The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 08, 1925, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebr ask an
TXXNO. 38.
y.W.CA. DRIVE ,
FALLS SHORT
OF GOAL $400
Women Give $1400 to Campus
Association in Three
Day Campaign
NAME FOLLOW-UP TEAM
Committee Will Be Appointed to
Interview Student! Who Have
Not Yet Beeni Seen
Within $400 of its goal, the Y. W.
C A. drive closed Saturday after
oon. About $1400 was obtained. A
follow-up team will be appointed at
once to interview those women who
have not yet been seen. It is expect
ed that the follow-up team will bring
the sum up to the set goal.
Elsa Kerkow, chairman of the drive
stated: "We are not satisfied with
the drive, but we feel that it fell
short because of the fact that all the
girls have not been seen. Wewere,
however, pleased with the way the
teams worked and the spirit of the
girls."
. The team captained by Virginia
Taylor led the second team with a
margin of a dollar. Her team turned
in $157. The team captained by
Eloise MacAhan brought in $156.
The winning team will be entertained
at a dinner by the Y. W. C. A. cabi
net later.
Every woman on the campus will
be visited as soon as the cards are
re-catalogued. Those who have not
been seen and wish to make contri
tribution to the Y. W. may do so by
stopping in Miss Appleby's office in
Ellen Smith hall.
Due to the request of the commun
ity chest, faculty members were not
solicited this year, as in former years.
The sum, which was always consid
erable, caused the burden of the
drive to fall heavier upon the stu
dents, this year.
The budget for the coming year
of the Y. W. C. A. is as follows: $75
for social purposes; $300 to meet the
national apportionment; and $100
for work on the College of Agricult
ure campus. $25 is allowed for the
vesper choir to meet the expenses in
volved in the buying of music and in
caring for the choir robes. A fund
for office and rooms of $300 takes
care of the upkeep of three rooms in
Ellen Smith hall which are furnished
by the Y. W. C. A., as well as all
printing bills and the purchase of
new office supplies. $115 is required
for a pentioning fund and $80 for
speakers. The secretary's salary is
$1,900. $75 is used for Social Ser
vice work, and $250 for the Estes
Park conference fund. $100 is pro
vided for a contingent fund. The to
tal of the budget is $3600, half of
which is furnished by the community
chest.
PLAYERS GIVE "THE
GOOSE HANGS HIGH"
Original Cast Present Play Before
State Teachers in City Audi
torium Friday Night
The University Players present
ed "The Goose Hangs High" before
the state teachers in the city audi
torium Friday night. The same cast
Played that played when the Players
Presented the production in the Tem
ple Theater some time ago.
The production was received with
great enthusiasm, even greater than
that which greeted the players when
they first appeared in the play ear
lier in the season. The characteriza
tions by Misg McChesney, Ray Ram
ey, Harold Fenton, Mary Yabroff,
H. Alice Howell and Herbert Yenne
were popacially pleasing.
The city auditorium is not, un
fortunately, well suited for such of
ferings but none of the genuine spirit
was lost thereby, although it called
for strenuous work on the part of
the characters.
The cast:
Bernard Ingals Theodore Diers
Eunice Ingals H. Alive Howell
Noel Derby ...Ray Ramsay
j0 Day Harold Sumption
hod ,Ruth Jamison
Julia Murdoch Fern Huhbard
Mrs. Bradley Frances McChesney
"ugh Ingals Mary Yabroff
Bradley Ingals Harold Fenton
Dagmar Carroll Blanche Green
Elliott Kemberly Thaddeus Green
Clem . Jach Rank
Call for Applications
For Countryman Staff
The new tff in the Cor""'
ker Countryman will be selected
s?on. Applications- for the posi
tions of editor-in-chief, business
manager, and circulation manager
'nould be sent to Prof. H. E. Brad
ford, Agricultural Hall, before
November 16.
