Till DAILY M1DRAS K AH HDD FOLLOWS CORNHUSKERS Vr;tr StilA Having To Work Out On Sl'ppery Field Stiff Pr actice Held. MEN IN GOOD CONDITION If old man weather continue to deal out rain and mud, the Husker football team will bo an expert at the slippery gnme. The gridateri emulated their Saturday perform nee in practice yesterday, playing with soaked ball and muddy hands. The workout was stiff, with drill on plays the fundamental thing. Coarh E. E. Bearg got down to brass tacks and pitted the Varsity gainst the Freshmen who used Mis souri plays. ' Reports from Missouri indicate that Nebraska will again be out weighed. Veterans on the Tiger team are much more plentiful than on the Nebraska squad, and the line will produce a formidable wall. But no one realizes thrt better than Coach Bearg and his team. The result of the Illinois game is still echoing over the country. The usual analysis which comes after every game in which the dope is up?et has brought out a number of opinions. Grantland Rice, dean of American sports writers, expressed the opin ion that Nebraska has a team which will go a long way before it is beaten. Rhodes and Weir, especially, he says, looked to be the features of the afternoon in consistent smooth ness. Parts of his story in the New York Herald-Tribune follow: "It was the all-around work of the Cornhusker team which sent Illinois to defeat Grange never had a chance. The great est of all backs must first get started to make any headway. And Grange could never reach the open. "Nebraska deserved the vic tory with a beautifully balanced team that was strong in every department of the game. Ne braska had a decided advantage in kicking and in the handling of the muddy ball." Coach Bearg now has his team running smoothly, with most of the positions practically decided, for a while, at least. Avard Mandary was back in suit again yesterday, posted at the halfback position. The rest of the backfield was the same as that which met Illinois Rhodes, Brown, Dailey. The men are ail in good condition. Yesterday's Varsity line included Sprague, Ed Weir, Raish, Hutchin son, Scholz, Stiner and Joe Weir. THIS I1USKIE WILL BATTLE CORNHUSKERS ( ? r L BUEL McRAE A guard with better than 180 pounds of beet to back him, and one year of experience under his belt McRae will give the Nebraska Corn hunkers somethln to worry about when the Universities of Washington (Seattle) and Nebraska clash In the opening game of the Nebraska grid Iron season at Lincoln, October 17. McRae Is 2S years old and claims Sadro-Woolley, Wash, as bis home. ANOTHER WASHINGTON FOOTBALLER OF NOTE WOMEN START TO PRACTICE HOCKEY Nearly 100 Hae Signed Up For This Sport Need Mora Seniors Out To Organise Class Team. Hockey started Monday, October 5, with twenty-two women out for the first field practice. About one hnndred women have signed op for the sport, but there is an urgent need for more seniors to come out. We must have more seniors out in order to have a senior hockey team. The field is in splendid condition and we expect to have a different form of hockey than we were able to have last year. It is not too late to get in the ten try-out practices for the season. Sign up on the W. A. A. bulletin board in the west end of the Armory soon. Each woman who is a member of W. A. A. must make complete try- out practices for at least one sport each semester, in order to maintain her membership. If this is not possi ble she must notify the secretary, of the same, in writing. The nights for hockey practices! are: Monday, 4 to 5 sophomores. Tuesday, 4 to 5 general. Wednesday, 4 to 5 juniors seniors. Thursday, 4 to 5 freshmen. Friday, 4 to 5 general. HARRIERS TO BE IN SHAPE Distance Men Round Into Con dition To Give Missouri Team Stiff Race. SCHULTE COACHES SQUAD The Husker harriers will finish their strenuous workouts before the race with Missouri Saturday by a three mile Jaunt over the hills of Belmont today. With the exception of a few minor cases of "shin splints" the Scarlet and Cream run ners will be in good shape for this early season meet. According to present plans the team will leave with the football squad for Missouri territory Thursday. Schulte has not given out the offi cial lineup yet, but according to the way the men finished last Thursday, Captain Lewis, Lawson, Hays, Searlc, Re Her, and Zimmermnn will be the choice unless scholastic difficulties should hold any one of them back. In that case, Roberts or McCartney, the alternates will be taken. Missouri will present a good team this season with three regulars back on which to build a goodly squad. Besides this, the predominating Tiger fight and determination generally carries the men through to greater efforts