THE DAILY NEBRASKAN COACH SCHULTE GIVES LINESMEN STIFOT1K0UTS Scarlet and Cream Hospital List Handicap Dawson in Preparing for Urbana Game Barely Two Weeks Away. MANY RUMORS COME FROM 1LUNI CAMP Bear Dope from Blue and Gold School Is Offset by Stories Tell of Proming Sophomore Gridsters on Squad. Vith Coai-h Henry F. Schulte back at his old job of coaching the Husker W'.w, Ncbiaska's prospects for de veloping strong line before the n inris game have brlngtened con siderably. The feature of the drill Friday and Saturday afternoons was the siff workouts given the lines m n bv Sehulte and Day. The hos Hiijl list, which grew rapidly, the last : f the week, is expected to pro vide another handicap to the Husker coaches in preparing for the game viin ihe Illiiil. Bassett, who has a badly wrenched arm. Weir, who has a bad cold, and XoWe with blistered feet, compose the Husker hospital list. Bassett, . who was bothered considerably last fall by Head injuries, has ben pro vided with a special headgear this year, which is designed to prevent injuries to his cranium. - Stories coming from the Blue and Gold camp at Urbana are a strange combination of "bear dope" and "bull stories," One story says that two stro ngveterans, Robinson and Perrill, halfback and end, respec tively, have turned in their suits while three other men are ineligible at present The latest "bull story" emanating from Coach Zuppke's headquarters is to the effect that in addition to the eleven letter men at the Illinois institution, there b a larpe squad of most promising sophomores fighting for places on the first team. Included among these is D5ck" Hall, 230-poufld tackle, who will be in the lineup when the Illini meet Nebraska on the 6th at Urbana in the opening game ot the 1923 sea son for both teams. Friday's workout in the Husker passing, signal running and punting. Captain Lewellen doing most of the punting on "A team. His punts were almost up to standard. Danny Reed and Bowers were . also trying out their toes on the pigskin. The Cornhusker coaching staff realize only too well that the condi tion of the team they are to face at Illinois and the strength of this foe. The Nebraska team is rapidly gain ing hold on their formations and will soon be in better shape for hard er scrimmages. Coaca Dawson and his assistants do not expect to meet Illinois in mid-season form and j they are taking things slowly and: grasping them as they go. The pur pose is not to build their team too fast A team that s thrown to- gether and allowed tj go that way does not come up to requirements,; hence the time and consideration of every move and change, Dawson says. At the start of the reason of sig nal running Captain Tjewellen was shifter from halfback his old high school station at quarter. At first it was awkward for him but now he is been ging good at quarter tins sea place creditably. Rufas DeWIti has hitting his old stride and 111 ji the son; he is also a valuable halfback. I'ave Noble- and Herb DeWiti have been playing with their usual steadi ness at ha"'fbaclL. Sid Hartman has been filling the gap at fullback in good form, al though there are possibilities of Mey ers, Locke and Rhode being used at full Choppy Rhodes reported for workout Friday and it is a question whether he will be useJ at end or in the bactfield. The next two week will be spent in good, hard workovts every day, according to Coach Dawson; with every man fighting for a chance ts make the first trip of the year, to ! Urbana, October 6. which govern the actions of the Uni versity Y. M. C. A. throughout the Unitefl States. Mr. Altstadt was oifginally a local representative in the state organi sation of the "Y." He thn ttn. ed the Estes Park conclave as a state representative in a regional convention including the six -states oi mo itocxy Mountain regional council. By this organization n elected as one of two vthe other be ing the president by virtue of his office) to sit in the national student council of the Y. M. C. A. Not on ly do the 16 student members of the national council determine the poli cies of the "Y'f throucnout the try, but