FOUR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, MAY 27. 1931 I' SC IN DO -last service on Nebraska squad Bia-Six Meet Sees Several Huskers End Cinder r; Path Careers. . v. TOMSON, lamson to go y White, Garvey, Faytinger, : ;.True Are Included ,." " Among Losses. 'The Big Six meet last Saturday saw several valuable tracksters on Coach Schulte's squad do their last bit of running, jumping and weight pefoiming under the Sear let and Cream. The "Indian" takes heart, however, in reviewing the sensational array of freshmen talent he will have on tap next season. Schulte's losses include Cobe Tomson in the broadjump; Bill Lamson and Merle White in the hurdles; two important members of that sensational shuttle relay team that absconded with titles wherever it competed; Phil Garvry and Wesley True in the distance ruiu; Elmer Faytinger in the jave lin and Eisenhart in the discus. The sprint ranks are less de pleted md next year will find Jerry Lee, George Smutny and Harold Petz all back on duty. Overstreet and Foster are the flashiest fit the freshmen aspir ants and John Roby and Clayton Snow will be in top shape for call to dash service. ' Has Good Material. Material in the 440 and 8S0 is. nothing short of extraordinary. Bob Cslergard, Uodgers. England, Siefkes and McDonald, all varsity men, will be in quarter mile trous ers. The list of 440 first year men includes Fred Overstreet, Wick man. Keelme, Drummond, Barger and Booth. Then there are those phenom enal freshman 880 men notably Sesco Asher, Jim Storey and Francis Ayres. Asher recently ran the 880 in 1 :58.8 in he freshman telegraphic to be closely pushed by Storey who has done better than 1:57.6. Ayres, who hails fom Lincoln high, ran breast the half mile tape in less than two minutes. In the long distance runs Cor don Nuercnberger. Catson and Marrow will be back. The two mile stretch will diaw sterling performers from the ranks of the freshmen including Blazer, Tool, Silker, Hoffman, Wyrens and Asher. Holcomb, Slump and F.oter have also had valuable experience. in the long un. Has Shuttle Possibilities.. Jackson. Petz. Smutnv. and thr Carrol twins, Linus and Leon, will j be available to fill the gap that I Lamson and White leave in the i i Plm Sporty Cotton Mesh Frocks g l-u'L A (Rinsing Time 5 Minutes) if EPP Dresses that wash out as easily 5sJ t jtA t( ttvVy ltSy as nos'erv or lingf'e that can gfo SS f 5 VCf ST be ironcd damp in 10 minutes! L I"'1" Jk I-k , s. ThHt wear' coollv' a" throtign Tl Lpv mj ,r 'tf-nip',yS tnc day! For sports! Kor 1 ll rf J. 4SS7H- VTyrjr school! Kor morning! For re- "SC 1 KiWr'i sorl wear! f - ffi I raft v&&si sfcA shuttle relay team. Then Heve LambertUH, Gothenburg has been striding the low hurdles in spark ling fashion to be strorgly sup ported by Warrick, Jacobs, Weir, Kowand, Paul, Lunney and Dohr mann. In the pole vault Orlin Dean and Chris Matins have a good start upward while Hampton, Thomas and Swanson look good among the yearlings. Hist and Justice made points in the Big Six meet along with the great shot demonstration put on by Hugh Rhea in the iorn ball event. Promising weight fresh men include Sauer, Rambeau, Silk er and Beatty. Elmer Faytinger graduates with his javelin and his loss will deprive the Huskers of a man who has won first place in his event twice In the Big Six meet in the last three years. List Javelin Tossers. Dean, Bell, and Ray will be the varsity javelin tossers next year while Jones, Warner and Sever son are the best spear throwers among the frosh group. Don Gray is coming back to broadjump. Schulte will miss the timely leaps nf Cob Tomson but he will have Gray, Jerry Lee and Hege to fall back on. Zllmer and Asher have both cleared twenty one feet as freshmen broadjump ers. Slavton Pierce and Jerry Lee still have competition left in the high jump and Jacobs, a first year man, has threatened six feet in telegraphic meets. Jeffery. Beatty and Thomas are other freshman leapmen. The mile relay team that took second in the Big Six meet will be