Daily N EBRASKAN Farmers Formal Friday Grads Return to Campus Saturday Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska VOL. XXXVI INO. 32. LINCOLN, INEM.ASKA, TIILKSDAY. Of.TOHKR 29, 1936. PRICK 3 CENTS. JL JLJLJC MIZZOU PEP FEST TO FEATURE TREK THRU GREEK ROW Homecoming Rally March To View Organized House Displays. With bloodthirsty cries of "Maul Mizzou." loyal Cornhuskers will demonstrate their lust for victory at the Homecoming rally Friday night. Congregating in Memorial stadium, cheering students will team for their next step toward the Big Six crown. Imbued with the spirit of Home coming and its customary crowds of old grads, enthusiasm will run high as the Corn Cobs, Tassels, a blaring band, and the milling mass of collegians tramp thru the fra ternity and sorority sections deco rated with their traditional dis plays. A myriad of dramas de- ... .ii . .u t: . i n . . . : 1 1 ka lliaiiWlll U1C 1111 3 Mlll'ill Will w i enacted on the lawns by wooden ! cats and uprooted corn stalks as ! tfca nll -i -. I r-t n inn niAninitnm ! inn ) i i irn u pallia inuiiivtii.uiii in passing the Greek houses. Anticipate 'Real Rally.' "Anticipating a real Homecom ing celebration and Nebraska's "harvest moon" at it's best, this Missouri game should be marked by one of the largest and peppiest rallies of the 1936 football season," declared Jane Walcott, Tassel rep resentative to the student rally committee. Urging a large turnout of stu dents for the rally, Don Boehni, Student Council representative to the committee, stressed the impor tance of this game. "This is our third Big Six conference game and America's Filipino Scholars Keep Bi-Monlhtlv Tab on Each Oilier in Editor Antonio Hamoy-s Bulletin An editor who never sees his re- j States into two sections, with porters is Antonio Hanioy, jour nalism senior at the university, and associate head of the "Filipino Student Bulletin," bi-monthly pa per for Filipino students in Amer. tea. With reporters in every univer sity in which a Filipino student is registered, Hamoy gives his as signments by letter. One day's mail will carry the assignment to the reporter; the following day will bring the finished story to the editor. Drllon in charge of reporters east of the Mississippi river, and Ham oy managing material from the west. Clashes come when the paper is ready to be assembled and the edi tors arrange the pages. Editors Disagree on Style. FRENCH CIRCLE TO HOLD SECOND LUNCHEON TODAY Miss Mengers Will Recount French Anecdotes; No English Allowed. To promote a more friendly re lationship between instructors and students in the French department. the second French luncheon of the 1 year will be held at the Capitol hotel at 12:00 noon today. Approximately 50 students and instructors are expected to attend SEVEN POTENTIAL QUEENS FILE FOR PARTY HONOR the luncheon, which is sponsored Drilon likes a flashy sheet; j Dy Le Cercle Francais. Miss Marie Mengers, instructor in the French entertain the Mileage Brings Difficulties. Long-distance assignments are difficult to handle, but even more lMnl.lniiAm i U ... 1 1 U tween Hamoy and his chief. Res-1 !lm .L !f f -1 T urrecion Drilon, a student at the Hamoy prefers it balanced. Let ters shoot back and forth between i department, will me university or Missouri ana Ne braska, as the Filipino editors en gage in heated written combat over the size of headlines and posi tion of stories on the page. "These are only differences," Presentation to Be Made At Farmer's Formal Friday Night. GEOGRAPHERS WILL HEAR DR. HATCH AT LUNCHEON!1 ! Teaching of Controversial j Issues to Be Topic of ' N. J. Educator. "Teaching of Controersial Is sues," will So the topic of the speech discussed by Dr. Roy W. ! state teachers college. Upper , Montclaire. N. J., at a luncheon i of the Nebraska chapter of the i National Council of Geography j i Teachers, today noon at the city ; ' Y. W. C. A. Dr. Hatch is visiting Lincoln W irDQ TVMADQ umulhuii i mm o PLAN TO COLLECT SHARE