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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1935)
THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1935. TITE DAILY NERRASKAN TTIREE E TRACK SQUAD PREPARES FOR STATE FRAY Iowa State Cindermen Are Vastly Improved This Spring. AMES, la., May 22. The Iowa State college track team, return ing from Lincoln, Neb., and the Big Six meet, was busy today prac ticing for the next two meets. The Cyclones, who have shown a high degree of improvement this spring, meet Grinnell and Coe in a trangu lar meet on State field Saturday, and then participate in the state meet at Cedar Falls, June 1, Iowa State, doped to place well in the cellar in the Big Six meet, where it finished in the Indoor championships, surprised everyone by clinching fourth place, and lacking only a few points to beat ing Nebraska out of third place. The illness of Wayne Lyon, Des Moines, star pole vaulter, who fin ished in a first place tie at last year's conference meet, and the failure of Lawrence CoHtigan, Buffalo Center, who in past meets has garnered points in the three weight events, the broad Jump and the sprints,, to qualify in any of the Individual events, robbed the State crew of a third place posi tion. Lyon, who at present in con fined in the infirmary, is expected to be back in competition this Sat urday. Lawrence Minsky, El Monte, Calif., sophomore find in the javtl in, gave the Cyclones their only first Place when net won the spear throwing contest with a mark of over 188 feet. Every man who made the trip to Lincoln, with one exception, scored points either in the indi vidual or on the relay teams. up introduced on the campus last fall, and the drives for the book pxcnHnire and for the union build ing. He gave over hln nnut tn m Hill after making several aufcgos nuns io no carried out by the council cnirtng the coming year. Members of the organization gave a rising vote of appreciation to MIhs Emma Anderson and to r. pj. w. uwu who have ated as faculty advisors of the Student Council during the past year, as men nn io me retiring officers. Reports of past year's work were presented by chairmen of the various committees in the council. They were Junior-Senior prom, Irving Hill; Big Six conference, Dick Fischer; organizations, Eve lyn Diamond; senior Ization, Lee Young; publicity, Boo Duiffer; engimiity, Marlon Smith; and treasurer, Frank Crabill. Members accented the rnnnttfn. tlon presented by the French club thereby permitting that organiza tion to become active on the unl versity campus. BIBLE SETS DATE FOR FIRST FALL FOOTBALL PRE-SEASON WORKOU T Seventeen Lettermcn Return for Drill Sept. 10. to CITY TRACK MEET TO BE HELD IN STADIUM Churches and Neighborhood Clubs, Scouts Enter Y.M. Tournament. Memorial stadium will play host Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock to the second annual city track and field meet sponsored bv the Lin coln Y. M. C. A. About 200 boys are expected to enter the meet, which Is limited to boys between the ages of 12 and 21. Five weight classes will be contested, for boys under 85 pounds, under 110 pounds, under 126 pounds, under 140 pounds, and over 140 pounds. Seven events will be contested in each weight class, which include the 100, 220, and 440 yard dashes, high jump, broad jump, 8 lb. shot, and 440-yard relay. Each entrant will be allowed to compete in two events, exclusive of the relay. All church and Sunday school groups, scout troops, and neighborhood clubs may obtain entry blanks at the physical education desk not later than May 29, there being no entry fee. IRVING HILL NAMED NEW COUNCIL HEAD (Continued from Page 1.) council 'during the past year m which he mentioned the rally set- Husker gridsters will take to the turf Sept. 10, 1935 to complete pre season preparations for one of the toiiKhest