4 TEE DAILY NtjBBASKAN POLL TEAII TO GO TO KANSAS MEET Coach SchulU Plans to Talc Twnty- Ei!it to Thsrty Msa is BattU WitK Kansas , Despite his gloomy outlook on the Saturday triangular meet at Man hattan, Coach Henry F. Schulte is planning on taking a full team with him to fight it out with Kansas Uni versity and Kansas Aggies. He will take twenty-eight to thirty men, leaving Friday noon. Last hard work of the week was given the varsity cinder burners Wednesday evening. Campbell and Dailey eased through a 6600 in 1:29 and later stepped 300 yards in 33.1 running the last straight away against the wind. Wirsig led Doty and Lowe to .the tape in another 300 in slightly over 33 seconds. Weicht men eased off on their work. Hurdlers went through some more stiff drill, crashing over the low hurdles for the bulk of Wednes day's efforts. Jumpers were taper ing down although Wirsig took an other good workout on the pole vault. Mcanwell of Wisconsin Upholds The New Basketball Dribble Rule FRESHMEN TRY-OUTS TODAY Men to Mats Trip to Telegrapliie Meet Try at 4:30 O'clock Freshmen tryouts for the Missouri Valley track and Kansas and Kansas Aggie Triangle telegraphic meets will be held promptly at 4:30 today. Coach Schulte asks that the follow ing be present, and any other fresh men interested in the meets: Benbrook, S. P.; Bauer, Dale; Batie, T. R.; Christenson, C; Con ner, W. ; Cogswell, H. ; Elkins, F. ; Etherton, L.; Easter, A.; Elfine, L.; Griff en, C. R.; Hann, H.; Halstead, C; Hicky, G.; Huddlesen, W.; Kibble, C; Kenagg, W.; Mousel, Chas.; Mor gan, C; Morse, W.; Trumble, H.; Thompson, C. ; Tomes, C. ; White, M. ; Miller, G.; McClure, E.; and Ossian, Perry, Raue, Richards, Rhoades, Raugh, R.; Sloan, C; Snyder, Sne athen, Settles, Wyatt, E.; Swartz. The new 1928 basketball rules which are causing so much discussion throughout -.the r-onnfry ttni &TS meeting with a great disapproval in the Missouri Valley are discussed in a late issue of the Big Ten Weekly by Dr. Walter E. Meanwell, head basketball coach at the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Meanwell is a mem ber of the basketball rules committee. His discussion on the " new basket ball rule,' limiting the dribble to one bounce next year follows: 'In the first place the Rules com mittee consists of a group of twenty men : six members each from the Y. M. C. A.'s of the country, from the colleges and from the Amateur Ath letic Union; and two members repre senting the national organization of basketball officials. Most of these Rules committee men have been serv ing for many years and the majority of them have had ten years or more of experience on the committee. This would preclude any thought that snap judgment was excerised in the deci sions of the committee at any time. "Further, the committee, through its editor, is in touch with basketball situations throughout the United States and receives hundreds of let ters expressing satisfaction or dis satisfaction with rules and suggest ing helpful changes. "From all over the country have come to the committee protests against stalling, which in some sec tions is practically ruining the game. The stall, to be effective as an offen sive weapon, is practically always concluded by a dribble. One state organization wrote to committee and stated the national 'that unless measures were Ukcn to eliminate the stall, such measures would have to be erected by their own state board and they concluded by stating that the true remedy for the misused stall is the elimination of the dribble. "It has been observed that over seventy percent of the fouls called in a game have been due to the dribble, either because of the guard held, or because the dribbler charged, very frequently because the dribbler, hay ing passed the guard, was then foulded in the act of dribbling which is one of the most dangerous plays in the entire game from the standpoint of resultant serious in jury. "Third it was felt that the game was not progressing as a team game to as great a degree as its possibil ities would permit. Instead of bas ketball becoming more and more like football as a great team game, as is entirely possible, it is drifting to the type of baseball wherein individ ual effort predominates and team co operation is of rather minor impor tance. Football is a game wherein one great star can help win the game but can rarely win the game soley by individual effort. "The committee feels that the team game element was the one to promote, especially for teams in edu cational institutions wherein the games, after all, are played for the purpose of teaching the lessons of good citizenship rather than for win ning championships. Corhhuskers Win 1910 Valley . kw mm. a sV VllOllipiUllOlllp Extraordinary as Well as One Of Greatest Seasons For Iluskers COACH COLE ENDS THIRD YEAR SERVICE Reed Reports Meeting To Be Well Attended At the national meeting of the University Extension Associations held recently at the University of North Carolina, Prof. A. A. Reed, head