FOR UNION that we may come to an under' standing about a settled policy for the Bulletin next week when nU ...111 ,.lnU U; nntTMia fr r 'lHrLP .dUih.e 1 Missouri-Nebraska gamV; The paper is a full page affair, University of Missouri at Colum bus. Mo. paper unaided, acting as editors, copy-readers, and business staff. They have divided the United (Continued on Page 2.) LIBRARY DRAFTS INCLUDE LATEST BUILDERS IDEA LUTHERANS TO HOLD HALLOWEEN PARTY Students Schedule Event For Friday Evening In Temple. A Hallowe'en party for all Lu theran students will be held Fri day evening, Oct. 30, from 8:30 to 11 :30 in room 203 of the Temple. The following students are mak guests with some anecdotes of Farmer's Formal Queen are Al- trencn me. r rem n win ue spoKt-n i tnea Barada, Elsie Buxman, Ber- exclusively by all attending the luncheon. The luncheon will be served in a private dining room in the Capitol hotel. All undergraduate students of French are especially urged to attend, to get practice in speaking French, and to become acquainted with other students and instruc tors. All outsiders interested in French are cordially invited. Price for the luncheon has been set at 35c. Candidates who have filed for this week for the purpose of coiv ducting a public class of high school students on the subject of "American Crime." This class will GUNTHER STATES POSSIBILITIES OF ELECTRIC FIELD nice Cruise, fchnor McFadden, Marjorie Miller, Gladys Morgan, and Alice SouUop, it was an nounced by Genevieve Bennett, in charge of arrangements, Wednes day. Presentation will be made Fri day night, Oct. 30, at 10 o'clock be staged in the Lincoln high school auditorium today at 1:30 o'clock. Tickets for the luncheon today are 50 cents apiece, and may be obtained from Miss Vera Uigdon in former museum room 2, or at Gunderson Issues Denial as To State Legislature. Alumni Grants. 20 RYT1 KINGS I ing arrangements for the party: t- ! out of a' Faculty Committee Forgets Proram committee: Barbara Ro j ower Company executive thP stage at the Farmer's Formal in the j the registration headquarters in oiuuent -rtx-uviues uuiiuuig on the Cornhusker hotel campus, ine queen win be select ed by the votes of men who at tend the party. From 9:45 to 10:15 the music of Clyde Davis and presentation of the queen will be broadcast over the radio. Climaxing the overall and ging ham dress parade the queen will be revealed in a distinctive cere mony, planned by Miss Bennett and Al Nore, co-chairmen. In charge of decorations, Al Moseman stated that the cornstalks and trimming used in Farmer's Form als in the past will be discarded this year. Last year's queen. Constance Clinchard, was presented stepping out of a mammoth pumpkin on LEAD DANCING A T INNOCENTS' BALL Whatever rumoia may haie been circulating the campus re garding a legislative or equally mysterious grant for the univer sity's end of the student union fi nancing were abruptly stopped by L. E. Gunderson, finance secre tary, in a Nebraskan interview yesterday. The $220,000 will be paid by the students, and by the students alone. Method used will be a loan thru floating of bonds. The faculty board will meet next Saturday morning solely to consider bids of bonding companies to carry the loan, paying off bonds as student funds come in. A grant of $130,000 has been promised by the federal PWA, this comprising 45 percent of the 400, 000 structure. This leaves $220,000 to be raised by the school, and questions of the means of obtain ing this sum will be a main pur pose of the board meeting Satur- I day morning, along with consider ation of bids by bonding com- Expense in Favor of Modernism. Disregarding expense, library mine, Helen Hansen: entertain ment. Lester Brack. Donald ! Meixel. Viola Lemmerman; re- j freshments. Leona Degner, Irroa j Bamesburger and Leonard Harsh, j Chaperons for the evening are Speaks to Engineers Wednesday Night. Advance ticket sales for the i formal indicate wide student in- terest in the affair, according