SUNDAY, DECEMBER '6, 1936 THE DAILY NEBRASKA FIVE E RETAIN TOP POST Schulte Gets Early Start In Effort to Replace Graduated Stars. By Joe Zolley. Faced with the austere test of defending their indoor track dia dem March 6 at Columbia, Mo., Coach Henry Schulte's runners have ordered unto themselves a menu of Arduous workouts until Christmas vacation interrupts the academic calendar. Beginning' to morrow, rehearsals for the oncom ing indoor track duals will be staged under the east stadium and a call has been issued for all var sity tracksters and freshmen pros pects to take heed of the practice (schedule. At the Columbia carnival last year Pa Schulte's Huskcrs garner ed championship wreaths by chalking up 45 points, besting Ok' lahoma, Kansas State, last season champs; Missouri, Iowa State and Kansas in that , order. Compra tively little trouble was given to the Nebraskans in absconding with the title, as they lead their nearest rival, Oklahoma, by 17 points. What About These 7 But a great change has taken place in the Husker track camp since that momentous contest. No longer will the names of Harold Jacobsen; Standley Haight, Sher man Cosgrove and Chester Beaver be found in the Husker starting lineup, as they finished their col legiate athletic career last June. The services of these satellites will be direfully missed this year. Jac cobsen won first place in the 100 and 220 yard dashes in both the Indoor and outdoor conference meet ; Sherman Cosgrove pole vaulted his monicker into Nebras ka sport annals; Standley Haight was a hurdler of high repute, and Chester Beaver was a consistent point assembler in the mile runs. To make things darker, Kenneth Chapman, letterman in the hurd les, and Harwin Dawson, demon in dash events, did not matriculate this fall, and their offerings, too, will be greately lost by Preceptor Schulte. Reports from other Big Six schools are to the effect that the Huskers will have to do some nifty trotting to repeat as confer ence winners this coming March. Revenge is the watchword of the circuit brethren and nothing would appease their appetites more than -j rum GEORGE BROS. TABU DECORATION Many rW Number In SNOW PIOURIS. WRAPPINGS N Tin, Ribbon. Tin Mi, nuut. Cellophane. FOUNTAIN PENS New and Novel Holder 11.M U U.M GIFTS FOB THK BOSS Zipper Rlnf Book, Carry Cane, Portfolio. Deal Pad. Chair Pads and Hundred of Item from Il.M to flt.H POKEK SETS Chip. Dup'lcate Brldce Beta, Btnco, Chest Checker. Dom Inoe, Fortune Telling Card and Chlnete "Chi Chi." DESK, TABLE AND BOt'DOIK LAMPS Several new alyle fl.M U $9.44 WORLD GLOBES Plain and lighted. Table and atand. II .M U H.M PICTl'RE FRAMES Sir.e to fit the Small Kodak and up to 7 Inch. II.V and MARVIXOI' BOOK ENDS -Bronze. Oold. Sliver, Pottery and Preued Wood. II.M and RADIO ORNAMENTS Whlat ilng Buv Hunting Liog, llortr and Tiger. ART WOOD NOVEI.TIEH Covered Wagon Plaeqiie. !.rge A h Stand, Table Tray. Ah Tray. Cigar and cigarette Box. Pipe Holder. Tie Hanger and other article la Walim or white. SI M U M M DI'RAND'S IMITATION LEATIIKR In white and brown. Wane Paper Basket. Large and Small, Boi for Stationery, (ilove and Handkerchief Scrap Book. Index for Bill, Imic Set and Pad and other Hmr A niarveloua number. V ! II.M CHRISTMAS CARDS Modestly Priced Distinctive De sign for Personal Oreetlngs and Special mend and Relative. lc to 50c each GEORGE BROS. PRINTERS GIFTS STATIONER ND EH NUN ON HEAT HOPE TO Movie Box Kiva- " La dies from Nowhere" and "Code of the liange" Lincoln "Go West Young Man" Orpheum- " Midnight Revels'' and "Mr. Cinderella" Stuart- "Big Broadcast of 1037" Varsity "Pennies from Heaven" SuUsdin INTERCLUB COUNCIL. Interclub council will meet Mon day evening at 7:30 in the base ment of U hall. AH. members are urged to come as the meeting is important. a dethronement of the Schultcmen from the championship chair. All's Not Dark. However, there are several silver linings in the Husker track sky in the way of returning veterans. Sam Francis, All American full back, heads the retinue of track men coming back, and will con tribute his share by doing shot- putting. Sam broke the conference indoor iron ball throwing record last March with a heave of 50 feet 5 3-4 inches, eclipsing the former mark of 50 feet 1-8 inches, estab lished by Hugh Rhea of Nebraska in 1932 and Clyde Coffin an of Kan sas in 1930. Wild Hoss" Cardwell, now that football has been ushered out ,un til next September, will don track apparrel and do some high class hurdling, broadjumping and dash ing. Cardy can be used in any event, with the sole exception of shotputting. Cardwell took first in the 60 yard low and high hurdles at the last Columbia indoor show. Lea Pankonin, whose forte is the 220 and 440; Wilson Andrews and Fred Matteson, members of the two mile team; Floyd Gleisberg, Verl Athey, Floyd Glsh and sev eral other