FOUR NEBRASKA WALLOPS 101 STATE QUINTET BY 43 TO 16 SCORE Eighth Defeat of Season Leaves Ames Team in Last Place. A MKS. Outplaying- the Iowa State cagers in every plia.se of the game the Nebraska Cornhuskers downed the Ames men in surpris ingly easy fashion by a 4" to .16 score on the Cyclone floor Tuesday night. Nebraska got off to a great start and at halftime held a 21 to 4 advantage. The loss, which was the eighth of the Big Six season for the Iowa State team left them in the cellar with only two games won all sea son. However, the Browne five was only winning its third conference game of the season in walloping the Iowans, while it has lost six and has one game to be played, that with Oklahoma Saturday night at Lincoln. Browne Uses Subs. Early in the first half the Ne braska machine strode out ahead of the demoralized Amesmen with some fine floor work and shooting, and when the half was two-thirds gone Coach Browne was able to put a number of subs in the game. Altho the home team came back in the second half a much im proved team, their rally was short lived and the visitors strutted out to lengthen their lead considerably with the bubs seeing much action. Henrion put on some superlative floor work in the last frame in leading the Brownemen while they blasted any Iowa State hopes that might be left. Wegner, lanky Ames center flipped in a number of nif ties following the intermission, but the first half lead of the Scarlet had already made the home team cause hopeless. Henrion Individual Star. Walt Henrion was the individual star of the game with his 11 points and outstanding floor play, and to night played one of his best games of the season. Hub Boswell came out of his slump when he got into the lineup and succeeded in gar nering 10 points. Wegner tallied P counters in the Iowa cause. The box: Nebraska -Maum, f ffi ft f pts ft 0 2 10 2 2 3 fi V,i.'iliiiist, f 0 0 1 0 Liiinify, f 1 1 0 3 ('!(. c 1 0 0 2 Hi'tinon. c ft 1 1 11 Suii.-r. -a , 1 0 0 2 I'.ir.ons. A 3 0 0 6 H"kul. ti 112 3 T'lUl 1m l'twa State Th'itnpson, l J'JIll'S. I . . . . B.-iim.in. f . , Wt'tiu'i . i" . . TVtiiiilt'tiiti, c Iio.i. g .... 19 ft 9 43 fK ft f pts I il 2 2 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 0 (I (I 1 Titiiis (i 4 7 10 Ni-tit ,'i.sli 21 Iowa .S''.i!' Ht li 1 f : S-.-ite 1. Iti'fi-ri'c: North. HikMuihI Park. HEALTH SERVICE CUES THE ATM EM TO MANY PERSONS Has Total for Semester Of H)00 Visits hy Sliulents. Tlio January report of the uni versity studi-i;t halth .service, completing the first semester of the current school year, shows a marked increase in the number of students who availed themselves c f this service. The January total of 1,601 visits by students to the health service offices brought the semester total to lO.GoQ. The number of students cared for by the service for the school year of 1931-32 totaled 13. 775, with an additional 1,464 stu dents administered to during the "U?,2 summer session. During the previous year, 1930-31, the total number of students cared for amounted to 11,467, less than 1,000 over the number treated by the health service for the semester just closed. In January of this year 018 men applied for treatment and 127 wo men visited the health office. Six electrocardiograms were taken sixty-six swimming examinations were given, eleven X-ray pic tures were made, thirty-five typhoid in occulations were given, two small pox vaccinations were given, the infirmary reported sixty-two hos pital days and the dispensary filled 3 81 prescriptions. During the first somter the health servi'.o gave X1" swimming examinations, filled 013 proscrip tions, gave 1.M2 audiometer tests f r hi-aring. the infiimaiy ropoitod :;''.." hospital days foi pati nts and flnrinrs mad'1 201 hou.