of the extension department, just returned from the annual meet ing and reports that directors of ex tension departments representing about forty institutions attended the Conference. The) business meeting was given over to various discussions of exten sion work and reports of standing committees. The main topic of dis cussion was in regard to standard ization of special credit courses. They triedl to agree upon various standards so that universities can recognize the credits for extension work in reference to degrees. Another topic of interest was ra dio work in its relation to college courses. A special committee was appointed to see that the value of in struction and information given over the radio by universities is not over come by the attempts to commer cialize its uses. Pageantry is a very important work in that part of the country where the conference was held. The University of North Carolina took all members who attended the meeting to an adjoining county to view a de monstration in dramatic work. About fifteen hundred children presented a pageant showing the history of the state of North Carolina. Next year members of the Exten sion Association will meet at the University of Kansas. ALPHA XI DELTA WINS Jl I do Sd V) with i-5 that 33367 VARSITY CLEAJJEES AKD XER3 All The Latest On COLUMBIA RECORDS TED LEWIS la Your Heart When My Baby Smile At Me RUTH ETTING WUlful Ami Ble If orv"3r 5wwi.leart CLiQUCT CLUZ2 At Sirodmrn Tbetas Lose in Baseball Tourney; Phi Omega Pi Defeats Alpha 0 Alpha Omicron Pi bowed to Phi Omega Pi in the first round of League 2 intra-mural baseball. Kappa Alpha Theta lost to Alpha Xi Delta by a margin of six points. The final score was 19-13 in favor of Alpha Xi Delta. In the second round of the tour nament which will be played next week, the winners of the games played next week, the winners of the games played within the leagues will meet the winners and the losers will meet the losers. The champion of the league will then play the champion of every other league to determine the best team entered in the tourna ment. The batting order: Alpha Xi Delta Kap. Alpha Theta Hedge Trester Renfro Kenner Romberg Hutchison Schrick Manning Frohm Patterson Horton Youngson Lindemeier McGraw Clarke Munger Phi Omega Pi Bell Clapper Ross Grau Thorn Leigh Hines Pflug Cannon Score: 22-10 Alpha Omicron Pi Hitchcock Ley Mankin Rush Wirsig Geisler Lakeman Harris Heikes Knickers or Sense? Some ttudenta have good sense other wear knickerb. U. of M. ermumtufavrix IL.....;..r. vSJS SO. 12! ST. ' i iwrni m wfr Bf78 ; Have You Noticed That unsightly complexion and uncut hair never accompany a man on the road to success in the good old U. S. A. Liberty Barber Shop E. A. Ward, Lib. Th. Bldg. i" n T it iT'rit'l r i -ir-iH f 1 ijlr aaHHaaMMHaHBHaHBaaUHanaHHaaaHaM A GOOD impression frequently ic a lasting one, especially if it is made in a Braeburn Suit. , How it will aid you to mako your mark - so cial or otherwise - will be evident when you see our selection of Brae burn apparel for Spring. XI (Editor's Note) This is the eleventh chapter of an historical resume of Nebraska ath letic which ha been compiled by a member of Tk Daily Nebraskaa sport staff. A chapter of this ac count will appear in each issae of The Daily Nebraskan for the re mainder of the school year. By Jack Ellioit After spending an unsuccessful season on the football gridrion last season the Cornhuskcrs again started the uphill climb and won the cham pionship of the Missouri Valley con ference for the year 1910. It was an extraordinary as well as one on the greatest season the Husker school ever experienced. After a lapse of three seasons, Nebraska returned fo her position as football champions of the Missouri Valley. Coach '"King" Cole, head football coach at the Husker school in 1910, turned out a championship team his third and last year at Nebraska. Cole had given Nebraska three years of excellent service as a football di rector and was one of the best the Huskers ever had. He was the man who developed th "Nebraska Spirit" in both the student body and the football squad. Ewald O. Stiehm succeeded Coach W. Cole as football coach at Ne braska. Stiehm graduated from Wis consin University in 1909, playing on the Badger team for three years, gaining a position as All-Western center his last two years in football. "Jumbo" Stiehm came to Nebraska as head football coach in 1911 after being out of Wisconsin but one year. The spirit Coach "King" Cole de veloped at Nebraska was first made evident in the election for the 1910 football captain. Heretofore foot ball captain elections had bee a se ries of electioneering and campaign-j ing by political factions. Bitter feel ing was plainly demonstrated in every election but this practice was gradually killed by the Husker coach before he left Nebraska. - Thei season opener was a practice game with Peru Normal which the Huskers easily won. The second game of the season was South Da kota, which was also scheduled to