opposition schedules ever undertaken by a Nebraska lootball team. Coach Dana X. Bible will be greeted by a squad of seventeen lettermen as a nucleus for his next grid machine, whose numbers will be swelled by a group of promis ing yearlings. Over a hundred arc expected to check out suits for varsity try-out when the little head man toots his whistle Sept. 10th. The Huskers next fall will rely on the same type of football as in the past plays worked from either a double, single or punt for mation, Coach Bible made known. With a quartet of rangy ends, passing is expected to play a big part in Nebraska offensive tactics. Nebraska opens her 1935 sea son Sept. 28 with Chicago and closes with Oregon State Nov. 28. Five of the nine parries on the ros ter are to be played here. The com plete schedule: Uamr lll!H Wlniirr Mlt. 2fl: hir'iirn. h-ri- . on. 5: limn KIkIk, hrrr. Ort, It: Mlnm-.Hlii, I'iti M. 19: Km. Shite, thi-ri-. Oil. 2H: OklMmnm, hi'lY . iv. 7: Kiin.a. Iii-n-. Vi. EPIin , x-o., l. Mtlin., 2w-ll km. SIhIi, IH-7 IVrh., ift.ft M"tl.. H-ll Nov. IH: rillshiiruh. ihirr. I'lltuhiirsh, Kim Nov. .((I: Orcitun MhIi, Iipit No Ktnr List of returning; lettermen: Lloyd Cardwell, back, Seward; Henry Bauer, back, Lincoln; Sam Francis, back, Norton, Kas.; Jerry LaNoue, back, Wisner; Ralph El- dridge, back, Norfolk: Bob Benson, back, Pender; Ron Douglas, back, Crete; Bernard Scherer, end, Dal las, S. D.; Virgil Yelkin, end; Lin coln; Lester McDonald, end, Grand Island: James Heldt, tackle, Scottsbluff; Harold Holmbeck, tackle, Beatrice; Carroll Reese, tackle, Chappell; John Williams, guard, Lincoln; Ladas Hubka, guard, Table Rock; Clyde White, guard, Tecumseh; and Paul Morri son, center, Havelock. GASOLENE U. S. Motort Regular 14V2C 16.9C 14th it W HOLM'S 7 An artist friend sends us this Gentlemen: Here's a rough idea of how I looked before I got acquainted with Arrow Sanforized Shrunk shirts. Look at that flossy shirt--the collar has gone haywire, the cuffs have an attack of wanderlust, the bosom has buckled so much I was ashamed to show it. No wonder I was having glamour trouble! Things ara different now. Arrow shirts have come into my life. The collars fit perfectly, the sleeves are in my correct size, and remain that way, and the tailoring looks like a ostom Job. Life for myself, my friends, and my mirror, is certainly less irksome since I adopted Arrows-thanks to Cluett, Peabody Co Sincerely, T. G. COOVZt OKLAHOMA CAPTUR ES SIX SPORTS TITLE l Sooners Set New Conference Record With Five Team Championships. Oklahorna Sooners sweeping three conference titles into tneir trophy bsg last week end, set a new Big Six record of five team champion ships garnered in one year and stepped into first place in the all sports tabulations for the 1934-35 season. It was the Sooners sixth title in the last nine years, an nexed with a low total of 19 1-2 points. Kansas State followed in second place with 30 1-2 points, while Nebraska nosed out Iowa State 34 1-2 35 1-2 for third. Kansas had 40 1-2, and Missouri's luckless Tig ers trailed the field with 49 1-2. The. arl sports championship was originated in 1922 by Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, Kansas athletic director. The conference members rank in each sport is tabulated and the low score wins. The 1934-35 Big Six table: Okln. K.N. Noh. Km Aim Mo. Down the Straightaway Knnllmll Hn.ikollMill Riifli'hHll Irulnnr th. . outdoor tk. W rest litis T'nnli noir Two-mllo .1 3 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 4 'ii 1 H a 1 2 2V4 II ft 1 3 2 0 5 3 3 ti J" 4 1 4 2 A 4 6 4 2 3 5 414 A 1 2 4 2V4 3 4 2 19 "i 30 .14 4 40 35 4 49'4 DUMONDMEN MEET 101 STATE TODAY Postponement to Be Played Off on the Muny Diamond. Nebraska's doubleheader base ball mix with Iowa State, origin ally scheduled to be played Wed nesday after a postponement from