) FOUR kaufman is finalist In golf tournament Sieman, Haegen, Eisenhart Remain in Running for University Title. With Harry Kaufman, Lincoln, 1031 stato high school golf cham pion and scmlfinalist in the city tournament last year, safely en trenched in the finals of the all university golf tourney, it appears that the former Lincoln high star is out to add another tournament victory to his collection. Kaufman, a freshman, will find his game put to a stiff test when he goes up against either Fred Sieman, Wilbur Haegen or Don Risenhart. Sieman is scheduled to play the winner of the Hacgen Elsenhart match, with the victor to meet Kaufman for the cham pionship. " The young Lincoln player has been forced to travel no easy path in his way to the final round. He defeated Linus Southwick 2 up in a first round match, bested Wilbur Olson 6 and In the second and then conquered Ed Lyman 3 and 2 to enter the finals. Lyman had previously disposed of Joe Alter in a terrific battle, the match end ing 1 up on the 22 green. Charles Justice Named Coach at Cambridge Hi Charles "Chick" Justice, varsity guard on Husker grid teams for the past three seasons, will coach '"-jAL't ' Cambridge high next year. L .Justice played I 1 for the West in ' if er cr r the East-West . . atmttg a m e i oqu " Francisco last .December. Dur- ,ing nis iooiohh g career here, the I Grand Island boy fwas considered one of the most dependable play ers wearing the Scarlet. SIGMA NU, MA CHI WIN Golf Teams in Semifinals of Interfraternity Links Tournament. Sigma Chi and Sigma Nu ad vanced into the fourth round ot the interfraternity golf tourna ment Monday, the Sigma Chi quar tet scoring a win over Delta Up silon in the third round while Sig ma Nu was putting the kayo on Thi Kappa Psi in another third round encounter. The two leaders must wait for teams In the middle brackets to play off matches before competi tion can be resumed. Beta Theta Pi defeated Alpha Tau Omega in the second round and is now matched with Delta Tau Delta. The winner of the Delt-Beta tilt will meet Sigma Chi in one of the remi-finals. In the lower bracket, Sigma Alpha Epsilon plays the victor of the Kappa Sigma-Pi Kap pa Phi tussle, with Sigma Nu Mated to take on the eventual winner of these two matches. TO GIVE TEMPLE RECITAL Misses Yates and Stover to Appear on Program at 4 Wednesday. Laureola Stover, mezzo-soprano, 1 - . . 1 V- HnnvnwtA ..'ill be presented Wednesday afternoon in rf.cita-. at tne lempie meaier. The recital is at 4 o'clock. Miss .Stover ard Miss Yates are study ing with Maude Fender Gutzmer. Th r mo-ram: Bach tiwlard. Chanacr, de Florlan: Chamtnarle. fiitournelle; Woote, When Cella Singa; Miha Stover. Uavdn. in ReeJutiRfer; KuDineteir. fn .. . . rA t3..K,nBt,n. rile R. alien Kruhllngau?en; M1M latet. liajbach. Mountain!: Spro, It It the Fli.net Hmir; Dowr.inr. June; Heroen, 1 l.iit the Trill: Mire stover. lirtilei, Pv a Lonely Forent Pailiv: naabach. Overtonei La urge, Hiii. Up'h,' The Tear'a at the Sprmic P.'iem. tt.j'artmi: Nevin, The NiKliteiit;a, 6on, Mi" Xatee and Mm duvet. FINAL CONTESTS IN HIGH DEBATLS WILL GO ON AIR Leaders among the nation's high school debaters will be heard over the Columbia network at 2 o'clock Wednesday when the national high school debating contest finals will be broadcast from the auditorium of East Sioux City, Iowa, high schooL The question to be debated is: "Resolved, that the several states should enact legislation providing for compulsory unemployment in surance," the question used by more than 20,000 high echool de bating teams in thirty-three states. CLASSIFIED ADS Ten Cents Per Line Minimum of Two Lines HELP WANTED ALL. crew manafera. auperrtaora. team captain, and student subscription nfrspaoplt who wi"h to tII thetn clres of th opportunity for fr KcholeriMp made pos'ble through fh eourtny of tha Leading Mag-i-cltt Publialxr's attain thii year are: requested to apply lo tht national orcanlzrr. M. Anthony. Jr., Box 241. n .luan, V. K. Lost and Found LC5T-Wn aortrlty ard li.iernity (..r.t. 1ewd aad uo Jeweled, during Ivy da reattrtuea. Flndera ahould return them to the Daily Nebraakan cftlt her tfWf rthtrul cwnere may claim them. F-ndara will be rewarded. LOST 'Karpa Alpna Thta pin. rjama on eln. Brnie-e Huffman. Liberal reward. Call r?6- LOST Brown ey ca rorilalnlnt wvea kya. Retora to Bos 