r m ht1 s X A 1 JLJU Sarah P - f j vol vn. N. 2a Louise bTSs. J IV r"i W APPLE OPENS CSL,J! TPIIPIflM' DIUAI DV i uiuuiun nvm. EBRASKAN Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska LINCOLN. MLBHASKA, TUESDAY. OCTOBKU 26. I.t7 nu:i: nvi: ci-ms AT COB CARNIVAL i Corn Cob-Tassel Novelty Party Halloween Eve Draws Interest. li v Arc Wollcrc If the great Wcstbrook Tcqter vondcrs why there are column ists, as he recently did, and ad mits that it Is hardly possible to go on day after day writing "oracular articles"' about this and that, surely some of us Icss-than-grcats should give our selves a bit of serious pause. Why columnists? Whence? Wherefore? We have romo to know by city editorial comment, by pencilled! "Truck to the left! Truck to lot tor. by wok! of mouth, by in- right! Swing high! Swing- low! ference -that not a few poisons I Suv.y-Q! Shine! Praise AUnh!" have serious doubts about the Such big apple calls as these value of a certain front page col-: Wjll 00no thruout the coliseum umn in "one of the student publi-1 next Saturday night when Corn cations." And objections have boon : busker students get into the swing voiced on almost every class of 1 of the gala Corn Cob-Tassel topic treated therein. j "truokin' carnival." The carnival There have been many storms , sponsored jointly hy the two pep over sex columns which are far j clubs will climax ' the evening's nnd away the most closely read, j entertainment following the Indi Ihe most widely read, the most ' ana-Nebraska intersectional clash, talked about, and also the most j Professional Dancers Judge. ( 'O'ltriiiin'iiii'ii, I 'i ' i hi lit i iv. i hi 1 1 ( has been violent issue taken with treatment of religious or philos ophical subjects. There has been hotness-under-collnrs over accusa tions of an ideationless student hody and faculty. On the Other Hand. Our most thcuqhtful, most earnest piece of writing was met with "out of place in a front page column." Our moEt care fully turned out piece had, so far as we can determine, one reader. A Kappa complains "You're too deep for me." An in tellectual opines, "You're shal low." It all adds up to zero, by a sim ple process' of cancelling one com ment against another. So with a how to the. motto, "The customer Is always right," we went out ; gunning for tome theories of our' own and better minds on colunin izing. I Nothing But Truth. The Columbia University Tress suggests that these arc columnists because "there are comparatively few people who do not want to be given the low down on things. They don't want to be bothered with information which is not pre cise and winnowed. They only want truth, and they go to the people who sec iii to have an end lcs:! supply of it." Surely'this is one function of a eclumn, whether our wo. thy publishers recognize it as valid or not. Us common folk can't and won't sift endless evidence of pros and cons in the ap proved academic fashion. We want a statement that some thing is so by an authority we feel wc can truct. The souls with out access to Hills and Arndti and Guilfords and Lymans must rely on columnizing specialists. Few student real columns, how ever, are very learned. Most pop- ular niches ro'itain, ihiefly. an ni formal dissertation on lnauline stories and headline personalities Rules for the "truekin' " contest, as announced by members of the carnival committee yesterday, are that all couples will start with the big apple dance. A jury of Lin coln professional dancers will judge the novelty craze and elimi nations will be made before the "truekin' " proper starts. Prizes will be awarded the winners of the "truekin" contest hy the judges who will select the winners on thei rhnrmony, poise, rhythm, and general dancing ability. "Truekin'" alone won't be the sole feature of the Corn-Cob Tas sel carnival. Ted Adams anil his hot rhythm 11 piece colored orchestra will provide the proper musical background for the carni val atmosphere. The entire coli seum will be transformed into as complete a resemblance of a back street carnival on Hallowe'en Eve possible. Booths covered with dec orations will line the dance floor (Continued on Page 2 Lawyers' Dignity Takes Beating as Derby Circulates Some smart citicks are pulled about the dignified College of Law and some frightfully dumb ones too. Seniors and freshman alike may be the source of the latter kind but only the the humble fresh men are awarded, by tradition, for the simple remarks they make. Meritorious indeed must be the lower classman who is allowed to wear, hy