The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 04, 1932, Page FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1932
FOUR
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
VOGELER
NAMES
TANK TEAM FOR
Track Star Leaves School
BURN IE!
Twelve Varsity Swimmers
Represent Nebraska in
New Pool.
DEDICATION IS PLANNED
Saturday Contest Is First
. College Competition in
Coliseum.
Twelve men were named by
Coach Rudy Vogeler Wednesday to
represent Nebraska in the opening
meet of the season Saturday at the
coliseum pool against the Wash
Durn college swimmers. The af
fair, which is scheduled to start at
2:30 is in the nature of a forma!
dedication cf the Huskcrs new
swimming tank.
Easterdav. Thomas and Master
son who have been on the sick list
have rejoined the squad and are
included in the list of starters for
Saturday's meet. It is expected
that Waldo, tree style and relay
man. will be able to clear up his
ineligibility in time to compete
Little is known of the exact
strength of the Washburn outfit
this year. The Topeka crew was
in the field last year with a strong
team, and it is understood that
several veterans arc with them
again.
Illness Cuts Squad.
Elliott, Yang and Powell will not
be able to swim Saturday because
of illness. The Scarlet and Cream
tankmen meet the strong Iowa
State splashers Monday at Ames.
The men nominated by Coach
Vogler and the events they will
compete in are:
.',0 vd. free style: Amatn. Masterson.
IHO'yd. free style: Amato. hitworth.
au yd. free style: Sutherland. Waldo.
440 yd. fre3 style: Kasteiday, Waldo
ut YVebrter.
1MI ja. bat-kstrukt: Church. Lackey or
Kau.
2"0 yd. breasUtroke
3w0 yd. medley re
hltworth.
4"fl yd. relay: Waldo, Sutherland, Whit
worth ana Masterson.
Ilving: Sutherland, Minor.
Carle. Thomas.
reliy: Amato. carle,
FROM THE PRESS
BOX
By JOE MILLER
Courtesy ot Journal.
DON GRAY.
Who announced Wednesday t hat he will leave school because of
financial difficulties. Gray is rate d as one of the best college broad
jumpers in the country. His abse nee will not prevent his competing
in the Olympic games in California next summer and he will con
tinue his training at his home in Louisiana.
T QUINTETS SET TO
Varsity, Ag Second Teams
Both Have Games Here
This Weekend.
MEET WESLEYAN, OMAHA
The two Nebraska B teams re
sume second semester activity this
week end when the campus reserve
five tackles the Nebraska Wes
leyan cagesters in a Friday night
tussle while the Ag B team takes
on the undefeated Omaha U. Car
dinals Saturday night.
Both games will be played at the
coliseum, the Friday game start
ing at 8 and the Omaha U. tilt get
ting underway at 6:45. The latter
game is part of a doubleheader
program, the Husker varsity go
ing up against the Kansas State
Wildcats at 8 in a Big Six affair.
Coach Waldorf's quintet holds a
26 to 24 victory over the campus
B outfit, and the latter are out to
even up matters. Omaha U. pos
sesses an extremely fast team this
year, according to observers, and
has swept all opponents before it.
The Gate City team features an
effective scoring combination of
Curtis, Patterson and Wilkinson,
with Max Egbert doing the heavy
work at guard.
following day, only to have Cobe
Tomson, defending champion, win
first place a few minutes later
with a leap of 25 feet 6 1-4 inches.
Because of a stiff wind that was
blowing at the time, Tomson's
mark was not allowed to stand.
J
MEBRASKA track stock sagged
' considerably Wednesday when
it 'was learned that Don Gray, Big
Six broad jump champion, had
quit school and left for his home
in Gilliam, Louisiana. It is under
stood that 01' Man Depression was
responsible for Don's withdrawal,
but it leaves a gap that will be
hard to fill in "Indian" Schulte's
cinder squad.
