THE DAILY NEBRASKA!. TUESDAY. SFJ'TEMnEIS 21, 1937 PAGE THREE Weir Places Confidence In Kicking Ability Of Yearlings. Freshman gridatevs are lonfin Ing this week's drills to I he per fection of Minnesota plays and formations. Coach Ed Weir Is putting special emphasis on the punt formation due to the fact that the yearling; will probably have to resort to punting as a means of gaining ground against the varsity in the The Tassels are coming. Cur Rental Department Features SAFETY-RENT-A-CARS Reasonable prices. Always open. Fords, Chevs., Willys. MOTOR OUT COMPANY 36819 1120 P St. varsity freshman game next Sat urday. Coach Weir did not disclose who would do the punting for the fresh men but it ts believed that George "Bus" Knight, all state back from Lincoln, will get the call. During practice sessions Knight has been booting out better than average kicks. The frosh are getting most of their defensive drilling in lengthy scrimmages against the varsity teams. MANY POSITIONS OPEN ON '38 GYMNASTIC TEAM Gymnastic team practices arc getting into full swing, and Coach Eddie Reynolds is keeping a wary eye open for talent. "I'm not looking for experts," stated Reynolds, "but 1 do want men with a little talent who are willing to work with the team and myself. Actual competition is a long way off, and any man who is willing to work will have plenty of time to develop into an A-l tumbler." As no Vetera ns are returning, chances for making the first squad are better than doubled. Practices are held in the coliseum daily from four to six o'clock. FRO GIVE FIRST TASTE OF GOPHER PLAY TOVARSITY Howell Shows Most Promis ing Toe Among First String Punters. There's NOTHING FINER Than EVAN'S DRYCLEANING! S Evan's have won and held student patronage only by giving superior, finer service. Our method of clean ing transforms silk or woolen dresses into bright, crisp newness . . , men's suits regain the smart lines of original tailoring. "f,cf Et on's lie Your Vuh-l" SIIIIITS BEAUTIFULLY LAUNDERED Only 10c WUH BACHELOR ROUGH DRV "V, Located on 12th St. Just South of Campus. is . Vur-ilv V'dVvrn Tunnies Willi Yrarlin;; Sat u relay Musker football devotees will get their first glimpse of the '37 Nebraska squad Saturday, Sept. 25, at Memorial stadium as .the .varsity .tangles .with Conch Ed Weir's highly touted freshmen. Last year the first stringers plastered a 54-0 de feat on the frosh. According to the business manager of athletics, John Scl leck, admission to this contest will he 25 cents. R1I.C. ADOPTS SPORTS PROGRAM FOR BASIC UNITS Highest CASH Prices For All USED BOOKS w WW COLLEGE BOOK STORE JOHNNY JOHNSEN A broiling September sun, which pilfered its share of poundage from the players, failed to put a crinip in Coach Biff Jones' plans yester day afternoon at Memorial stadium as he trotted three Corn husker grid outfits through their first de fensive work out this fall. With the po tent Minnesota Gophers booked to be here Oct. 2 to pry the lid off the Husk ers' 1937 sched ule, Major Jones gave his footballers a JACK DODD thorough lesson CnurtMv Stiilc .Irnnniil, on pass defense. This topic will bp j present on the practice menu until : the mighty men from the north in-1 vade Huskcrland. Bedecked in green shirts, the No. 1 backficld of Johnny Howell, I quarterback, Harris Andrews andj Jack Dodd, halfbacks, and Ekion Mcllravy, fullback, was put thru the task of guarding passes thrown against it by the second and third quartets of backs. Dodd turned in a commendable perform ance as he knocked several aerial heaves to the terrain. Ends Snare Passes. However, this foursome let a few flips get away as Elmer Pohr mann, veteran end, and Bob Kahl er, sophomore flankman from Grand Island, snatched several short passes. The second backficld of Paul Amen, Hugo Hoffman. Thurston Thclps and Bob Morris let but few ozone throws get past the secondary defense. The varsity got a preview of Minnesota plays yesterday as ex pounded by Coach Ed Weir's year ling aggregation. The few varia tions of Gopher plays that were exhibited by the Weirmen caused the varsity no concern. The fresh men, led by their illustrious back field of Bus Knight, Floyd New ton, Harry Hopp, and Edsel Wib bels, were stopped at the line of scrimmage. Charley Brock, burly varsity center from Columbus, stemmed Gopher crashes and threw ball car riers for noticeable losses. Brock, who has drawn words of praise from such national sports writers as Alan Gould, Associated Press sports editor, and Henry McLe' more, united Press columnist, is