PAGE I OUR TIIE DAILY NF.RRASKAN, SUNDAY. OCTOBER 31, 1937 h Johnny llotccll and Mary innn Cockle AS JOHNNY SKKS IT. Victory, anil again Nebraska is celebrating. Most of the whoopee was raised at tin; Corn Cob-Tis-sels Trucking Carn.Val at thi Col iseum last night although house parties, plagued and unplanned, pot a good play. Kappa Alpha Theta bore the brunt of this angle with fun reported in most corners. On Friday night pre-game pep was aroused at Chi O and the farmers formal. Begging for a little free adver tising this week is Mary Anna who I Rather is selling tickets for the Kosmet Klub Fall Review. Mary Anna has volunteered to re serve an entire section of Reals so that any who exchange the sheck els for a ticket cnn sit with her or near her. The Awgwan appeared Friday for the second time for the usual quota of very dry humor. l?y the way, what happened to "The iioamer Boys", Bins? Bill Gray, Delt, does a bang-up Imitation of Napoleon when feel ing so inclined. AS !URY ANN V SKKS IT Did someone say this week-end wouldn't be exciting? To start it all off the l'hi Dell's gave a shin dig Friday night so that everyone coidd see the famous Charlie's Place. The Chi O's did their part to liven things up, with the Alpha Chi's and Theta's not far behind. It wa.s a red letter evening for Pauline Walters, when she was chosen Farmers' Queen at Ag, and rm this campus Saturday was the night of the Corn Cob-Tassel af fair, and what a night! Of course the game just put everything else in the shade, and did you see that punt that Johnny directed toward the east grandstand? Someone near us almost caught it. ARF! ARF! The A. T. O.'s not only turn out well for hour dances, but they take their dog house with them and set it up at whatever house they happen to be. From then on it's just a matter of keeping on good terms with them, but, no matter, every dog has his day. CHANCELLOR, SEVEN FACULTY MEN SPEAK AT M'COOK TUESDAY (Continued from Page l.i ning is Prof. O. K. Kdison's ad dress on "Audible Light." The speech will be a demonstration of the principles of the photo-electric cell. Prof. Edison Is a member of the electrical engineering faculty. On Wednesday Miss Marjorie Shanafelt, curator of visual edu cation, will give an exhibition with the aid of Jier puppets. Prof. 1'wight Kirsoh, chairman of the fine arts department and a Ne braska artist, will present an illus trated lecture on "Seeing Color Around You." Profs. Joseph Alexis f the Germanics department and II. S. Ginsburg of the department Of the classics will discuss the European situation. Also on Wednesday will be the it exhibit and educational tour of the various pictures on display, conducted by Professor Kirsch in the public library.'Chancellor Bur nett will talk on "The University and the People" at the men's Sonsililr Saving shins finished for Only I Or with Bachelor Rough Dry Service "lvi lira iis Bp Your Yalvt" luncheon at noon. Other faculty members who will appear on the program are Prof. Herbert Ifenne of thp jlraninttes department and Prof. K. W. Lantz of the Teachers college. playersTto open in 'squaring the circle' on nov. 8 (Continued from Page 1.) to come out of the Soviet. Allho It was the first produced about eight years ago on the Russian stage, the farce is sldl a sell out in Mos cow, Leningrad, and other Russian cities. Its popularity, moreover, is not limited to tht country of its origin but it has been staged suc cessfully in Paris Vienna, Prague, Rome and other Kuropean capi tals. Some years ago it was pro duced in Germany by the interna tionally famous producer, Max Reinhart, and on Broadway the play won spectacular success. "Squaring the Circle" is now con sidered a brilliant addition to in ternational drama. Has Serious Side. A It ho it is w ritten in a spirit of broad farce, the Soviet comedy is not without its serious side. Thru the medium of a comedy about young people the Russian play wright shows one phase of life after the Russian revolution and takes many n dig at the, mistakes anil exaggerations of his country men. During its long run In New York the play stimulated wide dis cussion about Soviet conditions, divorce laws, utlitudes towards love, and other subjects. "'Squaring the Circle' will give students a perfect picture of Rus sian life and social conditions, not in the terms of bespectacled intel lectuals, but from the viewpoint of very human youth," was the state ment of Herbert Yenne, professor" in the depart men' of speech. RHODES SCHOLAR COMMITTEE NAMES FIVE CANDIDATES (Continued from Page 1.1 scholarships worth about $2,000 per year. Two Innocents Try. Murray, a senior in the college of Arts and Science, who is editor of the Daily Nchraskan this se mester, is a member of Innocents