to ! Marjorie Francis and Earl Heady, Senior Honorary to Present Lawn Display Trophy At Intermission. names. uti t uaic urru I UU1U1B 111 L11D university that the state legisla ture would contribute the $220, 000, or that a huge alumni dona tion would support the cost. This, however, Mr. Gunderson stated we will not have to worry about included every item within their ! party the Pittsburgh game." Boehm as- j knowledge to insure that the pro- sertccl. "That battle will take care posed building will be one of the (Continued on Page 2. E. H. BELL DESCRIBES CH50NMEN TO HEAR ALUM SECRETARY AT CITY AT LYNCH, NEB. Professor Gjves Address BeTof PresbyfeTTan Mother's Club. our last one at home before the ar- i planning- committee which this .nH in vx rri, onH ur mH lines beine- strung- across the coun rival of the Pittsburgh team. It J week announced their recom-iMrs! Fred Devke. All Lutheran try and constant changes being u,r" -"- "'. i menaauon lor a new uorary nave i students are invited to attend the 1 made in methods or producing ana transmitting electric pov are opportunities for trical engineers in the F. J. Gunther, assistant manager in charge of operation of the Iowa Nebraska Light and Power com pany assured the members of the Nebraska student branch of the American Society of Electrical Engineers at their meeting last night. Mr. Gunther explained the dif ferent lines of development along generation of electric power at present in the future. Two of oldest steam and hyuro .plant s are still used ex- , tcnsively. Lit tle development is being made in hydropiants Twenty artists of rhythm and ; emphatically, is not true. an nltrsrlivs mitotrn Wmirn lhn ! AS a Detition SipTlprt hV 3 OOO j co-chairmen. Tickets may be organization of Carleton Coon and i students and submitted to the scnooi administration requested, (Continued on Page 2.) With new power transmitting j obtained from Krank Svbboda, (Continued on Page 2, BSiCADEI STAFF MAKES most up-to-date in the country. The new library, which will located between Social Sciences building and teachers college as soon as the necessary funds are i available, will be fully equipped with a micro-photography outfit, the latest invention utilized for making rare and expensive books available for public use. Project Enlarged. "Both the building and the staff of the new library will be much enlarged," stated Prof. Gil bert Doane, head librarian, "there by enabling us to stock many more books" a'rif to offer a much better type of service. At present tne library is so cramped and ; former years are expected to crowded for space, that many gather at the Coliseum, Saturday books which should be on display noon for a Homecoming Dav for use of students and faculty j luncheon, informal program and ai e literally buried on the shelves : general "get together". Following iir irom me sigm, 01 any who , the affair, the men will attend the. Missouri-Nebraska football came A rmrinff in f Via nlon. M'Vii.Vi . - . . 1 , , : . .- . r . i hitman MW rl,,h WVrtnMrUv 1 , . - v " w waicn uiw year s euiuon 01 inc til -...l. V-i o.i tv7i. 1 nave Deen arawn na approved Dy i Cornhuskers battle for the tradi- the disanery and excavation this ; the panninp committee, an en- tionai Missouri-Nebraska bell. w,r v" i tire floor will be devoted to a Lynch, Nebraska. i reserve reading room for students. "As recently as 3922." he de- j Tnis room win nave a djrect clared. "the foremost authority on , openjn, t0 lne outside for use of American archeology stated that , Ktll(ipn,, betwtn classes, thereby u - r i.. i -' qjvci uiijicu, lb y u a l'i uuauiv uc the present state of our knowl. ! nvf)irfiriir 1ht havv fraffir and I u J ;.; j , , . , . . . . . - i j - uuiuu vua ucnu iuliuii ui 1119 my 114- eage indicates that the plains is a nj ln mrrirfnn n.hirh . . - . . " . . noise in tne corridors w men , icai .vncncnm as an N man of (Continued on Page 2.) iii n i. iii t : - . i way DdiiK wrien iuuiu ui the Ramsay at Meeting