monogram owners will be back in the harness this win ter for another season of compe tition. Watch These Sophs. Using the veterans as a nucleus, Coach Schulte has sophomores ga lore, and it is from this group that performers will emerge to fill va cant team berths. Bob Allen, In land Butler. Alfred Kuper, Fred Koch, Frank Estes, Art Henrick son, Paul Owens, James Knight and a bevy of unknows are mem bers of the '30 class who will be out for varsity positions. The Huskers received a setback when Wayne Tarcho, freshman numeral winner in the 880, entered the Uni versity of Illinois this fall. Altho the other conference schools have their portion of the stars, Nebraska is conceded at least a 50-50 chance of repeating as crown wearers at Columbia. So everything is not murky in the Husker clique. Their accuracy was particularly unchanged in spite of fatigue, but Increasingly frequent "b 1 a n k" lapses occurred in which they could not solve the simplest problem!". This whole business may seem foolish and at the same time un warantedly cruel to the birds, but it is an essential part of a de tailed research on canaiies being carried on by Elizabeth Mitrhelt, a graduate student in zoology. A conipli'te outfit fr a woman avcrugrrt $78 ( while a complete outfit for a man average $o.40. The only singl" ',,,nl tov wn'rn males pny mie limn females la hats. The Daily California n evident l believes In learning Its readers by repetition. It stated five times in succession that "it is a little known fart that polo, a game of the anrtent Persians, whs invented by Chinese women." Safety Rent-a-Cars New, Clean, Heated and Safe Low Rates, S'2c Mile Up Always Open 1120 P St B6819 K. U. started the ball rolling the other night by nosing out a cagey Washburn quint, 30 to 26, in the first basketball game of the year involving a Big Six team. Accord- ing to reports, "Phog" Allen's gift to the court game-tne "basko lite" functioned as smoothly as his fine Jayhawkers, who are again favored to lead the league in the hoop game. Veterans Noble and Holliday were back in form for Kansas along with a fine crop of soph Jays, who are hoping to retain the circuit hoop flag for an other season. Swimming at Iowa State March 5 and 6, wrestling at Nebraska March 5 and 6, indoor track at Missouri March 6, Kansas Relays at Lawrence April 17, and Drake Relays at Des Moines April 23 and 24, are the events and dates settled by conference officials Sat urday during the annual conclave of Big Six conference bigwigs at Kansas City. Interpretation of basketball rules brought the ses sion to an end, there being little to hash over this year. Big Six rules aren't in need of revision, but football coaches all over the land are moaning low over some questionable points In the gridiron sport that decided quite a few major contests this fall. When the national football rules committee assembles for its annual meeting, it will hear protests against the fif teen yard penalty Imposed upon the offensive team which, after shifting, fails to pause a full second before the ball is put into play. Fordham lost - more than 100 yards for violation of this rule against St. Mary's, and the rule caused much grief to Du quesne when the Pitt Dukes tackled Detroit Another sore spot is the point after touch down which nearly always re quires a kicking specialist on the field. Some think first downs should count for the extra point or that two downs from the five yard line should be allotted, eliminating the place-kick or dropkick. Time out, laterals, pass interference, substitutions and changes in size and ar rangement of the football field have been broached as possible grid rule revisions. RneakiD? of bowls reminds me of something. Didn't this column say something tne rirst oi ine u'eek about Washington and Pitt nlavinir in the Rose Bowl January 1? Well, the Huswes sciecieo. x-ut and is Dixie howling! .Aiarjam and Louisiana State appeared to have the inside track for the bid herauw their records looked better than Pitt's. California sportswrit ers are all burned up about the selection, while the scribes from the smoky city are all enthused. iMxic'ii writers of athletics have rmund some powerful denounce ments out of their mills, but that's only natural. Pitt and Washington will put on a good show for the rne tournament fans, but I don't think Pitt will smash their Rose Bowl losing Jinx. The annual Sugar Bowl contest, which features Louisiana State and Santa Clara, may attract as many fans as the more popular Rose Bowl game. Undefeated Lou isiana was almost ready to pack their footballers, student body and a 200 pound pet tiger mascot on a California special, anticipating the call to the roses. Undefeated and untied, Santa Clara will come out of the hills around San Fran cisco to trek clear down to New Orleans to play real football on