THE DAILY NEBKASKAN TTIREK Leads Seventeenth Husker Track Team 'PA' February, when the Husker indoor season opens its doors, Pa wlU have his aspiring candidates work ing out on the indoor track ac cording to a carofully-dovlncd schedule. Something like a hundred nnd fifty men are now pounding the dirt oval, working iittlc-uscd muscles into shape for more ex tensive workouts later on. "It's too early to tell anything Hlxmt it," remarked Coach Schulte Wednesday as he left the practice site with Harold Pel and Ed Weir, HssiHtant conches for several years mid reluming as aides this season. "We won't know for a week or two how the squad will shnpe out. Some of the veterans are busy with studies, but the full force Hhould be out by tho last of the month." I i Brownemen Enter Big Six ..''.Ui Coach Henry Schulte Begins Forming Seventeenth Nebraska Team. Basket Compet With .500 Average. 0UTSC0RE OPPOSITION 150 WORK OUT DAILY THUKSDAY, JAMTAKY 9, 1936. HUSKERS RETURN TURNS AGAIN I ..." "imi i iii i "mi. mffoffm-v tOyji 1 HOOP TOUR 1 SCARLET MINUS ALL ALIBIS mill i urn TRACK DESTINIES A. .hdWi-'W.yffV WJi'UiV:. . 1..Mj WAT 4".dHa . VM-f ill J :. V M CHtlLTE NEVE I? & I'PfeJ . K?W9 COMPETE? IM TRACK CJ (V& J, ,f .;;i 'Jfj. J Ifo HE WA$ A MEMBER ' . Hfe,' "' v; fv Ik OF THE FAMOUS r-' - VV. ' , 7KV MICHIGAN ,,, X'A !;; - "U; TEAM ir ml Nebraska Opens Conference Season With Mizzou in Coliseum Friday. Nebraska's country covering basketball outfit, back in Lin coln Wednesday afternoon fol lowing a basket bombarding campaign to the west const and back, needed nnd offered no alibis for the fact that it won only two games and lost four on its holiday Excursion. Including the two lopsided wins over Brieham Young and Minne sota which preceeded the journey, the Hiwkera still go into the Big Six conference wars this Friday ,wlth a percentage of .500. Their season's reckoning stands at 349 points for 340 the opopsition and a scoring average cf 46 points per game. And the six games wnicn they squeezed into two scant and hectic weeks across something like 2,000 scattered miles is some thing of a record in itself. New Ideas Discovered. The Brownemen learned a num ber of the "tricks of the trade'' on that trip, and can wade into the rest of the big Six with a knowledge of varied brands of plav. And now, with at least two days of rest between games after the traveling strain ot playing, packing, picking up, and pushing on, they can rest up for George Kdward's Missourians and the .commencement of tne Big Six bat- Sig Alph, Acacia, Beta, Sig IN'u Teams Follow in Order; Black Cigar and All, 'Indian' Yet Unbowed by Service To Huskerland. here Sua J 2 From Sunday Journal and Star. Henry F. "Indian" Schulte, who this year leads his seventeenth Nebraska cinder squad into ac tion. Years of service to Cornhus kerland have left him unbowed and with the reputation of the na tion's ace track coach. PHI PSI'S LEAD GREEKS IN INTRAMURAL SCOREBOOK tie. , tj The Scarlet took it easy Wed nesday arternoon, tui not as easy I as might have been expected. A few members of the squad were I shooting lackadaisical baskets, but I there was nothing resembling Beven a moderately "workish" at titude on the floor. Coach Browne appeared perfect ly satisfied with the showing of his charges. Sport Directors Claim This Season Campaign Overshadows AH Others in Past. By Ed Steeves. Nebraska's quiutuplets of intramurals are Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Acacia, Beta Thcta Pi, and Sigma Nu. These five are now riding comfortably in the apex of the fra ternity athletic graph, in the order named. With the first se- making no excuses m ester's program run slicker than a junior officer's boots, beyond the strain of continued tne managers or the departmento- playing and lack of familiarity turn to the cage sport as do the with the Pacific coast rules. It was Phi Psi's who have aspirations of in the Caliofrnia territory that the a third trophy. This brick house Huskers met their greatest set- on the corner already bears two JTack, losing to Santa Clara, 61 to fresh intramural loots, one from 49, and Stanford, 42 to 3. soccer ana me ouier irom waier Stanford Best Team. P'- . Stanford, in the opinion of the th. srr rVl ,ith . tirat Husker coach, had the best team ., ir, .'A encountered on the trip displaying footbaI1 tney are situated simi- a o iooi t men ikicuh Liiaw r larlv to their last vear'a chamoion- ship stand. Another club that has exhibited an abundant crop of willing athletes is the Acacia fra ternity, which was victor in the touch football round robin Coming Close The other two leaders, Sigma Nu and Beta Theta Pi, are both de- to have "evervthinar. The lead thanked hands in the game some thing like sixteen times, and Brownie had plenty of praise for bis Huskers despite the loss The trio to Denver, last engage ment on the card, provided one of those handicaps the tourist en counters to reach Denver at 11:30, blocked roads delayed the time to void of blue ribbons, but likewise 1:30, and it was after 2 a. m. both have skinned their finger tips the day of the game before the of the trophies only to fall slightly team firtally turned in. " '8 in. Kirht-einr nrovided a maior Director Horney's easy chair has thrill in the trio, visions of the Cal- been without wear this year as ifomin .