TUESDAY. NOVEMUKR H. irrtn miiv vrnnicr IV 4 View Huskier s Snatching Big Six Title . , p.. mm ' Wir"v E LF JOI I? II UK I nc i hiiiiiiiiiihii.i - NGINEERiNG -3 J ! 'I , . Vi. -. Services Will Take Place at Vespers Tuesday Afternoon. Formal recognition of new anil old members of the Y. W. C. A., will be held this afternoon at Vespers at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. Miss Bernice Miller, secretary of the Y. W. C. A., will speak briefly en "The Technique of Living" and htr talk will be followed by the traditional candle-lighting cere mony. The recessional, "Hymn of the Ugh: t," will bring the service to a close. Special Music Offered. Special music will be a feature of the Vespers. The choir will ing and Violet Vaughn will play medi tation music. Jane Boos is to preside as mem bership chairman. All members are requested to be present. GOSPEL TEAM OF MISSIONARIES TO TALK IN LINCOLN (Continued from Page 1.) jrress of Women held in Chicago last July. She was one of the lead ing delegates to the Institute of Pacific Relations held in Bannff, Canada in August. As President of Ginling College, Nanking, China, and vice president of the National Christian council of China, Doctor Wu, although still quite young, is one of the outstanding feminine leaders in China. Doctor Wu Addresses Vespers. Doctor Wu achieves her title of "the flying first lady" due to the fact that it was during the Shang hai "incident" that the Institute of Pacific Relations was meeting there last year. Boat and rail serv ice had been discontinued. Doctor Wu, a delegate to the Institute, was marooned in Nanking. Mindful of her responsibility, determined to he present at the conference, and determined not to be thwarted she took to plan service, flew over the battle area and arrived at the con 'terence on time. Hence, the ap pellation. Plan Luncheon. The World Forum luncheon on Wednesday wiil boast of two dis tinguished speakers in the Rt. Rev. Logan H. Roots, bishop of the diocese of Hankow, China, and Dr. Herman Chen-en Liu, president t.f the University of China, who .comes to America as a special representative of the Chinese gov ernment. Reverend Roots is widely known for his interest in promot ing church unity and a better un derstanding of China. He was one . of the founders of the Chung Hua fiheng Kung Hui, the national Episcopal church of China. He is also honorary secretary of the Na tional Christian Council of China. Doctor Liu is known as the founder .f the Anti-civilan war league of China in addition to being the President- of the University of .Shanghai. He is also respected as eing a Christian exerting a great influence in the guiding of state affairs and the citizenship of China. Sponsors Meeting. Other programs planned during the visit of the team, although not planned entirely for students, in clude the Youth Supper at First Plymouth Congregational church which will hear another of the team, in a meeting sponsored by the Lincoln council of Religious Education. Fenner King is presi dent of the council and will have charge of that meeting. Jones Delivers "Lecture. Closing the stay in Lincoln, youth will be in charge of the mass meeting in First-Plymouth Congre gational church at which Dr. E. Stanley Jones will deliver another lecture. Nearly 3,000 are expected to pack the church to the doors for this program. A pageant "Ba Thame" will be presented by a group of young people from the churches of Lincoln. The campus religious council will have charge of meetings on the university campus. Rev. Dean R. Leland is in charge of arrange ments. ART CLUB SMS FORUM Miss Faulkner Will Conduct Informal Discussion Sunday Nite. An Informal discussion group will be sponsored by the Art club Sunday evening, Nov. 19. at 5:30 o'clock at the home of Miss Kady Faulkner at 1902 E street. The topic "What Makes a Thing a Work of Art" will be discussed un der the leadership or' Miss Faulk ner, Instructor in the University fine arts department. Open forums will be held every two weeks at different places and under different leadership each time. Every one who is interested is invited to attend the group meetings. Isn't ft enspcrat i n t to hare to miff woedrfr! party because of "recurrin" pains? Embarrusios, too, when too cao'ttell friends the ref xo. But now, no need to flunk an exam or miss " par.. Vheo yo are below par, take Raima, quick -acting tablets developed by Jouoo & Johnson especially to relieve "re currins " ftn such is headache, backache and neuralcia. n tablet is enooeh for most cases. Katou- safe, dc km? affect dicestioa or heart action, and arc not habit -forming. Your drug Slit has the - - in purse-size boxc rf 12 tablets. (ALMS FOR BELiE OF "RECURRING" . PAINS fa.' 5AM-L SEND Ot'PON J !