New Year's Day, in what may be the best game of the day, and per haps, year. College women's clothing costs moie than college men's clothing Recanting to a hurvey of 42 men and f0 women on the Texas Wes layan college campus. Buy Where Equipment is TESTED for Cleanliness o o o Roberts Dairy GROAN BOYS READY FOR L Adams Expects High Entry For Preliminaries to Eastern Sojourn. The all-university wrestling tourney will get underway tomor row afternoon at 4 o'clock in the coliseum, with the finals being run off the following day. Coach Jerry Adams is expecting a record breaking entry list for the meet. Quality as well as quantity will be shown at the Monday and Tues day embroglio, as a group of dex terous bonebenders have already given word of uncovering latent tactics of the old Greek sport. Carl Yost, Keith C?rter and James Knight are representative of some of the star wrestlers who will ex hibit their goods to the delight of those spectators gathered at the tournament. Gold medals will be given to in dividual champions and silver awards to runncrs-up. The battles carry much weight in view of the fact that those making outstand ing performances will 'be given thought when time arrives to pick men to fill vacant team positions. Also, the trip to the east in Feb ruary will serve as an incentive to elicit the best wrestling efficacies that are present in each contest. L. B. Orfield Writes Trio Articles for Law Reviews Prof. Lester B. Orfield of the college of law, who is now on leave of absence at Washington, D. C, is author of three articles appearing in November law re views. "History of Criminal Ap peal in England" appeared in the Missouri Law Review; "History and Structure of the State Appe late Courts with Special Reference to Criminal Cases" was published in the Southern California Law Review, and "Appeals by In digent Criminals" in the Univer sity of Pittsburgh Law Review. He is also author of the chapter on quasi-contracts in Ballantine's Problems of Law. For more than a week, an earn est canary has been setting on pieces of red and white chalk and still she Is not discouraged. Two other little yellow birds are perched about six inches away, waiting patiently to ake their turns at the "chalk-warming" party. a Dr. Neil Warren and Dr. Brant Clark, with the help of 12 as sistants, kept three students awake from 5:30 a. m. on a Fri day until 10:30 p. m. on Saturday. Every ten hours the experimenters took testa in solving more than 100 mathematical problems and identifying more than 300 colors flashed before their eyes. RASS ES MONDAY Slumber WynsVrT wfcrm comfort ol Siuia- viSi7 fM Jt.Wyni r aura Vrfon V J f A I 1 JEr..4" 'BrETfcr ' TVv oEnalna- or dMpirif. trtnth Bin I 1 V-f f ilMitTG: D. BIBLE REFUSES TO CONSIDER 'OIL BOWL' Big Six Rules Precludes Acceptance; Huskc s Not Approached. Nebraska's chances of playing a southwest representative in the "Oil Bowl," an enterprise of the Tulsa, Okl., chamber of commerce, were definitely squelched when Coach D. X. Bible announced at Kansas City, where he is attend ing a Big Six session, that his team will not participate in the contest. Arkansas U was named ns a possible opponent. On the topic Coach Bible said: "We have not been approached relative to a post season game. We have a conference rule that football ends the Saturday follow ing Thanksgiving and I know the sentiment of the University of Ne braska authorities. . . there will be no post season game at Tulsa. Okl." OR. CONGDON DIRECTS STATE MATH COUNCIL N. U. Professor Supervises Organization of New Nebraska Society. Dr. A. R. Condon, professor of secondary educatlpn at the uni versity, state representative of the National Council o2 Teachers of Mathematics, announced that Prof. Carl R. Thomas of Chadron Sate Teachers college has been elected president of the newly formed Ne braska section of the national or ganization. Dr. Condon took the initiative in the formation of the Nebraska unit. Mathematics teachers in the six districts of the Nebraska. State Teachers association voted approval of the new state con stitution, and a sufficient number have joined to make the section possible. Other state officers announced by Dr. Congdon.are: Miss . Eva Phalen, Kearney high school, vice president; Lloyd V. Cross, Norfolk junior high school, secretary; Miss Ellen Anderson, Lincoln high school, treasurer; and Miss Inez Wilson, Curtis high school; W. R. Sudman, principal of Oakland high school, and Dr. Congdon. to gether with the officers, members of the executive board. First convention of the Ne braska mathematics section will be held in conjunction with the meet ings of the Nebraska Academy of Science, probably the first week in May. Heitkotten SuE? QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Makers of Fine Sausages and Barbtcucd MaU B VUS 140 So. tun Motor Out Company