--j (iid.s. PERSHING RIFLERS INITIATE Military Honorary to Induct Thirty Men at Regular Spring Affair. Thirty men are to be taken into Pershing Rifles, honorary muuary group. Thursday evening at . o'clock when the regular spring in vitation is held. William Gordon, captain of the company, stated at the reguiai mooting- Tuesday night that the in itiation fee of five dollars must be paid before any pledge may be in itiated. Sot-ins: trvouts for the company are to be held some time in the near future, it was also announced L Scabbard and Blade Group Expects 150 Couples at Annual Party. Approximately one hundred and fifty couples are expected to at tend the annual "Officer's Hop." sponsored by Scabbard and Blade, honorary advanced military fra ternity, Charles Husbands, captain of the local company of the organ ization, declared yesterday. Eddie Jungbluth and his orches tra will play for the affair, which has been scheduled for Saturday evening, March 4. at the Corn husker ballroom. Admission to the party is one dollar. Only ad vanced course military students in uniform will be admitted to the af fair, Husbands said. Scabbard and Blade sponsors the "Officer's Hop" annually for students in the advanced course in military science and for local mem bers of the Organized Reserve Corps and National Guard. Tickets are being sold by members of Scabbard and Blade and by the military department. Chaperons and guests for the event will include officers of the military department and their wives, administrative officials of the university, and officers of the reserve corps, national guard, and seventh corps area headquarters. IRVIKGHILfw"lNSiONTEST Aleph Zadick Aleph Sponsors Sectional Conference in Kansas City. Irving Hill, freshman in the 1 college of arts and sciences, won an o r a I o r i cal contest sponsored , by Aleph Zadick y Aleph, interna tional Jewish fraternity. The contest was part of a sectional ' conference of the j organization held in Kansas Citv Feb. 21, 2. 26. ! Hill is a pledge of Sigma Alpha i Mu, and won the freshman debate cup contest last fall. 3 1RVINO Illl I.. Courtesy of I.lni'nlri Journal, HISI. ISICS OF TllKI i;'; pun em:mii:s Monteith, Colfer, Circs Opinion on Problems of Turf Management. AMF.S. Ia. Diseases of turf are among the most important enemies of the ten-foot putt, according to John Monteith, jr., Washington, D. C, of the United State Golf as sociation's green section, who spoke Monday at the greenkeop ers' short course at Iowa State college. Golf clubs are beginning to sup port research work on this and other ploblems of turf manage ment, he said. "Like many other problems, however, which must be solved by tedious painstaking study, progress is slow," said Mr. Monteith. "Often a club in Texas, Maine or California writes in de scribing a new disease and want ing a solution overnight. If the solution isn't forthcoming, the club members, like the public in ff-inV'-'1 condemn the whole pro- pwai." More than s -verity Iowa greon-kcopi-is and club officials had registered at r.oon Tuesday for the Ifirst day of the two-day short 'TT"r I!. is is about onc-tniM ji.??- than ic-gi.stored for th- en- tire conference- lu.t yi .tr, MILITARY HONORARY TO GIVE ANNUA HOP THE DAILY NEPRASKAN CONFERENCE CATCHES BY BURT MARVIN. that's ft surnrise! I sup pose you know that I'm referring to the Nebraska 43 to 16 victory over Iowa State last night at Ames. Last week Iowa State licked Missouri at Ames 32 to 31 Friday night, and then the next night "here at Lincoln the Huskers dropped a game 39 to 31 to the selfsame Missouri five. Keeping these scores in mind one would until rn 11 r luive forecast an Ames win even though he hated like the dickens to do it. Well, anyway, they didn't win, and how they didn't! A tow weeks aero the Cyclones came hen- for a conference game and lost to Nebraska io id, in punk exhibition, but from what we hear the Ames game last night uasn t. full of that poor brand of ball which the Scarlet has been putting on for the home folks of late. I'm glad to see that I'm wrong about that inferiority com nlex idea, and that the team is a scrappy outfit. Nebraska has often got leads in the early stages of the rrnnie. but always momentary iei- downs have spelled defeat in the dying moments of the game. How ever, Tuesday night the fellows got off to a great start and steadily built up as they went along. Judg ing hv the fact that Iowa State made only one point in the first half, the Husker defense must have been plenty tight. V r v But lots call a halt to this jubi lance and continue on to the Okla homa game here this Saturday night. Only two weeks ago at Norman the Sooners got a good scare from the Nebraska five, but finally edged out with a 39 to 33 victory. Of course the narrowness of that win would