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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1928)
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN. THREE ARMY GRIDIRON DOPE ARRIVES AT Coach Jones Will Give Men Secret Practice at West Point AERIAL GAMESTRESSED f ho Army foolbiill squad, likp tlj! Hu-ikejs, will be KOiiiK throilKb. se-..n-t practice this etk according I'oinl. Husky military 'police rS i l.uui q Mm tripu fn l lwi l.( lll-M 'V " " , " Biactico fitld keppinK anxious spec iHiors away from the field. From this week on, various defen sive plays will be worked up with only tlio watchful eyes of the coac-licH to see the progress of the Miny gridiron eleven. "Biff" Jones, iiead football mentor at the Cadet school is figuring on Malloy and Messinger to fill the flank positions of t he Army eleven. Doth those players are yearlings and last year played the wing positions on the ulebe team. With more experience in hand line the passes of the Army backs iliey should go far toward filling I lie positions which have caused most concern. Coach Jones is asain figuring on the aerial game 10 do Ms destruction work with ihis fall. The Army eleven opens with Boston University at West Riviera Party House Muilc by LEO J. BECK and His Orchestra Dancing Every Night. !:1 Cornkutker Editor Wants Photographers A call is being inaue from tf-,e 1929 Cornhusker office for snap slipt artists. Any students who enjoy the hobby of playing own era man will find a warm recep tion at the Cornhusker office in the south side of University hall basement. Successful experience Jn tak ing snapshots will be a recom mendation for the position. 6tu denis having their own cameras will be given 6peolal consideration. Point this week end. And from then on a schedule of real fpotball elevens meet Coni Jones' Army eleven. On the year's program ap pear Notre Dame, Harvard, Yale and Del'auw. The Army baokfield this fall will be light and fast. Speed and the aerial game will be slressed by West Point coaches. Messinger on one wing position tips the beams at 165 while his running mate on the other side of the forward wall is weighing in al 178. Comparing these to ihe husky Cornhusker eritta before the season gets under way, Nebraska tops the weight about fifteen pounds. OffioudBuIletin. Tl.it. dnwrtuiriit 0 Tli Pwilr -bruskiin mil l.r devutrd (ram day 4o l l.i ..ffirlHl annuunrrpirnt of rynix nf the ihiiijmi. Any tirriinlrjt lion or iileuilflaj ullli imhervMr Iff limy mnkr ur of llir drpartmrnt l.y IiuihIIiik in BniiimnrrmrnU a I The Ihllly Nil.rvui. Hhr, prinr to t n tlmk rucU artrrmton. JiBRnnnnnr! m wm MM U mm mt mm mm mmM , Qs.Ma4MOUinflTUIE & a . A rVkftA mtO U MTr l T U m E VAUDEVILLE "ODDITIE8 OF THE JUNQLK" Pit Llv Anlmali TYLER ST. JLAIRE In 'Xylophonio Conversation' BERTRAND A RAL8TON in "Over and Back" "Art and Rythm Rajihe" Now Now n Tucmloj. Srptember is. SlKina I.eltH Chi, U liall library, 7:16 o . Iih k. rn-shnifln foothall i:andlillea, Jf tluh room. " oliwuni. 1:60 oVlo.k. Varsity habn)l ;andlriatea, N club room. I'olineuin. :0 o'clock. Ill!'"1""5 S,'rvk'' 5 o'clock, Kllan Smllh K.mmi'l Kiuh women chgrua Irisuta, Trinplo, 7:15 o'clock. l'hi Tku Theta, Mnthodlal men will Mold Its opi-ning mentine on Tueaday, September 25, at 7 p. m. at th Waa lcy Foundation Parnonags. 