The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 05, 1939, Page SEVEN, Image 7

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FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1939
DAILY NKBKASKAN
SEVEN
n n
ill i w
sikers today
V
Nebraska to dedicate
new baseball diamond
Lloyd Schmadeke to hurl against Cliff Brass
in opener of two-game series starting at 4
Nebraska opens Its home baseball season this afternoon on the
new varsity diamond northwest of the coliseum at 4 as the Huskers
go against Kansas U. in the first of a two-game series. Second game
Is scheduled for 2 Saturday afternoon.
The new field is to be dedicated just before this afternoon's frame,
to which admission is free. Activity tickets, however, will be re
quired for admission Saturday.
The Jayhawks, who have won
two and lost three, are in fourth
place in the conference, while the
Huskers, with four defeats, are
in the Big Six cellar, and will be
seeking their first league win of
the season.
Lose to Wildcats.
Kansas dropped their first Big
Six game to Kansas State, was
rained out of the second against
the Wildcats, defeated Iowa State
in two games last weekend, then
took a double defeat from Okla
homa at Norman Monday and
Tuesday.
The Huskers, who lost seven of
eight games on a barnstorming
trip to the west, have beaten only
California. They were rained out
of their conference opener, a two
game series here against Iowa
State, and have dropped two each
to Missouri and Kansas State.
Schmadeke to pitch.
Pitching for the Huskers this
afternoon will be Lloyd Schma
7 deke, senior right hander from
Bradish who pitched Nebraska to
their victory over California. Rube
Denning, another senior, will be
on the mound Saturday.
Cliff Brass, veteran Jayhawk
hurler, will open this afternoon for
Kansas, while John Burge, sopho
more football end, will probably
pitch Saturday, with Red Dugan
being held in reserve. Brass and
Burge pitched the Jays to their
double victory over Iowa State.
Cadwallader plays.
Names familiar to Nebraskans
on the K. U. lineup are those of
Eldreth Cadwallader, right field,
who scored a touchdown, then
fumbled to give Nebraska their
chance to beat K. U. on the grid
iron last fall, and Les Kappleman,
fine shortstop, who was sports edi
tor of the Daily Kansan last se
mester as well as a member of
the basketball team. Ed Hall,
catcher, and Frank Bukaty, third
baseman, both backfield men in
football.
Harlan Muth, Seward, will take
over the first base spot of the
Huskers.
BIG SIX STANDINGS.
Missouri ...... 4
Oklahoma ..... 4
Kas. State .... 7
Kansas ....... 5
Iowa State .... 6
Nebraska ..... 4
w
4
S
4
2
2
0
I
0
1
3
3
4
4
pet.
1000
.750
.571
.400
.333
.000
Tennis deadline set
All first round games of the
girls intramural tennis tournament
must be finished by Friday at 6
o'clock. The games can be played
on any court but the scores must
be turned in to the W. A. A. office
and any defaults must also be re
ported. The victor must win two
sets out of three.
A.I.E.E. to hear
Hild safety talk
Power company team
conduct demonstration
Members of the student branch
of the American Institute of Elec
trical Engineers will hear E. C
Hild, safety engineer of the Iowa
and Nebraska Light & Power
company, speak on "Safety Meas
ures" Monday eaening when that
group meets at 7:30 o clock in
room 206 of Mechanical Engineer
mg.
Following Hild's address, Orville
Rose win direct his safety team
made up of members of the power
company in a safety demonstra
tion that will illustrate Hild's talk.
&L 9- $&l
91
by
June
Bierbower
Muskers to leave
for triangular meet
against El-State, ElU
Three cheers and a couple of hur
rahs for John Bentley whose com
ments in last night's Journal about
Jack Marsee, the Oklahoma jitter
bug, jibe (not a pun on jive) with
our opinion.
Marsee, a freshman football
star, is setting quite a bit of at
tention down at Norman because
he's one grand jitterbugger. No
one's objecting in fact, they seem
to think he's cute, judging from a
press reelase coming from the
Sooner publicity office.
But, as Bentley says, wait until
Oklahoma loses a few games. That
sort of thing is -jitterbugism, for
instance "interesting" when a
team wins but it's suicide when a
team loses, as witness goings on
last fall.
For quite some time this Okla
homa business has puzzled us. Mr.
Harold Keith, a very capable gen
tleman, directs Oklahoma pub
licity, and he seems to have the old
knack of giving people what tney
want at least what they want
from a winning team.