vote of his classmates, the. familiar brown derby which identifies him as the author of the bon mot of the week. This year's Brown Derby will run from this weekend to that time in the second semester when the hat mysteriously disappears (is thefted, if you like). It should be a very good Derby this year for when freshmen bought the green Homburgs which are their special head gear this year each one paid 50 cents as his share of the one and only Brown Derby. Frosh Class Prexy Wears. The president of the freshman class will wear the Derby until a likely candidate shoots out from the ranks. Sometimes the Derby is given just on general principles but more often for a specific naivete. Some of the printable ones (Continued on Tape 3.) DR. JOHN D. CLARK TO TALK AT BIZAD T THURSDAY Dale Nichols IWtravs Nebraska Seenes in Vivid Water Colors. Oils on Exhibition in Morrll Hall Council President, Scott, To Announce Winners Of Awards. Dr. John D. Clark, formerly a member of the university faculty, will be the main speaker at the annual university college of busi ness administration honors dinner .) AT FRIDAY ELECTION Edmond Dudek Discusses Charles University In Prague. I '..'' j Its a j, I A' 1 IhWlHMli 1MrtftWWQtfc'' ft- ytt Gy Barbara Meyer. Thirteen long, very long years ago, a grim-faced family and an equally grim-faced young man hade one another farewell in the terminal of the Chicago and North western railway at Omaha. This in truth, constituted more than a parting with his immediate family. It was a farewell to Nebraska and the many cherished friends who had gathered about him during' those first 20 years of his life With very much the same be wilderment which Alice must have COLL-AGRl REVUE j SKIT FILINGS END ! nun s rTrrninrm mi tun mu inn M I IIV III I Ulll IVVI 1 experienced in Wonderland, he stepped off the train in Chicago, and from there on bis turbulent career began. The significant part of his whole experience is that he did not forget his native land. Ne braska, and what he has achieved belongs increasingly to Nebraska, and the honors that accompany it belong to Nebraska. Slate-Blue Twilight Scene. Dale Nichols has on exhibition in I Morrill hall a group of oils and water colors done between 1027 and 1037. His works are highly realistic and vivid with color, the paintings of snow and blue winter skies having great depth. Out standing in the exhibition are "A Nebraska Winter," depicting; the slate blue of a Nebraska twilight and the breathless still of the winter eve; "The Cold Wave." which carries as its theme a Ne braska farm in the winter and the red barn, plastered with the sign familiar to all travelers. "Dr. 1 Pierce's Favorite Prescription for IYMCA launches ! DIRECTORY SALES CAMPAIGN TODAY i 1937-38 Student Handbocl; Adorned in Scarlet. Cream Cover. r.cing placed on sale this morn ing at the various bookstores and at. booths in the Temple and Social Science buildings, are sixteen hundred copies of the 11)37-38 Stu dent Duectoiy, annual publication of the University Y. M. C. A. which lists the names, addresses, and phone numbers of all stu- , dents and faculty members. Larger this year by 200 copies, the diicctory is also unique in that. it appears Tor the first time in Nebraska colors. A red cover with I silver-white lettering. The direc tory was finished sooner this year Women;" and "Kire in the Nig-hA," than ever before. Kditor Jerry Wil- - c'nurli-sy Lincoln Journal DR. JOHN D. CLARK. Manager More That Houses Acts Immediately. i tragedy of the rural areas. Included in the exhibition is also RCGUCStS a display of Graphic arts, and Mr. " 1 Nichols b:-,s on disnl;,v n cronn of GCCjin i modern advertisements which .show the technique wmen mis won nun fame in the commercial field. 4000 State Public School Instructors to Attend Convention Here. Five days a week. 270.0.10 young Nebiaskans trudge to school to learn their a. h. c's: their readin', ritin' and 'iithmetic: their geog raphy, history, Knglish and soci ology. Once each year H.fiOO of their teachers tneet in general sos sions. compare notes, hear educa tors of national renown, try to "Mnstlv they are conversational, un-, una answeis 10 ine perplexing pretentious affairs with emphasis problems which beset the public n the behind scenes done and m- , loo teacher. dividual angle thereon. A sort of On Thursday, .iot-,,1 r..r iho nru-s columns as it! Ut'day ol this I r - were. 1 Poiiictiines such copy is more, noteworthy for the way the ma-. Wiiil i.s treated than its actual 1 content. Many years of widc-ryed 1 wonder at great big New York have kept O O. Mclntyre in pay dirt. The WiiKhcllisms rather than; the Key Hole gossip that prompts; them make The Mirror's Walter; widely read an, I quoted. In count-' Ws other cnlumils it's the person-1 nlity of the writer, rather than his writings that count. And such .typewriter pnnishcis are not to be is-offcil at. Anyone who has a per-! 