- )!, Q JMtlT Send toe a FREE sample 01 Kalras. Nme AMre if" f If NEBRASKA'S MOST AN CIENT BUILDING DE NOUNCED AS UNSAFE IN 1872 NOW ABOUNDS IN VARIETY OF TRADITIONS (Continued from Page 1.) tention of the regents to the fur naces which failed to heat the building and were costly to oper ate. In his scant report in June, 1873, he stated that classrooms had been heated by stoves during the past winter and advocated the introduction of stoves in the chapel also. Early generations of students remember the ugly and insatiable stoves that made winter use of the chapel possible, but never comfort able. The old chapel in the north wing of what is now known as University hall occupied the second and third floors, the rostrum be ing at the north end with the gal ley across the south end. The seats were the traditional pews. With its wealth of bleak walls, its stained and perilous ceilings, a more unin spiring room cannot be imagined, but pioneer spirit was not so easily daunted. Students Act As Janitors. "Until the installation of the steam heated plant in the side of the north wing of the basement in 1885. the janitor services were per formed by students who were re munerated very modestly, one, at 7? tfa Aaa your wardrobe Yo- 11 probably FEEL bet te and we KNOW you'il L jOK Detter. We're EXPERT CLEANERS! Pritr Minleralel V CLEANERS .221 ISo. 14 Jo T-icker RVtb7 Bay Wythera a; Maow4'll('trJi W If, IWv, v , W K . ... fti V 4Mi'."' h .St least, being permitted to sleep in the building. The care of twenty five or thirty hard coal burners constituted the most laborious part of the janitor work. Huge ash heaps accumulated in the angle of the north wing. Pioneer children mounted these in order to view the skeletons in the museum on the first floor, underneath the chapel. "With the coming of the steam plant. John Green entered the service of the university as head janitor and heating engineer. Un til the removal of the heating plant to the new boiler house in lshU, the Doliciutr of the campus brought student life in close touch with the! head janitor. If the students chant- ed some appropriate air when John j chances were that the light would not go out too abruptly. If they invited John to their Thanksgiving "feed" they usually became priv ileged to wa?h their dishes in the steam down in the boiler room. When they graduated they hunted for John when adieus to the cam - nns Hi-pro in nrdpr and heard some- thing like this: 'Well. I don't know what the university is going to do for students next year. When your class is gone there won t be anybody worthwhile around here." anybody Undergoes Repairs. "Old Univetsity hall has with stood the vicissitudes and calum nies of time and is still doing good service to the state. Condemned as physically unfit from the be ginning, the building has under gone from time to time extensive repairs. The original foundation, chiefly 0f soft brown sandstone, was temoved and limestone sub stituted. For months the building ; stood on jackscrews and on its complete system of inside cross i walls which extend from basement ;to roof. Three years ago (1916) ! its front walls were found to be ! bulging a few inches. The regents with a retinue of architects and engineers, filed through the build- in? from north to -south bv steel cables, givire the exterior what Chancellor Avery described as a 'corduroy effect' " Won't Feel at Home. However, in spite of its crum bling walls and worn floors, the builclirg is home to the journalism students. Publication workers say they doubt whether the Nebraskan could be published in any other Vv ii fl : . jM VI place, but the dark, dirty and marred basement of U hall, with its untrimmed limestone walls. "We just wouldn't feel at home," they maintain. YW HOST TO RURAL GIRLS MONDAY NOON pipn! L I I CI I j LOndUCt I OUf I llrU CmU Uo nicrncc OlTllin Hdll, UliUUib V3N0US St3f fS. Thirty girls, coming from rural routes and bringing their lunches, were guests of the Y. W. for hot chocolate yesterday noon. A tour through Ellen Smith hall was ar ranged, and discussions about the ' different groups and staffs of the Y. W. C. A. were Held. Arrangements were made lor i the back door of 242 Ellen Smith hall to be opened at 7.45 every morning so cnai gins may irave their lunches. Louise Hossnck was chairman of the hostess commit tee in charge of the arrangements, and Jean Aldcn, president of the Y. W., presided. Miss Miller, sec retary of the Y. W., expressed the hope that the girls some of whom come ten to twenty-three miles every day, will avail themselves of the opportunity to eat their lunches at 242 Ellen Smith Hall. Declaring that children should be made "music conscious" at an early age. Miss Marion Flajrg. mu sic instructor at the Horace Mann school of Teachers college, Colum bus university, asesrts that the conversation between all parents j and their children should take place in a sing-song chanting man- ner. Part of Mount Holyoke college has been transplanted from South Hadley, Mass., to Hartford, Conn., a distance of about fifty miles. Economic conditions prevented a number of potential students in that section from coming to Mount Holyoke, so the college decided to go to the students. Tiie Camera 1. Harris (No. 20) the Kanass threat fakes a punt from his own end zone and is almost caught for a safety. 2. The Nebraska cheering sec tion gives a memorial touch to its card displays. 