The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 13, 1937, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1937
PAGE THREE
UARSITY POLISHES
UP DEFEHSIUE PLAY
FOR SOONER CLASH
LOWELL ENGLISH
CHOSEN TO LEAD
'BiFF FROWNS ON COOL) LUCK
CHARMS, RELIES ON TACKLES
Hain Drives Huskers Indoors
to Hear Scout's Report,
See 1936 Movies.
I'Yir the first time this season.
Coach Biff Jones' Husker gridmen
went down in defeat yesterday at
the hands of Old Man Weather,
Rain forced the Jonesmen to prac
tice under thr' cast stadium tn
preparation for the Oklahoma
game here Saturday.
Donned in sweat rainments, the
Oornhuskers viewed pictures of
lest year's Nebraska-Oklahoma
fray, which was taken by the for
mer, 14-0. Major Jones saw the
fi'med contest in a Dr. Jekyll-Mr.
1 vde role, as he coached the
f o.iners the past two years before
ermine to N. U. this spring.
As game time approaches, it is
becoming more manifest that the
i carlct and Cream eleven will
have its hands full in dealing with
the Soor.ers. who aiv on the war
pith nfer holding Coach D. X.
Piblc's Tcxans to a 7-7 tie.
Scouting the Oklahoma Texas
hMtle last Saturday at Dallas,
TEAM
SATURDAY
Back to Thrill
You aain!
"Trail
L
Rogers V
"The 13th i
Vv Guest" .
V 2 Serials! j
of the
Lonesome
Pine"
l COLOR
MiuM irrniy
,sHm Sidney
ltiiry I'oimIh
, 10c
V 15c
J!
Coach Harold Browne returned to
the Husker citadel with news that
Mentor Tom Stidham, who suc
ceeded the Differ as head grid in
structor at O. U., has grounded
Nlis proteges in baffling running
plavs and tricky passes.
On bearing this bit of informa
tion the. Biffcr immediately rele
gated the first eleven to Coach
Rrowne for instructions on thwart
ing Sooner plays. Mentor Ed
Weir's brilliant frosh squad en
acted the Oklahoma maneuvers
against the varsity.
Attempting to ferret out the
trickcrv of Sooner plays were
Amen and Dohrmann, ends; Doyle
and Shirey, tackles; English and
Mehring,- guards; Brock, center;
Howell, quarterback; Dodd and
Andrews, halfbacks, and Callihan,
fullback.
Frosh Stopped.
This aggregation, which Major
Jones plans to start against the
invaders, found very little ado in
stopping the freshmen. Oklahoma
aerial heaves went for nil as the
Husker secondary batted them to
the terrain.
While the first team was work
ing against Oklahoma plays, the
reserves were learning several
new assignments. The substitutes
took a liking to their new lessons
and reeled them off in machine
like precision.
On the No. 2 varsity were Rich
ardson and Grimm, ends; Mills
and Schwartzkopf, tackles; Peters
and Ffciff, guards; Ramey, center;
Link Senior Shifted Back
to Guard After Long
Grooming at Full.
Lowell English, handy Andy of
the Husker foofcall squad, will
lead the undefeated Ncbraskans as
game captain against Coach Biff
Jones' alma mater, Oklahoma,
this Saturday.
A senior tn
the University,
English has
ployed football
under the Scar
let and Cream
for three years,
w inning one
major and one
minor letter.
Versatility is j
t n e c u r 1 y I
thatched grid
der's mi idle
name. In Lin
c o 1 n high
iauFii f KH schoo , English
"""" was an all-star
center. Coming to the Cornhurkcr
school the next year, he continued
his pivot duties on Ed Weir's
freshman eleven. During the next
year, Coach Dana Bible saw fit to
shift him out to a gaurd to utilize
his speed and determination.
There he stayed for the re
mainder of that year and the next,
during wnich he earned his rpurs
as a varsitv man. This season he
Luther, Cornhusker Porter, j
Acts as Jinx-Bugaboo
for 15 Years.
"Luther" is a Negro porter who
has been going to out-state games
with Nebraska teams for 15 years.
And Luther was right on hand
last Friday to greet Nebraska grid
men when they boarded the train
headed for the Iowa State fray.