-flmnusps the . Salt Lake the little man has been the con. City temples, the new Golden Gate tant toter of a scoring board or bridge, (under construction). Airs. UL" uuuro u uia jimrBi, hub .nfnrH'. rgthHni in Stanford year's campaign overshadows all .in commemoration of her husband, others in every factor. Athletes President Hoover's home in Palo have possessed more ability and Alto, and Chinatown in San Fran sportsmanship, thus making the cisco. directors pay a great deal easier "Out-of-Ordinary." . earned. Fewer forfeits have been , ,." , ,, chalked up against the groups ui....vem . - than has been the tradition here- 7rrU.r3;r fon. SUUstici show that the niZft tvf; wvnrnfncr SLt On ber of men competing in each pirmg in Uie Wyoming game One In ui iiic pi ay ci o. nt-i auiuiui nn an vul oi ounu , c percent, in rifle shoot base of a eoftball dmmond imposed ' in water polo 50 on the gym floor. Dunng the mo- c ment of silence as he sprawled v thus f new onthe across the base, Baker, sitting di- . ' hut showed UD fav. recny in ironi ui tne Fmy, biuou -, Tn th. awininiin. mept. k n Kac- I J' ' Kappa Sicma 195 Sj(?ma Phi Epsilon ' 1 Delia Tau Delta , 170 Beta Sicma p-n Phi Sicma Kaooa 140 Theta XI 140 up, spread his hands in umpirical manner, and bellowed "Safe!" Elmer Dohrman was the only other recorded "unusual," making a 2 o'clock class after reaching the depot at 1:30 Wednesday. 'GREEK CAGE SLATE however, only five fraternities en tered. This shunning of the aquar ics was attributed to the undesir able date of the affair. It will be continuted another year. Dick Smith Outstanding Putting pedistals under the out standing individuals of the semes ter's activities is about as diffi- READY TO PUBLISH I whistling thru cracker c rum us, Dut wiin long ponaenng the following are nominated. Probably most prominent was Dick Smith who not only featured for his fraternity. Acacia, in every sport in which they participated, but also shown as far aa compari son with other stars goes. Bob Joyce, Phi Psl, Is an athlete to in ules have been outlined, but not 72SLSloaL, a ,Z' published, and the various teams ih.. a?fna i are utilizing evening hours for , sl xlph ls hurried endcavoi-s at training. ' Wo. Wr vimntilitv. In With a barb slate, as success- tho Hn. ,,, Averv rvu ful as a stock salesman during a UpBiIoni battered the bull's eye for bank run. Just completed. Director the n, n of 180 Subsequent- Horney expects a bigger and bet- , following was George Galloway, ter season than any on previous sigm& N witn 175 and Natnan Fraternity llootmers in Training for Coming Maple Season. Having shaken the last moth ball from their basketball togs, w 'JU' l..r .n mTnnlnr .wav with ledgers. Games will begin next week, but the teams win rest ror the next two ensuing weeks be cause of the notorious final exams. DEADLIKE SET FOR RIFLING PRACTICE Mis$ Ridder Sets Starting Of Second Semester as Period End. Clara Ridder, head of intramural rifling, announced today that all . girla wishing to try out for rifling teams must have eight practice tn by the beginning of second se mester. The rifle range will be open during examination week. Team tryout will be held the beginning of second semester, and 1 girls will be placed in groups for team competition. The high scorers of the team competition will enter the telegraphic meets with other universities Allen. Sigma Phi Epsilon, with 174. Wiebusch and Seeman, Sigma Nu and Phi Psi respectively, churned reputations out of the pool with Weibusch copping a first in the breast stroke and playing a satellite role in water polo. Fraternity standings thus far: Phi Kappa Pal i0 Slrma Alpha Epalloo 130 Acacia B Beta Theta PI 110 Sigma No Z! PI Kappa A.pba 263 Sirma Chi Alpha Tau Omera Jo .Inn. f. mm ft RhA ......... ........ . 