Extend Time For Filing Names
Of Carnival Queen Candidates
The deadline for turning in names
of candidates for queen of the mili
tary carnival has been set ahead to
Tuesday noon. Some sororities had
already picked their candidates by
Saturday noon, but others asked that
the date be set ahead so that they
coum take up the matter in meetings
Monday night.
Each sorority and women's honor
ary organization may choose one of
their members as a candidate for the
Carnival Queen. The queen will be
selected by votes cast during the mili
tary carnival, November 14. and she
will be crowned that evening. '
Extensive plans are being made for
the coronation ceremonies, Scabbard
HARRIERS WIN
AT PES MOINES
Husker Cross Country Team
Defeats Drake in Race
1 During Snow Storm
CAPTAIN LEWIS IS THIRD
DES MOINES, la., Nov. 7. (Spe
cial to The Daily Nebraskan) Ne
braska harriers won the cross country
meet here this rnorning, defeating
Drake by an eight-point margin.
Two Drake men finished ahead of
the Cornhuskers, but all of the Ne
braska men followed and won enough
points to take the meet.
Captain Wahl of Drake took first
place with Wright, Drake, second.
Captain Lewis of Nebraska finished
third and Searles, Nebraska, fourth.
Ross, Nebraska, took fifth place and
Hays, Zimmerman and Roller, all of
Nebraska, tied for sixth place.
The five mile grind was run in the
morning amid snow and sleet driven
by a sharp wind. The final score
was Nebraska 24, Drake 32.
CHANCELLOR WILL
ATTEND MEETINGS
C. to Chicavo for Annual Con-
ferencei of College 'Associa
tions Next Week
Chancellor Samuel Avery will at
tend the annual conference of the
National Association of State Univer-
sities in Chicago, November 16 ando women' have signea uf for Hay-
17, and the annual meeting of the
Association of Land-Grant Colleges I s;x are needed while Saratoga needs
in Chicago, November 18 and 18. Hejtwo on Wednesday and one on Mon-
is a member of the executive com -
mittee of the National Association of -j-ne committee reports that one
State Universities, and is chairman j j,oy nag signed up for the work and
of the military committee of the As-tney believe that more men should
sociation of Land-Grant Colleges. become interested in the work as
At the latter meeting he will present j tney can use them as well as the wo
the annual report of the military !men
committee. Anyone who i3 interested in enter-
The Uuniversity of Nebraska will
also be represented at the meeting oi
the Association of Land-Grant Col
leges by Dean O. J. Ferguson, Col
lege of Engineering; Dean E. A. Bur
nett, College of Agriculture; Prof.
William H. Brokaw, director of agri
cultural extension service; Miss Mar
garet S. Fedde, chairmar of the de
partment of home economics; ana
Prof. William Wesley Burr, chairman
of the department of agronomy and
assistant director of the experiment
station.
FACULTY APPEAR ON PROGRAM
Speak Before Meeting of Nebraska
State Teachers' Association
Members of the University faculty
who appeared on the program of Ne
braska State Teachers' association,
District No. 1, program last week
were: Miss Edna G. Benson, depart
ment of Home Economics; Dean Her
man G. James, College of Arts and
Sciences; Gustave Otto Fuchs, de
partment of ancient languages; Prof.
J. A. Rice, jr., department of ancient
languages; Prof. Herbert Brownell,
department 6f instruction in science;
Dr. F. D. Barker, department oi
medical zoology and parasitology; R.
D. Mortiz, director of teachers' place
ment bureau: Prof. H. B. Gramlich,
department of animal husbandry;
Prof. F. D. Keim, department of
agronomy; Miss Luvicy M. Hill, de
partment of commercis' arts; Misf
Flora Bullock, in charge of corres
pondence courses in English; iTol.
A. Bengston, department of geog
raphy; Prof. J. E. Alexis, department
of modern languages; Prof. F. E.
Henzlik, department of school admin
itrHon: Dean W. E. Seelock, of
TooorV Colleee: Prof. O. W. Sjog
ren, department of agricultural en
gineering.