be enough rea son for the Norman team to be on its toes, and now that Coach Browne's men have won an over whelming victory it will make the southerners that much more wary. It should be a mighty fine exhibi tion of basketball if Nebraska is only able to retain that surprising punch which it produced last night. Friday night Oklahoma meets Kansas in what is the conference championship game at Lawrence. Farly in the season the Sooners, playing on their home floor, boat the Jays 25 to 23, but considering later tilts Kansas is favored to come through with another win and capture the Big Six champion ship for the third time in succes sion. If the Sooners should hap pen to win at Lawrence Friday and then lose at Nebraska Saturday, the Huskers could at least have the honor of keeping a team from cinching a championship. Folks hereabouts thought Nebraska had the bottom place cinched, but those naughty boys at Ames just would n't let it happen. If Kansas should ever happen to land in the last place that would be news. STUDENTS PRESENT RECITAL THURSDAY School of Music Will Sponsor U cchly Program. Students in the University School of Music will present the weekly recital Thursday, March 2, at 4 o'clock in recital hall. School of Music building. Tho program follows: 1. Miss Mary Kby will play "So nota." by Griffon. 2. Thais Mickey, "The Creation Recetative and Aria;" Haydn. 3. Doris Dickinson, "Concerto No. 7, 1st movement;" de Meriot. 4. Esther Kreuscher, "O Rest in the Lord," from Klijah; Mendels sohn. 5. Charlotte Perry, "Partita In c minor;" Each. 6. Betsy Benedict, "Der Ring;" Schumann 7. Harold Spencer. "At the Cry of the First Bird;" Guion. Buy at Your Own Price Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Silver Harris -Sartor jewelry Co. AUCTION 1323 O St. PHI KAPS CAPTURE T Volley Ball Finals Will Be Played Thursday Night. In the interfraternity handball championships which have been in progress for several weeks the Phi Kappa team has finally emerged the title winner, having sot back Phi Gamma Delta men last week end in the championship. The interfraternity volleyball tourney has been finished as far as league play is concerned, nu Thursday night, March 2. the final matches are to be played in the coliseum. At 8 p. m. the semifinals are to bo run off with Alpha Tau Omega, champs of League I meeting Phi Sigma Kappa, titlists in League II, and the winner of League 111. Beta Theta Pi. playing the winner of the final match in league IV between Sigma Phi Sigma and Farm House. The final mix for the champion ship is to be played at 9 p. m., and the game deciding third and fourth places is also to be run off at that time. In each of the volleyball matches the team taking two out of three games is the winner, and the game is won when either team scores a two point lead with fifteen or more points. Edwin Jones. Graduate. Visits Form or Employer Edwin L. Jones, Wymore, who received his degree in mechanical HANDBALL OURNEY It is only NATURAL that you have been waiting for warm weather be fore buying your SPRING Clothes. The Weather you have been wait ing for is here and here to stay. Ob tain your Spring Outfits Now. FROM NOW ON THE Daily Nebraskan will be carrying the advertisements of the New Spring Lines of Merchan dise handled by Lincoln's Up-to-Date Retailers. WATCH WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1. 19.:. engineering: from the university iq 1927, recently called on Prof. w. K. DeBaufre, under whom he waI employed formerly doing work f,r the International Combustion :n. gine Corp., New York city. He jg at present lining up for civil .rv. ice work. I'rofewsors to Attend Educational Merlin Among the faculty membemwho plan to attend the sessions of the National Education association and related meetings, are Dr. H. Koch, Dr. W. H. Morton, Dr. D. a, Worcester, Dr. Charles Fordyco' Dr. S. M. Corey, Dr. J. M. Matzon' and Dr. E. E. Lackey. These meet-' ings will be held in Minno;m,,js Minn.. Fob. 22 to Mar. 1. SILK DRESSES CLEANED And No Shrinking KUIIAI'S you have ha.) P such a sad experience. You have no trouble like that hero. Measurements ;ire checked carefully ou each dress we receive. You'll like such a service. Send p.uly dresses now. VCLEANERS 33367 Wythers-Tucker 211 No. 14 THL ADS!