The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 11, 1936, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THE DAILY iNEBKAMvAIN
Huskers Take First Test in Cage Technique Tonight
FKIDAY. DECEMREK 11. 1936.
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SQUAD HEWED
AT LAST HOQEDT
FOROYGLOPETRI
Grid Pair Not Yrt Adapted to Maples; Cornhuskers
Confident as Soren?on, Parsons, Ebungh,
Hule. Haker Named to Start.
By Ed Steeves.
As the Husker basket hall mol) finished its whetting for the
taste of South Dakota Coyotes, ;i pontic shakenp hit the hquad.
The first squad named to take the Vermillion jaunt was selected
in the light of forecast rather than anything else, hut two of
the football boys did not have quite time to shift their abilities
from the sod to the hardwoods. O
As a result two new members
have been
named to make the
hill hop. I
The new Husker squad will meet '
the South Dakotans tonight on !
the Vermillion court in a debut
of both squac'13. The Brownemen '
are in perfect physical fitness with
the exception of Larry Nelson, six i
foot seven center, who has been
ailing for several days and will
not make the trip. The Huskers
are set for the kill and it appeals
as tho they are aa sure of the pelt i
as puddles follow rain. The Big
Sizers have the advantage in
height and speed and in general
have played a better brand of
ball and a tougher schedule than
our northern neighbors.
Should be Good.
Last year the Ryan brothers
were their only scoring threat in
the Nebraska walk away meet.
This year one of the "freres" re
mains. The remainder of their
squad is made up of veterans and
should prove to be a team worthy
of the Husker's serious considera
tion. After a little game of upset the
fruit basket coach YV. H. Browne
brought out his srrn'l anrl namml
some alterations in the plans. Of j r.raska's rotund head master, who
the squad named yesterday to so- is in constant demand as an hon
journ in Dakota are Leland Hale, I ored speaker at prep football
Howard Baker, Paul Amen, Ernie feasts.
White, Floyd Ebaugh, Elmer p. X. doesn't go in for long
Dohrmann, Bob Parsons, Hairy spiels to high school gridders. His
Sorenson, Jack Schock, and Bob: talks are always succinctly done.
Elliott, Ernest White has been j ne doesn't develop a boring
definitely replaced by Alton Wer-!ppeech about athleticdom; rather,
ner, tall well aiming sophomore, I e ras a short message which he
and Paul Amen tenatively dis- presents in the briefest of words,
carded in favor of Bill Kvonda, j some high school audiences are a
Elk Creek. The two boys who ; bjt disappointed because of the
may be left at the station at the j terseness of his remarks, but D.
last minute slipped thru no fault ; x. usually has only a few points
of their own, but simply because , he wants to get over to the hear
they have had a time handicap in ers He tells them what he has
the way of practice.. Both were on his min(i and sits down. Too
members of the varsity football j bad more speakers can't be like
oijuau a.Jiu milieu lu caging u"v i
mis weeK.
Opening Lineup.
A starting lineup of
sharp
Shooters named just before the
squad's departure included Hale
and Baker, forwards: Ebaugh.
center; and Parsons and Sorenson.
guards. The entire group of five
bear lettered bosoms. Parsons an ;
Ebaugh are junior members m
tne squad.
Due to weather of the nastiest ,
brand Browne was forced to alter;
his plans of driving to the scene
of action, and will travel by train
instead. The cagers left last
night from the Union depot.
Next in line for the Huskers to
humble is Montana university Sat
urday, Dec. 19 on the Capitol city
maples.
The Nebraska B squad also! D. X. has been talking all wpek.
makes its fir.t nighter appearance , Monday he spoke at Concordia,
of an 18 game schedule. The first; Kas., to the high school grid ban
being Luther college of Wahooiquet. Tuesday he talked at the all
Saturday night on foreign boards, j state rally in Lincoln and spoke
Nubbins. ! at tne Beatrice prep banquet the
, . ..,, '., .... ; Fame evening. Wednesday he
nxn.il nnuui njugrn. ,,,.,-
ace all nubbins games as In
the i
past. Cliff Scott i3 the only minor
letterman still on the squad this
year.
