.Tiursday, May 8, 1941 DAILY NEBRASKAH .7 11 h V ft UiV baseballcrs play Ioiva State at Ames today 4 ii eye oi Girls Sports Fifteen Husker baseballers left yesterday for Ames, la., where they win meet the Cyclones in a twin game series Thursday and Friday. Iowa split even up in a two game series with Oklahoma. Nebraska lost their first game aimogt; with the sooners 3 to l ana were rained out the second came. " t r a 1 . . 1 mi A Oscar Teetmeier and Ernie appa Aipiia ineia What ever happened . By Dorothy Martin. First round baseball games are1 completed. Results show that Gamma Phi Beta defeated 3, 6 to 5; Swanson are scheduled for mound Kappa Kappa Gamma 1 won from duty for the Huskers. The other Delta Gamma 2, 16 to 4; Whitney thirty mpmhrs Hnar.h Wilher defeated the Tri Delts 3, 17 to 3, r,- ,wan't realize how fleeting Knicht has selected to make the and Raymond hall advanced into fame is until he sits back and con- trip are: the second round by conquering templates what has happened to Catchers, Clarence Herndon, Delta Gamma. 1, 11 to 1. S chaps who had the world by John Fitzgibbon; infielders, Bob T"1, am?.S the tail in the field of sports, only Sauer, Bernie LeMaster. Dean TuesftaJ night brought forth Julia K.e," . l hM onrt Hn awav tpi,; Tii, wnib Rnlnh Krv- Steele and Ethelbelle Cambridge, ; to iusc uivii ..v. - r - vj vu..uu , x like rain on a grease spot. ger, Ray Grossman; outfielders, Whatever happened to Mon- joe Rvan. Warren Gabelman. Er- tague, the burly golfer who played win Klein, Sid Held; pitcher, An- gelo (Jssino. show that Jean MacAUister and amidst the showers. Incidentally, Annjean Ray AXD defeated Pat the English bikes have proved to Ainlay and Barbara Hahn, DC, be the most popular because they 31-14. Mary Gaule and Olive Sor- are speedier, ensen, Tri Delt, defeated Jayne Lynn and Jane Johnson, 31-16. Orchesis recital Friday night was the most successful modern dance Rain or shine the WAA bicycles program staged on this campus in are always on the go. Reserva- many a year. Outstanding hit of tions were made for all day Satur- the performance was the number, day and not one was canceled. The "On the Avenue." coeds kept right on pedaling lows; a sensauonai imna un; re:- r.nayr frr reut stllkpS and I 1I1 Wiuouj av.a ...v - J mnn. His handicap was running t the 18 holes with a hoe, rane, ana 4 i l I A nt 4- Via rv rtVO garaen spaue cu v gchmeli and thousands of nr less ronvcniionai viuuo. Aim .. Johnny Goodman, Johnny Weiss muller, Ellsworth Vines, Max Chi O, as the winners over Mar garet Stordorf and Sylvia Kugler, Whitney, 28 to 13. Barbara Jo Bates and Betty Finnegan, Kappa Delta, won from Virginia Stoddard and Phyllis Long, Kappa Alpha Theta, 48 to 3. Nebraska U. came through vic torious in the bowling meet with -ii A I 11 1 . . ,1 v-k 1 ' ni.i. 11 1nnfr name was plastered all over sports WeekTen bowlerg represented pages mmugiwui i..c. '""- aomethine extra that makes their each school with only the five was consiaerea as one ui u. th viu woHroBUfl1 Rosborough, Dorothy ne was coniueu u. - .v the mindg of the scQreg tQ Nebraska.s "IX Zl , s oDDV after that Pblic lon after they have taken Margaret Rosboroug nament play was sloppy after that v nice whne f Ak Rnlendid showlne acainst tne Dei- o ...a , ' . ..a m - ;,n . nnj v., ii lasts, dui we wonuer wnat mc Derg, ana tvuin oioaa otuicu tor than erage Crosby and he . d of . penn 1369 faded from the top Bpot ir the golf on P R wag Rosborougn npws in less than a month after his sensational rise. Good things end all too quickly. And what of the walking beer barrel of the fight ring, one Tony Galento, who popped up from no where to get a fight with the 'Alurnvs on Tod" Louis for the passed Air corps- (Continued from Page 1.) want the army or navy to handle it should not be discounted. Re flecting the influence of our de- now Raise vour hand if vou k what V Gordon j Dover "-v IS JJr heavyweight championship of the fense activity and the war, the world? Last reports from an idea- feeling found among many a stu sapped sports scribe in Jersey City dent was expressed by a