7, Pauy ehraakan. rOUKD Owntlemana ralnroat. Call at Ardrawa Hall . t 00 A. at. Rooms for Rent 5!! tA-A.ro you ptannlnr t?!'" timaw rhool Set-ura a roora i on tt arprorao lit, cIom to Knt til a month. Uhl houaoaaap- BOX itJoe Miller CAMMY AMATO, sprint ace on the Nebraska swimming team the past reason has been chosen honorary captain of an all-Big Six swimming team just announced by Coach C. E. "Jake" Daubert of Iowa State. The first four place winners :n each event of the con ference meet won places on the mytu:cal team. Daubert's selec tion will be published in Spalding's intercollegiate swimming guide. That Amato's appointment is a real honor is better realized when it is consioered that this is the fl'st time in the history of Hunker swimming that a Nebraska man has been given the captainship. In addition, it is a well known fact that Daubert doesn't hold any great love- for the Scarlet swim ming team which every year gives his Cyclones the hardest fight for thi! Big Six championship. w Sammy ended his competitive ilnvn with mime "Treat swimmine during tiie conference meet here in March. He anchored the Husker 400 yard relay quartet that nmushprf the existir? record bv ten seconds. The Omaha Italian was clocked in .r7 9 seconds for his 100 yard leg of the relay, which must ho arfmitfprl is pettine Dlaces fast. He entered the pool later in the ft I afternoon to set up a new iuo yaru dash maik of 1:00.3 and then plactcl third in the fifty, inches be hind Masterson and MacDonald. ' Finally. Amato's selection is no small tribute to Coach Rudy Vogoler. He has had Amato under his wing since the Omaha boy left the tutelage of Coach Cal C. Hub bard of Cmaha Tecb. It signifies the rapid advance the Huskers have made in their swimming studies. Next year, Vogeler hopes to put a team in the field that will outshine anything that has ap peared under Husker colors here tofore. Iowa Slate Nctmen Hang i 6-0 Defeat on Huskers AMES. The Iowa State tennis team swept all six matches with the University of Nebraska Tucs-1 day afternoon. While all the j matches were bitterly fought, only i one went the full three set route. Pedcn, Nebraska, took the first se' i 0.7 from Snvder. Iowa State, but dropped the last two sets, 6-3, 6-3. , Summary: Thompson defeated TUfien. S-7. 6-2. Johnson defeated Mario. 7-5. Waller defeated navin. S t. 6-1. Snvder defeated Peden. -. 6-3. 6 3 Thnmiunn and .Tnhnion defeated Pedoit and Haeiten. 6-4. 6-3. .... . ; Waller and 8nyder defeated Mario and ! Davia, -0. 6-4. FRENCH PIANIST PLAYS TUESDAY NIGHT FOR 300 (Continued from Page 1.) i soul of an artist. i Varied Numbers. The program was composed of French, Spanish and American music. Three numbers ny n,van geline Lehmann, an American, were presented for the first time in concert. The three numbers by Gabriel DuPont are from the suite t "La maison dans les dunes" which DuPont dedicated to Mr. Dumes- nil, and which he had the honor of presenting in Pans for the first umf ne. Following the brilliant evening of music. M. Dumesnil personally met his many friends at a recep tion in his honor at the "hool ot music building. Chancellor and Mis. Burnett and Prof. Howard Kirkpatrick with M. Dumesnil W rere in the receiving line. .. 1:,. .1 Miss May fersning. wno mumi-u ... v HU Dumesnil in aris, whs h guest at the reception, as weio Mrs. Karl Werndorff, Council Bluffs, la., and Mrs. Kail Kinsler and daughter Ruth of Omaha. Mrs. Kinsler is organizer of the Friends of Music club of Omaha. Those attending the reception were welcomed by Mrs. Viola Erickson, ard met M. Dumesnil and the faculty of the school of music and Miss Valorita Calln president of Delta Omit ron. musi cal sorority, as they progressed dwn the receiving line. Informal Evening. Mrs. Howard Kirkpatrick senM (he first hour, and wa.