The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 07, 1936, Page THREE, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY. OmmF.lt 7. 1936
FROSE! USE GOPSIE
GRID STRATEGY U
l rltinK 5IinnMt Plajs iul -,,,ru.a phu-.mls that
it '?; thPm af ,;lhers- lWh K'l Pi'tl his froshm,,,
against the varsity in dummy seriinmau.- Tuesdi.v. Alfonso
rushed and passed apamst the linkers i ,n attempt to !, n-
-aLiatc me vopner end stvle. -
Coich Browne, who
Minnesota two weeks ago in their
game against Washington, brought
back to Huskerland a mass of in
formation concerning the Gophers,
which was revealed to the varsity
Tuesday. The Biblemen struck up
, defensive pose against these
Minnesota plays during the day's
workout.
Dohrmann in Suit.
Yesterday's practice session saw
;i tall Elmer Dohrmann in practice
! togs for the first time in some
. days. Ken McGinnis. varsity right
V uard. was also back in suit, cast
:. ing off his sweat suit for "fight
ing togs." as Coach Bible called
' i them.
j No heavy workouts will be
; staged before the Minnesota tussle.
Long and serious practices will
be featured but no "rough stuff."
. ' Coach Bible is taking all precau
; tions to avoid having any of the
Cornhuskers on the injured list
j when it comes time to select the
. squad to make the trip,
.'j "Minnesota is in fine shape for
.F"so early in the season," Coach
Bible stated Tuesday. "They
scheduled a big team" for their
:j ' opening game which enabled them
7: to be on their toes. School at
Minnesota opened later than it did
k-; ,re, and the squad was whipped
Into shape thru an extensive train
iBg season and two practices a
, Gopher Cackfield Liahtcr.
Coach Bierman has a lighter
1 backfiekl hut It has more speed
3 and deception than previous Go- I
i pher backficlds. Minus the able
" services of Sheldon Beise, last
fall's ace Gopher fullback. Bier
man's weak spot is the tailback
nosition. Rork is hobbling around
'f -'with a leg injury leavinj Spaoic- ,
i cinl and Buhier to fill the full-
2? back post. Roi k should be ready ,
i for game action in a few dayj. '
Andv Uram. preat T-nhnr
'half, brags about the fact that he
f has never played on a losing foot-
i ball team, including both high
1 school and college competition. If
1 his leg injury heals sufficiently.
J Uram will start Saturday. Uram
y . is the Gophers' best bet "when it
t' comes to passing and punting.
Tuffy Thompson and Bill Matheny
have been working out in Cram's
uf nn.
Julius Alphonse. victim of the in
eligibility ruling last fall, is a Go
pher co-captain and a certainty to
start at right half. Alphonse "is a
ISO pounder upon whom 'he ball
toting responsibility lies. He does
a good job of line smashing as well
as skirting the flanks for substan
tial gains.
Wilkinson Shines at Quarter.
Bud Wilkinson, who nl.iverf n
guard position last year, has" been
cen eneu into the number one Go
pher quarterback Wilkinson
weighs 193 pounds and is 6 foot 2
inches in height. Wilkinson shines
when it comes to pass receiving
and is a good field general.
Coach Bierman has four fine
ends, ranging freni six fect even to
six feet two. Reed and Kintr cet the
calls, whil? Antil and Krezowski
sub for them freouentlv. Tun cv.
tra fine tackles are on "the Gopher
line. Big Ed Widseth, 20 poands
of might and muscle, fills the left
tackle spot most proficiently, and
despite his bulk, can move around
the field speedily. Midler is the
other tackle and weighs 210
pounds.
Weld and Tweedell are Bierman's
first choice guards. Both men are
over 200 pounds each and are
i mighty fast when it comes to pull
ing out to lead the intci ference.
Bell and Sihultz are second choice
guards who soe much game action.
Schultz was injured in the Wash-ington-Minoesota
game and as yet
is not fully recovered.
Svends.in and Hanson are pivot
candidates for Bierman's line, but
neither can match Rennebohn as a
snapperlack. Rennebohn was the
mm who efficiently took care of
th center of Minnesota's lir.e last
rail.
GREEKS MAR GRID
RECORD AS MANY
HE DAILY NEBRASKAN
FAIL TO REPORT
Farm House. Delts. ATO
Ring Up Third Round
Victories.