Dr. Pfeif.-er .tilves Program
Dr. Laura B. Pfeiffer of the de
partment of history gave a "Peace
Program" under the auspices of the
Woman's College Club at Fairbury
last week.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN. NEBRASKA,
and Blade members are conducting a
search for a suitable crown. They
also expect to procure regal robes.
Organizations may file the names
of their candidates in the military of
fice, second"floor, Nebraska Hall, or
they may call the office by telephone.
Another recent announcement by
Scabbard and Blade was that nothing
but 'Klondike currency" will be ac
cepted inside the door. Booths will
be erected at various places in the
Armery where "currency" may be
bought. The price is ten cents for
each dollar of "Klondike currency."
Sufficient currency has been printed
to last through the evening, so the
law has been made, "Nothing but the
Klondike Currency."
SENIORS FILL MINOR OFFICES
Rlnph R. Rickley, President Will An-
nounce Committee Soon
Minor officers of the senior class
were elected at the meeting of the
class Friday noon in Social Science
205. The following were the. ones
elected: vice-president, Charles E.
Grifith; secretary, Millicent Ginn;
treasurer, Robert M. Scoular; ser-goant-at-arms,
Joseph Wostoupal.
Ralph R. Rickley, president of the
senior class, announced that the class
committees will be made public some
time next week.
NIGHT SCHOOLS CALL
FOR 35 WORKERS
Need More Women to Fill Vacancies
In Americanization Program;
Fifty Have Signed
Thriyt-five more women are need
ed for the Americanization program
in the Lincoln schools, while fifty
women have already signed up for
the work. The greatest need is at
Longfellow school and women with
car3 are especially wanted because of
the long distance of the school from
the street car line. Two are needed
on each Monday and 'Wednesday
evening while four are needed on a
'luesday evening.
The quota for McKiniey scnooi is
filled as is that of Bancroft but no
one has signed up for Park school
and there are eight needed on Mon-
dac night. Three more can be used
in the Tuesday night section and two
more on Wednesday night at Park
ward on Wednesday nigSt and about
'jav
in tbe WOrk should inquire for de-
eails at the Y. W. C. A. office. Rose
Faytinger is in charge of the arrange
ments. WILL PLAY AT CONVOCATION
Mrs. Louise Watson and Fred Cardin
To Give Musical. Program
Mrs. Louise Zumwinkle Watson, pi
anist, and Fred Cardin, violinist, will
give the musical convocation program
next Thursday, November 12, at 11
o'clock, in the Temple Theater. Mrs.
Watson will give the following num
bers: "Allemande," d'Albert; "Ua-.
votte and Musette," d'Albert;; "Con-
tre Danse" (country dance,) Bee
thoven; "Waltz fram Ballet 'Naila,"
Delibes-Dohnanyi. Mr. (Sardin's pro
gram will include: "Indian Ghost
Pipes," Lieurance-Cardin; "Indian
Flute Song' (with Indian flute dem
onstration) Lieurance-Cardin; and
"Scherzo Tarantelle," Wienawski.
These weekly convocation programs
of the University are open to the gen
eral public.
Nebraska Hall Occupants Return to
Quarters after
Amid buckets of paint and oil, with
painters and decorators wielding the
brushes, and the air filled with the
odor of turpentine and stain, the van
guard of former occupants of Ne
braska Hall returned last week to
their old quarters after an absence
of several weeks during which time
they had to depend upon the hospi
tality of neighboring buildings.
The return home was partial only,
as several of the rooms have not
been tinished, ana " -'-building
was taken off by the wreck
ers, forcing some of the classes to
find a permanent location in other
buildings.
The military department is cramp
ed the most in the renovated building
as the majority of its classrooms were
100 JUNIORS
ARE PRESENT
AT BREAKFAST
Silver Serpent Entertains Wo
men at Get-Together
Party Saturday
PROGRAM IS PRESENTED
Dancing and Musical Numbers
Amuse Guests) Will Give Other
Such Affairs t
Nearly one hundred attended the
country breakfast given on Saturday
morning at 9 o'clock in Ellen Smtih
hall by the Silver Serpents, honorary
society for junior women. According
to Serpents, the breakfast wassuch
a success that they plan more such
fetes.
