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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1935)
TUESDAY. MARCH 5, 9.r. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TIIREE HUSKERS FAVORITES IN CONFERENCE SWN MEET THIS WEEKEND Big Six Splashers Gather in Coliseum March 8 and 9 For Championships. Coach Jack Minor' Husker pluhing squads, riding: the crest of a victory wave two wing long, writel the high sport of the season In the aquatic sport Friday and Saturday as the coliseum tank play host to the Big Six confer ence swimming championships. With the best mermen of Kan sas State, Kansas university, Iowa State, Oklahoma and Nebraska thrown into the same pool to gether, the waters of the reservoir under the coliseum stage promise to make the "breaking waves dash high," higher than at any other time since the championships a year ago. Nebraska, by virtue of the 48 38 licking she administered Iowa State's protesting but ineffectual mermen two weeks ago. holds the choice of professors of the dope bucket as the chief contender of the Cyclones, Big Six champs last year. However the Huskers were given a heavy setback last week when the injury bugbear, uncom mon to the natatorial sport, hit Coach Minor's Scarlet camp. Harry Kuklin, crack backstroke and div ing artist, broke his toe in the meet with the Kansas Aggies last week and seems definitely out of the competition for the weekend. In addition a portion of the Scarlet squad is just recovering from sick ness in the form of the measles epidemic and will be thus impared by lack of practice. Oklahoma will send a one man team to the fracas, .lack Davis, record holder of the 220 and 440 yard free style classics, pointing toward wins for the Sooners in those departments. Preliminaiies will be hWd Fri day to determine who is to swim Saturday in the finals. Prelims will 'consist of time trials, the five fastest men earning a ticket to the final competition the following evening. PREVENTION OF WAR COUNCIL GROWS DE- SPITE LIMITATIONS. (Continued from Page 1.) staff of the Foreign Policy asso ciation, issued invitations to the organization meeting and was the first acting chairman. The head quarters has been from the first opposite the state and war depart ments' building. Three guiding principles were made the basis of this co-operative movement to promote peace and prevent war. They are today the recognized policy of all peace minded governments: Progressive world organization, worldwide re duction of armaments by interna tional agreement, and worldwide education for peace. These princi ples which have characterized the council, are stated in the slogans: "Avoid duplication. Co-operate!", "Step-by-Stcp" and "Educate, edu cate!" NCPW Staffs Actual Workers. The NCPW has distributed 1. 595.000 pieces of literature of all sorts in the past twelve months, largely on orders from members of other organizations. Its staff mem bers made 2,030 addresses during the year in forty of the forty-eight states, to a half million people, the meetings being arranged largely by members of other organiza tions. The foes of the peace movement have been guilty of much mlarep- ic.-.unmuon or me alms and meth ods of the NCPW. Since that may have been due to misunderstand ing, u will be well to state cate gorically what the NCPW is not. It Is not communist nor anHnlinr nor does it serve the interests of any other political party. It advo cates no specific theorv of social reconstruction. The national council remains to day a clearinir house for its mm. bet groups. At the same time it co-operates with many groups not affiliated. It does not find co operation with the communists nor with the American Legion. During the past year its co operation wnn tne ienfrii or nb tions association, hpnrlcd hv Rav mona B. fosdick as president, has ueen oarueu ar v r nu. Trip nr. fices Of each nrpnnlzatinn are iirpH by the other and the program of me iujw, as readers and work ers for the organization know, em phasizes the importance of can vassing with the LNA petition. AG CAGESTERS DEFEAT BRISTOL CLUB 15 TO 14 Boarding Club team to Meet Panthers in Barb Finals. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Cluilflcdi Are Cub lOo PES LINE Minimum nf 1 LIdm COLLEGE M A N To "-11 women's nhowi. Apply Bua. Mar. Daily Ne brank&n. LOST Black Kvan cigHrette 'in rumpus. Engraved letters H. H. Phone F195D. Reward. The Ag College Boarding club team earned the right to meet the Panthers in the final round of the Barb basketball tournament by de feating the Bristol club 15 to 14. The game was undoubtedly the best barb game played thus far this season. The Ag college team will meet the Panthers at a date to be decided later. The game Monday night started out to be a breezer for the Bristols as they scored 4 points in quick succession while the fast Ag col lege team was held tallyless. Then the Ag team awoke and