Gray, considered with Hugh
Rhea the state's outstanding can
didates for the Olympic Games,
set a record of 24 feet 2 3-8 inches
last spring in the preliminaries of
the Big Six outdoor carnival in
Lincoln. Don got out a distance
of 23 feet 1-4 inch in the finals the
KAMPUS EAT SHOP
Vow under new management. Slnp
In and nee us. Wed. and Thurs.,
Feb. 3 and 4, we are offering one
cup of coffee FREE with each 5c
Hamburger or l'lc bowl uf Homo
made Chill.
We Also Serve
Plate Lunches and Home-made Pies
STATE
All Week
mmmi
JUNIOR FEATURES
RUTH 1TTING WORDS and MUSI
RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT
ONO CARTOON PATH E NEWS
CLASSIFIED
I'lAflT ADS
Ten Cents per line.
Minimum of two lines.
Lost and Found
POUND Oreen Walil
Owner may claim b
naylnff for thin a
N'ehraskan office.
fountain pen.
y identifying ana
d at the Dully
POUND Pair of dark rimmed glaonea
recently. Owner may claim by Iden
tifying and payltiK fr this ad at the
Dally Kcbraakan office.
Typing
WANTED To type term papers
at reasonable rates. Leave copy
In Box 49, in the Daily Nebras
kan office.
i I CAFES
'i IHKLIN'H CAKE Popular prtcn. Club
Mkft lit ui, lunch SSc, dinner 40c,
I Bunday dinner 5r.
I For Sale
j I 1
1 FOR SALE One complete tuxedo, In-
1 eluding ahlrt. etc. Practically new.
-1 Call P3743 afternoons.
' I
. i Wanted
'j I 1
I WANTED TO BUY-Bookn. "Princi
ples of Auditing" by Kohla and
1 Tettenglth; TrinHple of Auditing'
-1 by Pliiney. and ' Cftlce Management'
j by Lefflngwrll. Call K.IM9 belween
i ' Tl and 1 o'clock tmluy or from 6 un-
' 1 til 7 o'clock. I
OHN ROBY, former Nelson high
school sprinter, was working out
Wednesday with the Husker track
squad. Much is expected of Roby
in Nebraska cinder activities this
year, and he should bolster the
dash and relay events. A long-
legged lad, Roby nevertheless can
go places fast. His best marks in
prep competition were 10 seconds
flat in the century and 21.9 in the
220.
Ask Forrest "Aimee" McPher-
son how it feels to shoot at the
wrong basket! The rotund Corn
husker tackle did this very thing
Tuesday night in an interfraternity
basketball game, and the specta
tors convulsed with laughter. Mc
Pherson, who was playing a stout
game at guard managed to get
possession of the ball once but
things got mixed up someway and
he shot at his opponents goal.
Fortunately, he missed.
.
Talk about weird basketball
games! The Baptist hoopsters
edged out the Catholic five in a
light game Tuesday night at the
coliseum. The final score was 4
to 1. The referee tossed the ball
at center but once during the first
half and that was at the start
Shortly after the second half got
underway, a technical foul was
called on a Baptist player for fail
ing to report, and the Catholic
quintet chalked up the first point
in the score column. Just before
the game ended, the Baptists got
loose under the basket for a couple
of setups to turn the tide the other
way.
According to the referee, the
game was hard fought and clean
ly played. Alert defenses pre
vented only a few tries at the goal.
Contrast "this with the 90 to 18
hcore run up by Hickman against
Cortland high a few weeks ago.
Willis Lamson, hurdle star on
the Husker track team for three
years has registered for the new
semester. Lamson, of course, will
not be eligible for competition.
The College
World
Students at the University of
Texas are either not interested in
Einstein or doubt their mathemati
cal ability, for a course in the Ger
man scientist's theory of relativity
has had no registrants since the
1025-6 school term.
The Golden Book and the Read
er's Digest are the magazines in
the University of Kansas library
which receive the most student at
tention, according to a survey
made by the librarian there. Mag
azines like the Bookman, Harper's
and the Atlantic Monthly, results
show, receive little or no student
use until time for compilation of
term paper material arrives each
semester.