For the first time this year, a get-
together party for those who felt a
lack of friendliness upon the campus
and desire to get better acquainted
was held.
From 9 to 10, the girls were enter
tained by dancing. Breakfast was
served at 10 after which a short pro
gram followed. Mary Louise Walch
played the piano during the serving
of the breakfast.
The program follows:
Vocal Solo Thelma Robbins
Saxophone Solo Felyn Frosh
The Charleston Lucile Livingston
Committees in charge of the af
fair were: Food: Hazel Hagerman,
chairman; Mildred Sweet, and Madel
ine Downing.
Invitations and publicity :Eloise
MacAhan chairman; Blanche Stevens
and Helen Keyes.
Entertainment: Dorothea Dawson,
chairman ; Margaret Dunlap and Miss
Katherine McWhinnie.
HONOR SOCIETIES
CHOOSE MEMBERS
Alpha Zeta and Omicron Nu, College
Of Agriculture Organizations
Announce Pledges
The College of Agriculture held a
convocation Thursday to honor those
students who were elected to Alpha
Zeta and Omnicron Nu, honorary ag
ricultural and home economics soci
eties. Election to these societies is
limited to those who have proved
themselves' wirthy students in schol
arship and give primose of leadership.
Miss Margaret Fedde, chairman of
the home economics department, gave
a short talk on the purpose of the
Omnicron Nu, emphasizing the fact
that it corresponds with Phi Beta
Kappa in the College of Arts and
Science. She announced the names
of Miss Anne Bute, Aurora, and Miss
Betty Bosserman, Lincoln, as the
pledges of this society.
Prof. M. H. Swenk next spoke on
the history of Alpha Zeta. He men
tioned that Alpha Zeta is not social
nor is it strictly a technical frater
nity, although its sponsors technical
agriculture. He announced the
names of Addison Maunder, Hastings,
Wendell Woodward, Overton; seniors
and Morton Frederickcson, of North
Platte; Irvin S. McKinley, Ponca,
Rufus Moore, Schuyler, Frank Reese
Seneca, juniors, as pledges to Alpha
Zeta.
As is the custom each member pre
pared an oration which was given be
fore the faculty committee, the best
one being given at convocation.
Frank Reese was given this honor
and spoke on "The Place of Livestock
in a Permanent Agriculture."
Dean Margaret Justin of Kansas
State Agricultural College, gave the
address of the morning. She empha
sized the value of enjoyment of the
present, the value of friendliness,
honest thinking and invincibility of
spirit. She deplored the tendency
of "getting by" and appealed for a
spirit of "carrying on."
Temporary Absence
on the third floor. By devetailing
class periods with the geography de
partment the freshmen classes will be
accommodated in the west rooms on
the second floor. Sophomores will
be back in their quarters in the two
east recitation rooms, and the mili
tary office r. n ns at the east end
of the second f! or.
Advanced military courses will re
main in temporary rooms in the Law
building and the M. A. Hall until
permanent disposition can be made.
TVia sreooTaphy rooms will be the
sane as before the wrecking of the
third floor. The first floor devoted
to the Conservation and Soil Survey
department, and the basement where
the military store room and Soil Sur
vey laboratory are located are little
affected by the change.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1925.
WILL NOT MEET THIS WEEK
Forum Will Not Hold Luncheon Be
cause of Vacation Wednesday
The World Forum will not meet
this week because of the Armistice
Day education. The Y. M. C. A. and
Y. W. C. A. finance drives caused
the omission of the meeting last
week. On November 18 the Forum
will resume its meetings when Stitt
Wilson, nationally known lecturer on
educational and economical subjects,
will speak.
