The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 10, 1935, Page THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1935.
4)
LET'S
EXPAND.
Playground
Would Aid Our
Athletic Facilities.
by Arnold Levin.
Athletic facilities expansions
have como to a temporary halt In
CornhuBkerland. The varsity has
its stadium, single practice field,
coliseum, and in the opinion of the
many, sufficient to satisfy its
every need. The intramural de
' partment has the Russian Flats,
the baseball team the Ag college
and city municipal diamonds, and
individuals have the basement of
the coliseum in which to vent their
, muscular bends.
Over 30,000 people crammed
Memorial stadium for the Minne
sota mlxup. The year previous
Fitt drew 33,000 screaming par
tisans of the grid. The Iowa game
that season found close to 30,000
onlookers. This year attendance
at every game has exceeded by
some thousands the number of
spectators present when that team
played last in Lincoln.
Accommodations Few.
Obviously, accommodations at
Nebraska, both from the matters
of participating athletes and spec
tators are not of the best. At the
Minnesota game this year the
knot-hole ticket holders were
herded into the coliseum, to watch
the play on a grldgraph.
This situation is not necessary
at Nebraska. We have room for
expansion if we only will. It will
cost money, yes, but within two
' years Indebtedness on the coli
seum will be removed, and the
athletic department can start on
an expansion venture. Help, if
need be,, can be secured from the
legislature. Bonded indebtedness
on new projects is not- to be
shunned as an all feared evil.
Complete Stadium.
One of the first steps would be
the completion of the stadium, the
rounding off of the north end into
the natural horseshoe construction
intended by the builders. Several
thousand spectators could be
seated, relieving the stadium of
its traffic congested condition ana
deleting entirely the temporary
wooden structures unsightly, un
satisfactory and bothersome,
which rise as if springing from
the ground before every important
i game.
Completion of the horseshoe
would beautify the stadium, re
move the decayed, unseemly board
fence, finishing the project in true
stvle.
i There is need at Nebraska for
a playground large enough to ac
commodate the intramural' depart
ment in its sport schedules, pro
vide training ground for freshmen
and varsity football men, and fur
nish a diamond for the baseball
team to practice and play on.
Plenty of Room.
Natural expansion in this line
m would be north of the stadium ana
east of the coliseum. There are
numerous little houses in that
space, belonging to the university,
which might easily be razed.
Many of them are tenantless now,
and the empty hulks cast a dark
reflection sq near to the campus.
This ground could be cleared,
leveled, and would provide ade
quate space for all necessities.
Dressing rooms in the stadium
and coliseum would be easily ac
cessible. Fraternity and barb ath
letic teams could play their games
close to the campus, relieved of
the trek to the Russian Flats tor
athletic competition.
Baseball at Ag.
The baseball team at Nebraska
must now practice at Ag college
and play its games on the Mu
nicipal diamond to have any kind
of representative crowd. Dana X.
Bible this year has arranged an
eleht irame schedule for the Corn-
r husker nine. With bright pros
pects for a good team, games
should be brought near the cam
pus, where everyone may have a
chance to watch.
Practice fields for football play
' ers are too few. A playground
would give freshmen and varsity
plenty of room to scamper, jump,
and puff in all contentment. And
the military department, needful
of adequate grounds for parades
and drill, shouldn't fight such an
achievement.
Nebraska could be aided all
around in every way by the con
struction of a playground and the
completion of our stadium.
ELEMlNUP
. FOR ALL-UNIVERSITY
FISTIC MEET DEC. 18
Petz Receives Tournament
Entries in Intramural
Office.
Eleven entries have been re
ceived by intramural department
officials for the All-University
boxing tournament to be staged
on the main floor of the coliseum,
Dec 18
There will be eight weight divi
sions. In the 115 lb. class George
Hossack Is the sole entry. There
are no entrants in the 125 lb. class.
Bud Wolfe and Harold Finch have
signed up in the 135 'b. class.
Willis Palmer, Ralph Miegel.