society and Sigma Delia profes sional journalistic fraternity. He was also a member of varsity de bate team. Marts, a senior in the college of business administration, has been active in the extra-curricular program of his college. He is a member of Kosmet Klub, secretary of Alpha Kappa Psi, and is a member of Innocents, Corn Cobs and president of the Delta Upsilon fraternity. Flory is also a senior in the college of arts and science and is a member of Chi Phi and Gamma c LASSIFIED ADVERTISING IOC PER LINE FOR SAI.K Formal tlres.ues ont white moire. mo Murk flat crepe, one wlvt and one livlit blue net. .Al size 14. pioil styles, mill in coi condition. Come and see them and make me a price. L'-'7 No. 31!nd. KINAI. orders from X to C WedneST d'iy. Meanwhile watch all hamburger stand for clues. The (roose hani;fl liiKh, except on .Sunday night. Our Rental Department Features SAFETY-RENT-A-CARS Reasonable prices. Always open. Fords, Chevs., Willys. MOTOR OUT COMPANY B6819 1120 P 6t It pays to buy good clothes even though they cost a little more. They look better so much longer. It pays to send them to The Evans for Dry Cleaning for the same rcn -and this costs you no more! Lambda fraternities. Both Kalten bom and KoberU were nominated last year by the university com- mittce as Rhodes scholar candi dates from this Institution. Kal tenborn is doing graduate work in business research and has been appointed a graduate assistant. He is a member of Gamma Lambda, Phi Beta Kappa and PI Mu Kp.si lon fraternities, ltoberts, who is not in school this semester, gradu ated from the college of arts and sciences last year, majoring in his tory and law.' He is a member of Delta Upsilon and when in school was a captain of an H. O. T. C. regiment. 'Protecting Somebody's God dam Oil Wells, ' Not National Defense Object of R.O.T.C. Says S. D. Butler. (Continued from Page 1.) . you guys how to fight when they only work on you once a week for four semesters. These innocent baby faces, Holdlers? God help us!" The general said he had nothing against optional military training so long as the people of America would put an amendment In the constitution which would forbid the transporting of American boys outside the boundaries of the United States. He described the fear that this country might be Invaded as "absurd." "By the time I C rtrf aimer W- AW": ' 01 ' Y . Mmk 1650 of I 1 Don't envy your roommate because she spends all her spare time on the telephone . . . because she is escorted to classes by the Football Team . . . because her life is one round of gaiety. Join the fun . . . Invest in one of the cute little Cartwright's that Martha Gale designed, and they'll have to Install a 'phone with a blind number In your House. Clever StyLs the enemy has sailed all the way over here, they would be too weak to fight. You don't gain any strength by riding on a bont 5,000 miles," he added. No Training to Defend Home. "Your morale is better when you fight n war of actual defense," the general averred. "It takes nlxmt six months to make a good enough soldier out of a twy for him to successfully defend overseas oil wells, and to shoot somebody he hasn't anything against. It takes about one day for him to learn how to defend his wife and babies. That was what happened in the Revolutionary war when 2.r2 American farmers whipped the hell out of 1,200 British redcoats." Not always was General Butler such an avowed supporter of peace and non-Intervention. Joining the army at 16 to fight in the Spanish American war. he has had one of the fullest military careers of any living rtian. Questioned as to what brought about his change in atti tude, Butler declared: "After I got TYii:vim i:iks Haircut .... 50c terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. 12 St. B2157 Lincoln, Nebr, Join the Fashion Sponsorec Cartwri jberianeJ L Wjarllia Gale up high enough In the service so I could see the whole situation at a glance, 1 had to change my Ideas. It was too damn silly." Sheer irony- freshman at the University of Michigan are no longer required to wear "pots." But the das of Ml has donned them again in an effort to unify the class in order to win the class (fames from the sophomores. m:v deal ItAIIIIKIt SIIOI All standard makes fnr tals or rent. Used and rebuilt machines on any 1306 "O" B6154 ONLY 26 DAYS Left to bake Pictures for the Campus I Parade I For Cartwright's are the frocks that simply do things to you. They make you the Ideal of all the campus heroes . . . the darling of Fraternity row. For Cartwrights were de signed especially with you in mind . . . and they're modeled for the Junior figure, and have all those little touches that make them young and gay and startling. Kampua Korner Third Floor