The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 14, 1928, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
MEN FOR MEET
CHOSEN SOON
Trackstera for Kansas Indoor
Contest to Be Selected
By Wednesday
LETTERMEN BID FOR TEAM
The track team which will rep
resent the Cornhuskers in the Kansas
City Athletic Club indoor meet at
Kansas City, Mo., Saturday, Febru
ary 18 will probably be selected Wed
nesday, Coach Henry F. Schulte,
cinder mentor, announced Saturday.
Coach Schulte is having the scholas
tic status of the candidates exam
ined in order to determine which
men will be eligible before choosing
the team.
Eleven letter men are making
strong bids for the team, while sev
eral sophomores and novices are
making claims for varsity positions,
as shown by performances in the re
cent tryouts.
Lowe, a letterman and Easter,
sophomore, are the two most prom
ising candidates in the sprints. Easter
ran the fifty-yard dash in 5.6 sec
onds Thursday. Krause and Fleming,
lettermen, and Trumble, a sophomore
and A. A. U. junior high hurdle
champion, promise to give this year's
team a point-scoring combination in
the barrier events.
880-YarJ TryonU Fait
Dexter, Sprague, Johnson, and
Janulewicz are fighting it out in the
885-yard run. Dexter appears to be
the best bet however, as he won the
event in the tryout in the fast time
of 2 minutes 2.4 seconds.
Captain Perly Wyatt has not been
defeated this season in a 440-yard
dash tryout. He ran the quarter-mile
event in 53.2 seconds in Thursday's
tryout, although his younger brother
E. T7yU pushed liim hard to the
tape. Campbell held second place in
the race until the final dash when he
fell in an effort to overtake the Hus
ker pilot. Davenport finished third.
Fleming and Potts have been per
forming well in the high jump, ac
cording to Coach "Indian" Schulte
and have chances of making the
Kansas City trip.
Yale Man Uses Track
Art to Capture Croak
New Haven, Conn. (IP) His
training in running the mile was of
use of George B. Berger Jr., a sen
ior at Yale college recently, when
he chased and captured the local
"College Crook" who for months had
been making away with campus fur
coats.
Berger and Horton Spitzer were
seated in the Delta Kappa Epsilon
house ,on York street, when they
heard a noise in an adjoining room.
Upon investigation they discovered
the cause to be Vincent Bowdon,
known to police as "The College
Crook," in the act of climbing in a
window.
Seeinj that he discovered, Bowdon
beat a hasty retreat, but Berger's
training on the cinder track proved
him the better man, and after several
blocks, during which Bowdon once
nearly knocked him down, he suc
ceeded in bringing the offender to
the police.
Racquet Competitors
Continued in College
Berkeley, Calif. (IP) Bobby
Sellers and John Doeg, two of the
nations leading tennis players,
have long been junior antagonists.
Now that both have entered col
lege, their rivalry will continue,
for Doeg is a freshman at Stan
ford and Sellers a yearling at the
University of California. The
tennis teams from the freshmaq
classes at these institutions will
soon meet, with these two as opponents.
STUDENT
SUPPLIES
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SUPPLIES, Laundry
Cases, Expense
Books, History Cov
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Nebraska jumped a place ia the
Missouri Valley cat race on its
Iowa invasion last week. The Hus
kers were successful over Grianell
and Iowa State. Drake and Kansas
are this week's foes on the Husker
slate and should the Scarlet and
Cream take both games, first divi
sion in the standing will be open for
Black's quintet.
"Jug" Brown, acting captain of
the Scarlet hardwood five was the
outstanding basketeer in both con
tests. In the Grinnell game, "Jug"
was high point man with IS points
and again in the Cyclone game the
Huskcr star was one of the main cogs
for Nebraska.
Who will stop Oklahoma? That's
the question all Valley basketball
followers are asking at present. The
tall Sooner five has been predom
inating the Valley basketball king
dom since the starting of the winter
pastime. On February 25, Nebraska
entertains Vic Holt and his crew on
the Coliseum floor.
Coach "Phog" Allen has discarded
his two-year men and now "Rub"
Thompson, sophomore flash is doing
the heavy arttillery for the Kansas
Jayhawker five on the court. He
has been the main cog in three Kan
sas victories this season. On the
Iowa trip, Kansas was able to nab
three games in a row from Grinnell,
Iowa State and Drake on account of
the last minute efforts of Thompson.
This is Thompson's first year with
Kansas and he is heading the Kansas
scorers.
Valley schools are preparing for
the 1928 track season. Nearly
every school ia tke conference is get
ting under way this week for tryouts.
