The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 02, 1928, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
OKLAHOMA FlYE
LEADS RACE FOR
' VALLEY HONORS
Sooners Remain (Undefeated ;
Tigers Stand Second,
Nebraska Eighth
Oklahoma Sooners continue to
lead the pack in the Missouri Valley
basketball race for 1928 champion
ship honors. The Sooners from Nor
man have a perfect percentage col
umn, having won in eight starts.
The Missouri Tigers are pursuing
the Sooners with one lone defeat and
that handed them by the Nebraska
Huskers. The two leaders meet this
week at Columbia. A wfti for Coach
Edward's Tiger crew will tie the two
quintets for first place and a set
back for the basketeers from Col
umbia will mean that they still con
tinue to hold second place alone.
VALLEY STANDINGS
w I pet. pts. op
Oklahoma 8 0 1.000 341 186
Missouri 6 1 .857 261 186
Oklahoma Ag. 5 3 -623 288 193
Washington .... S 3 .625 239 218
Kama Aggies 4 4 .509 235 235
K-.n... 3 4 .429 191 220
Drake 3 5 .375 215 257
Nebraska 2 5 .286 186 207
Grinnell 1 6 .143 193 276
Iowa State 1 7 .125 250 326
Oklahoma Aggies and Washington
are tied for third place, each with
five wins and three defeats. This
week end the Stillwater Aggies trek
to the camp of the Cornhuskers for
a game on the Coliseum floor. This
will be the first time Nebraska has
met an Oklahoma quintet this sea
son. The Aggie floor men are led
by "Ab" Wright, sophomore flash
who has been leading the scorers of
the coference all season.
Holt High Point Man
Coach McDermott's Oklahoma five
presents one of the most formidable
basket shooting quintets in the Miss
ouri Valley if not in the entire
country. The Sooner five have
scored 341 points in eight games
and have held their opponents to but
186 points. Ld by the tall "Vic"
Holt, Sooner pivot man the Sooners
have ran rough shod over all Valley
fives they have met this season. Holt
has taken the leading in the individ
ual scoring and is now leading with
103 tallies while Wright of the Oak
Ag .ies is close behind with 96.
i'he Sooners come north this week
for the thair first real test against
the Tigers and Washington. The
southern quintet boast of four men
over nix feet nd hope to make thpir
northern invasion entirely success
ful. In the eight games .o far the
Oklahoma five has scored an average
of 43 points a game.
Last week's games affected the
Valley standing very little with the
exception of the dumping of the
Kansas Jayhawkers which set the
Allen crew down in the second divi
sion. The victory for the Washing
ton five put them into third place.
Nebraska is well down in the sec
ond division with two wins out of
seven starts. The Huskers took the
count of the Iowa State quintet on
the Coliseum floir Saturday, putting
the Ames team into the cellar posi
tion. Grinnell and Ames have eked
out but one victory out of seven
games.
Games this week:
Thursday: Kansas at Grinnell.
Friday: Oklahoma at Washington,
Oklahoma Aggies at Kansas Aggies,
Kansas at Iowa State.
Saturday: Oklahoma at Missouri,
Oklahoma Aggies at Nebraska, Kan
sas at Drake.
game for 1928 and possibly a game
for Memorial Stadium in 1929 it will
be a huge step forward for Nebraska
in the sport light of the world and
we don't mean 'if."
"It won't be long now," until Ne
braska has a baseball nine on the
diamond representing the Cornhus
ker institution. It will not be this
year but is a sure thing for next
season. Baseball has been extinct at
Nebraska for three years now and
the grand old American pastime is
coming back. The spring of 1929
will see aspirants for the horsehide
nine working out on the Nebraska
diamond somewhere west of the Col
iseum. The Cornhusker carnival at the
Coliseum Friday night, sponsored by
the N-club, is one of the high lights
on the intramural athletic program
at Nebraska this year. The big event
will include the fraternity relays,
wrestling and boxing.
Coach Henry Schulte is taking
stock of his varsity track material
for the coming season. Tryouts for
the frosh were held last week and a
number of varsity candidates were
on exhibition also.