The hitherto handsome monu
ment to Nebraska intramural play
was badly defaced yesterday as
clan after clan failed to appear
for the ShAhllnrl rnnfootc "In tKio
. uu,u wviil..ji.?. titc u'nn, uu ponna
other manual, however, the re-1 soPnomoree. was the outstanding
i ... ... ETJard on thp fioiH in a
Hummer oi me nines put their
AMES SHAKES OFF
HlfSKEK VICTORY;
URDS FOR KANSAS
AMES, la.. Oct. 6. With their
toughest game of the season be
hind them the Iowa State Cyclones
settled down this week to hard
work in preparation for their Big
Six conference engagement with
Kansas to be played on State field
here Saturday afternoon.
Outweighed and outclassed by a
powerful Nebraska team last
week Iowa State took the short
end of a 34 to 0 score, the worst
defeat suffered by a Cyclone team
in the six years that Coach George
Veenker has been at the helm.
The Cornhunkers, in Coach
Veenker's opinion, constitute the
best football team any of his Cy
clone squads have faced.
The play of four Cvclone men
was cited by Coach Veenker as
outstanding. Ed Bock, 200 pound
More than 100.000 students in
the Unite! States are r.ow attend
ing America's 500 junior colleges.
Fifteen years ago there were only
100 junior colleges in the nation.
John Stuart Curry, famed artist
of the soil, i3 now an "artist in
residence" at the University of
Wisconsin.
If Yoit Can't
GO
To Minnesota tips Week
end, do th next be3t thing
DANCE
to
Howard Fcrdham
and His Orchestra
TURNPIKE
Again Gives You a
HIT BAND
of National Rating
Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
Gentlemen $0.40, Ladies $0.23
YftlP IllUVPrcifV hie tha o A
j dresses of all but SO of its 31.003
graduates.
Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, presi
dent emeritus of Harvard univer
sity, recently failed to pass an
automobile driving examination.
i I
LAST v "'ne of the rm-
n I f ot family pictrrr
. w J rrr nvidc.' FILM
DAYS W DAI LI.
A 1 1 ttti2S2E3a
W irni. ft vmmwTaemmm&wmmm
:
ft
CONSTAT.CE
BENNETT
"EveryLhin Is
Thunder"
tth Dtmt:-. Mnnttcmirrj
shoulder to the task and produced
some A-l scraps on Russian flats.
Little by little Director Hornev
is acquring the name "Jolly Roily"
as play cruises through to what'u
expeciea to De me best season yet
on the books in spite of Tuesday's
defaults.
Farm House Wins.
By virtue of a 12-0 victory over
Beta Sigma Psi, Farm House
tight?ned its grasp on the top
rung of League Four in the Greek
intramural touch-football com
petition. The third successive vic
tory for bovs from th Ar Cn.
- "o " -
lece was marked bv the lone nm
of Jacobsen after being on the
receiving ena or a penect pass
play. Alloway went over the pay
off stripe for the second tally.
Sensational blocking and near
flawless teamwork established the
farmers as favorites for the league
championship.
Delta Tau Delta and Zeta Beta
Tail locked horns in
tuck battle with the Delts com
ing out on the long end of a 15-12
score. Wilson and Navleaux went
over for the Delts. The deciding
points came when Wright con
verted for the extra noint nnrt th
Dells clinched the game by smear
ing Z. B. T.'s behind their own
goal for a safety.
A. T. O. Takes Beta.
The gods of fate smiled on the
A. T. O.'s and sls a result limn
came out on the long end of a
i-u score in tneir came with thf
Betas. The lone rmmtir ranm
when they out-gained the R street
boys during the extra six downs
auoiiea to decide fe contests.
iaro competition nnfn.H n;tv
the Panthers lighting all over the
cissies ciud and coming off the
field with a 2S-0 victorv fnr thr
ciions. onesoerg, star high jump
er and javelin slinger on Pa
oChUlte B Bier Six rhamnlnn tra.U
team, was the head man fTii- tK.
striped boy and directed the
whole show. No common feat was
the Panthers' rare ability to con
vert the extra point after eacS
touchdown.
The other two games on the
Barb schedule went the way of all
forfeits as the StratTordite's and
Clippers took gift games from the
Independents and Pals club by one
to nothing scores. Failure of the
losing teams to put in their ap
pearance was the cause for the
unseasonal Christmas spirit.
guard on the field in Veenker's
opinion. The line nlnv r,r rn(
Clarence Gustine. end, and Harold
Reupke, sophomore fullback who
overaged 5.2 yards every time he
took the ball, was pleasing.
TEN HUSKER MILERS
FOR PLACE
GOPHERS HAVE HEAVY
MAKE BID
ON SCHULTE'S SQUAD
Dr. Clarence A. Mills of the Uni
versity of Cincinnati claims that
the falling birth rate is due to an
increase in the earth's heat.