of Old Lettermen. Approximately 150 N men of Visualizing the rise of a new i archeology of the plains as a re sult of recent discoveries. Prof. Earl H. Bell, university anUiro- might need em " Ray Ramsay will give a wel coming speech at luncheon, and although the exact details of his subject have not been definitely ascertained, it will probably be a barren area around whose border we find a fringe of artifacts com-j mon in adjoining areas." Due in large degree to the discoveries of ! expeditions sponsored by the uni- ! versity and the State Historical Society, the plains are now recog nized as a fertile field for archeo logical research." Declaring that "American arch eology should occupy a position of prominence in the field compar able to Egyptian archeology," Prof. Bell stressed the fact that of the world's twelve staple cereals Fix were domesticated by the pre- i historic peoples of America, and that at the p.-esent time the Amer ican farmer owes 71 percent of his income to these contributions of his predecessors on this continent. Outlining his theories regarding the history of the prehistoric citv found nar Lynch, he declared that AT NEW FRIENDSHIPS Miss Bannister Speaks on Upper, Lower Class Friendliness. ' , LjJIlJ his orchestra, will provide enter- ; tainment and hilarity for the In- ! ! nocents Homecoming party in the ; j coliseum after the Missouri-Ne-' : braska game. Hallowe'en decora- jtions and implements of fun will i also be present at the affair which j ! climaxes a .weekend of Homecom- I j ing festivities. At intermission the j . award donating the winner of the ; house decoration contest will be j made. i Carleton Coon, the son of the famous Carleton Coon of Coon ; Sanders fame, tomes from such , . r" n 1 . : rfvciiL triifc;ci:triii!iia ai me irmirjii IWden S Company t Rated in Cleveland, the Lowry hotel in i St. Paul and the steel pier at At lantic City. By Students. First in Initial Review In the first of the cadet inspec tions that will be held weekly thru out the year, infantry's Company 'But to university students," said Ted Bradley. Innocent in charge of rallies, "the recent en gagements are not half as im portant as the fact that Carleton i Coon has appeared in U2 AS DATE FOR INITIAL TRYOUTS IN DEBATE Squad to Take Journeys to Kansas, Minnesota On '36 Schedule. With two trips Into Kansas and a probable journey into Minnesota Lincoln ! ahead of them, aspirants of the at present ex- u"uer "f""' OIU ' several times in recent years, and wuversuy aeoaie squads win soon cent by the ' thru to win flrst Place With a ' no doubt many have already I given positions and mformation y , 'rating of 61.7. Battery C under ! n!,-A . y,,a othor.tirk-Hnp- evn- I upon which to work. Nov. 12 haa because of the j Pin Hutton and Battery A COpation. These students know I set by Prof. H. A. White, - under CTantain Adams rdaced sec-i .: i . i I debate rnarh as th Aaxr fnr- t Iixed COSLS OI i C- . TiT f e a Vi iwnal- l'"a urt-UBu im-i w unci. f j -.'j- OULS. The first subject, which has been tentatively chosen, is: Resolved, long po wer-'ond and ,third 'llh 615 and 61 . i; ) respectively. A shininp- new cud will be respectively. ! awarded to the winner of the These inspections, to be made Homecoming decoration contest trans mission j i; ,..t,i.V. o incae ilia necessary with i Xatfd !kiy .by a member. of ; at the the Cadet SUff, intprmission. "So that lnai an eiectnc utilities should be is an innovation ; nf th. win he . governmentally owned and oner- F. i. ci nther. ably Lincoln Journal efficient h l i a Ttfanto ii 3 u . t..... . . .:i,,arl, ricnartuMint All . ... " ... ..n- til StAnm i nroh. " J i -. - cut our lnis CUD wii ppecilicaiiy : ably the most ' the results are to be publicly an-, awarded at the intermission," According to Prof. White, -books a n d : """"" wecR- 1LS lu Vince Jacobsen. chairman of the ; "v mreaay ueen piacea on re- an da low pressure turbine The first turbine used high pres (Continued on Page 