1417 R atrat. Th subject of tho program wilt be "Hliilol" Krteiide. Corn Cob iiu-atiriR In loom 1S4, Tem pi muiaitm. Tuilay uinj, Septem ber 26. officers and nn mtmbera for tin. lumlng year will be chosen. TI.nn.dH, toptrmbrr (1. Annual freshman convocation, Coli .leum, 10 o'clock fin your grtsn cap! Fridny, ik-pttmbcr (8. Student athletic tickets on $1.60. Coliseum. Clivurlnv aectlon tiikata ami cans on sale. Collrtcutn. ciiepr leader tryouta, 4 o'clock, drill fiold. All slu.liT.tn are cordially inyitad to at tend the h'tuilcnt Ite.eptlun at . I'aul M. K. cl.urch, Twelfth and M, Friday evenliiK, Sentuiiiber it at 6 16 Srtlurdtty, September i. Make up examination In Chemiatrv 1 and chemistry 2. Chcmlatiy Hall, 206, 1 o'clock. Monday, Octube J. rnlvuraity Playara, "The Spider." Temple theater. Vesper choir pleaae report at !lan Smith Hall, Tuesday at 5 o'clock. Very important! has the rank of bandmaster, the outstanding musicians being io vannl da Olorgi, cornet soloist, Jean Manganaro, Euphonium solo ist; Holly Stanley, plucolo soloist; Loyis J. Ooucher, nylophona solo ist. Included on the U. S. Navy pro gram in yqcoln will be a few mo ments with U. S. Navy "jaz" band, one of lbs smaller combinations within the large organisation. The band will give a niatlnee gnd pvpning performance at the university coliseum. TRYOUTS NET 38 NEW MEMBERS FOR BAND Continued from rune I. unit that the men whose applica tions were turned down because of the large number already enrolled this year, will try out again next semester. The Dbiiies pf the new bands men, and their home towns follow: Clarinets: Kenneth E. Koust, Donald L. Foust, lied Oak. la.; Milburn Eastman, B. F. Hemphill, Lincoln; Mark Muffley, Alnsworth; William MeGaffic. Polk. Piccolo: Lawrence Davis, Su perior. Oboe; Lee Daniels, tiering. Bassoon: Royce Miles, Lincoln. Trumpets: William Fitzglbbon, Tobias; William gommers, Fre mont; Bea Joyce, Alma; Paul Gallop. Denver, Colo. Tromboqeg: Joe Alter, Alma; Gordon Ayres, Lincoln; George Klok, Omaha; John Steen, ricoits bluff; Leroy Frazler, York; Fred erick Brandhorst, Mllfort). Baritones: Kusetie Rennet, Sheri dan Wyo.; Warren Wood, Gering: Lloyd Thompson, West Point : Ralph Trester, Lincoln. Passes: Leonard Hunt, John Hall. Joe Bennet, Lincoln; Lester Selientine, West Point; Harold Busch. Utlca. French horns: Hugh Sherwood, Lincoln; Lee Clarke. York. Saxophones: Merle Senn, Lin coin; Sam Ely, Aineworth Neil Dearinger, Wheatland, Wyo.; Sid ney Epstein, Omaha; Julian Ja cobs, gtaplehuret. Drums: Fred Gebert, Denlson. !a.; Norman H o f f . Winner; Charles Griffin. Mapleton. !a. Social Calendar Saturday, September 29 Mixer at Armory sponsored by Kappa Kpallon. Delta Tau Delta dinner at Cora' husker hotel followed by a party at the cjiapter house. Sigma Alpha Epsilon house party. about the game, cluttering the M. V- athletic department, bear out tho statement. Two other features will mark the Missouri home schedule this fall. The day of the game with Centre College, Oct. 13, will be known as Public School Day, Sixty high school teams and ten bands will attend. Nov. 3, the day of the Drake game, will be Missouri Day with civic organizations of the state co-operating. Iowa Stale Fraternities Are in Midst of Hushing AMES, Iowa, Sept. 24. Special: Thirty-eight fraternities at Iowa State College, with something llk Classified Ads l-Y.K UK N'T: Two fine ai'l Mmlciity. inio 11. l..rx rooms for l.-4;6. WA.VTKK: At colleKc slrl to work for room ami board. mly two in family, M-HM, Vo. 3flth, uMAiTa IIUK-MSWS delivered by cur lier. Full ieaur ts of the graat Hun: tn-Kanlzatii.il. Boat featurp wrltora In the country. I.arueat sport ectioi. of any paper in N'cl.r. l'O cunts tier wprk. dailv and Sunday. Call 6tr. I.tnr h-m. l.t.ST: n-m i l.t.ST: Shiiw'fer Lifetime pen. bin. k ribbon. M-3HH4,, i-oi; HiKina Kappa recognition pin. Ureeu- Ki;NT: l.ii.'tje !iuuc for fraternity or aororlty. 