Loud rejoicing burst from the team
at sight of the familiar black face,
for Luther has traveled nearly
90,000 miles with Cornhusker de
fenders, and many are the Husk
ers who bave rubbed Luther's
head to bring them luck and vic
tory. Request for the same two port
ers is sent to the railroad com
pany each year. But "Bill," the
other porter who has been with
the team for the past 15 years,
will not be along this year. Bill is
in Portland.
Luther doesn't know about the
lnrlf which ruhhinir his head
brings. But he's "for the team in '( then returned a number of times
this game just as he was in the hater with identification cards car-
Theater, ' present their Identifica
tion cards and vote for the one
whom they think the most "likely
candidate." But not always is the
candidate the one of their own
choosing, as is evident by the omi
nous presence of the Inevitable lob
byists who stand around whisper
ing and nudging each other, and
who makes life miserable for the
unaffiliates. "Do you know the
merits of our candidate," and
"Thomas Bingenwingle has the in
terests of the barbs at heart," are
the most familiar campaign
speeches, and many a barb, like
wise green freshman, has suc
cumbed to the wiles of the lobby
ists. Far overshadowing those who
cannot make up their own minds,
however, are the wise University
students who some way or other
obtain a number of identification
cards and succeed in voting sev
eral times. Attendants at the polls
Tuesday revealed the fact that a
number of persons presented their
own cards and voted once, ana
DAILY NEBRASKAN
TOPS FUNNY BOOK
BY SCORE OF 6-0
Terrific Play by Newsmen
Wins Terrific Game
For Pub Crown.
ShjudiA,
Minnesota game.
Skill, Not Lucky Break.
The whole complicated mass of
jinxes and lucky charms rubbing
a Negro's head, carrying rabbits'
feet, choosing a hunch-backed
mascot do they spell the differ
ence between winning and losing
to the sportsman? Not to Nebras
ka men, says Coach "Biff" Jones,
who stakes' his chances on block
ing and tackling rather than any
mysterious rites or lucky omens.
Yet at Nebraska, as everywhere
in the sports world, one finds an
occasional pet superstition, a cling
ing to a lucky number or wierd
custom, all in an effort toward
wooing Lady Luck, toward two
rying names other than their own
and attempted to vole iwo or mree
times. This situation proved to be a
bit ironical, however, as the over
zealous supporters
good deal of embarrassing ques
tioning from the assistants when
they had difficulty tn writing the
name which was on the Identifica
tion cards
By Ed Steevts.
It was a tough battle, but I
won ma! I think!
After a blood fetching battle on
the Russian flats last Sabbath
afternoon, the Nebraskan smeared
the Awgwan terrifically, very ter
rifically, yes, very terrifically, by
a score of 6-0. The winning touch
down came in the last play of the
game, after the Newsmen had
toyed with the Dirty Jokers for
the entire fray, on a pass from
Wagner to Wagner.
I, playing for the Awgwan, did
really more for that terrific win
ning eleven than did anyone else
met with a ! during the entire afternoon.
It was a terrific day (for a
date), as the game began. Mate
rial was plentiful. John Howell,
who calls himself a player of yore
failed to make the grade as did
CYCLONES TAKE WIND
OUT 01 T.IL AUDREY'S
SAILS.
and
that
"The voting this year
mentcd Trofessor Lam 7., faculty
advisor for the Student Council,
"has been verv light. I would say
that there will be perhaps two
thirds less votes than last year.
However, the voting may pick up
com- i Adna Dobson, varsity guard. Thus
they were given the tasks of offi
cials. The Humorists got away to, a
terrific start at the opening whis
tle, for I came late. With my in
stallation on the Awgwan team,
Sat. North of
the Rio Grande''
and "Borneo"
Porter, quarterback; Mather and j , t aalnst Minnesota at his
I IOI K, nHllDMeKM, rtMU .IIIilH-M'H,
! fullback.
Hoffmann Alternates.
Found in the third string were
Kuhler and Shindo. ends; Nopiud
HURRY! & tut. 10c
-AST DA VI I t
Eve.
and Klum tackles; Dobson and
Alteon, guards; Burruss, center;
Phelps, quarterback; Pctsch and
Ball, haltbacks, ano Morris, full
back. Hoffmann alternated with
Ball at the halfback berth
old guard spot where he shared
most of the iackits.