Despite the favorable trend of
student taste at the Jayhawker
school, it receives a setback when
it is also learned that Theatre,
Asia, and Studio magazines were
recently removed from the shelves
in favor of the American, Good
Housekeeping and the Saturday
Evening Post, in response to pop
ular demand.
A scrappy set of fistic bouts re
cently entertained basketball fans
between the halves of the Kansas
Aggie-Kansas game staged at
Lawrence,
Old scurrying methods of regis
tration have been abandoned at
Northwestern this semester for
liberal arts students. The plan be
ing tried removes the necessity for
r
1
Sodas Sundaes
LUNCHES
Sandwiches Soups
We Have a Booth
for You to Use
RECTOR'S
PHARMACY
B3952 13 A P
C. K. BachtJ.z, Mgr.
Water Polo Results
WEDNESDAY NIGHT.
Phi Kappa Psi 5, Sigma Nu 1.
Sigma Phi Sigma forfeited to
Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Phi Delta Theta forfeited to
Delta Upsilon.
Theta Xi forfeited to Pi
Kappa Phi.
TUESDAY NIGHT.
Alpha Tau Omega 7, Phi
Kappa 6.
Sigma Chi forfeited to Delta
Sigma Lambda.
Theta Chi, Alpha Sigma Phi
failed to show up.
involved efforts to get faculty
autographs, and requires the sig
nature of only one person, the stu
dent's faculty advisor. Professors
re-enroll the students in their
courses for the second semester,
and thus, it is averred, advantages
of unified study are assured.
Crapplers Colled
Two Watch Charms
From Ames Mentor
AMES, Iowa. Feb. 2. Believing
that his wrestling team was resort
ing too much to the same holds,
Coach Hufo Otopalik decided be
fore the recent Iowa State-Cornell
match that his men must employ
new methods to pin their oppon
ents. It cost him one charm when
Frevert won his match with a leg
spread in the 155 pound weight.
Bob Hess claimed another when
he pinned his man with the most
difficult of all, the key lock, in the
175 pound class.
Accordingly, before the meet he
offered a gold watch charm to
every man who would gain a fall
with one of three new holds, the
key lock, leg scissors or the leg
spread.
"The most pampered individuals
in the world" Is the uncomplimen
tary epithet applied to Yale under
graduates by Richard M. Bissell,
jr., one of the students who edits
Yale's radical review, the "Hark
ness Hoot."
m
i.l,::
m
The Talk of the Town:
These Glorious
Spring Styles
From Gold's Kampus Korner
Those telling little touches of lingerie
and Irish lace on black and navy can
ton Dresses give an air of sophistica-
and chic! Bright color Frocks
. . plain tones and prints!
Tiny puff sleeves . . . one
piece Frocks, two-piece or
three-piece ... all sizes 1 1
to 1 7 ... at
tion
16
HOLD'S Kampus Korner Third Floor.
CflJDC
Thompson Asks for
Early Payment of
Rag Subscriptions
Statements went out to all
holders of block subscriptions
to the Daily Nebraskan Mon
day requesting payment for the
second semester. Several fra
ternities and sororities have as
yet made no payment for first
semester subscriptions, accord
ing to Jack Thompson, business
manager of the Nebraskan.
"We appreciate the prompt
response which most of the
stewards and treasurers of the
organized groups make to our
semi-annual statements," said
Thompson. "We are hoping to
receive all payments promptly
this semester and we are par
ticularly anxious to have last
semester subscriptions paid up."
DELIS AND PHI SIGS
PLACE IN BASKETBALL
Win Third Places in Classes
A and B Respectively
In Final Play.
Final playoff games in Class A
and B interfraternity basketball
were played Tuesday night, with
Delta Tau Delta winning from Phi
Sigma Kappa 21 to 15 in Class A,
and Alpha Gamma Rho trouncing
Delta Upsilon by a 21 to 3 count
in Class B. Third and fourth
place supremacy in either league
was settled by the games.
Xi Xsi Phi won the professional
fraternity cage crown when it tri
umphed over Delta Theta Phi, 11
to 6. The Baptist team took a
wierd contest from the Catholic
five 4 to 1 in the church league.
