The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 11, 1931, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    T
FOUR
THE DAILY NEllKASKAN
SUNDAY, JANUARY 11. 19.11.
FINISH
COMPETITION
OF
Nebraskaball and Bowling
Races Due to End
During Week.
NEW EVENTS STARTING
Rifling Instruction Carded
For Monday, Tuesday;
Practice Follows.
Intramural program for women
continued this week with two
sports endinr. Others will take
their place. Wednesday night will
see the close of the bowling- tour
nament, and Nebraska ball cham
pions will be determined Friday
nieht. Rifling- practices are be
ginning, and plans for ping- pong
and basketball pre-iourney prac
tices are under way.
Tomorrow night, Chi Omega
team one and Alpha Phi s second
team will clash and attempt to
mow down a sufficient number of
pins to gain them entrance In the
semi-finals Tuesday night. Pi Beta
Phi (2) will meet'Sigma Eta Chi.
last year's winner and record
holder of this season. Alpha Delta
Pi (1) will bowl against Sigma
Kappa.
Sigma Kappa defeated Kappa
Beta in the Nebraskaball tilt
played Saturday morning', entering
them In competition with four
other teams. Pi Beta Phi, Phi Mu,
Delta Gamma, and Alpha XI Delta.
Finals Friday.
Pi Beta Phi plays Phi Mu Tues
day at 5, Delta Gamma meets
Sigma Kappa Wednesday at the
e same hour, and Alpha Xi Delta, by
its victory over Chi Omega, meets
the winner of Pi Beta Phi-Phi Mu
match. Semi-finals and finals will
be played Thursday and Friday.
Contrary to the procedure last
year, rifling this year will not take
the form of & competitive tourney
between intramural groups. Girls
interested will try out for the var
sity rifle team composed of ten
girls, and each group will be given
25 points for each girl within that
group who receives the necessary
one hour of instruction, one hour
of practice, and who shootts a rec
ord score. Likewise, 25 points will
be awarded for each girl who
makes the varsity team.
Instruction Monday.
Instruction will be given those
who have signed for it Monday
and Tuesday, with practice shoot
ing opening Wednesday and con
tinuing the remainder of the week.
No one can compete who has not
had an hour of instruction and
practice. Students will report for
both instruction and practice at
the hours which they have previ
ously Indicated. All girls have
been asked to sign a list in An
drews hall after receiving instruc
tion and practice.
The hours open for instruction
Jan. 12 and 13 are Monday 1, 2,
3, 4,: Tuesday 9, 10, 11, 1, 2. 3
and 4. Practice shooting hours for
the remainder of the week con
tinue the same as one Tuesday.
Continued practice and shoot
ing hours for record score will be
held Jan. 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. The
hours are: Monday, 1 to 4; Tues
day, Wednesday. Thursday and
Friday 9:00 to 11:00 and 1:00 to
4:30.
Matches Start Feb. 2.
Intercollegiate matches will be
held from Feb. 2 to March 21. Any
one wishing to try out for the var
sity team, which includes ten girls
shooting the highest scores during
the week Jan. 19-23, must receive,
at the range under the direction of
the sergeant, the one hour of in
struction Jan. 12-13, also one hour
of prartlca shooting on days desig
nated for practice.
During the week Jan. 19-23
those having completed the one
hour of instruction plus the one
hour of practice will shoot two
practice targets and in addition
one record target.
The record target will be signed i
by the sergeant and they will be
used in selecting the varsity team.
Girls who make the varsity team
must have the required scholastic
standing for all varsity teams.
A thoroughly enthusiastic foot
ball song was needed by the uni
versity in the fall of 1901, accord
ing to the columns of The Daily
'ebraskan.
Classified Want Ads
Only JO Cents a Line
(Minimum of 3 Llnee)
PHOTOGRAPHS
T!ie HAUCK STCDTO. 121 O airtet.
B2m. Distmcuve photofraphs.
