The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 19, 1936, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
HUSKERS TAKE SOONERS 40-33
SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1936.
NEBRASKANS WIN
OVER OKLAHOMA
Coach Browne's Team Left
Prepares to Meet Kansas Jayhawkers Monday Night
For Leadership of Conference.
2,300 SEE SCHOOL'S CAGE MEN SHOW POWER
Scarlet Rally from Score of
To Draw Up a 14-16 Position at End of
First Period of Game.
By DICK KUNZMAN.
Nebraska's CoriihusUcr basketball team ennui from behind
in ii swirling, whirling display of 18-earat thrills Saturday night
at Norman, Old., to lash out a -Kl-M victory over the Sooner
net swishers. The victory left Coach Hrownu's retinue with an
untarnished slate as they prepare to talk turkey with I'hog
Allen's Kansas Jayhawks Monday to
night at Lawrence for the undis
puted leadership of the conference
Having proved that they can go
oifc in front and hold a lead once
they obtained it by thrusting back
Missouri and Wyoming last week,
the Huskers convinced a crowd of
2,500 Friday that they have the
stuff to come from behind. Show
ing the Sooner a thing or two
about their fast break specialty,
the Brownemen turned loose a
tractor-powered speed attack that
left the Sooners gasping for breath
and clutching for straws.
Hanging to the short end of a
36 to 8 score curly in the first half,
the touring Huskers rallied with
clash and fire to draw up to a 11
lG position at the second half.
Huskers Shoot Works.
And then in the second half, the
five Nebraska maple artists really
went to work. Setting a red-hot
piice that had players of both
teams strewn all over the floor,
alid the crowd weak from exhaus
tion in their scats, Nebraska drew
neck and neck with the Sooners,
edged ahead of them, and then
climbed to a 38-24 point lead.
But the reputation of the fast
break superiority which prevails
at Oklahoma proved its worth, for
the Sooners started surging ahead
in a wild melange of rallying speed
that had the spectators wondering
if this wasn't a nightmare. The
Oklahomans spurted up to within
seven points but the bell cut short
the drive, and the exhausted crowd
todfc time out to breathe again.
Wahlquist Heads Attack.
- George Wahlquist showed the
Scarlet Its way down the streets
of victory, providing a whirlwind
foundation for the Nebraska of
fense and figuring in every play.
Feeding, shooting, guarding, Wahl
qijlst proved the margin between
n wpll-eamed victory over a fight
ing, splendid team that didn't quite
have enough, and a smarting de
feat carrying with it an enormous
handicap against the undefeated
Java Mondav nltrht.
Scoring 11 points, Wahlquist
earned the Scarlet marksmanship
crown, followed bv Bob Parsons
with f and Hank Whitaker with 8
The diminutive Whltakcr's ripping
dashes down the floor, Parson's
lone-ranee shooting and driving
sriearhead of the passing barrage
nnrl Flovd Ebauch's play off both
haskets wfiio all Nebraska fca-
tuits.
Meanwhile the Sooners weren't
doing so badly themselves. Martin,
Sooner guard, bagged 4 field goals
and tallied five times from the dole
line to take high scoring honors of
the game. And with another five
siinutes of play, the rate at which
the eleventh hour Sooner rally was
travelling might have resulted in a
not so happy ending for Nebraska.
The box:
Nebraska 40 'K l'i
Whltakfr f 3
Wahlquist
KbiiiKh c J
lacox f jf
I'arsnns c
Wldman b 1
Dohrmann g "
Totals
Oklahoma 33
C.nnn.Uev 4
17 6 11
tg ft p(
2 0 1
Tonef 2
Ntlson t 3
Warren t J
ElUworth f J
dunning c ?
Martin g
Otteg ?
Ntdy g
TBomas R J
Baerg
Smith g 0
2
0
0
0
0
S
0
0
0
0
0
Totali 13 7 12
Mined free throw: Parnom 2, WhIUker
2, Wldman, WahlquHt, Connelley. Nelson.
Store at half: Oklahoma 16, Nebraska
"jfflclals: Miller, Iowa and Old, Kansas.
STUDENTS ASKED
SAVE BOOKS TILL
NEW SHOP OPENS
(Continued from Pago 1).
"We feel sure every student
Will be relieved of a large part of
his "book worry," which has been
a perennial problem for years, if
he will cooperate in the experi
mental stage of the book store,"
etated Jean Walt, member of the
store committee.
Operates Without Profit.
