Mutt Aunta. --Tif 'nfcfr I, fUESDAY, JULY 28, 1931. SHOE HEAVERS EINISH FIRST BRACKET PLAY Quarter and Semi-Final Matches Are Partly Completed. The horseshoe tournament has completed tha first round and part of the quarter and semifinal matches. Wilhelms defeated Schmidt and Quimby rook Majors in the only matches played Thurs day evening. All ohters remaining in the meet tAi trt see Verne Jones or watch the bulletin boards in Teachers college ani the main li brary for their next matches in order that the entire tournament may be finished by the end of this week. TEACHERS FORM LARGE SHARE OF SAUNDERS GROUP Of the sixty-eight students from Sounders county who have been attending the summer session, mnet?en are from Wahno. Four teen of the group from Wahoo have been taking work in Teachers college. Emily 7ovak. who will teach in Valparaiso, and Margaret Maude Rood, who will be at Hastings, are freshmen. Jennie Marie Divis, who will teach at Colon: Mary Jane Kanek, teacher at Wahoo; Virginia Joan Janak, also at Wahoo; Libbie Novak, who will teach at Morse Bluffs, and Ludmila Marie Parou lek, who will be at Weston, are; sophomores. Marjorie Ruth Helsing. Roseline Constance Pearson, teacher at Wahoo: Thure Julius Anderson; F. Konrad Magnussen, who will be at Morse Bluffs, and Emil Frank Paroulek, teacher ax Hershey, are juniors. Florence Anna Berg and Leonard Carl Lindgren, teacher at Marquette, are seniors. Ruby Irene Sutton is a senior at the school of nursing at the college of medicine at Omaha. Verner El dred Johnson, who i3 an instructor at the Luthern College at Wahoo, is taking special work in the col lege of arts and sciences. Dick James Edwards, junior; Lester Ju lius Flodman, junior, and Carl Nygren, senior, are in the college of engineering. Ashland. Nine of the twelve students from Ashland are taking work in Teachers college. They are Mary Agnes Gilmore, Vivian Maude Gil more, Zena R. Gray, who will teach in Cass county. Eve M. John son, will teach in Memphis, Frankie C Deck, who has a school in Lancaster county, Crystal Bfti lah Weaver, Mable Lucille Padgft, who will teach at At.hla.nd, Ethel Carolyn Negley, who will teach at South Bend, and Grace Mae Owens. Blarmhe M. Grerne is taking graduate work and will be iu Lin coln. Helen Hermina Hoffman, another graduate student, will teach at Denver, Colo. Edward Clyde Pancoast is a senior in the college of aits and .sciences. From Ceresoo are Ruby Carrie Caha and Engleen Elizabeth John son, junioro in Teacher college, and James Foster Hunter, a grad uate student Valparaiso. Sewe iiof the nine from Valpar aiso are women and eight of the group are taking work in Teach ers college. They are Elvera Ester Carlson, Ahlyce Thelma Edwards, Mildred Marietta Ilg, Dorothy Helen Taylor, Leo Raymond Tay lor who will teach in Lancaster county, Daisy Grace Mortenaon who will teach at Valparaiso, Pearl Irene Carlson who will be at Atkinson, and Edna Lorraine Neit zel. Bernard William Gerdes ia a graduate student and will teach at Wood River. The three students from Cedar Bluffs are - Alma Pearl Petersen, who will teach at Beaver Crossing, and Alta Mae Petersen, both sen iors in Teachers college, and Alan son D. Brainard, graduate student and a teacher at Carleton. Morse Blu"s. Five are registered from Morse Bluffs. Four are freshmen in Dancing Kwp Vou Yourt LEARN TO DANCE Special Rates in Ballroom Danclna Earner Sisters Studio Coach Schulte Partly Responsible For Percy Beard's Mark in Hurdles By Edwin B. Dooley. la Ikr Nrw Tartt Many track records have been disallowed in recent yeara because oversight on the part of the author ities in charge of Ue meets. Slop ing cinder paths, illegal starting devices, unofficial hurdles, inex perienced timers and similar circ umstances have shattered more than one athlete's hopes after it had been announced that he had shattered a world mark. the University of Nebraska, must have been thinking about such things as he sat in the stands at Lincoln recently watching the na tional A. A. U. track and field events. The 120 high hurdle race was about to take place, when Schulte turned to one of his friends and inquired whether or not the International Amateur Athletic federation has approved officially thene w hurdle invented by Harry Hillman. famous runner of two de cades ago and now head track coach at Dartmouth college. Starts Discussion. That casual qu?tion prompted a discussion which spread to the officials in charge of the contests. Henry Schulte, track coach of the A. A. U. authorities wisely de- cided to use the old style of hurdle. Thus, any doubt, dispute or un certainty would be avoided should a new record result. What