Their schedule:
Ter. 12: Luther at Wahoo: 1 r;.n
at Fl:r; 1. H.dland, 17, Ooane. l'J
Ktarnev Ta'hei.
Jan. 12; LKane at Cre. IV Kenrr.ey
Tea'-hern at Kearney, lfl. Hfhrnn; iy,
Peru Normal at Peru: i't, Werieyan
Fen. 2: I.iH1-r eollege, 1.1. Vlolond
Fremont ; ii, York nt Vork : 17. In,
2J, WeleKn at Wene.an; 2 York; 27
J'r4 Teach r.
I'.tnh 2: Hehron at Hehron.
Dr. Itririjzea Denounces
Food? Advertised for
Purposes of Reducing
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (ACP).
Speaking to a Kansas City audi
ence, Dr. Milton A. Erldges. diet
expert of Columbia university,
knocked the foundation from un
der common theories about food.
"It has never been recognized
that nature or man has been able
to produce anything pitch as a re
ducing food." he said.
"The efficacy of fish as a brain
food, onions to cure a cold, par
ley to increase fluid output, broth
for strength, port wine and rusty
nails for blood-building, celery to
soothe the nerves, skim milk and
bananas for reducing, and last but
not least, an apple a day to keep
the doctor away have been proved
Without foundation."
a kit
mmw
lib m&u
Wjoaajla gipp
A very, very busy man is Dana
Xenopho'n Bible these wintry days.
It's that time of the year when
post-season high school football
banquets are all the rage. Every
hign scnooi nas
its banquet
withthe moth
ers serving,
fathers talking
b u s i n e ss and
players feeling
u n c omfortable
when the usu
ally loquacious
speaker p o u rs
glory upon
their scrubbed
heads. E x c op
tion to the rule
of circumlocu
tory guest
DANA x. bible
Courtesy Journal
speakers is Ke
him
Right now, the little bald-headed
grid mandarin is traveling around
tne country making speeches to
high school football banquet au-
. .nH enm..
timM (vo a dav is hjs itinerary
d iVa far from being. an easy
jon Not on,y does D. x. have to
Jsppak before these groups but he
aso ukps onp of tne athletic de-
nart merit's film nroiectors alone
to show pictures of some of the
Cornhusker football oentests.
While filming the slow motion pic
tures, D. X. has to give a running
resume of the game, identifying
players, calling attention to par-
I ticular plays and answering sun-
riry questions about Husker ath
j It-tics.
,a,hoA at a jnn r,f Lincoln
: ;
nin siuufnis ;il iiuuii aim hi-ul iu
Stromsburg to address their foot
ball banquet. He conferred with
Lincoln business men Thursday
morning and spoke at the grid
banquet at Creston, la. in the eve
njng. Friday noon he will speak
be-fore the Ida (Jrove, la., high
school group and in the evening
h will talk to the LeMars. Ia.,
prep outfit. And he isn't running
for any office!
Omaha's "N" club will honor
D. X., the squad and the coach
ing staff with a banquet Tues
day evening of next week. D. X.
will probably spend the re
mainder of next week along the
same speaking lines only be-
No time like
the Present
to Build for
the Future
Drink
Rpberts Milk
n
i
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!
X
Ml
u
m
H!i?
fore new facet. . .other high
school football banquets. Such is
the lot of the athletic potentate!
D. X., along with every one else,
will take his Christmas vacation,
and the latter part of his days of
leisure are most enviable. Accom
panied by the wife and kiddies,
D. X. wili ro south to Fort Worth
and San Antonio for a brief rest.
He then travels eastward to New
York -City for the annual N. C.
A. A. and national football rules
committee meetings. Nebraska's
little colonel is a member of the
all-important rules committee
which may do a bit of rule revis
ing this fall, judging from some
of the howling that has gone up.
The National Collegiate Athletic
Association convention starts Dec.