AFTER ALL. It's a Townsend pBotofrapn
lhat you want.
LOST A.ND FOUND
LOfT-.J.welM Kappa Alpha Theta pin.
P.rrd! Call Margaret Schleyer at
WANTED
WANTED EvaryoM to brief articles
v.hirti bava been found to the Latiy
rCebraakaa oll'tut.
TYPING
TTPI.XO Student paptrf t;pl at ron-
b prtrf. Ppeciftl rate on twm-ive
ram or mort Call B.04"t j
TVPINrJ atiema anil fhe.t. to tvp at
innahl rt. :ll Kal V. M'ller. .
Lima Bkie Bll.'il. I
PAIR
SPORTS
J.
Tennis Dates Must
Be Made by Jan. 12
All men registered for tennis
must take a final examination
from Joe Stanton, Instructor,
before credit will be reported
for the course.
Appointments for this exami
nation must be made before
Jan. 12, 1931, Appointments
may be made at the office of
the division of physical educa
tion for men, room 207, coli
seum, or bv telephone univer
sity phone 21, between the hours
of 11-12 a. m. or 2-6 p. m.
BASKETBALL nittlSi"vj.;
Farm House Wins League IV
T... . n .
lllie Dy UOWning
Delts, 23-20.
LAST GAME ON TUESDAY
Schedules for the intramural
basketball finals were announced
Saturday by Kudy Voegler. League
IV was' settled "when Delta Tau
Delta lost to Farm House 23-20.
The finals will get under way
Tuesday night. Jan. 13. with the
second round scheduled for the fol
lowing Thursday. The two remain
ing teams will plays for the cham
pionship Tuesday, Jan. 20, on the
varsity court, the game starting
at 7:50 o'clock.
Sigma Alpha Fpsilon, Phi Gam
ma Delta, Acacia. Alpha Gamma
Rho and Beta Theta Pi are the
teams already sure of competing
in the tournament, together with
the winner of League IV.
In the upper bracket for the
first round of play Tuesday, Jan.
13, the winner of league IV has
drawn a bye while Phi Gamma
Delta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon
clash. Id the lower bracket Acacia
drew a bye while Alpha Gamma
Rho and Bets Theta Pi clash in
the first round.
VOCATIONAL TALKS
FOR GIRLS PLANNED
A. W. S. Board Sponsoring! -
Series, With Miss icoach Pits Two Strongest
Dunn in Charge.
The A. W. S. board will open a
series of weekly vocational guid
ance conference periods Monday
when social work will be consid
ered. Mis-s Catherine Dunn of the
sociology department who is spon
soring the conference will speak at
several meetings during the week
and give time for personal confer
ence. On Wednesday afternoon at 5
o'clock Miss Dunn will speak be
fore the sophomore commission
groups and persons interested. She
will discuss the field briefly and
will answer questions for persons
dubious as to their vocations.
Each day Miss Dunn will be in , first 'time sjnce Christmas. Bowen Southwestern State Toachers col
her office in the Social Science j won a numeral as a member of lee matmen will combine against
Dunuing iroiu a uniu ji o iiock 10
hold private conferences with stu
dents. Special appointments will
be made upon request.
In classifying the possibilities
under social case work. Miss Dunn
lists family case work, child wel
fare work, visiting teacher posi
tions in schools, psychiatric prob
lem cases and medical sociaT work.
Personal work is also in this group.
Miss Dunn will also talk on in
stitutional work, group work in
recreation and character building
like that of the Y. W. C. A., and
Camp Fire girls, and executive
work of organization and admin
istration. SENNING SPEAKS
BEFORE MEETING
IN CLEVELAND, O.
At the Cleveland convention of
the American Political Science as
sociation during the holidays. Dr.
John P. Senning, chairman of po
litical science here, spoke on "Need
of Studying Administration in its
Actual Environments" before a
round table discussion group on
methods of studjing public admin
istration. He discussed relation of
civic organizations to administra
tive heads and the desirability of
a continuous tenure of office in po
sitions of public service.