The Mcllravy mishap that put
the Tecumsoh fullback in the hos
pital, brought another shift to the
100 pound English. .Tones paw pos
sibilities for him at the fullback
spot as a plunger. However, late
in the Iowa State fracas Saturday,
his absence at his old guard stand
I was conspicuous, thus he was re-
between the hours of five and six the tide changed and the Rag
when people who have afternoon mopped the gridiron terrineauy
LORETTA ROEERT
YOUNG - TAYLOR
PRIVATE NUMBER
in "OH DOCTOR"
, STARTS THUPf DVY
MOUNTAIN JUSTICE
GEORGE BRENT
JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON
plus "'Wing's of The
Morning"
HENRY FONDA
uame captain uoweu r.ngusn s ( intalP(i jn hls oM lolls ne
the handy-andy man of the team : m p-,,,.. fXnvt this week
I In his sophomore year he played
at the pivot post, and last season
I won a major N at guard. After
against the Sooners.
English lives in Lincoln, stands
5 feet 11 inches and is 23 years of
the injury ci i-.kio,i Mcnray "i , afrp. He is a two sport mn. doubl-
the Minnesota game, Biff Jones on thp bascball diamond,
converted English into a fullback ,
I on the second squad, but lo and
behold he is now back at guard,
i Two officials, both well known
in Eig Ten circles, will make 'heir
, Big Six debut here Saturday. They
arc Referee Lyle Clarno of Brad
ley and Umpire Anthony Haines of
1 Vale. Othci arbitrators are' Jack
i Nosih. linesman, and Reeves Fe
i ters. field judge.
Regler Defends
Officers Work
At Gopher Game
12
HI RRX! I nh Thursday!
KAY FRANC.IS in
"CONFESSION"
EXTRA!! SCOOP!!
ronipl.'t''
WORLD SERIES
Biebaf High Lights
Sin, I f'KMJ .:
Thr Shinr 7 hat II lit l.rrrylhhin! !
pert arte
Romanrr
Comrffv
X 1
Mr...
Jr.. V Ki
fj.r '
f-4 Y X -
' - -1 riirTiriiT
Ith
himoinJ
ALICE FAYE
DON AMECHE
RITZ BROTHERS
Hi'iir W inn iiicr
viwv Br lr"
l-.iij Maritn
Arthur lr-rhrr
Niitti I'rlttt
mill IiIk hund
RUBINJOFF
mn hU vMilht
Stuart owi
tlx lill I". M.
EXCLUSIVE PICTURES
NEBRASKA.
IOWA CAME
HOW FAR
WILL A
WOMAN
REALLY GO
FOR MONEY?
SATURDAY!
Frederick Ware, sports editor
for the Omaha World-Herald, is
quite put out with the action of
the policemen on duty in the sta
dium during the Minnesota-Nebraska
game. In his column of
j Oc t. 3 he made various charges
! against them, and on Oct. 10 he
I devoted another column to letters
! from the public in regard to the
I same matter.
Mrs. Mcllravv appeared at the ; 8018 ?
i door of the varsity dressing room
after their son's injury, they were
, denied admittance. He cited other
i examples of alleged discourteous
treatment shown to spectators.
Among other things, he com
plained of the confiscation of un
opened bottles of liquors in the
timing the jinx. In the office of! labs can have an opportunity to, with its opponents as it does in its
Coach Jones is a small brown ran-: vote,
bit's fnn rift of "Dad" Tesch.
ardent sports fan of Lexington, j HI1 ,
Neb., who. at the beginning of the 1 1 lit I
.AQOxn anna tho "AO Ph Ot Fv Phrfl 55 K H "
icnwn, ntco vnv v. v . v - - - "
equipped with his favorite lucky
charm. But the head football men
tor is skeptical, for if it- is not the
left hind foot of a graveyard ra li
bit shot in the dark of the moon,
it might well be returned to the
rabbit it might get in a few runs
for bunny, but it won't make any
goals for the team.
Sockt Never Washed.
Plavers of yesteryear would ,
wear football socks till they could j
stand alone rather than have them j
washed during the season. But j
present-day gridders. tearing as-!
phixiation more than defeat, con- i
sent to washing of both socks and
jerseys. ;
Johnny H well's chosen number, i
13. has never been changed. Num- j
bets which in" high school have j
brought good luck to the players
are often requested when the play
er gets on a varsity squad, and,
once chosen, the number is never
changed.