scored 6 points on baskets by Borman, Newton and Carsten. The Bris tols evened the count as the half ended. The second half started out to be the antithesis of the first half. The Ags ran the score up to 12 to 6 before the Bristols connect ed with a fielder. Then a basket by Borman and a free throw by Newton sent the Ag five 7 points ahead. Then began one of the Bristols' famous belated rallies. T. Fager sank two fielders and Bris tol connected with one. The rally stopped there, however, as the Ag gies got possession of the ball and kept it until the game ended. New ton, Carsten. and Borman were mainstays for the winners while the Faeer brothers and Bristol starred for the losers. Saturday afternoon the Sigma Nu fraternity team beat the Chi Phis 13 to 10 in a quarterfinal game. The Sig Nus won by virtue of a last minute rally and the stel larwork of Zoesch and O. Thomas. The Chi Phis led 9 to 8 at the half. keim, Former Instructor, Visits Engineer College Paul F. Keim of North Platte visited the college of engineering at the university recently. Mr. Keim is a graduate of the depart ment of civil engineering, and a former member of the civil engi neering teaching staff. More than one-third of those en rolled at Case School of Applied Science (Cleveland I are trying out for some varsity athletic team. Dr. C. W. Spears, Wisconsin's grid coach, wants his centers to be musicians, for then he will have rhythm, he says. DANCE Every Friday and Saturday Night Marigold Club 1001 M St. Tuxedo Suits for Rent ABLE GLEAN ERS 223 N. 14th St. B2772 SCARLET GRAPPLERS MEET THIS WEEKEND Nebraska Bone Benders to Ames, Iowa, for Big Six Contract. With the dual competition of the season at a close after the driving finish made by Coach Jerry Ad am's Scarlet grapplers last Satur day against Minnesota's Gopher bone benders, Interest on the mat under the coliseum maples turns this week toward preparing for the wrestling championship of the Big Six conference of Friday and Sat urday at Ames, Iowa. Coach Adam will cast the same lineup for the league battles as he sent against the Minnesotas. Don "Flash" Flasnlck, crack 165 pound er who received his first setback of the season Saturday, will tackle Kees of Oklahoma, present 165 lb. titleholder, In a drive for wrestling laurels. Although Iowa State seems the most dangerous contenders con fronting Oklahoma, the present champs, it will be a highly deter mined Nebraska grappling team that leaves Saturday for the site of the grappling battle, according to Coach Adam. Jerry Swanson, 118 lb. muscle man, will be competing under the Husker colors for the last time. Lineup 118 lb.: 126 lb. 135 lb. 145 lb.: 155 lb.: Jerry Swanson. Clee Smiley. Adam Green. Neal Hill. Frederick Mallon. 165 lb.: Don Flasnick. 175 lb.: Benno Funken; Heavyweight: Wally DeBrown. GEOLOGY GRADS RETURN. Carl Modesitt of Denver, Colo., a graduate in geology ar. ine uni versity in 1910; and Herbert Auch Moedy of Fullerton, a graduate in that department in 1932, were campus visitors during last week. Wayne university (Detroit, Mich.) has adopted new methods of rating students of the grauate school, whereby they are now given credit, no-credit, or honors for their grades. Faculty Minds At Work BY D. G. K. (Authors' note: Disguised as students, the undercover oper atives of our organization lie in wait for unsuspecting professors in classrooms, and cull these gems from otherwise more or less intel ligent lectures. The members of our organization may be obtained by the day, week or month to find lost children, collarbuttons, or can openers or to mow lawns, air the dog, or do the breakfast dishes. They may be spotted in classrooms by their sleepy appearance and by their furtive scribbllngs in note books at odd times such as during a lecture.) "Now here's something I wouldn't tell my own son." Dr. Rufus A. Lyman. "They set words in heavy type so they are more apparent." R, J. Pool. "You're a bunch of nincom poops." Melvin Van "den Bark. "I'd like to find some nice me dium swear word like near beer, you know." W. K. Pfeiler. "We were discovered in 1492." G. O. Virtue. "I want a roll." U. W. Frant2. "Lincoln has no restaurants it has a few eating houses." K. M. Arndt. "It's the angles that really count in history." C. H. Oldfather. "I always use a Gillette my self." Miss Leva B. Walker. "Sneak around with your ego." L. C. Wimberly. "Boy, that's a lot of wheat!" W. J. Hlmmel. Michigan Stated college (Lan sing) is the oldest agricultural col lege in the world, with the Univer sity of Maryland the second oldest. Altho Michigan State was not opened until 1857, it was created by an act of the legislature passed in 1855. University sports in Germany are still in their infancy, having been introduced only about four teen years ago by ex-soldiers. Up to now they have considered duel ing to be the only sport worthy of them. . FACE CRUCIAL WEEK Oklahoma