Roland "Gip" Locke and Fait
"Chief" Elkins, Nebraska's two
Olvnmic men are working out on the
I track nrior to their leave for New
I York for the Olympic finals.
Coach Charley Black's revamped
lineup on the hardwood looked plenty
neat in the Iowa State game and
from all indications the same quintet
will face the powerful Oklahoma Ag
gies on the Coliseum floor this Sat
urday. Munn has replaced Elliott at
center, Lewandowski has replaced
Krall at guard and Grace is working
in the forward hold with "Jug'
Brown in place of Othmer.
Munn, the tall sophomore center
showed up better in the Cyclone
game last week than he has all sea
son. There are great prospects for
Munn at the pivot position and we
believe that with more experience he
should rival the tall Holt from Soon
erland. Nebraska opens its Missouri Valley
wrestling season Saturday at the
Coliseum when the Kansas Jayhawk
er grapplers come to Lincoln for a
Valley mizup. Coach Guy Looka
baugh has a promising squad of mat
men this season but Coach Kellogg
has a likewise promising squad at
Nebraska so the meet should be
everything but one-sided.
KANSAS PREPARES
FOR IOWA INVASION
Jayhawks Will Meet Ames, Drake,
Grinnell This Week-end With
Crippled Line-up
Lawrence, Kan., Feb. 1 With a
crippled line-up and the memory of
a 35-28 defeat at the hands of Wash
ington University last week-end, the
Jayhawker quintet i3 preparing for
an invasion of Iowa this week-end.
A surprise line-up to be used in these
games is being rounded into shape,
according to Dr. F. C. Allen, director
of athletics and coach of basketball
at the University of Kansas. The stiff
schedule for this week includes games
with Grinnell on Feb. 2; Ames, Feb.
3; and Drake, Feb. 4.
Balfour Jeffery is out of the game
for the season with an injured knee.
Bob Maney's hand is bothering him
and Clarence McGuire is suffering
from an injured ankle. McGuire will
probably be in shape for the Iowa
trip however. Art Lawrence, who was
a star on the football squad last fall
and who was expected out for bas
ketball this semester, will be inel
igible on account of scholastic re
quirements. Harold Schmidt and
Duane Henderson were graduated at
the end of the first semester.
Of the three Iowa teams Ames is
the only one which has played Kan
sas this season, K. U. winning the
game, 33-46.
TEACHERS WILL BE
ACADEMY LEADERS
Frankforter Heads Chemist Section;
Brenke, Brunig, Slaymaker
Are Officers
Dr. C. J. Frankforter of the chem
istry department will be chairman of
the chemistry section of the Nebras
ka Academy of Science when it
meets at Midland college, Fremont,
April 25, 26, 27. Several university
faculty members are officers of the
organization. Prof. W. C. Brenke
of the mathematics department is
vice-president, Prof. M. P. Brunig of
the physics department, secretary,
and P. K. Slaymaker, professor of
engineering design, treasurer. Prof.
D. W. Crouse of Midland college is
president.
AMES RELAY TEAM
LEAVES FOR RACES
Iowa Runners Start for Millrose
Games; Captain Caulum
Is 111 in Hospital
Ames, Iowa, Feb. 1. A crippled
Iowa State relay team is making the
trip to New York for the Millrose
races Thursday, Coach Bob Simpson
announced today.
Captain Lindus Caulum of Sioux
City, the fastest half-miler in camp,
is still in the college hospital with
influenza, and his place will be filled
by Behrens of Davenport, who has
looked good in speed drills. Thorn
burg, who has been on the sick list,
is out of the hospital, and although
not in top form, will run in the Mill
rose games.
The Cyclones are scheduled to
meet Penn State and New York uni
versity, according to word received
from the east. The other members
of the team making the trip are
Hoak and Thompson. Coach Bob
Simpson and his charges left Ames
yesterday.
Ray Conger, national collegiata
and national A. A. U. mile champion,
who is scheduled to represent the
Illinois Athletic Club in the Wana
maker mile event of the Millrose
games, may be hampered in Thurs
day's race by an infected tooth.
Conger will make the trip with the
Iowa State 2-mile team.