63ii Bo. Kith. John M. Al e.vi'lidcf, B-176; or B-4U4. l.i ST: ll-l'In Jeweled H, A. U. pin, rewaid. The whole CQUntry's talking (bout Ihli daring, different picture "OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS" An M-O-M Picture With JOAN CRAWFORD ORPHEUM ORCHESTRA NOW ORPHEUH NOW OJriOW In The Great Hit I UNITED .AATlSTi.PlCTURB The beginning of the mutir thriller 'The TfRRIBLE PEOPLE" sow COLONIAL NOW (HOWS 1. 3, 5. 7. 9 MATS. 10c-15c; NITE, 10c-2Sc INTEREST HEIGHTENS IN IMPROVED AWGWAN ContlniuMl from Page I, Chiles, Kaymond Coffey, Bill Hanna, George Thomas, John Mc Knlght, and Joe O'Furey. Cartoonists and artists who have submitted drawings are James I'ickeriug, Allen Klein, Ray Crab- tree, Gay Williams, and Margaret Ketring. The Awgwan staff urges that all freshmen or other students who can produce humorous writ ings or draw cartoons, should place their work in the copy bo on the editor's desk in the basement of University hall. Individuals who desire to purchase subscriptions to the magazines may do so after noons in the Awgwan gffice. ( SCHOLARSHIP RULES ARE AGAIN GIVEN OUT t'ontlnurd from Page 1. permission allows him to continue on probation. 2. Since at least eighty per cent of the student's work must be of 70 or more in order that It may count toward graduation, when ever a student has accumulated twenty-five credit hours with grades below TO he may be placed on probation, may have the num ber of hours for which he may register stipulated, and may have his participation in extra-curricular activities curtailed. 3. When a student becomes sub- jnet to probation a second time, lie may be dropped from the rolls of the University. 4. A student who has been drop ped from a college of this or any other University may not register in any college of Ihls University without permission of both the conimitreo on Scholarship and the d-an of the college which he wishes to enter. NAVY BAND WILLPLAY . HERE ON NOVEMBER 6 I ontinurU from Vmft I. being at one of Mrs. foolldie's garden parlies. Every soloist In the Navy band OFFICIALS WILL HEADLINE BILL AT CONVOCATION, (oniinarl from Pace 1. Lincoln alumnus of the University will talk for a few minutes on i scholarship. Coach Henry Schulte, Nebraska track mentor, will speak next to the assembly. He will emphasize the importance of school spirit and the Cornhusker strain that runs in the blood, of every loyal Nebras-, kan. i Fresh Will Take Oath "Father of Nebraska Traditions" i Is the title that has been given i Doctor Condra. This valiant ex-1 ponent of Nebraska spirit will ad-1 minister the Cornhusker Oath to1 some two thousand freshmen. ! Copies of this oath have been printed bo that each freshman may learn It and keep it throughout their career in the University of Nebraska. Girl students will remain after the convocation where they will become acquainted with Miss Amanda Happner, dean of women at the University. Learn to Dance Guarantee lo teach you tn els private leeaoni. Clesaee Every Monday and Wedneedey, f te 10 P. M. Privele Leaeone Mornlnit, Afternoon and Evening. Call for Appointment Mrs. Luella William. Private Studio Phone B-42SS 1220 O St. 1,000 members are entertaining 400 flrt-yer man aach of them ft prob able member of pne of these or ganizations. Of the 400 mn listed in the of fice of the dean of men, in keeping with the plan of organised enter tainment or "rushing" this year, nearly seventy.flve have been an nounced as pledged to some group Entertainment for the freshmen lasts two weeks, ending Oct. 2. The daily periods of entertainment are the noon luncheon, afternoon en gagements, the evening diner ad brushed off a bee that stung him) evelng engagements. "Entertain ment" at any house seldom con sists of more than the meal, or "visiting" with fhe prospective member. Infractions of "rushing" rules by blther organizations or rushees, bring penalties by the faculty-fraternity committee in charge of all pledging to fraternities. -Ah, you shouldn't do that, tho bee will die now. You should have helped her 10 extract her sting, which is spirally barbed, by gently turning her round and round. Pupil All very well for you, but how do I know which way she un screws? Punch. Dee Try It. master (to pupil who Students! Purchase a $."