'penality that lends well in all sorts ;of editions of an kinds of papers )lay in and day out earns his big jruoney, ! 1 Try All Three. j It is highly possible th.it a j J V'cll rounded columnist should 1 ; he learned, with the common ! touch, and a personality smi'-;. IWere he so, he'd be a beautiful j I phenomenon, and sliqhtly inl-u- irnan. And then he'd be a no-ac- count eoiumnlst. For it is eir ! Jworse than worthless opinion ; tth.it a columnist's chicfest as- "set Is his human frailty. -.4 The news columns of a paper.' m JVleally. present Uie i.icis. m m impersonal aim impn u.u i". lis possible. They aim to tell the rlraight goods -at hast all of it they could prove in court. Fea tures present, more or less fac tually, the news behind the news: P.aekcround, explanation, opinions on the material. Columnists to one more step In humanizing the new. They give hiphly personal Hants on anything and everythiiiR. In which, because they are human, they are allowed a wide margin of rrnr. So why columns? r.ccaii.ie peo ple hke to be entertained with the thoughts of a "different person alily" be he right or wrong, lo calise people like huni:ini7ation (r their news. Hccaune people like fouieone who, like themselves, will m out on a limb, for better or tor 'orse. and, like themselves, some 'liur.s be woiae. Trail flesh like 'beii'd. And, ladies and gents, frailty, thy name is woman. Friday and Sni vel k nunc 4.0(1" public school teachers, members of the First Nebraska district, will invade Lincoln for their annual conference and will attend general meitings in the university seuni. Philosopher, Senator Speak Anions th; list of pio!nincnt speakers are Philosopher Will Dur ant. of ('ireat Neck, N. Y.; ('en. Smedley D. Butler, retired, former commander of the V. S. marine corps; Historian Mary II. Heard of New Miltord, Conn ; Senator Ccrald f Nye of North Dakota, ami I'd'icator J. B. Na:.h of New i Continued on rage Edward Vaeek became president of the Comenius club, university Czech orpanization, at the Friday evening election held in the Tem ple theater. Anna Ach was elected vice president; Lillian Blazkovec, secretary; Evelyn Ripa. treasurer; Charles Hranse, guide; Libby Blazkovec, reporter, and Mrs. Miles J. Bicuer, sponsor. Following the election of offi ces, the group was addressed by Edmond Dudek, psychology lab oratory assistant and a member of the Couieniiis club, who has recently returned from a year's study in Czechoslovakia. "In Czechoslovakia." Mr. Dudek stated, "students nni!:t pay for the I rivi lege of taking their semester examinations." No Compulsory Attendance. Students of the Charles uni versity in fragile, which Mr. j Dudek attended, are not compell'2 I to attend their clars meetings in order to pass the course for all J students are entirely on their own on the campus. They arc allowed to "cut" every (lass with the exception of the first and Inst meeting of the term. The Chechoslovakian govern ment is very interested in educa tion, and many government schol arships, based upon need and i Continued on Page 2.1 j to be held Thursday evening at 6:30 in t'.-.c main dining room of the chamber of commerce. High ranking students and win ners of several scholarship prizes will 'aim be announced at the ban quet which will be presided over by Quinn Scott, of North Bend, who is president of the executive council. Feature of the program Thurs day evening will be the awarding of the ten William Gold keys to the sophomores who ranked high est during their freshman year. Dr. K. S. Fullbrook of the Biz Ad faculty will announce new mem bers elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary fraternity of the (Continued on Page 4.1 Five o'clock today is the dead line for all filings of the Coll-1 Agri-Fun Revue skits. Filings are! to be made in Dean Burr's office. ' Al Nore is manager of this year's skit. Selection of skits and curtain acts which will compose the 1."7 Revue wil! be made at tiyouts scheduled by members of the Coll-Agri-Fun board. Mcnioeis of the board who will make up the .nidg ing committee include: Al Nore. chairman; Timline Walters, Ray Kruse, Lois Lichliter. Peggy