slated to be the spearhead of the Scarlet and Cream s forward wall. Kickers Show Wares. On the regular playing field, Mentor Jones called on his kickers and had Xhem show what they could do with their educated toes. Thus far Quarterback Howell has shown the most promise of becom ing the best punter, altho Thurston Phelps, Bill Andreson and Jack Dodd have been sending several long spirals down the rectangle. For variety, Preceptor Jones taught his proteges several plays which he hopes they will use in foiling Coach Bernie Bicrman's Norsemen. The new tricks were dashed off with machine like reg ularity and precision. Blocking and more blocking was the fodder meted the linemen by their instructor, "Link" Lyman. The guards and tackles were put on the blocks and kept there until perspiration flowed in streamlets from their brows. Peters in Suit. Raven haired Gus relets, major "N" winner at guard last season, appeared in sweat clothes yester day and took a short workout. The Lexington High product was kept out of practice last week because of nn ailing buck. News that Bill Callihan, hefty fullback from Grand Island, and Herni Ktrnsheini, 20.") pound tackle from Walton, sre no longer f find ing the Ineligibility list, brought cheer to the Husker training quar ters yesterday. It was thought last week that those stellar performers might be barred from athletic com petition because of scholastic dif ficulties, but their status quo Is now free of ineligibility taints. Military Officers to Take Charge of Games Held Between Companies. llll-kM 1lo)C to Get 'Hot' When Hunker (!om BY CD STF.EVF.S. A sultry curtain hung over the Nebraska practice field yesterday and the varsity Huskers had a t'liijrh time keeping up chatter and enthusiasm. But it was as Paul Amen, transformed h;ickfirlr ace. said, mopping his brow of per spiration: "I hope we meet Minnesota on a day like this, cause we ean Basic students in R. O. T. C. will usually take it and they can't. All Athletic IWaiti'g'MS Will Meet on S-jit. 23 All fraternity athletic man agers are asked to meet with 23, in the "N" club shrrllu uttu Harold Petz Thursday, Sept. 23, in the "N" club rooms at the coliseum at 7:30 p. m. Plans for the schedules, sports to be included, and possible changes in the rules will be discusssd. do more than drill this year, ac cording to the plans made by the military department In conjunction with the intramural office. The cadet companies arc to compete In the same sports regularly sched uled for the fraternities, Knot hull and baseball games will be played in the afternoon from 4-(i while the volley ball and has ketliall games will he scheduled after the dinner hour. Officials and all necessary equipment will be provided by the Intramural office. The present plans for the mili tary units provide for optional participation. This Idea differs from the track meets that were I'his is truer than the average fan realizes. Those post earns that come back trom vacationists who vacation in the Nordicland marked "sleeping under five blank ets every night'' are no smooch. II s rwilly a northern paradise and the Uiermrn huskies aie used to a low ebbed thermometer. If the mercury rlimlis high on Oct. 2. so should the. Husktifc. Koi those who doubt this state ment; think oaek to all the times that Llic western 'nvincihles have had their rompers spanked oft when they tiekked noun sou'.h to the cotton climate. That weather corollary is just like dynamite; it can't be beat. cross breed between the .ln.ies town Hood and 1 he Mexican .jumping bean, The principle that as the contraption throw out. water in a circular stream it. creeps up a wire at a snail's gait until it gets to the other end of the fi"ld. The whole thing runs by water power. Someone tried to improve tlm thing by suggesting, "if it only dug dandelions;" "Yeah, if it du? dandelions, what would the students do?" re torted the indignant school gard-ner. A new course in marriage at. Syracuse university enrolled 1 .1 1 1 students last, semester, with Mb on the waiting list. held two or three years ago. Then j every able bodied man was re- j Page Mr. Ripley! I quired to participate and the, on ine timers r.ew va-sny meets were he Id ( urine regular eleven, every man is irom uie. Stanford university regulations keep the nearest bar five miles from student beer drinkers. The Tassels are coming. Pete Hagclin Will Serve as Participating Coach Of Husker Team. class periods. To Appoint Officers. Athletic officers will be ap pointed in the next few days