THE NEBRASKAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1934 THREE. IT SEEMS TO ME by IRWIN RYAN. Flansburg, an excellent r,w.v diver, and Abe Grossman will be relied Home points "ew in this department FlanHburg ana ' rated high In city tournaments r. i,.,inir relied upon to up ....a Mfh standard. AUfA V Sutherland Both have i and uphold - - a t I- With the loss 01 Who is Ineligible since he Is Minor, quail' no) 3 (0) MARIE DRESSIER JOHN BARRYMORC TV WALLACE BEERY "V JEAN HARLOW it LmH BARRYMORE JrLEE TRACY EDMUND LOWE tVbiliie BURKE Madft Evait Narsfc.lt Kim M.rlty rbilliM JUIm.s REGULAR PRICES STUART fying for a degree In mid-semester, the burden of the responsibility for the replacement of his position will rest upon Harry Kuklln. Kuklin Is a master of the backstroke and handles the fancy diving in no mean manner, and he will be con slderably aided In this department by new men. Masterson, Easterday, Fllesbach, and Church are the only available lettermen. Other new prospects who look promising are: Glyndon Lynde, utility swimmer; Ben Rim erman, sprint man; Robert Gib bons, breast stroke; and Flans burg, fancy diver. Reports from Iowa State say that the outlook is the most prom ising in years in spite of their hav ing won three Big Six champion ships and a tie for the laurels in the last five years. Here is the dope from the Cyclone camp. "Desnlte the fact that Wo Kfafo has won three Big Six swimming kuauipiunamps ana a lie ror tne title in five years. Coach C. E. Daubert describes th nrosnwrs for the 1934 season as "the most promising in many years." Four major letter winners from last vear's team, which tied for th conference title, and six numeral winners from one of the greatest freshman tank teams ever gath ered at Iowa State a tenm that outswam the varsity in several practice duels are leading con tenders for team positions. The lettermen are Russell Gerrv of Ames, Harley Zimmerman of Washington, 111., Karl Feise and Richard Murphy of Des Moines. Both Gerry and Murphy hold sev eral Dig aix. winning cnampion ships, and were members of cham pion relay teams. These lettermen will have to speed up their strokes to keep ahead of the numeral winners Robert and Jar it EVipu nf Pork Ridge, 111., John Smith of Balboa neignia, anai z,one, William Grant of Ancon, Canal Zone, Charles Frilev of A ard Herrick of Gloucester, Mass." PHI PSI HEADS GREEK ATHLETES THIS YEAR Leaders Rank a Little Past 400 Mark in Season's Competition. With all the interfraternity soprts tabulated and the points dis tributed among the various partici pants, Phi Kappa Psi was found to lead the field with a total of 407 1-2 points, and is the first and only team so far this season to reach the 400 mark. Delta Sigma Phi is pushing them closely for honors, and has 385 points to its credit, some twenty points back of the fast-stepping Phi Pis. The leaders are bunched rather closely after these two teams. Pi Kappa Alpha has third place with 385 1-2 points, and Delta Tau Delta is right on their trail with 353 1-2. Alpha Gamma Rho takes fifth with 330, Sigma Alpha Ep silon sixth with 313. and Sigma Nu 305 to complete the list of teams which have reached the 300 mark. The rest of the field bunches it self for the 250's or above and then spreads out down to twenty points. These results include Intera mural basketball, which has just been completed. The list of teams and rank in standing: Phi Kappa Psl 407 Delta SiKma Phi 3M PI Kappa Alpha x,n Delta Tau Delta 3.'.'1 Alpha Gamma Kho 3'iO Sit; ma Alpha Kpsilon 313 SiKma Nu 30.', Beta Theta PI 27 Delta Upmlon 20 BlKma cni 2M Alpha Tau Omen 2M Tau Kappa Kpsilon 2J'J I'm SiKma Kappa 213 Farm limine 174 Delta Sigma Lamlxla 1H0 Chl Phi 127 Hlcma Alpha Mu .120 Theta XI 120 8lKma Phi Kpsilon 112 Kappa SiKma Ill Acacia 110 Lambda Chl Alpha 103 Phi Delta Thela 101 Alpha SiKma Phi DO Beta SiKma Psl 5S Zeta Beta Tau 40 Phi Gamma Delta 20 RIALTO THEATRE II wm inch a becattfol road, tuch wonderful road, bat It m only r, iL QUINTET Cowboy Team Boasts Record Of 44 Straight Wins In Cage Play. Still possessing an average of .500 percent in the Big Six conference race the Nebraska basketball team dropped to fourth place during their dis astrous two game trip which resulted in a loss to Missouri after leading at the half-time 20 to 12 and losing in the dying moments of the game to Kansas SUte after possessing a 23 to 18 point lead with hardly three minutes of bat tle remaining. Wyoming Team is Strong. This week-end the so far rather unlucky Browne basket flippers meet one of the strongest teams in hte nation on the Coliseum ma ples when they play the highly touted University of Wyoming quintet Saturday night at 8 o'clock. Sporting two Ail-American basketball players the Wyom ing outfit, coached by Willard Witte, former Nebraska basket ball and football star, is expected to give the Huskers for more trou ble than they have met this year or any other year when the pres ent team was in action. Witte on Quint. Presenting such nationally known figures on the maples as "Beanie" Witte, Willard's younger brother, and Johnny Kimball, both of whom were former Lincoln high school athletes during the reign of Coach Browne, the Wyoming outfit promises much in the way of ability and sharp-shooting. Just to give one an idea as to the ability of the Wyoming quin tet here is a bit of news from the invaders: "Forty-four consecutive victories at home against eastern division teams of the Rock Mountain con ferences over a span of the last eight campaigns! That's the record nailed to tfte wall by the Wyoming Cowboys last week when they racked up a pair of triumphs over Western State college here in the first double header of the 1934 season. Forty-Four Straight Wins. Forty-four straight successes count 'em! It's a mark which may never be surpassed or even closely ap proached by any other member of the conference as long as it chooses to remain the "Big 12". Certainly no team has