St. Ed say that the name of Galento jcan't ward's (Texas) University junior, even draw bar flies to his beer who declared, "It's military train sudq disnensarv in the New Jersey ing from now on it's no use being town It was a great day for Tony, hypocritical about it.' And in the field of horse racing, there was Nebraska's sensational jockey, Earl Dew, who not so many months ago was the nation's top jockey for the year of 1940. His name was on the lips of every Results of this poll furnish fur ther proof of the air-mindedness of today's collegian. When the pro gram was started in January of 1939, the Surveys asked, "Do you approve of President Roosevelt's avid racing fan until the mount plan to train an air reserve corps he was atop at the Caliente oval of 20,000 men now in college?" A stumbled on New Year's Day. Dew was killed in that fall. Now he has been forgotten and the great racing public is looking once more for a "favorite" jockey whom they shall laden down with their praises and component parts of this thing called fame. Then, too, not so far back, there was a woman in sports who made her name, Babe Didrickson, fa mous from coast to coast with her all around athletic ability in games designed only for the stronger sex. No one hears of the great Babe today. That fame, then so potent, has been so weakened by time that it does not even leave a bit of a hangover. And 8-". it goes, Lou Gehrig, majority of 62 percent answered yes. Last April another national pins. Hign with 313 total for two games Kunkle took second with 310 pins while Penn State's Dorothy Pearce had a 299 total. The high individ ual game was 179 for Kunkle. Total pins for the ten bowlers on each team showed that Nebraska had 2636 and Pennsylvania 2514. Marjorie Schroder and Mildred Clymer now advance into the semi-final round of the ping pong by beating the Tri Delt team of Jeannette Mickey and Marion Nicholson yesterday, 21-10, 12-15. Badminton first round results study conducted by the Surveys indicated that nearly half of the men now in college would prefer the air service over the army or navv if thev had to enter the armed forces. These were the re sults: air service, 48 percent; army, 27 percent; navy, 25 percent. TT'S ARROW'S popular university oxford shirt with the roll front button-down collar which transcends all other shirts in acquiring that casual "take it easy" lack-a-daisitude. Your local Arrow dealer has these oxfords in white and solid colors. All Arrow shirts have the trim "Mitoga" athletic fit They're Sanforized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than lCc). A couple of fins will buy you a lot of smartness. Arrow ties $1-$1.50 handkerchiefs 25c up. ARROW SHIRTS ( Why Arabs and tennis stars wear white! WHITE reflects light, therefore keeps you cooler. That's why your best shirt bet in summer is a white shirt. Specifically, an Arrow White, with its perfect tailoring, its Arrow collar. Sanforized-Shrunk, fabric shrinkage less than Get some Arrow whites now. $2, up. Arrow Simmer Ties $1 and $1 50 iiiwimmi m -u. h.iiiiiiii niuiii'JU in wm himaumjm"' v mjW' pmiwmi Mf 7Hv4V ffmrfc cL W't.xiA XiA I i -1 r'- '-.i'r... I Which White Shirt Would You Pick? t-j p A R K O W 1 SHIRTS S-N4 TRUMP SAYS: DART SAYS: GORDON SAYS: WE SAY: Choose me. I have the longest-wearing soft collar of any shirt. I cost just. .$2 Pick me. I have the longest-wearing non-wilt collar on earth. I'm a bargain at $2.25 Take me. I'm O.K. for both sport and business and the most popular oxford shirt in America. $2 is all I cost! Pick all three! They're ell Arrows, all Sanforized Shrunk, fabric shrinkage less than 1. And you need them all in a well-rounded wardrobe! See them here today and see if you can resist taking them home! (shirts y For Dress wear it with a tie For Sports wear it open at the neck This is the phirt that men have been hoping for for years. Arrow's "Doublcr" adds ver satility to the long list of Arrow Shirt virtues. It has Arrow's famous "Mitoga' figure fit ... is Sanforized-Shrunk, fabric shrinkage les than 1! Come in and get it today ... $2 up 1 SHIRTS I