The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 15, 1928, Page 4, Image 4

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    THM DAILY NEBRASKAN
LIEN TRAIN FOR
VALLEY CLASH
Schulte' Husker Cinder Squad
Takes Rigorous Workout in
Monday Practice
With the home stretch of prepara
tion for the twenty-first annual Mis
souri Valley conference track and
field championship meet to he held
at Nebraska Memorial stadium, Fri
day and Saturday May 18 and 19 be
fore them, Coach Henry F. Schulte's
Cornhusker cinder men went through
a rigorous workout for Monday af
ternoon's practice.
Davenport, Campbell, and E.
Wyatt, quarter-m i 1 e r s, breezed
through several 220-yard dashes as a
conditioner. , Monday's workout was
handicapped somewhat by the chilly
and rainy "weather but the full prac
tice as scheduled by Coach Schulte
was run through regardless of this.
Huskeri Strong In Dh
Davenport, Easter, Snyder, Lowe,
and Donisthorpe stepped two 75
yard sprints together with a fast
180-yard dash. The performances
of the Husker sprint section in the
Valley meet Saturday will be an im
portant factor in the Nebraska show
ing. Oklahoma, the favorite for the
title, is not so strong in this event
as in others and if the Huskers could
collect some points in the sprints, it
would greatly aid them in the race
for the championship.
Trumble, Thompson, Arganbright,
and Krause, Nebraska's strong hurdle
quartet, worked out with three flights
of hurdles in Monday s practice and
finished up with a 220-yard sprint.
The Nebraska barrier toppers are ex
pected to score heavy in the Valley
games as they have made an impres
sive record during this season.
Chadderdon, Dexter, Janulewicz,
Sprague, and Cummings ran a 660
yard dash and several 220-yard
sprints before going to the showers
Monday. Some hard competition is
promised for the distance events in
the Valley meet and Coach Schulte
wants his men to be in tip-top shape
for the battle. With Keith of Ok
lahoma; Moody of Kansas Aggies,
Frazier of Kansas, and Caulum of
Iowa State among the entrees the
long runs promise to provide a world
of interest.
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MISSOURI TOPS LIST
IN TRACK VICTORIES
Nebraska Rank Second in Number
Of Points and First Place
Honor on Cinder
When the curtain falls on the
twenty-second annual Missouri Val
ley conference outdoor track and
field meet to be held at the Nebraska
Memorial stadium Friday and Satur
day, May 18 and 19 the University
of Missouri will lay claim to the all
time outdoor championship of that
league as six members are withdraw
ing this spring.
The strength of the Missouri
claims are preserved in the records
of athletic director C. L. Brewer of
Missouri which show that the Tigers
have won eight Valley champion
ships, tied for first once and placed
second four times and third once.
The Tigers have amassed the great
est number of points scored by any
other team during the various cham
pionship meets 631.
Huiker 534
Nebraska, out of the conference
for three years, receive second all
time Valley track honors with five
championships, two seconds, four
thirds with & total score of 534
points. Iowa State with 415 points
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is third but boasts only one cham
pionship having one the first meet
held in Kansas City in 1908. How
ever, the Cyclones have captured five
seconds and four thirds.
The other teams finished in the
following order: Kansas, fourth with
384 points; Grinnell, with 207; Kan
sas Aggies with 205; Drake' with
169; Washington with 128; Okla
homa with 121 and, Oklahoma Ag
gies with 24. This order of places
may be changed by the results of the
final Missouri Valley meet this wee
end.
13 feet to win first place. A. D.
"Hippo" Howell threw the discus
141 feet and 9 inches in the Kansas
Relays for a new record. The med
ley relay team (John Hewitt, Heston
Heald, Russell Carson, and Harold
Keith) established new marks at the
Rice and Kansas Relays. A medley
team. Tavlor. Adkison. Sarson and
Keith) set a new mark in the Texas
Relays.
SOONER TRACKMEN
TRAIN FOR CLASSIC
Oklahoma Cinder Team Prepare for
Missouri Valley Meet After
Undefeated Season
After keeping their five-year dual
meet record clean by defeating the
Oklahoma Aggies, 77 to 54, the Uni
versity of Oklahoma track men are
in training for the Missouri Valley
conference meet at Lincoln, Neb.,
May 18 and 19.
Some of Coach John Jacob's men
will enter the National collegiate
meet at Chicago June 9 and 10, and
Harold Keith and Tom Churchill will
enter the Olympic tryouts. Keith
has been the Sooner's star miler and
two miler during the season.
Due to a mistake, he was forced to
enter the 3,000 meter steeple chase
at Penn relays, winning the event
over the best stars of the nation al
though it was his first time over such
a course. Tom Churchill will make
his bid for a decathalon position on
the United States team. He won
this event at the Kansas Relays and
placed third at Penn, which places
him among the probable representatives.