27 and is followed by the rules
committee huddle.
On his way back, D. X. will
pause in New Orleans to take In
the Louisiana State-Santa Clara
Sugar Bowl grid classic on New
Years day. After watching this
stupendous intersectional match.
D. X. will pick up the wife and
kiddies in Texas and return to
Huskerland. Some jaunt!
Ames Psychologist
Ponders Vegetable.
Meut Ferocity Clue
AMES. Iowa, Dec. 8 Does a
meat diet make animals and men
ferocious, while a vegetable diet
makes them gentle?
Martin F. Fritz, associate pro
fessor of psychology at Iowa State
College, pondered that question in
a review of literature on diet and
racial temperament recently pub
lished in the Journal of Social
Psychology.
The deprivation of meat may
cause an animal or human being to
live on . a lower energy plane,
thereby giving the appearance of
peaceableness and a mild disposi
tion, Dr. Fritz said. According to
that hypothesis, he said, a vege
tarian diet simply depresses the
activity level while a generous in
take of meat may bring out the
full energy potentialities.
Protein Increases Metabolism.
On the basis of the rather well
established fact that the ingestion
of food substances, especially pro
tein, results in a distinct increase
of basal metabolism, it might be
argued that the continued eating
of high protein foods such as meat
might result in a permanently
higher plane of basal metabolism
which would account for the en
ergy and vigor of meat eating na
tions, Dr. Fritz said.
If that were true, the Eskimos
could be expected to be especially
I violent, for they eat a meat diet
and their basic metabolism is about
33 percent higher than that of
people living in temperate zones,
i literature quoted by Dr. Fritz
showed. However, Eskimos are the
mast peaceful and unwarlike race
in the world, according to another
quotation cited by Dr. Fritz.
Activity Degree Innate?
Inheritance is an important fac
tor in the degree of activity, evi
dence presented in the article
showed. But "it may be argued
that all races have inherited a
potentially high level of activity
a very questionable assumption
and that the differences we ob
serve are due to the failure .to
utilize a diet which will bring out
this activity to its fullest extent."
Dr. Fritz summarized his study
i by a statement that "it is quite
possible that diet noes lnnuence
racial temperament, nut. unui
further evidence is gathered we
may well be just a bit cautious in
drawing conclusions." j
Statisticians at Kansas State
Teachers college have found that
the college coffee shop serves more
than 39,000 meals in a year.
K
small,
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Calfskin, a 1 1 I t a tor
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Kover-zip pourh. en
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Akoi and tubular
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For More Than Fifty Yearn The
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TRACKMEN TRAIN
N ARCTIC
CIRCLE
OF EAST STADIUM
Schulte Puts Cinder Boys
Thru Paces for Dual
Meet Feb. 14.
Ignoring the cold weather, about
15 aspiring trackmen reported for
drill yesterday under the east
stadium. Figuratively speaking,
the performers seemed to be about
as "cold" as tha outside breezes,
and Coach Schulte began im
mediately to "warm" the strides
of these men. by ordering them
thru stiff practice rounds.
A tentative indoor schedule calls
for a dual meet around Feb. 14
with an opponent yet to be se
lected. This improvised slate has
two home meets for the Corn
huskers, one with Kansas and the
other with Kansas State. Colum
bia, Mo., will be the scene of the
indoor conference carnival and will
be held March 6. The Schultemen
are defending champs and are
picked as repeaters this year.
Ficldman Train on Track.
Coach Schulte brought about an
innovation in regard to rehearsals
by requiring fieldmen to take sev
eral jaunts around the track before-
undertaking their routine
tasks. Heretofore they were not
asked to run before practice; Pre
ceptor Schulte is trying this
scheme in hope of developing util
ity men for relay teams, which
have been rlirefully short of cap
able reserves. Who knows but
what there might be a few relay
dark horses among the fielders.
Fred Koch, one of the brilliant
sophomores, ran an &S0 in 2:14,
and this clocking was regarded as
good for pre-season workouts.