The store will operate on a
non-profit basis, the 50 and 75
percent figures being only tem
porary. They will be regulated
either by raising or lowering them
so that accounts will balance and
excess profits will be eliminated.
w The store will not be in full
operation until next fall, but if
students sell their books to the
university store, considerable bus
iness may be possible in Febru
ary, according to Mary Yoder,
also a member of the store com
mittee. Brauklein Gives "Parkers
fclossary" to Department
J. E, Brauklein, architect of
Kansas City, Mo., presented the
department of architecture here
with three volumes of "Parker's
Glossary." This Is a valuable ad
dition to the department's library,
fays Prof. Linus Burr Smith, director,
With Untarnished Slate as It
16-8 Early in the First Half
NO NEW
GRID RULES.
Which Is
Just os Well,
For the Game's Sake.
By Arnold Levin.
If an oplniatcd poll of the coun
try's leading gridiron tutors fur
nishes any precognition of the
rules under which, college boys
will nlav next fall, there will be
no radical departures from the
present day football panorama.
Drastic proposals in the order
of events have been abolishment
of the point after touchdown, sub
stituting one point for every first
down as a scoring system; an
overtime period to break ties; and
that perennial controversy, the
shifting of the goal posts back to
the goal lines.
This business of points after
touchdown is a moot question
which ha.-, been subjected to blfar
ious criticism since its inception.
Games are won, lost, and tied be
cause of the adeptness or inadept
ness of some certain athlete to
swing his big toe rythmlcally and
truly. Example Nebraska's three
wins in a row over .Iowa by one
point margins.
The big argument is that not al
ways the most powerful combina
tion has the best kick-after-touch-downers,
and that consequently a
team by sheer luck may overcome
stronger opposition. That, how
ever, holds water just about as
well as a sieve. Breaks can decide
a game whether the try for point
is used or eliminated. To argue
that the less cogent combination
can win by an extra point is quite
similar to saying that the more
potent outfit can lose because it
interfered with an intended pass
receiver.
Those same souls who argue
abolishment of the try for point
are positively fanatic on the sub
ject of tie games, proposing five
minute after-sessions in which the
team gaining the most yardage
would be declared winner.
60 Minutes Plenty.
Now any twenty-two gridmen,
playing thru 60 minutes of rough,
tough football, are not going to
relish the prospect of five minutes
more. The advantage here would
decisively lie with those squads
who number the mostest of the
bestcst. Weaker institutions, lack
ing cogency in reserve strength,
would be at a severe disadvantage.
The meager glory that might re
sult from an upset tie would be
non-existent.
Providing points for first downs
would eliminate high-speed scor
ing plays, and at the same time
cause Buch concentration on de
fense that yards would be precious
earnings.
Football plays today are de
signed to gain much ground. As
much of it at one time as possi
ble, with the end zone the ulti
mate goal. Under the point per
down system, teams would point
for first downs, not touchdowns.
A gain of ten yards would be just
as satisfactory as one of twenty.
Chances are the opponents would
hold after a twenty yard gain
anyway, because defenses would
be stepped up to the peak of per
fection. The offensive eleven would
play for ten yards. The defensive
eleven would bo keyed to the
point where only a few plays
might gain ground all afternoon.
A drab exhibition such as that be
tween Nebraska and Kansas State
last fall would be the result.
Paying customers like to see
long runs and thrills in their foot
ball games. I believe the substitut
ing of a point a down for the
point after touchdown system
$1.00 wrought Iron AA
SMOKER'S STAND JW
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SEATS NOW ON SALE AT Wall's Music House
MATINEE: 75c, $1, $1.50, $2. EVE.: $1, $1.50, $2. $2.50. Plu Tax.
Sooner Diamond
Star Headed for
Big Time Compet
NORMAN, Jan. 11). Another
University of Oklahoma baseball
player, developed by Lawrence
"Jan" Haskell. Sooner coach, Is
on his way to the major leagues.
He is Merle "Hook" Coleman, of
Tulsa, a 0 foot 1 inch boy who was
brought along carefully by Coach
Haskell as a freshman pitcher in
1031 and actually worked In three
varsity games last spring before
jumping tlio club and withdraw
lug from school to pitch for
Shrcvenort in the West Dixie
league.
Coleman was purchased recently
for $2,000 by tho Boston Red Sox
unti has been farmed to the ayra
cusc club of the International
league for seasoning.
The lanky Sooner right hander
last year won 0 and lost 10 games
with the tallend Shroveport chili
prior to a back Injury, after which
ho played outfield and hit 300. Be
fore his injury Coleman had struck
out 135 batters in 100 innings and
was leading the league in that de
partmcnt. He had walked 70 bat
tcrs.
Others Leave School.
Coleman was tho second Sooner
player to Jump the club Inst year.
Roy Meyers, of Mllfay, a center
fielder, played seven games then
left school to sign with tho Okla
homa City team of the Texas
league, hitting like a fiend thru the
league playoff nnd also the Dixie
series, both of which Oklahoma
City won.
