FRIDAY. JANUARY X 10.U TITE DAILY NERRASKAN TOUR - HUSKERS READY SCRAP VITH DRAKE CAGE IN Injuries Suffered on Trip; South May Bench j Maclay, Hokuf. CQNKLIN TO SEE ACTION. Game Will Be Saturday At Coliseum; Opponents Strong In Valley. Deserting conference competi- j Uon for the week ena, jNeoia&ita will see how the brand of basket ball plaved in the Biff Six com pares with that of the Missouri Valley conference wjien the Husk ers meet Drake on the coliseum floor Saturday night. Drake, al though not utandlng at the top of the conference, is up with the lead ers and will bring a team to Lin coln which should give Charley Black s charges all they want to do for the evening. The entire Nebraska strength will not be available for the game as Don Maclay. lanky center, is temporarily out of the game with a sprained wrist and it is highly improbable that the former Au burn star will be in shape for the Saturday night fracas. In case Maclav is not able to start Leon ard Conklin, a former Minatare high school star, will be in the lineup at center. Conklin has been used at both center and forward this year, playing forward for the major part of two games during the series at Seattle when Davey was forced out of the game by in juries. Hokuf May Play. Steve Hokuf. regular guard, has not been reporting for practice regularly this week but will prob ably be in shape to take the floor by game time. Hokuf is suffering from blistered feet but is expected to be in condition. The probable starting lineup for tne game mis ween enu win no vc , Davey and Fisher at forwards, Conklin at center, and Koster and Hokuf at guards. In case Hokuf should not be able to play. Stipsky will probably get in the game. The game with Drake will be the sixth non-conference engage ment for the Cornhuskers. In games outside the loop this year Nebraska has won but a single vic tory in the five starts. This one victory was accomplished when South Dakota was nosed out by a single point in the opening game of the season. All Losses Close. The three games lost to the Uni versity of Washington at Seattle, Pacific coast champions last year, were all close and the Huskers were in the lead in all of the games, only to fall behind in the "ast few moments of play. The other loss was to the strong Pittsburgh Panther team which eked out a one-point victory in a game just betore the Christmas recess. Entering conference competition after the holidays, Nebraska hung up a record of three straight vie- Classified Want Ads , Ojily 10 Cents a Line (Minimum oi jjinw PHOTOGRAPHS TFTF HKVnK BTODTO, O atreat, B299L Distinctive photoaraphi. AJTEH ALX. lt' ft Tnran photograph that, you want. TOR ChMPt A plenty ood black fur mat. Average nU. Ml). Call Clarence HlKmnii at B-H226. LOST AND FOUND J.OST Small tooled leather handliair. Con tained ttevt, pen and pencil. Lniave at Registrar's ofIre. Reward ! 1.0BT or taken bv mistHlie. valuable blue three hole notebook. .Kinder call Uauel Henkle at E2WM. LOST Jewelled Oamma I'M Beta pin be tween Social sciences' and Andrew's. Cell F2233. "WANTED "WANTED Evervone to brine artlclM which have hn iound to Um Daily Kcbraakan office. DANCING JKRRY'R DANCING RCHCHM. Private or clnim Iwminn In ballroom dancln. Call B 2(rW or B-7MB. TiTIN'f.-ilunmorlptii tvpcil. Will call for TVHTNG r:xprllli:r In typlnn Urni papoln mid llixlu. ''all Mr L Bl'" l-AJ-'.l. posmoNS t!iru-JKh T'" Iivi. M-liool Ht'i'ii-Bin. FOR SALE. T" TVIM.NG : torles to take the leud In the Biff j Six. Missouri was turned back ju j ! game on t he Coliseum floor and j ahen Nebraska took the road and won from Oklahoma In at Sutur-1 day night battle. Tho following i Monday saw the Curnhu.kera : climb to the top of the standing; 1 when they noed out Kansas at Lawrence by a onc-poini mat gin, In an overtime game. , Dciichwariner WITH thin, the last Issue of the Daily Nebraskan for the first Kemcsler of 1S30-G1, the Bcnchwarmer" concludes its pub lication for the same period. During this semester it has at- ; tempted to bring things of interest ' to the attention of its readers (or maybe we should say reader. as you can never tell just how many i may be reading it). We are cer-! tain, however, that there is at , least one reader of the column. OATURDAY night will find the Cornhuskers in action on the coliseum maples. But this time it will be a non-conference foe the Huskers face. The Drake Bulldogs of the Missouri Valley conference will furnish the competition. In addition to facing a team which will give them plenty to do during the evening, Nebraska will be handicapped by the less of Don Maclay. A sprained wrist received in the Kansas game will probably keep the lengthy center on the bench. VTITH all this flurry of record w breaking taking place in the militarv meet, the question has been asked whether the men are better this year than in the last two or three meets that