I StuTufcty, October 8 1939 Tlie DAILY NEMUSKAN Fraternity house parties cap victory with hilarity Scarlet and cream iscentral theme football celebrations A pop party with cream and red decorations will be the buffet supper at the Alpha Xi Delta house tonight. Pris Camp sey will be with Don Bowers, Genevieve Smith and Herb Dow, Pi K. A., Eleanor Collier and Henry Dresf, and Mary Brian and Jim Smith, Acacia Treasure hunting followed by a wciner roast at Antelope park is in store for tlie Theta XI pledges and their dates this afternoon. Their arrangements are all secret from the actives and are arousing much curiosity around the hoi se. Some couples who will be there are Dale Anderson and Marjorie Morris, and Louis Knudsen and a little girl from Crete. (She was with him at the game.) Herb Williams will be with Katherine Hanley, and Gifford Rogers with Marjone Mull. Fine stuff! Joe Saunders, Chi Phi, drew the lucky number which won the varsity-autographed foot ball at the Barb hour dance in the Union last night. Maybe his be ing with Barbara Clark made it .'egal. Phi Mu sorority entertained last night with a nautical house party for the pledges. Decorations in cluded a gangplank leading up to the door, mammoth life savers, anchors, fishnets hanging from the ceiling filled with balloons, flags for each sorority and fraternity on the campus, and a United States flag made of balloons. Jody Marshall was with Paul Miller, Billie Greene with John Hendricks, Eleanor Veith and Norman Hib- bard, Sig Ep; Dottie McCartny and Rudge Vifquain, Sigma Nu, and Frannie Vaughn with Ernie May, Sig Ep. Chancellor and Mrs. C. S. Boucher were hosts on Saturday at luncheon and at the Nebraska Minnesota football game to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. M. Jeffers, Mrs. Margaret Hynes, Dr. and Mrs. G. Alexander Young, Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Davis, all of Omaha; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Huse of Norfolk, and Miss Helen Hosp of Lincoln. Mr. Jeffers is president of the Union Pacific railroad. Dr. Young and Dr. Davis are from the col lege of medicine campus, where jhey are chairmen of the depart ments of neuro-psychiatry and urology respectively. Mrs. Hynes, a prominent Omaha citizen, has been interested in the development of the university for many years. In August, 1938, she established the William J. Hynes, jr., scholar ships in agriculture amounting to $500 each year. Mr. Huse is pub lisher of the Norfolk News, and Miss Hosp is the new dean of women. Patty Berg watches Gophers lose to Huskers Patty Berg, greatest woman golfer in the world, saw her fa vorite football team, Minnesota, go down to defeat yesterday. Miss Berg, a freshman at Minnesota U., J A -4 MISS PATTY BERG Lincoln Journal and Star. has been touring the northwest with a group of alums, who made the 5,000 mile trip in behalf of their student activities building fund. She will finish her freshman year at Minnesota this fall at the end of the first quarter, having missed one quarter last year be cause of her absence from school during the winter due to her golf ing activities in the south. She has traveled 85,000 miles in five years of competitive golf, the distance including the western trip. Miss Berg, a tomboy as a little girl, has been following the Gophers' football fortune for a long time, and is one of their most rabid rooters. New York City's four municipal colleges enroll more than 52,000 students yearly. French club brings film 'Grand Illusion' to play at Varsity Saturday Banned in Italy and Germany, but highly acclaimed by all Americans, "Grand Illusion, " a French motion picture, will be brought to the Varsity theater next Saturday morning by the French club. There will be show ings of the picture at 9 and 11 a. m. Admission is 25c. Fannie Hurst has said of this film: "It strikes straight to the heart of humanity." Helen Hayes said: "I loved Grand Illusion. What on orgy of good acting it Is!" Samuel Goldwyn has exclaimed: "A challenge to Hollywood. The most brilliantly directed film have seen in years." The setting of the film is in a German prison camp during the World war. It presents the Ger man characters without prejudice or bitterness, among the French, British and Russian soldiers. Included in the cast are Jean Gabin, Pierre Fresnoy, and Erich von Stroheim. Jean Renoir wrote and directed the film 'Grand Il lusion." He considers the human element the most important factor portrayed in the picture. Counselors meet Tuesday Coed Counselors will hold their annual mass meeting Tuesday eve ning, Oct 10 at Ellen Smith at 7 o'clock to explain their hobby groups to new students, All r A rk. g i v u c u t Counselors and their little sis- ' ters are asked 5f to attend the meeting. Girls who have signed up for hobbv erouns is or who are in- fk