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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1932)
t I t s t .1 rUUK Ulti UAILI CUm3MHI ACTIVITY LOOMS IN SPORT FIELD Tl Husker Basketeers in Key Post With K-Aggic Tilt Saturday. BY JOE MILLER. Husker sport activity is widely scattered this week end with four teams froing into action, three of them in competition. Occupying: the foremost position is basketball, the Big Six affair with Kansas State at the coliseum Saturday night headlining the court pro gram. Friday night the campus B team meets Nebraska Wesleyan in the second tilt played between the teams this season. It will be played nt the coliseum, with game time slated for 8 o'clock Omaha l's un- j defeated quintet journeys to Lin coln Saturday night to play the Ag B team in a tray preceding the Nebraska-Kansas State game. U will lart at 6:45. Coach Joe Lehman's inexperi enced wre.-tleis pull away from Lincoln this morning for Norman. Okla.. where Saturday night they go up against the undefeated StKner matmen. One change has been made in Lehman's list. Hoi gele replacing Walker in the 13" ound class. Heady is scheduled to display his wares in the 115 pound division. Burnett. 1-5: Heigele. 135: Green. 145: Shnley. 155; Ac kerman, 165; and Adam, heavy weight. The Nebraska swimming team will open the season Saturday alt- ti noon against Washburn and in-1 cidentally dedicate the new swim-j ming pool in the colisum. Coach Rudy Vogeler hopes that swim- , ming fans will be ci.t in full force Saturday, declaring that 600 spec- t tators can be accommodated in tne j bleachers. The meet will start at . 2:30 p.m. Coach Henry F. Scnu.te has planned the first tryouts .or tre i year haturcn aiiernoc-n un . ; c inder men. ine urah uuai n.i ; i l.- 1", to Feb. 20. allowing only a s-nort to reo. jo. amoving m,i a " 1 I t:me to prepare for ind(Xr compe- i tition. Second of a series of try- outs for the Drake meet .are sched- , uled for the following Saturday. UhVl Hill II l!l rerrhrN ir . 7T: vrriH -Rp ' Chicago Convention wui e . Attended by Grace Spacht Student Secretary. Mi.-s Grace Spacht. Baptist , student secretary. Wednesday night t attend a Baptist student worker s conference at Chicago. Over fifty workers for the Baptist church on college campuses in the United States will attend the con ference. The meetings are sche duled fr Feb. 5 to 9. Miss Spacht will read a paper entitled, "The Student's Back ground: His Home." It deals with the relationship of the average student's home to his religious life in college. PRE-EASTER TH)Y SESSION W ILL BE HELD FEBRUARY 9 The tecond of a .series of w eekly pie-Easter study sessions will be led next Tuesday night Februiay 9. to 8 bv Miss Bc-mice Miiler, uni versity Y. V. C. A. secretary, at the Baptist student hou?e. Or. E. Stanley Jones' book. ' The Christ 'if the Mount," is being u.ed as a basis for the studies. The series is a patt f a pro gram which is being arned out by each church group on tbe caiupus to offer a course .-tuciy appro priate to and in spirit with the ideals and meaning of the coming Easter .season. AJ1 students ate welcome to attend the.-e nx-etir.. TYPEWRITERS T;t-r. the j'Je&i in'i-jihf i r VjJ-M. Ail rueJifp t :;,ar.i e for rn!. AH sriiu:f oi t,&i f.a- Nebraska Typewriter Co. tatl B-21S7 -i?-;2 O St. CLASSIFIED Ten Cents per line. Minimum of two lines. Lost and Found WNIMiwii Walil fo'jru-jjn ten. ijvr -r may 'aim V i'l'-D' ifyirir ari-1 piiyiwr i'iT tt'is Ja'l at tt.- Iju-.y FOUND Pair "f Jark jjn.rnei! .'-r. iwwjtjjr. Owr.