The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 10, 1928, Page 3, Image 3

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    RJzad Students
To Hold Frolic
(Continued from P 1)
other faculty members of the Busi
ness Administration College are also
scheduled to Bpeak during the ban
quet. Mayor Hedge, a Nebraska
alumnus, has not .indicated what he
will talk about but his fame as an
after dinner speaker insures an in
teresting address.
''Red" Kraue and hi" orchestra
will play fr tne "dance after the
dose of the banquet.
"Every student in the Bizad Col
lege is urged to attend both banquet
and dance," is the invitation issued
jiy the Frolic chairman, Wilbur
Mead. According to him, the Frolic
will parallel the annual Bizad Day
held every spring.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Librarian Receives Manv Extnina
And Varied Requests for Material
Tonight at 8:30
All Week
Matinees Today, Thur., Sat.
A Brilliant Comedy
"IF I WAS RICH"
Eluilve Charm Combined with
Hilarious Humor
Evea. 25c, 60c, 75c Mati. 25c, EOc
Next Week: "The Donovan Affair"
WHAT A COMEDY
BEERY
UAIIUIJ
"WIFE SAVERS"
A Paramount Picture
COMF.DY Tjj NEWS
WW
OWHAT
A GREAT SHIPWRECK
Jackie Coogan
-IN-
"BUTTONS
A M-G-M Picture
Suspense!!
'THE MASKED MENACE"
"Wanderinf Waistlines"
A Comedy
NtWS
COLONIAL
Kow
Rhowinff
SNAPPY I SCRAPPY!
ALWAYS HAPPY!
WILLIAM
y HAINES y
$ "WEST $
tf POINT"
i M O M Picture
ON THE STAGE
A Glorious Garden of Girls
JEANNE FULLER
DANCERS
Ten Talented Beauties In
"DANCE VARIATIONS"
RUTH GLANVILLE
America's Foremost Lady
Saxophonist
A Merry Musical Mirthmaker
BOBBY JACKSON
"THE DUKE OF DUDUQUE"
Beaver and His Jazz Maniacs
NKWS
THIS
FABLES
WEEK
Romance"
iNDER BEAUTIFUL
RONALD
COLMAN
and VILMA
BANKY
"THEMAGIC
FLAME"
ADDED
DOROTHY RAYMOND
Soprtao
NEWBICH AND ORCHESTRA
3 COMEDY
K
E
K
IT ! .
vermuiion, S. D., Jan. 10 "Please
advise me whether there is any world
movement on foot at present" is
just one of the many requests made
of Miss Mabel Richardson, librarian
at the University of South Dakota,
from citizens, teachers, and high
who receives dozens of letters daily
school students of the state, asking
for book3, and Information on var
ious subjects. Most requests' are def
initely and intelligently stated but
some are quite unusual and some are
humorous. '
One writes asking, "How much
does South Dakota spend annually
for men's shoes?" Another asked the
Library to send "a picture of victory
and one of patriotism." A ludy
wanted "to borrow a very large copy
oi uosa Bonheur's picture, "The
Horse Fair,' framed or unframed."
A high school student asked for
"everything you have on socialism."
One request was for "history of the
motto and design of the great seal of
South Dakota."
Demands Are Extensive '
A high school student wanted
"books about trade unions, child
labor, prohibition, crime, divorce,
sex, motion pictures, and psychology"
all in one order. Another future
voter wanted material for a debate
on "Resolved that Immigration
Should Close." One query was for
something "about races in the Bible."
A boy wanted a book about the "or
igin of the Fourth of July" and a
little, ischool girl wrote "Wiil you
please send me an Easter poem if
you have any? This poem must be
long, sad, droary, and full of ex
pression." A poem was found and
sent to her. Another request was for
material on debate: "Should Russia
Be Re-organized by United States?"
A druggist wanted a book on "Em
balming." Serious requests for material cover
topics as: "The Place of Church in
Farm Life Influence of the Press
How to Organize a High School Li
brary The "Swaraj" Movement of
India Bi-cameral verses Unicamer
al. Requests for "pieces to speak"
and toasts for banquets are endless.
A student asked for "Ride Away."
After some questioning, the librarian
found he wanted a copy of Sir Gil
bert Parker's "Right of Way."
A sophomore asked for an "an
tidote" about Thanksgiving. At the
beginning of last year a freshman
came to ask, "Where can I sit?" An
other student asked, "Have you got
anything about Washington?" The
librarian asked, "Do ybu want
George Washington, Washington, D.
C, or Washington state?" The stu
dent answered: "I don't know the
teacher didn't say." The librarian
finally discovered that he wanted in
cidents in the life of George Washington.
