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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1944)
Sunday, April 2, 1S44 tHE NEBRASKAN 3 Husker Grid Hopes Jolted If 4-Ps Go Plans for '44 Would Change Nebraska's grid hopes for the 3944 season will receive a severe set-back if government plans ma terialize to force 4-F's to enter es sential industries or to be drafted into special labor battalions. Men on whom grid Coach Lewandow ski is counting most for next fall are largely 4-F and consequently will probably be forced to with draw from school should the pro posed legislation be enacted. Such veterans as Buzz Hollins, 3 Bert Gissler, and Frank Hazard, all 4-F, would undoubtedly be di rectly affected by such legislation, as would the majority of the rest of the candidates expected to re port for spring practice April 5. Many 4-F's Last Fall. Last falls Husker team was liberally sprinkled with 4-F ath letes, and Lewandowski has been laying his campaign plans for next season on the assumption that 4-F's would again be available. If the 4-F's are lost to the Huskers, Lew will be faced with the pros pect of building a team almost en tirely from students too young for military service or awaiting their call to the armed forces. Tho a good share of the UN team last fall consisted of ath letes under military age, there were several 4-F's on hand to give the squad needed age and expe rience. Lacking this draft-exempt material, the Huskers would have been hard put to finish the '43 season. Only Service Nines Listed Or O.U. Slate NORMAN, Okla., April 1. No intercollegiate opponents are on the schedule of the University of v Oklahoma baseball team of 1!44. but Ensign Bill Scheeror's Sooneis will meet several strong service clubs, thus perpetuating the Soon er tradition of having played col lege baseball for 53 consecutive years. The club is strong on pitchers. Three experienced left handers are available, Hay Lacer of last year's team: Bob Reese of Kansas State, and Bob Scheble of Oregon State. Bill Fry of last year's club and Virgil Ward, an athletic specialist assigned to the campus who for merly pitched for the Sooners of 1941, are also available. In the infield is Gus Hendrix at first base, Bobby Estep at second. Jewell Eastham at short and Bob Clark at third. Hendrix formerly played with the Okemah, Okla., Junior American leaguers. Estep was the Norman Naval Air Sta tion's sub third sacker last year, Eastham was with Springfield in the old Three-Eye and Clark with the University of Nevada and for EASTER CARDS Now on Display Open Shopping Mghlt GOLDENROD STATIONERY STORE 215 North 14th SI FEM FUN BY ELEANOR KNOLL Twenty-one teams which have played their first games in the badminton tournament represent 11 organizations on the campus. AOPI's and the Delta Gams have three teams in. With two teams each are the Thetas, Alpha Phis, the Barbs, Gamma Phis, Pi Phis, and the Dorm. The Kappas and the Alpha Xis have one team each. Winners in League I are the following teams: Wheden-Holtz-Scherer, Lemon-Winter, Morton Sinclair, Wolf-Coywood, Sneed Burgess, Glotfelty-Legge. In League II the visitors are these teams: Sears-Swanson, Schaeffer-Dolezal, Boyd-Winter, Bromley-McKissick, Cole-Gish. In League III. the winners are the following: Johnson-McPher-son, Chamberlain-McCampbell, Mardis-Platner, Hansen-Ormsher, Sage-Peterson. Victors in League IV are the following teams: Beetem-Hagen, Thomsen-McDonals, McKinsey Emery, Ralston-O'Conner, Hern-don-Peterson. Soft-ball tournament begins on April 10. Team lists must be in by this Friday at 5 p. m. Archery meets at 5 o'clock on a Hime with the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast circuit. The schedule: March 30: NATTC Skyjackets there; April 4 and 8, NAS Zoomers here; April 11 and 15, NATTC Skyjackets here; April 25, Purcell Gunners here; April 29, Enid Fliers there; May 2, Purcell Gunners there; May 6, El Reno Reformatory there; May 13, 'Purcell Gunners here. f I mmtct 1230 'O' STREET lay ImA 4 5'tfi Hm NEWMAN CLUB Rev. G. J. Shunter, Chaplai,. Mass 6:15 A. M. Wednesday and Friday Easter Sunday Mass 11 :00 A. M., lioom 201, Temple Bldg., 121 h and I? Streets Confessions before Msiss 10. -00 A. M. Thursday in Grant Memorial. i. nere la pitfiity ui ruii'iucut onu plenty of instruction for every one. ' Ex-UN Wrestler Copple Crowned AAU Champion Competing as a member of the Iowa Preflight team, Newt Copple, former UN grappler, won the Mid west AAU 155-pound wrestling championship at the Central club in Omaha Friday night. Copple, whose home is in Lin coln, was a Big Six conference champion while wrestling for the Huskers. Earlier in his naval train ing he won the championship of his unit while stationed at Pur due university. A naval air-cadet, Copple Is sta tioned at the preflight school at Iowa City. First woman to become an of ficer in the army medical corps was Dr. Margaret D. Craighill, formerly dean of the Women's Medical college of Pennsylvania. She was commissioned a major. Marine trainees at Bucknell uni versity wanted a mascot. A few hours after they adopted Queen ie, a stray collie, Queenie gave birth to 12 pups. Mil! lebra. Jia 'i Jailtion (denier l WW V.-- .... .. ... A 1 x : - . t 1 - " , - i mmm r 1 . . :: ..x- Looking truly like a beauty queen in her spring Carlye with bolero jacket is Rose Phillips, Nebraska Beauty Queen Candidate, in addition to canyir.g a full study schedule at the Univesity, Rose works every c'ternoon in our accessory shop. NEBRASKA BEAUTY CANDIDATE CHOOSES COSTUME FROM SPRING CARIYE COLLECTION ft Hi 5 if 7 Spring Carlye with fitted jacket and flared skirt designed for all-occasion wear. 19.95. s vH r 4 Sophisticated, good-looking fashions by a famous designer of junior-coed clothes. Your "date in surance," for a Carlye never fails to bring ap praising glances. See our clever collection now in stock. 19.95, 22.95 m MADEMOISELLE SHOP SECOND FLOOR