by the military department. As soon as these officers have been ap pointed and schedules arc made, piny will begin in football and vol ley' ball. Awards similar to those given the interfraternity winners will be given to the winners at the close of the season. Each company may enter as many men as they wish and each man eomnctinc in two Pete Hagclin, Bic -Six swim ' ,wt.i who is a member of the dash champion, is the new Husker ! team winning two titles will re- swimming coach, replacing Jnck!c'c a gold intramural medal. Minor, who has accepted a gov good ol" drouth state, Nebraska, save ,'nc, Fred Slurry breaks the pel fection o f ; ' . eminent position In Washington, D. C. Hagelin will be a stu dent mentor which requires no class in structional ac tivities and for which no sal ary is allotted. The new coach is in his last year of c o m p e 1 1 tion and will swim with the Husk er mermen as, usual. Hagelin, Ki-om l.mr..n J..iirnal. 'On two firsts rue Hnrf nn. in the confer ence championship swimming meet last year. Only one dead heat; blots Hagclin's last season record in dual meets. The tic was with Thurman Talley of Texas univer sity, who was the reigning loop champion when the Longhorns . stopped off in Lincoln last spring j on their way to the national inter-1 collegiate meet in Minneapolis. Talley and Hagelin tied in the 50 yard free style but the Husker' evened the score in the 100 yard free. i the tale by c o ni i n g from I L a t r o b e, Pa. ! To carry the ihing still lur-j thi r. every man on the. j team comes1 from a diller- ent tow ii, a fact seldom true on any rREDSHiOFV football team. , Krnm Unrein Journal. M O s t o( thei top teams in the United States ' draw their grid talent from every! corner of the man. In Huskevland. ! Eligibility rules applying to fra-tthe first eleven usually lists more - ternity play win oe cniorcea in than one man from Lincoln. R. O. T. C. play, that is, no mem- On the ends, .Jones has Elmer her of a varsity, "B" team, or j nermann. KMpleii usl ; John irrsnman squao is rugnm- 10 o rjetiaid'ion, some Ml' hamlet in i ll HALVERSTADT ilHOCKIiV AND MARKKT Hc. l H'iiI I1t. t.h. We Mmt'P'l Mum. 2 Mil" Hr.'l KnaM. rh"irT ruts, 1.1, l.'.r i',, in H in I Trim. Nn. 2 turn, 3 fr ... Nhvv Bran. l.lii-' 2.1c Sll.lil IToN.-ini;. Qt l'niiir., r'Hl'f.. 2 I.tw. IV Apple. .I'-nathnn. fi 2V F ish. Frr.h Krn7.cn. Lr, 1'lc Varsity Men Barred. TYriiWHITKHS All Mandarri makes for sale nr rent, Used and rebuilt machines on easy terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. 12 St. ' B2157 Lincoln, Nenr, pete, nor will any man who has ever made a varsity award. Fraternity athletic managers will, meet with Harold Trtz, intra mural director, in the "N" club rooms Thursday, Sept. 23, at 7:l.r p. m. at the coliseum. Plans, schedules, sports and changes in rules will be discussed. The Tassels are coming. (ilirrr Loaders Try Out Before Innocents lodiiy Candidates for cheer lead ers are to meet today at four o'clock in front of the east stadium, Dave Bernstein, last year's yell king, announced yesterday. Members of the Innocents society will be on hand to judge the men in the tryouts to determine the cheer leaders for the 1937-38 school year. Bernstein urged all interested men to report at the stadium. Wisconsin; Ted Doyle. Curtis; 'red Shite v. Latrohe, pa.; Boh Mehring, Grand Inland; Lowell , Knglish. the only Lincoln tirst stringer so far; Charlie Block, Columbus; John Howell, Omaha; Jack Dodd, Gothenburg; Harris Andrews, Beatrice; and Eklon Mc Ilravv, Tccumseh. Good? 4 John K. Sclleek, pursemastci of the Husker athletic funds, has done some more purchasing. This lime he delved into the ultra mod cm and bought two water sprmk leis to keep the gridiron com plexion in good condition. The sprinklers really look IWe a Hats Off! TO Peerless This ts felt hat. wpek at Peer less. With the first touch of fall your straw will make you feel like the last, rose nf sum mer. 68c For Cash and Carry earless CLEANERS B6731 On. H. Lemon 322 So. 11th u Husker Coaching Rosier Includes Newcomers, Vets mi r- '" '''vrrpw 1 It's Because It's Got What It Takes the College Choice over any two others combined A Wholly New and Superlative Model of the Revolutionary Sacless Pen Parker's Spccdlinc Vacumatic! Stop today at any good pen counter and see Parker's latest and Rreatest achievement the Parker Speedline Vacumatic. A princely new model of the Pen that does what no other pen can do. Here's a new all-time high in ink capacity, yet sixe reduced to a lender, restful