The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 30, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
iooeer Tracksters Appear Strong
GRINNELL MEET
WILL BE STIFF
Look for Real Compteition
When Pioneer Track Squad
Come to Lincoln for Dual
Contest Saturday.
SCHULTE PREDICTS FIGHT
Nebraska Likely to Lose Many
of Field Events and to Have
Hard Fight to Place in Dis
tance Runs.
"The meet will be a great one
with Grinnell stronger than she has
ever been, and Nebraska struggling
to hold her lead for the Missouri Val
ley championship there will be some
wonderful performances," Coach
Schulte said yesterday while speak
ing of the dual meet with Grinnell
next Saturday. "Grinnell has the
greatest dual meet team in the Val
ley it appears. New records are sure
to be established."
The Pioneers are strong in the
dashes, their sprinters, Scharnweber
and Taylor are expected to capture
second and third places in the 100
and Scharnweber and Jones can be
counted upon to win second and third
in the 220.
Kitchen, colored flash, and his
team mate have equaled the best
time of Crites and Scherich in the
440 and are expected to furnish
strong competition in that event in
the meet Saturday. Their best half
miler will press Lewis and Houder
Scheldt in the 880, having done the
event in 2:00.
Grinnell's miler is one of the best
men in the Valley and will press Lew
is hard for first place. He beat the
Nebraska entries badly at the Mis
souri Valley indoor meet. The Pi
oneers can run the two mile event in
9:55, which is better time than any
of the Nebraska runners have made
it in.
Weir has beaten and been beaten
in the high hurdles by J. Morgan
Taylor, Olympic star, in the Kansvs
and Drake Relays. Green, their oth
er entry is almost as fast as Taylor.
Weir is not in very good shape fol
lowing his injury on a hurdle at
Drake.
Taylor ranks as the second best
low hurdler in the world, having run
a yard behind Brookins when he
made the world's record in 23 sec
onds. Green can run the hurd'es in
almost as fast time, being clocked in
24 seconds.
, Grinnell can place first and second
in the high jump if its entries can o
over the bar at their usual heighth.
Taylor can go over at 5 feet 11 inch
es and his team mate can do 5 feet
10 inches.
The results in the broad jump will
be a tossup according to present indi
cations. Taylor and Jones of Gri--nell
and Mandary and Rhodes of Ne
braska can all do 22 feet consistant
ly. Nebraska, with Wirsig, Gleason,
Rhodes, and Davis, holds the edge in
the pole vault. All of them can clear
the bar around 12 feet, which is bet
ter than the marks made by Pioneer
vaulters so far this year.
Grinnell holds the edge in the shot
put according to present marks made
this year. Rhinefort and Meeker
have been heaving the shot 43 to -"
feet which is much farther than thi
Nebraska weight men have been ab
to do. Krimmelmeier and Molzen
have been doing 41 to 42 feet 6
inches.
Rhinefort, Grinnell discus heavr,
won a third at Drake with a toss of
better than 138 feet. Nueher can
throw the discuss 135 feet in prac
tice. These two men look good for
sure first and second unless they fail
to live up to advance notices.
Rhinefort throws the javelin 170
feet consistently and the next best
man can do 165. Nebraska men can
do 165 feet.
The mile relay promises to be a
thriller. Grinnell beat the Husker
team at the Kansas Relays but Ne
braska reversed the decision at Drake
with Locke leading off.
Varsity Track Records
OUTDOOR
One mile relay Locke, Critea, Scherich and Dailey, time
3:19.8 (1925). , ,
One-half mile relay Hein, Locke, Dailey and Scherich,
time 1:27.4 (1925) (Pending).
440-vard relay Locke, Dailey, Hein and Mandery, time
42.5 (1925).
220-yard dash Smith, time 21.3-seconds (1922).
440-yard dash McMahon, time 49.8 seconds (1919).
One-half mile run Gardner, time 1 :56.6 (1923).
One mile run Anderson, time 4:26 (1911).
Two mile run Graff, time 9:52 (1919).
120-yard hurdles Wriffht (equaled by Weir), time 15 sec
onds (1921) (1925).
220-yard hurdles Crites, time 24.8 seconds (1923).
Pole vault Gleason, distance 12 feet 3 3-4 inches (1924).
Shot put Dale, distance 44 feet 9 1-2 inches (1921).
Javelin Hartley, distance- 189 feet 6 inches (1923).
Discus Weller, distance 131 feet 5 1-2 inches (1921).
High jump Turner, height 6 feet 3 inches (1924).
Broad jump Werner, distance 23 feet (1917).