-i followed by Mrs. Will Owen Jones, who served the second. The evening was spent informally. Students of the organ class ol Mrs. Edith B. Koss ushfred at the concert. Misses Marjorie I-yl. Bernif e Schellcnberg. Helen Whit ney and Doris Nordgren served in this capacity. M. Dumesnil appeared in conceit Monday evening at Concordia col lege, Seward. Playing favored masterpieces he was exceptionally well received. "I find the students of the uni versity and the Nebraska people uerv mil sirnl " stated M. Dumesnil I after the concert. "The influence j of the university is great. One readily realizes this influence after visiting cities with and without such institutions. The university forms a musical nucleus. Likes Nebraskans. "Nebraska people are very hos pitable. I like to meet them. 1 leave in a week for my home, but look forvard to my return next year," the piarist concluded. The p -ogram: llrti Homajiaae a aUtweaa "i prrl"de ( Im aaaae ae rack, BrmiHIarde.; I. l-le Juyewee. Ityr-Mtl, Uanae lea daaea fmr mm etnir matin; Mm frere Ir etit r m aoear la plalr; Im eielTlle da mmmmtm. I fcoplai. Hoaala la B ' mtne. Ijrnmmmm. late KrtaiTOHe'l ' ' le.rrri mUr e: Haler UUeal fcray K: A 1ml" ai " Kari. taullw. Madera Tenia al Mla- u,i. twKUa "aria" I erlUa "aaa fw-ti nntv-itv has invited faculty members to participate In the marble piaying couw " wui te neia 'n ue new n"' OLYMPICS WILL HAVE ALL MODERN SETTING Science Steps In to Make ' Conditions Ideal for World's Alhleles. BY LEONARD HORWIN. I', C, I.. A. i orrmpondcnl. Coroebus, first recorded victor in the ancient Olympic 210-yard clas sic, planted his bare feet in parallel grooves carved in rude slabs ol stone each of the 20 lanes sepa rated only by posts four feet apnrt at the starting line. Amid his closely packed competitors, he leaped from a standing start down the dusty path to fame. Later, runners were burdened with armor, helmet and shield the Hiicicnt idea of a running sweat-bath. It was a rude, but thrilling, athletic carnival in that day. In 1932, the athletes from fifty nations who will cavort before 105.000 spectators in the Olympic stadium next July 30 to August 14, wiil find the set-up for the track and field events a miracle of ad vanced methods and precision. The modern official and athlete has grown particular. Wykol'f, Percy Williams. Albert Jona'th. "Blazing Ben" Eastman, Gene Venzkc, "Phantom Finn" Nurmi, Harry Larva, Lieutenant G. Rampling and the scores of others who will gather to split seconds into fractions during the ten events of the, eight-day track and field period, will leap to the starter's gun in lanes half again as wide as the ordinary lane. No dust will blind their eyes no ob solete cinder track retard their speed, nor clay track stick clam- Gold's THE DAILY NERKASKAN i l.rlnfr lathr For months. Ullijr w tiji-u ---- i experts have experimented witn clays, to find resiliency without stickiness. Hard by flower-strewn Westlake park in the exclusive residential center of the city, facing seaward along the palm-lined vista of the "Fifth avenue of the west," the ex perts found their ideal clay. Just a few miles from that spot are the La Brea pits, whore a more stub born clay, covered with asphalt, still holds the prehistoric fossil re mains ot the athletic dinosaur and sabre-toothed tiger who became forever stuck there in an unofficial track event. Nor will entrants in the field events lo: c any distance through Improper measurement. Measure ments will be marked off both in feel ami meter3 on the tapes, on the ground, and on the wooden sup ports for the high-jump and pole vault burs. In the high-jump, the humpii gazelle of 1932 will lind an npn.i. around the jumping side of the pit three times the ordinary SiNo inefficient raking of the sand-pit will mar the broad-jump events. A metal straight-edge, moving at a specified height on curbs at the sides of the pit, will automatically level its surface. International Score Board. Nor will the audience on the concrete bleachers, rising 106 feet into the open sky, remain In the usual tortuous doubt about the re sults of events for long long min utes nt a timer A split second arter results have been decided the name, nationality and record in both foot and meter measurement of the winner will appear on the mon.ster score-board. At the same time, the authentic flag of the vic tor's nation will rise on the center pole above the score-board, flanked bv smaller poles on both sides with the flags of second and third place winners. A moment later, Harold Robert's official 100-piece Is Working Miracles AIS24My32 Candy Striped Linen. .very casual and trim, is something of a miracle! Just one of the many smart modes . . . washable! 