FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1933. TITE DAILY NFRRASKAN THREE FINALS DRAWING NEAR FOR BARB GREEK NETTERS Panthers Only Finalists as Result of 24-8 Victory Over Dex No. 2. ' The reign of intramural basket ball ifl rapidly drawing towards its close and Thursday night saw the claying of several games in pre puratlon for the finals in both barb ana iraiernuy leagues. The feature game of the evening paw the small but fast Chi Phi team spring a surprise on the larger Sigma Chi five and emerge victorious by the score of 13 to 6. The game started out with a bas ket by Galloway from the middle of the floor to send the Sig Chis to the fore. A basket by. Fergus knotted the count. From that point on the Chi Phis met the challenge of the Sig Chi team and gained possession of the ball every time that the Sig Chis took the pellet down in their territory. The Sig Chis went in the van on Scholzs free toss but the Chi Phi five went in front just as the whistle blew on Fergrus fielder. In the second half the winners definitely proved their superiority. While holding the .Sig Chi team to three charity tosses by Yelkin, they stormed the basket from all sides with the re sult that Wilson and Schwenk scored eight points between them and put the game on ice. The speed o fthe victors coupled with the poor basket shooting of the losers made the Chi Phi team the champions of Leaerue IV. The Panthers barb champions of League number IV trounced the Dex No. 2 the vitcors of league number II, 24 to 8. As vast as the score seems it does not represent the sloppy playing of the highly favored Panthers. For sloppy the playing was. Barnes their star missed more than half of his set ups, altho he did make quite a few points and his teammates did much worse. There was no close compe tition however and the Panthers won easily. The game started out with Feldman Dexter, center, mak ing the first two points. The league IV champs retaliated with a dou ble counter by Barnes. From then on the Panthers were not serious ly threatened as Barnes put enough shots thru the hoop to give them a comfortable lead. The score at the half was 16 to 4. The third game of the evening was between the Bristol and Y. M. C A. barb teams for the right to meet the C. A. X. team for the Barb League III banner. The Bis tols won a game that was packed full of thrills by a 10 to 9 count The game started out with the "Y" team scoring 6 points before the Bristols counted. The half end ni with the "Y" in the lead 9 to 2. The second half waa a different story. A. Fager started it with a short field goal. Then three field ers were accounted for by T. Fa ger who received several good passes in the vicinity of the basket and sank the tosses. In the last thirty seconds of play Harding fouled a "Y" man who missed the nance to knot the score as the ball rolled around the hoop and out In the remaining few seconds the Y i-oiild do nothing. The Phi Gamma Delta team won te right to claim the League x hampionship before last night but ih-y plaved off a game and trounced the Farm Housers 47 to 2 Lorcher waa high point man jnth 17 tallies. f Lambda Chi Alpha won a post poned game from Tbeta Xi by for- ini. Box scores: hi Phi Speed's His Name. tlAROLD CAPTURED FIRST PLACE IN THE 60 YARD DASH AT THE DUAU MEET WITH IOWA Ca STATE ! Br M THE 6lGS MEET LAST YEAR, HE RAM SECONP IN BOTH THE 100 AND 920 YARD DASHES -HAROLP JAC03SEM Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star. Above is pictured Harold Jacobsen. re-christened "Speed" be cause of a pair of flying feet. He's the 60-yard sprint man on Henry F. Schulte's Husker Indoor track team, and has scooted down the straight-a-way in 6.2 seconds. Last year he ran second in both the 100 and 200 dashes in the Big Six outdoor meet, but this year well, wait till May, says he. Barnta 8 1 El rod ii 1 Brlrirrs 0 0 Glenn 0 0 Miller 1 0 Chamberlain 0 0 Mays 0 0 Total 11 I No. 2- IK ft Smith 0 0 Simmon 0 0 Feldman 2 1 Schroeder 0 1 Wahl 0 0 Olsen 1 0 Total 3 2 10 UNIVERSITYOFINDIANA Tin I.. Sou , Tl . "f.nwrfl . ii'ywair A rrutrofif T'tal V. M. C. A - -.lT ' ' r f.om H ' Hi hurr.fay It i II it a (i i i f i 2 'i li 1 It T'rfal Bn'K ' A Fager K irif T fairer Urdu. fcritUil 4 !' li 1 II II 1 ft V o It It Total i'ntjr ( It U a a it it it t it H 1 1 I (t Institution Uses President's Reconstruction Fund for Building. LOAN REPAID IN 25 YEARS BLOOMINGTON. Ind. Feb. 19. (CNSj The rush of American col lies and universities to avail themselves of President Roosevelt's new federal reconstruction iaciii- ties wan manifested here this weeK with plans to construct a new ad ministration building with $120, 000 PWA assistance. The building, to cost $400,000, was recently favored by the Indi ana state senate. The Public Work.? Administration has agreed to pro vide $120,000 of the cost of the building, the balance to be paid out o fthe university endowment fund over a period of 25 years. cyclone-soonek game near big 6 scoring record AMKS. Ia.. Feb. 21 The recent Iowa State-Oklahoma basketball game at Norman, Okl.. set. as far as U known, several new Big Six records in the matter of the speed of tallying points and the quantity of them. The score of 50 to 44. in favor of the Cyclones. 