Dr. Waller Ieliirn
lo Ilenlelhrrg !?aft'Iy I
Dr. Heinrich Walter of Heidel
berg university who spent several
months of last year working in
the physiology laboratories of the
University of Nebraska haa safely
arrived home, according to word
received here by J. E. Weaver.
Dr. Walter visited America un
der the auspices of the Rocker
feller foundation in a study of the
osmotic relations of prairie plants.
VEXNE HONORED BY
COLLEGE PLAYERS
Herbert A. Yenne, assistant pro
fessor in dramatics, was elected
first vice president of the NatiOL'd
Collegiate Players association at
the national convention held in
Chicago during the Christmas holi
days. Mr. Yenne is also associate
editor of the Players magazine, a
publication sponsored by the or
ganization of which he is an officer.
Your Manuscript Typed
Neatly Quickly Reasonably
Improve Your Grades
With Neat and Well Typed Manuscripts
Bring Your Paper for Satisfactory Work
Lincoln School of Commerce
Accredited by Nat'l. Ass'n. of Accredited Com'
P 4 14Th Ma. eb774
MM WRESTLERS
DEFEAT HUSKERS
T
Final Heavyweight Match!
Decides Outcome of
Season Opener.
TOTAL SCORE IS 11 TO 17
Nebraska.
1T . t . .
University of Nebraska wrest-
hers lost their first dual meet of
the year to the University of Iowa
jgrapplers Friday night when Ar-
dean Peterson, Cornhusker heavy
weight, lost to Righter of Iowa in
an overtime bout. The Hawkeyes
won by a final score of 17 to 11.
Iowa was compelled to forfeit
five points in the first bout when
Deege, 118 pounder, sustained re
newal of a rib injury and had to
quit the ring.
Meady in the 118 pound class,
Larson in the 135 pound group and
Reese in the 145 pound class,
turned in the Nebraska victories.
Summary.
118 pounds: Meady (N'l won
from Deege (1) by default.
126 pounds: Peer (II won from
Lindskog ( N l by decision in two
overtime periods.
135 pounds: Larson l.Ni won
from Amilie (I) by decision.
145 pounds: Reese (Nl won
from Weldon (Ii by decision.
155 pounds: Coone.s (I I threw
Shirley (Nl with a bar arm and
reverse headlock in 5:06
165 pounds: Poyner (I I won
from Robertson ( N ) by decision.
175 pounds: Coughfan (Ii won
from Adam N) by decision. :
Heavyweight: Righter (Ii won '
I from Petersen Ni by decision in
! two overtime periods.
101 STATE SQUAD
! Lineups Together for
Long Session.
I AMES. Iowa. Pitting his two
strongest lineups against each
other
for a full 40
Vi r,.flrtn Vi.cV.thgll t.am nnA !
N FIRSTCONTES
of the hardest scrimmage sessions Prlsc j'y ? competition ar
it has had this season. On the ' aneed for Oklahoma A and M.
varsity five the regulars Hawk. I wrestlers, Coach I C.
' Heitman. Roadcap, Rieke and Ga"ahr ,has announced.
Thomson uorked in comb nat on:
' and on the opposition the. coach
: used Bowen. Holmes, Luawij
Bowes and Wilcox iLM" ollu nuiuicaai.era olslc
Roger Bowen. who played half-j Teachers college will vie with the
back on the Iowa State football ! Aggies. Then, on Jar uary 23, Ok
t.. in uniform fnr the ! lahoma City univorsny and
th. v,o,ijrnr team last vear and I
wiU'probablv be groomed for a I
-.,h ,itio
'b"" ...s- n. for
action last night. Roadcap" was I
knocked unconscious in the Min
nesota game when Hawk charged
into him on a follow-around in
the first play. Roadcap played
but a few minutes against the
Gophers and Heitman was dis
missed during the first half be
cause of personal fouls.
