The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 20, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBUASKAN
8
H.,.rforJ to H.e Unlimited I Cut.
1 A new system of unlimited cuti
, ; unpcrclassmen ha. been put Into
'2 ,t at IUverford college. Thf. c
&2 th. Ma of ardent
bearing the brunt of the responal
billty tor education hinuolf nearer
fulfillment than at any time In the
hirtory of Haverford. , .
J Lincoln, neb.
Mm
NEW OFFICERS OF UNI
Y TO BE ELECTED SOON
New officers of the University Y.
M. C. A. will be elected enrlv in
March. A nominating; committee.
chosen from the cabinet to select
candidates for the various positions,
is now making its selections.
PRESS ASSOCIATION
GUESTS OF PLAYERS
A special performance of "Craig's
Wife," the Pulitzer prise play which
the University Players presented two
weeks ago, was given in the Temple
theater Friday evening for the mem
bers of the Nebroska Press associa
tion.
Another Big Double Program ! ! ! ! !
Elinor Glyn's
'THREE WEEKS"
and
1 1 I X ITI BOIIRTt
V? f ltejan IOWARO
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES 1
RIALTO :-: Mon., Tues.,
THURSDAY COMES
TIM McCOY in "Winners of the Wilderness"
Wed.
NEBRASKA WINS
BOTH WEEK-END
BASKET TILTS
(Continued from Page One.)
drcson and Gerelick kept the Ancle
forwards taking their shots from the
middle of the court. The first half
ended with Nebraska holding a slim
margin of 15 to 14 over the Still
water crew.
The scoring , started with Clark
Smaha dribbling the length of the
floor to make a neat set-up under
tne basket. Captain Peery of the
Aggies came back on the next dIuv
to tie the score. For five minutes
the two teams battled up and down
the floor with neither five arettir.ir
the advantage. The score was at a
tie lor several minutes before a score
was market up for either team, then
Tom Elliott snagged a shot from the
corner to break the tie and put the
liuskers in the lead. Thus the first
half see-sawed back and forth with
the the lead changing six times and
going into a tie three times.
Peery Main Stay
During the first period, the Aggie
offense was functioning and going
through the Husker defense for short
shot under the basket. Captain
LYRIC WEEK
THEATER
APPLESAUCE"
The Great American
Comedy
EVES at 8:2S S0c-7Sc
MATS, Tue, Thura, Sat. 2 5c -50c
PHONE B-4S75 for tickets
HAROLD BELL WRIGHT'S
"The
Winning of
Barbara Worth
Ronald Colman
Vilma Banky
and
3,000 Others!
Struggling men, (urging beasts, unbridled floods In
tense, stifling heat, hatreds and intrigues. ..But through
it all the sunny laughter of golden girll
Souvenir photos of Ronald Colman or Vilma Banky to
all persons attending the Monday matinee.
Lincoln Orchestra,
A. L. Bonner, Conducting
NEWS
ALL
Fables
WEEK
I
MON.
TUES.
WED.
rip I Vi tjjEYi jJi . Viv
(HzZmkl EVERYBODY ioes
MON.
TUES.
WED.
THE THEATER OF HAPPY MEMORIES
HARRY
DOTTY
MASTERS & GRAYCE & CO.
In a Pratcntioua Offarint
"MEMORIES"
A Serle-Cemaey Episode ef Staa Ufa With Songs and Dances
ASSISTED BY
REENE BRAHAM, BLANCHE ALTER
TIM BOWES AND ED HAVERLY
CUS VERTNER
BARTRAM & SAXTON
The Kantucldans In
. "CYCLE OF SONGS'
JANE JOHNSON REVUE
A Colorful Offering Featuring
CRAWFORD CASKEY
r WITH
JOE PRICE, WILLIAM HARPER AND AL WHITE
Lata Feature, of Mclntyro and Heath
BEE HO GRAY
"The VersaUle Cowboy"
CLAUDE M. . .I.SJ5.LLE
ROODE & FRANCIS
Tbo Unusual Entertainers
ALSO NEWS AND COMEDY PICTURES
BABICH AND THE ORCHESTRA
ENTIRE CHANCE OF PROGRAM THURSDAY
The Hauck
Studio
Skoagland
Photographer
1216 "O"
B-2991
Tecry was the main-stay of the Ag
gie aggregation and to tho flashy
captain goea the high scoring honors
of the evening with a total of 20
points out of the 27. Nine times the
ace of the Oilers got through for
baskets and twice registered from the
free throw line.