2. TO LIBEL LAW To establish a basis for friendship between upper-class women and freshman girls is the aim of the Coed Coun selors, according to Marjorie Ban- "way back when." Charles Miller. gym director, and Eddie Bignell and Eddie Reynolds of the gym team will present a few minutes of tumbling and clowning. Oz Black, well known Lincoln cartoonist, will sketch caricatures of some of the honored guests present. Ely, Schulte in Charge. Coach "Pop" Schulte and Law rence Ely, in charge of Homecom ing arrangements, will be present j at the luncheon. j Because of the days game, i Allen Berkman to Soeak to Coaxjh D. X. Bible will not be able to attend the luncheon, but he will Iru-ilr in sin him n'9V river tn thp i ,,:,, stadium and bring with him all of! real, individual ... . , me senior niraiuei vi uie football squad to introduce to the Homecomers. This w: Lloyd Cardwell, Ron Douglas, neth McGinnis. Jack mosrmrmethS: 1 re- P? W e for the ball, J11 1 atPendencl'appn and"11 i . rr" form, attitude and bearing, man- SiStaL a ?'g.eS.SUrblne i uaL conduct of officers, and cshool Daily Nebraskan Staff Saturday Morning. of soldier, platoon or company. The Unit averages that were an nounced this week were: Field Artillery. Lt. Col Pearl, 58.63; Engineers, Lt. Col Parker, 56.75; and Infantry. Lt. Col. Bradley, 45.&5. Field Artillery Battery Av erages were H Battery. 58.5; Bat- itery A, 55.S: and the two placing j I batteries, B and C. Engineer I j Company Averages that were an-; ! nounced were Company A, 53, and 1 Companies B, C. and D, all 5S. ' Infantry battallion averages j were 54.73 for the 1st, 54.63 for the 2nd. and 28 for the 3rd. Com- plete infantry averages were ; Company A 56.5, Company B 50.95 STATE TEACHERS Tl serve in the university library for this question which will be de bated during the month of Decem ber. Because of the fact that this subject is also the state high school subject, additional copies of the official high school bulletins, which I contain complete bibliographies on j the question, are being obtained, j To Visit Kansas Legislature. I Four members of the university i squad are to be sent to the Stu ASSOCiatiOn Members Hear Legislative Assembly in the , . i house chamber of the Kansas state Ur. rretWell at ;capitolin Topeka. Dec. 10. "Altho Pnnupntinrt : no certain question is to be dis- isUiivciiiiuii. cussed in these sessions, various i bills bearing on public affairs will First district members of the Ne- ' be introduced," said Mr. White, braska State Teacher's association I "Members appear before commit -opened their annual three day sc-s- ; (Continued on PaEe 2.' don wjtn an aji toii cjiuuji uu- The law of libel - r 2T Oomnanv D the Cornhusker ballroom UUPTI TFIPMPPQ TfT in relation tp the I-yC wenjnr. teaf hers heard UU.I.A. ItAUHtHi lli VISIT FRENCH ALLIANCE Bcrk.nan has spent a good deal of at the time the city flourished.,.: ' ., .u Francis, Le MacDonald there was sufficient rainfall and 1 J ' ;u.. 1 c TIih Yelkin, president of the : KM tKl rf'M mrti ct i ir in 1 Yt iou.n . 1 vtu r aa'ill Am i iS Iacc v( t--r A ' tn h,.n,if, 'tu iedm-saay afternoon at 5 o clock.;-' .CZ v time in the preparation of an eight rnatic changes produced' auch e-! lo JZeTfrZt SriT ' captain for the W brief on Mb,! laws and sho,ld vere and prolonged drouth that the I lJ. t ,7 "Z i Saturday fray ' an . '" resting and valuable rte-ion was Jemidri t,f all i to PP"nt one of the Coed Coiin- ' exp anauon according to managing rtgion was oenuoea oi au ege-a. h HnHn 120 Ree.-vation to Date. , .f. -.i.