Yale University is having the
home of Noah Webster razed be
cause no one would furnish funds
for its upkeep.
Dartmouth College alumni con
tributed $94,500 to the college in
1936, a new record high in con
tributions during a single year.
f
YOUR LOOSE CHANCE
$3.50 Kaywoojlie
PIPE FREE
If You Are the FIRST to
Guess the Score of the
Minnesota-Nebratka Game
ffift
1
' !
the, llailwaty Sxpws Route...
Let that dependable college pal. Railway Express,
pick up and ship your laundry home and back for
you every week. You will find it glossy going -easy,
fast, inexpensive.
Merely notify the folks you will send the pack
age by Railway Express, and ask them to return it
the lime way. You can send it collect too, you
know, and while on that subject, we can add, only
by Railway Express. The folks will understand. It
saves keeping accounts, paying bills, to say noth
ing of spare change.
YouTl find the idea economical all round. The
minimum rate is low only 38 cents sometimes
less. Pick-up and delivery by motor vehicle and
insurance included in the shipping charge. It's the
same with shipping baggage or anything else by
Railway Express. So arrange your shipping dates
by phone call to the Railway Express agent, and
start now.
' 1123 "P" St. 'Phone B2364
. Depot Office: C. B. & Q. Depot
7th A R Sts. 'Phone B3261
0t , Lincoln, Neb.
'Railway Express
1 ,! AGENCY, IXC."
-;: NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE
I I t tl ff A AMsnt I I
rwTMiwiiii i ii ,n i 3f i
Ask L's About It
. ! Big League Cigar Store
iStlA.iD I! 112 SO. 11th St.
A 4Tl jdTJr onmr In
jfoC&r p Hie pip
K-t Ja1 Hioh-ff iclancv
Track Men Rounding Into
Shape for the Kansas
Cross Country.
With a frigid northerly breeze
sweeping around the nooks of Me
morial stadium, 10 intrepid two
milers yesterday went thru their
usual practice procedure. With the
Kansas State cross country clash
but 11 seemingly short days off,
the Schulte coached lads are work
ing with an untiring resolution to
round into the best of sh
this weighty encounter.
There is nary a sie-n of o iniim
in the Husker track
Tarrying has no place there:
everyone is working diligently for
one srood reason to ho nr.o .r th.
live to start against Coach Ward
tiayiett s Aggies.
Coach Schulte is "in the dark"
in regard to which five performers
will match their strides against
me juannatianites. He is certain,
however, of one thing, and that
is those who are selected to rep
resent the Cornhuskers will have
to te class A tracksters in order
to reverse Mentor Haylett's Big
Six two mile championship ag
gregation. Obessed by the verity they will
enter the imbroglio as underdogs,
"Pa's" bubs have decided to ex
punge this rating and garner in
a triumph for their instructor.
Such a task looks comparatively
simple to carry out on paper, but
actually it is an austere job.
Why is it such a stern assign
ment, you query. Well, in the
first place, the Wildcats have such
capable letter winners as Robin
son, Sweat, Redfield, Dills and
Eberhardt on deck to meet all
competition. In the second place,
most of these runners holnort in
bringing the Big Six cross country
championship to the ManhattAn
citadel.
Coach Henrv Schulte also hao
Some reliable nerfnrmro in VraH
Matteson. Wilson Andrews, Bob
West and Bob Morris, all major
letter holders in track. Matteson,
Wilson and Andrews have been
practiciner daily but Boh Morris
whose forte is in the half mile, is
convalescing' from a. rprent illnpcc
and therefore has been unable to
go thru his chores. Several game
sophomores are out to make the
team, among them being Fred
Koch. Art Hendrikson, Bob Allen,
Alfred Kuper and others.
So the picture is far from being
morose for the wearers of the scar
let and cream.
LINE, LACK PLUNGING
POWERJCOUT FINDS
Browne Reports Brilliant
Ends, Tackles, Halves:
Secondary Alert.
A heavier Minnesota line and a
lighter but faster backficld is
what W. H. Erowne. assistant foot
ball coach, noticed when he scouted
the Gophers in
their opening
game on the
vvestern coast
against Wash
ington, t w o
weeks ago.
" M i n nesota
liar, a heavier
line thin iall
as good as.
if not better
better than,
last year's for-
iward wall, From Th, joUma
I Coach Browne W. H. Browne
remarked. "The backficld is
somewhat, lighter, although fast
er and more shifty, but none of
their backs can match the hard
ness and line-devastating ability
of Roscoe."