Monday and Tuesday, will be run off this afternoon at the muny dia mond provided Jupiter Pluvius doesn't throw another monkey wrench into the works. The first of the two seven inning pames will begin at 2 p. m., with the second following immediately thereafter. Batteries for Nebras ka will be Joyce or Carstens and Pohlman in the first, and Spurlock and Pohlman in the second, while Iowa State will depend on Holmes in the opener and Smaha in the follow-up encounter. With the Nebraska high school and Big Six conference track high lights already out of season and stored away on the shelf for an other year, cinder interests still focuses on Memorial stadium and the hair-raising thrills its nation wide assemblage of cinder aces brings to Lincoln this summer. Coming to the Cornhusker cinder capitol July 3 and 4 in a bla.tng riot of outstanding track and field athletes will be the National A. A. U. championships, pedigree event of the cinder world. In addition to the already crowded roster of top notchers assured by the char acter of the meet itself, will be a further incentive for the "super" performers in the fact that the Olympics are due next year and that three teams for foreign trips will be selected on the basis of their performances here. Memorial stadium is already primping itself, for the meet, Henry Schulte t and the Husker coaching staff 'starting perpara- ' t inn a frt? Hraaolniy iYiA Vfihfifilia ww... ut. 1 ij ...... A 1 V '.'t l. n nil battleship out in its best for the affair. Changes must be made in the distance markings along side of the track, due to the fact that the meet will be conducted on the meter basis. Twelve different run ning events will demand the com plete reconstruction of the mark ing system. In addition, facilities must be arranged for two events comparatively unknown to the Big Six the hop-step-and-jump and hammer throw. Meanwhile five Schultemen look forward to the last competitive preliminary to the A. A. U. finale. Every year the National Collegiate Athletic association invites out standing track athletes who have fulfilled certain performance stand ards to compete in its annual track and field carnival. The Husker quintet which has been recom mended by Pa Schulte to partici pate in the meet comprises Glenn Funk, Fred Chambers, Lloyd Card well, Sherman Cosgrove, and Har old "Speed" Jacobsen. Speed, Trenton, Mo., speedster who navi gated the 100 in 9.8 seconds re cently, suffered a broken blood vessel in the Big' Six conference meet but should have sufficient time to get in shape before the meet is staged June 21 and 22 at Berkley, Calif. Fred Chamhers, Minatare, is an other of the Schulte injury jinxes that should be able to shake off the burden of a season-long afflic tion and get into condition. Fred snapped out a 197 feet throw in the javelin at the first of the sea son, but has been unable to equal it because of a persistent shoulder sprain. Pa thinks that if the Min atare spearman ever gets out in front of the injury he'll be getting more than 200 feet consistently. Glenn Funk, Central City, will have only onu race after the N. C. A. A. under Nebraska colors Funk's 4:24 )n the mile earned him the recommendation in his special distance race. Sherm Cosgrove, Lincoln, probably missed entering by the narrow margin of one jump, when he cleared 13 feet 4 inches on his second try in the Big Six pole vault championships last week. His ber.t performance had been a 13 to 2 vault in practice. Lloyd Cardwell's time of 24.3 sec onds in the 220 yard low hurdles was the basis for his entry in that event. Oklahoma's team in the Col legiates lists Bart Ward, Loyett Burk, Floyd Lochner, and Herman Nelson . . . Husker freshman will compete Thursday afternoon in the annual Big Six telegraphic meet. The competition, originally dated for the first of last week, was put off