-...... e o j rUJ UJJ 1)1 LJjr t UI rmnan her firBt year at the university." j Already ovtr 120 reservations j Berkman plans to devote roost r.jjiau.cu jwif-s ciniiii.cr, uu , nave oeen sen,- in jor iiw nome- 0f his tklta otoianis II in udo ,CC ' ""j-v. . ,, , -r.rtu rmsn,.iW. v. i- reiweii or , i... r .f i i . jiuitiii ' 'i j -r, . . , . . , .... . Ken-'y AJ,en cc"1Dla"' rl"ur 'aw u .n r- rl(i f-nmarmV k i university t-U about. -Jne ---- i . i - 1 rtm Mini A M I i Ual lira ij auj i - j v i and Virtril PKlea uliuy reporv-.ii -- - - - - The conclaves first gen v,.iK, staff at 10:30 Saturday morning. - , - nnpn.d in ln ,lni. Columbia , Amer- Model." tation. and the it of the city was buried undr a layer of wind eroded clay. The age of the city la indicated by the fact that vege tation has darkened the surface of the clay covering it to a depth of 32 inches during the centuries that have cJapeed since the great drouth." RELATED IN BULLETIN:?; was introduced by Barbara Meyer, coming lunrhejn and many more Cf his talk to pitfall awaiting re- chairxroui for this meeting. are expected. Thu far 12 honored j porters of the college press. His Other projects under the super- ! guests, N men who competed be- illustrations and warning ajsainjst Mice Vera RiOdOfl Serves aS vision of the Coed Counselors in- I tween the years 1911 to 1915 in- libelous material should be invalu-j . , elude the sponsorship of a dinner ; elusive, have made reservations. I able to tbe beginning reporter. I , EfJltOr 01 GeOQrapriy -i, .uuir.. u, . u. (Continued on Page 2. Managing Editor mpai stateo. j Dnhlilinn ra! ririb Invites Lincoln Guests rsitv coli-1 io Kcguiar jneeting This Evening. Featuring a discussion o:i th "French Interpretation of Amer- ty of Michigan u ho mt,r.nrofMsor vnrr,r.r Un. 11 diacusa "The Ne' Position of ... th svi, I tucauon in a a iionji f"'""- j meet this evening at o'clock in Dean F. E. Henzlik of the tf-ach-1 the home of Prof j R Wad). ers college will lead the evening worth( 3434 Orchard street. v-ission's open forurn on '"iouth: The meetinrs of thin oraniza- seum this morning with an ad dress of welcome from Chancellor E. A. Burnett of the univerwity. Principal speaker of the morr.irg 1 meeting will be J. B. Edmor.son of , the L'nivers filED TO SERVE AS HEAD OF GRADUATE TEACHERS Students Elect Stoneman As Vice President of Organization. Harold O. Paed, candidate for Pa. V. in 'ducaUon. was elected pifiderit of the graduate student body of teachers college at a re cent mtfting held in Ellen Srrutb ball. ileile Stotieman, another Ph. D. aspirant, was elected vice pre- camivaL a fall party for fresb- men women, and four hrbby 1 groups. Thin year the sale of ' Awgwan subscriptions haa been added to the program. Janet Lau will act as chairman of the next meeting of the A. W. S. and Marion Kidd will assist her as secretary- tion are Mitirplv rnnmirt-l in Sessions will be held both Fri- French and its numbers come day mon.ing and afternoon in the fTom the entire city of Lincoln, coliseum. I Both Prof. Wadworth. atsifLa-il A teaching unit on Indiana and j rnl,llrrnTrn Tn irrrun j proffcjisor in the Romance d-part-corn is the feature of the year's FRMrTlRTPR TO flTThNn ni Harry Kurz. 11 f f 1 I? . i first hrllotin of the Nebraska! " head of the romance department, 'rints of French Buildings;1 eJUy rlttS1 Ytom FWRIWFFR MFFT i emphaaired the fact that th. meeiing is 10 oe neia tnis eveunj so that teachers attending the Nc- Romance Department Shows W. S. WRITTEN TO TALK TO ALPHA KAPPA PSI'S Postcards Are Aid to Compliment Current Courses. Valuable ' Multicolored marble columns Kill AldJiJ -A ! .'."r na Theater in Aries, and the cathedral of '.. Trophine pictures Chapter of Geography j published recently. The unit out- ( ! lmes thf uses whtcn tne inoians helps are also included for the pre- cloisters with Komanesque and j (w,nu,lin of the jjfe anj customs Nimes, Golhi? can-ings. Callo-Koman ij, 1 cemetery of the Alyscamps shows AtTt-m and Avifnon C of C Secretary to SDeak Provence in southern France arecanea toirins m long ro ' yearly and contains articles which To Commerce Club This Evening. depicted in sepia and black and he ground, the old method of re of .x interest to geog whJte prir.ts in the postcards now ! burial. A museum of Roman ; ranhy teachers thruout the state on display in the library of the sculpture cntains the enus 01 , Vera Rigdon. instructor of