on the home course. Of the Ilusker squad, Lawson has been showing the way to the other men and as yet he has not pulled himself lard in time trials. Havs. the small 2-miler of the Husker squad last spring is running in good form in spite of a weak ankle. Cap tain Lewis has been having trouble getting into condition. Lewis under went an operation this summer and was unable to start the season with a rush. Zimmeran is showing better form than last year, while Searles and Reller the two new members of the squad, show excellent ability for so early in the season. Of the alter nates Roberts is the best runner and shows some of the qualities he ex hibited last spring in the half. Mc Cartney, the other alternate has been hindered by an operation for tonsil it is late in the summer. Coach Schulte, who is devoting his entire time to track and cross country this fall is coaching distance men for the first time. However his ability to coach, distance men has been displayed in the champion track squads of past seasons. Among the other men who are, ac cording to Schulte, capable of step ping into the front ranks at any time: Arnot, Ross, Dexter, Cummings and Kelloy. BOXING IS ABOLISHED AT KANSAS UNIVERSITY Boxing has been abolished as a collegiate sport at the University of Kansas this fall, and no professional instructor will be employed to teach the sport, according to announcement made by Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics. Doctor Allen gave as his reason for the step the fact that boxing, and all sports Tf a? character tending to the professional, had been frowned upon by Missouri Val ley conference heads at their meet ing last spring. K. U. will continue to support a wrestling team, it was said. MANY WA11T TO SEE HOTRB DAME Practically All Good Seats for Ne-bratka-lriih Game Hava Al ready Been Sold Out. The erection of temporary stands at the ends of the field or the turn ing away of throngs of fans are the alternatives which will soon face the University in its arrangements for the Nebraska-Notre Dame s-ame. Although only the first game has been played and the Notre Dame gamo is still practically two months awny, most of the tickets in the stadium for the Notre Dame game have been sold. In the Student's activities office where the seat sale for all games is being carried on, they report that the best seata left for the Notre Dame game are on the five yard line. All seats between the five yard lines in both sections of the stadium have already been reserved with possibly the exception of an occasional scattered seat. The seat sale for the game with the University of Washington Is picking up. Indications are that the crowd will be up to standard at this game despite the tremendous early season seat sale for the Notre Dame game. The students activities office report that scats for all the games are soiling readily. f A. A. STAGG OLDEST COACH IN FOOTBALL CHICAGO, Oct 6. Coach Monro Stagg of the University of Chicago is the oldest football coach in the United States in tho point of service. He is entering his thirty-sixth year of. coaching this fall. Stngg began to coach football at Chicago in the fall of 1921. All of his years of coaching have been spent at Chi cago. Syracuse Daily Orange. WANT ADS LOST Parker Gold Fountain Pen. On the Ten Col. J. A. Barker. ANTEDGirlToshare room. Call L6438. FOlTSALE ATuxedo in good con dition. Inquire Daily Nebraskan Business office. LOST The pen rart of a Parker Duofold, orange color. Return to Nebraskan Business office. Buy a Box of Cupid Chocolates the best Candy In town also Whitmore'a Meier Drug Co. Always Tha Bast 1230 O St. VVa Deliver rRor v You better lend ma your (clothe today or tomorrow if you ulan on coin to Misioa. J and A r t v t i. MIKE HAN LEY A brother of Dick Hauler, coaea Haskell Institute, Mike Haaley, iU be watched with Interest whea 1) appears in Lincoln as a halfback o tha University cf Washington (Seat tle) football team, October 17. the opening borne game of the Nebraska gridiron season. Mike is 22 years old and weighs 170 pounds. On the theory that an athletic con test is not a social event, and that a fighting spirit can be best effected when men and women are free to give all their attention to the teams, University of Missouri men have been asked to refrain from taking a "date" to a football game. Dor an Referees Football Games. Mr. Doran, assistant professor in history of education refereed the game between Cotner and Nebraska Central College of Central City, at Cotner Friday, October 2. The game Saturday, October 3, between Lin coln high school and Creighton prep atory was also refereed by Mr. Doran. 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