After all, it's a Townsend pho
tograph that you want. Adv.
Meeting of Scabbard and
Blade Called Thursday
Scabbard & Blade, national hon
orary military society, will hold a
meeting at 5 p. m. Thursday,
Feb. 4, according to C. M. Ault,
secretary. Both actives and
pledges are requested to attend
and to bring their sabers if possible.
KANSAS TRACK TEAM
Grldlev. Coffman. Klaner
. Lead Veteran Crew of
Jayhawks.
LAWRENCE, Kas. Prospects
for another winning track team at
th TTnivrsltv of Kansas are par
ticularly bright at this time and
everything points towara me j ay
hawkers repeating this year in se
curing the conference title.
Brutus Hamilton, Kansas track
mentor, won his second outdoor
track championship last year and
he has an imposing array of ma
terial to begin the season this
year. Two men who set Big Six
records last season are Gridley in
the 220 low hurdles and Clyde
Coffman in the pole vault. Klaner,
K. U. dash man won the 100-yard
dash at the Big Six meet last year.
In the dashes this year Coach
Hamilton will have Joe Klaner,
Leroy Sickel, brother of Ralph
Slrkpl who was a snrint man last
year, Jay Plumley, and Bernard
Gridley. The quarter mile will see
but one letter man back this year.
Th lnsa nf npnrco .Tones. Bi Six
champion, will be felt in that de
partment, 'ine nair mue position
will probably bo filled by Bondank,
who ran that race last year.
The distance runs should be bet
ter than they were last year. Cun
ningham, star two miler runner
lnr full will ho nut in the srjrine
and it is thought that he will be
the class of the conference. Stover,
a member of last years team will
also be back.
The hurdles will sec Bernard
riHHiPw who tied the worlds rec
ord in the 220 lows last year. Grid
ley will be the class of the confer
ence again. Maurice K.ue is me
nnlv lorrer hurdler besides Grid-
1pv whn la in school at the pres
ent. It is thought that Raymond
Flick will be back in school next
semester. Flick was a consistent
point winner last year.
RENT - A - CARS
WITH HEATERS
Always Open
OUT
MOTOR
1120 "P"
COMPANY
B6819
Pickle Barrel Used
As Texa9 Exerciser
A pickle barrel with a shaft
through it, the whole suspended by
ropes, is the latest addition to the
physical education equipment of.
the University of Texas. The ex.;
erciscr using the device lies on his
back and spins the barrel with his
feet. The avowed purpose of the
converted pickle container appara
tus is to strengthen and develop
leg and waist muscles, according
to its inventor, the physical educa
tion instructor for men.
Hotel D'Hamburger
Shotgun Service
1141 Q st
1718 O St.
TYPEWRITERS
See u for the Roye.1 portable type
writer, the Ideal machine for the
tudent. All makei of machines
for rent. All makee of used ma
chines on easy payments.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
Call B-2157 1232 O St.
. LOOK
25 Reduction On
Malted Milks
Take Your Long's Trade
Coupons to
BUCK'S COFFEE
SHOP
(Facing Campus)
20c Malted Milks
Now 15c
m
I;'!
You'll Enjoy Shopping at Lincoln's Buiy Store Cor. 11th A O Sta. S. & H. Green Stamps an Added Saving-
Have You Heard About
the New
WEATERS?
They've gone stripes, plaids, fancy,
lacy. .Oh, there are a hundred new
jg tricks in I932's Sweater styles and
ils
weaves!
T
That's why they're so
important right now!
Yes, if you are to be
smart you must have
iots of these Sweaters,
(10LD "S liaKcrricnl..
REGULATION
EN GYM
i
oo
o
f 85
o
95
The regulation Suit necessary for physical educa
tion rmircp .all siVps . . . oonrl nualitv fahnrs!
1
! !
ii
l'i
ii'i
it!' I
III'!
MM j
''tl
'!,!(
HP
111
II'
I'll'
WBrnmammmmmanmamma
" f . r-f.i.--.,.