84 points altogether, is the highest basket ball total since the Nebraska-Iowa State game of 1930. in which the Hunkers downed the Cyclones, 02 to 50. for a total of 102 points. In the Oklahoma game the two teams scored 26 points before 10 minutes had elapsed. Iowa State scored points In the first 90 sec onds of the overtime period, and a total of 14 point was chalked up by both teams In that same period. it CdPDlSACEE for " OCCASDONS Ecdhie IFDoiraD Seven Students Perform in Recital Thursday at Temple. The Department of Music pre sented seven students in the week ly recital Thursday afternoon in the Temple theater. Miss Marian Munn, student with Ernest Harrison, presented "Inter mezzo," by Brahms and "Scherz Ino," by Ganz. Another student with Mr. Harrison, William Gant, presented "Last Movement of Son atine" by Ravel. Mildred Platz, student of Miss Marguerite Klink er, offered "Prelude-Fuge F major Book I" by Bach. "Rhapsody in C major" by Dohnanyi waa present ed by Harry Flory, jr., student with Mr. Harrison. Miss Ruth Hill offered Debussy's "Gardens in the Rain," and Alfred Reider, student of William G. Tem pel, presented "Honor and Arms" from "Samson. 'The program was concluded with "Diversions," Nos. 1. 3 and 4 by Carpenter given by Vance Leininger, who studies with Herbert Schmidt FORDYCE CONTINUES SEIUES OF LECTURES Dr. Fordyce will present the third of a series of lectures on the "Psychology of Developing Youth" at the Westminster Presbyterian church on Thursday evening. The topic will be "The First Stage of Alolescenr." He will speak on "The Second Stage of Adolescence" at a later date. HUSKERS DEPART FOR 101 STATE CAGE ENCOUNTER Brownemen Seek Second Win Over Cyclone Quint in Next to Last Game. HOPE TO LEAVE CELLAR With only two games remain ing on the Nebraska basketball horizon to separate the 1933 cage season from the fate of its predecessors in the vaste bas ket of discard, Coach Harold Browne's maples soldiers depart this evening .to give the best pos sible account of themselves In the first of two final engagements on the Husker slate. Setting sail for Ames tonight at 7:30, the Brownemen are prepared to turn loose their last degree of heat on the Iowa State basketeers in their final drive toward victory. It will not be a march toward a first place finishing in the Big Six conference, however, for by no miracle of fate could two wins push the Scarlet scantyclads Into the top position In the league, or in the first division, for that mat ter. But an opportunity lingers in the ranks of the Cornhusker to el evate themselves to a trifle more desirable ranking when the final gun strings down the curtain on the current Crimson cage sessions. If Coach Browne's performers can put a happy landing on their final road journey of the season and trip up Iowa State's ball hand lers, there still remains an arith metical chance for the Huskers to pull out of the mire of the cellar guarding spot and finish in fifth place. But it promises to be a none too luminous opportunity for the Nebraska hoopsters, for with Iowa State resting in second place, only a game behind the topmost Kansas Jayhawks, the first lap of the drive toward Husker emergence into more successful circles will pro voke plenty of opposition. And if the Scarlet thinclads should take the Cyclones into camp, the road to fifth place will have been paved with a very rough and rockstrewn way, for victory over Kansas State cagesters the following weekend is essential for a higher standing. Nevertheless, the Brownemen, after their first win since the be ginning of the conference season, depart Friday to give the Iowans all they have the following eve ning on the 'Staters borne court Incidentally, the Huskers have not contacted the Iowans since their drop from first place stand ing in the conference, a standing attained at the expense of the Cy clones' defeat by the baskets of the Nebraskans In the