Floyd Bond, Don Kvasnlcka will
scrap in the 145 lb. class. Jim
Beltzer is the lone fighter in the
155 lb. class. In the 165 lb. class
there are Bob Heilig, John Mc
Laughlin, and John Wachtes. No
pugilists have entered the 175 lb.
class or the heavyweight classes
ft yet
Entries can now be made with
Harold Pet at the intramural of
fice or with Harold Matthews, as
sistant boxing instructor. All phys
ically capable men In the uni
versity are eligible for competi
tion. Dr. Andron Makes Address.
Dr. Esther S. Anderson of the
department of geography is sched
uled to address the Yankee Hill
Community gathering at the school
house southwest of Lincoln, the
evening of Dec 13.
TEAM SELECTION
PUZZLES BROITO
Cornhusker Cage Coach Has Week Before Season
Opener With Brigham Young to Pick Five Men
For Tuesday's Starting Positions.
SPORTSWR1TER EVALUATES 17 CANDIDATES
Whitaker, Leacox, Wahlquist Seek Forward Berths;
Parsons, Amen, Dohrmann in Guard Money;
Widman Leads Center Competition.
By Dick Kunzman.
Concli llnrokl Browne, who has called the cards for Corn
husker basketball teams since 11)30, has turned this season from
directing basket shooters to character nctin. Right now he 6
rendcriiiff a Jekyll-Ilyde interpretation, for he's in the process
of Krinnin elatedly on one side of his face and frowning in
puzzled bewilderment on we oiner.
tvia rnninn for Coach Browne's
dual personality stunt appears in
the fact that he doesn't quite
know what to make of his 1935
30 cage squad. As ho surveys a
troupe of scrappy reliable veterans
supplemented with sky stretching
sophomores, the terrors of Big Six
competition vanish into rosy
visions of a place in the upper half
of the money. But on the other
hand, such a bountiful supply of
talent gives rise to the problem of
selecting the strongest combina
tion out of it. Just what's the
formula for picking the best five
men out of a squad that wouldn't
finish far from a blanket tie in
any test of individual ability?
He's Gotta Go.
Ott Romney's Brigham Young
crew from Provo, Utah, will be
marketing their wares In the
Husker coliseum next Tuesday
evening, and in those seven days
Browne must select from his 17
man squad a quintet possessing
most of what it takes to give the
westerners a lesson or two in
salesmanship.
Losing only two lettermen Rol
lin "Bud" Parscns by graduation,
and Harry Sorensen by scholastic
difficulties Coach Browne finds
returning to the wars five major
lettermen, a minor letterman in
Robert Leacox, and a "B" team
winner in Merrill Morris.
Wahlquist Alternates.
Of the vets, Henry Whitaker, St.
Joseph, Mo., and Bob Leacox, Shen
andoah, la., stand out as the for
ward highlights, altho they're the
littlest men on the squad. Whit
aker can't possibly miss when he's
"going hot" and Leacox is the best
DIMINUTIVE
J SZJCJF. MISSOURI
. J .tHM'Afr
Courtesy Lincoln Sunday Journal and Star.
Henry Whitaker, only 5 feet 8 inches tall, is the speedy little
cog in the Cornhusker basketball scoring machine. As a sopho
more and Junior he led the team's scoring. Now he's ready for
his last year of competition, and his unerring eye is one of W. H.
Browne's chief dependencies.
SOONERS LAGK GUARDS
"ON 1936 BASKET TEAM
Coach Whipping Squad Into
Shape for Clashes With
Southern Cal.
NORMAN, D ec. 9. Lacking
rugged versatile guards, an Okla
homa basketball squad is being
feverishly whipped into condition
for the inter3ectional clashes here
December 13 and 14 with Southern
California, champions of the Pa
cifio Coast conference.
Graduation of Omar "Bud"
Browning, all-"Btg Six." all-Western
and a 11-American A. A. U.
guard and also of Stanley Tyler.
If you rent a Car
jrey will find .
GOOD CARS
CLEAN CAPS
WARM CARS
and th lowett rate at th
Motor Out Company
11 P Always Opan BfW
ball handler on the floor. George
Wahlquist, Hastings, who alter
nates between basketball in win
ter and tennis in spring, can play
either forward or guard, and his
qualities as a leader make him a
hard man to keep off the team.
