The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 25, 1935, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1935.
THE DAILY NKBRASKAN
' v THREE"
NEBRASKA TRACK
TROOPS
JOURNEY
10
DRAKE TODAY
20 Schultemen Leave
Annual Meet Haight
Added to Squad.
for
re-
Returned from the Kansas
lay festival at Lawrence, Kas., last
Saturday, Coach Henry F.
Schulte'a Nebraska track scamper
era set sail again this week end
on the second outdoor competition
of the season, the Drake relays at
. Des Moines, la. -
Leaving Thursday afternoon at
3:30 for the Iowa battlefield, the
Husker delegation will comprise a
party of twenty. Standley Haight,
DuBois hurdler who was out with
a leg injury last Saturday, will
make the jaunt and compete in
the shuttle hurdles and sprint re
lay. The Drake carnival, which will
be staged Friday and Saturday,
promises to give the Scarlet cin
derites an opportunity for a better
showing than at the Lawrence
meet. With more time for work
outs and with one taste of compe
' tition behind them, Coach Schulte
is hoping for more places in the
Husker ranks.
Glenn Funk, Central City middle
distance ace, who took second in
the 1500 meter run at Lawrence,
will compete in the two-mile
classic at Des Moines.
The lineup:
100 yard dash Harold Jacob
sen, Trenton, Mo.; 440 and 880
yard sprint relays Jacobson;
Lloyd Cardwell, Seward; Lester
Pankonin, Louisville; Kenneth
Chapman, Wymore; Standley
Haight, DuBois; 120 yard high
hurdles Linus and Leon Carrol,
Cambridge; shuttle hurdle relay
Cardwell, Chapman, Carroll,
'Haight; mile relay Howard Rob
erts, Sioux City, la.; Leonard Rail,
Crete; Chester Beaver, Yankton
S. D.; Pankonin; distance medley
relay Beaver, Howard White, Te
cumseh; Glenn Funk, Central
City; David Rice, Neligh; four
mile relay Beaver, White, Funk
Rice; two-mile run Funk.
High Jump Ray Toman, St
Paul; Le&ter McDonald, Grand Is
land. Broad jump Cardwell, Bob
Warnke, Milford. Javelin Fred
Chambers, Minatare. Pole vault
Sherman Cosgrove, Lincoln. Discus
Sam Francis, Oberlin, Kas.;
Owen Rist, Humboldt. Shot put
Rist, Francis.
RIFLE GROUP ENTERS
DISTRICT DRILL MEET
Annual Second. Regiment
Competition Staged at
Iowa City.
Entering into the annual drill
competition with the companies of
the second regiment of Pershing
Rifles, national honorary basic
military organization, the Ne
braska chapter of the society will
journey to Iowa City, la., where a
meet will be held on Saturday,
May 4.
According to a letter received by
Ealon Standevan, captain of the
local company, from the regimen
tal headquarters, competition will
begin at 9 o'clock Saturday morn
ing. Each company of the regi
ment, which includes Pershing
Rifle groups in nearby schools, is
allowed to enter two squads in the
meet to form a platoon for drill.
Judging by the recent company
drills held at their regular Tues
day 5 o'clock meetings, Standevan
believes that Nebraska's chances
of carrying off the honors are very
promising. Those who will make
the tirp will be named at the next
meeting.
Arrangements for the annual
dinner dance which will take place
Friday evening, May 10, at the
Lincoln hotel are now under way.
Officers of the company are form
ulating the details.
Andrew Turns Up
With Broken Hand;
Hammed Dohrmann
Harris Andrews, Beatrico fresh
man who played a great ball game
at the booting assignment in the
Husker spring football drills, has
a hand in a cast this week.
The Beatrice big league punter
and passer, who Intercepted a pass
and raced 50 yards to a varsity
touchdown in one of the Red-White
Saturday afternoon tussles, broke
a bone In his right hand during
tne last game of the season. An
drews rammed Into lengthy Elmer
Donrmann after rifling a long
touchdown pass to Jack Dodd, ver
satile Gothenburg frosh. It wa3
the only tally of the season for the
frosh. Andrews played the rest of
tne game.