Showing the strain of the evening
before, the quintets started out the
second half slower than the opening
period with Peery making the first
tally from the field to put the Aggies
in the lead for the last time in the
game. Ted Page, the giant Husker
was all over the floor and started a
scoring Streak that didn't stop until
he was taken from the game with the
rest of his team-mates in the Inst
four minutes of the game.
A colision between "Jug" Brown
and Page resulted in a broken nose
for the Nebraska forward when they
were both going after the ball at the
north end of the court. "Jug" was
taken from the game and Kenneth
Othmer sent in to help the scoring
column, and he filled Brown's shoes
to the total of three tip-in shots and
two gift shots.
The box score:
Nebraska 35.
fg ft p pts
Smaha, f (c) 4 12 9
Elliott, f 2 0 1 4
Page, c .' 5 0 1 10
Andreson, g 10 0 2
Holm, g 0 0 0 0
Gerelick, g 0 10 1
nthmor f 3 2 0 .
Brown, f 0 0 0 0
Olson, f 0 0 1 0
Klepser, f 0 0 0 0
Lawson, g 0 10 1
Krall g 0 0 0 0
Total 15 5 5 35
Oklahoma A. & M. 27
fg ft p pts
Peery, f (c) 9 2 1 20
Kine. f 0 0 0 0
Collins, c 110 3
Danford, g 10 12
Statton, g 0 2 1 2
McCoy, c 0 0 0 0
Heilieman. sr 0 0 1 0
Total 11 5 4 27
Referee, "Red" Brown, Kansas
Lunch Meala
Candy Drinks
At
LITTLE
SUNSHINE
LUNCH
1227 R
1st Door East of Temple
SECOND-HALF RALLY
WINS FOR NEBRASKA
Launching a fierce second-half ral
ly that swept the Sooners off their
feet, the Nebraska quintet came back
Friday night to defeat the Oklahoma
cagers 36 to 26, on the floor of the
Coliseum. The end of the first half
found the Huskers trailing 17 to 12
Before the largest crowd of basket
ball fans this season, the boys of
Charley Black came back in the sec
ond period with the Oklahomans five
points in the lead and put the ball
through the netting in such rapid
shot-gun fashion that they overcame
the lead, went into a tie, and with a
basket from Ted Page, shot into the
lead, never to be headed again the
remainder of the game. The second
half was an exhibition of fast and
accurate basket shooting from all
over the court by all members of the
Nebraska team.
Referee Eagan blew his whistle
30E30I
IOE30
101
O
D Davis Coffee Shop
o
108 N. 13
Doubled Decked Sand- o
wiches, Home made
D pastry, Unexcelled
Coffee
Day & Night
onoca i ocaoi
D
o
OI
and the two powerful Missouri Val
ley teams swung into action. The
Sooners started off like a flash and
before the game was but a few sec
onds old, Captain Cene West slipped
through for the opening basket,
which was quickly followed by one
from Holt, the tall Oklahoma center.
With the Sooners holding a four
point lead, a basket by Tom Elliott
and two gift shots by Smaha evened
the score. The lead changed three
times during the first half, and at
half time the Oklahoma five had the
count 17 to 12.
The second half was Nebraska's
throughout. The Scarlet and Cream
quintet scored 24 while McDcrmott's
men could only manage to get 9.
Page opened the second period scor
ing, followed by one from Smaha and
Gerelick before the Sooners could get
started. Page, who had lost the tin-off
to Holt during the first half, had
solved the big Oklahoman and was
getting the tip to his mates and ex
ecuting the plays in machine-like
fashion.
With the score standing 16 to 18
for Oklahoma, the referee's whistle
could not be heard above the din of
the frantic crowd that yelled out its
approval when Captain Clark Smaha
put through the tying basket. Okla
homa called time out, but after the
two minutes were up, the liuskers
came back stronger than before.
Andreson and Gerelick were play
ing a suberb brand of ball at the
guard posts and were spoiling many
Sooner shots, while twice Ted Page
lagged under the basket to receive
an intercepted Oklahoma pass for
baskets. "Jug" Brown, who went into
the game at his old forward position,
to relieve Elliott, was going great
and snagged two baskets and a free
throw during his stay in the game.
Captain Gene West and Bruce
Drake were playing a fast game for
the visitors from Soonerland, but in
the second half, the Husker guards
kept the two Oklahoma scoring aces
smothered and allowed them but few
shots.
The assistant must be In France
by October 1. In accepting a post, a
man binds himself to keep it during
the entire scholastic year, barring
illness or some unavoidable circum
stance. Applications, with all credentials,
must be filed with the Institute by
March 15.
