FOUR in , ' ""I!1 i!.n'"iii"i"i"'i"ri'ii'i'"i'i'ii"iT mi?' "" Huskers Enter Whirl of After Game Parties for the Week-End WITH THE SOONERS Milled iiw ;iy for ;ml lir year .1 . 1 1 ... I t!li tiipn tln.ii tittoiit iiiii fii viwi:i! iii'tiv. i wo MI H'I Mir iiiisi-i- ilirs Saliinlay evening coliseum at h:o0 o'oloi charge, of the ooiiimit ti t i-liiiirmnii. and W ilbiir .irniiigiiij; for t he decora! ions and Maruarot. .Medlar chaperoiies. who wili ho Mr. and .Mrs. (i. K. Condon . i it.... I.' v i .,., , anil Mr. win .mis. i-. '!"' LINCOLN COUNTRY CLUBS will also give dances celebrating the Oklahoma-Nebraska game Sat urday night. The Country club and Kasl'ridge are both planning din ner dances, which will be attcnrled liv university students. THE DADS WILL HOLD the ( enter of the stage at the annual luncheon to be given at the Oorn hu.sker Saturday at 12 o'clock by the Innocents society, under the direction of Woodrow Magee. Guy Chambers, president of the Ne braska Alumni association, will be the main speaker, and orchestra music will be furnished during the luncheon. About 300 are expected to attend the affair at which Byron Goulding. president of the Innocents will preside. UNUSUAL IS THE De Mulay dance Saturday night, with five door prizes being given to women guests at the annual fall party. Eddie Jungbluth's orchestra will play. The committee in charge of arrangements ts composed of Bill Crittenden, chairman, Bud Alm- Soon You Can't Get Along W ithout an OVERCOAT LET US CLEAN YOURS It will look rifcM. pet Rood as ever and seem like new. WE ARE EXPERTS f ash & Carry 0c'e Off SXF ARSITY 7 CLEANERS B3367 221 No. 14 Joe Tucker Roy Wythers 1 Do you get hot and bothered? II so Ancvr uCj co Is en oxford slilri ihs coolest known io man. Oxford shirts shrink, you say? You're right most do. But the Arrow Gordon is one oxford shirt that won't shrink ever . . i because it's Sanforized Shrunkl Always comfortably smart $250 ARROW GORDON iL A 4 Star Dance Band For a 4 Star Dad's Day Party (TV .. i!nl fun lid imc iukis way party in. me k. Hintoii Marvin is the chairman in ami is assisted liy Marjorir- KM Icy, vice KrickMin, secrdarv. Vernon Killey is Selected tllP K. 1). Keim quist. Karl Warner, George Tillers, anil Bob Lantz. IN LINCOLN FOR tno week is Mrs. Clara Raynor-Kuder, national vice president of Phi Mil, who will visit the Zcta Gamma chapter of Phi Mu. Mrs. Rader and Mrs. Wil ms Srhlentz. district president of Phi Mu, were the honored guests at a. dinner at the chapter house Wednesday evening. Tapers and table decoiations carried out the rose and white motif. Mrs. Rader lives in Columbus, O., and will leave Friday tor her home. THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF the marriage of Eleanor Rasse, Chi O pledge, to John Rennau. both of Kairhury, was made recently. The wedding took place in April of this year. The couple is living in Kairbury. FOLLOWING THEIR business meetings, the State Association of Deans of Women will hold an In formal reception at Ellen Smith hall today. :iss Berdcna Donald son, president of the organization is in charge of arrangements. If ''I lit THE ENGAGEMENT OF Doro thy Speidell and Ralston Graham, Sigma Chi, was announced several weeks ago when Mr. Graham passed the cigars at the fraternity house. Winifred Peterson, Sigma Phi Sigma, left school yesterday to ht tend the funeral of his father at Cook, Neb. The entire fraternity also went. It is not the hard knocks, the cuts that hurt in college. but WHY BORROW A CAR? We have not rnise'l Rent-a-CiiI priced. They lire still at the low est ever offered in Lincoln. Tlat rate for evenings and speeials for lone trips. Good tars, insurance, always open. NRA. MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 P St. B6819 It Harold AND HIS Commanders They've come straight from the Chicago station or the Columbia Broadcasting System to play for this Dad's Day party. You've heard of the ritzy Oak Ridge Ballroom of Chicago. They've just com pleted a successful 1 5 weeks stay at this favorite resort. No more need be said. For 1 5 weeks at Oak Ridge brands this band as one of the best. Dad's D ay Coli lseurn 60c Per Couple PEP BARBECUE BEGINS AT Two-Day Celebration Will Culminate in Cyclone Missouri Game. AMKS, Iowa, Oct. art.