Despite Carl Hubbell's advice to
the Sooner squad, delivered two
years ago when the Giant south
paw drove to Norman to work out
with the Sooners, that a college
ball player could learn more base
ball under a good college coach
and get an education too than if
ho Jumped the club, the Sooner
youngsters continue to succumb
to the lucrative offers of scouts.
Even after Meyers and Coleman
left the Sooners last spring, Coach
Haskell developed a club that
swept its last 12 games in a row,
thanks to the chucking of a soph
omore southpaw from Mocker,
Mayo Parks. But Parks has been
tempted by the Oklahoma City
club and will go south with them to
Shreveport, La., their training
camp site.
would ruin the thrills, excitement,
and open vigorousness of modern
football.
As to moving the goal posts
back to the goal line in an effort
to start a popular trend towards
field goal kicking I once saw a
fullback take the ball on the op
ponent's 2-yard lino and dive
square into the post. I never want
to see it happen again.
It isn't very often that a foot
ball player runs tho wrong way.
Roy Riegels of California's Golden
Bears is the classic example. It Is
more common, however, for a
basketball player, under the heat
and stress of the moment, to score
for tho other side. So when Center
Aron of Doano whished a two
pointer thru the Midland basket
Friday, John Q. Public didn't
think much of it until ho read
further and found out that Center
Aron's basket won the game for
Midland, 28-27.
After a bit of tough luck in the
beginning, Wilbur Knight's Husker
nubbins baskcteers seem to have
definitely found themselves.
They've won two straight, by nice,
margins, and have exhibited team
work and strength that should
carry them on quite successfully
thru the rest of their schedule.
PREP SCHOOL HEADS
TO HEAR PROFESSORS
Brokatv,
Der.v, Hcnzlik,
Reed
on
January
Program.
Among the faculty members on
the program of the Nebraska su
perintendents' annual meeting to
be held at the Lincoln Jan. 21 to
23 are Prof. W. H. Brokaw of tho
agricultural college extension serv
ice; Dr. A. A. Reed, director of
tho extension division; Theodore
Diers, radio director and Dean F.
E. Henzlik of the teachers college.
WANTED'
OLD GOLD
s10to35oz.
Killed nr Natrd Jewelry
Rrnfci'n Watrhex, Itin, (hitlti,
Gold Teelh, Sterling silver. Ktc.
CASH Ml I) I.MMKDIATKI.Y
1'. S. Government License
Come In Tor Free KMImatet
Uoncled lluyers
Nebraska Gold
and Silver Co.
1408 O ST. )vi:Zel
Oalfl Matinee and rtn!agf
MONDAY, JAN. 27 .5 K
HELEN
MENKEN
CNDE1EN
OPEN
I
Schulte's Squads Practice
Saturday With Eye to
Initial Contest.
The Thundering Herd Is looso
again!
Henry Schulto's track and field
flock, awaiting tho opening nf tho
conference indoor season Feb. 22
ngainst Kansas U. started rumb
ling and roaring Saturday after
noon in tho beginning of a prncttco
movement which will turn into
little short of a clnder-poundlng
stampede prior to the initial dual
engagement.
Conducting tho first regular try
out for varsity positions on the
1936 Husker track squadron,
Coach Schulto had representatives
of all the Indoor events except the
hurdlers and broad jumpers flex
ing their muscles and taking short
turns at competitive marks.
Many Distance Men.
Heading the aggregation were
the distance men, who threatened
to turn the track into a racetrack
for the solo utilization of long-distance,
non-stop specialists. Fred
Mattson, Sutton; Chet Beaver,
Yankton, S. D. and Wilson And
rews, headed the competitive dis
tance grinds, with Bob Morris do
ing his competing with himself
earlier in the afternoon.
Beaver nnd Mattson finished
even Steven in a six-lap duel that
was scheduled for three-quarters
of a mile, but went another lap by
mistake. Tho time for the three
quarter was 3 minutes 22 seconds,
but neither of the runners pulled
into the stretch until tho final lap,
clocking 4:19 for the whole. And
rews, strongest of the three in the
2-mile this fall, too late to get Into
the headlining contest, finished in
3:29 when his- cross country pals
combined later to pace him over
the route.
Pankonln Edges Frank.
Mattson also came out on top
of one of the 440 yard heats, while
Les Pankonln, Louisville, edged
out Eldon Frank, St.f Edward, in
another. "Pank's" time was 55.2
seconds, Frank's 55.4. A trio of
frosh, Simmons, Allen, and Owen
finished in good order in the
speed grind, Simmons hauling
down the best time. He called it
a day a little later after clocking
28.9 seconds for the lap, more than
250 yards.