until Friday and Saturday of 8fter the Big Six conference cham pionships, but was postponed again till Wednesday because of rain. It was set for Thursday when an other shower drenched the track yesterday . . . Nebraska and Iowa State baseball teams are running a close parallel in the double-header baseball contest scheduled Thurs day afternoon at Muny diamond, having changed the date three times. Galloway, Miss Littrel Explain Duties to Members Today. to "Our llnei ore ture knocking ' 'em cold, Glendal You con toll the Parmer's Daughter we're makln' a piker out of her pal the Traveling Saleimanl" "You told It, Joanl We've got what It toko to get order! We're making good ... and plenty!" Members of the Sponsors club will meet Thursday evening at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall to plan for their part in R. O. T. C. com petitive drill Wednesday, May 29, it was announced Wednesday by Violet Cross, president. Lieutenant Colonel Charles Gal loway will be present at the meet ing to explain to the sponsors their duties during and after the parade. Miss Fva Littrel will ex plain their part in the serving of refreshments in the various com panies' tents. All members are urged to be present as it is imperative that they receive instructions, Miss Cross stated. Elizabeth Kelly, Mary Kean and Jean Palmer compose the commit tee which has notified the girls of the meeting. YOUR DRUG STORE Rat a health producing lunch at the Owl fountain for as low as 15c Grilled luncnes which are iust a little tastier. The OWL PHARMACY 148 No. 14th B1068 -A J' with TTT lOTt ' "tt V . nuun jf3Vlfr-' , J. 1 vv-4 nt HERBERT Patsy Kelly Wm. Gargan Ruth Donnelly Starts TOMORROW L I B(f O 1L iM Matinee 20c till 6 P. M. r I- I y ' 1 fn tennis "T 1 1 ' I' ac! "tit V1t fc if . d. ;lvfflfflfrnftn(ay i"f(f it n iL"rttiaaBfl"fliUi rt ifWiieMtfioftt nnrinririftttfcnnnflww nnnfcitwft-iAlhaafc eoMriBor -a , VfrJj GEORGE BARKER 1, I. Jw fer - i;,v DIV,N0 Lv Fnt,-"'n' Ch"'"0', 1 1 jf & BASEBALL f . rVNtA 1-4 . ? J lou Gehrig I jZ V' ' ' J J Tommy armour f.1 yvS;l m ' fX 5 IV aw iTP rm SIX-DAY BIKE RACING B , J- 5 1 -l l it I BOBBY WAITHOUR, JR. ' " l" ' 4 ' V I Vjl Winnr of 6 Sin-Doy Roc 1 P v j f - Aili - fi Fpll f I ' ... 1 ? ! GOOD NEWS I Iff good news to hear that If 4 $ Camel's costlier tobsccos are so mild you caa f 1 I i I noke all you please. Athletes say Camels never f t vc-' , - I ret vnur ""wind.' t jtJ- f, ifln i in mi ' ti -j LOU GEHRIG has played in more than 1SOO consecutive big league games. Such in athletic achievement takes "wind" healthy nerves "condition." Lou says:"For steady smoking I pick Camels. They're so mild they never get my 'wind' or my nerves." 06 rJjt f1tfa! Of course you want mildness in a cigarette. And the athletes to whom "wind," healthy nerves, "condition" are vitally important insist on mildness. Lou Gehrig, baseball's "Iron Man," says: "Camels are so mild they never get my "wind."' George Barker, intercollegiate cross country champion, says: "Camels are so mild, they don't cut my 'wind' in any way." Bobby Walthour, Jr., star of the six-day bike grinds, says: "I've got to have 'wind' in bike racing. ' For my cigarette I long ago chose Camels." Tommy Armour,- speaking for the golf stars, Bruce Barnes for tennis, and Betty Bailey for the aquatic sports all agree: "Camels don't get your wind." What this mildness means to you I ... It means you can smoke as many Camels as you please. Athletes say Camel's costlier tobaccos never disturb your nerves never tire your taste never get your "wind." C IMS. B. J. Bayaoldi Tob. Co. 'Vj " i St- tm mr wss COSTLIER TOBACCOS! Camels are made from finer, MOr.E EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS Turkish and Domestic than any other popular brand. ( JvWJ R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY. WinKoa-Sak, N. C