3. The receiving end of a mem orable pass. Kilbourne is shown gathering in the ball at tcp speed which he continued to the goal. W hen one realizes that the pass was forty-two yards one can ap preciate Saucr s deadly accuracy In putting: the ball in exactly the ri'jht place at exactly the right time. 4. Kansas threatened frequently In the early part of the game. This time it was Nebraska s ball on her Director W. S. VanDyke, direc tor of "Eskimo" and "Prizefighter and the Iady" is olf on another lo cation expedition, this time to Ari zona. Van Dyke left the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios yesterday, bound for Flagstaff and the Nava- jo Indian reservation. He will se- , , . . , ( . . r UA filming- rtf "Laughing Boy," adaptation of Oliver LaFarge's Pulitzer prize novel of Indian life, and will be joined within a few days by Ra mon Novarro, Lupe Velez and other members of the "Laughing Eoy" troupe. Metro-Goldwyn-Maycr has ac quired motion picture rights to T. Everett Harre's novel, "Heavenly Sinner." This story, based on the glamorous exploits of Lola Montez, California actress of settlement days, was published by Macaulay company. Cast and director for the 'screen production have not yet been announced. A scenario contract with Zoc Akins is anonunced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Miss Akins is author of "Declasse." "First Love," "The Greeks Had a Word for If and many other stage plays, also a number of novels and short stories. Peter Freuchen, author of the novel, "Eskimo," gave a talk at the Explorers' club on his experiences in the Arctic during the filming of "Eskimo." Mr. Freuchen will also address the members of the Sea men's Institute on the adventures in the whaling vessel which formed the base of operations of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer expedition in Alaska. YOUR DRUG STORE Some Football Team We Have and Another Championahip The OWL PHARMACY 148 No. 14th and P Sta. B1068 WE DELIVER pSfCETlj ANNOUNCE "DATE FOR Court wy of Nebraska Alurnnu" Man Says - own one yard line, rorc?ng Sauer to punt in close quaiters. 5. Nebraska's first touchdown, the result of the most perfectly executed forward pas we have ever seen, Sauer to Kilbourne. The pass traveled forty-two yards and Kilbourne added thirty more for a touchdov.r. 6. Nebraska's second touchdown, Sauer flipped a forward pass te Kilbourne who in turn tosed lat erally to. Masterson. It wes the same play Minnesota uied to beat as last year. 7. Harris (No. 20) was a consis tent punter for Kansas, his long hih kicks repeatedly carrying the Jayhawks out of dangerous terri tory. SILL GRAIN SHOW Exhibit in Connection With Organized Agriculture; Frolik in Charge. Inviting Nebraska farmers to participate, the Agronomy depart ment of the University, has scheduled the annual corn and utility show to be held on the Ag college campus Jan. 24, in connec tion with Organized Agriculture. A. L. Frolik announced details of the show Friday and advised farmers to begin looking for their best samples. Cash prize totaling $300 will be awarded to the winners in the show. Mr. Frolik beieves that as in the past smooth corn will prob ably win the major prizes again this year. Make Few Changes. Few changes have been made in the corn and small gTain show for this year. Classes for flax and Atlas soreo and Black-hull Kafir, however, have been added to the small errain section. Increasing in tere3t in growing forage sorghums necessitated the addition of the last twon named classes. President Grau of Cuba faced the possibility of losing one of his strongest groups or supporters students of Havana university. zz v A- te 9ett; V : ss New Streamline Train to Be Described by A. H. Fetters. The student branches ot tin American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and American Institute of Electrical Engineers will hold a joint meeting Wednesday night m 7:30, in room 206, Mechanical En gineering building. A. H. Fetters, Omaha, gcnfrnl mechanical engineer, for the Union Pacific railroad will give an illu strated lecture about the new stream-lined train being operated by the railroad. Mr. Fetters will use pictures and diagrams of 11: j train to Illustrate his talk. Have Common Interests. The two branches are ni.'etin;: jointly because of the nature f the talk which is of interest tn both groups. All sophomore ami junior engineers are urged to at tend this meeting. Kmil Pro chazka, chairman of the program committee of the A. S. M. E.. and Max Mattison, chairman of thu program committee of the A. i. E. E., are in charge of the meet ing. Mr. Prochazka sates that this will be the last open meeting of the mechanical engineering society. PLANNEDBY W. A. A. Executive Council and Phys Ed Faculty Will Go to Roberts' Cab:n. A rocrration trip to Roberta cabin, near Mil ford, is bcinp planned by the W. A. A. executive council and the faculty of the phys ical education department for Sat urday. Nov. 18 Alice Beekman is chairman of the committee on ai rangements. assisted by Elaine Kontein and Carolyn Van Anda. The girls plan to leave Saturday afternoon, stay overnight, and re turn the following morning after breakfast. Those who are attend ing the overnight patty are Alice Geddes. Jean Brownlee. Hallcen Haxthausen. Maxine Packwood, Elaine EonU-in. Evelyn Diamond, Vera Oxenford. Chiistobel Weaver, Carol vn Van Anda. Alice Beek man, 'Miss On, Miss Ratisih, ami Miss Rice The traditional draft uniform worn by Yale football teams for many years have been discarded by Reggie Root, new head coacli. Hencefcrih Eli elevens will parade before the fans in bright blue jer sies and pants and white helmets The University ot Washington is giving a course in "bluffing." ft is given in conjunction with the English and history departments. NU-WAY SHOE SHOP Voir Opvn Shoe Repairing and Sinning Hats Cleaned and Reblogkcd Ladies' Heels 19c Ladies Half Soles 59c up Men's Half Soles 69c up Men's Rubber Heels 29c ar.d 39c 140 So. 13 S. Federal Trust Bld. a"Viw ZX Or A WEEK OF H-l-T ATTRACTIONS AT THESE THEATRES WJSM J II -