Agricultural League
Plays First Games
The opening games of the inter
department basketball league at the
College of Agriculture were played
last evening in the Student Activities
building. There are eight teams en
tered in the league so far: agronomy,
ag. journalism, ag. engineers, chem
istry, dairy, rural economics, animal
husbandry and faculty. The games
are being played on a percentage
basis. Each team plays every night
and the team winning the highest
number of games will win the league.
Colorado Aggies May
Establish 'Honor Day'
Fort Collins, Colo., Feb. 1 The
presidents of all the honorary fra
ternities at Colorado Aggies met
in a group conference with Dean
S. Arthur Johnson a few days ago
to formulate an "honor day" on
the campus. Plans are? not yet com
plete, but it is hoped that such a
day, when all honorary organiza
tions can pledge their new mem
bers at one time, may appear on
the college calendar.
ALUMNI RETURN FOR VISIT
Former Nebraska Chemistry Student
Renews Acquaintances
Former students of the chemistry
department who were recent visitors
on the campus are: Dr. Randolph
Major, who received his master's de
gree here in 1924, now chemical in
structor and research assistant at
Princeton; Dr. R. H. Edee, granted a
master's degree in 1925, now assist
ant professor of chemistry at Ham
line college, St. Paul, Minn.; Miss
Dora Brunell of Friend, Nebr., now
professor of chemistry at Houghton
college, Houghton, N. Y.; Miss Jose
phine Grave of Falls City, now in
structor of chemistry at Principia
academy, St. Louis, Mo.; and Irwin
A. Clark, a graduate in 1920, who is
working with the Mid-Continent Pe
troleum corporation at Tulsa, Okla.
Housekeeping
At Wisconsin U.
Is Gigantic Job
The University of Wisconsin af
fords a housekeeping job that would
have appalled the most efficient major-domo
of the largest medieval cas
tle. This job falls to the lot of A.
F. Gallistel, superintendent of build
ings and grounds at the state uni
versity of Wisconsin, who keeps
things ship-shape in the academic
home of the university's 9,000 stu
dents. Mr. Gallistel has oversight of the
university's 110 buildings of all
kinds, valued at some. (10,500,000.
Exactly ninety-one of these buildings
are heated from, the central station
which generates 4,800 horse power,
and burns 150 tons of coal each win
ter day.
The steam from the heating sta
tion travels through thirteen miles of
pipe laid in two one-half miles of
tunnels large enough to walk in and
one one-half miles of smaller con
duits. The 2,000,000 gallons of water
which the university uses on an av
erage school day is carried through
three miles of lake water mains and
two miles of city water mains.
Mr. Gallistel's establishment has
700 acres in the campus at Madison,
and another 700 acres in experiment
al farms, etc. The lake shore front
age is 13,000 feet. Roads and drives
on the campus measures approxi
mately ten miles.
LAW PROFESSOR IS
AUTHOR OF ARTICLB
L. Void of College of Law Tells of
. Tort Principles of Business
In Harvard Review
Prof. L. Void of the College of
Law is the author of a leading article
in the Harvard Law Review for Jan
uary. The article, "The Tort Aspect
of Anticipatory Repudiations of Con
tracts," is the first systematic pre
sentation of the bearing of tort
principles on the question of liabil
ity for unjustified cancellations of
business aspects. Another of the
leading articles in the law review for
this month is by Gustavus H. Robin
son, now at the Boston University
law school, who was formerly a pro
fessor of law here. His subject is
"The Public Utility Concept in
American Law."
FELLOWSHIPS FOR
TRAYBL ANNOUNCED
Small Number of Students Eligible
For American-Scandinavian
Foundation Study
Dean O. J. Ferguson, and Profes
sors C. C. Engberg and O. W. Sjo
gren have been appointed a commit
tee to select one or two students to
compete for the award in May of
twenty travelling fellowships by the
American-Scandinavian Foundation.
The fellowships are of $1,000 each
and offer opportunities for engineer
ing study and research in Scandina
vian countries.
Albert P. Strom, of Wahoo, a
graduate of the College of Engineer
ing in 1920, was the holder of one
of these scholarships. He is now an
instructor in electrical engineering
at Purdue University.