-r nny laun !' :i- ,f;-iTi;4 sn'l payiTje t'T tins u'J tii Dai:y Netjraj-tiarj uffx.e. nij ifvr.'i. Typing WANTED To type term papers at reasonable rates. Leave copy In Box 49. in tbe Daily Nebras kan office. CAFES I iki1 Km. ui. iyni n Sir. dinner For Sale t'OR fAE One rojnp'M t-jJc'Jo. n cludinr riirt. tr. Pra'tialiy nf. Call firnoor.i. BARBER SHOPS VI"1T r- Tmi' brir ("!. .nf r H-uii Mijiuii i.Ot;. VI II U. lor vu- IS WEEK-END i WANT ADSshe I I FROM THE PRESS. BOX By JOE MILLER "TWO Indiana boys, one a former All American high school star are listed among Coach Browne's most promising frosh basket can didates this season. "Chuck" Wil liam?, Warsaw. Ind., received his high rating while playing for St. John's military academy quintet two years ago in the national high school basketball meet at Chicago. Williams came thru with a for ward position on Stagg's first ull toumament selection, altho his team was eliminated in the semi finals. The second Hoosier player wear ing Husker freshman togs is Bill Funkey of Gary. Funkey, a six foofr won a guard position on the third All-Indiana prep team last year. And remember, please, that basketbail occupies about the sane place in the Hoosier sport realm that iootball does in Ne braska. RAY CAS FORD is back in school after a semester's absence with . i. . .. . i.n. V. nit ' me niiuuuiu i uicui uai nc ii i for the track team. In case some are inclined to emit a few horse laugh,-, it would be well to recall that Casford was a brilliant per former in hich school track circles with Tecumseh high. Rav stepped the SM) in 2:4 in the state high school meet in Lincoln four yeais ago to beat cut Stedman of Crete in a great tace. . . . ! L-'ANSAS' already bright track: nrospects are further enhanced with the announcement Thursday that Melvin Thornhill. crack discus : thrower has registered and will be' eligible for competition this semes ter. Thornhiil. who holds the Jay hawk discus record of 155 feet 11 j inches will have plenty of help in i the weight department from Frank -p.-te" Eausch. brother of the 10,nHr grjj star. Schulte's Huskers. winners of lh., ,nijtK,r crown the past two vears have been forced to yield j0 Kansas in the outdoor meets. anJ Coacn Hamilton is in the field asam Wl;h puch stars as Gridley. ' Coffnian an,j Klaner. j , -pip.-rf; more Cornhusker ath- 1 , . M competition in , th?ir favorit(, ?port frora the sjde. jn ,,. Tfcey inc!ude Art Hoag. one, of the most likelv tennis prospects . . xVhraska for several enrolled at : e Ho - p m;tr4a;adC' " w I ard Schmitt. sooho pho- and Tom Jurekovic. ' I outstanding end on the tiesnman . !so!i:ii. if . . THE Sooner wrestling team has! this season. The Oklahoma grap-1 ?rs jn matchcs have won 47, of 4S bouts. That is the team! Ccacn ljenman s .eorasna mai - men must face tomorrow night- HOME EC GIRLS MOVE Home Management House Will Caim Several Girls For Six Weeks. S x eirls registered in the home I economics department of tho uni versity mo-ei into the f nme Man agement House at 13:h and R streets for a six-weeks peiiod. Wednesday. Their duties during their sojourn there are comprised of all duties that one Is likely to encounter in the actual manage ment cf a tome. The girls are: Marguerite Hager man. Niobrara: Grace Baldwin. Ornaha; Ona Knott. Sharpsburg, Iowa: Retha Miller. Beaver Cross ing: Ruth Jenkins. Lincoln: Evelyn Kioiz. Odt-11. Ni lra!-ka (irads Read Papers at Convention Three Nebraska graduates in elect! ical engineering presented J papers at the mid-winter conven- j tion of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers held last week ' in New ork Citv. I E. I. Pollard. Elec. Jan. "l now j with the W'estinghouse Elee. and i Mfg. Co.. Pittsburgh, ciiscussed "( "n!r nintion of the No-Load Dam-I j per Winding Loss in Sychronous i Machines." L. P. Shildneck. Elee. '24. of the General Eler.tric Co.. .Schenectady, presented the topic "Sine-Wave Generators." A. M. Candv. Elec. 