During the season the Sooners
have defeated some of the strongest
teams in the middle west in tne ma
jor relay carnivals and have repeat
ed as Missouri Valley Indoor cham
pions. They defeated Missouri, Ne
braska, and Oklahoma Aggies in dual
meets making a total of 17 consecu
tive victories in dual encounters.
They won over Misosuri 76 to 65,
and stopped the Cornhuskers 66 2-3
to 64 1-3. Jacobs' men won ten
first places in both the Missouri and
Nebraska meets, and 11 against the
Oklahoma Aggies.
The Sooners hung up their share
of new meet records during the sea
son. Harold Keith set a new record
at the Kansas City Athletic Club In
door meet when he turned the mile in
4 minutes 22.4 seconds. Jack Car
men cleared the 50-yard low hurdles
in 5.9 seconds in the conference in
door meet to set a new mark.
Bruce Drake made a new mark at
the Rice Relays when he pole vaulted
thr t'8wl ill isillis
When Dad was a "Modern Youth"
"ICYCLES.stereopticon lectures,
JD and the "gilded" youths with
their horses and carts; at night the
midnight oil burning in student
lamps while the gas lights glared and
flickered across the campus the
gay nineties when Dad was in
college seem primitive to us to-day.'
Now it's sport roadsters, the
movies, and radios. At night
the MAZDA lamp replaces
the midnight oil in dormi
tory rooms, while modern
street lighting sheds its friendly'
glow over the campus.
"Without electricity we would
have none of these improve
ments. To-day's marvel of electrical
invention becomes to-morrow's
accepted utility. In the coming
years, by taking advantage of new
uses of electricity you will be
able to go so much farther
that the "tearing twenties"
will seem just as primitive
as the "gay nineties".
Scientists in tit research laboratories of the Central Electric
Company keep C.R a leader in tht field of electrical
pntgmu SliL'ta C-E engineers develop such fata invention.
Tht C-E factories carry out tht engineers' designs with
high-quality material and expert "workmanship.
John Grover Is to Be
Valley Track Starter
John C. Grover of Kansas City,
veteran valley track and football of
ficial, will be the official starter at
the twenty-sixth annual Missouri
Valley track and field championships
to be held at the University of Ne
braska Memorial stadium, May 18
and 19.
Grover has been starter at the val
ley championships for a number of
years.
Lincoln, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
McPherson, '24, of Bancroft. Be
fore her marriage Mrs. McPherson
was Leona Crawford.
Oklarkma R.O.T.C. Is
Given Very High Grade
Norman, May 14. After recently
inspecting the R. O. T. C. unit at the
University of Oklahoma, ' Lieut. Col.
C. R. Mayo, eighth corps area offi
cer, said thst he considered the unit
the best in the history of the school.
"The appearance of the unit as a
whole is uniformly good," Lieut. Col.
Mayo said on his departure. For
several years the university unit has
won distinguished college rating,
Which is the highest rating bestowed
on any college or university in the
United States. J
An average of 50,000 persons a
year have been served by the educa
tional cooperation department of the
University of Oklahoma for the past
three years.
ALUMNI RETURN FOR
PHARMACY PROGRAM
Alumni of the College of Pharm
acy who visited the campus during
Pharmacy week are Leslie Abrendts,
'26, of Edison; J. Paul Brown, '17, of
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HMSAWTERSon.
E. Cambridge. Massachusetts.
One-Man Track Team
Sets Record at Meet
State College, Pa. (IP) A one-
man track team, made of up Paul
Heydrick, from Potomac State
school, Keyser, West Va., set a rec
ord for individual point scoring here
recently at a 14 school meet, when
he piled up 33 points for himself and
his alma mater.
Heydrick took first places in the
high jump, broad jump, pole vault,
hammer throw, discus and javelin
events, and finished second in the
shot-put.
COMPTON IS AUTHOR
OF LIBRARY ARTICLE
Nellie J. Compton, assistant li
brarian of the university, is the au
thor of an article entitled "In Libra
ry Workrooms," in the March issue
of the Step Ladder, publication of
the Order of Bookfellows. The ar
ticle was .written for those not famil
iar with library work.
SPRING SUITS
for the College Man
AT
TV TEBRASKAN
l TAILORS
B-eou
1 1 CLEANERS
235 No. 14
WANT ADS
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What Shakespeare
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The CocCola Compter Atlanta. Ca,
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7a
THE 1928
CO
C7 C7
R
University of Nebraska Annual
WILL BE DISTRIBUTED
TOMORROW MORNING
Starting at 9:00 o'clock
U-HALL BASEMENT
South Side
Extra copies of the Cornhusker are
available for those who have failed
to reserve them earlier.
If you have one reserved,
bring your receipt.
P
$5.00
nee
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