Bench line-ups meant a lot to
Coach Bible's peace of mind. In
variably the seating arrangement
on the coach's bench at games
would be: Coach W. H. Browne on
the left. D. X. in the center. Line
Coach F.oy Lyman at the right.
Weath..r. also, is a big item, as
Minnesota's Gophers found in the
Sooners, Coached by Biff
Last Year, to Renew
Rivalry Saturday.
Sooners Tie Longhorns.
Tom St id ham's Oklahoma
Sjoners battled 7-7 deadlock
with D. X. Bible's Texas Long
horns. Saturday.
Husker-Sooner History.
11! hik. 1S-U.
1!M Tt ".
)i1 NrhrnOin. 4-.
lfl?t hrnkii.
ltr-ia N-hri.l(ii. 24-.
1'.'4 iH.liilimj,t 14-".
1H; hr,l.,
1M!K .irk. 44-.
I? Te came, 1S-1S.
1H liljtwns,
1SS1 Nrhrk, lS-.
lH:i2 lriik. IV-4.
lftss -hrltK, 1-.
l.u.4 -ltrjiliH. 6-4.
editorial columns
j Paunch Wadhams slung pass
after pass, and all were complete
for long gains. In the first quar
ter, the two Wagner boys were the
, best ground gainers, but good
sports as they were they didn't
; cross the goal line.
I 'Lil Hartington Burney clipped
off some long runs that stood out
'well for his side. Once he might
i have been nailed for no gain, but
seeing one of the Dirty Joke clan
' about to snare him, he dropped
the ball and ran the other way.
Later in the fray the Humorists
I threatened twice, but both times
i managed to smear my team's play
. bv encouraging the opponent on-
iward or muffing the pass or some
such clever device,
i Once I forgot myself and caught
1 a pass that netted the Awgwan
several yards, but with an imme
! diate apology, I was reinstated as
' star.
I The end of that terrific grme
Ineared. The Nebraskan, that'sthe
other team, saw that they must
play terrifically to win. So as the
terrific Paul Wagner took a ter
i rific center from "Ruskin" Ed
Murray. Don Wagner ran terrifi
cally into the flats, reached terri-
ficallv into the air and snatched
it The gun sounded and the game
' was over. The fans roared, both
of them.
It was a terrific pame; Nebras-
i n,vnt& uncnina fniuiwo' " '
dealt them at the Nebraska Minne
11 NhrMhkH. 1 4-41
vln: hrk 11. tlH I. !
. . r .vir.rtA over
. . ...... ,,. 11 V,tt MlVM nnn ... ' '
quani .i-.u.,., - N(,K, week Nebraskan vs.
Min
THE BRIDE
YJORE
JOAN CRAWFORD
FRANCH0T TONE
ROB'T YOUNG
l JOAN (
i FRANC
ROB'
piu
Ittihl. lUnrhlrv In
H(lt TO MAIU TMI. flV"
MKkH MOI r. anil TKINAI.I) DICK
VI. Ii I , In
"THK CUM H l.l.M;W
t'.mU Tonili "hntehl H il'-itul Arnmi"
THURSDAY!-
and' ''llandv Anilv'
t go on
a bender . . . of fun!! ( 1 t
.KI. -"ll fonHn-f MM 'f?5 '' '
If. ihr brim "h lunthi. r. jmW - '
Ik-Z . f'n t..,. h in. in thi-ir" A t
r- R i VI. I Si I""' .c I" t -arvil
. r :) r ii.m. it, iMTnih-r 5 '( 1:'
f: V -A ""' ' ' Vnnk tHWIlt Ni IV lii?,,
stands, and certain remarks which
he claims weje made to the Min
nesota team by one of the police
men. Mcllravy's Deny.'
Mr. and Mrs. Mcllravy answered
the first of these statements by
saying thst there was no element
of truth in it. Thev said that they
were shown great consideration at
that time, and have nothing to
complain about.
The other charges have been an
swered bv Sgt. L. C. Regler. He
states that he has investigated all
of these charges, and that there is
nothinc to them. He says that if
any officer under him is rude or
discourteous, he wants to know
about it. and if after examination,
he ihinks that conditions warrant
it. that officer will be immediately
discharged. He is very firm in his
statement that there is nothing to
the charges of Ware.