INDOOR
50-yard dash Locke, time 5.4 seconds.
440-yard run Crites .time 52.1 seconds.
660-yard run Roberts, time 1 :26.4.
880-yard run Lewis, time 2:00.4.
One mile run Lewis, time 4:34.7.
Two mile run Zimmerman, time 1001.
Shot put Kriemelmier, distance 41 feet 8 inches.
High jump Turner, height 6 feet 1-4 inch.
Pole vault Wirsig, height 12 feet 2 1-2 inches.
Broad jump Triba, distance 21 feet 10 inches.
High hurdles Weir, time 6.6 seconds.
Low hurdles Weir, time 5.9 seconds.
SPRING WORK
FOR CAGERS
Off-season Work Is Introduced
Here by Coach
E. E. Bearg.
Three Varsity records have been
broken and one equaled at the Kan
sas Relays and the Drake Relays this
year. The records broken were the
one mile relay, the one-half mile re
lay, and Locke broke the 100-yard
dash Varsit record and equaled the
world's record.
Locke set a new Varsity record
and equaled the world's record in the
100-yard dash at the Kansas Relays.
The Husker sprinter ran the distance
in 9 3-5 seconds. The former Var
sity record was held by Smith, joint
holder of the Missouri Valley Con
ference record, who made the dis
tance in 9 4-5 seconds in 1922.
A new record was made in the
one- half mile relay at the Kansas
Relays when the team composed of
Hein, Locke, Dailey and Scherich
lowered the time to 1:27.4. This
record has not been made official.
Give Assismments
For Managers
Sophomore basketball managers
report at the Armory as indicated
below:
Thursday, 4-6 Schroyer and King.
Friday, 7-9 Luikhart and Mousel.
Monday, 7-9 Larson and Schroy
er.
Tuesday, 4-6 King and Luikhart,
Wednesday, 7-9 Mousel and Lar-
sen.
Thursday, 4-6 Schroyer and King.
Friday, 7-9 Luikhart and Mousel.
Report at least ten minutes before
the hour indicated to tale care of
the equipment.
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
A spring festival to be given about
the middle of May will take the place
of the traditional May Day celebra
tion. '
The "Yellow Cnb" is the name of
a humorous publication at DePauw
Three Varsity Records Are
Broken at Kansas and Drake
The former record was held by
Smith, Layton, Noble and Lukens,
who ran the event in 1:28.4 in 1922
(The mile relay team was respon
sible for the breaking of another
broken record, formerly held by
Hawkins, Smith, Layton, and Beck-
ord, who ran the event in 3:28.8 in
1922. The Husker team composed of
Locke, Captain Crites, Sherrick and
Dailey, lowered this record to 3:19.8
at the Drake Relays last Saturday.
Weir equaled the Varsity record
in the high hurdles at the Kansas
Relays. His time was 15 seconds
The other holder of the record is
Wright, who set this mark in 1921.
A large crowd is expected to be in
the stadium to watch the Cornhus
kers in their first home meet of the
season with Grinnell. Several rec
ords are expected to be made by the
Huakers.
PLANNING FOR THIRD
ACADEMIC CONTESTS
Winners of District Meetings
to Decide State Honors
Here May 9.
Plans have been made for the
third annual interscholastic academic
contest for Nebraska high schools,
which will be held May 9 at the
University. The preliminary con
tests for the separate districts were
held on Saturday, April 25 in each
of the six districts.
Uniform questions will be provid
ed by the University for all subjects
included n the average high school
curriculum. Representatives from
the district contests and from high
schools not represented in the district
contests are eligible for the state
contest.
The preliminary contests were held
at Kearney, Wayne, Hastings, Alma,
Holdregi, McCook, Chadron, and
Bridgeport. The two winners of
each contest, which have not as yet
been announced, will comprise half
of the delegates at the state meet.
Only the accredited high schools that
did not enter students in the prelim
inary contest are eligible to send stu
dents on May 9.
The first contest of this kind w,a
held in 1923 for eight different sub
jects. Since -then the subjects offer
ed have increased considerably in
number. Omaha Central was the
easy winner of the first contest. In
1924 the number of subjects was
increased to enghteen and Omaha
Central again took a majority of the
medals. All questions to be asked
in the contest are being prepared by
faculty members of the University
of Nebraska, and are to be of such
nature that only general school
work will help in preparation.
The Department of Fine Arts at
the University has prepared a design
for the medals to be presented to the
winners of the state contests. A
wreath of laurels surrounds the dome
of the new capitol, typical of Ne
braska, upholding the torch of learn
ing. On the reverse is the cupola of
Nebraska Hall, representing schol
astic endeavor. The medals are in
gold, silver, and bronze.
