Jf'-.- VARSITY TRIES OUT FOR MEET Cinder Men Will Be Picked to Represent Nebraska at Kansas City The varsity track tryouts for the Kansas City Athletic Club indoor meet to be held in Kansas City, Mo., February 18, will be staged under the east stadium this afternoon at 4 o'clock, Coach Henry F. Schulte, track mentor, announced Wednesday. All eligible varsity cinder men will participate in the events in the hope of representing .the Cornhuskers in a meet in which many of the leading universities and colleges of this sec tion of the country will compete. Trumble, junior A. A. U. high hurdle champion, and Krause, letter man, will be among those competing in the hurdle events, while Easter, a sopho more, will make his initial bid for varsity competition in the sprints. Captain Perley Wyatt, Campbell, Davenport and Hoffman will run the 440-yard race with other varsity can didates. The men who will compete in the 880-yard run are Johnson, Sprague, Janulewicz, Chadwell, Mousel, Ether ton and 'Others. Tryouts will also be held for the pole vault and high jump events. NEW DEVICE MAKES FACSIMILES OF ART Photo-chemical Process Reproduces Sixe, Color, and Shades of Famous Paintings New York, Feb. 8.- Again science ; has triumphed, and this time art has benefited. Guy Golterman is now exhibiting at the Ambassador Hotel here Bel vedere faesmilies of paintings by old masters, products of the recently perfected process devised by Ulf Seidl, of Vienna, whereby exact rep licas of art masterpieces are to be made available to the students and lovers of art throughout the world. Reproductions of the works of Michel Angelp, Rubens, Rembrandt, Velasque, Raphael and others are in cluded in the exhibit as well as two water colors by Will Pogany, con temporary artist. New Process of Reproduction The facsimiles are results of ef forts to produce "mechanical repro duction worthy of artistic respect", by photo-chemical process. The pro cess seeks to reproduce the original color, shades and sizes. The new invention, says Mr. Gol terman, involves first, the use of photography, and second, the use of sensitive dye washes compounded by German and Viennese chemists. None of the processes of lithography, color printing or hand copying is em ployed. Each reproduction requires spec ial attention on the part of expert photographers aqd chemists, thereby eliminating the, possibilities of too great mass production. The image of the painting to be reproduced is first placed by photography on can vas, wood, and plaster or other med ium originally employed by the painter. Desired Color is Brought Out After this is accomplished, an in fallible sensitizing process is applied to the highlights and shadows of the photograph in such a way that the subsequent use of sympathetic dye washes will bring out the desired coloring." The success of the de vice depends upon the refinements inherent in chemistry. The final ef feet is varnished. Naturally, since the original is photographed all changes due to lapse of time, such as cracks, changes in texture of the varnish, dimming of the paint, and flaking of frescoes are reproduced in detail. Several emminent artists and cri tics, including Willy Pogany and William Allanson Byron, director of the Los Angeles Art Museum and president of the Western Associa tion of Museum directors, have ex amined the exhibit here, and have been enthusiastic in their praise of the new process. Mr. Byron planning to arrange exhibits in number of western art museums. is Jolley Attends Westinghouse E. M Raymond Jolley, '27, graduate of the Mechanical Engineering College is now attending Westinghouse E and M. at Philadelphia. - LUNCH WITH THE REST OF THE CROWD AT - Owl Fharmacy S. E. Cx. 14 P. rkoee BlOflS Rigger and Belter . Hamburgers 5c Fizs Chili Soup Sandwiches Drink j Give Us a Trial j llzzzh'vzir Inn , ill ha. 11 lb. i Vi Z'xh Soutn ff Lini. Library The Army game has been tched. uted and Cornhutker fans can now tit around the fireplace and dream of an Army-Nebraka game that is reality. Although the game could pot be scheduled for Memorial Stadium it is beyond doubt that there will be a large crowd of Cornhusker fans in the West Point Stadium on Nov. 24 to see the Scarlet do battle against the Cadets. Nebraska now has a football sched ule that will make any coach in the country blink his eyes more than twice after he has glanced at the ar ray of nine games booked for the Cornhuskers next fall. Nine games and five on the road. Two of the road trips to the eastern seaboard. One of the five down south to Norman for a game with the Sooners and one to Kansas and Iowa State. The Husker court team left last night for a two-game invasion of Iowa. The Scarlet clad youths of Coach I Back will tangle with Iowa State at Ames tonight. Nebraska has taken the count of the Cyclones but it may be a different story when the Nebraskans meet the Ames team away from home. Grinnell, champions