Sherm Cosgrove, Lincoln, Big
Six runnerup in the pole vault last
SEASON WITH K
HOLIDAY MEET
Schulte May Buy Radio
For Waltzing Milers
Cornhusker track fans .who
see Coach Henry Schulte's spike
stingers In action this winter
may prepare for a surprise if
everything works out as the
Husker mentor plans.
By the end of the Indoor sea
son the distance men should be
pounding around the Indoor
track In perfect step to their
humming of the latest waltz
strains, and the pole-vaulters
will be chanting "Who-o-oho
And It comes out here!" asMhey
skim over the bar.
At all events, it's a possibil
ity, for the new radio whloh
Coach Schulte has placed In the
stadium dressing room for his
athletes provides an Inspiration
for musical outlet as the Husk
ers don their cinder togs to go
through their paces on the dirt
track just outside. And It may
have Its practical advantages
too, for If the Husker coach
wants more speed, all he has to
do Is bring It on the track, turn
on the latest thing In fast-stepping
syncopation, and let his
runners follow the band.
May, slipped over the stick at 12
feet 0 inches, George Galloway,
Lincoln, trailing with 12 feet even.
Vcrl Athey, Wauneta soph, and a
duct of freshmen in Dick Evans,
Lincoln, and Bob Neumann, dis
posed of third place among ihem
sclves at a height of 11-G.
"Jake" Has to Step.
Hnrod Jacobsen, Trenton, Mo.,
head man in the Scarlet dash rep
resented last season, hit a fair 5.7
seconds pace in his initial 50-yard
dash, but had to get down to seri
ous business a moment later when
Dick Ficher, Ravenna, shot down
the straightaway in a dead heat
with him for a time of 5.5.
p-evv of the regular varsity men
were in evidence, due to studies
nnd injuries. Bob Mills, Lincoln,
was taking some practice heaves
with the shot; Ed Maxey and Dick
Kosman, Omaha, hopped over tho
high jump pole a few times; and
Harwin Dawson, North Platte
sophomore who is counted a
mighty csential feature of the
Cornhusker team this season, con
fined himself to a few trials at
getting his step for the broad jump
board.
Although blind for 25 years,
Perry Hale, Yale All-Amerlcan in
1900, hasn't missed a game since
the day the doctor told him he
never would see again.
Gasolene
Motor Oil
10c to 30c
16c
Gal.
Heating Oil Qy2c Gallon
HOLMS i4th
PHONE D3998
at w
Aucti
Coming Soon
Details will be
published Feb 4th
Watch for this important Notice
TKe
Daily Nebraskan
Ti
Scott, Morris Lead .Attack
That Beats Off Foes'
Last Period Rally.
Coach Wilbur Knight's Nebraska
B basketball team made it two in
a row Thursday evening, taking
Dana College down the line for a
3(1-27 victory at Blair. After los-
ing their first four games, tho
Huskers swamped Nebraska Cen
tral 56-7 Tuesday evening.
Rolling nhead by a 20 to 11
margin at the half, the Scarlet re
serve unit had things their own
way In the entire second period,
thrusting back n late Dana rally
to pluck their second victory of
the season.
As usual Cliff Scott and Merrill
Morris led the Husker nttack,
Scott bagging 12 and Morris 9
points for high honors. Harold
Hurd, Dana guard, banged in five
field goals and a gift throw for
the Norsemen. Summaries:
Neh. n fg ft pfl Dnna Sg ft pf
Morris t II 1 Kalinin t 0 2 3
Expert
Launderers
IN
AT
333 North 12
10 DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY
on
B 2 HI'Mrlckf
I II 1 'OlMII C
1 1 1 Jewell E
1 1 uillurilK
u ii in Morrow g
i) o nnilxlerK
1 1 in Cux f
2 2 O
l n l
i ii n
& l o
0 0 3
1 II 1
1 0 U
Total If. 6 I Totals 11 B 7
Score ut half. Nebraska l), sto; Dana,
U.
Kefcrrc; Dum Helford, Crelditon,
Bible, Wler Speak at Aurora.
Coach Dana X. Bible, varsity
football mentor, and Ed Wnlr,
freshman football coach were tho
principal speakers at a banquet
honoring Aurora's football squad
Friday night In Fidelity hall in
Aurora.
Orfleld to Washington.
Prof. Lcstor B. Orfleld of tho
collcgo of law, will go to Wash
ington, D. C. Tuesday at tho in
vitation of tho ucncral counsel of
tho social security board.
Try The
9c
SHIRTS
at the
GLOBE
1124 L
B6755
B6961
Responsible
Cleaners
Scott (
(iolfred'n e
Wolf K
WMiipIrr k
I'vtrrion ic
Oilionu k
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