Four students and f ur faculty
members are to be named as a com
mittee to discuss the control of stu
dent publication at Syracuse Uni
versity. The faculty publications
committee decided that the two men
and two women should be chosen by
the presidents of the student body
and of the W. S. G. A.
Nebraska Highs
Will Compete in
State Meet May 9
Nebraska high school coaches are
rounding the corners off their squads
this week in preparation for the big
event in the high school track world,
the state meet on the Stadium track
here May 9.
Meets this week bring almost every
team into action in the final compe
tition before the state classic staged
by the University. At Scottsbluff,
Mitchell, Alliance, Gering, Bayard,
Bridgeport, and Sidney will run for
Nebraska honors, while numerous
invitational meets throughout the
state make the card a large one.
Hastings college, Kearney Normal,
and Nebraska Central .invitational
meets will bring a lot of high school
talent together, and the Harlan coun
ty meet at Alma and the Tri-State
meet at McCook will take care of the
larger teams of the southwestern
part of the state.
The Northeast Central Athletic as
sociation meet is expected to be the
best of that association, and hot com
petition is expected.
TWENTY-SIX SIGN
FOR MAT CONTEST
WILL TEACH PLAYERS
OWN STYLE OF PLAY
Spring; basketball practice opened
for the first time in the annals of
the winter sport at Nebraska when
twenty-five men reported at the Ar
mory yesterday evening. Coach E.
E. Bcarg, the new Husker coach for
basketball, delivered a short talk to
the men in which he outlined some of
his plans for the coming year.
Spring practice will start immedi
ately, the first work-out being this
afternoon at 4 o'clock, and will con
tinue for three weeks. The practices
will be held from 7 to 9 o'clock on
Monday, Wednesday and Friday and
4 to 0 o'clock on Tuesday and Thursx
day. All basketball men are urged
to turn out daily for these practices.
The chief object of the spring
practice is to get the men thoroughly
accustomed to the style of play which
the new coach will use next season.
The Husker five man defense, which
was rated as one of the strongest
in the Valley, will remain practically
the same. Slight changes will be
made in floor tactics, especially on
the offensive, and emphasis will be
stressed on the short pass. The sys
tem in the main will be patterend
after the Illinois style which was so
successfully used in the Big Ten.
The men reporting for practice last
night were: Goodson, Smaha, Klep-
scr, Eckstrom, Black, rage, Beeikle,
Searles, Banning, Swanson, Oehlrich,
James, Jacobson, Decker, Petersen,
Mclntyre, Bernard, Cass, Grace, Eg-
gert, Chaiken, Roth, Gerelich, Nor-
ling, Lawson.
FRATS POSTPONE
BASEBALL GAMES
Today's Schedule Brings Ten
Teams Together in Second
Round of Tourney.
TODAY'S FRAT SCHEDULE
Delta Sigma DalU vi. ZU
Beta Tau.
Delta Upiilon . Pi Kappa Al
pha. Farm House . Siima Nu.
Phi Kappa vi. PHI Delta Theta.
Kappa Sigma . Sigma Phi Ep-tilon.
ill I f ' -
ft
WML.
Ten fraternity baseball teams are
slated to mix this afternoon in sec
ond round contests, after delays caus
ed by rain and bad ground condi
tions. Yesterday s three games were
postponed because of bad grounds,
and will be played today.
Meanwhile a pair of contests origi
nally scheduled for today will be run
off if the conditions are fair. Five
diamonds in Lincoln will be the scene
of Greek engagements.
Delta Sigma Delta meets Zeta
Beta Tau at 3:30 o'clock. The Den
tist Zeta Beta game was originally
scheduled for Wednesday. The D.
U. team will play Pi Kappa Alpha in
a game which will bring two strong
teams together.
The Farm House Sigma Nu, post
poned from Wednesday, will be play
ed at four o'clock at the Ag college
and Phi Kappa will play Phi Delta
Thcta on the Lincoln high school
diamond. Kappa Sigma and Sigma
Phi Epsilon, winners of last year's
trophy, will play at 3:30 at the State
Hospital.
Thrills enough will be on schedule
Saturday afternoon when the Grin
nell Pioneers will try to do what
hasn't been done in Valley circles for
aomo years, and that is, defeat the
Husker track men in a dual meet.
Close competition in every event
and the final score promises to be
close. Grinnell has one of the strong
est teams in years. Forty some odd
athletes will compete in this meet in
comparison to the twenty-two play
ers who line up in football games.