For further information and appli
cation blanks, address the Institute
of International Education, 2 West
46th Street, New York, N. Y.
The box score:
Nabraska 36
fg ft p pts
Smaha, f (c) 4 2 1 10
Elliott, f 10 0 2
Pane, c 5 0 0 10
Andreson, r Ill 8
Holm, ft 0 0 1 0
Othmer, f 10 1 2
Brown, f 2 11 5
Gerelick, K 2 0 2 4
Totals 16 4 6 38
Oklahoma 26
fu ft p pts
4 2 0 10
West, f (c)
Drake, f 3 3 1
Holt, c 13 2
Lecrone, r 10 0
Pinkerton, K 0 0 1
Haller, r 0 0 1
Totals
Referee: V. S. Eagan.
9 8 6
Individual Haircuts
Designed for your
own personality
Mr. Joe Hair Cutter
Gif fen Beaute Salon
1340 M B3273
French Government
Offers Positions
To American Men
The French Government,, through
the Institute of International Edu
cation, this year is offering American
men ten positions known as "postes
d'assistant."
The requirement is instructing
English for two hours a day. No sal
ary is paid, hut the assistant receives
room, board, light and beat, and is
given the privilege of attending cour
ses at the school in which be is teach
ing or at a university if-there is one
within commuting distance.
The French Government allows
thirty per cent reduction on steam
ship ft .re if passage is taken on tlw
French Line; otherwise all traveling
and incidental expenses must be met
by the assistant himself.
Candidates Mutt Be American
A candidate must be an American
citizen; he must have a Bachelor's
degree or its equivalent, and he must
have a good knowledge of French.
WRITERS GUILD
HEAR STUDENTS
(Continued from Page One.)
venture and it is not strictly a uni
versity publication for many of the
contributors are not attending the
university at present. It is hoped in
the future that it will be on a firm
financial footing and be on the scale
of a real commercial magazine. The
staff hopes to have a better maga
zine as time goes on; they would like
to have it independent of advertising.
It is doing very well for a beginning
publication and in the future it is
hoped that it will rival the Yale Re
view or Harpers, who knows?
Mr. Walker, acting director of the
School of Jaurnalism, was the fifth
speaker of the afternoon. "It is a
good thing for the chaps in the writ
ing game to get out and mix with
those who are more steadfast in that
end. Censorship is not necessary be
cause of the caliber of the young
men and women", he declared.
Emil Glaser, Lincoln, editor of the
Cornhusker Countryman, spoke on
"Agricultural College Publications."
"The Cornhusker Countryman start
ed six years ago as a branch of the
Agricultural magazine," said Mr
Glaser. "It deals with those things
concerning agriculture and home
economics. Agricultural journalism
may have been looked upon as a low.
er cast than other journalistic fields
but it is coming out of that."
Keene Abbott was leader in the
round table discussion of "How and
where we sold our first marketed
published productions," and "How
and where we expect our future mar
ket." Responses were made by guild
members of note.
Plaster Model
Of New Theatre
Given EnQtnecrB
The original plaster model of the
17 million dollar Paramount theater
bulldjng in New York City has been
presented to the college of engineer
ing of the University of Nebraska
through the courtesy of the Lincoln
theater. The model is on display on
the fourth floor of the mechanic arts
building where it will be studied by
classes In architectural engineering
and drafting.
The building is located between
Forty-third and Forty-fourth streets
on Broadway. It is a thirty-one story
structure, rising to a height of four
hundred and fifty feet. The theater,
which seats four thousand, occupies
the first eleven stories. Interior dec
orations are carried out in the French
renaissance stylo.
According to engineers at the uni
versity, the building is representa
tive of the pyramided style of mo
dern office, building construction and
clearly shows the effect on archi
tecture of the New York zoning law.
C. W. and George Rapp were the
architects.
The model is complete In every de
tail, from the marquee over the en
trance to the real clock in the tower.
"THE THEATER OF FEW REGRETS"
OFFERS THIS WEEK AN UNUSUALLY GOOD BILL
OF SCREEN AND STAGE ATTRACTIONS
ON THE SCREEN
"Nobody's Widow"
A Sparkling Comedy with
LEATRICE JOY
CHARLES RAY &
PHYLLIS HAVER
ALSO
"THE MON A LISA"
A Fascinating Romance in
"NATURAL. COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY"
and
WORLD'S NEWS VISUALIZED
ON THE STAGE
KAY SISTERS
AND THEIR SEVEN TALENTED
BLONDES
WITH
VIOLET JOY
In a Colorful Offering
"THE VANITY REVUE"
Beauty, Grace. Rhythm and Melody
ARREN
Vaudevillre Scintillating
JUVENILE STARS
Mr : i .