Coach Henry Schulte has been hard;
at work with his cinder path artists
since vacation and will be ready for
the opening gun, starting off Valley
track this spring.
Lloyd Hahn, Nebraska, the best
distance runner in United States to
day is still setting a dizzy pace in
the East. The Nebraska miler is
America's hope in the Olympics and
lastt night ran a special two-thirds
of a mile at New York in the Elks
meet. Hahn now holds four world's
records for indoor track events and
will attempt to beat out Jimmy Con
nolly, now holder of the two thirds
mile event.
Harold Demarsh
llllliiSpftP';lv
Harold Demarsh, 115-pound grap
pler at Oklahoma A. and M. who fig
ured largely in the decisive defeat
given West Virginia by the Aggies
I in an inter-sectional meet last week.
of the time which means that he
must take off three pounds just be
fore the grapplers are weighed in as
three pounds leeway is allowed under
a national wrestling rule.
CO-EDS WILL HAVE "OPEN
SEASON" FOR PROPOSALS
Salem, Ore. (IP) The period
from Feb. 4 to 18 has been set aside
as an "open season" for the co-eds
at Willamette college to exercise
their rights under the Leap Year
season. The action was officially
taken by the students.
UP A,,, fill IST ST
i.iwrm.N "nfr
BW8
FORMER CHAMPION
IS WITH SOONER AGS
Harold Demarsh, Injured at First
Of Season, Makes Team
At 115 Pound.
Stillwater, Okla., Feb. 13. (Spe
cial) After returning to his first
love, the 115-pound weight, Harold
Demarsh, of Cushing, had no trouble
in . making the Oklahoma A. and M.
college wrestling team. Early sea
son attempts to make the team via
the 125 pound class had failed.
Three years ago Demarsh broke
into the wrestling limelight by win
ning the national championship in
the 115 pound class, competing un
attached. In 1926 he was runner-up
in this weight, while a fellow team
mate, LaVeme Lake, was national
champion.
At the opening of the 1928 season,
Demarsh decided to try for the 125
pound class as he had taken on some
weight. A bad knee and spirited
competition kept him out of the early
matches and just before the West
Virginia trip he trained down to his
old weight, 115 pounds, and made
the team.
Demarsh weighs 121 pounds most
COMPETITION IS
SHOWN IN MEET
Senior Blue Team Molds Lead;
Reds Are Second; Blacks
Lead Second Group
The senior Blue team and the
junior Black team won their respec
tive divisions in the second tri-color
meet of the season held Monday
afternoon under the east stadium.
The senior Blue team scored 122.5
points; Red team, 68.5; and the
Black team 6S. The junior Black
team totaled 44.5 points; the Red
team, S6; and the Blue team, 34. 5
points.
The standings of the teams includ
ing the points of the first two meets
find the senior Blue aggregation se
curely in first place of that division
with 218.5 points; Reds with 159.5
points. in second place; and the
Blacks in the third position with
1S4.5 points. The Black team holds
a scant lead in the junior division
with 85.5 points closely followed by
the Reds who have totaled 84. The
Blue team lags behind with a 76.5
total. The winning team of each di
vision will be given a banquet by the
other two teams.
Dexter Wins 880
Dexter, Blue, finished victor in
the feature race of the afternoon,
running the 880 yards in 2 minutes,
1.8 seconds. M ousel. Red, and Janu
lewicz, Black, finished second and
third pushed the winner hard
throughout the ' race. Easter, Blue,
ran a 50-yard dash heat in 5.6 sec
onds to win the senior event. Ether
ton, Red, paced the mile in 4 min
utes S6.4 seconds. Griffin, Blue, and
Kibble, Red, finished second third in
this event.
The summary of events:
50-yard dash Junior: Coffey,
Blue; Frahm, Black; Sloan, Blue;
Mays, Black; and Rexford, Blue.
Time, 5.9 seconds. Senior: Easter,
Blue; Snyder, Black; Tomson, Red;
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Bailey, Blue; Chilton, Blue. Time,
5.6 seconds.
880-yard run Junior: Richards,
Red; Batie, Blue. Time 2 minutes, 9
seconds. Senior: Dexter, Blue; Mou
se!, Red; Janulewici, Black; Sprague,
Black. Time, 2 minutes, 1.8 seconds.
60-yard low hurdles Senior:
.Trumble, Black; Snyder, Black;
Potts, Blue; Tomson, Red; Lamson,
Black. Time, 6.5 seconds. Junior:
Bennett, Black; Krause, Red; Sloan,
Blue; Huddleston, Black; Lefgren,
Red. Time, 6.6 seconds.