Speediine. A Pen that shows the ENTIRE Ink supply shows when to refill hence one that never runs dry In classes or exams. The world't smartest style Parker's exclusive laminated Pearl and Jet wholly original. And not merely modern in style, but modern also in mechanism. lis revolutionary SACLESS Dia phragm Filler radically departs from earlier types, whether they have a rubber ink sac or not. A patented invention GUARAN TEED mechanically perfect. Once you try this pedigreed Beauty, with its marvelous Scratch-Proof Point, you'll feel sorry for anyone who doesn't have it. Go and see and try it today. The Parker Pen Co., Janesville, Wis. Mtktrt ofQu!nk,thMwptn-efon-mi writini ink. ISo, Jiu and up. ft i j By MORRIS LIPP. TVstiny of the 1037 Cornhuskers in the football wars rests in the hands of Maj. Lawrence McCeney "Biff Jones who. aided and abet ted by such Nebraska personages as Roy "Link" Lyman, Henry V. "Indian" SVhulte and W. H. "Brownie" Browne as assistant coaches, has the staggering task of retaining the Big 8ix cham pionship as well as giving Minne sota, Indiana, Iowa and Pittsburgh a run for their money. "The Bifler" stands In a pair of mentor's shoes that few coaches would regard with envy. A spring practice has been his only contact with the Huskers, altho he has sat on the opposite side of the field from them for two years as head coach at Oklahoma before taking Lana X. Bible's position. ; " ! ;;. - (.. -v --- A.LEVANDOW5KI COACH BROWNF Coiirirny of Court v n! Lincoln .lournsl. Lincoln Journal. CM -oiK-JONI Ceui ty nl Lincoln Jounul "LINK" LYMAM Cour(iny of Lincoln Journal. HOLDS 102 MORt INK TttMl OUR FAMOUS DUOFOU) :nS VACUMATIC -rir OUAMANTIIO M ICMAN ICAllV MICT f.ni. ii, V.i0, IMS, 10. r.ncll to a'Otch, tJ.M. 3.i0. $3.73. J. D3 He, of course, knew of Nebraska years before when he was the West Toint and Louisiana State head coach. A former Army officer, Jones was recommended to the Ne braska athletic board by D. X. when the mild mannered Little Colonel resigned his nlhlctic-direc-tor-bend coach job at Nebraska to take a similar position at Texas for what Is reputed to be the high est coaching salary In the United States. Husker jitudents and grid ders cottoned to "Ulff" Immediate Iv and from all indications the fcelliifr seems to be mutual. Title of "Grand Old Man" In Muskcrdom can hardly be dig' puled. Henry K. Schultc has de. served the title after nearly . a score of years with Nebraska football and track. He started his football way-back-when on the famed "Polnt-A-Minute" eleven coached by Fielding; "Hurry Up" Vest ajid bgan his own tutoring In the Big- Sue at Missouri. Columns could be written about Schulte's year-in year-out success InHusker track, but let It suffice to say that tlm nig Six dlndems fur Indoor and outdoor trnck and field have adorned the Huskers' trophy room for several years , si rale, hi. "Pa" Schultc does most of his 1 tutoring from a folding chair to the linemen and it is quite aninh ing how Comhusker linemen have i been able to learn the strategy and ti irks-in-the-trnde from 'Ta" without having him get down on the line and demonstrate. The hoarse words that "Pa" speaks do the job. But the man who can get down on the line with the two hundred pounders and give them the works n forward wall technique, decep tion and finesse is none other than robust Koy "Link" Lyman, former Nebraska star and bulwark on the professional Chicago Bears. "Link" has played his football with the , l mmimmvm i HENWSCHULTt ED WEIR - Coui lrnv nf rourlrnv of l.ini-oin Jnurnnl. Llni-oln Jntirnnl. best of them and the many fine points ho has picked up have been transmitted to the Cornhuskcr line with notcwoithy sicccss. "Drownlc" Is drill muster and end coach of the Huskers whose job it will be to develop a pair of good, leather-snapping ends with sufficient reserve ttrength. Browna will have 8ome of his 193ft flank expert back, but the first few days of pre-season workout Indi cate that the positions are wide open. Also on the Cornhusker foot hall conchlng stnff are Kd Weir, Harold IVIjs and Adolph I-ewan-dowski who will manage the freshmen griddcrs this year. Styled To Take You Places! COAT niKKKNKK nr .am. mis soriul 8,liiii lead you, tlit'M' coal can C" liroudly . . , and they're luiilt for active riir! Sw (;(;i;ks, iiii or iih out u licit ... to suit vonr l.c 1TH TOI'IM.O iila Viol.K, H.VCCOON or HKAVKK. Soft fleer.- and linr.lv w eetls. UTIMN color illi pep Idue, rust mill ovford. 12 to 20. Si.c $50 0 7wl JhinvwuL 0$$ Zim ( Si miLLEIiXJMIE