Pin
PUBLISH BENGSTON'S WORKS
Geography Professor Reviews Texts
'For Journal
Prof. N. A. Bengtson, of the de
partment of geography, who is study
ing at Clark University, Worcester,
Mass., while on leave of absence, has
recently contributed three book re
views to scientific journals. A review
of "Business Geography" by Hunt
ington and Williams appeared in the
December issue of the American Ec
onomic Review. "The Rainbow Coun
tries of Central America," by Wal
lace Thompson and "Black Haiti," by
Blair Niles were reviewed in the Jan
uary number of Economic Geog
raphy.
Former Student Now Teacher
George E. Harding, who received
his masters degree from the depart
ment of geography last year, will
teach geography in the summer ses
sion of the Sam Houston state teach
ers college at Huntsville, Texas.
WHY BE LATE?
Fool your Profs and be on
time with the aid of a
good
Alarm Clock
$1.50 $5.00
at
Fenton B. Fleming
Jewelry Shop
B3421 1143 O St.
L
CONWAY BEAVER
AND HIS MERRY
MUSIC MASTERS.
Mat. 25c SQfllP; Nite 50c
High Grade
Boxed
Stationery
Below Cost
We are offering our 1926
line of fine stationery at
, exceptionally low prices
to make room for the new
Spring line.
Lot 13 for 1.00
Lot 2 3 for 1.50
Lot 3 3 for 2.00
Lot 4 3 for 2.50
Lot 5 3 for 3.00
Popular bifold and club
sizes.
TUCKER-SHEAN
STATIONERS
1123 O St.
At the Bargain Counter
Chicago Man to Talk
For Mission Program
"An Evening In China", will be
presented by the young people of the
First Presbyterian Church, this after
noon at 4:30 o'clock.
Frank W. Bible of Chicago will
be the speaker of the evening. Chin
ese decorations and costumes will
portray the missionary spirit of the
program. All students are invited to
attend.
Omaha students wishing to spend
week end at home see the Burlington
for round trip tickets, now selling for
$3.00 and good for three days. 73
minutes to Omaha via the Burling
ton. Adv.
New Victor Records
Latest releases in our big
store. Here are a few
(No. 20418)
Lonely Eye
Wistful and Blue
Paul Whtieman & Orth.
(No. 20419)
Moon Beam, KUa Her for Me.
Sweeter Than You
Nat Shilbret and Victor.
(No. 20417)
All Alone Monday.
The Revelers
Maybe
Franklyn Baur
Also Columbia and Bruns
wick releases.
Complete Stock
Yours for Service
Schmoller &
Mueller
1220 o St.
Lincoln
Talks of eating at the
We have now covered briefly
the Central Cafe'a Combination
Breakfasts and so much of the
a la Carte menu as relates to
griddle cakes, cereals, toast and
the like.
But a great many persons
have an appetite for fruit of
some kind for Breakfast and the
Central is always ready to serve
a generous portion of Straw
berry, Blackberry, or Red Rasp
berry Preserves; or Orange
Marmalade at 15 cents.
Also Grape Fruit hearts at 15
cents. Large and meaty Prunes,
Apple Sauce, or Figs at 10
cents. In season, half a Canta
loupe and Strawberries and
Cream, at prices governed by
the prevailing wholesale cost.
So, . too, with Peaches and
Cream. Bananas and Creaih 20
cents. Sliced Orange 15 cents.
Orange Juice 25 cents.
A very flew presons drink
nothing but water during a
meal; but a great many indulge
in a cup of Coffee or a glass of
Milk at 5 cents, where not in
cluded in a Combination Break
fast. A pot of Tea (made only
to order) is 10 cents. A glass of
Half and Half 15 cents r a
glass of Pure Cream 20 i r.' -s.
Postum for those who tad
and believe national advertising
10 cents. And during the sum
mer. Ice Tea 6 cents a glass.
This concludes the Breakfast
bill. You have a laige variety
to choose from, whether your
needs and desires are for a glass
of Orange Juice, Milk Toast,
Sausage and Cakes, or Ham and
' Eggs. "Food Cocked as You
Like It" is the watchword of
Manager Harris of the Central
Cafe.
(T to continued)
luriini Lbs ik
Shows 2:30, 7:00, :0O. Mats 25c. Nile 50c. Gal. 20e
curtWS AT 2:4. T-OO, 9:OQ
NOTE LOWER PRICE