BROWhTEEWfTWO
MILE m TEAM LOSES
Distance McntoMeet Kansas
State, Oklahoma Teams
Saturday.
Despite John Brownlee's winning
time of 10 -Of., the Cornhusker two
rrnlc squad lost a close one to Iowa
ctatf. yfi-''!t last Saturday at
will""".' ncnta
Cornbuskei-s go against Tom "
hams OKianoma wii" 111 '"
tofiiiim Dunne that time
. IllV'lini r-
Diamond Jinxes. ... -morccd vic-
imp nuMipin nt . , ,
More than in any other sports torious 12 times, tied twice, and P'".'lru
line, baseball players go in for I dropped two contests. The ties
strange superstitions and lucky j w(Te tn, 7-7 deadlooi at Omnia in
charms. To most pitchers a hotnoip and the 13-13 battlt at Me-
day is the best set-up. but Harris morial stadium in 1S29. The set-1
Andrews fans m best when the j br),s suffered by Nebraska were j
mercury takes a plunge down-1 th(, 54.7 rarjV at Nc.iman in 1P24 :
ward. Left handed himself, Paul and 2u-7 drubbing UKen by h-iblc s
Amen for a long time believed charges in 1930. i
himself Jinxed by left handed Adde interest is attached to
Pitchers. "But he got over it." ! thi, year's mix in the tact that,
Little Audrey just laffeJ
laffed when they told her
Iowa State was no setup
At the end of the first half and
far into the second, however, the
game had the carefree little la.is
repent ent for her mockery. Ames
WAS tough. Within eight plays,
two less than it took Minnesota,
the Cyclones had tallied on Ne
braska and were leading 7-0.
Of course by the end 'of Ne
braska's Big Six inaugural the lit
tle miss was back in her leering
stare as the Huskers toted a 20..
slab of victory bacon from the
field.
When Interviewed after the
game the leering Audrey con
fessed, "I'm just laffing to keep up
appearances; honest, I was scared
stiff. The Huskers worked almost
as hard for this victory as they did
last week against Minnesota.
And little Audrey was right.
Coming up from the behind in th
second half, the Huskers were giv
ing their all every minute.
Someone said, "Nebraska
seems to have a severe case of
weariness or overconfldenca
judging from their play."
Personally, we believe that it
was neither. To us, the Cyclones
surprise power came from vari.
ous sources.
1. The lowans were keyed t
infinite heights to lick the in
vincible conquerors of Minnesota.
2. Nebraska was missing their
biggest cog, John Howell, who is
their steadying influence, their
punter, and their quarterback
and plunger.
3. Nebraska was missing Mc
llravy, their regular fullback.
4. And so on.
Aside from the above, we have
no alibis for our Huskers. Not
that a 20-7 score is anything to
shove into the proverbial closet.
but said score didn't come in ex
actly the form that a champion
ship tt-am orders. By this we mean
that the Huskers weren't shoving
the Corn Staters all over the field
at will, and two of their three
scores came from deep in their
own territory.
If anyone was overconfident
about the prospects of annihilation
of the Cyclones, it was the student
body who turned out for a depot
rally about seven strong. No one
couid expect the team to get very
net up about a fray after viewing
a platform sparsely sprinkled with
shivering and mummified rooters.
But as we were saying, Ne
braska was pitching like Hubbe'.l
from the first, but the Cyclones
could take it. Loyal Corrhuskers
eek after,, Nebraskan
Pittsburgh.
P
This is the story of the man
who micht have boen. It is the
says Coach Wilbur Knight. Should Blff jfnr.g will be opposing the story 0 tne mtin wno rnijrht have
vs. 1 can be proud of the way th"ir team
lean come up from behind as ihey
S. Campbell and Austin also have clone in their nrsi two games
in noin irays inry nxr inrinunr
score odds, like Socrates with his
stutter pebbles, to win bv msigins.
It will be Amen and Plock who
will receive the lavish praises of
the week due to their mercury
footed and lenjthy touchdown
journeys. A men's was for 80
yards and Plock'a for 60. An
drews scored, too, but his was
only by the drab plunge method.
Though the above nsmeo wm
Lonsliorn Coeds
Take 'Gri(l0.oy,
Class Under U.X.
and you hnve
one chance to find an elongated
figure crawling on all fours on
the grass of the infield just be
fore a game. Coach Knight as
sures us that, once It has disen
tangled itself and assumed an up
right position, it will prove to be
Elmer Dohrmann, looking for, four
leaf clovers.