The Oklahomans bring a well
rounded team to Ames, including
in their lineup two all-American
scholastic players.
11 GRADUATES OF
CEOLOGV SCHOOL
VISIT ON CAMPLS it
Visitors at the office of Prof. E.
F. Schramm in the department of j
r.o1orv Hiirir.o- th holidavs were:
O n .' r
Allan Reiff. '29. and Ira Brinker-
hoff. '2S. both with the Producers
and Refiners corporation of San
Antonio, Tex.: Harvey Whitaker.
'29, consulting geologist at San
Antonio: Guy SchoU. '25. consult
ing geologist of Wichila Kails,
Tex.; WilMm Schultz. '29, of the
Empire company. Lyone. Kas.:
John Bean, '29. of the Gulf Pro-
duction company. Ft. Worth; Ver- ;
non Hesu, '29, of Tulsa: Gale Giber-
son. '27. of the Phillips Petroleum it
comrfeny. Brcckenridge. Tex.; J. B. 1 1
Burnett. 16. chiet geologist oi me
Laeo Petroleum company, Mara-
caibo. Venezuela; Clarence D. Buf-
fett, '22, assistant production en
gineer for the Midwest Refining
company. Midwest. Wyo.: and W.
Keith Miller, '29, Skelly Oil com
pany, Tulsa.
DECKER ADDRESSES
YORK WOMEN'S CLUB
Hermann T. Decker of the
Bch'Xl of fine arts gave a lecture
recital before the Y'ork Women's
club Monday afternoon. He was
accompanied by Jean E. Decker.
Magazine Car.ies
Iiif!ruior"s Work
A full page wood-cut by Ben
Albert Benson describing Christ
mas appeared in the December is
sue of the Ryitarian magazine. Mr.
Benson graduated from the Uni
versity of Nebraska school of fine
arts in 1920 and was an instruc
tor here until this year. He Is
now engaged in commercial art
work in Chicago.
. Schools
Lincoln, Nebr.
Handball Entries
Will Close Monday
Entries for the All University
handball singlet tournament
will close on Monday, Jan. 12 at
5 o'clock. All men in the uni
versity are eligible to compete.
Gold medal w'll be swrd to
the winner, and a silver medal
to the runner-up.
The Interfraternity bowling
tournament will start the week
of Jan. 19. Entries will close at
the Intramural office Jan. 16, at
5 o'clock.
The week starting Feb. 2 is
the date set for the Interfrater
nity indoor track meet. Formal
entries at the intramural office
are not required. Every frater
nity must participate with at
least two men, and finish two
men, in every event. Further
particulars will be sent the or
ganizations this week.
FORTY WRESTLERS GO
Kansans Prepare for Match
With Oklahoma Jan. 21;
Opens Season.
LAWRENCE, Kas. Forty Uni
versity of Kansas students are go
ing through the preliminary drill
nectssary for the wrestling season,
which opens with a match against
me university of Oklahoma at
Norman Jan. 21.
Coach Leon Eaunian has a
number of promising candidates
in all except the 115 pound class,
snd a freshman squad of more
than usual promise. Final tryouts
for the team will be held late next
week.
Wrestlers showing up well in
clude: Jay Shroyer, heavyweight,
St. Joseph, Mo.;' Carl Cummings,
165 pounds, Washington, Kas.:
Ned Russell, of Lawrence, and
George Brown. Wichita, in 135
pound class, and Wayne Larrabee,
of Haddani, in the 125 pound
class.
Frashmen showing up well ta
eniae I'eie Aienringer. of Kinsley,
heavyweight : Scott K e n n e d v.
' Lawrence, 125 pounds: Otto Pro
( chazka. of Atwood. 155 pounds;
: Jack Redmond, Saline, 115 pounds;
Richfird Cnpton, Kansas City. Mo.,
, 135 pounds, and Ralph Johnson,
j Burlington, 145 pounds,
i Bauman hopes to schedule
I matches with Salina Wesleyan and
' East Central colleges of Okla
homa. OKLAHOMA A. & M.