Also in the picture are Leland
Hale, Lincoln, and Howard Baker,
Grand Island, veterans, and George
and Cliff Scott, Lincoln, sophs.
Strong on Offense.
Harvey Widman, Mead, leads
the center competition. An excel
lent tipoff man, he Is strong
enough offensively to surpass two
Empire State sophomores in Law
rence Nelson, Curtis, and Floyd
Ebaugh, Superior. Nelson towers
nhnvn R feet fi. while Ebaugh IS
an inch shorter but more expe
rienced and an excellent snoi.
The leading guard candidates
find Bob Parsons, Paul Amen, and
Elmer Dohrmann, all sophomores,
battling among themselves. Bob
Parsons is the best shot on the
team, with a long, high arch that
seldom misses, and appears Cer
tain nt a at-nrtin? berth, with
Wahlquist probably at the other
position. Dohrmann is capame or
playing either forward, guard or
center, showing possibilities at all
three positions, but looks best at
bringing the ball out of the de
fensive scoring zone. Amen Is a
hnrd worker and active, with a
toff handed ae-illtv on nasses that
makes him a strong contender for
starting honors.
Nnt far behind In the euard race
are Earl Daft, Waverly, and Dick
Kosman, Omaha. Also out for for
ward honors are John Osborne,
Lincoln, and Lloyd Wampler, Lin
coln. DYNAMITE
his running mate, split the Sooner
defense wide open. In addition
Browning was the team's leading
scorer last season and main cog
around which the Oklahoma fast
breaking attack was built.
Forwards hard at work this
year include Tee "Moose" Connel
ley, 195-pounder who last year was
chosen on the all-"Big Six" second
team; Edgar "Fudge" Warren;
Jerome "Shocky" Needy; Elmo
Southward; Denton Livingston;
Jack Baer and Harley Shirk, the
last four sophomores and squad
men.
Center candidates Include Don
Gunning and Herman "Red" Nel
son of last year's squad and Ar-
. The University of Nebraska .
University Players
present
"THE LAKE"
A Rlehty-Mevtns, Human Drama
By Dorothy Maailngham
December 9-14
with Saturday Matlnea
Eva. at 7:30 Mat. at 2:M
Thoughtful, Tens, Entertaining
DOXT MISS IT
Tlcktta at Magcaa or Tampla Lobby
BIBLE ANNOUNCES
NEBRASKA SPRING
SPORT CALENDAR
Schedules Incomplete, Only
League Competition
Tabulated.
The Cornhusker spring sports
card, featuring indoor and out
door track, swimming, wrestling,
baseball, golf, and tennis, was an
nounced Monday by Athletic Di
rector Dana X. Bible, following
his return from the Big Six
coaches' meeting- at Kansas City.
The program gives only confer
ence competition, with nonconfer
ence and intersectlonal tilts to ba
announced later.
Indoor track opens Feb. 22 with
three home meets before the Big
Six conference ; championships at
Columbia, March 13-14. Outdoor
cinder competition begins April 18
with the Kansas Relays at Law
rence, followed by the Drake re
lays at Des Moines, and meets
with Oklahoma and Kansas State
before the championships in Me
morial stadium, May 22-23.
Minnesota is the only noncon
ference team on Coach Jack Mi
nor's splash menu thus far, the
Gophers coming to Lincoln Feb. 7.
Four meets with Kansas State,
Kansas, and Iowa State are crowd
ed into the next three weeks, with
the conference title mix at Kansas
City March 13-14.
A tentative meet with Missouri
Is on the books for Jerry Adams
wrestlers, Jan. 81, followed by
bouts with Kansas, Kansas State,
and Iowa State, and the cham
pionship climax at Norman the
same week end as the swimming
battle at Kansas City.
Oklahoma. Missouri, Iowa State,
Kansas State, and Kansas are
slated for seventeen games with
the Huskers, home and home ar
rangements being made with Kan
sas, Kansas State, and Iowa
State.