"Coach Bierman." said Coach
Browne, "has plenty of tall, fast
and nigged ends who can block,
tackle and nab passes with equal
proficiency. Minnesota has two
exceptional tackles in big Ed Wid
seth and Midler, but their tackle
reserves aren't so much. At guards
there are plenty of good sopho
mores. No man at the center po
sition is up to the caliber of Ren
nebohn, last year's outstanding
center."
Remarking about the backfield
personnel. Coach Browne stated
that "the backfield candidates
lack the power of the great Shel
don Beise. Wilkinson at nnarter-
back is as good as Seidel and Le
voir were last fall." Coach Browne
added, "and Julius Alphonse and
Andy Uram are two fine half
backs that would make the, sad
dest of football coaches burst into
tears of joy.
"Their kicking is only average."
continued Coach Browne. "Uram
is Minnesota's best passer and
punter while Alphonse does the
best job of ball-carrying."
"Brilliant" is the term Coach
Browne applied to the Gopher
secondary defense. According to
the Washington-Minnesota game,
the Gophers will play a six man
defensive line this fall with a
"2-2-1" secondary.
THREE
Dr. R. E. Sturdevant of the col
lege of dentistry will attend the
southwest district meeting of the
Nebraska Dental society at Su
perior Sunday and Monday. He
will be present for the southeast
district sessions Thursday at
Fair bury.
Classes have not yet begun at
the University of Berlin, according
to Dr. E. L. Hinman's letter from
Dr. V. H. V.'eikmeister, now on
leave in Germany where he will
teach at the Berlin school.
I .
I-l I . - - - A v 111 I
28 - ill
St 95 f '
I. J ' f
If p.
f Mi
RUDOE S Second Flocr. j
New York university has a new
course in cosmetic hygiene.
Prof. Seiig Hecht of Columbia
university claims that chemicals
in the eye cause our color sense.
Women drivers react more slow
ly than men in time of braking
emergency, according- to finriine-s
of a series of scientific tests giver.
at t-ennsyivama state college.
Dr. Clarence A. Mills of thp uni
versity of Cincinnati claims that
the falling birth rate is due to an
increase in the earth's heat.
Yal university is having tho
home of Noah Webster razed be
cause no one Would furnish fnnHa
for its upkeep.
fl
e Lmgene Lsne-Up
College Qin
Should Include RUDGE'S
Slips
Pajamas . .
n i n i
royai Kooes
Night Govn
Dancettes .
Just exactly the type of lingerie college girls love and need
Miss Swank slips.... satin supreme, tailored or lace tea rose
or white, sizes 32 to 44.
Miss Swank pajamas tailored or lace trimmed crepes, dark
and light colors. Sizes 32 to 40.
Royal Robes.... pre-shrunk flannel. Gay colors. Your own
initials snap into the collar button. Si-es 14 to 17
Nightgowns.... dainty satin, bli. pink, white. Sizes V to 40
tanurcu or iace irimmea satin or creue
sizes 32 to 36. -
For More Than Fifty Years The Quality Store Of ebraska!
Iron out
your laundry
worries
Dartmouth college alumni con
tributed $94,500 to the college In
1936, a new record high in contri
butions during a single year.
Dr. W. H. Morton, Prof. Norma
Gillett, Dr. Rosenlof, all of teach
ers college and Dr. Harry Bradford
of the agricultural college will be
guest speakers at the Carrol Ta
tuuiiLy msiuuie program Oct. 12.
Minnesota
Fans--
One Excellent Ticket
Available for
Minnesota Game
Also Inexpensive
Transportation
to Minnesota
See Bus. Mgir
Daily Nebraskan
SWIFTir - SAFELY - E C
soreltani hu,
meka. Tram malitura Kli.
ping. No travbl. Prove It yo rlf
Greetings
FRESHMEN!
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Shirts fitted to a young man's figure .... in pa:
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oxford cloths and fine woven broadcloths Mill not
be found in other shirt lines in such abundance. So
don't forget! .Make your next shirt a MANHATTAN.
MAS
SEE'
Reach new heights of pipe-pleasure with Half & Half.
Cool as a hill for last year's dues. Sweet as the proof
you rioivt owe a dime. Fragrant, full-hodied tohacco
that won't hite the tongue in a tin that won't hite
the fingers. Made hy our exclusive modern process
including patent No. 1,770,920. Smells good.
Makes your pipe welcome anywhere. Tastes good.
Your password to pleasure!
a bit of bite in the tobacco or the Telescope Tin, which
smaller and smaller as you use-up the tobacco. No
you reach for a load, even the last one.
O.pjricht 1936, The Amrriran Tobacco Co.
W V"A Hi A EL IP
FOR PIPE OR CIGARETTE