Cast Appearing In "The Guardsman"
New Spring Styles
By Fair-child News Service
Among the problems that rise to
vex the undergraduate thi3 time of
the year is the purchase of a spring
suit, and for some students this will
involuve buying more than one suit,
in order that their wardrobes may be
complete for the social duties of
commencement time.
Many college men will order this
spring their old favorite, the four
piece suit, and an additional suit
without knickerbockers, the latter
for city wear and other occasions
when they desire to be a bit "dressed
up."
But whether he wants a four-piece
or three-piece suit, or both, the col
lege man will not be interested in
bold patterns thia spring. Moreover,
the "ice-cream" cheviots have run
their course and will look out of
place when he new, more subdued
worsted fabrics have begun to ap
pear. For the sports suits, however,
good stout tweeds will be the thing
The time has come when the univer
sity man buys a four-piece suit
strictly for campus or sport use, and
Harris tweed, the rough, peat-smelling
Irish cloth which is woven into
such beautiful brown and green
heather mixtures, and the harder and
more familiar domestic tweeds will
be used for these clothes. Lovat
fabric, a soft loosely woven cloth
somewhat resembling Harris tweed,
also will be liked by university men.
For the three-piece or lounge
suits conservative worsteds, some
with widely spaced but faint stripes,
in gray-blue, blue-gray, slate, light
gray and gray-brown will be in de
mand. These worsteds have been
worn in the East in ever-increasing
numbers for the past five years.
'The cut of the smart university
lounge suit this spring will be rather
more severe than in former years.
As worn at present in the East this
suit has trousers with roomy knees,
twenty and one-half to twenty-one
and one-half inches, but the trousers
measure only eighteen and one-half
inches, at most at the cuffs. Per
haps nineteen inches is permitted in
special cases, but tailors generally
look a .little grave when this is requested.
This of course means that the
trousers must be cut higher. Gone
are the days of trousers dragging at
the hipbone for the suspender idea
has come to stay and the American
undergraduate's trousers now are
moored high and handsome, with
buttons or safety pins, to his braces.
The trousers are cut to swing free
of the shoe-top, with no break. This
is contrary to a widely accepted but
incorrect notion and will be regarded
as unorthodox by those who preah
that trousers must break over the
shoe-top, come fair, come foul.
A delicate point arises in connec
tion with the cut of the new jacket
When the three button jacket worn
with all its buttons fastened, was in
its heyday, a number of smart young
collegians appeared in the two but
ton jacket, worn with the lower but
ton open.
The result was that 90 per cent of
the three button jacket wearers be
gan to roll their coats to the second
button. Now we have the two but
ton jacket accepted as the smart
thing and the three button jacket
made with the saft front so it can be
worn in this manner without commit
ting is wearer to anything too "ad
vanced." Either way, the correct
university jacket now has easy shoul
ders and a slight fit at the waist.
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The Playhouse, which was' recently closed when negotiations between that stock company and the Liberty resulted in the former
cast moving to the Liberty, will now be open to road shows, according to the management. The original New York Theatre Guild will
present the first show, "The Guardsman", Tuesday night, January 17. f
Dakota Professor Says Making of
Arrowheads Is Not Yet A Lost Art
Vermillion, S. D., Jan. 9. The od of the Indians. The display at
Huskers Lose 30-19
Game to Washington
(Continued from Page 1)
example of defensive play.
The Cornhusker journey to De3
Moines for a tussle with the Drake
Bulldogs this next Saturday Jan. 14.
Drake has won one game this sea
son, defeating the Oklahoma Aggies
early in the season. Being an un
known quantity, the game is a toss-up.
The box score of the Washington
The waistcoat may have five or
six buttons and a nice touch here is
to leave the lowest button of the
waistcoat unfastened.
NEBRASKAN
TAILORS
CLEANERS
CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN
B-6013 235 N. 14th
Nebraska game follows:
Washington 30 fg ft pf pts.
Wientge f 0 12 1
Lohrding f 10 0 2
Meyer c 7 0 0 14
Eckert g 5 0 1 10
Kurz g 110 3
Christensen f 0 0 0 0
Totals 14 2 3 30
Nebraska 19 fK ft pf pts.
Brown f 3 0 2 6
Witte f 2 0 14
Elliott c 2 10 5
Holm g 10 2 2
Krall g 0 0 10
Grace f .10 2 2
Othmer f 0 0 0 0
Munn c 0 0 10.
Armstrong g 0 0 0. 0
Totals 9 1 9 19
Referee: Leslie Edmonds, umpire,
Eagan.
