FOUR COACH BIBLE TO TAKE ACTION PICTURES Films of Football Players in Action Aid in Training Coach D. X. Bible wiil spend this week end taking motion pic tures of football players in ac tion, stressing: fundamentals and individual play. "These pictures will be kept in the library of the Victor company, and will be avail able for the use of all coaches who are interested in showing them to their squads," stated Mr Bible. "They should be useful as the pro grams have been arranged for the practical aid of coaching staffs and players." MUSEUM PARTY TO INSPECT NEW SITES ON SUMMER TRIPS (Continued from Page 1). son Stout, David Abbott, Gordon Graham, Jack Graham and Dean Kerl. Mrs. Schultz will accom pany them. With Meade in the Marsland area will be David Tourelot and Walter Stolle. Barbour's Paper. In a paper just published by Dr. Barbour and Schultz on early man in Nebraska, they point out the state's earliest inhabitants ap- pear to be the makers of Yuma and Folsom artifacts. Many of their implements have been dis covered during recent years, and they say, "from the evidence now at hand it seems certain that Fol som and Yuma artifacts are rep resentative of a cultural complex definitely antedating all other known cultures here." The article continues: "These people were not discriminating in their choice of materials for chip ping. The artisans were able to chip with equal skill quartzite, flint, agate and jasper. There are many cases in which Yuma and Folsom artifacts are found to gether in the same blowouts, but this does not necessarily imply that they were made by the same group of people. However the probability is strong that if any time did elapse between the de position of Yuma and Folsom im plements it was a comparatively short period. Geologically speak ing, the artifacts appear to be of the same age. The sand hills may have been the hunting ground of both. It is noted, however, that Folsom points are somewhat rare in Nebraska, which might imply the makers of Folsom artifacts were more or less restricted to tha foothills of the mountains and the .Yuma people to the plains." Dr. Barbour and Schultz feel that these newer sites warrant ex tensive field work this summer, and that if certain lake deposits in this area can be dated, the re gion will be of equal importance to geologists, paleontologists and anthropologists. FACULTY MEMBERS TO SPEEND SUMMERS IN RESEARCH, TOURS (Continued from Page 3.) who will spend much of the sum mer there in research. He will vacation the latter part of Au gust in Connecticut with his fam ily. Prof. Evelyn Metzger, assist ant professor of design, will teach in the University of Minnesota during the summer, later visiting her parents in Iowa. Prof. Grace Morton, of the home economics staff, will drive through Oregon and California following the sum mer session. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Schmidt will leave for Berkeley, Calif., June 20. Mr. Schmidt, who is a member of the business staff, will do work in the California summer session. Summer months will find Dr. Harry Kurz, chairman of the de partment of romance languages, in New York city doing research KEEP NEAT and COMFORTABLE In An Evans Laundered Wash Suit Linens and Palm Beaches 60c Seersucker 50c 15c Extra for One Day Service at the Municipal and Columbia university libraries. Brackett Attends Meeting. The university will be repre sented by Prof. E. E. Backett of the agricultural college at the 30th annual meeting of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers at Estes Park, Colo., June 22-25. Prof. Brackett has been elected a member of the nominating com mittee for next year. His family will accompany him. Prof. P. A. Downs and family will motor this month to Pennsyl vania where he will attend the meetings of the American Dairy Science association and make a committee report. Following the convention they will drive through New England, visiting friends and the Downs' home in Connecticut. Professors H. P. Davis, R. F. Mor gan, E. L. Reichart, and I. L. Hathaway, of the dairy husbandry department will make an eastern trip by motor to attend the meet ings of the association, which will be held at Pennsylvania State col lege. Prof Reinhart will go later to New York city to study the marketing of creamery butter; Prof. Hathaway will visit a num ber of research institutions in the east, and Professors Davis and Morgan will visit a number of dairy cattle breeding establish ments and experiment stations. Miss Wagner Visits East. Miss Alma Wagner, of the mu sic faculty, will drive to New York by way of Niagara Falls and the New England states. Enroute home, she will spend a few days in Washington. Following the summer session here, Herman T. Decker plans to vacation at Mir ror lake. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Decker and Mr. and Mrs. Duval, who have just returned from fifteen months of theatrical amrir in EuroDean capitals. Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Pierson and family will leave about July 1 to attend the meetings of the American rwntai association in San Fran cisco, July 13-18. Dr. Pierson is the Nebraska representative u A. D. A. house of delegates. E. F. Powell, zoologist, will com plete research and thesis work for his Ph. D. degree, which he hopes to receive in August. He will also study the piscatorial nie ana in sect fauna of Nebraska. Prof. t v rviitvrt of the eneineering de partment will attend the meetings of the society ior tne prumuuun education at the University of Wisconsin, June 23-26. Following me summer session, Gertrude Beers and Lu vicy Hill of teachers college, will spend the rest of the summer at Camp Olympus near Estes Park. Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Stoke will spend a few weeks at Painesville, O. Later Dr. Stoke, a member of the political science faculty, will go to New York to take part in discussions at the new school for social research. He will also engage in some independent re search. After the summer session, Dr. J. O. Hertzler, chairman of rrmpnt of SOCiolOTV. Will tour the northwest, the Pacific coast, and the southwest witn nis family. Instructor to Do Painting. Miss Kady B. Faulkner, of the fine arts faculty, is going to Sy racuse, N. Y., to attend the sum mer session of the university there. She then plans to drive down to North Carolina to do some water color painting. Dr. E. L. Hinman, chairman of the philosophy department, will drive through New York, New England, Quebec, New Jersey, Washington, D. C, Virginia and Tennessee. Prot Clara Kausch of the women's physical education de partment, left last Saturday for the University of Texas, where she will teach physical education for the summer term. Major John P. Horan, of the military department, will be at Fort Crook until July 3 8 and later in the fall will motor to Colgate university, where he will leave his THE DAILY NEBRASKAN MOVIE DIRECTORY STUART Golden Arrow. LINCOLN Trouble for two. I OFvPHEUM Road Gang, The Milky Way. LIBERTY Call of the Prairie. SUN Invisible Ray, Oil for the Lamps of China. VARSITY Avenging Waters. son who enters as a freshman there this fall. Major Horan graduated from Colgate in 1914. Lung to Do Research. Dr. A. L. Lung, of the geology staff, will carry on field research and do mappine for the geologic survey Under Dr. G. E. Condra, state geologist. He will also work on a book dealing with the geo logy and wround water resources of south central Nebraska. Late in the fall, he and his family will visit North and South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and other east ern points. A foreign trip has been arranged by Lloyd D. Teale, assistant in structor in romance languages. He will sail with his wife from New York June 13 for Spain and will study in Madrid. T. T. Akhus plans to attend the short summer school session on drawing, a descriptive geometry sponsored by the society for the promotion of engineering educa tion at the University of Wiscon sin. He will also attend the na tional convention of the group there. After teaching part of the summer here, Emmanuel Wish now, violinist, will study with Jacques Gordon and still later will appear in recitals in Connecticut. Kirsch Attend Art Meet. Dwight Kirsch of the fine arts faculty will attend the national convention of Delta Phi Delta in Kansas City, June 34 to 17, after wards visiting Chicago and points east, and remaining in the New England state seceral weeks painting and photographing. George E. Hudson will teach zoology during the summer ses sion and then with his family va cation in South Carolina the rest of the summer. After the sum mer session, Prof. Nellie Eastbum, of the women's physical education staff, will join her sister who teaches at the University of Ore gon, for a vacation of several weeks. Dean R. A. Lyman, of the phar macy college, will spend the lat Cool Summer Footwear Sport Styles Favored for Campus and Street Wear 3.95 Illustrated afcwve, the smart while Elk Oxford, perforated trim as Rhown. Cool and comfortable. 3.95 pair. Widths AAAA to B. COLD'S Street Floor. ter part of the summer in the north woods or Wisconsin, ne win also attend the annual meetings of the American Association of Col leges of Pharmacy and the Amer ican Pharmaceutical association at Dallas, Tex. Miss Norma Gillette, of teachers college, will spend the summer at Iowa City collaborat ing on some elementary school texts. Dean Foster to Fish. Dean H. H. Foster of the law college will prepare annotations of Nebraska for the American Law Institute restatement of trusts. The rest of the summer he will give over to fishing. Dr. and Mrs. George Grubb plan an extended automobile trip through the west and along the Pacific coast Dr. Grubb, dean of the dental college, will attend meetings of the American Dental association at San Francisco, July 13-17. Others of the faculty at- ending include Dr. K. E. sturae vant, Dr. John Brauer, Dr. B. L Hooper and Dr. A. H. Schmidt, who will attend departmental meeting or me a. u. a. Dean F. W. Unson. of the Grad uate college, will remain for the summer school and will spend Au gust in northern Minnesota. Dean O. J. Ferguson, of the college of STUDENTS: You will find it both pleasant and prac tical to patronize our air conditioned shop near the campus. Hair styles by Lincoln's finest ladies hair cutters. CORRELL'S BEAUTY SALON 228 No. 13 Phone B2936 Welcome Summer Students Of course you will want to eat at Lin coln's Leading Restaurant, where it is always cool. CENTRAL CAFE MODERN PRICES BEST OF FOOD COURTEOUS SERVICE 1325 P Street IllUHtrabsd below, modish laced var ip and laced-quarter style of white burk with broad Atrap. A favored style, at 5.95 pr. Widths AAA to A. GOLD'S Street Floor. You'll Enjoy Shopping at FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1936 engineering, will attend the an nual meeting of the society for the promotion of engineering edu cation at the University of Wis consin and then with his family will spend the rest of the summer vacationing in northern Minne sota. Martin S. Peterson, of the Eng lish department, will teach liera ture courses at the University of Montana summer session. During the summer he will also be occu pied in reading proof on his book, "Jacaquin Miller; Literary Front iersman," which will be published in the fall by the Stanford Univer sity Press. MORNING NOON NIGHT THE MARICOPA CAFE 137 North 12 Serves complete meal with pie or ice cream. 15c Quality without extravagance. Above Is shown the popular fport tie with laced -vamp as shown. A white-buck model, eally cleaned. 6 95 pair. Widths AAAA to A. GOLD'S Street Floor. B6961 Expert Launderers Responsible Cleaners 333 No. 12 Convenient to the Campus ft.