There will be only one other home
meet of the season in which the fol
lowers of the Husker runners will bo
seen in action Among the Huskers
of nation fame are Locke and Weir.
These two men have been the center
of attraction in two of the nations
greatest relays.
Grinnell is bringing some men of
prominence in the athletic World
Taylor, of the Olympic team h, hil'
name on the honor roll as Wor)(,
record holder in the hurdles. Hit
field of competition includes the two
hurdle races, the high and broad
jump, the two-twenty yard dash, and
the quarter mile.
The triangular meet with Kaniaj
and Kansas Aggies will be the next
event on the Husker schedule. This
will be held on the ninth the same
day as the High school moot. The
next week will bo one of rest, but
the week following the Husker,
meet the Kansas farmers at Man
hattan and then journey to Norman
Oklahoma the week following for
the Missouri Valley championship.
Every national sorority in the
United States has a chapter at the
University of Minnesota.
COLD HALTS BALL
SQUAD'S PRACTICE
Will Have Plenty of Work to
Prepare for Games
This Week-end.
The Varsity baseball squad has
been forced to discontinue practice
at the Rock Island Park the last two
days on account of the cold rainy
weather. Coach Kline is planning on
a final workout this afternoon before
leaving for Manhattan, Kas., where
the team will meet the Kansas Aggies
Friday and Saturday. Local fans
will have their first chance of the
season to sue the Nebraska team in
action when they return to meet the
Iowa State squad on the Rock Island
diamond Monday and Tuesday.
"Choppy" Rhodes will be busy di
viding his time between the two
spring sports this week-end. He will
pitch the first game against the Kan
sas Aggies and will return to the
track Saturday where his services are
needed in the dual meet with Grin
nell. "Murph" Lang, who held the
opposing teams to three hits in two
games on the' recent trip, will hold
the mound on the second day.
The Huskers will meet a strong ag
gregation in the Kansas Aggie squad.
With two victories over Missouri and
an even split in a two-game series
with Oklahoma they are leading the
Valley. The Nebraska squad emerged
from their last week's trip with an
even break in Valley standings, hav
ing both won and lost two games.
The Husker games up .to the pres
ent time are as follows:
Nebraska 7 Missouri 0
Nebraska 3
Nebraska 3
Nebraska 3
Nebraska 3
Missouri 4
St. Louis U 17
Washington .... 1
Washington .... 7
Some 78 doctor's degrees were
granted by the University of Wiscon
sin at its latest commencement.
WANT ADS
TEACHERS wanted for all lines of
teaching work. The Stewart School
Service, 138 No. 12 street Room
383, Peterson block.
WANTED A student to work part
time running a Hoffman Pressing
machine. Apply Ben Simon &
Sons.
Do You Know
We Serve TATER FLAKES
With Your Sandwich?
Fillers' Pharmacy
16 & O Street
B-4423
gllllHIIIillllllllllilllllllllllllililllM
Extend Time for Entries Two
More Days Because of
Few Contestants.
Twenty-six men had signed up for
the wrestling handicap meet at six
o'clock yesterday evening. Dr. Clapp
has decided to extend the time when
entries can be made, permitting men
to enter two more days. The meet
probably will be held Thursday and
Friday of next week, if sufficient in
terest is shown. Medals will be
awarded to winners of each class, if
at least four men are competing.
The men already entered for the
meet are: 108-pound A. W. Dun
ham and Smith; 115-pound Gett
man, Karrer, A. S. Dunham, and
Waterman; 125-pound DeFord, Mil
lette, Weber, Hudson, and Huddle
ston; 135-pound Kellog, Luff, An
drews, and Buck; 145-pound- Skin
ner, Stinner, Richardson, and Bish
op; 158-pound Lundy, and Brani
gan; 175-pound Davis Johnson,
Waldo, Scheeckle and Brainard.
Accounting, salesmanship, adver
tising, auditing, commercial engi
neering, banking, and teaching are
jobs that take most of the graduates
of ths Course in Commerce, Univer
?
When You
Have
Anything
Clean
To
Only
The Evans
Can Clean It
In the Evansway
Get your Ribbon
Now for
Big Parade at 10 o'clock
Lunch at noon
Track event, stunts, and a ball game
in the afternoon.
Bizad Spring Party
At the K. C. Hall
Friday Night
Music by the Kandy Kids
Every Bizad Should Come!
University. , j
sity of Wisconsin.
E,!!!!!!!!!Tn7-'!IIII!'I!I!!n