Babe Ruth's practice of stepping
on third base both in going to the
outfield and returning to the plate
may not have been copied irom
Eddie George, '38, but it has
brought both of them some pretty
good hits. Bats are never loaned
by players, for, with only, so many
base hit in a oat, lis Daa busi
ness for the player who loans his
to another.
No Teddy Bear No Score.
Back in '26, Coach Jones recalls,
when he was head coach at West
Point, the team was scheduled to
play at Chicago. There came to
his office a teddy bear, sent by
a little "girl fan as a good luck
token. In relating the incident at
a roach meeting, "Biff" pulled the
bear out of the waste basket where
he had thrown it and showed it to
the other coaches. No more men
tion was made of the incident, but
down at the station, after every
fin hurt tviariieri thr train, one of
Ames. Stimson placed second for of.ha fUaanneared returninc
lows State and Andrews was tnira jupj M lh, traln pull(,d outi the
team that he guided lo the run- , tljtor 0f the team that
ner-up position in tne Big ix ion- trounced Minnesota. The story 01
ference last year.
In the 1936 game. Francs
flipped a pass to Cardwell for the
first score and Andrews raced 66
yards for the second. The educated
toe of All-American converted on
both attempts as the Sooners were
held scoreless.
CHI CME6A AND TRI DELT
WIN FIRSTROUNO GAMES
Intramural Soccer Baseball
Season Opens as Two
Tilts Are Played.
the man who was lured away
to the sunny climes of the Lone
Star state, "to pilot the football
destinies of the Texas "Steers."
From coaching Cornhuskers to
coaching Co-eds is a long step.
Whether it is a step down or a step
up depends upon the personal point
of view. Anyhow this is the sad
sad denouement of a once great
coach, Dana
get the hallelujahs, the forgotten
men, also responsible or the
second Husker victory, are
Brock, Mehring, Shirey, Doyle,
Richardson, who intercepted the
pass that set the pin for t"e
last touchdown, English, Calli
han, Dodd, Andreson, Dohr.
mmn, Phelps, Ramey, and many
others, all of whom pUyed Sterl
ing ball.
Only in one phase of Ihe game
i did the home b"ys )" k por. l rat
Intramural soccer bsseball
games have opened with Delta
Delta Delta I defeating the Husky
Nubbins 15 to 3 and Chi Omega 1
winning from the Phi Mus to
football coach, Dana Xenophon )n the fumble department. ni
Bible. (there they seemed tn be over-
Fundamentals of Football. . Hocked. It took the Ir.ws rheenrg
We quote from the Daily Texan: '.on snout f.ve bauhles to pick
"In', senes of .ectures beg,n- ! P unusu. rhrrr nt .
1'mversitv co-" v,.,-
In Kiscner nr .umi
one of the better backs of the r,s-
ning Wednesday.
eds will be tsucht the fundamen
tals of foot ball by Dana X Bible.
"The talks, sponsored
Orange Jackets, (similar
r...l.. M-.1t t.u In A wh.
:""'-: , have been 20-7.'
lecture buiicing 3 10 mm ' r i I AM . little Audrey, let that b.
hv the t'on. Following the battle an Iowa
r 10 N.'cnbe declared. "If Kischer hadn't
1 (n , t rrL ! been hurt, the score might not
mv r rk nr
with
Joe Penner Gene Raymond
Harriet Hilhard Victor Moore
Helen Broderick B'lly Gilbert
Parkyakarkus Ann Miller
. -,- -fe
1
iff S-
(Sf ... 1
rj r.r,." ""II
1 ..f:f.: mm I !
a
hrrr be o prrjr
- rimr
J"1 '- - f LEWIS STONE
U "THE MAN WHO
CRIED WOLF
Tom Brown
Barho'i Rrcd
for Nebraska.
Coach Srhulte announced Satur
day that a triangular engagement
with Kansas State, the present
Big Six champions, and Oklahoma
will be run Oct. 16 at 11 a. m. at
the Wesleyan field. The Huskers'
iwn truck' is not available because
of the temporary bleacher.