Pas coe. and Carroll Gaicy. All organizations should have their plans well under way before Biz Ad M tni8tll's deadline. Norte stated. in orner inai acis may e as complete as possible when tryouts begin, we arc asking that skits be organized immediately." The usual custom of awarding a trophy to the winner and S30 in prizes for the runnerups who excel in the show Nov. 10. will be followed. LENTZ TO GIVE FLUTE . i Y.VV.C.A. HOLDS FRESHMAN MEETING THIS AFTERNOON Short Talk, Group Discussion Will Feature Program Today. All I re.hineii and transfer Mo di i, Is on the Ag i Hiipus are urged to attend a meeting of the Ag lieshman comii'is.'lon this nfter liocci. Sponsored by the V. W. C. A , the medings are held to orien tate freshmen and new students, and to get Ihdu accpiainted with the various phases of the univer sity. Talks on "Why we came to col lege" will occupy the fore pru t of the inieting, and afterward there will be n groi p discussion of rules of courtf fy Helen N'ovacek, lead er of the freshman council, will preside over the meeting which will be held In the Home Kc par lors at 4 p. in. Fifth Music Convocation Features Program Of Director. I'an A. Lcntz. new dirret"i of t hi- school of music's instrumental activities, will resent a flute re cital Wednesday afternoon at lh--fciloiti'.s fifth v.el(ly music con vocaunn He will be tssisled by Mr. Ernest Harrison, pianist. The i program, follows: ' Handel : Milhaud ill four parts, will be as :'oliata. (' Mr Lei. ft. Debussy llelnif.. , ' II'. Chaiilinade Mr, Saint Saens. . ivhiir.fy (iodard .... Mr I L-i I risen C . Li-ntz major S'.-intme . . Voiles '!;n.;tii Is inccrtiiio FRATERNITY THERS District Court Paroles Youth for Three Year Period. .lohn Hutton. IS. Lincoln, pled 'guilty in district court Saturday ! to a charge of breaking and en tering in connection with the rob- beiies of five fraternity and so- rority houses, and was paroled for j three years by District Judge I ! Broady, ' Hutton admitted entering the Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Nil fra ! trinity houses and the Delta Delta 'Delia. Alpha Delta Theta, and I Kappa Delta sorority houses be tween Aug. 10 and 1 fl, l'C". He ISP id that he had entered the Sig ma Nil hoii-e on two occasions. A large amount of property was taken, most of which has been re covered and returned. ; Hutton was arrested on Aug. 10 and bound over to district court, where he received his parole on Oct. 2.1. riiix Uc Tiiloi Offers Coed Ten Popularity llinls (oils of Hunter college. New Yolk may n iw receive instruction in iitamici .s. Mrs. Katharine Meigs, din-dor of the Postal Telegraph Service iFlupiettel Bui-can will teiuh the course. A women's col- Hcppner to Sponsor Convocation Oct. 27 There, will be no freshman A. W. S. meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 27. In its place a convo cation tor freshman women will be sponsored by Miss Heppncr. There is no change in the schedule for next week. Donations From Communist Heads Help Living Conditions. Km ploying- the current exchange rate between Russian rubles and American dollars. Dean J. K. Le Rossignol of the business adminis tration college states that the av erage Russian laborer cams from $10 to !?12 per month, therehy elapsing himself lower, financially, than the poorest American work man. Government Gives Pension. Only the donations of the com munist government toward eas ing the lives of the Red masses enable those masses to survive as well as they do. Thru the medium of government, the population re ceives free medical service, free education, holidays with pay. low housing costs and rental fees, health resort service, and various tonus of pensions. Economy is Hams attributed its earlier comple tion to belter cooperation on the part of fraternities and sororities in furnishing menibeiship lists, and in the prompt checking of name-lists by individual students. Ag Sales Wednesday, Sales of the directory on the Ag campus do not begin until tomor row morning. They will bo. man aged by Ward Bauder, Y. M. C. A, secretary for the Ag campus. A selling booth will be maintained in the Activities building. Priced at 50 cents a copy, th directory lists jpersonal informa tion about every student, registered in the university. This includes the student's name, street address, tel ephone number, rank in school, home town, and his allihation with Greek letter societies, if any. PLAYERS 10 STAGE 7 First Year Men to Dis( Monroe Doctrine In Tryouts. Freshman compel it ion Long debate trophy