'OP. E. E. '28. cf We.-ticghouse Elec. and Mfg. ! Co.. spoke on "An Improved A-C Are Welder." The mid-winter convention was tbe outstanding ck-ctro-technicaJ meeting ol the year. Goes and she's a HOLEPROOF HOSIERY fan! tl 1 v 1 " couldn't tand the strain brr Ilole proof fthrtr and inl-lirrri bear up nobly and they only tolJ3a Palr' Atk for Holeproof Every Timet HOSIERY GOLD'S Street Floor. NEBRASKA MEETS K-AGS SATURDAY IN FIELD HOUSE Cornhusker Lineup Will Be Picked from List of Six Men. WILDCATS RANK THIRD Locals Must Stop Skradski And Boyd; Omaha U in Prelim Game. Coach Black yesterday announc ed a tentative lineup for Satur day's game with Kansas State at the coliseum. The starting quint W1 be picked from a list includ- ta Roswell. Lunnev. Mason. Kos- , if r, rionnon ana Davison The team in general is in nniih better shape than was the case a week ago. according to Black, and the boys are hopeful of a Cornhusker ictory. The come- Dack in the final period against Iowa State indicated that the Huskers are iu good physical con- j dition and it is only a question of I maintaining the pace thruout the entire game, said Black. Kansas State is in third place in the Big Six race with a per centage of 600 percent. They have won .' and lost 2 of their con ference games. Skradski. Boyd, and Auker all of Kansas State are among the ten leading scorers in the conference at the present time. The Ag college B team will play a preliminary game preceding the . Nebraska-Wildcat game with the (unbeaten Omaha U quintet. The probable starting lineup for the j B s W ju Im Walker and LeDoiyt ( at ihe forwaids. Hartlev at center, ' atu: Snipes and Bea'tle at the I euarjs Tonight the varsity B -iggrega- i tion meets Coach Waldoif's Weslevan team at the coliseum : a return eneaeement. Leviscn. , Yordv. Eauer. Sineer. and Chase . wi start aKamst the Methodists. i - - rpv,Vi wV T ViTl ! 1 1 1 A SK h I I A I I 4 i m A m A m r J. m.. m- . 1 f. II lYW'IRF 4 I By GEORGE ROUND X I .Evidentlv the two leading fra ture campus have buried the' hatchet and not in each others. neck either. Just the other eve-, iniug iue uairiuiiraruiaujcuuui- I ner to start the ball rolling toward : eliminating old time antagonism. ' ganizations probably will not be j able to understand the mutual un- derstanding of both fraternities. In past years the groups have fought each "other to a standstill and riv alry has been exceptionally keen. What the outcome of the proposed new plan will be is hard to tell. Try this on your radio. Prof, j M. H. Swenk of" the college of ag- ; riculture says there is little dan- j ger of grasshopper eggs being ! killed by direct action of low tern- peratures if thev are down two ! inches or more in the soil. The eggs might not be killed if the air temperature goes down a.s low as 29 degrees below zero and the ground is bare. Several methods have been used in attempts to kill the grasshop pers" but each time tbe hopper seems to emerge alive. A northeast Nebraska farmer tried putting the insect in an ice box and then he frown them until surrounded by a sma, fj of ice Wfaen jj. . Hopper thawed out. he wan ,,ist ag ,jv.,v as fore he entered nis p.rjoj Jf hibernation. Delphin Nash, premier potatoe , salesman on the college of j agriculture campus, maintains that j ! he will sell more than 30 cars of "spuds" this year. Despite poor business condition Nash is selling j j the potatoes at a small profit and 'j luey ai e gj?ug u idM u rei. And now "Ramona" is once more on the college campus. This time she put in her appearance in the form of a Brahma heifer. Corn huker co-eds probably do not un derstand what tbe term means but scientifically it refers to a breed