intact next year with Ostergard, Siefkes. Englnnd, Lee, Rodgers and McDonald all able to care for their 440 baton stretches in an ef ficient manner. FIX 1932 SCHEDULE Big Six football sc hedules for 1932 are out. The game dates were arranged at the conference director's meet ing held in Lincoln last week dur ing the Big Six track meet. Arrangements so far display seven of the contests on the 1932 Cornhusker schedule including home games with Pittsburgh, Missouri, and Kansas Aggies. The Huskers will engage Oklahoma. Kansas. Iowa and the University of Iowa away from Lincoln. There will be other games added to the Nebraska encounters before a year from next fall. In 1932 Nebraska will join with Missouri in starting on the series of Thanksgiving day battles be tween the two schools that is ex pected to establish a "Turkey Day" tradition between the Hus kers and Tigers. The first of these will entertain fans in Memo rial stadium. Then the following year Nebraska will meet Missouri in Columbia nn Thanksgiving and that plan will he developed there after. 4 0 0 w wv-w mm rm nm ww w i i cornhijskdi.it WITH KANSAS AGE ENDS SPORT YEAR Two Games Series Finishes Season for Scarlet And Cream. ARRANGE PIGSKIN TILTS First Encounter Set Here With South Dakota as Opponents. The last drop will pour out of the Cornhusker 1930-31 i-ports bucket today when Nebraska plays its second game of the two tilt baseball series being staged with Kansas State at Manhattan. With this school vear almost relegated to history, athletic optics in the university are focusing on next year's schedule. Only a short three months in tervene before Memorial stadium will again resound with the plunk of football shoe on pigskin. With this in mind it is noteworthy that the second game on the Husker lineup will be fought Oct. 3 at Evanston, 111., against Northwest ern, one of the most formidable of the foes Bible's men will encoun ter next season. Opens In Lincoln. Play opens in Lincoln Sept. 26 when South Dakota U. comes here. Other extra-Big Six teams that are listed on Nebraska's schedule include Iowa university which will come to Lincoln on Dad's day, Nov. 7 and the University of Pittsburgh. The Huskers play Pittsburgh Nov. 26 to close the season. When Big Six directors met here last week thev drew up partially j complete basketball ana wrestling eliaHiilc Thoen liars nnn Ihfl 1 Hd I football program follow: 1931 ornhuikri- Football AT LINCOLN Sept. 26 - South Dakota university. Oct. 10 Oklahoma university. Oct. J4 Kansu Uni. thomecoming t. Nov. 7 Iowa Unl. (Dad's davi. Nov. 21 lowa state. A WAV Cel. 3 Northwestern at Kvanhlon. HI. Oct. 31 Missouri at Columbia Nov. 14 Kansas A!S. at Manhattan. Nov. 26 PIUi.bureh I'nl. at Pittsburgh 1:'3I-.'I2 Buskrtbell Schedule. Pec. I' Unl of S. Dakota at Lincoln. I7- . BrlRham YounK Unl. at L'ncoln. 19 Iowa unl. at lowa city. 8 Iowa State at Ames. 12--Kansas at Lincoln. 16 Missouri at Columbia. 18 Kamas State at Manhattan. 23 Oklahoma at Lincoln. 1 lowa State at Lincoln. 6 Kansas state at Lincoln. i:i Oklahoma at Norman. 1.1 Kansas at Lawrence. 2 Missouri at Lincoln. 10.11 U rest Una; Schedule. 23 Kansas at Lincoln. a Oklahoma at Norman. 11 Missouri at Lincoln. 20 Kansas State at Manhattan. 2A-Iowa Slate at Amee. Jan. Keb. J 111. Keb. PLAN POPULARITY CONTEST (Continued from Page 1.) the Sunday Journal May 31, and 0 0 0 4 00 i V5 the .''nal vote to select the most popular graduate, either boy or girl, froii these twenty, will be taken the following week. The name and photograph of the win ner will appear in the Sunday Journal, June 7. Since this is entirely a popular ity contest the decision rests upon the number of votes cast. A nomi nation blank is printed In ths Jour nal for anyone who wishe? to make a nomination. SEEK JOBS SAYS DEAN Barnard Head Says Women Should Leave Positions Open for Men. NEW YORK. Virginia C. Gilder- sleeve, dean of Barnard college and one of the foremost woman educators in the country, says that gins graduating irom college in this year of