The committee in charge of the
Forum announced the possibility of
having Raymond Fosdick, former
under-secrctary to the League of Na
tions, come to Lincoln for a morning
convocation which all students may
attend. Mr. Fosdick spent several
years at Geneva working with the
League of Nations and because of his
experience would talk on the World
Court.
WILL PRESENT
HUGHES DRAMA
Players Will Give "Hell Bent
For Heaven," Winner of
Pulitzer Prize
YENNE IN LEADING ROLE
"Hell Bent For Heaven," Plulitzer
prize drama, by Hatcher Hughes, will
be presented by the University Play
ers on the evenings of November 12,
13, and 14 with a Saturday matinee.
The leading part, that of Rufe
Pryor, hypocritical religious fanatic,
will be taken by Herbert Yenne. In
his "hysterical camp-meetin religion"
he imagines himself to be the divine
instrument of God. Upon the mad
dened endeavors of Pryor are built
the plot of the play. A mental de
generate, drunk with religion, feels
himself called upon to thwart the love
affairs of the returning war veteran,
Sid Hunt, and Jude Lowry, and final
ly to do away with Sid.
In the end righteousness prevails,
and Rufe fails to win Jude for him
self as he believed the Lord had in
tended. His destructive plans, all of
which he accredits to the personal dij
ection of God, fail in their purpose
but enough harm is done to make
a nerve-straining period of tragic
possibilities in the little mountain
household. ,
The action of the play takes place
in the Hunt home in the Blue Ridge
Mountains, between four o'clock in
the afternoon and nine o'clock at
night on a midsummer day.
The play is a good old-fashioned
melodrama of the Blue Ridge moun
tains. Slumbering mountains, feuds,
shooting, and bursting dams all con
tribute to make the performance
tense with dramatic interest, while
at the same time the' play is full of
wholesome humor.
"Hell Bent For Heaven" was sel
ected by twelve nationally known
newspaper men as the best written
and acted play of the several hundred
plays produced and acted in a course
of a year in New York.
Mr. Mentel, famous dramatic critic
spoke of the play in a New York
paper as a "first-class entertainment"
and the "season's mot exciting
drama."
SIGMA TAO ELECTS '
SIXTEEN MEMBERS
Honorary Fraternity in College of
Engineering Chooei New
Member
Sigma Tau, honorary fraternity in
College of Engineering, announces
the pledging of sixteen men in the
annual election. Members are sel
ected from among those in the junior
and senior classes whose scholarship
averages are in the upper one-third.
The men chosen this year are: Les
ter Shields, Leonard Smith, Ernest
Pollord, Richard Stech, Stanley Reiff,
C. Harris, Hilmar F. Greiss, Carl Hin-
richs, Van O. Hannan, James Wick
man, Neal B. LauBauch, William E.
Schneiber, Theodore A. Armstrong,
Carl R. Dalton, Rudolph Smith, and
Ralph N. Worrest.
This group represents about one
eighth of the juniors and seniors reg
istered in the college. The general
average of the pledges this year is
considerably better tLan eighty per
cent.
A meeting of the pledges will be
held next Tuesday evening at 6
o'clock.
Weather Forecast
Sunday: Generally fair; rising
temperature.
NEBRASKA BOWS BEFORE
DRAKE BULLDOGS, 14-0
Frequent Fumbles, Recovered by Iowans, Go Far in Losing
' Game For Cornhuskers Who Were Outplayed and Who
Have No Alibi; Baft Kept in Their Territory
BATTLE WAGED IN NEAR
Still Snowing at End of Fourth Quarter, and Bitter Ptortn
Wind Makes Playing Difficult; Ball Is Icy Pellet;
Dedication Game in Des Moines Stadium
DES MOINES. Iowa, Nov.
We this afternoon. But they
wasn't in a green pasture, either.