..00 j Meal Ticket for $1.50 at the has Temple Cafeleria. Adv. RI4 xs-ut ot the J jars lli. jfP' ? J tjjrl mallaiia, u.oo llfrA t j larga titt OfftJ $2.00 yji vmall it, j IVlipgoiiri-Kansiii Came To Draw 40,000 People The Missouri-Kansas game, one of the traditional classics of the Big. Six conference, held In Co lumbia this year. Nov. U, will bring a erowd that will overflow the 25,000 lee ting capacity of Memorial Stadium, according to C. h. Brewer, athletic director at the University. A crowd of 40,000 Is expected. The game will necessitate the construction of temporary bleach ers back of the giant, elliptical stadium stands. Stacks of letters containing checks and inquiries my dear! you simply must meet Jacqueline she's the cutest thing on the campus 1 (j 7he holders of Waterman's fountain pens are made of rubber. Years of experience and experiment have demonstrated that there is nothing like rubber for fountain pen holders; nothing that is as light, as resilient, as pleasant to hold, and that has the advantage of being stainless. Color effects in hard rubber have always defied the rubber chemist until our research engineers finally solved the problem. This notable achieve ment has resulted in a beautiful line of two-tone stainless ripple-rubber holders in Ripple-Blu-green, Ripple-Rose and Ripple-Olive. The new twotone Waterman's pen has a real collegiate look. It is a pen you will be proud to own. It will be a constant companion throughout your college and business career and a valued memento of your college days. Dependable, speedy pen performance saves valuable time for thought a decided advantage during exams. Tuo-tone pencils arc made to match Ut'o-tone pens. They are sold where you buy your books and stationery. Waterman' Ink in Waterman's Pens - A-2S4J Lincoln's Lug-sat Fountain Psn Merchant TUCKER -SHEAN 30 YEARS AT 1123 "O" ST. A Complete Line of Waterman 's . Pens and Penoils Waterman Ptiu LONG'S . College Book Stores FACING CAMPUS Waterman Pencils LATSCH BROTHERS FOUNTAIN PEN SPECIALISTS STATIONERS 1118 "O" 8T. mi it EH m MUGIC- CONG-OOUND LINCOLN'S FIRST SOUND PICTURE 6TARTIN0 THURSDAY is 1 ( I-" M ! 30 Mill. Mull JANET OAYNOR Slid CHARLES FARRELL. AT TUB ttt r? r rr cm 9 Days Gtarting THUHSDAY! SHOWS 1, 3, S. 7. t. MATS. 3Se; EVE THE BEAUTIFUL MUSIC! Iiaf; the 0e HAUNTING LOVE SONO! THE AMAZINO SOUND EFFECTS I SEE! m m m DON'T FORGET THE bach IT amily Students Demand Quality and on that we have built our fine School Business. If by chance you buy from us and are not satisfied we feel grateful when you tell us. This is your store and we want to serve you as you feel you should be served. We value your good patronage and feel you deserve the best. Supplies for All Departments of the University "GREENEDGE" History Paper grows more popular every day. It's Boxed. Beware of Imitators SPECIAL- Genuine Leather Note Book $2.50. Fountain Pen Headquarters for All Leading Makes "GREENBACK" NOTE BOOKS of steel construction. Khaki: Grey Flexible and Leather of block and brown. LATSCH BROTHER Stationers and School Supplies 1118 O St. llillliilil ! I ' ' 1 1 I " i ' 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 ' ( 1 1 1 1 ! ! I H ' 1 1 1 1 1 ! I M I I ' 1 1 1 1 ( ; ( i j rt 1 1 r t , ililllllilll llllliillllMlliiU H!H!II!I'I':MH!