of the second division will be the foe for Nebraska on Friday night. Nebraska and the Pioneers have not met on the court this year. Coach "Bunny" Oakes' freshmen squad will do battle with the Ag Col lege team this week and the yearling j court director will have an oppor- tunity to see wnat his first year men r look like in action against another team besides the Varsity. uaKes 13 dam, Nestor, Chatfield, Lefgren, J or well pleased with the showing so far genson, Richter, Grissinger and Os this season but reports there is yet j borne. All men who are eligible m . . , , 1 " I . . .... a lot oi worK to ne aone wun nis squad before they are to be turned over to Varsity next year. FOSSILS EMBEDDED IN BUILDING STONE Magnifytng Glass Discovers Shells In Two Buildings of South Dakota University Vermillion, S. D., Feb. 8. The law building and library at the Uni versity of South Dakota, end the State Capitol building at Pierre, are literally modern monuments to mil lions of tiny sea animals which lived more than 60,000,000 years ago, Dr. Walter V. Searight, professor of ge ology at the University of South Da kota stated recently after investiga ting a remnant of stone from which the three buildings were construc ted. . . Carefully disengaging the tiny hell-like animals from the rock with the aid of a magnifying glass Dr. Searight discovered that the speci mens were even smaller than those usually found in the particular rock formation. The building stone of which the University structures and the capitol building are constructed is called Bedford stone, said Dr. Searight. The tiny shells imbedded in the rock formation millions of ears ago are perfectly preserved and under the magnifying glass evi dence beautiful and delicate shapings and formations. A little pinch of what at, first appears to be merely grains of sand spread on the table, when viewed with the glass reveals little snail-like brachiopods called Inmn shells' because of their resem blance to ancient Roi4ian oil lamps, delicately formed crinoids or 'sea lilies' and bryozoans or 'sea mosses'. Fordyce Cires Illustrated Lecture At the State Hardware Convention of Nebraska Dr. Charles Fordyce gave an illustrated lecture on "Per sonality," as it pertaines to a suc cessful business life. the Regal representative to show you the $6.60 Regal Reproduction of London's Leading Shoe Style selling on Regent Street at 75 shil lings ($18.25). An English Oxford made from Genuine Martin's Im ported Scotch Grain, Full Leather Lined, $6.60. $500 REGAL SHOES Campus Representative Dennett & Flugstad Kfftrnt Hwta House Phi Delta THE TRICOLOR TODRHEY IS SET FOR TODAY Ninety Men Enter in Season' First Open Track Festival; 6 Teams Compete The first tri-color meet of the season will be staged this afternoon on the indoor track under the east stadium. Coacli Henry F. Schulta has divided the eligible men for the meets into junior and senior class ification, according to ability shown in previous tryouts. Each division will be made up of a blue, black, and red team making six teams in all with over ninety men participating. A Innquet will be given to the lead ing team of each division following the first four meets. Coch Schulte announced tho line up of the tri-color teams. Wednes day. The blue team of the senior class will be made up of Easter, Holm. Lamson. Potts. Pierson, Bai ley, Rice, Dexter, Jamrog, Cum mings, Richard, Morgan, Pierce, Os- sian, Chilton, Griffin, Hess, and Ber ard; the black team, Becker, Snyder, Keyes, Trumble, Young, Argan britrht. McCallum, Miller, Janule wicz, Wickwire, Gibson, Garrey, Spiague, Swartz, Cook, Dean, Batie, and Hoffman; the red team, E. T. Thompson, C. O. Thompson, Ragains, E. Wyatt, True, Mousel .Kibble, Etherton, Rowley, James, Hagen meister, Toms, Benbrook, Stevenson, and Witte. Line-ups Given The blue team of the junior class will consist of Coffev. Mi-ay, Pres nell, Donisthorpe, McChire, Sloan, Hunt, Jackson, C. Batie, Oehlrich, Eisenhart, and Rexford; the black team, Keating, Roddy, Steffan, Frahm, Marrow, Huddleston, Morris, Mays Gilbertt Griswold, Bennett, nrwi Hnhrinlsnn: the red team. Hal- stead, Kreizinger, Scherzinger, slaughter, W. Krause, Wilson, Maas- and have been missea in maKing up the teams are asked to report to Coach Schulte. I The tri-color meets will be run off promptly on the following time a" 7' lum""" Tl schedule: Mile, 4 o'clock; dash, 4:15; !