will Thursday evening. Dec freshman man who has any debate at the V lot the, he held ; 2. "Any: not had Diversity ol , Nebraska or at any other urn-j versity and is carrying 12 hours is eligible for the tryouts." stated Prof. II. A. White, debate coach. The subject will be the Monroe Doctrine. j Reference books concerning: the .question were placed on rcerv ' sit the library. Monday. PreC iW'hi'e announced that bibliog 'raphies have been placed on the bulletin hoard at Andrews 111. ' Anv eiiiiy may secure one there. practiced thruout the land. witiiif,,.p entire families otteii living in a single room. Most Members of Family Work. ; With the average workers sal- ary approximately 200 rubles per I ClOllin, ruin l.irvuij, nil', iipii.w,' ' i lion the fact that most of the i members of n family work, the USS following puces seem rather high. ! Taken from a book written by Sir j W'plter Citrine. Knglish labor I leader, the puces read as follows: Winter overcoats, made of shoddy ! material. 225 to .",'i(J rubles or ab- 'Squaring the Circle" Op:r.: Week's Run in Temp': Novembers. Hi nuc life in Russia, -al.i 1 by a Russian, is the theme of II new Vniversity Players : l:o . , "Squaring the Circle." which vr. i announced yesterday by Miss 11. Alice Howell, director of the P'.;.y- as the November offonr.,; of the actors, Cast of the play, which will opc i Nov. , will not be made public un til the end of the week. "Sqmn ing the Circle," written by Valen tine Tp.yrv, reveals what the Rus sians think of communism. Tim nlav was first presented on '.he I Russian stage he fore it appeared, !veiy successfully, on Broadway. most two months wages I Continued on Page men s i l WAA. FILLS THREE I 'Council Entertains Sports Board. Instructors At Picnic. Misses Burn, Kovanda. Grant Replace Rcsigninn Officials. Pa V!' ii" .Syrinx , .Allegretto mi: yi;atiii;i Sorry, but the weather man has nothing more exciting to of fer for last night and today than fair and cooler. Mostly cooler last night. AcUerlisers Promise Slmlenls In Sae Teelli. Kriemls, Sleep, ( miles, Kvcryllun Bui Money Student Obtain IMioto At Ki-gUlrur't Office Photot taken it the first of the semester are ready for dis tribution to students who call tor them at the registrar's ot. flee in Administration building, room 103, and who present their Identification cards. Agricultural college student may obtain their pictures in room 202, Agricultural hall. I It s iiihi-i Using that makes wheei of modern industry round. It's advertising that en allien us to dress and prepare properly for Friday evening dates, jand it's the hame advertising thai depl -le.i papu'a pockctbook. I As an institution devoted to i "saving." advertising rivals the fedi ini banking dyntt-m. Kools iuve your throat, I.'aniela save your dig-estion, Fleisehman's yeast mv your complexion, Squibb' Dental Cream save your teeth, ably ahited by Colgate. Pepso dent, etc.. Ivory Flake save your linperio, .lohn Hancock Mutual Life Insurance company, Ine. help hv the bept years of a boy'Sjlifc, the Kclvinatiii saves your food, l.is goilrrine saves your hair, Kallcc- Hajf coffee ni-.es your sleep, Col gate Dental Cream and Lilcbiioy save you your friends, '-specially gill (or boy l friends. Tli.t only thing that advertising will riot help the buyer save it, money. Aid to Lumberjacks. This marvelnu nM to mankind doe more than help him 'save." Lumberjack should park a set of Gillette blade for they "clear away the forest." F.quatorial ex plorer dhoulr) drink rabRt "to be cool " i Singularly enough Tabst I recommended for Arctic explorer i (Continued on Tne .1.) lege, the New Yolk university boasts 12.0110 girls eligib'e for the course. J Ac'C-luig that "You can'l teach men. They are nlwuys sure tliey re ! right." Mrs. Meigs offer tlieip ten I commandments for working girls. 1. Thou shalt not ever use scented powder ai a substitute for soap and water. 2. Thou chalt not wear flashy , clothes, screaming colors, re- qardlers of what the Duchess of Windsor has selected for parties. 3. Thou shalt no put on ! make up like Thcda Barda in I "A Fool There Was," nor per- j fume thyself so that strong men ' reel when you pass, j 4. Thou muct not talk too j freely keep gossip tor thy pri- ! vale life. j b. Thou must keep thy lovt : life outside the office. i 6. Thou musl not necessarily leap like fire horse at the alarm when 5 o'clock comet. 7. Thou must speak clearly and distinctly accurately. 