FIVE DAILY NKMIASKAN Alumni clubs may finance scholarships i. Plan would also give needed assistance in equipping departments The university will gain much reeded equipment and scholar ships from the alumni clubs if a plan presented Tuesday by E. F. Du Teau, alumni secretary, works out successfully. Deans of the various colleges are assisting Du Teau in compil ing a list of outstanding needs in their departments, such as books, scholarships, equipment, graduate work and even funds for profes sorships. These will be listed as projects for alumni clubs over the country, and will range in price Si K. U. sends ill students to $175,000 hospital Boasting a completely equip ped hospital, whose price tag reads $175,000 and whose faci lities include accomodations for 265 bed patients, an operating room, laboratory and X-ray ap paratus, and an expertly trained staff of physicians and nurses, th University of Kan sas presents an extended health service to its incoming fresh men and returning upperclass nen this year. from $25 to $1,000. Alumni office prepares leaflet. The alumni office will prepare a leaflet listing all of the projects, copies of which will be sent to all alumni club and zone officers. Ac cording to present plans, clubs will be given the opportunity each year of choosing any one or more of the projects. "Such a program will provide Nebraska alumni clubs with an op'portunity to perform an import ant service to the university," Du Teau Btated. "By sponsoring these projects graduate groups will be providing the institution with much needed equipment and financial assistance which would otherwise be lacking." . Du Teau suggests methods. Du Teau suggested that the clubs raise funds for the projects by holding dances, carnivals, etc. The university, he said, now has about 40 active alumni clubs, with particularly large and strong or ganizations in New York City, Rochester, Chicago, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Washington. D. C, Kansas City, Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Den ver and Pittsburgh. Tickets (Continued from Page 1.) small part of the 29,000 seating capacity will be left. No knot holers will he admitted to the Minnesota game. Drawings soon. All students desiring tickets should turn in their money on the 25th at the athletic office in the coliseum. Drawings will be made by the DAILY NEBRASKAN edi tor immediately thereafter, and the reservations will be given out on the following day. 'Reporters7 of fashions make plans Twenty fashion-minded misses gathered for luncheon Monday noon to ponder over the problem of what the smartly dressed coed will be wearing to football games, fall house parties, forma Is, or just every day about the campus. The organization of fashion re porters from various sorority houses dates from last fall when Helen Severa called them together to make the rounds of the local stores and report their findings to Sartor Jewelry Co 1301 "O" Street Phone 2-3616 'Sister' Counselors to meet new wards Coed Counselors will hold a mass meeting Friday afternoon at 4:00 in Ellen Smith. They will receive the names of their "Little Sisters," whom they will help thruout the coming year. Counselors will contact these freshmen girls over the week end, carrying out their purpose of trying to increase friendship between upper and under class women, and affiliated and un affiliated women. Cornhusker (Continued from Page 1.) photographers for many years, will again do the photography work on the book. "Rates will be the same as they have been in the past," the business manager said, "and the photography will begin sometime in October." The exact date will be announced later. All juniors, seniors, and mem bers of organizations are among those the staff at present plans to represent with individual photographs. Group pictures will not be taken until later in the year. :ven a Railroad Spike cant "take if lilie this Jewel of a Parker Pen SAYS THE RAILROAD SPIKE IN ONE OF THE S TORTURE TESTS I WAS CHIP PLED FOR LIFE BY FERRIC CHLORtDe (ACID) SOLUTION. t w y v y a V Ik V J- mtrk on the AiROW dip Guannrc4 tot Life. GUARANTEED for LIFE (oaolntt varyflilng aacapt km or Intwrfienol doataffa) We're using more than 2 SO eolkge papers to tell ktudrnti of the S devaa tatinff and -drvitAlizinf frata recently performed by the Parker Vacumatic to prove it will last for life. No other pen T know hat ever faced such torture. Yet the Parker Vacumatic did it can do it ar.r time and oxoe forth in per fect working order. 1 1 r Peat irrW! uh tb hint D.imood r aaraeed (or tl life of rt owaer tttin eicrytii.oir ettept km or immitooiJ diroite. wbica oelr to a chirrr at iU tot tKur. uitrai.c aed bttxilim. prortded to&picw pea it reniroed tot arrmc. let filed wrtk Acai (itroif ferric chloride tolutioo which ate away rail road spike) instead of with ink, this in credible pea wrote S mile line with the acid on a revolving paper-covered drum and finished in per fect working order. FfhV foo ro 1250 aa SAYS THE PAAK.E R VACUMATIC V WAS FILLED WITH THE SAME ACID 'WROTE ALL DAY 'A S' MILE LINE' AND I'M JUST AS GOOD AS EVER.1" 2i4 "Bak- Tttt: Parker's Dia phragm filler encased in an oxygen bomb FOR WEEKS, where a single day equals 6 months' normal age to prove its kmc We. 3rd "DectraortiaV: Every Tarter Diaphragm proved 100 leak -proof by exposing it to 5.000 volts of electricity v bich flashes red light if there's even pinhole leak. t "Drif Tt$t": Pens filled and hung points down for hours in frigid temperature, then in torrid temperature. 5 1 Cropped 3,000 ft frwa air pit to prove the lovely laminated pear) barrel and cap are Non-Breakable, You never saw such a pen. You never owned one. A saclets pen that holds far more ink than ordinary rubber sac pens shemt the ink level at all times, hence won't run dry without warning, in classes or exams. So go and see it now and get it for college and for life. The Parker Pen Co , Janesville, Wis. tflUPU! HMD'S h STEyE the campus. They took over the fashion edition of THE DAILY NEBRASKAN, sponsored a style show tea in the Union ballroom. Margaret Krause has now taken over the work of directing the group, and will be assisted by Mary Bullock, Alpha Chi Omega: Lucille Stepanek, Alpha Omlcron ri; Tat Prime, Alpha Thi; Ben Alice Day, Alpha Xi Delta: Jean Cnrnahan, Chi Omega: Kay Deur meyer, Tri-Delta ; Margaret Krause, Delta Gamma; Mary El len Robison, Gamma Thl Btta; Ruth McMillan, Theta; Vircinia Charnock, Kappa Delta; Betty Meyer, Kappa; Phyllis Jean Hurst, Phi Mu; Charlotte Stahl, Pi Phi; Annabelle Lee, Sigma Kappa; Miriam Rubnitz, Sigma Delta Tan, and Betty Mallo, Carrie Belle Ray mond Hall. Unaffiliated represent atives from the other organized hoises are yet to be chosen. Welcome Students ir r ii k rte v-an oave iou Money un NOTEBOOKS TEXTBOOKS (New or Used) LABORATORY SETS ENGINEERING SUPPLIES DRAWING SETS Book & Supply Store 1229 R 5-9302 Your Guide to College Life 1 i '--Zt THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Do your rivals have more pledges than your house? Will Nebraska beat Minnesota? Did you see "her" caking with "him'? Miss that activity meeting yesterday? Why? Find Out From The "Rag" .Subscribe , 3 now only 50 PFR 5( HOOL YEAR Subscription Orders Token at "Rag" Business Office in Basement of Union Building u it