Koch, a member of this year's two
mile squad, i3 looking forward to
the impending indoor meets with
intentions of earning a major
letter. Being seasoned by two
months of cross-country running,
he has acquired speed and stam
ina, two rudiments of an adept
trackman.
As soon as the hubbub of the
grid season departs, several out
standing footballers will make
their appearance in track togs.
Sam Francis, indoor conference
shot putting champion, and Lloyd
Cardwell, dash and hurdles star,
are ex-members of Coach Bible's
team who will soon appear for
tutelage under Pa Schulte. Both
of these stars performed bril
liantly in contests last year and
are counted upon to do equally
well this season.
James Norguard, manager of
the student annual, will have to
erase his smile before posing for
the photograph.
This is not a move to create
general campus gloom. The edi
tors issued the order because they
want all pictures to be in keeping
with the tenor of the subject mat
ter. Each male student of Pennsyl
vania State college who expects
his picture to appear in La Vie,
Heitkotten YSJg Market
QUALITY MEATS
AT. LOW PRICES
Makers of Fine Sausages
and Barbecued Meats
B-3348
140 So. 11th
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Smart shifts s
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women curled only a
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of linena colors and
RVDGE'S Street Floor.
Chrittmn Slorr Of ISrbraika! JS
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1.00 U
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"Broad smiles on faces of the
men will be omitted so that the
general tone of the senior sec
tion will conform to the formal
clothes worn," the announcement
read.
I UHITY TO COUNSEL
BOYS' CllUKCH PANELS
Professors, Students Lead
3Iethodist Discussion
Sections Sunday.
Six university professors will
attend meetings of the Older Boys
conference at the Trinity M. E.
church this evening and Saturday
when they will be counselors of
discussion groups. The Conference
is an interdenominatitotnal meet
ing for boys of high school age.
Dr. Warren Bailer, Teachers col
lege, is chairman of the discussion
group program on which Dr. O. H.
Werner, Teachers college, is listed
as leader of the group studying
"What is a Religious Person
like?" Dr. C. W. Scott, also of
Teachers college, is named as the
group's counselor. Dr. D. A. Wor
cester, chairman of the department
of educational psychology and
measurements, and Dr. Dewey
Stuit. Teachers college, will both
lead in the discussion on "Build
ing a Wholesome Personality." Dr.
Harold Ennis of the college of
business administration will lead
the group whose problem is "What
Can I Think About My World To
day?" Others who will appear on the
program will be Paul Amen, var
sity football player, and John Wil
liams, of the coaching staff, who
are in charge of the "Building Cre
atively in Athletics" group. Regis
trar of the conclave will be Mark
Delzell. a graduate student in
Teachers college.
d Hear ''The
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For More Than Fifty Year$ The Christmas
F
Advance Ticket Sales Point
to Substantial Increase
Over Past Seasons.
That considerably larger crowds
of hoop fans wiil watch Ne
braska's hardwood aces perform
in the coliseum this winter is the
belief of John K. Selleck director
of student activities, who pre
dicted larger attendance and an
improved basketball team Thurs
day. "The basketball tickets are al
ready out, as they are a part of the
student activities books which
were issued at the first of the
year," Selleck stated, "and they
exceed last year's number by a
thousand." Including student and
faculty season books, 5,200 student
activities books have been sold
this tall.
"We can't esimate the crowd
that will attend the basketball
games very accurately," Selleck
said," as townspeople attend the
games only if they find time and
then they purchase general admis
sion tickets."
Nebraska's season opener at
Regular
Grade
BRONZE
Gasoline
14th at W HOLM'S
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Pink, aqua, tea rose. Sizes 32 to 40.
home will be played with the Uni
versity of Montana Dec. 19.
As part of the prom publicity
stunt at Northwestern university,
30 beautiful coeds recently drove
around the campus in new 1937
automobiles.
Economis courses are more pop
ular than any other course given
at the University of California. A
survey shows that economics has
reached a new high in schools
throughout the country.
Classified
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