first Scarlet conference tilt. Now with Nebraska bringing the close of her basket ball conference slate to a close, and drawing the finis in last place with only one win since her conquest of the Cyclones, the match promises no end of conjecture. Will the 'Staters prove kind- I The funniest, wildect. yet moat dramatic how you've aeen in yean. A real hit I I TUT WfhVHOLE II 15 tiiSd II I WKIHG ftH ft J1 1311 N i 'Vi. Ym 1- I ;T;i Cfrflfiflrm f THUtt WONDER. OF I ! THIW0UD- DIRECT I faVJ' It 'wi wriiyj wouo'5 J : r LV'A( Ifi WKtmm rromor' II IlIfflM aw m. I vl 9 W t mm 111 . I rtumi M tW ' " " ' .. I 1 in n n 1 1 (J 8 DAYS LEFT TO Buy A Cornhuslcer v A . itA mn hit r . A I.IUJVLi 111 I 1 hMtih" .tWTHEWJ'tL WISH i YOU WEW Vk ON THE CHAIN JjSS CAMu litOU I CET TMU3U6H WITH YOU' Vv m ME MILL BSTTK DITIf I t hearted and give the Crimson art ists a fifth place chance at the ex pense of their own top position finishing? Hardly voluntarily, but if the Scarlet turn on the pressure as they did against the Sooners, it bids fair to be a long, long evening for the Iowans. Coach Browne has selected eight men to make the trip Into the fort ress of the Ames-men, Harry Sor ensen, George Wahlquist, Bud Par sons, Harvey Wldman, Henry Whitaker, Leland Hale, Bud Lea cox and Harold Baker comprising the list. The men who commenced hostilities against Oklahoma will probably get the call Saturday night on the initial tipoff, the prob able lineup consisting of Sorensen at center, Wahlquist and Whitaker at forward, and Parsons and Wld man at guard. COLLEGE MAIDS IN Tl Swimming Group Holds Time And Endurance Tests Each Week. Tanksterettes, women's swim ming club, met at 8 o'clock Thurs day Feb. 21 at the pool and dis cussed arrangements for the mid western intercollegiate telegraphic swimming meet. The contests at different schools are scheduled to take place all thru the month of March. The results will then be sent in for comparison to the cen tral district of the national tele- fl Learn to Dance The Hollywood Tango from Gene La Verne Private Lesons Frl. and Sat. at the studio of Lee A. Thornberry B3635 2300 Y St. which sponsors the contest. At the meeting it was announced that there will be an endurance and time practice, supervised by Beth Phillips, every Thursday at the regular meeting time. The group's pictures for the Cornhusk er were taken Thursday night Cyclone Swim Stars Land in Far Climes AMES, la., Feb. 21 There is something about being a member of the swimming team at Iowa State college which seems to fill one'a nostrils with a desire for far away places. At leant that is the recent experience of several team members. Ivan Butler, a former swimming captain, is now located in China as a field manager for the Stand ard Oil company. Charles Lowdcr, who swam as a member of the Cy clone team for the last time in 1932, is working on Cocoa Isle In the Canal Zone. Buy Solid Leather with a Few Dollars -a in these 395 pair SHOES BLACK OH BROWN OXFOKDS in classic, plain elyle. New arrivals for spring wear. Narrow and wide toe styles. Rub ber heels. An extraordi nary value in good-Jit-fiig, smart-looking e.r cellent wearing shoes. Sizes up to 11; widths B, C and D. Men's Shoes First floor. MillekSPaine, It's so EASY! Even Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater Could Win A Ticket in The "Gilded Lily Contest" Here is How YOU Can Win A Ticket to "The Gilded Lily"-Fea turing Claudette Colbert. Use Thursday's Paper THE RULES--- The Idea of the contest Is to gild a lady from the advertisements that ran In Thursday's Daily Nebraskan. The 50 students who send in the best and niort com plete lists of clothing and accessories for "Gilding the Lily" will each be awarded witn a ticket to the Lincoln Theatre. Only articles taken from the ads In Thursday's Nebraska!) will be considered In this contest. With each article you select you must name the ad from which it was taken. For example: silk stockings from Ben Simons; gloves from Golds; and per fume from Miller & Paine, etc. Your cleverness will determine the articles necessary to properly gild the lady. Hata. roata. gloves, stilts and all kinds of wearing apparel and accessories even Includ'ug flowers may b important In your list of articles. Mitt Alice May Liringtlon, who write the Daily Nehrankan feature "Paging the Smart Co-ed' will he judge of the Lett lit. ALL LISTS MUST EE TURNED IN AT THE DAILY NEBEASKAN OFFICE BY FRIDAY AT 5 P. M. Winner, rill b- innnunerd in thr Sunday pop" mnd my tcur their ticket from ths Butlnen Manager of the Daily flebratkan. The DAILY NEBRASKAN