Golfers and racquet-wielders will
do their battling on the same days
and places, winding up their sea
son with the championships at
Lincoln the week of the outdoor
track festival.
The schedules:
.... -1 thaa fthtrtnlen have
Aiino noi coiiiyio-c, lijov -
been drafted for the spring sports at Ne
braska U:
TRACK.
INDOOR Kansas at Lincoln, Feb. 22;
Kansa T State at Lincoln, Feb. 29; Iowa
State at Lincoln (tentative). March 7: Big
Six conference at Columbia, March 13-14.
OUTDOOR Kansas relay at Lawrence.
April 18; Drake relays at De Moines,
April 24-25; Kansas at Lincoln. May 2;
Oklahoma at Norraan, May : Kansas
State at Lincoln. May 15; Big Six cham
pionships at Lincoln. May 22-23.
SWIMMING.
Feb. T Minnesota at Lincoln; 14. Kan
sas State at Manhattan; 15. Kansas at
Lawrence; 28. Kansas at Lincoln.
March 6 Iowu State at Ames; 13-14,
Big Six conference at Kansas. City spon
sored by Kansas U.
WBKSTMNO.
Jan. 31 Missouri at Lincoln tenta-
tlVFeb. 8 Kansas at Lincoln; 21, Kansas
State at Manhattan; 28, Iowa State at
Ames; March 13-14, Big Six conference at
Norman.
BASEBALL.
Anrll 9-10-11 Oklahoma at Norman;
13-14, Missouri at Columbia; 27-28, lowa
State at Lincoln.
May 1-2 Kansas State at Lincoln; -7,
Kansas at Lawrence; 8-9, Kansas State
at Manhattan; 14-15, Iowa State at Ames;
25-28, Kansas T. at Lincoln.
GOLF.
April 24 Iowa State at Ames.
May 1 Kansas State at Lincoln; 8,
Kansas at Lawrence; 9, Kansas State at
Manhattan; 15, Kansas at Lincoln; 21,
Iowa State at Lincoln; 23, Big Six con
ference at Lincoln.
TENNIS.
April 24 Iowa State at Ames.
May 1 Kansas State at Lincoln; 8,
Kansas State at Manhattan; 9, Kansas
State at Manhattan- 15, Kansas at Lin
coln; 21, Iowa State at Lincoln; 22-23,
Big Six conference at Lincoln.
thur Ellsworth, 180-pound 6-foot
3-inch sophomore from El Reno.
Players whom Hugh McDermott,
veteran coach starting his 15th
season, is trying to develop into
guards are John Paul Remy, Ru
dolph Tone, Jay Thomas and Ed
Ottey. squad men, and Bill Martin
and Pete Smith, sophomores.
The Sooners will play a 15-game
schedule this season:
Dec. 13 Southern California at Norman
Dec. 14 Southern California at Norman
Jan. 2 Wichita U. at Wichita. 1
Jan. 4 Missouri at Columbia.
Jan. 9 Oklahoma Angles at Stillwater
Jan. 13 lowa State at Norman.
Jan. 13 Nebraska at Norman.
Jan. 21 Oklahoma Aggies at Norman.
Feb. 3 Kansas State at Manhattan.
Feb. 8 Kansas at Norman.
Feb. 15 Missouri at Norman.
Feb. 22 Iowa State at Ames.
Feb. 24 Nebraska at Lincoln.
Feb. 29 Kansas State at Norman.
Mar. 3 Kansas at Lawrence.
Non-conference games.
Official Approval Given
Bid on Ag Campus Paving
Official approval of the low bid
ror paving on me university agri
cultural college -campus was given
rnursaay oy jonn L,aienser, jr., i
state puuiiu wurss MuuiuusLrakiuii
engineer at Omaha. The bid, made
by coenrane construction com
pany of Lincoln, was $27,741.
want to take with
you. Of course they must be cleaned
first
233 North 12
A HUSKER
fijWoo
IS A MEMBER L V - ' f'&
TENNIS CUPTEAM ) MW,J
mmch holds J I W&pMmMM
THE STATERS $3&N WMWa
f m "3m: -j GEORGE
Courtesy Lincoln Sunday Journal and Star.