Substitutions: Washington Chris
tensen for Lohrding, Lohrding for
Christensen. Nebraska Grace for
Witte, Witte for Grace, Grace for
Brown, Brown for Grace, Armstrong
for Krall, Krall for Armstrong, Munn
for Elliott, Elliott for Munn, Othmer
for Witte.
making of flint arrowheads is by no
means a lost art, nor such a difficult
one according to W. H. Over, cura
tor of the museum at the University
of South Dakota. Mr. Over, prob
ably the best authority on Arikara
Indian culture in the country using
the same primitive instruments of
the Indians can turn out a sharp
smooth arrowhead as quickly and
nearly as any Indian warrior pre
paring weapons for battle.
Many people have thought that
the making of arrowheads such as
are found from time to time at va
rious places in the country is a lost
art, and that it was a very difficult
art. The pfoaess of striking1 off
flakes of flint from the right kind
of flint rock formations and of chip
ping out the arrow-like outline is
exceedingly simple says Mr. Over.
Flakes of flint are cracked from
flint rocks. The flakes, long and
thin, are then chipped to shape by
holding them on the knee and press
ing on the edges with a sharp-pointed
instrument. Usually the Indians used
a green splinter of bone for the
chipping process. The .angle at
which the piece of stone is held de
termines the size of the chip cracked
from the edge of the rock.
Mr. Over has a collection of ar
rowheads and sptar-points which he
has made, using the primitive meth-
the University museum would easily
be taken for genuine Indian arrow
heads picked up in the fields.
January 1 1 Is Date
Of Debate at Ames
Ames, Iowa, Jan. 6 Special:
"That the present tendencies toward
buying on the installment plan are
to be condemned", is the subject of
the debate between the University
of California and Iowa State College
which will be held here Jan. 11.
THE "GUARDSMAN"
TO OPEN TDESDAY
New York Theater Guild Repertory
Company Will Present Three
Act Comedy
. "The Guardsman" will open at -the
Playhouse on Tuesday, January 17,
when New York's Theatre Guild will
present the Theatre Guild Repertory
Company. This is the first show
since the removal of the "Players"
to the Liberty theater.
George Gaul and Florence Eld
ridge will play the leads in "The
Guardsman". This three act comedy
by Molnar reveals the stormy love
of an actor and his actress-wife. Six
months after the wedding-day the
household is already rent by storms
of jealousy and reproach. The act
ress, at the piano with Chopin, is
coaxing herself into the mood for
another love affair, and the tortured
actor-husband has a scheme. Con
vinced that the time is ripe for a
foreign soldier in her amours, he
avails himself of his art to posa as
a Russian Imperial Guardsman. If
she resists him, her faithfulness will
make him the happiest of men. If
she yields, at least, he will know.
Among the principals of the Guild
cast are George Gaul, Florence Eld
ridge, Mollyn Pearson, Erskine San
ford, Stanley Wood, Hortense Alden
and Dorothy Fletcher. The produc
tion was directed by Philip Moeller.
Jo Mielzinor directed the settings.
The performance ran for an entire
season in New York.
Starting Today at 8 A. M.
Hotel Cornhusker
Wants to figure on your
Parties.
The Greatest Attraction of the Year
Semi Annual Sale
of
You Are
Always
NEXT
' AT
STURM SHOP
Frank & Frank
116 So. 13th.
How Would You
Like to Buy a
25.00 Crested
. Ring for 20.00
or a 10.00 Ring
for 8.00
You Can at Our
January Discount Sale
HALLETT
UNIVERSITY JEWELER
Etb. 1871 117-119 So. II
TUCKER-SHEAN
JEWELERS OPTICIANS
STATIONERS
SCHOOL and COLLEGE
SUPPLIES
EXPERT WATCH,
CLOCK, JEWELRY, OP
TICAL AND FOUNTAIN
PEN REPAIRING
MANUFACTURERS OF
SCHOOL, SORORITY,
and FRATERNITY PINS,
RINGS and CHARMS.
TOCKER-SHEAH
1123 O Street
LINCOLN, NEBR.
MANHATTAN
Display
See
W'iruloiv
SHISTS
and
PAJAMAS
at a discount of
25 Percent
$2.50 Manhattans now $1.85
$3.15 Manhattans now $2.25
$4.00 Manhattans now $2.85
$5.00 Manhattans now $3.65
$6.50 Manhattans now $4.65
$7.50 Manhattans now $5.35
$12.50 Manhattans now $8.35
$13.50 Manhattans now $9.85
Manhattan Materials and Patterns are Supreme
So important is the mere announcement of a reduction
in price on these high grade shirts that many men will
lay in a season's supply during this sale which offers
a great discount.
We Give Cash Saving Stamps.
nn
ELX SlilRB. PRES..
s