Romance Language department -Aries wnicn conaioerea gecgraphy in the extension seme dert of the etoud. Thin i the! Walter S. Whi'ten. secretary Vf ; f,, ,,, fwiai inifrf-et nf dwimti i highly as the Venus de Milo- firrt time in the history of teach- i tbe Lincoln cham t of commerce, of 1 history. French civi- i Dedicated to the people of es college that the graduate body I mLU iu.u.v uu, 11 .nd Latin. Stones of Camarque. to preserve their folk ma'Je of corn and Sxiao snovii rne ; j-uicc uuivudujcs Aiiaugc vWa .' imrxirtant part which corn has had j Educational Conclave i,rAS"nlrtertediTth- Frenc i on Amt-ncan civilization. Teaching An one mieresteo in me hrent.i ai Lawrence. Picf. C. J. Fi ai.kforter. aAsori ate profefc4or of cherf.Lstry. has been Invited to address the Ne-braska-KanaaJi section of the So ciety Jor Promotion of Education of Er.ginet-rs at their meeting at the University of Kansas at Law rence, on Nov. H and 7. ProJessor of the Indians The bulletin is printed five times ; language Is uiged to attend SKLLKCK CLAIM j MISSOIKI CKOWI) BE 25A)M A ciowd of about 25,000 is expected to be In the stands for has established an organization. members and guests of Alpha Faculty of the graduate college ' Kappa Psl, professional commerce t re host to the advanced stu- fraternity. The group -ill meet dents. About 100 persons heard th B'Ll Theta Pi bouse at Dexn F. W. Upson, of the gradu- 7-3( o'clock. ate college, talk on the history of I Mr. Whitten -will discuss the V graduate education in the country. functions and activities of a cham- and Dean Frank Henrlik of tr 01 commerce, miin parucuiar iU editor havinz supervised tbeit, .', ' rrmnm.r thc Homecoming Missouri gam is taiwr. naving supervise lDC Frankforter has announwd his in-! eaturd,v iDhn V e,,!,.!, ticket compilation and printing of mate- ,,, ,v. .t , ssaiuraay, jonn iv neuecic, ucaei f v tcr.tion to attend the meeting. : manager, announces. Alphonse Daudet describing these j customs, the Mistral Museum vvas region of France are being read built in honor of MistraL French bv students in French 3. writer who strove to preserve the Remain of Roman buildings in j Provincial language through his Nimes show the Temple of Diana ; literature. in crumbling ruin now used as a 1 Avignon on the Rhone River i ir.g devices public park, the Augustus used as An added attraction appearing in the bulletin this year is a spe cial children' page. Here are in cluded freoz-rathv riddle, games. j plays and other interest rtimulat- TetrpJe of ; has as its places of historical in- Other contents are various an a museum ' terest. the pauce r tne I'ope. teachers college, discuss the place I reference to that of Lincoln, as ; housing a valuable coin collection. 1 the unfinished bridge cf Ft. and purpose of graduate work in i weli a the relationship of the jthe Great Tower built by Caesar' , Benetet, and the Fortress of the field of education. Lt. W. H j 1 o c a 1 chambers t the United i soldiers as a fortress, and a 1 Phillippe Le Bel across the Myrixm presided at the met-tics. States chamber of commerce. ( Roman aqued jct I Rhone. Kansas i-iat? university, tne t the crowd will about University of Kansas, and the , 200 "N" men and several hundred University of Nebraska are in- 1 011 grads returning to their aJma eluded In the Nebraska-Kansas j mater for the homeconunj fame section of the S. P. E. E. The rn- and festivities, glnetrs will be divldeded lrto scv- Good reserved scats are tUl era! round tb!e groups for ccn- available for the game, at the - . . , . a.aMA... A w m j . 1 J M . 1 OA A W. w nouncements and a history or tne . u-Ko. v- , ainur-j 'j Nebraska Slate Council of Geog-! ments. Profrssor Frankforter was . seats at $20. General admission rsphy Teachers which corses of ' askei to speak at the chemleal ' tickets will be on sal at 1 :0O age this year, celebrating the 21st eneir,et-ru)g round Uble confer- o'clock the day of the game for anniversary of its founding. Jnce. 11.10. i