50-yard high "nurdles Junior:
Bennett, Black; Krause, Red; Lef
gren, Red. Time, 7.6 seconds. Senior:
Potts, Blue; Lamson, Blue; Trumble,
Black; Tomson, Red; Pierce, Blue.
Broad Jump Junior: Griswold,
Black; Huddleston, Black; Sloan,
Blue; McClure, Blue. Distance, 21
feet, 4 inches. Senior: Tomson, Red;
Chilton, Blue; Holmes, Blue and
Potts, Blue; Fierce, Blue; Young,
Black. Distance, 21 feet, S S-4 inches.
Quarter-mile run Junior: Mays,
Black; Rexford, Blue. Time, 55.5
seconds. Seniors: Bailey, Blue; True,
Red; Wickwire, Black. Time, 55,1
seconds.
85-pound weight Junior: Sturick,
Red; Oehlrich, Blue. Distance, 86
feet, 10.5 inches. Seniors: Richards,
Blue; James, Red; Morgan, Blue.
Distance, S8 feet, 6.5 inches.
2 mile run Junior: Garvey,
Black. Time, 10 minutes, 56.5 sec
onds. Senior: Cummings, " Blue ; J.
Batie, Black. Time Id minutes, 13.6
seconds.
Shot put Junior: Oehlrich, Blue;
Distance, S3 feet, 8 inches. Senior:
Rowley, Red; Richards, Blue; James,
Red; Morgan, Blue. Distance, 40
feet, 1 1-2 inches.
Mile run Junior: Wendt, Black;
Chatfield, Red. Time, 4 minutes, 47
seconds. Senior: Etherton, Red; Grif
fin, IBue; Kibble, Red. Time, 4 min
utes, S6.4 seconds.
Pole vault Senior: Ossian, Blue;
Woody, Red; Dean, Black. Height,
11 feet, S inches.
High Jump Junior: Gregory,
Red; Krause, Red; Bennett, Black,
Lefgren, Red. Height, 6 feet, 6
inches. Senior: Cook, Black; Potts,
Blue; Marrow, Black; Pierce, Blue;
Morgan, Blue and Bevard, Blue.
Height 5 feet, 9 inches.
LUNCH
WITH THE REST OF THE CROWD
AT
Owl Pharmacy
S. E. Cot. 14 P. Mm BlOM
Just that time of year
when they taste awful
good.
Buy ean by the Sack
Hotel D'Hamburger
114 12th SL 1718 "O"
Men's Spring Clothes
Will Be Plain Colors
New York City, Feb. 13. (Fair
child News Service) Development
of new fashions for students has
been unusually brisk during the past
year, and indications are that these
styles will be generally adapted dur
ing the coming spring, according to
the fashion experts of the Daily
News Record, the only, daily newspa
per in the world devoted to the men's
wear industry.
These university styles, the fash
ion observers report, are of such na
ture that college students take them
up practically on sight, which has re
sulted in a phenomenally quick
spread of style ideas.
Plain black stockings and black
"crew-neck" sweaters also have been
generally approved. The black
stockings, smart and practical with
gray knickerbockers, have led also
to the use of Un and white solid
solor stockings, in contrast to the
vivid and large Argylle patterns for
merly in high favor.
Pallover Sweaters
The plain black pullover sweaters
also have brought with them tan and
white garments of similar cut which
have made an instantaneous appeal
whenever exhibited for the college
and university trade. Blues, greens,
and yellows also have been seen as
shades used for the snli.i.
en jumpers or pullovers of
dressd students.
Shirts with the collar attache
the favorites still, altnougu most
dents now use detachable suJj'
collars for afte.noon occasio
formal nature. However, th ,
shirts now liked by collegi'anj
the completely uniform whit
ton-down models of a few
back. Green, Un, blue and viri
narrow stripes now vary the i
scheme and the best-dressed t!
men among the underflTAanatT1
using pins in their soft collars,
ing the collars with unbutwj
points. 60
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127 No. 12
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Where "good enough" isn't
In making telephones as in debating, one achieve
ment serves only to stimulate the effort toward fresh
, successes and to overcome new problems as they arise.
In manufacturing communication equipment at
Western Electric a wide range of problems is con
stantly being faced and conquered in the labora
tories where small switchboard lamp manufacturing
is planned; in the punch press rooms where huge
presses pound away; in the production department
where forward planning controls the flow of work.
As the college debater applies himself to preparing
new and better arguments, so Western Electric men
unceasingly apply themselves to devising new and
better methods in the production and distribution of
the nation's telephone equipment needs.
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SINCE 1112 MANUFACTURERS FOR THE BELL SYSTEM