BOARD SELECTS NEXT
YEAR'S SISTER GROUP
Dr. Oldfather Leaves for
St. Louis Classical Meet
Dr. C. H. Oldfather, dean of the
college of arts and sciences at the
university, left Wednesday for St
Louis to attend meetings of the
Midwest Classical association. He
expected to return Saturday.
The Dally Mini. University of
Illinois (Champaign) student pa
per, suggests the reason the Sing
Sing prison football team is trying
to get. a game with the Army team
Is to prove that the pen is mightier
than the sword.
Names of 120 New Members
To Be Revealed After
Notification.
Final selection of Big Sisters
for the coming year was made at
the Big Sister Board meeting held
in Ellen Smith hall Wednesday
noon, April 24. Names of the girls
chosen will be announced after
they have been notified. New
members of the organization will
be installed about the middle of
May, according to President Eliza
beth Moomaw.
Fifty girls were selected from
the present freshmen class, thirty-five
from the sophomore class,
twenty from the junior group and
fifteen from Ag college. Prospec
tive members were suggested by
organized houses on the campus
before spring vacation and the new
group was chosen from those
names submitted.
Ag
College Boarding
Loses 10-15, 9-15
In Finals.
Club
The Panthers marched into the
championship of Barb Volleyball
Wednesday by defeating the Ag
College Boarding Club in two
straight games 15 to 10 and 15 to
9. The Panthers, led by Glenn
Funk and Bob Ebaugh adminis
tered the first defeat encountered
by the Ag College Boarding club
in barb competition this year. They
took the lead from the start and
kept it despite the last minute ral
ly tendencies of the Agsters.
The Intramural department an
nounces that Intramural Fraterni
ty and Barb baseball will begin
next week. Schedules have been
sent to all contestants.
DEFEAT WESLEYAN
22-3 IN EASY MEET
Ag 'Rasslers' Chalk Up Two
Falls, Four Decisions in
Walkaway.
The Husker ag college wrestling
team tutored by Jerry Adam, Unl
versity of Nebraska grappling
master, romped all over Wesleyan's
mat artists Wednesday evening on
the ag square, taking the Plains
men into camp with a 22 to 3 ver
diet.
The meet was the first of a round
robin series between ag college,
Wesleyan, and the Lincoln Y. M.
C. A which will culminate late in
the spring in a triangular tourna'
ment.
The ag wranglers chalked up
two falls and four decisions in
scoring their walkaway, limiting
the Wesleyan grapplers to one de
cision. Maynard defeated Robinson
of ag college in the lone Wesleyan
win, narrowly missing several falls
as the two competed in the feature
match of the evening.
Summaries:
118 pounls: Clare (Ac) (leeljIonM Smith
W).: 128 pounds: Myers (Aki won a fall
over Pelmer (W) In 3:4.1 with it cradle
hold: H." pounds: Whlttman (A decision
ed Drown (W): 1A5 Pounds: Murnhv (A
won a fall over Leading (W) In 4:12 with
a crotch halt Nelson. Schricker (Alt) decl
sloned RunM (W): It).", pounds: Mavnard
ivi necitonea Koninson (Ag): heavy
weight: Van Cleave (Ag) declsloned
Branch (W).
COCHRAN SPEAKS
AT LAST EVENT IN
ENGINEERS' MEET
(Continued from Page 1.)
will be announced and presented
at the banquet: the Clark E.
Mickey Award, presented by Pro
fessor Mickey of the civil engineer
ing department; the A. S. M. E.
junior membership award, paying
initiation dues to the junior soci
ety, by Prof. M. L. DeBaufre of
the applied mechanics department:
the Brashear Biography Award of
the national A. S. M. E. by Prof.
W. F. Weiland of the mechanical
engineering department. The lat
ter award is given to the student
in each school who does the most
for his college during the year.
Blue Print Staff Announced.