George Wahlquist, Husker high scoring forward or guard, who
is one of the veterans on W. Harold Browne's quintet this year.
He's looked to to supply the punc h on the victory side of the ledger.
ALL-UNIVERSITY
MAT MIX DRAWS
66 COMPETITORS
Annual Open Tournament
Gets Under Way
Tonight.
With 66 entries filed and still
more expected before the dead
line tonight, the annual all uni
versity wrestling meet will get
under way at 4:30 Wednesday aft
ernoon at the coliseum, and con
tinue thru Thursday with the
finals to be held at 7:30 that eve
ning-
Entrants in tne meet wui De re
milred to welffh In Wednesday be
tween 8 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. Only
one weign m will De required cur
ing the event. Aa was previously
nceA. there will be a three
pound weight allowance over the
regular standards ror university
wrestling in all of the weight di
visions.
Lettermen Referee.
Varsity lettermen will referee
the meet, and If the number o
entries and the class of competi
tion have anything to do with re
suits In the events thev will have
plenty of trouble keeping law and
order among tne utie aspirants.
Gold and silver medals for first
and second place respectively will
be given in all the divisions, and
this alone should be enough to
malts thia vear'a meet one Of the
best, if not the best ever held at
Nebraska.
Entries.
Entries received up until this
time include Darrel Bauder, Jim
Knight, Hugh Miller, Martin Fam
lpn Allen Frederick. Rov Plum-
mer, Don DesJardien, George Pet-
zold, Ken Brown, wuiara uurney,
Pat Glenn, Jank Hutcherson, Mll-
lTnlrht .Tnrlr Nicholas. BUI
Doherty, Herb Thimm, Jim Cul-
bertson, Ed Daniels, rea wen
star Sr.1 Tjttrtn. Julius Whlttman.
Leonard Focht, Lyle Rolofson, De-
Los jonnson ana uan xosu
Jerry Adams, Richard Adams,
Harold Benn, Ray Cruise, Will
Elchberger, Ron Buschult, Al Rip
pen, El Rolofson, Clark Moore,
Howie Schmidt, Dewey Regier,
Roger Rosenkrans Niel Getch, Vir
gil Krick, Urban Newelk, Keith
Preston, Lyle Kroft, Floyd Miller,
Rill Luke. Claire Marshall. Dale
Anderstrom Jack Ellis, Lowell
diguou, nuu iup -
uauti
Eueene Yost, Jack Wagner, Don
Kvasnlcka, Dick Treakle, Russ
Moore, Era Lown, E. L. McGrew,
Vacation is only a
few days away.
Better start plan
ning now on what
garments you will
B6961
Responsible.
Cleaner t
TO WATCH
wlquist
HUSKER FORWARD
FROM HASTlNb
Frosh Footballers to
See 1935 Game Movies
Coach Ed Weir announced
that he will show 1935 Corn
husker action football pictures
to all freshmen football men
Wednesday afternoon at 4:15
o'clock in the south dressing
room of the stadium.
Freshmen numerals will not
be awarded until the end of the
first semester, when scholar
ship standings will aid In deter
mining which frosh will be
given numerals.
Roger Smith, John Williams, Fred
Wilson, Norm Lewis, Vernon Stan
ley, Bob Reichstadt, George See
man and Howard Gray.
Football athletes entered in the
tourney Include Jack Ellis, Pat
Glenn, Lowell English and Bill
Doherty. Frosh footballers are
Reichstadt, Buscholt, Hutcherson,
Seeman, and Luke.
TUMBLING TEAM 10
I
Coach Charley Miller, Five
Gymnasts En Route
Tomorrow.
Coach Charley Miller and his
university gymnastics team will
loav Lincoln Wednesday morning
for three dual intercollegiate meets
in Chicago.
Their itinerary Includes a meet
with George Williams college in
Chlcaro Dec. 12. with the Uni
versity of Illinois In Urbana, Dec.