WRESTLERS HAVE
TWO MEETS AHEAD
Okla. Special)
" O
double-header meets com-
""'" l"c "'6"- "
16, will be a sixteen-match affair
in which grapplers of East Cen-
lne auagner crew.
Other dual meet for A. and
M. include invasions by Kansas
'State
Agricultural college, Jan- I
30, and Kansas university. I
"ar'
February 5, and a trip for the
Aggies to Xorman. February 13.
to meet Oklahoma university j
Sooners. j
In March the Aggies, as usual, :
will enter the two national tour- i
naments, the collegiate and the
amateur. Definite announcements
as to time and places for both
have not been made, but the
probable choices will be March 21
and 22 for the collegiate, with
place unsettled, and March 28
and 29 for the American ama
teur union at Grand Rapids,
Mich.
and M. will conduct the
h'Rh school tournament at
uiwaier i-eo. a ana
.
IllVllallOll .01)101
To Close on Jan. 22
Saturday morning a group of
Camp Fire girls studied rock speci
mens commonly found in Ne
braska which are on display in
the Morrill hall museum. They
were conducted through the mu
seim by F. G. Collins, assistant
curator.
.
h I A (J A K
' V-"" A V
Fords, Reoa. Duranta and Austin.
Your Business la Appreciated
MOTOR OUT COMPANY I
iin c Kt Ha,... rinsn B.Mia. I
SIX REASONS WHY
' Greened ge"
History Paper
IS BETTER
HEAVIER WEIGHT
CAN USE BOTH SIDES
SMOOTH WRITING
SURFACE
INK DOES NOT SPREAD
ROUND CORNERS
WILL NOT BIND
GREEN EDGES
WILL NOT SOIL ,
DRILLED HOLES
DOES NOT TEAR SO EASY
ITS BOXED
BEWARE 07 IMITATIONS
LATSCH
BROTHERS
STATIONERS
1118 O St.
Former Nebraska Grad and
Wrestling Champ Taken
by Bright's Disease.
Wayne "Big" Munn, thirty-five,
former Nebraska football star, and
later world's heavyweight wrest
ling champion, died at San An
tonio, Tex., early last Friday from
Bright s disease,
Wayne attended the university
In the years preceding the World
war. He had the distinction of
winning three letters in one year,
1917-18. in football, wrestling, and
track. He was the Missouri Valley
heavyweight wrestling champion
in that year.
Munn won the world's heavy
weight championship in 1925
when he was matched with Ed
"Strangler" Lewis In a Kansas
City ring. "Big" Munn won the
match two falls out of three, on
one occasion picking Lewis up and
tossing him from the ring. His
title waa short lived, however, as
he was thrown by Zbyszko less
than three months later in Phila
delphia. Munn is survived by his widow,
Edna W. Munn; a daughter, Mary
Ann; three brothers, Wade of Lin
coln, Monte of Chicago, and Glenn
of Akron, O.,' and a sister, Eliza
beth. Munn's three brothers were also
star athletes at Nebraska, each of
them holding three letters.
Burial will be at Fairbury, Neb.
JOSEPH SARGENT,
STUDENT HERE IN
1898, IS VISITOR
A campus visitor during the hol
iday season was Joseph Sargent,
who was a member of the college
of engineering class of 1S9S. Be
cause he enlisted in the Spanish-
American war he was not granted
a degree until 1903. Mr. Sargent,
in addition to being a captain of
engineers in the American expedi-1
tionarv forces in France during !
the World war, has had an active
career ns an engineer throughout :
the world.
His most recent position has
been supervising and consulting ;
engineer for a power development I
company in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
He has been engaged in con- j
stiucting a large dam to be used 1
lor irrigation purposes.