depression should not seek Jobs unless they are forced to earn their living. If the girl graduating this June has a family that can nosslbl" support her for a while longer, or a kind aunt to help her, or a little money in the bank, then she should not try to get a position in times like these," Dean Gilder sleeve declares in Physical Culture "Silly Custom." "A tew years ago," she says, "a silly custom grew up among girls of the rich set, of studying stenog raphy and taking posts as clerks in offices, even though they had no special taste for the jobs. At the present moment this would be even more foolish for such afflu ent workers." A college girl in dire straits, she declares, should take up any hon est work she can "in order to keep off the breadline. No kind of hon est work, well done, will ever dis grace anyone," she avers, "even though it be dishwashing and the girl's ambition is to sing n grand opera." Dr. Alexander Meikle.john, chair man of the Experimental College of the University of Wisconsin and former president of Amherst, de clares in Physical Culture that if the young men who are graduated this June emerge "intellectually lifeless" they might better have "spent the years in digging ditches than in going to college." Says he to the college graduate: "What have you been doing with your mind? Is that mind an eager, living, venturing energy going forth on its own initative? Or have you come to deal with your mind as a sort of bucket to be filled by the inert results of other men's thinking?" 0r mm AGGIES TRAMPLE E TO TUNE OF 20-4 Oetgen, Wandra Are Unable To Prevent Hits of Kansas Nine. AUKER STARS IN GAME Opposing Pitcher Allows Four Hits, Scores Two Home Runs. In a wholesale slaughter that terminated 20 to 4, Kansas Agglt.i' baseball team knocked down three Cornhusker pitchers and proceeded to trample on them for fourteen hits, five of which were home runs and four of which were two base smacks. Auker pitching for the Kansas State club was the outstanding player of the game. He let Ne braska down with four hits and in five trips to the plate knocked out two home runs, a two bagger and a single. Oetgen started in the box for Nebraska but was impeached in favor of Wandra after the Aggies had crashed out five hits that scored nine runs in four innings. Wandra was unable to stop the Kansans, however, allowing six hits to bring In nine more mark ers in the next two innings. Liv ingston finished the contest on the mound proferring three hits to the Manhattan clubsters. Errors Made. The error complex that dogged the Htiskers earlier in the season set in again yesterday when eight diamond crimes were committed by the Nebraskans. The Kansans cut loose witn an orgy or scoring tnat saw men cross home plate in every inning except the seventh. Maser, Davison, Kotab, and Ros enberg scored for the Huskers. Browne's men will have an op portunity for revenge this after noon when the second contest of the series is to be played. Armatis will probably deliver from the box for Nebraska today with "Boo" Williams behind the bat. The summary: Kansas State ah r Carter, ss 4 3 Price, rf 3 3 Steliter. rf 1 1 Forsberg. lb ,'i 1 Nlgro, cf A 3 Flser. If s 2 Prentup, 2b S 0 Chalmers. 2b ft 0 Peterson. :ib ft 0 Peterson, 3b 4 2 h o a 0 1 1 10 0 1 0 (I 2 12 0 2 10 1 1 0 1 2 4 0 0 1 o n i 2 1 3 HUSK RTWIRLERS Schrader. o 3 9 u 9 1 Auker, p ft 3 4 u 3 Total 4ft 20 14 2T 13 3 Nebraska ab r ijriiih. rf 3 1 ,TTempsy 1 0 Maser, 2b 4 11 Davison, 3b 4 2 Kolab, rf 4 0 SnyftK. lb 4 0 Brown, sa 3 1 Rosenberg, If 4 ft Williams, c 4 ft Oetpen, p 1 0 Wondra, p 1 0 Livingston, p 1 0 h o a li ft 0 II 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 o 13 a 0 2 3 1 n u 0 2 2 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totali 34 4 423 17 3 Batted for Smith In ninth. Home run: Auker 2. Nlaro, Fisher. PC' teraon. Two base hit: Price. Korabera. Nlgrn. Auker, Kotab. Walks: Off Auker 2. off oetgen z, olf wondra 4. struck out: By Auker 0, by Oetgen 1. Hit by pitcner: Maser ana snygg by