be a practice game. The first battle of the 1910 season was at Minneapolis against the Minnesota Gophers, the Husker eleven coming out on the short end of the score. The Ne braska eleven gained a wealth of ex perience in this game and returned to Lincoln with increased determina tion and as a result trimmed the Den ver University eleven by a decisive score. , The greatest game of the season came on November 5 with the Kansas Jayhawkers, the age old rival of all Husker grid machines. Nebraska outclassed Kansar in every depart ment of the game and won the game by the sheer outplaying and outgen eraling its opponents. By winning the Kansas game, Ne braska cinched the championship of the Missouri Valley and brought home the trophy for the first time in three years. The last-game of the season was with the Haskell Indians and a monster crowd"turned out to see the big Turkey Day game. The Indians had beaten Nebraska the year before and this year Cole's Husker machine easily outclassed the Red skins and won the game by largest score in the history, of Cornhusker football, 119 to 0. This was a fitting climax to one of the most brilliant seasons at Nebraska. Not to be outdone by the football eleven, the Husker basketeers put a record in Nebraska history that was one of the best if not the best up to j this time. The Nebraska quintet The Handy Place To Buy SUPPLIES Graves Printing Company Three doors south of UnL Temple finished second in the Missouri Val ley race. After playing medicore basketball during the opening two weeks of the 19110-11 season the Husker quintet took a long road trip six game in as many nights and traveling nearly eight hundred miles. Ames, Missouri, and Kansas all in one week without a day's rest. Two victories and four defeats was the result of the trip, but one encouragement of the trip was the defeat th Huskers handed the Kansas Jayhawkers, beating them 36 to 27. Coach Field, Husker basketball coach, 'started with a green team and when the season closed had one of the most finished basketball quintets in the conference, and the only team to beat the strong Jayhawker five. Nebraska's season on the track was quite an unusual one and only in a degree FuccessfuL Hard luck was the by-word in the camp of the Corn- husger tracksters all season. There was no track coach until after the season had opened the track was not completed until late in May the track team was forced to get in its practice when and wherever it could, and greatest of all, two of the star runners of the team, were injured early in the season and were of little service to the team throughout the season. On May 6 Captain Burke took his band of 'Scarlet and Cream thinclads to Sioux City for the big meet of the season. I he Husker team sprang the j surprise of thn colors of theKasJw ning away from the Minnesota g2Z era. au1 almnat : V,0P' -jy "uDi, winning the n . Missouri Vb11pw vJr. I6 t . . , -u"upions. T v . Cornhusker tracksters brnVo cna ' ference record, tied another and hi' ered four old Nebraska marks. (To be continued) WANT ADS Typing L-9767. done reasonably. c5 LOST Conklin Pen at Anti - - "'".ouajr, reward, rence Clark. B-4102. Law- EXTRA TROUSERS a new selection of patterns at m vw j mj t ON film : r J2 MOTHERS' DAY May 8th CANDY Finest assortment of fancy boxes for Mother's Day- packed with our own - High Grade Chocolates and. Potted Plant FLOWERS Potted Plants and cut flowers of all kinds. All fresh cut and reasonably priced at Fin Candies Cut Fknrars LiUKlMMIttM LEWIS' 14th & O Phon B-1540 Prompt Service LA 'EtSElNE SIX EST CON PORTABLE AU 5UPR.ME DE G RE"" L'AUTO, PARIS "Still jetting tit stylt face, aren't youl Glad Tm not the parent wh fays ami fays and fays. ' ' "Ai, that's the feint. It's an Erskine Six and economy is its secret fas sion. Don't iudgt its cost iy its appearance." CPEAKTNG frankly, who cares a fig for bore and stroke, y cubic displacement and all of that. The car of today . is the one that slips through traffic like an All-Amcrican halfback wriggles through a broken field; turns on a dime with nine cents change and pops into a parking space with a hair's breadth clearance front and rear. To match the spirit of American youth a motor car must have "It." ' It" is the ability to chase the horizon all day without panting; smart good looks that do credit to the intelligence of its owner and riding comfort that wins a sigh cf complete case. That's why the Erskine Six Custom Coupe is taking America's youth by storm. Style conceived in Paris design by Dietrich, the master designer speed that lets you decide whether or not the car behind will pass. And, will it stand up? Studcbaker builds it Q. E. D. Take possession of an Erskine Six today. Drive it over roads other cars fear. Forget the gearshift lever. Hcvise all your notions of motoring. You're riding in a car that has set a new pace for others to try and follow. Th, Efikimt SixOutm Cf. Ulamtti. i.U, f f, f. fy C ff lLm a M M y t U a MASE THE LITTLE ARISTOCRAT U'5 5