8. Thou must not be emotional or oversentltivc or get thy feel Inga hurt. 9. Thou must do thy work thoroughly. Fear not to say; ''I don't know." It's the way to learn 10. Thou must not think men In the office are making pascet when they are only being civil. Do not make passet yourself. Applicable to working girls, these rule might prove of value to the plou and humble college girl. mi; SERVICES SERIES TODAY John J. Lodwith to Discrss 'Significant Liviiu-' In First Lecture. the Jehu .1. Leilwith will opi n Y. V C. A. vesper series t h e tures eiititt-d "Significant Living" at the Y. W. Vesper service to be iheld at Kllen Sn.it h hall this nitei ' noon at five. Selmn Hill will in troduce Mr. Lei'.with ,vho will , speak on "Significant living from a I Lawyer Viewpoint." Othr Ice- lure of .this reries will concern living from Hie viewpoint of a : hou;:e wife, business man. profen- sor. an I prolcfisional man. Three lev.-iiinr-. one on ',!'.. W. A. A. coiinei: ami two on tlif sports board, wne made tins week as a if suit (i. the resit-nations of meni hcr. formerly Imldinf; the positions Takiiii; fie p!,ic- ol Harriet .lacks'on. co,",co.N.,ons manager who is no longer in school, is llonnie limn who worked under her as a.-.Nistant concession Manager. Hel en Knvanda w.-s c:e,'te, ly the council to Ml Miss Hum's place IX :..::..!..;. I I....J.... On the sports board a position was made vacant when Maxim; Wert man who was head of the W. A. A. rifle cluh, dropped school. Lorraine Grant has Ircn elected to fill her place. CJernldine Wal lace is takins over the duties of Nebraska hall h'-ad on the .sports hoard, vhich was left open when Helen Kovanda, previous head, was elected to the council. Chili and popcorn eaten hrfois i a roaring fireplace will be the biil of fa.Y when thf W. A. A. counnl I cntert riins members of the W. A. A. s; ::; hoard, club beads and 1 phy. old education instructors at a piece Wednesday ever.it.g Meeting in front of Grant Me ; iitnriii I at o o'clock. Hie group will 'ride nut U the V. A. A. c.'ihin least ol town where the picnic will ; be In Id. Mrs. Haw kins, cook at : Kllen Smith, is in i barge of buying and pi epanng t he supper. Arrangements are being mad to entertain ?,'. i The picnic is being he'd lor the purpose of getting W. A. A. ; together. If successful, the head out;! will be made n regular al'f.ii. . OF 1936 TO SHOW HERE Student French Club Brings 'Carnival in Flanders" to Varsity Oct. 30. hick rol r avs Minor r;ir tr ------- 1 i In I Loatrs IUmI. Yellow. Orange, Claims Dr. 1. J. VtnA urmnn Willi the cominc ot the fall sea son and the daily coloring of the landscape, the Nebraska eiiinpiiN Is again passing through that in teresting phenoiiu-nor. wh.c'i inch year is responsible fur turning the ouk leaves red, Hie a.-iln s and elms yellow, certain of Hie maples orange urid purple and the native prairie grasat-a into an in.spuing riot of color. Popular belui' has it that .lack Frost is Mother Na ture redecorator. Cold weather, however, has a r-iinor part to play in the I if frosts were to hold off lifter Christinas, leaves Would still I go through the same color pro Igression that tins commonly been ! n.Hscciateil with Hie first ii 1 imces of frost. I le nays:. Green Pigment DcornpoLo. . "Cold weather MiUilidly li-iul.-i In ' slow down the tile uctivitliS ol lull plants ami with this sliowing up conies decomposition of 1 he i ehlorophvll - 1 he creen pigment in hut, the leaves which serve ns a ren n. i sitizer and enables the plant tin tual changing of color, av Or. ,n- n '"''' R. J. Tool, chairman of the de-! fsetu.ing its food. Chlrn-ophvl is psrtmcnt of botany at the tnivei- 1 complex combination oV various of Nebraska, in laet, even l (.Continued on rase 2-) lty The world's finest piclure of; I'i.'H'i. "La Kermessc i leroiiic. ' will lie shown at Hi o'clock Sat urday iiiurnin;:. Oct. "(). at lii Vaisily theatre under the sponsor ship of Hie University French cli.'i. Adjudged the world's best by a.'l mil il 1 inlcriinl ioind committer the pic- lure received first prize. , ; "Carnival in Flanders," which ii the Knglish title, ran for the bettor icar- 'part of one year in New York , Arli licclly peitecl, the lilm was Produced in Trance in the l-'rcii.-ii ian''ii:i''e Willi I'nclch subtitles. The t'diii Will bo iiiterciitii'ig 10 a widely varying, audience oral with the resume and sublines enn be understood without difficulty by those who do not understand French. Tickets will be 2. cents miles ! purchased with th.- ticket for the film 'Ta.'teur" which will be shown I Dec. 11. Tirketg for the two plays cost 40 cents.