PAGE'Two TtY RItt~ ~ . Wt '"'!""' tl V All' T I" 'Lt t IN A #L t tk. A I t 'ly /MtY- /VYi. " YY tM.M.Y1YS9i IV+4 YAM\ # t,+u## PLANS COMVPLETED F0 Om FOML DANCE IN UNIONBALL HOG Women Students Given Privilege of Staying Out Until 2:30 O'Clock. NICHOLS TO LEAD MARCH WAWMM*" II t.iMI U H I AlN lDJA I L YTHUR TDAY, NDV TUDIR C, "O KING BORIS OF BULGARIA WEDS HEIR OF ROYAL C Ur B 0l l2FRESHMAN DINING ITALIAN FAMILY IN HISTORIC CUC TASIIULLE I CC L CLUB STILL OPEN mo Dflfl0IA valuable opportunity for fresh- FHll IIJIUIUn to male social con acs Wth r° r members of their own clas is seen School of Music Orchestra Also in the newly organized freshmen Prepares to Broadcast dining club, which is being spon- ThisWeek'rods sored by the Student Christian - TO IMPROVE RAI Herbarium Director Experiments to Produce Perfect Marion Hardy and His Columbia Recording Orchestra Will Feature Music, Plans for the Union formal ball, the first of its kind to be given by' the organization, are all completed, it was stated last night by Albert F. Donohue, '31, president of the Union. The ball will be held to- morrow night in the ballroom of the Union. Late permission for women stud- ents was granted at the meeting of. the Senate Committee on Student Affairs on Tuesday. This permission allows woman students who sign out for the ball to stay out until. 2:30 o'clock tomorrow night. A much enlarged Union seal, similar in design to the seal on the life membership pins of the Union, is being constructed by students in the engineering school Members of virtually every ro and will be especially illuminated. Mricrs ofItaly asehysr Other decorations will be in the Princess Giovanna of Italy as his form of palms and ferns, probably The wedding took place in the his from the greenhouses of the Uni- versity. -Grand March at 11 O'Clock. The 9:rand march will begin at n 11 o'clock. At its head will be George F. Nichols, '32, chairman of the dance committee of the Union SELLING IL IUITi under whose directions the plans for the formal have been carried out, and his escort Miss Harriet President Requests Additional Kyson, '34, of Maplewood, N. J. Membership at First Meeting Marion Hardy and his Alabam- o ga ians, Columbia Recording orches- of rganization. tra, is coming direct from Chicago for the dance. At the present time, PROGRAM IS ARRANGED1 he is playing in the Merry GardenI cafe in -Chicago, and has been 1 A demand for more students previously featured at the El Tor- from schools other than the arts reon ballroom in Kansas City and and architecture schools was made at the Boulevard de Paris night club in St. Paul, Minn. by Lorne E. Marshall, '31A, presi- The orchestra comprises eleven dent of the Studio Art club at Negroes and are bringing with the organization meeting Tuesday them an especially arranged pro- night in the Russian Tea room of gram for the Union dance. They the Women's League building. include, in their personnel, a master of ceremonies and a trio offering At the present time, he stated,! novelty numbers. Negro spirituals only a few students from the liter- arp onf of the features of their ary schools are in it, the rest of performance. -t lie members being trom the art airo serve Special Brakfast. and architecture colleges. The pro- served aftelub12:b5ea ck inlthe gram of the organization was de- cided upon by the members. There taproom of the Union and refresh- are to be two separate groups in ments will be served throughoutIthe club with six meetings each the party in the ballroom. This is month. One group will consist of one of the few instances during the ! studio classes which will study art year when the women are allowed and its appreciation while the other in the taproom. The Pendleton lib- will be more of a social gathering. rary on the second floor of theThe first group will meet every building will be open for lounging week and the other will convene purposes.4 The members of the board of every two weeks. directors will be the chaperons. This ball, Doi~ohue pointed out. is one of the features of the great- est social year in the history of iALEXA the Union. Attendance records for all past years has been broken con- sistently this year. The formal is an innovation in the program of the institution and it is planned to make it an annual' affair. There are still some tickets for I sale for the dance. They may be obtained at the desk in the main lobby of the Union. ThL W soredby theStuden Chrisian aras- sociation and which is to hold its I CLUB HAS 64 MEMBERS fist regular meeting at noon on T Monday. STUDIES GRAIN DISEASES Rehearsals are under way for This organization which consists Prof. E. B. Mains, acting director both the men's Glee club and of a group of freshmen who plan of the University herbarium who School of Music orchestra for their to eat their noon and evening meals formerly was a member of the fac- together at the Lane hall tavern ulty of the botany department at radio programs this week-end. The aPurdue University, is at present Glee club program. vill be given restaurant was formed for the pur- carrying out studies for the purpose Sunday night, while the string or- pose of giving first-year men a of developing more perfect c:real chance to make close friends with plants. chestra, a subdivision of the sym- their own classmates. He has conducted much research phony orchestra, will give its con- Alfred Lee Klaer, resident of Ann in this field, having been in :harge cert on Saturday night. Arbor, has been chosen by the club of the study of the leaf rusts of Both organizations have also to act as its leader. Klaer will head small grains for the cereal dvision been working on preparations for the table and act as the advisor of of the department of agriculture. other concerts to be given later this the group. The club will include The rusts are fungous diseases of month and next. The Glee club is approximately 25 and as there are plants and affect the g::ain con- also preparing for a concert on still some places in the member- siderably, he said yesterday. Nov. 14 at Pontiac for the Metho- ship, any freshmen interested may While he was at Purdue, ie made dist church, the proceeds of which hand in their names at the main a very extensive study of the dif- will go to a scholarship to the Un- desk at Lane hall. ferent rusts that occur on cereals versity and a concert on Nov. and grasses and helped