Kirh Writes Article
On Photographic Plates'
Dwight Kirsch of the school of ;
fine arts is the author of an article 1
on "Color Plate Technique" which
appears in the American Annual 1
of photography for 1931. The ar
ticle is a discussion of practical .
methods of photographing with j
color plates and of using these j
natural color photographs as lar- ,
LEARN TO DANCE
Can teach you to lead in one lesson.
Guarantee to teach you In eix pri
vate lesson. Classes every Monday
and Wednesday. Private lessors
morning, afternoon and evening.
Ball Room and Tap.
MRS. LUELLA WILLIAMS
Private Studio:
Phone B4258 1220 D STREET
f t
Business mea. iodastrialisu aod eai
aeexs 600,000 of theta regularly read
the McGraw-Hill Publications. More
than 3.000.000 asf McGraw-Hill books
and mifirines ill ibeir business.
The Busioess Week
System
Radio Retailing
Flectrooirt
Ariatioa
Prod OCX Eoauoearian
Factory and Industrial Eesineerinf aod
Maoaaeawal Mining Journal
Power Engineering and
Industrial Eoginecrioc Mining World
Coal Age Electric Railway Journal
Textile WorM Bus Traneportauoa
Food Industrie America Machinist
Rectrinl World Cogiseerinx NiJ?
EUctrical Merchandising Record
Electrical West Construction Methods
Oiemirsl Mi Metallurgical rogi Bering
Mc GRAW-
McCt W.M.U auHtSHiKS CO. Ic. New ret Gcsae
IfSL aC!SL
tern slides. The material In the
article was gathered through ex
periments he has made during the
past five years. (
311 STUDENTS TO
RE AVAILABLE 1 OR
SCHOOL TOSITIONS
Three hundred and forty-one
students in teachers college last
month registered at the university
tcacheri placement bureau and are
available for high school and
grammar school positions next
year. Of those who enrolled at the
pro-holiday registration, 167 are
women who plan to teach in high
schools, 144 are women seeking
grade school positions, and 30 aie
men wanting high school teaching
Jobs. A total of 538 men and
women are now registered in the
active files of the placement bur
eau, according to R. D. Moritz, director.
Tlitfi-'s Mini-tiiuig alu'iit lucse new frocks new colors
- ii-nv stvli j, Ili.il lo ut.inlt'is j'ur vim to make vou
look liki- a million ami l'ctl like a million for oh so
little.
MAGEE'S CO-ED CAMPUS SHOP
112.J 11 STKEKT
He Got the Facts
Behind the News!
Stretching its huge bulk across the Sao Fraocisquito
Canyon, the St. Francis dam cupped a deep bice lake
of water against the hills. Peacefully, fruitfully tilling
the soii in the valley below were the water-hungry
farmers of Santa Clara.
Then, something happened! Without warning, the
great man-built barrier crumbled. A vast flood reared
its bulk into a ferocious torrent smashed every
thing that stood in its path. Another unwarranted
disaster. Lives lost! Property destroyed! Why?
An Engineering News-Record editor in San Francisco
hopped a fast plane. Rapidly he surveyed the acere;
investigated and photographed the remaining traces
of structural fault; wired his paper.
Fast news? Yes, but what of his story? Nothing sen
sational in the story he wired no wrath-stirring
adjectives calculated to arouse public sentiment. This
editor tersely related the reasons for the disaster
scientifically pieced together the causes of founda
tion failure gave construction engineers the facts
which they could not get from newspaper stories.
Many weeks later an official investigating commission '
confirmed, almost to a word, that first telegraphic
flash of the McGraw-Hill editor. Meantime!, editors
of metropolitan dailies used the McGraw-Hill story
to reassure their readers that similar disasters were
not likely to occur in other places.
Each McGraw-Hill Publication has built a splendid
reputation among leaders of industry and business
for truth, leadership, constructive foresight. From
the publication which covers your chosen field, you
will get close-up of what your future employers
and fellow-workers are thinking of and doing.
McGraw-Hill Publications are in your college library.
Ask the librarian.
HILL PUBLICATIONS
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