- a.lm st week" In 440-yard run, 4:30; high hurdles, st f the there were no 4:45; 2 mile, 5; low hurdles, 5:15;tuPsets a"d terans " bt sent ,n S80-yard run, 5:30; relay, 5:45; thJ the Mountaineers pole vault, shot put, and high jump, 4; broad jump and 35-pound weight, 4:45. No individual points will be award ed in the meets but all points will be credited to the team to which the scoring individual belongs. The junior teams will be awarded points on a 5-3-0 basis while the seniors will be awarded on a 7-5-0 basis. Holdein Prints Will Be Shown by Ags During this week there will be shown in Room 302, Home Economics building. College of Agriculture cam- pus, an exniDition oi noiaein mnis. These are reproductions of paintings by Hans Holdein, a painter of the Renaissance. These paintings are in very fine in line, many being delicate line drawings. A few are in colors. The public is invited to see these pieces of art, which may be pur chased for seventy-five cents each. Sealock Speaks at Wymore Tuesday , Dean Sealock of Teachers College, j went to Wymore Tuesday, where he j addressed the students of the high I school and also spoke at a special meeting 6f the Wymore teachers. a SrAAJTT WtAR UU-U24 Q CO-EDS This Smart Creation - a Is developed in black suede with ffunmetaJ . silk leather trim. Med ium short vamp last . $ir.oo JLKJ PHOENIX HOSIERY The PROFILE the very latest in hosiery de signgracefully slenderizing the ankle. A delicate fillet of tone in pointed effect, a shad owy form that blends heel and ankle in a ribtle, charming way. To be had only in this fine full-fashioned all silk hosiery, and at the new low price, $1.95 a pair. FOOTWEAR SALCN DAILY NEBRASKAN Stellar Mat Man I x r 4 t George Rule, captain of the Okla homa A. & M. college wrestling team in 1926, who made an enviable re cord. He is national champion in the 175 pound class, and will defend his title this year. AGGIE GRAPPLERS MEET EASTERNERS Team Which Will Compete Against West Virginia Is Picked In Tournament Stillwater, Okla., Feb. 8. (Spe cial) After a week of spirited elim inations, seven Oklahoma A. and M. college wrestlers are enroute to Morgantown, W. Va., where they will meet the University of West Vir ginia Thursday evening in an inter sectional wrestling meet. Every man cn the Aggie squad was given an opportunity to make the varsity team irrespective of his previous experience or record ii i. i; : x : i . . viliaill vjtrui xvuic auu unn Cready had no trouble in earning the right to compete in the 175-pound and heavyweight glasses respectively. Rule wrestled against West Virginia last year, winning a decision with comparative ease. McCready is a new man on the squad. There is little definite information here ast othe strength of the West Virginia team, except that they are strong in the 125 and 145 pound weights. New "Yankee" Magazine Is Founded Cambridge, Mass. (IP) A new quarterly magazine has been found ed by five professors of Harvard. .Th x Emrland Quarterly" is to !be iven over mostly the printing of historical material concerning New England. Articles are to be accepted from students or faculty members who have interesting data concerning "Yankeedom." Romie Donahoo, a Popu lar Lincoln Hair Cutter, is again with The Charlotte Beaute Shop. Try our Manicures-onlv Soc. 1240 M St. Lindell Hotel STOUT 1 ft y Ml New York Women Do Not Need High Scholar$hlp New York, Feb. 6. -(By New Student Service) Deciding that sororities are social and not scho lastic organizations, the inter sorority council of New York State College for Teachers has abolished all scholarship require ments heretofore requisite to election. COLLEGE STUDENTS GET TARDY START Harvard President Claims Students Begin Life Work Too Lata for Best Results Cambridge, Mass, (IP) Ameri can college Btudents begin active life work entirely too late, according to Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard University. "American secondary schools," he says in his annual report to the Harvard Board of Overseers, "do not , complete the secondary teaching that ought to be dona at the age our young men come to college. The result is that with the preparation now required for professional and business life much longer than it was formerly- xne young man uoes. not begin his active career until a later age than is wise. An artisan , at the age of 20 may be earning as large an income, and be as well able to support a family, as he ever will be; but his contemporary who is looking forward to the bar or to med icine, for example, is only half way through college at that time. The ordinary age of entering an Ameri can college is over 18, so that if the young man completes his four years before beginning his professional studies he is over 22 at graduation." President Lowell went on to cx - plain that it is a fallacy to believe that sending a boy to college at the age of 17 is to make him at a disad vantage socially and athletically. He said that to wait a year after high school graduation before entering college is a mistake. BRUINS PREFER MAKING THEIR OWN Per r KOviKAM Los Angeles (IP) Undergradu ates at the University of California at Los Angeles are tired of copying their northern kin at Berkeley. So they have decided to throw out of their "pep" curriculum all songs and yells which have been borrowed from the University of California proper. A student committee is now at work on the problem of new verses for songs and new yells