Ajlvrrlinnp FraN-rnity
Mfii to Si inly Surveys
r.umma Alpha Chi. honorarj- d
vcrMtising fraternity, met at the
Ellon Smith hull Tuesday evening
nt 7 o'clock. The group took up
the study of surveys. Tlans for
rushing new members were dis
cussed. Pliins for the programs
for the coming year were also
discunsed.
Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at
5 o'clock Tuesday evenings.
little brown teddv bear tucked
under 'his arm. The score was tied
and, the coach never relinquished
the belief that, had "Biff" carried
the bear, the team would have
won.
All the good luck tokens which
two Negro porters could muster
failed to save the day at Stanford
In '29, recalls Jones. "They gave
us every kind of rabbit's foot,
horseshoe, and four leaf clover
and we got beat anyway." The
"Blffer" is pinning his faith on
blocks and tackles, and Luther
joins him In sayinf that the big
gest chance for the team this year
is that "they think faster. They
forget the man. They work as a
team."
"Have you voted? Let's go
vote!" So the freshman, sopho
more, Junior and senior alike climb
the shakey steps to the Temple
-1 nn TM . .u.ln(.a will Ml""'11 "
. . - 1... t a, linn jnr nifi
FMrrt rimes to be filnyea ei 1 . . ... . '
" . . iMTinnslralf I ne 1 nf amcrnniB "i
football, and the others the tech
nical points behind the plays.
Nationally Recognised Authority.
"This plan is a remarkable op
portunity for university puis to
i.n.n linnrKi'iBii the rountrv'i
most popular sport as taught 'by I EnPlnrf
Mr. Bible, nationally recognired
Huthnrily," Margaret Fisher,
Orange Jackets president said.
Charts and motion p: ures will
supplement the lectures which Mr.
Bible says will 'imbue a thorough
appreciation of football, and hence
1 rationally grounded school spirit
tn the university students ' "
are Kappa Aipna nn-m
Alpha Chi Omega. Delta Gamma
III with Kappa Delta. F.outon Hall
versus Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Alpha Thi versus Delta Delta Del
la IV. Delta Gamma II with Ray
mond Hall.
Delta Delta Delta 1. sophomore
barbs. Delta Gamma 1, Wilson
Hall, Sigma Delta Tau. Gamma
Phi Brta, Sigma Kappa, Chi
Omega n, and Delta Delta Delta
III drew byes.
Mechanical KiifJnrrr.
Will Meet October 13
Prof. Whclan Write
Hulletin on Mammals
Of Eastern Nebraska
The student branch of tha
American Society of Merhar.icaJ
11 meet st ":.' Wed
nesday night in room 2. Mechan
ics Engineering building. Student
nspers will be presented bv r.llis
Smith and Joe Brown. Several
reelfc of pictures wi'l be shown.
All interested sluder.ts sre urged
to sttend.
TONITE GLEN BUHL
tnd orehmtrm tnmtnrint the Whittling Irtimmr
rind
TRUCKING EXHIBITION
h? l.ufllit Wllliatrnt, dncln tnarhnr, mn4 pmrtnmr,
At Capitol lch. Contmuoui But fcvrvica.
Cnmlng Trlrtwy, Rtfrntt Rtrnhfrg,
Prof. Don B. Whilan ot
entomology rieparmeTit is author of
a bulletin entitled "Some Mammals
of an Eastern Nebraska rrairie"
which has been published in the
transactions of 1h Kansas Acad
emy of Science. This is the second
pBrt of a series of publications
dealing with the launa of an
original tract of Nebraska prairie.
Karlier in the summer Prc.in.sor
Wheltn published R paper on the
"Coleoptera of an Original Prairie
in Eastern Nebraska" in the
Journal of the Kansas Entomo
logical society.
Dr. Harold G. O. Hoick is senior
I author of a recent article entitled
the I vm.ti th. Kelt Difference
in Rats in Tolerance to Certain
Barbiturates and to Nicotine."
which was published in the Jour
nal of Phsrmocology and Experi
mennl Therapeutics.
Expert Typing
einblt ratra. Eipn-ifnDrJ
r.u, i n... Rurkrlrv Cull'. l"i . "a 1
UBl. e Mebr. Accrpt'S "d '
provefl methrrta r p.n't'rn f
theme. Iheura, "S r"
Popular ratra. Call F-ti39 er 7:.
P. M.
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Sorority Sections
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