they also cooperate and are a part ot tne international organiza tion which has similar aims. ELECTED DELEGATE TO Y iiATIOIIAL COUNCIL Wfliam G. Altstadt, president of the University Y. V. C. A- cabinet nd a serJjr in the College of Busi ness Administration, as elected to a national committee f the Y. M C. A. while at the Etes Park con ference held June 9-19, thii rammer. The national r. M. C A- student council, as it is called, meets in New York City once or twice each year and hat policy determining powers Francis A. Flood. '20. of Univer sity Place, instructor in mathematics at the School of Agriculture last year, has been appointed instructor in English at the Iowa State College, Ames, this year. At Nebraska he specialized in English and Journal ism. For the publicity department of the Canadian government he has published a series of articles in the Nebraska Farmer on a trip he took to Alaska last summer. Miss Jessie Watson, '22, formerly in newspaper work in Lincoln, is now in the advertising department of the Bremerton News Searchlight, Brem erton, Wash. YEARLINGS GETTING READY FOR VARSITY Coaches Young and Hagen Picks Men for Coming Scrimmages. Freshman coach Farley Young split up his troop of fifty-five year lings yesterday into six squads and put them through team and signal practice. Three seta of backfield men and three squads of linemen worked out at their favorite posi tions while coaches Young and Ha gen looked them over preparatory to pickin gthe team that will scrimmage the varsity next week. First year men who have reported for prac tice are: Gilmore Decker, Joe Weir, Ivan Walters, Kenneth Cook, Willard Dover, Arnold Lee, Harold Almy, Harold Scoville, Ed Gibbs, Lloyd Grew, Gilbert Reynolds, John Day, Paul Kann, Henry Brainard, Albert Loden, Kenneth Peckenbaugh, Esl worth Du Teau,, James Wickman, Vera Toof, R. W. Cook, Paul Bass, Paul Memengal, Roy Anderson, Nor man Gray, Roy Manderey, T. Morrill, Ben Tryba, Harold, Snyder, Alfred Angel, Herman Anderson, Llcyd Timm, Walter SchoTtz, Allen Tillot sen, TJoyd Stryker, Frank Daley, Donald Yost Frank Cummins, Iiryce Boeder, Dill Bronson,, Georg: Cogan, Bunker Hill, Cal Giltrcdge, Ted Pickett, Clarence Kruse, Lucien Melt, Clarence Miller, Carl Swan son, John K."iman, M. ft Reller, W. A. Rogus, D. G. Wishart, D. W. Pkkett, J. E. l ange, Ruben Waake, KtitnetL Moss. SEPTEMBER ALUMNI JOURNAL PUBLISHED Advance Story on Football and Article by Avery in Re cent Issue. Thirty-eight hundred alumni and former students are receiving the University Journal, official publics tioa of the Nebraska Alumni Associ ation. The September issue, now out, contains the advance specula tions on the 1923 football team, a special article by Chancellor Avery on the distribution of students through the various departments and colleges, and numerous articles on the activities of the more prominent alumni of the university. A number of marked changes ap pear in this issue of the Journal. Ad vertising matter has been admitted for the first time, not to make the Journal entirely self-supporting, ac cording to Harold F. Holtx, secretary-treasurer of the Alumni association. 3 The Holborn The Accepted Standard of Correct Dress at Nebraska At Nebraska and in Universities the the country over the Holborn is the style worn by leaders in college life. It's a typical college coat made with three buttons, set wide apart loose, boxy, easy hanging, and expressing a college man's personality, as no other style possibly can. The Holborn is here in a splendid va riety of fabrics, in light shades and dark, priced from $ to Stop in and ask 'to see the Holborn ARQUHAR Have you a good place to h eat? Service, reasonable e rates. 1428 S Phone L4798 n 35Sv SPALDINGv rvirs forSPORTI 1 Play your best I I tl,c n m 1618 Harney St., Omaha gl!lllIII!!l!ll!!!ll!ll!llli!!llSlllii!ii!l!Iii!III!l!!i!Iii!IIIIiili!l!!l!l!i!Ill!lll HI A Better Laundry Whether it's shirts and collars or the daintiest feminine apparel, EEs you can send them here with every assurance that they 11 be laundered SAFELY and well. 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