which will be strictly "Bruin" products. Among other suggestions of note, is one that a composer be employed to write the music for a new alma mater song and rally chorus. Typewriters For Rent AU standard makes special rate to stu dents for long term. Used machines portable typewriters monthly payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1232 O St. B-2I57 "UK? j Docks, Geese and Swans Have Much In Common, Says Assistant Curator Mr. F. G. Collins, assistant curator of the museum, gave a talk on the collection of geese, ducks, and swans found in the University museum, recently over the University radio. "Ducks, geese, and swans have an been grouped together, not only be cause they have much in common, v.,f i0a wuse it has hitherto been beyond the wit of man to make such a definition of any one of them as would exclude the other two," Mr. Collins said, m explaining why case after case in the museum is labelled with the same Latin word "Ansores, which simply means goose, although in some there are ducks and swp as well as geese. . This scientific difficulty is inter esting and not new. If fond par ents thought unduly high of a child of theirs while other folks Baw only an ordinary child, it was said that those parents thought their goose f swan. "Long ago when natural history was still largely myth and folklore there was a belief current that per sisted almost into modern times that it twas from barnacles that Barnacle Geese were hatched somewhere off the coast of Ireland. The arctic breeding grounds of these birds be ing at that time quite unknown and itm,nna. storv Mr. Collins added, "is told of some monks who after feasting upon Branacle geese upon a f asl day protested that they had not transgressed the rules i -Holy Church in as much as Barnacle geese were in reality nothing but shell-fish." Barnacles are small crustaceans, any size from a grain of barley to a billiard ball. They grow in clusters and are found in shallow seas all over the world. They collect and grow on any timber, piers, and docks land even attach themselves on j whales which perhaps they sometime mistake for ships. The clinging of the barnacles up on ships has long been a difficult ! problem, but it has been solved by painting the hulls of the ships with a light colored paint, which repells the barnacles. There are fourteen different kinds of geese in North America, and just half that number are found in Ne- i braska. The museum has specimens of mos tof them. Many of the geese will soon be starting on their way over Nebraska to their breeding grounds in the (printers: Capital bgravir.g Co. 19 SO. 12! ST. LINCOLN. NEB. The Frat Lunch 321 N. 13 Just Good Eats A. L. Terry, Prop. each It may not look so, but he is referring to his friend's new Waterman's. But, unless he owns one, he doesn't know hall the story. Waterman's looks good, but the real test comes in and that is where Waterman's truly excels. 01854 is made oi rubber. A metal lip-guard pro tects the cap from breaking; a pocket clip insures against loss, carat gold nib will give service a big ink capacity. The dealer from whom you iupplies sells ?rr i i i f north. Among these will be found the greater Snow Goose, a large biro, all white save for the black primary! feathers of its wings; tho lesser Snow Goose; the Canada GooBe, the largest of all; the Hutchlngs Goose and the Blue Goose, whose breeding grounds have only recently been tracked down to Baffin Land. Only ono specimen of the swan the Whistling Swan, is possessed bv the University museum. Mr. Collina said that he wished very much that the musfum had a Trumpeter Swan. These are the only two kinds 0f swans in North America. In closing Mr. Collins said, "We have indeed learned that geese do not grow from barnacles, but we cannot yet sort out geese and ducks and swans quite as satisfactorily as we could wish." STANFORD PLANS TO TRY TWO-TEAM IDEA Palo Alto, Calif. (IP) Although he has as yet made no definite plana in this direction, Coach "Pop" War ner, of Stanford, has announced his intention of trying out the two-team football idea started by Michigan in the Big Ten conference. It is prob able that the plans will materialize by the beginning of the next football season, according to Warner. WANT ADS Photos by Hauck and Skoglund are the ideal gift. Attractive frames and folders of all sizes. Tinted por traits a specialty. First class work for everyone. Prices reasonable. Adv. By mistake a copy of Hegner's College Zoology was left in a Ford coupe parked near the Armory Tues day about 3 o'clock. Will finder please return it to 1545 S. LOST Square brilliant buckle et Interf raternity Ball. Reward. Phone F-2006. Music Every Night in Georgian Room Hotel Cornhusker e to a snail l go It I with that f B3367 VA US Y wmiEBS. CLEANERS AND EVERS use, We recom mend for college w work, Waterman R.R. The bolder stainless HfpU and a solid 14 lor years. It has buy your J t)