amassed such an impressive list of victories in the loop before, and the odds appear overwhelming against that possibility. And the Punchers, who en counter the Nebraska University Cornhuskers at Lincoln on Jan. 20, are not yet thru, at least as far as the naked eye can discern. They will be ready to pick up the thread here on Jan. 23, when they face the revitalized Denver unversity five. Slated as Tough Team. Wyoming is hailed from one end of the Rocky Mountains to the other as one of the toughest clubs in the country to beat in its half acre barnyard, and here is the rea son. Back In dusty 1927, when hte present gymnasium was preparing to celebrate its second birthday. the Cowboys began the season at home on Jan. 15 by dropping a hard battle to Denver by a 28-25 score. The result was set down in the ledger as just another ball game on the wrong side of the sheet, and the Cowboys, tnen a SO' so bail club, eroped their way tin steadily along the Rocky confer ence path. Streak Started in 1927. Feb. 15, 1927, is recorded as an all-important date in Wyoming's athletic history, for it marked the end of the reign of opposing teams On that date the snarling Colorado College Tiger came to town and handed the Punchers a stinging 32-27 defeat, the last for a Wyom ing quintet up to the present time. The Cowboys went on to win four games at home In 1927, and the string began to unravel. The MEALS That Really Surprise for Only 15c W feature larga variety of food and each customer ! given individual service. next year Wyoming captured sev en straight at home, and In 1929 five conference squads fell. In 1930 the Cowboys boosted the total to twenty-two in a row by talcing six. The winter of 1931 brought Wil lard "Dutch" Witte, former Ne braska satellite, into the Wyom ing camp as basketball's head man, and pickings for another di visional teams became leaner as the Cowboys notched five more successes and launched themselves on another winning streak that threatened to eclipse the first. Af ter losing the first game of the Greeley, Colo., Wyoming rang up eleven straight decisions over the field, both at home and away. Bring Total To 33-6. The Wittemen kept both runs intact thruout 1932, winning six games at home to increase their at-home stretch to 33, and adding a half-dozen on foreign courts to record twenty-three successive tri umphs against division clubs on any battle-site. Wyoming annexed seven more against all teams on all fields last year, but a smart Colorado uni versity team caught the Cowboys on a bad evening in Boulder, and snapped the chain at thirty vic tories in a line. Their at-home record continued to prosper, however, and the House of Witte wound up the year with nine wins on its own court to raise the ante to forty-two. The two afore-mentioned victories over Western State here last week started the new season off In record-building style. In the last seven years three coaches have helped to erect the mark. Stuart M. Clark was a Cowboy wheelman in 1927 and 1928, and he topped off his work with a divisional champion team in his second year. George Mc Laren succeeded Clark in 1929 and he preserved the winning streak until the arrival of Witte two years later. Witte, of course, has never seen his squad trimmed on its own floor by an eastern division club. In fact, Wyoming has lost only twice at home since Witte climbed into the driver's seat, dropping one game to Brigham Young in the playoff series for the conference championship in 1932, and another in a two-game series to the Wichi ta Henry's, with whom they split even in that same year." In swimming circles this year Nebraska and Iowa State again lead the Big Six field in prospects for the coming year. Iowa State is reported to have a stronger team than last year when they tied the Husker tanksters for the con ference aquatic title. Easy Starting J Lasolene HOLMS 14th A. W 30th year B3998 T TO INUE Schulte Strives to Prepare Squad for First of Indoor Meets. Coach Heny F. Schulte, track mentor, urges all Varsity track men to continue training, thruout the period of examinations, at least three times per week by re porting to the stadium for regular conditioning workouts In their available time. This work, he be lieves will help keep them at razor edge for the exams as well as pre vent them from breaking down the accomplishments of former training by this period normally given to physical rest and in ac tivity. To complete the schedule for the approaching semester, Coach Schulte is corresponding with var ious colleges to secure meets for Feb. 17, and March 10, and 17. UP on the receipt of agreements to meet at these dates, the schedule will be officially announced. With the Big Uix indoor meet to be held at Columbia Feb. 24, Coach Schulte is getting his boys in good shape and urges all avail able track material to report for practice immediately after the opening of the spring semester. Practice I3 held every afternoon at the stadium track, and work-outs during the exams will be light. In Baylor unversity a freshman tried to check from the library Brownings Book of Letters to Isa Blagden. That copy happened to be worth $30,000. mmmm The only thing on which deacons and touts have ever agreed because it's jam packed with belly-laughs and brow-raisers for every man of every type and taste! TO CLOSE FRIDAY.,. pW!tinn!mi!!!!;r! jiiiiiiiiiiiiii: One lot of 78 ORIGINAL 3.30 TO 10.00 FOOT WK VR ini liulinii pirt kIioi-h. tlreet oxford and pump. Illurk and brown. Man drueeu, kid, patent leather, ralf and suede. A pood ranee of sizes but broken, of course, in sljles. To rlose pr. One lot of 174 ORIGINAL 7.50 TO 10.00 SHOKS inrltidiiiK tlrevl ox- 2 jm Rwrdi, pumps, lrap '4J! pr. slippert and lie. Mun- drui-ra, calf and kid. A fairly good rafifte of Me. High (trade nhoe lo fintl at this small prire. Sond Floor I rliilf'!!!!"!:'!! BIT WlM'XH'ii; 1 11 urn Miller 8 Pam The ROAD to RUIH ORPHEUM GRILL Orpheum Bldg. 223 No. Ifth