5.75 Doesn't Begin to give you an idea of the quality and flair in the eyelets and batistes and piques in white, blue, pink, green! Smart Frocks that areperfect companions . . . they go to parties, they go to the classes, they go on picnics, they go to the tennis courts and they all come home triumphant! Horseshoe Standings In Intramural Race Standings In the Interfratern Ity horseshoe tournament with only a few matches to play are as follows: League I. w I Alpha Gamma Rho 5 0 Theta XI 3 1 Beta Theta Pi 2 2 Farm House 1 2 Phi Delta Theta 0 3 Phi Gamma Delta 0 3 League II. . Delta Sigma Lambda ... 5 0 Kappa Sigma 2 1 Phi Kappa Psi 0 1 Sigma Phi Epsilon 0 1 Alpha Theta Chi 0 2 Lambda Chi Alpha 0 2 League Ill Phi Kappa 5 0 Delta Tau Delta 3 1 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2 1 Pi Kappa Phi 1 2 Phi Sigma Kappa 0 3 Pi Kappa Alpha 0 3 League IV, Delta Upsilon 4 0 Sigma Phi Sigma 2 2 Delta Sigma Phi 2 1 McLean Hall 1 3 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 0 3 band will burst into the victor's national anthem. The same methods will announce in the Olympic stadium the results of events going on at the same time in the other eight stadiums brought by direct wire. Assuring visibility for all. the field event facilities will be placed on an angle out toward the middle of the field. , Out With the Sweatered Crowd. A boon granted the audience in the tenth Olympiad will be the ruling off of the usual white sweatcred crowd who "angle" on ith to the field and Into the range of vision of the exasperated spectator. Only starters and Judges, with one or two appointed cameramen, will bo allowed on the field. That will be borrowing a prece dent from the Elean Judges of old, who carried rods to insure that no maliciously or curiously-inclined "anglers" intruded on the ancient stade (field). To top off the amazing thor oughness of the preparations, na tional customs will be satisfied in the matter of bathing. Fifty Ways of Bathing. Runar Ohls, Finnish Olympic attache now in Los Angeles, tells us that a special bath house is being prepared for Nurmi and his compatriots, where the traditional hot rocks are doused with cold water the steam rising to the re clining athletes on the elevated shelves above. Finally, the playful Finns leap from their shelves and belabor ench other with birch wands to generate "pep." The Japanese not to be out donewill have their traditional tub in the Olympic village a tub large enough for fifteen men to stand around, splashing chill water on each other. Any athletes who get crowded out of either bath-house, along with their less fastidious brethren, will find gleaming miles of beaches below the flower-grown Palisades Del Rey, reached by bus and car line fifteen minutes from Olympic village on the historic "Lucky" Baldwin Hills above. SUSPENSION OP COUNTRY'S R0TC CAMPS ORDERED (Continued from page 1.) quarters in conflict with the above are herebv rescinded." According to Colonel Oury, the only orders received so far relat ing to the R. n. T. C. camps are those setting fjrth the dates for In Gold's Cotton Shop WEDNESDAY, MAY 18. 1W2 the camps and regarding officers I ----- o.iuy wno are to at. tend the camps. The camp fo ' braska students in the advanced course was set for June 7 at Fort Crook. 1011 It is not known what action con gress will take on the appronria. tions bill, which will prbvide the necessary funds for the various tn. campments. It is likely however that the citizens military trainin-' camps will be abolished this sum, mer, members of thn military de partment believe. " Effects Graduation. H ' .',T' C can'Ps flre nt on ducted this summer, requirements for graduation of students now taking the udvanced course in mili tary science will be affected. Those students are required to attend on.i six week encampment in an R o T. C. camp before they ran re ccive their degree from the uni versity. "Rotter Clothes AVr, natter Cl(anin((' For Prompt and Efficient Cleaning Call Butler Cleaners M-1679 She;sClad in Nebraska Tans! Chic College Coeds Choose Delta Dune A light suiiiiiiir tan w li i c li is smart for cain jius wear! Pi Phi Parchment Will lie a favor ite with inn ny a -oc(l . . . ideal with white! Nu Nude Cmitcd to flat ter, fitting P' j'pct ly in tlie sum mer picture! AND THEY'RE Exclusive with Phoenix Hosiery of course! Sheer Chiffons or Semi Service at 85 to 1.35 i : .,. -ov -J Hotel LVHunburger BAOtfVa Senriea 1141 Q St. 1711 O SL (DOJDtC1!? Term Papers Typed tr ptrn. Pata ra""T,'