of cattle of the female order. Originally the Brahma's were to College AlUllllu idiiiu icda- LD t ID CI Husker Sports Events Listed for Week End FRIDAY. Campus B team vs. Wesleyan at 8:00, coliseum. SATURDAY. Nebraska vs Washburn swimming, at 2:30, coliseum pool. Track tryouts for Drake dual meet at 2:30, stadium. Ag B team vs. Omaha U at 6:45, coliseum. Nebraska vs. Kansas State at 8:00, coliseum. the sacred cattle of India but later were imported to this country for cross breeding purposes. "Ra mona" was purchased in Denver a few weeks aeo to replace 'Aioon shine." Scotland steer, upon the Ag campus. Like other cattle of the same breed. Ramona has the characteristic large ears, a hump on the shoulder and a thick hide. Financial worries are forcing Chris Mathis. varsity football per former, to the sidelines for the co.ml "tV,1 thm.th mined to be back next fall though when Coach Bible makes his first call for football material. But then Charley Talbot, mem- j ber of the ZIP basketball team that j recently copped high honors in the j ,hp inti tem ran irive anv fra- ternity quintet on the campus a cose battle. Evidently the teeth jerkers were the class of the league. Men students on the college of agriculture campus believe the Block and Bridle club is making a mistake in not sponsoring a coed showmanship contest this year in connection with the annual Junior Kk-Sar-Ben show. Lack of interest on the part of the girls is said to have been the reason why the club is not having the feature this year. Several prominent vomen students on the campus took part in the contest last year. These home economic students who are now in the home manage ment house for six weeks seem to be having a big time in learning new tricks and new things. Cook- ing. sewing, keeping house and other more important duties await the eirls thruout the day and girls night. It is said that Margaret Hagerman is taking her work in lne nouse very senousiy. Then Reuben Hecht claims to be the house very seriously the best bridge player on the cam- pus. Too. he is a dramatic king pus. Too, It is not known now whether Art Peterson will duck eggs for the baseball throwers at the fair this year or not YovTll Enjoy Shop pine H At Waffle weaves . . corduroy weaves spider weaves . . that look like they're hand knitted . . little puffy sleeves . . half sleeves! Qreens Browns Reds Tans i i 1 GOLD FARM SHORT COURSE UOOrSTERS TRIUMPH As Quintet Wins Seven Of Eisht Games Scheduled. The farm operator's short course basketball team at the college of agriculture has won seven games out of eight played this year, ac cording to Coach Otto Dillon. It is the second year the farm boys at the college for a four-month course have had a winning quintet, Teams defeated by the farm op erators include Western States Grocery twice, Grace M. E St Paul M. E., Miller & Paine, Ray mond town team and Greenwood town team. The Warren M. E, team is the only one to defeat them this year. George Heumann, former Omaha Benson high school player, nas been blazing the way for the Dil lon boys in their games. He is the high point man. Paul Jones of Salem is second high scorer. Other regulars include Corwin Shipherd, Nora; Harold Oppinger, Colum bus; and Dave Boardman, Ports mouth, Iowa. Coach Dillon announced this morning that the farm boys will play at least ten more games this season. Most of the remaining games are scheduled with town teams in the Lincoln territory. BAPTISTS TOHEAR REPORT University Class to Discuss Article of Kirby Page, Noted Pacifist. "Missions' and World Peace." a report of a round table discussion with Kirby Page, editor and paci fist, will be given Sunday noon at the First Baptist university class, 14th and K streets. Albert