in mono- 29 for the Detroit Golf club. Work Heller Begins Course graphing the rusts of North Ameri- will also begin soon in the club for ca. He has been attempting to ob- t h e annual Christmas concert of Judaistie Lectures tain a variety of grain, especially which it gives every year in con- wheat, that has high yield, gives junction with the band and the Rabbi Heller of the Hillel found- good flour, stands up well in the Girl's Glee club just before the hol- ation gave the first of his season rield, is beardless in the case of idays. of lectures yesterday on "Judaism wheat, and has a great resistance The orchestra is also preparing 'as Affected by Modern Thought" to rusts. for a radio concert on Nov. 22 to strike the keynote of a course Professor Mains who is now doing which will include the whole in- that he is teaching every Tuesday work involving advance plant my- strumentation. Its annual concert night at the foundation. A group thology and mycology, and who is will be given Sunday, Dec. 7 in of sixty attended his discussion. ai'ding in the development in the Hill auditorium and work for this Tracing history through the collection of plants here, plans to program will begin soon. At this kingdoms of Babylon, Media and conduct a more theoretical study of last concert, a faculty soloist, whose Persia to the Era of Emancipation, rusts here. name has not as yet been announc- and through the skepticism on li- ed will sing. beralism of the Russian writer, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH - Cam- Prof. { Arthur Hackett, of the Achad Ha'am, Rabbi Heller began pus societies are conducting a poll voice department of the School of the discussion which will develop to determine whether favors should !Music,is directing the Glee club the phases of modern philosophy in or should not be given at formal this year while Prof. David E. Mat- their relation to Judaism. parties. tern, director of public school I music in the School of Music, leads the orchestra. The former organ- Sization consists of 64 members, the largest number in its history, Swhile the membership in the or- chestra is about 70. A suc ate Press '' oyal European family were present when the Bulgarian monarch took consort, strengthen rig materially the bonds between Italy and Bulgaria. tonic church of St. Francis at Ar:sisi, Italy. L X i c jt r a Y t i c r t I Is c f a y t GLIDER SECTION OF AERONAUTICAL SOCIET Y COMPLE TING ORGANIZATION Members to be Instructed in Franklin at Wayne, has a stream- Preliminary Phases of line design and an enclosed fuse- Aviation. lage which make it well fitted for long soaring flights. The glider section of the Uni- The gliders are to be launchedj versity Aeronautical society, whose by towing them behind an automo- purpose is the encouragement of bile which has been presented to interest in aviation among stu- the society by Edsel-Ford. The glid- dents, is completing its organiza- ing will be done at Barton pond tion. after it freezes over, as this loca- Members of the section are to tion affords a much better take- receive instruction in glider-flying, off runway than the Ypsilanti air- a step in learning the technique of port which is now used. handling a motor ship as the con- By limiting the membership of trols and flight conditions are sim- the section to 75, each student will ilar in both cases, receive a greater amount of tdi- A primary and secondary course viue instruction and practice, of instruction will be available to and 10 hours of solo flying is guar- members, it has been announced, anteed. It is necessary for each ap- the first intended for beginners, plicant for membership in the while the latter is for advanced group to pass a physical examina- students. Corresponding to t h e tion, insuring his ability to handle courses, two different types of a glider properly. gliders, primary and secondary, will be employed for instruction UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA - and practice. The primary-type A women's "pep" organization ship, of which the organization known as Tassels conducts ticket possesses two, is designed for train- sales for the student plays given ing purposes only. The fuselage is here. lags nme i tShsoy Italy Observes World War Pact Anniversary (By /1 s wcat'7' PrY S) ARSIERO, Italy, Nov. 5-Italy cel- ebrated its twelfth anniversary of the Armistice day, with the inaugu- ration of new cemeteries and maus- oleums containing 13,000 bodies of soldiers fallen in the World war. These cemeteries, concentrated near the Australian battlefront, were thronged with relatives of the dead, who were able to make the trip through the government's con- cession of a 70 per cent reduction on the railroads. NOW CHARLES in "QUEEN HIGH" SUNDAY GODINO SIAMESE TWINS not enclosed, its lines are not streamlined and it is capable only of short flights. In addition, the club has purchased a secondary type of ship which will be used by the advanced flyers. This ship, which was built by Prof. R. E. - - . ON THE STAGE IN PERSON WITH THEIR BRIDES NOW SHOWING 1 t err,, Y Shows at 2:00, 3:40 7:00, 9:00 I I in, David Belasco's Famous Stage Show "THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST" Ann Harding's supreme screen characterization. Better than "Holiday." Better than any picture you have seen this year. z YO f '' , nS ~ r ' ' 1, r31rj t / ' . ,11 l( i i r y MAJ STIC PLAYING NOW Daily at 2:00-3:40-7:00-9:00 ALL'S FAIR IN LOVE AND GOLF! IN the race for fame and iM ost Likely fortune, the man with the Succeed" greatest stam ina, physical an m 0a we and mental, wins. "The sen- ior most likely to succeed" delectable dish all of the is chosen because he has necessary food elements- superior strength of brain and gives them in the most and body. ALL IN COLOR! I I The sparkling show that m America golf - conscious! sweethearts of the screen in a geous comedy romance of g grins and girls! Through traps, over the hazards, onto fairway of love. Shredded Wheat is the favorite breakfast of many famous captains of industry - the ideal food for conquer- ors. It gives in one simple easily digested form. Plenty of bran too, for a clear sys- tem and an alert mind. Let a bowl of Shredded Wheat with plenty of good rich milk start you on a successful day -every day. CHAR2LES NANCY DOCGFD-I ADDOh . _ , ' , THE SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY -RED0 is I