Witness the pictures of onia-
homa athletes. Seldom do you see
an ordinary picture but one of
some muscleman with a fair coed
hanging on his arm, or soothing
his wounds, or just adoring him.
And funny thing about it is, that
one Mr. Fred Ware, who is period
ically taunts the jitterbug-minded
Huskers, decorates his sport. pages
with those very pictures, without
as much as giving them a word of
comment in his column.
Not that we're telling Ware how
to run his business he does fine
by himself or objecting to the
pictures, because they ARE inter
esting. A pretty girl always bright
ens things up, and if the Sooner
news service and the press associ
ations send out such things, they
might as well be used.
But, tho they do liven up the
sport pages, the fact remains that
along about last fall what did we
Pick Hackney, Wibbels,
Simmons to be stars
Nebraska's track team, 20
strong, will leave tomorrow morn
ing for Manhattan, Kas., where
they will face Kansas State col
lege and Kansas U. in a triangu
lar meet to
morrow after
noon. The meet will
bring together
a number of the
m i d w est's
greatest stars
as Hackney and
Mitchell of
Kansas State;
Wibbels and
Simmons of Ne
braska, and
Stoland, Bird,
and Harris of
Kansas lead
Uncom journal, their teams into
action. Nebraska has lost to both
Lineups:
K annua
Oariwa.ila.lrr rt
Kapplrman M
Hen airy rt
Rukaty 3b
Holcim If
Panda lb
Parti 2b
Hall e
Bran n
Nrkrmaka
TrMartr m
M-IrrfnoU If
Wllaoa 2i
Harm cl
Tmrtmrlrr 3t
AMtrrsnn rf
Muth lb
Hrhmmlr c
Schmad-kr p
Umpirrn: Clfcpprr and Kllrl.
St. Paul league
to stage banquet
World's Fair theme
set for Friday event
The world's fair theme will be
woven through the St. Paul M. E.
Epworth league's annual spring
banquet this Friday evening. Mark
Simon, Lincoln lawyer and former
league president, will speak on the
"Temple of Religion' in conform
ity to the theme.
Toastmaster will be Delbert
Christensen and toasts will be
given on the "Hall of Fashion" by
Beula Brigham, the "House of
Man" by John Norall and the "Hall
of Jewels" by Ellsworth Steele.
The trylon and perisphere will
serve as decoration motils. Helen
Eighmy is program chairman,
Marie Larrabee arrangements, and
Lilah Jensen decorations. The
banquet will begin at 6:30 o'clock
and will be at the church.
A "Georgia Garden Center" has
been established on the Vniversity
of Georgia campus.
Have You Heard About the New Shirt
nilb the Cooling System?
Out new Arrow Mesh shim hare cross-ventilation!
Hundreds of tiny pores that you can't even see let
out the warm air from your body ... and let la
cooling fresh air!
Arrow Mesh has the handsome Arrow collar, the
Mitoga better-fit And it's Sanforized Shrunk! Drop
in and see this cool summer shirt today.. ...... .$2
' lit i c-h. i -n "la, i fW
i
if
schools in outdoor duals, but the
See HUSKER, Page 8,
see but a picture of Howard Mc
Carty with a lovely gal congratu
lating him on the touchdown he
made aganst Rice and then,
about two weeks later, a blazing
denunciation for the Huskers be
cause of jitterbugism. Then came
that series of photos of O. U.
players at Miami for the Orange
Bowl game in which the boys
looked like escort service em
ployes. It all goes to show what winning
a few games will do. Would we
have ever heard the end of it if
there'd been any pictures of some
handsome Husker gridder making
eyes at a beauty queen last fall or
now, for that matter 7
v jIA
BEDTIME STORY
ABOUT A SHIRT
Coms bedtime, the col
lars on our Arrow
Hitt shirts look just as
fresh as they do at break
fast. These wonderful col
lars look starched, act
starched, but rent. Tney
have true soft collar
comfort Hitt is $2.
N jf rg '''Vll
"Wilmcr! Speak to mc!
ONE HOT day last week, poor Wilmcr melted com
pletely away leaving only a small unimposing
puddle.
It's pity because if he'd been wearing one of the new
delightfully cool, Arrow summer shirts, be might still
be with us.
As cool as a peach basket, Arrow summer shirts have a
two-way no-draft air conditioning system. They have the
famous Arrow collar Mitoga shaped fit and they're San
forized Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than r), a new
ahirt if one ever shrinks out of fit
Burn path to your Arrow dealer today and pick up a
summer's supply of these cool shirts in white or fancy. 2 up.
A RROJV SHIRTS
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