Cagemcn Meet K.U. in Important Two ' Game Series. NORMAN, March 4 Four Uni versity of Oklahoma athletic teams are facing their most important "Big Six" competition of the school year this week. The Oklahoma indoor track, wrestling and swimming squads go abroad tor conference champion ship meets and tournaments Fri day and Saturday while the bas ketball team closes its 1935 season with two crucial games against Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen's Kansas Jayhawkeis, "Big Six" champions the last four years. Since Kansas's surprise 21-23 defeat to Missouri at Columbia Saturday night, the young Okla homa team, although out of the championship picture itself, finds itself in a position to cli.nch the elimination of the Jayhawkers from the 1935 race by defeating Kansas in either game here Wed nesday or Thursday. The contest will mark 'the final competition for four Sooners, Bud Browning, Stanley Tyler, Don Hays and Francis Cobb. After playing seven strenuous games in fourteen days, the Sooners have had a ten day rest for the power ful Jayhawkers who will fight stubbornly to keep the title from going to Iowa State. Coach Paul Keen's Oklahoma wrestling team will be an odds-on favorite to annex the "Big Six" wrestling championship since they already have decisively defeated Iowa State, Missouri and Kansas State. Following its 31-5 defeat of the Tahlequah Teachers here Fri day night. Coach Keen announced that Sisney would wrestle at 135, Martin 145 and Brown 175 at the conference meet at Ames, la., this week end. Coach John Jacobs' Oklahoma Lying and stealing are the un derlying causes of war, according to Dr. Paul W. Allen, professor of bacteriology at the University of Tennessee (Knoxville). YOUR DRUG STORE Alwayi striving to bttr our en-vlc to II Students. Soda Kountain Service, Candies, and lea Cream. THE OWL PHARMACY 148 No. 14th A P St. Phona B1068 track team, weak in the field events, will be forced to make a killing in the track events to de throne Kansas and win the "Big Six" Indoor track and field meet Friday and Saturday at Columbia, Mo. But with runners and hurdlers likd Cox, Ward, Moody, Chancy, Janz, Barrett, Lochner, Burke and Hewes, Jacobs' Sooners will be se rious contenders. Jack Davis, Oklahoma's "Big Six" champion and record holder in the 220 and 440 yard free style events, will go to Lincoln, Neb., to compete in the "Big Six" swim ming meet. His chief opponent there will be Jim Pixley, crack Nebraska sophomore, who broke Davis's conference 440 yard record by 14.7 seconds in the dual meet last week with Kansas State. soil mim TO Lecturer Shows Pictures Of Erosion Near Albion. "Phases of Soil Erosion Control Work in Nebraska" will be the subject to be discussed by R. L. VonTrebra, regional director of the Soil Erosion service at Albion, in the Soil Seminar room of Ne braska hall, Tuesday evening at 7:15 o'clock. Pictures will be shown ot ero sion conditions existing around Albion and the methods that are used to control it Thi3 talk is one of a series of lectures sponsor by the conservation and survey di vision in the university on prob lems relating to soil conservation The public is invited to attend. WORKOUT WEDNESDAY Fifty-Six Try Out for Berths On Husker Nine at First Drills. With one week of indoor condi tioning to their credit. Coach Knight's baseball squad has ben slated for its first outdoor practice Wednesday afternoon, weather per mitting. , A total of fifty-six men have re ported since last Monday to dis play their diamond talents. Speci.il attention has been given to tram ing the pitchers who always nrc I a great deal of drilling before trey round into shape for the rcguia? season. New men that reported Monday are Floyd Mecham, Delos Johnson, Clarence Anderson, Richard Colt man, Cleve Trimble, and Charles Pilcher. w m anil . v t v Coming! A REAL TREAT FOR LINCOLN' In Peron! CEORCE DEWEY WASHINGTON ORPHEUM FTNrST BRIAR V anurv ran A - I Thia simple appearing yet amazing rHorbftit -tiner lnrenuon wim Cellophane exterior andcoolingmesh acrrea interior keein juicea and dales in Filter and out of mouth. Prevent tongue bite. rawmouth, wet IitL bad odor, frequrnt expectoration. Io breaking in. Ion- proves tte and aroma ot anv tobacco. FRANK MEDICO PIPES Sold at Boydens Pharmacy WHEN DAD COMES THROUGH WITH AN EXTRA TEN (V m uenm. 3 .J"; , - - , .. .:..;; ' " -;-v ( t 1 J --' Ill II "" 'K 4" I V C' ! MM. n I make all good news better! 1 never tolerate the bitterness, the acrid sting of undeveloped top leaves. Why should you? I don't tolerate the harshness of gritty, tough, bottom leaves. Neither should you. I give you exclusively the fragrant, expensive center leaves the mildest, the best-tasting of all. They permit me to sign myself "Your Best Friend." LUCKIES USE ONLY cirffLcAVES . . . CENTER mmm v. - ? - y LEAVES GIVE YOU THE MILDEST SMOKE PUSic BY -rl C3 JllVU nn TAX Included it ..inwr f