have been held. The reason for the excellent per formances of the present meet may be that the men this year are really better, but the real differ ence is due in k large degree to the new type of clothing the men wear when they compete. IN THE meets last year and the j 1 year before the 'kaydets" wore j their regular outfits, which was a requirement of the military offi cials. This year they are also ! wearing the regulation clothing I but it has changed, as everyone I probably knows. I In place ot tne regulation "britches"' and wrap leggings, the "kaydets"' now wear regular trou sers. These trousers allow more free dom of motion in the lower ex tremities of the participants, and hence they consequently turn in better performances. THE intramural program for the past semester has been one of the most extensive ever under taken by the department. Rudy Vogeler. director of intramural athletics, is largely responsible for the excellent manner in which the program has been carried out this year. Alpha Gamma P.ho recently carried off the class A basketball trophy while Delta Tau Delta gained the same honors in the class B division. Soccer and water polo have also concluded with the champions crowned in each of these events. Now bowling, handball and in door track are looming on the horizon. " Competition in some of these events is already under wsy but will be postponed until exam inations are over. CO, this concludes the comments of the "Benchwarmer" for the semester. It might be possible that during the year we have hurt some individual's feelings but it was never our intent to do so. If this column has failed to say the things that might interest you we are also sorry. But it some times happens that a newspaper must have something to fill up the space and the "Benchwarmer" has served thiB purpose on The Daily Nebraskan. And what a lot of space it has covered. Adios. Soprano Did you notice how my voice filled the hall last night ? Contralto Yes, dear; in fact 1 noticed several people leaving to make room for it. Ipswich Star. i T. ' t M II lTl 'riftV y L- i. ,f mi .L it'' -.-. .i '2 I ,V N" .... Men Here IS Something! Final Clearance of Mens SUITS AND O'COATS 80 "Parkway" Suits $22.50 j 45 Heavy j O'Coats ! y3 off OriQinally $40.00 ' Now $2fi.67 1 Originally $50.00 , Now $36.34 O'Briun Cum- el a Uulr and Tiiiiiuu j Tuft Alpuou. Bouolea and lloltont tn assort -I ed bli.m. Coiiti to aunn you: Prirea to 1 i-uhh your bart: McilnM (or limn uiiiJ yulinc llien. til Kubur liine. Iiund fllliHlmd worHtdd. CliHviotn uiiii ITerrmsfbynea Aver tigt, 8 tout and Shun 101 STATE COACH DRILLS ON OFFENSE Cyclone Caqers Get Stiff . Workouts: Dick Hawk Still On Bench. AMh,y, la.- Coach Louis Moiwe of Iowa State has been giving his tii! ket towers a strenuous drill on offensive tactics this week as they prepare for 'he game with Kan sas Thursday nljjht nd one with Crclghtcn Rt Omaha Saturday. The Cyclone mentor is trying to offset thw strong ilefensive machine of the Jayhawks. So far. Menu h;us boon unable to uncover anyone who can match the fine shooting of Roadcap, di minutive forward. Thomson, Om aha sophomore who has been Roadcap's running mate in early season tilts, has average less than three points per game. Dick Hawk, the rtar running guard, suffered a badly sprained ankle in the Missouri game last week and will probably watch the Kansas game from the bench. Hawk is an important cog in both offense aud defense. Bowcn. a sophomore, and Holmes, reserve of last year, are being groomed for the position. So far this year. Iowa State has shown the bet defensive work of anv team in the Big Six confer ence but its scoring power has been th poorest. BUTLER EXPRESSES VIEWS ON COLLEGE (Continued from Page l.i because our system of higher edu ction comprised the three links of high school, college and uni versity while the European sys tem, with the gymnasium or lycec and the univeisity, had iwo links, these subjects could not be dis cussed intelligently among our selves or with Europeans. The gymnasium or lycee, he said, took the student through adoles cence and then handed nim over to the university for his advanced study, while our colleges, replicas of Oxford and Cambridge as they were in the seventeenth century, covered ihe last two gymnasium years and the first two of the uni versity. Only Fundamentals Taught. The object of the American col lege had always been to provide the fundamentals ctf a liberal edu cation, and had not hing to do with careers or professions, he said. The colleges had been feeling their way the last 50 years, he added, to find something for the present day to take the place of the old curriculum of Greek, Latin and mathematics. The evidence that they had not. found it, he said, lay in the fact th&t no two American colleges had the same program oi rtudies. He said that he felt that the progress of Dean