14, and wltn the university or.
Chicago in Chicago Dec. 16. Ac
cording to Coach Miller, these
eastern colleges feature gym
nastics as a major sport and they
boast of a large annual turnout
of gym performers.
"Your Drug Store"
If It is wanted in a hurry. Lunchr s.
Candy. Draw or Toilet Articles.
Phone B1068.
The Owl Pharmacy
148 No. 14th 4 P St
We Deliver
I Give HIM Something To Wear s
5 ... Ik
And May Wt Suggest-
Superior Sweaters I
Other Superior
SCARLET
CAGERS
A
FROSH
77-20 IN BREEZE
Huskers Show Ball Handling
Skill That Baffles
Newcomers.
WAHLQUIST HIGH SCORE
Nebraska Hoop Future Looks
Bright After Monday
Exhibition.
Don't plan on attending very
many of the Cornhusker has-
ketball tilts this season unless
you've had your eyes examined
hv n Tthvsieinn. You're liable
to go blind or something following
the course of the passes which
Coach Harold Browne's boys can
nonade hither ana yon across mo
coliseum court.
Piling up a 77-20 account with
Morris Fisher's freshmen, the
Husker varsity Monday afternoon
gave a two-hour exhibition of pass- . .
ing marksmanship that bodes
great things for Nebraska this m
season and somewhat lessef
things for her opposition. Altho
unpolished at times, the varsity
lads turned in a brand of team '
play and a co-operative passing .
attack that was "lovely to look
at, and delightful to know."
. The first string varsity, com
posed of Whitaker and Wahlquist,' . -
forwards; Ebaugh, center; Wid-
man and farsons, guaras; mu ,.
Bob Leacox alternating at for
ward sendine1 Widman to center
and Wahlquist to guard, rolled up
- . . - a ' .i rr
a 25-2 lead oetore retiring, a
1 rombination. with Wid-
man on the sidelines, came back
at the start o the second nair to
bag another one-sided score, this"'
one 18 to 6.
Browne's second lineup, listing
George Scott and Howard Baker
at forwards; Nelson, center; and
Amen and Dohrmann, guaras,
didn't do so badly itself, and took'
a 17-6 count to leave the half-time,,,,.
score 42 to 8 .
Coach Fisher, using ninteen men
during the workout, found his
frosh completely uname to Keep
im with the riace set bv the var..
sity machine-gun passes. But the
onHro frnsh Ennnd shows caDabill-
ties which, Inside of a week or two; ',"
should make the varsity sit up and
take notice tnat tney re piaying a
bail game.
Vsrsltv
fl? ft
fl Freshmen
fg ft
Whltsker f
3 0
l'Boettner t
0 1 Werner f
OlMlchaelson t
. 01 Thomas t
OiStubbs f
OIKovanda t
OiTraubeln f
0 Baxter c
OiRtchards
OiSatirders g
01 Elliott f-0
fliDean g
OiPheeley f
0 Metzger g
OlCalllhan g
Wahlqu't f-g 6
FhauKn c o
Parsons g 1
Widman g-0 3
Leacox f 3
a scott i 3
Nelson e 2
Amen g 2
Dohrmsn g-C 1
C. Scott t
Hals t
Morris f
Daft g
Grimm c-g
Wnolerv K
r)leixbe.-g g
I Brock g
Totals
Referee:
38
iV.
Totals
10 0 1
Browne, Earlham.
KNOCKOUT
An Ideal Way to
Reduce Expenses
$5.50 Meal Ticket
Only $5
$2.70 Meal Ticket
Only $2.50
YRJ C A
Cafeteria and Fountain
What man cannot use a
sweater for those week end
hunting and fishing excur
sions or to add pleasure to
his evenings at home. Su
perior sweaters bring him
the finest all wool construc
tion in new fancy back and
slip-over styles. In brushed
wools in brown, blue or
grey heathers.
$295
Sweaters to $5.95
JTR5T FLOOR
1 t2k'"
I
8
I
I
P.
i;
x '
v"
h
h
'i
I
.5 .
iff
i ev
i