Blue Flint, staff members for
next year will also be announced
by Prof. D. H. Harkness of the
civil engineering department.
Alumni students and other en
gineers may make arrangements
to attend the banquet with Mrs.
Timmerman at the Lincoln hotel.
If you are late to a class at the
University of Akron (Ohio) you
are fined five cents, the money to
be used to purchase a bench for
students to sit on during leisure
hours.
LITTLE GODS GALLEY
(Continued from Page 1.)
as the proposed Student Union
building, the Student Book Stoic,
and a Student Activities Fee."
Now a senior in the college of
Business Administration, at the
age of twenty-two, Maynard plans,
after graduation, to go to Schenec
tady, New York, where he will be
affiliated with the General Elec
tric Corporation.
Attending high school in Colo
rado Springs, Colorado, developed
his interest in winter sports, such
as skiing and skating. He was
born in Crete, Nebraska, but now
lives in Lincoln. Along with his
interest in winter sports goes hi
interest in cards, "but," lie said,
"don't put that in, because if peo
ple read that card-playing is one
of my hobbies, they'll expect me to
bo good at it." He also enjoys
movies, but aloofly replied that he
didn't care much for dancing, "But
don't say I can't dance, now," he
warned.
Concluding his list of hobbies, of
which he maintains that he has
none, is hiking. "I like to hike, but
most of the time I'd a little rather
drive."
PROGRAM FOR AG FAIR
Dunn Meets Daly in Squared
Ring; Flasnick Tackles
Wurgler on Mat.
The Athletic Exposition, high
light of the Ag college Farmer's
Fair to be held on tho Ag campus,
Saturday, May 4, will feature two
exhibitions of wrestling and box
ing ability In a series of grappling
and mtttslinging matches between
university and ag athletes.
Although definite pairings have
not yet been concluded, feature
bouts in both the wrestling and
scheduled and promise to make the
exhibit one of the high spots of
the Fair.
In the leather whirling competi
tlon, Claire Daly will oppose Wes
"Dynamite" Dunn in the main
pugilistic event of the evening.
The two will repeat their last
year's feature competition, in
which they battled to a three
round draw. A supporting cast in
cludes Lois Schricker, Harold
Nootz, Lester McDonald, Mark
McAllister, Harold Butler, and
otl.ers to be added later.
Don "Flash" Flasnick, Husker
165 lb. ace, and Bill Wurgler will
tangle in the wrestling feature,
competing In an eight minute exhi
bition bout. Other wrestlers who
will be paired later Include Everett
Brandt, Leonard Focht, DeLoras
Manory, Howard Robinson, Gene
Clare, Mllo Kottas, Les Brown and
Julius Whlttman. In addition, h
burlesque wrestling bout is expect
ed to furnish the comedy of tho
athletic presentation.
Discovering that tho University
of Minnesota (Minneapolis!
couldn't afford to send him to the
national A. A. U. wrestling meets
in Oklahoma, Calfson Johnson,
heavyweight grappler, started ' J
hitch-hike to the tournament.
HMSSRJ
IB"
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MUSIC CONVOCATION
Carl
Steckelberg Student
Presents Violin
Recital.
Continuing the series of senior
recitals, Gertrude Chapman pre
sented a varied violin program as
the twenty-fifth musical convoca
tion of the season in the Temple
theater at 4 o'clock Wednesday aft
ernoon. She is a student with Carl
Frederic Steckelberg.
She opened her program with
Sonata for Piano and Violin, Op.
13," by Grieg, with "Lento Dolor-
ose-Allegro Vivace," "Allegretto
Tranquillo," and "Allegro Animato
-Presto" movements. She offered
as her second selection "Concerto
in E Minor, Op. 64" by Mendels
sohn, with "Andante-Allegreto Non
Troppo" and "Aleero Molto Viv
ace" movements, and also "Au
Bord D'Un Ruisseau" by Boisdef-
fre. She concluded wUh "Ave
Marie." by Schubert-WilhemJ. Wil
gus Eberly was at the piano.
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