. - i 11 i
The Nebraska ioot-Dan team, lavoruu uei.oie mc game "
the lion was brutally tramped upon by Drake in a game played in
i v,n. KliT7orrt VVhpn trip final nisr.nl shot sounded
LUC UUUoL Jk a iicai v. . ' ' - I - j
the score board read, Nebraska, 0 ; Drake 14. It was the dedica
tory game of the new Drake stadium. It was 'quite a dedication,
according to the Drake fans. The field was snow covered when
the two teams trotted onto the field, and it was still snowing in
the fourth quarter. There was a bitter wind from the north
which made playing conditions uniavorauie, anu wie van wau
an icy pellett. The number of fumbles marks today's game as
peculiar, not to say funny.
Drake's ability to pick up the fumbles which occurred fre
quently was the factor which enabled the Bulldogs to down
4.1 TJnolrova Twn rnnr-Virlnwris. one the direct result of
a fumble, accounted for twelve
the other two.
Nebraska 1 Out-played
Nebraska was outplayed and there
is hardly an alibi that Husker fol
lowers can advance. Drake scored in
in the first quarter and after that
the ball was kept mostly in Nebraska
territory;
Choppy Rhodes could not get start
ed for those line plunges of his; 'Jug'
Brown was hampered by the snow
and wet ball; Avard Mandery and
Frank Dailey were unable to sweep
the ends and Ed Weir was a marked
man, being taken out of almost every
play.
Thegame was a farce in some res
pects for the icy ball caused many
freak plays. Once the oval was fum
bled four times before it finally came
to rest.
The game play-by-play:
Firit Quarter
The first Drake score came after
ten minutes of play in the first quar
ter. Drake won the toss and chose
the north goal, having the advantage
of a stiff wind from that direction.
Captain Ed Weir kicked of to Drake's
10 yard line and Everett returned
twenty yards. After an exchange
of punts the ball was in Drake's pos
session on its own 40 yard line. Then
Spear of Drake fufibled and Nebras
ka recovered. A few moments later
Brown fumbled and Drake recovered.
Then came punts and fumbles in
rapid succession. Neither team was
able to gain much through the line,
and the open game was out of the
question. Nebraska showed some of
its erstwhile power when Brown and
Rhodes carried the ball five and six
yards through the line. The next
play was called back and Drake was
penalized for off side.
The first break of the game came
at this point. Brown fumbled the
ball and Spears, the Drake halfback
picked up the ball. Dodging free of
a mass of tacklers, he found an open
field before him. He raced fifty
yards to a touchdown. Everett failed
to kick the try for point.
Second Quarter
It was Nebraska's ball on it's own
3-yard line, when the second quarter
started, a punt by Cook having put
it there just as the period ended. An
exchange of punts gave Nebraska an
advantage, placing the ball on the
15-yard line.
The punting duel continued, with
Ed Weir doing the booting for Ne
braska, until Ambelang, Drake line
man, broke through and blocked
Weir's punt and Nebraska recovered
on its own 3-yard line. Another
break. Weir had the ball in his
hands but is slipped through like hot
butter.
Nebraska moved up a notcTi when
a Drake fumble gave it the ball on its
own 35-yard line, and Weir punted
to Drake's 10-yard line. It was
after Drake's punt to its own 45-yard
line that Brown smashed through the
line for seventeen yards. It was a
pretty play. f
The Huskers tried a double pass
hchind the line, but Mandery fum
bled and Drake recovered. Stephens
was put into Nebraska lineup near
the end of the half, replacing Dailey.
Brown hit the line for three yards,
Rhodes went through for eight yards
in two downs, giving Nebraska the
second first down of the game.
Stephens tried a pass, but it was too
wide, andA. Ms.idery lost eight
yards in attempting a wide- end run.
Weir punted to Drake's 15-yard line,
and after an unsuccessful pluie by
Sutherland of Drake, the half ended.
Score: Drake, C; Nebraska, 0.