11A Delta Upilloa . . Hil Delta Theta. . Farm Houne Lambda Chi Alpha... Delta Sigma Lambda. C'hl Phi Sigma Alpha Mu Sicma Alpha Mu Z-ta Beta Tau ,. Phi.Gamma Alpha.... Theta Chi Alpha Slcma Phi.... Delta Sigma Delta... Tau Kappa Epallon... Xi Pal fhl 135 fiO 80 75 70 70 70 SO US TO 20 u 0 0 ACE TANKSTERS ENTER MIDWEST A.A.U. CARNIVAL Lvnde. Haaelin, Thorton Represent Nebraska at Iowa City. Three of Nebraska's ace splashers will represent Nebras ka at the Midwest A. A. U. meet to be held Jan. 17, at Iowa uni versity in Iowa City. These men wmmmmmimmwwm b Glyndon Bob Thornton, SALYARDS LEADS 105 40 Leaders to Represent Nebraska in Seventh Corps Matches. One hundred and five candidates for the university varsity and freshman small bore R. O. T. C. rifle team are shooting an elimin ation match this week on the An drews hall range. The forty high men in the elim ination shoot, twenty from each division, varsity and freshman, will represent the university in the annual Seventh Corps Area R. O. T. C. small bore matches in Feb ruary. Members of the selected groups will also represent the Pershing Rifles in the corps matches. Firing for the elimination matches is ten shots in each of the four regular shooting positions. Dick Salyards, freshman, with a total score of 356, is the high scorer to date. Arthur Brisbane declares that 90 percent of a child's future de pends upon ancestry and heredity. Is Arthur trying to alibi? The Dallas ( Tex.) Morning News. By DICK KUNZMAN. Oh! Oh! That man's again ! Over in the rambling, high ceiliiiijed racetrack beneath Me morial stadium s eastern arc, the possessor of a name that has been a stock synonym for Corn- husker track teams during the better part of twenty years is once more at his annual, un failing post. Starting his seven teenth year as Nebraska track and field coach, Henry F. Schulte, famed thruout the cinder circles of America as a manufacturer of high-geared cinder combinations, starts to work this week construct ing another Scarlet-copyrighted machine of harriers and hurdlers, jumpers and vaulters, weight and dash men. "Indian" Aging. He's getting old, this builder of track and field athletes. He can't show the lads just how it should be done anymore. Late years have seen his former springy stride slacken and falter a little. Younger men have come to assist him in the details and the problems which call for active demonstration. But that notorious black cigar still buni3 just as brightly, and those blue eyes still gleam out at you as challer.gingly and straight forwardy as ever. Commands and encouragements, criticisms and advice still ring across the track, their blunt crispness softened or increased tor the athletes receiv ing them by a respectful admira tion of the "Indian's" unwavering sincerity. Late years have seen an arm-chair added to the char acteristic conception of the Husler coach, but his tab on his charges still extends to the capabilities of every last man, and he knows the flexibility of every rippling muscle in the carefully-groomed legs and arms of his varsity performers. 150 Runners Out. From now until the middle of V Gasolene Motor Oil JLW 10o to 30o Gt Heating Oil 6c Gallon h n i m s 14th PHONE B3M8 it w Back of a Medal FIRE was raging through a Virginia village at midnight. A telephone workman sped there from his home ... found the central office in danger. Relieving the girl operator, he handled all calls ... sum moned help from nearby towns ... 'til buildings on both sides collapsed and the telephone building caught fire. Quickly he disconnected the small switchboard ... moved it to safety... improvised a telephone station in a field. In 20 minutes he re-established communication. Next morning, the rescued switchboard was installed in new quarters . . . telephone service was resumed as usual. That telephone man received the Vail Medal . . . one of several awarded each year to Bell System employees for outstanding public service. Devotion to duty ... day by day as well as in emergencies . . . has given America the world's finest telephone system. Jlr Matm L y n d e, f ree- , . - Magenn, DacK- if ("i iZ'P stroke man, and specializes breast- V i 2 who I in the stroke. Lynde, who holds the Big Six records in the 50, 100, and 220 yard free-style swims, will swim CouHeay Journal, the 220 and the blynaoa umc jqq yar(j free, style a t Iowa City. Hagelin will swim his specialty, the 150 yard back-stroke, and Thornton will also swin the 220 yeard breast-stroke. All three men will take part in the 300 yard medley relay. This meet will be the midwest sectional tryout for the Olympic meets. The winners in each event in meet will receive Olympic certificates. This means that they will be eligible to enter the national Olympic tryouti. The midwest section includes Iowa, South Dakota, and Nebraska. NEW YORK. Jan. . Charles Howard Warren. writer and former railroad official, has left his residuary estate, estimated at million dollars, to Yale univer sity. He left the bequest aa a me morial to his son, Lewis Baker Warren, and "to the Anglo-Saxon race, to which the United States owes ita culture." (College News Service). 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