happened in the national A. A. U. 120-yard high hurdles is history now. But Percy Beard, who won the event in world record time by clipping two-tenths of a second off Earl Thompson's 14 2-5 mark, has Schulte to thank for his record. The Hillman hurdle, splen did device that it is, has already been approved by the Intercolle giate A. A. A. A., but not yet passed the censorship of the Inter national Amateur Athletic federa tion. Even tho the A. A. U. will recommend that hurdle to the in ternational body when the latter organization holds its congress at Reaelizing that somee of the fore-. lo, Angeles next year, it is ex most timber toppers in the country tremely doubtful if Beard's record were entered ia the high hurdles. J shattering performance would go and that there was a possibility : down in the books had not ihe of a new mark being established, ' regulation hurdle been used. Education Boards Stop Seventy 'f Do Procession BUFFALO. N. Y. (UP). The board of education, in delaying the award of permanent contracts to teachers, delayed at least seventy marriages, it appears. In New York state teachers can not marry while on probation. The board, apparently not realizing the gravity of the situation, delayed action on the permanent awards. Then board offices were delayed with complaints from men as well as the teachers. "My fiance wants to get married and so do I. I'm afraid he may slip away if we have to wait all summer." one girl said over the telephone. BERLIN. Students of the Uni versity of Berlin have carried their difference to Under den Linden, National socialists mauled social democratic pamphlet distributers in fornt of the university and treid to conduct a forum in Franz Josef Platz. When a serious fight be tween the factions Threatened, po lice cleared the streets. Twenty students were arrested. Similar trouble developed at the Chariattenburg Institute of Tech nology, where police also were called in and where four arrests were made. PROF. ITTCGERLY RETURNS Editor of Prairie Schooner Prepares Pinal Copy on Summer Number. Dr. Lowry C. Wimberly, member of the department of English, has returned from the University, of South Dakota where be instructed summer session classes. He has prepared final copy for the sum mer issue of the Prairie Schooner of which he is editor and it is How at the printers. . . Early this week Dr. Wimberly and family are leaving for a vaca tion trip in the Minnesota lake regions. ". HARRISBURG, Pa. June grad uations from 835 Pennsylvania secondary schools, he high school classification, totalled 48.000 boys and girls, according to the depart ment of public instruction. The unmber increased "j.OOO over the 1930 total graduations. YOUR DRUG STORE Cool Off at Our Soda Fountain Your Favorite Drink or Lunch We Deliver THE OWL PHARMACY Phone B1068 148 N. 14th A P St. Teachers college. They are Ida Elizabeth Kuminston. Helen Marie Kaplan who will teach at Cedar Eluffs, Libbie Ann Stranik. a teacher at Morse Bluffs, and Arn old Jay Edminston, teacher at Malmo. Francis Anton Bartosh is a senior in the college of engineer ing. From Mead are Lillian Victoria Johnson, iunior in Teachers col lege; Aina Florence Samuelson, junior in the college of arts and sciences and a teacher at Wahoo; Walter R. French, graduate stu dent, and Carl E. Samuelson, jun ior in the college of arts and sci ences. Four are registered from Yutan. They are Clifford Jackson Ireland, senior in Teachers college; Alice Hedwig Michel, senior in the col lege of agriculture; Hedwig Paul ine Michel, junior in Teachers col lege, and Mathilda Elsie Michel, senior in the agricultural college. Cecile Rae Davis is the only stu dent from Ithaca. She is a junior in Teacher s college and will teach at Eustis. Lucile Linebaugh, who will teach at Wann. is a sophomore in Teach ers college. She is a lone represent ative from Wann. Clara Anna Lindquist and Hat ti Marie Res here- are from Swede- burg. Both are freshmen in Teach ers college. Barbara Vrana, a sophomore in Teachers college, is from Malmo. Three women are registered from Weston. They are Helen Vir ginia Bruce, junior who will be in Lincoln; Josephine Ellen Holubar, sophomore and a teacher at Wes ton, and Elanche Sklener, fresh man. All were enrolled in Teachers college. TWO AT RUSHVILLE. Two of the seven students from Sheridan county who have been at tending the summer session are from Rushville. One of these stu dents, Gladys Virginia Wilson, is taking nurses training in the Omaha college of medicine where she is a senior. The other woman from Rushville ia Audrey Norma Reed who is a senior in Teachers college. 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