Third Quarter
Soon after the kick-off in the sec
ond half Rhodes fumbled and Drake
recovered on the 40-yard line, r um
bles, fumbles, fumbles. Everett, the
touted Drake quarterback, went into
the lineup on the next play, replacing
Cronkhite. He responded by reeling
off five yards through tackle,
i An exchange of punts gave Drake
PRICE 5 CENTS
BLIZZARD ON SNOWY FIELD
7. The Lion and the Lamb met
did not lie down together, and it
1 1 f . 4-1 a wn m net
of the points, and a safety made
the ball on its own 45-yard line and
Sutherland fumbled when he went
through the line and Dailey recover
ed for Nebraska. Rhodes fumbled
on the next play and Drake recover
ed. The rest of the quarter was un
eventful. Nebraska tried in vain to
pierce the Drake defense but whether
it was due to Nebraska's difficulty in
getting started or to Drake's defense
the ball was in Drake's possession on
its own 26-yard line as the period
ended.
Fourth Quarter
Locke went into the game at the
start of the fourth quarter and after
Cook's punt fumbled on the 37-yard
line, and Cook recovered. Punts and
fumbles were the main features of
the game until Drake punted over,
Nebraska's goal line, giving the Hus
kers .the ball on the 20-yard line.
Rhodes twisted through the line for
1 1 yards and in the next play made
four yards. Then he fumbled and
Drake recovered on Nebraska's 31
yard line.
An attempted drop-kick by Drake
later gave Nebraska the ball again on ,
its 20-yard line. Brown's fumble
gave Drake tbe ball on the 20-yard
line, and on the next play, Suther
land went around right end for nine
yards. After making two yards and
a first down, this same Sutherland
went off right tackle for a touch
down. He dropped the ball on the
way, but picked it up and went over
the line. The try for point was
blocked.
With the score 12 to 0, Drake had
things pretty much its own way.
Nebraska received the kick-off on its
20-yard line. A fumble and a punt
gave Nebraska the ball on its own
six yard line, and in attempting to
punt from behind his goal line, Ed
Weir fumbled and was downed for
a safety, giving Drake a total of
fourteen points.
It was Nebraska's ball on the 30
yard line, and after a gain of six
yards through the line Avard Man
dery passed to Shaner for a gain of
23-yards. The Huskers were passing-desperately
as the game ended.
The lineup:
Nebraska
Lee
E. Weir (c)
R'aisch
Hutchison
Scholz
Stiner
Lawson
Brown
Rhodes
A. Mandery
Dailey
pos. Drake
le Sampel
le Henry
Ig Ambeling
c Amend
rf Robertson
rt Ewart
re Sloan
rb Everett
lh Spears (c)
rh Cook
fb Cronkhite
Score by periods:
Nebraska 0 (
Drake 6 (
Touchdowns Spears,
0 00
. 0 814
Sutherland.
Safety Drake.
Substitutions Nebraska J. Weir
for Lawson, Sprague for Lee, Steph
ens, Shaner for Sprague, Randalls
for Stiner. Locke for Dailey, Pospi
sil for Raisch. Stephens for Locke.
Wostoupal for Hutchinson, Wickman
for Stephens, Dover for J. Weir.
Drake Sutherland for Cronkhite,
Dustin for Sutherland, Sutherland
for Everett, Dunn for Ambeling,
Dalby for Sampel.
Referee Cochrane, Kalamazoo,
umpire Myllard (Illinois-Wes-
leyan).
Field Judge Riley (Kansas) Head
linesman Denny (Brown).
Yards from -scrimmage Drake 63;
Nebraska 121 of which 23 were gain
e i on a pass.
First downs Drake 2; Nebraska
9. .One Nebraska first down was as
by a 6-yard penalty arid another was
due to a forward pass.
Kickoffs Drake 2 for 30 and 35
yards, Nebraska returned 10 and 15
yards respectively. Nebraska kicked
off twice 30 and 40 yards, each of
these being returned 20 yards.
Punts Drake punted 14 times for
distances of 35, 40, 25, 35, 30, 40,
(Continued on Page Four.)