-When 3,000 alumni anil students of Iowa. State college gather at the east stadium of State field tomorrow evening for the annual "pep bar becue," the college's 1933 Home coming will be formally under way. The two day celebration will reach its height Saturday after noon with the Cyclone-Missouri football game. Following the barbecue supper in the stadium the 3,000 gueits will be given a short entertain ment with two former students m chief attractions. Chuck Oownie '28 of Des Moines, Iowa State's most illustrious cheerleader, will act as master of ceremonies, and Harlan S. Miller of Des Moines, student here in 1920 who now con ducts a well known newspaper column, will make a short talk. Novelty acts, singing and other en tertainment will be furnished by undergraduates. Big S'X Race. j The football game will bring to gether two evenly matched teams, both badly in need of a victory to keep them in the Big Six champ ionship race. The game, to .itart at 2 p. m. Saturday, is priced at $1.50. Two Homecoming dances in Me morial Union, Friday and Satur day evenings, and dancing la most of the fraternity and sorority houses will head the social festivi ties of Homecoming. The campus is being put in festive dress, with cardinal and gold street lights and decorations. Greek-letter houses are also being adorned with special banners and lighting effects, in competition for prizes offered for theb est decorated houses. FARMERS' FORMAL ON AGRICULTURAL CAMPUS TONIGHT (Continued from Page J.) autumn paraphernalia, according to Henderson. Elect Formal Quesn. Interest among Ag students, as the hour for the formal draws nearer, is largely centered in the selection of the 1933 Farmers' Formal Queen. Contestants for the honor of being crowned at the Fri day night frolic are Lorraine Brake, Truly Hemphill, Valentine Klotz, Mildred Tickler, and Helen Smrha. Each ticket holdet will be permitted to cast one vote for the new queen as he enters the party. Once the votes are counted, the winner wil be anounced and placed on her throne with proper cere mony. Ticket sales Thursday, accord in? to Chairman Howard White. insure that well over 100 couples will be present, and sales are usu ally heaviest on the day of the party. Freshmen boys and girls attending will be adequately pun ished if they fail to bring their jack-o-lanterns and corn necklaces, the committee said Thursday. The method of punishment has not been definitely decided, but will probably include running the gauntlet and wearing coin coo necklaces adorned with chicken leathers. Freshmen Help Decorate. Henderson said Thursday that ' he expected an almost 100 percent turnout of freshmen to help deco rate this afternoon, and added thtt any upperclassmen who have timo off will be appreciated if thev want to come over and help. Consider able work, he said, will be required to get ready for the old fashioned husking bee. Prof. K. B. Engle. soils department, has been chosen to organize the faculty team tor the contest. No dating committee was ap pointed this year as has been pre viously, Henderson said, but any persons desiring dates are request ed to get in touch with a member of any of the regular committees. Quite a number of dates have al ready been arranged that way, and it is believed that many students will take advantage of that oppor tunity Friday. Only one member of each couple needs to be an Ag student, Henderson pointed out, and it is hoped that every student in Ag college who wants to go will be on deck for the Farmers' Formal at the activities building tonight. The snow scenes in the movies are produced with finely ground white granite. Corn flakes were re cently used for such settings. H aynes rty tomorrow Night TITE DAILY NEBRASKAN Trial in Which Libel Principles Were Established, Depicted for Journalists LAWRENCE, Kan.. Oct. 25 A dramatization of the trial of John Peter Zenger, colonial editor, on charges of libel, will be one of the features of the Kansas news paper roundlables. at the unlver sity of Kansas Friday and Satur day of thin weeK. Miss Helen O. Mahin, associate professor of Journalism, Is direct ing the piay,wnicn is set tor rn day afternoon. Zenger, a German printer, was employed by Bradford, editor of the New York Gazette, olficia publication of New York colony from 1725 on. Zenger was sent to cover some political events, and found that the "official" publica tion dared not print the things he had found. Zenger a Liberal Leader. Accordingly, he interested some other liberal leaders of the colony in a new paper, which he estab lished as the New York Weekly Journal, Nov. 5. 1733, with the backing of the liberal clement of the colony. Early in the history of the pub lication he carried an article which Governor Crosby considered re flected on his Integrity, and he ac cordingly caused the arrest of Zenger on a charge of libel. Karly trial was denied, and Zenger con tinued his paper with the assist ance of his wife, who visited liim at the jail. Indiana Statistics Reveal Increase In Number of Coeds Finishing College i Iniiitn Uailv SC.tdrtil I Approximately one out of every three of the freshman women stu dents who enrolled at Indiana uni versity in the fall of 1930 have re turned for the last year's work on their degree. In exact numbers, 106 coeds of the original 360 have battled their nv throne h the curriculum, ac- cording to statistics compiled at the office of the dean of women. I This ficure shows a gradual in crease in the number of coeds who finish the complete