Hawks and his associates at Columbia college was the most constructive and likely to be the most permanent of what had been achieved in this direc tion, but that of course they had many competitors. At Columbia the "problem of preserving the character of a liberal education against the pressure of the stu dents' vocational or professional interest was answered, he said, by allowing them to choose for their elective courses in the last two years at college subjects which, while general in themselves and parts of a liberal education, an- BUCK'S COFFEE SHOP (FORMERLY EAVIS) SPECIAL CTUDENT LUNCH 30c Hot Rolls ard Drink Included NSfcV 30 Drees O'Coats $18.50 Hurl; Oxl'urdt! and KiiucIi in Hinurt, iluu liie )iruuted 1 1 J' 1 t. Cure. illy, expertly tttilur-.il with veivet niu kdf rollarn. fc-Ti.EET rxoor.. I ewered the requirements of their : later work. Law Students Guided. ' Future law students, he bald for I example, were not allowed to study contracts or torts, but could take such subjects as the history of jur isprudnce, economics and sociol ogy. The problem of vocational in terest was present, but not yet dtiuUfcl.v, at BtuiiaiJ, he aulJ, and when it did get strong there it would have to be met in the same way. Women were now enrolled In every graduate department of Co lumbia university except engineer ing, he said, and predicted that the time would come when women would equip themselves to serve ad engineering consultants or ad visers and this department would then too have added them to its rolls. When in the old days 3 per cent i of the students of Columbia col lege went on into graduate study this was considered a large num ber, he said, and if 10 percent went Into graduate and professional study it was "considerable." To day, he added. 78 percent remained in the university after their gradu ation from college or went to some other university for graduate and professional study. Ttrm "University" Vulgar. Dr. Butler prefaced his defini tion of a university by saying that "if we could stop the general, al mot vulgar use of the word 'uni versity' it would lead to more clear thinking." He said in part that a university was not a group of col leges and professional schools, but "an institution of higher learning where scholars of high competence guide students, who have been prepared by a liberal education, into advanced studies, with the aid of libraries, laboratories and sem inars." He also termed the university a "power house of wisdom." Eco nomic and other public service that j the univer sity rendered the state : was a part of its function, with the dissemination of knowledge, he : said. j EAT AT THE COLLEGIAN I Chicken Dinner Sunday 35c 1 COLLEGIAN CAFE j One Halt Block South of .Campus i on 13th Street -e Special Crested Jewelry We c.-iny Ocsls in Iwo sizes in hih Silver ami (.Joltl and can apply llieui 1o almost siuv ir1i,li GOLD STONE LEATHER WOOD SILVER GLASS HALLETT University Jeweler Established 1871 117 So. 12 St. It .V .2 i3a J Dr. Nutlev You will have to give up all mental work for a few weeks. Punkrlmer But, doctor, 1 earn my living by writing poems for the magazines. Dr. Nutley Oh, you can keep right on at that. Pathfinder. MUST YOU WEAR YOUR MISTAKES? VOGUE ... One of the Conde Nast Publication 10 Issues of VOGUE $2 Special Introductory Offer to New Subscribers Only VOGUE, GrajW Building, New York City. EnWd find t2 for vhicli wild m? TEN isMifr Sign and mail the coupon now Where it is located Now! 1229 R Street The Oldest Book and School Supply House on the Campus ISTHECOOP? What They Have for Sale? Stationery, Books and Supplies Their Specialty is History Note Book Paper Per Ream 45 "Your Drug Store" Our noon lunch business Is sure rowing and boy hiw busy our Soda Fountain Is. We thank you. Bunlness Is Rood. THE OWL PHARMACY Phor B1068 148 No. 14 4 P St. (WE DELIVER) Some girls fortunate creatures! can afford to give away their clothes mistakes or just leave them hanging in their closets. But most of us have to wear for two t-ea&ons the suit that looked out of style the first week we had it on ... or the dress that kept meet ing itself everywhere it went! Vogue can save you from such glialy plights. Vogue stalks the Paris couturiers in the ap proved Sherlock Holmes manner. It dashes to the fashionable continental resorts and catches the new mode on the wing. It haunts the great New York shops . . . and you get the benefit! Vogue can help you plan eery detail of your, wardrobe from a jaunty new coat to a pair of street shoes. It will help you look like a million dollars on a midget budget! How much for all this?... jii't two Utile runaway dollars pinned to the .coupon below. Voiun. I m a nw suIiscHIht. En )utd find $6 for nnr year Address. Qtv .State- DO YOU KNOW? lyl 122.W. ST. Halt-cutting 35c j Kearns t Barber Shop 133 No. 14th j 0'Vt'i 'A MiWrijrtiun to ofue. GCVJ I ! ! i -2