Auker, re terson by Wondra. Umpire: Qulgley. BIG TEN MEN OUTDO BIG SIX IN 10 ITS Big Ten teams performed more sensationally than Big Six track men in ten out of fifteen events in their ten team meet at Evanston accoi.ling to a comparison of the engagement records. The mil" run executed by G:en Dawson of Oklahoma in the Big Six in 4 minutes 22 seconds for a new Big Six record was slower than the 4 minutes 18.2 mile ruu at Evanston. Wind Hinders. Clyde Coff man's 13 feet S 5-8 inches pole vault for a nwe con ference mark was also four inches lower than the Big Ten vault bar clearance. The Jayhawker had a wind to contend with, however. Milton Ehrlick of Kansas Aggies high Jumped higher than all Big Ten comers hy 1 inch and H-8 in clearing the bar at 6 feet 3 5-8 inches. Cob Tomson of Nebraska did a foot and a half better in the broad Jump than the Big Ten leapers when he hurled himself 25 feet 4 1-4 inches with the wind. The chart comparisons: Big Ten Big Six 100-yard dash B 9.S 220-jard run . 440-yard run . 880-yard run . 20.9 21.1 48.7 49.4 1:54.4 ' 1:58.7 4:1. 4:22 9:21.0 9:59.x 11.4 14. 23.5 23 3.18 5 3.23.4 48- 8', 48 l.VM0, 135-8!i 191- 4U 137-5 24- H4 25-8 'i 6- 2 (i-3 13- 9 11-16 13-5S Mile run Two-mile run . High hurdles . . Low hurdlfes . . Mile relay .... Shot Discus Javelin Dioad Jump . . High Jump ... Pole vault . . . . Big Six Champions, loo-yard dash: Joe Klaner, Kansas. 9 5-10 second. 220-yurd dash: Rulph Mfekel, Kansas. 21 1-18 seconds. 440-yard dash: Cteorxe .lones, Kansas, 49 4-10 seconds. KMA-yard runt E. T.anrrten-t Iowa 8tat, 1 minute A6 7-10 seconds. Mile run: (tlrnn Dawson. Oklahoma, 4 minutes seconds. Two mile run: Glenn Dawson, Okla homa, ft minutes Ml 6-10 seconds. 120-ynrd Man hurdles: Bob Haser, lowa Slate, M 5-10 second. 220-yard low hurdlea: Bernard Gridley, Kansas, 23 seconds. Mile relayi Uinsllni, Henderson, Naiel, IjilierlFW uf Iohh Ntale, S minutes IS 4-111 seconds, hl pull Hush Kliea. Nebraska, 41) feel. Dl.ru.t Kd KlH-nharl, Nebraska, IS feel H"j Inches. Jitvelln: Klnier Fayllnger, Nebraska, 18T feet A inrlies, Rrnari Jump! fob Tnmaftii, Krnraska, 29 eel (I'-, Inches, High Jump) Mlllnn Khrllrh, Kansas Ag gies, 0 feel 8ak Inehes, Pnle vault! Clyde Coffman, Kansas, 13 feel 9 Inches, WATER COMPETITION 150 Coeds Enter Names in Annual Intramural Swim Meet. THURSDAY IS DATE SET One hundred and fifty girls have signed up for the Intramural swimming meet to be held at Capitol Beach, Thursday after noon at 4:30. Any one who cares to watch the contest is invited. The girls will be divided up Into teams and each one who is entered will give five points to her group, and if she Is on a winning team, she will receive fifteen markers. The entries going Into the water between 4 and 4 :30, but not before, may take advantage of the re duced price of fifteen cents. The events follow: Speed. Side stroke race 25 yards. SPEND the IN BUSINESS TRAINING It will be a splendid Investment for you. THIS TIME NEXT YEAR you can be well installed with fine chances ahead. Our class last summer has been well rewarded. Register on Jure 18 or 15 LINCOLN SCHOOL OF COMMERCE Momher Nat'l. A'n. nf Accredited Com'l. School ill P & 14th B6774 Lincoln, Neb. 50 yard dash, free style. 220 yard dash. 100 yard dash, breast stroke. 75 yard back stroke. Distance. Underwater. Plunge, 30 second limit. Diving. Running front dive, two optional dives, preferably Jack knife and swan. Exhibition diving. 25 yard balloon race. "Legs only" race, on back, flut ter kick barred. Medley relay race, 8 girls on each team, back, crawl and breast stroke. Newspaper and umbrella march. 25 yards. Peanut relay. In case of rain the meet will be postponed until June 1. New 1931 Fords, Victoria, Sport roadster with rumble teat and coupe with rumble aeat, Just added to our rent-a-enre. Your business li ap predated. MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 P St. B-681K Your Drug Store SNAPPY NOON LUNCHES Whitman Chocolates The Owl Pharmacy We Deliver Phone B1068 148 No. 14 and P SUMMER