four years work. Of the 436 coeds who enrolled in school in 1926, only 86 remained to receive their degrees in the spring of 1930. At that time, the small number was attributed prin cipally to the fact that many stu dents remained only long enough to affiliate themselves with some Oreek letter organization. It is believed that the present financial conditions have changed this as pect of college life. Twenty-Three "A" Records. There are 23 senior coeds who entered the University with A" records. Eleven of them have worked for their room and board, WEEK-END EVENTS. Friday. D. U. House Party, honoring pledges. Alpha Delta Theta House Party. Teke House Party. Chi O House Party. Alpha O. House Party. Phi Gam House Party. Alpha Sig House Party. Palladian Literary Society, Halloween Party. Newman Club Dance. Farmer's Formal, Student Activities Buildinp on the Ag campus. Young People's Society of The Baptist Church, Halloween Party. State Association of Deans of Womens reception at Ellen Smith Hall. Saturday. Dads Day Luncheon at the Cornhusker Hotel. Dad's Day party at the Coli seum. DeMolay dance at the Corn husker Hotel. Sunday. Buffet Supper at the Chi O house for Housemothers. Miss Mabel Lee, breakfast for WAA honoring Mrs. Robert Danielson. A freshman at the University of Chicago, bewildered by the ques tions asked on an examination, searching for an alibi for his in excusable and complete ignorance, wrote on his papei, "Only God knows the answers to those ques tions." The instructor returned the paper with the addition of these words: "God gets an A: you get an F." Gum chewing has the effect of increasing peppiness about H per cent, according to a psychology professor at Colgate. At Michigan State university of ficials have opened a drive to pro hibit students from driving car3 to school. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS ClasEttiPds Are Cash 10c PER LINE Minimum ot 2 I. lues Lost and Found. LOST Black und nhite Sheaffer foun tain pen w it n name Evelyn Coe on it. Call B6653. FOK SALE FOR SALiC Kine (Trade Hudson Seal oat. Siie 36. Phone B6150. Rooms for Rent. A WARM runvenient steam heated fur nished room for these cold days, hot showers, full membership privileges Included. $2 per week and up. Y. M. C. A . 13th t P Sts. B12.il. GRAND HOTEL ETROPEAN Corner 12th and Q Street! Good Coffee Shop Quick Service Lunchei Alto Short Order Mr. C. Rocke Trial for Libel. When Zcngcr's friends finally did force a trial, his lawyers were disbarred by the governor's court. These friends according brought from Philadelphia an aged attor ney, Andrew Hamilton, known throughout the colonies. His lepti tation was such that the court did not dare disbar him. Hamilton argued, contrary to the rulings of the court, that truth of statements should be submitted to the Jury, and the Jury, in de fiance of the orders of the court, brought a verdict of "not guilty." Thus was established a principle that has had wide effect in the libel laws of Kngland and of America. Reminisce Student Day. Another leaturc of the round tables, will be the publication of an "Old Grad's" issue of the Uni versity Daily Kansan, by men now publishers in Kansas, but former reporters on the student daily. Henry J. Allen, Just returned from Russia, will address an all- university convocation Friday morning, when editors win ne giv en places ofh onor. Charles Younggreen or i.nicngo, K. U. craduate. and former presi dent of the Associated Adv. Clubs of the World, will speak, as will also Don D. Davis of Kansas Citv. president of WHB. His topic will be on "The Radio and the Press." thus earning a major part of their expenses. Nine senior women are living in private homes this year. Bloomington has ten of the coeds who are in their last year. Although approximately 100 joined organizations at the begin ning of their freshman year, only 52 organized senior women are on the campus this fall. The rest of the coeds, as nearly as the records show, are living in the University dormitories. Ot the five colored students who entered in 1930, two are to graduate this year. Many Coeds Marry. There are still other reasons for the decrease in enrollment. Many girls drop out of college before graduation to marry. Finances and sickness also exert an influence in diminishing the number who complete school. The two-year teachers' course also lessens the number of four-year students. Several girls are asked to with draw each year because of their poor preparation for college work. This is more often due to neglect in taking advantage of the oppor t'.j.i !es in high school on the part c!" the individual student rather than to any difficulty in the uni versity curriculum. R.O.T.C. OBJECTORS TAKE COURT ACTION: "Sign Up or Be Signed Out" Is Threat of Southern Board of Regents. By College News Service. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 25. "Sign up or be signed out!" Such, in effect, is the ruling of the board of regents of the University of Cali fornia which has been sent to offi cials of the University of Califor nia at Los Angeles with regard to the cases of two students who re fused to enroll for military train ing courses. t "Compulsory military training is simply a form of physical ex ercise which has been part of the university's activities for years." declared George I. Cochran, a Los Angeles regent, following a meet ing of the board at which the rul ing was made. 'Academic Function.' "It has worked no hardship. On the contrary, it has been high, we believe, in its efficacy. We are reaffirming our conviction that it is worthy, and that it will remain an academic function. "Scu-unts who do not conform will have to go elsewhere." John Beardsley, attorney, had appeared before the board on be half of the two students. Alonzo Reynolds, jr., and Albert V. Ham ilton, both of whom ate ministers' sons and "conscientious objectors" to military training, to ask that the rule requiring all freshmen and sophomores to enroll for Ft. O. T. C. be set aside. This the re gents declined to do, however, on the ground surh action would be contrary to the charter of the university. Plan Court Action. Beardsley immediately an nounced that lie would institute a court action on behalf of Rey nolds and Hamilton in an effort to force the university to allow them to attend without taking military training courses. This case will be carried to the state supreme court, he said. The students are members ot an assertedly pacifistic organization known as the Green Shirts. They are also being supported in their protest against compulsory R. O. T. C. courses by Methodist minis ters in this vicinity. THREE THOUSAND TEACHERS ATTEND INITIAL MEETING (Continued from Page 1.1 psychology and their affects on educatijn, placing emphasis on a new U. ;ory in Micational psy cholog; which holds that most cre ative thinking is done during pe riods of mental relaxation rather than concentration, was the sub ject of Mr. Breitwieser, dean of the School of Education at the Uni versity of North Dakota. The morning's general session program, which included a brief outline nf the cc .tion program by Mrs. Grace Hyatt, Lincoln, dis trict president of the association, was folic :d in the afternoon by sectional meetings and demonstra tions : Park school and at Whit- tier Junior high. Several luncheons were held for special groups. Scores Political Graft. Political gra." und stupidity were scored by Miss Stc .nt, who declared that if these factors were removed there won'.' be enough money to give every child in the country the kind of an education he need;-. "Some v '.o," s'-' declared, "is caused by teachers, well meaning ones, who are bent on teaching subjects Instead of students... Some waste 'i caused by parents who see in education onl" - short cut to a poft Job for their chil dren. ..." F.Jgged Individualism was de fended by Mi;.i Stewart. "Unless we can teach uplls to think clearly, to be individuals, there is no use for the sacrifices being made ti giv! them an education. It Is not economic difficulties that m-'ke the w wrong. It is men tally squint-eyed people who hav en't learned to face the facts." '.Ve have been too willing to .v unsound ' adership or to put the full burden on sound lead c. ' ip. As soon a.i we can find tomeone who can carry on, we "Your Drug Store" .lust Whm Sim I. Hi!' I', :ilTMI.V IHIK OI.VI K MI.I.KVM IKK OI.ATI.N In Kancy Boxr The OWL PHARMACY 14 N". I'hnne HI OHM r IMIti-r -x , - Ait 4 H I 1 I I 1 l l details usually found only in 'more expensive uii 1850 Tin' cliu racier ;nnJ U;tlity of tlie woolens, tl-'' impeccable jrooij tnslc in x liieh they're si led a'11' the casual but . ell-dressed appeal-mice ihev ioaii to their owners put our 1S.5(I and l!l . suits in J class by themselves. Such h suit as von see it "it yourself in a mirror is nut an accident ...'1s I'"' result of vears of experience at suit iiiaiiufacliJi'' and the nainstakino- attention to the sin tails during the entire htruction. COLD raif)Y. OCTORKR 27. m give h; the IomI and when thin begin to go wron6 we run aw v " Btated MiHM Stvccrt. She i -ed that the cry for education,! ret-enchment bo r..n I., men n wot ...ave enough to n.:,. ,,'J real situation, to promote ti form where such is the need generally to right present fai'nu The mornings session at th co" -i was opened with a brief concert l-y the Seward hiih mho,,, band. During the internilsslin be. tween the tv - a-" Pi. , y n' Temnle, director of -..lusle at I in" coin high s:uwl, led communlh' singing. SEEING IS BELIEVING 1 1' volt let. US dean your clollirs up for 1 lio wi-ok mil. You'll n H ret- lliey look like new. H'Vij' iot Call 7IMMERMAFJ CLEANERS 11 B2203 204 So. 12 $71 ,allest de- time the suit is under coll- S Men s Store Eleventh "'.reel