In order to be qualified a candi
date must have been born in the
United States or its possessions, must
be capable of original research and
independent study, and must submit
a definite plan of study. In addi
tion, it is desirable that he be a col
lege graduate and familiar with at
least one language in addition to
English, preferably Swedish, Norwe
gian or Danish.
Will Study For One Year
The period of study will be one
academic year. Students of forestry
should arrange, at the beginning or
conclusion of their work abroad, to
spend a summer in forests or forest
schools, leaving America in June or
January.
Scholarships are offered in chem
istry, physics, mathematics, adminis
trative or social sciences, forestry,
minmiv anA wot ullnrirv olanfw! 1
luuiuig , viwuttw en
gineering, language and literature
scientific subjects.
College Journalists
Meet at Aggies Friday
Fort Collins, Feb. 1. Colomn
Asriries will be hosts to the fifth n.
nual convention of the Rocky Moun
tain Intercollegiate Press Associa
tion next Friday and Saturday, Fe.
bruary 3 and 4. Ten colleges, in.
eluding all the institutions of higher
i ' . jn-ljz TIT
learning in vuiiauu, Wyoming, and
Utah, will be represented by over
seventy delegates, including the edi
tors and business managers of each
college paper.
WANT ADS
Photos by Hauck and Skoglund are
the ideal gift. Attractive frames
and folders of all sizes. Tinted Por
traits a specialty. First class work
for everyone. Prices reasonable.
Adv.
LOST Bunch of keys im leather
case; billfold with 3 one dollar
bills. Call Hoekstra at the Y. M.
C. A.
Flute Instruction
All Students desiring to obtain
credit for Flute work call Molzer
Violin School for appointment.
B-6138. Arrangement can be made
for credit. Horace Flood.
New Haven, Conn. (IP) Ac
cording to the university health de
partment, 1,687 students at Yale
have been vaccinated since small
pox appeared in the vicinity of the
campus.
Today at Rector's
THURSDAY, FEB. 3
Pimento Cheese To.tette
Hot Mince Meat Pie
Any Sc Drink
25c
Also B Other Specials
No Date is Complete
without a lunch at
Owl Pharmacy
S. E. Cor. 14 P.
Pbene BIOS
After the Show
After the Dance
Eat
Chili, Spaghetti, Chow Mein,
Yocamy, Chili Mack
at
Hotel Cornhusker
Coffee Shop
Open All Night
SUPPLIES
for
EVERY DEPARTMENT
IN SCHOOL
WE BUY AND SELL
USED TEXT BOOKS
Co-Op Book Store
Just East of Temple
No new deTelopments cm the pro
posed Army-Nebraska gam ai yet
but we caa afford to wait for such
aa opportunity as this. Herb G!sh is
still ia tha east negotiating with
Army officials and a meeting was
held with athletic officials yesterday,
If Nebraska should land the Cadet
ili'ii'ir'Hiiiniii
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KPtHMlLtSCMItX
rr
C anital hrnnvma Co
BfI7B
313 SO. IET ST.
LINCOLN. NEB.
REVELERS
Opening
THE ROSEWILDE
PARTY HOUSE
FRIDAY NIGHT
Exclusive University
Banca
-vl per Couple
Adequate Checking Service
Hill !lll!i:;illlil!mi!Hilil!liHII!ill Illillli lliiMMllllllillllllillnlliiill Illil PIIHIIIIIIiillllil 11 1'lllWlllllltlllilllllllltlllillljllliW I Ilium mi" ' WfctwHK
Don't Forget
The
Greenback
Family
flip
STUDENTS DEMAND QUALITY
and on that we have built our fine School Busi
ness. If by chance you buy from us and are
not satisfied we feel grateful when you tell us. , S:C
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
mi h
Greenedge
Paper grows more popular every
day. It's Boxed.
SPEC'AL
Genuine Leather Note Book
$2.50
Sheaffer Pen Headquarters
Greenback Notebooks'
of steel construction. Khaki:
Grey-Flexible and Leather of
Black and Brown.
LA TSCH BROTHERS
Stationers & School Supplies
1118 O St.