King, Denver, a member of the class who attended the student volunteer con vention at Buffalo, N. Y.. during the Christmas recess, will give the report. The evening young people's serv ice at 6:30 will hear the favorite quotations, poems, and verses of the members. . . All students are invited to at tend these meetings. POLICE BALL WILL BE HELD IN THE COLISEUM The universitv coliseum has been choosen for the Annual Police Association ball to be held March 1. according to campus policeman. Regler. Tickets are . available at $1 per couple. The ball will be open to the public. Eddie Jung- bluth and his orchestra will turnisn the music for the occasion. at Lincoln's Busy Store Cor. i i . ardly All Yet Theyre The Smartest pp Sleeves cut short . . crew necks . . you'll want two . six! '.S St rr-M Moor. FRIDAY. OKLAHOMA READY BRASKA MAT SQUAD NE Sooners Confident of Win Over Cornhuskers in Match Saturday. NORMAN. Feb. 4. Sobered at sHiim-nter last Friday night by sight of the Oklahoma Aggie wrestling team trimming both the strong Southwestern and Central College Teachers in a doubleheader match, the all victorious Sooner wrestling team got down to work today for its Big Six match here Friday night against Nebraska. "Ed Gallagher was right when he said his Aggies of 1932 were the strongest team he'd ever devel oped," declared Paul V. Keen, the Sooner coach, "and I'll go him one further by predicting mai i year he has at least one man In every class who will win six out of eight bouts this season. Keen had loaded four Sooner grapplers, Hardie Lewis, Warren Gunter, Er nest Childers and Curtis Turner, into his car and took them to Still water to see the Aggies go. "And how they went," was one Sooner's succinct remark. However before facing tne Ag gies at Stillwater reo. it me Sooners must first dispose of two Bg Six conference foes in matches at Norman, Nebraska here Satur day night and Coach Bucl Patter son's undefeated Kansas Aggies here Feb. 12. The latter match will probably determine the Big Six championship for 1932 since Kan sas State has already defeated Iowa State at Manhattan. 16 to 13. Not much is known here of Ne braska's prowess this season. Last year at Lincoln the Oklahoma wrestler;; won five tans irom Ne braska and won the match quite comfortably, 28 to 6. Coach John Kellogg's Cornhuskers scored two victories. Shirley, 155 pounder. beating Turner, Oklahoma, by time advantage of 2:57 and Adams, 175 pounder, decisioning Hasbrook. Oklahoma, by 1:21. both sensational bouts in which the Ne- 0NLY 26 MILES TO KIND'S CAFE CRETE Sundicichct SO rnrielics FEED H. E. KIND 11th & O -S-. eeZ!jl?JS!!.!L Anything weater of a Chic Sweater Season All-wool too . . . crew, square or V-Necks. . . short or long sleeves . . solid colors of combinations! and trig . . yokes gay stripings . . . . three or maybe They're actually the kind of Sweat ers every coed wants for chic cam pus wear . . . styled definitely 1932 . . and priced to meet every budget ! FEBRUARY 5, 1932. braska men acquitted themselves well. Unless the Huskers have made an unprecedented improvement this year, they probably cannot hope to stop the Sooners in the Fieldhouse here Saturday night, it is believed. Proceeds from the sale of hut tamales pay college expenses for a student at the University of Akron. TT Student Supplies 1 JOT A NT nn.l ART SUP PLIES, Laundry Cases. Ex pense Hooks. History Cov ersAll Grades. MONROE High Quality History Paper Waterman's Ideal. Shaefier Lifetime. Parker, Duofold Fountain Pens We Can Supply Every Requirement TUCKER-SHEAN 1123 0 Street LINCOLN, NEBR. 30 Years of Service to the Cornhuskers :i .i " i' ii ti il HII' I.;,;' i ! Blues Whites Peach Blacks KlK 4 i it t( ;f' ;i'i i -rtfc