terested in do- ing bo are urged to be ' present to learn Kw., about the time and procedure I of their hobby L. ,r . Twas a nicht er the naughty wi' lights oot' Formally clad, chatting with friends and thoroly enjoying them selves were over 800 faculty mem bers Friday evening at the recep tion given by Mrs. C. S. Boucher at Carrie Belle Raymond hall when almost on the stroke of nine mutual cry of horror and fear arose. At exactly the same minute the dancing in the Union stopped short and disorder reigned. It was a "blackout" typical of European countries. But was it bombs? Nope. The lights just went out. Operating Superintendent L. F. Seaton explained the 10-minute darkness as "nothing serious ust a slight disorder with the cir cuit breaker." "This is the first time both the Union and the dormitory were on full blast at the same time. They receive, current from the same cir cuit and some adjustments had to be made," he stated. THURSDAY!! A riCTl RE TIIE TALK ABOUT wnoiJE woiti.n wm. AND KEMIMDKB:! ' L UlllfiSL-' 111 " k. Mil 1 w a'" f;j IX)OK STUDENTS I E1E .Til KITS If your name ap pear in Ihmc VARSITY. Lib erty or Klva Ad. Identify Yourulf at VARSITY Roi Office unit rrreire a trr Tirlirl! JAMES GEORGE RAFT it EACH DAWN I DIE" With Leonard Dunkrr GEORGE BANCROFT JANE BRYAN Also! I Color Cartoon Newt I'rrc Parking 1 Alter 6 r. M. I 1U7 r St. MAT. T.r,. I IV S.V-lflf VARSITY Carl niwi. bftfrr J """ j, V; f Pi Iwl'la Vfcr-i ira Held Over 2nd wli:k nj anoeed to the Unrrtj) Grealrr Than Anylhlni You've t.vrr Srrm "DAUGHTERS COUHAGEOUS" With I THE 'TOUR DAUGHTERS" Prlacllla. RoMmary, Lola Lon Gal Pao John Gailiald k Claude Rain A," fk Mar J. Ronyaa marrn fir Time H . MaamamA? ,SoD?s. I LIBERTY rofur No. i Edw. G. Robinson In "CONFESSIONS or A PLUS fecrtur No. 2 'BLONDIE MEETS THE BOSS" Penny 8lnrtoa Arthur le Larry Siuipm groups. Journal and Star. Fern Steute- 'm steutevtiie ville, president of the Coed Coun selor board, will introduce board members, leaders of the hobby groups, and faculty sponsors Elsie Ford Piper and Letta Clark. Hobby groups this year are tap dancing, scrapbook, reading, and charm school. Each group will meet on alternate weeks twice a month, and the meeting time and group leaders will be revealed at the meeting. Social workers to hear ag college professor Dr. Ruth M. Leverton, in charge of research in human nutrition at the college of agriculture, will ad dress the annual meeting of the Nebraska conference for social work in Omaha Monday on the subject "A Budget for Nutrition Essentials. Beg your pardon! The name of Ervine Green was inadvertedently omitted from a re cent article naming members of the editorial board of the Nc braska Law Bulletin. f Have Your 1940 Cornhusker Picture Taken At Once! $1.25 $2.50 Fraternity Sorority Picture Deadline Not. 1 Junior-Senior Picture Deadline Nor. 16 Combination Class-Fraternity Picture $2.75 TOWNSEND STUDIOS 226 So. 11th Perrinc (Continued From Page 1.) ganization, and the Lincoln Tele phone & Telegraph company, will be open to the public by invita tion only. Demonstrations. The demonstration and lecture will show the important trends and developments in the telephone industry, and purposes and dif ferences in the various types of telephone circuits new in use, and the many problems that must be considered in establishing tele phone communications, which, says Dr. Perrine, is more than a matter of fastening a receiver on a pair of wires. More than a ton of equipment is being brought to Lincoln for the show, according to Prof. Lloyd Bingham of the department of electrical engineering. Two engi neers from the American Tele phone company will be in the city several days before the program to install equipment and with tbe assistance of the Lincoln Tele phone company, connect the Union with five pairs of circuits needed for the sound demonstration. Starts Today r Always A K? 20C -1 if TOUGH!! 1., H it. r4 (W . . . You're Got To Be Tough To Steal A Million Dollars And Get Awoy With It!! iij?. 17 CtO.. SiT t. Plus! Second Thrilling Hit! -Non On The Hcm-mi . . . The r anxrtl hnnilHy omlr Htrip! with Rose I la Towne William Gargan Now Showing Always A Seat For 25c 135 Women With Nothing On Their Minds But Men! ( ) .n.uPni!"rnnn -tKt KHSAUK3 EISSSEU &&&$ milk Mary BOLAND Paulatte 60D0AR0 Pkrllla POVAH Ph! Cartoon In rbr NovHty "Aahran rierf lAleat Newa NEBRASKA NOW! r fur ) w V laN TURNER RICHARD CARLSON ARTIE SHAW BAND ) ANN RUTHUF0R0 LU lOWMM rinul Marrh of Tlme'a ti Battle Kireta of K.njland" STUART II The Uncensored, Sensational "All Quiet On Th Western Front" . . . Cavalcade" In Technicolor Amecht and Alice Fays , . . Ginger Rogers M "Fifth Avenue Girl" . . . "Heneymoon In Ball" starring Fred MacMurray and Madeleine Carroll . . . NAZI SPY" Harriet Weecli MAT IVC. 15e Ma PVm Parking After P. M. 147 P St. tCIVA