The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 23, 1937, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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THE DAILY NEBRASKAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1937
PAGE THREE
WHO'LL COP BIG SIX
grid cnonsiiip?
mimmi in lead
Conference Scramble Opens Wide as Elevens Prepare
For Season's Windups Saturday to Decide
Wearers of White Sweaters.
ShudiL
wit lx-t nt on I
ftirnk 1 0 .ino 40 to
Oklahoma S 1 1 .?no ss in
Kunrn 1 t .2II SS ts
MlnHinrl 1 t .MS M 11
Kinui Slate 1 t ,ne U 4a
low State 14 .tOO S3 SO
Gamn Thli Week.
Thorndays Mlseonrt vs. Kannat at Uw
fence. Snrbrdayi Nrfcrnika i. Knnnni State
at Manhattan; Mlnourl Vi. U, C, L, A.
at Lo Angeles.
Rfjulti ljut Week.
Nebraska 18. Iowa 0.
Iowa Mate 13. Kanmii 7.
MI'Mnrt S. Waithlnuton (St. Louis) 0.
Arltona , Kanaaa 7.
Oklahoma 16, Oklahoma A. M. t.
Manhattan will be the center of
prid hostilities this Saturday as
Nebraska's grldmen drop the cur
tain on the 1937 season by tangling
with the Kansas State Wildcats In
a game that will decide the final
outcome of the jumbled Big Six
race.
As a result of its two wing, no
defeats and two ties. Nebraska is
leading the chase at .750 and is
trailed by Oklahoma at .700. A
triumph over the Kaggies this
weekend will give the Huskers
their third consecutive Big Six
crown.
However, there are four other
possibilities in which the battle for
the conference diadem may termi
nate. Coach Tom Stidham's Soon
ers, who held the Huskers to a
scoreless tie here, can have sole
ownership of the flag if Kansas
State reverses Nebraska and Mis'
sour! beats Kansas.
Sooners, Huskers Can Share.
If Mentor Adrian Llndscy's Jay
hawks, who battled Nebraska to
a 13-13 tie, lose to Missouri this
Thursday at Lawrence and the
Huskers tie Kansas State, the
Jonesmen and the Oklahoma
Sooners will sharo the title.
Kansas and Oklahoma will be
co-champs if Kansas wins and Ne
braska loses. Kansas, Oklahoma
and Nebraska will own the cham
pionship If Kansas triumphs 'over
Mizzou and Kansas State has a
deadlock with the Cornhuskers.
Monday's practice was devoted
to perfecting pags defense and
offense as Major Jones ushered
out three full teams on the varsity
field. The aerial heaves, which
worked so effectively In last Sat'
urday's 28-0 rout of Iowa, were
propelled by Thurston Phelps and
Johnny Howell.
Squad Sees Pictures.
After the practice, Coach Jones
hied the gridders to the conference
room where they were shown piC'
turcs of last year's Nebraska'
Kansas State game, which the
Huskers won handily, 40-0.
Casualties from the Hawkeye
tilt were few, Paul Amen, end,
having a finger In a splint and
Hugo Hoffmann and Harris An
drews, backs, complaining of
slightly wrenched ankles. Only
Hoffmann did not report for drill
yesterday, and according to
Trainer Cornell he with Amen and
Andrews, should be in shape for
Saturday's title battle at Man
hattan.
Mcllravy Limbers Up.
EKlon Mcllravy, fullback, In
ured in that memorable Minne
sota game Oct. 2, put on a sweat
suit and football shoes for a short
limbering up exercise. Slowly,
Fullback Mcllravy is regaining
poundage lost thru an operation
on his head for removal of a blood
clot, and he expects to be on hand
for spring grid drills.
Officials for the game Saturday
are E. C. Qmgley, St. Mary s,
referee; Ed Cochrane, Kalamazoo,
umpire; John Waldorf, Missouri,
linesman, and Jack Crangle, Mis
souri, field judge.
Ed Weir Calls Yearlings
For Grid Meeting Today
All frosh football men plan
ning to attend the Nebraska
Kansas State grid game at
Manhattan this Saturday are
requested to report to Coach
Ed Weir not later than this
evening at the stadium. Only
players meeting the eligibility
rules will be permitted to make
the trip, stated Mentor Weir.
UNSUNG GRID
HEROES GET
PLAUDITS.
K-Slnlc Fullbacks (room for Huskers
KANSAS STATERS CINCH
BIG SIX TWO MILE TITLE
Brownlee Finishes Second
After Munski of Mizzou
Breaks Tape.
On a frozen track at Columbia
Mo., Saturday, Coach Ward Hay-
lett's Kansas Staters nosed out the
University of Missouri, 50-37, to
retain their Big Six outdoor two-
mile championship.
As was expected. John "Lone'
some" Munskl, Missouri sophO'
more, finished first in 9:44, altho
he failed to break the conference
mark of 9:32 established by Glenn
Cunningham of Kansas In 1932.
Nebraska's John Brownlee, jun
ior from Omaha, had to put on a
burst of speed on the home stretch
to edge out Mark Collins of Mis
souri for second place. Leonard
Miller and Charles Mitchell, both
of Kansas State, came In fnu'rth
and fifth, respectively. Wilson
Andrews of Nebraska took sixth
and Jacob Stlmson of Iowa hit the
tape for seventh place.
As teams, Iowa State finished
third, Nebraska fourth, Oklahoma
fifth and Kansas sixth and last.
BY MORRIS LIPP.
Thet perpetually grinning guard,
Lowell English, whose forward
wall activities pass unnoticed by
those grid-goofs who have eyes
only for the man with the pig-
skin, lost his
Cheshire cat
counte nance
once this sea
son. That was
when he failed
to split the up
rights with a
point after
touchd own in
the 13-13 Kan
sas stalemate.
Eight other
times, thrice
last Saturday,
he booted per-
forttv trt rvi'aII
LOWELL ENGLISH the Cornhusker
From Lincoln Journal score by eight
points. Placeklcking is but one
of his gifts. Those close to the
midweek scrimmages and Satur
day pileups know full well how
effective his blocking and tackling
can be when injuries aren't slow
ing him down. It takes a lot of
grit to come out of one of those
muscle massaging dogpiles with a
grin.
Scrapping and submarining his
way thru rival lines to get at the
ball toter, Guard Bobby Mehring
merits orchids for his work as
Nebraska's watch charm guard,
not in one par
ticular game
but for his cou
rageous play
all season. If
you've been
watching those
line pileups this
season, you
have noticed
that about the
last man to
pick himself up
from the mass
of legs and
arms Is a tiny
lad with a
grimy number BOB MEHRING
11 on his back From Lincoln Journal
and chest. He wasn't flat on his
back watching the foe's runner
walking thru his berth, He was
usually successful In grabbing a
leg or an arm of the lugger to
make the tackle or to slow him
up so that someone else could pin
him to earth. Mehring was the
mercury footed boy who hauled
down Mnd Marshall Goldberg
from behind in the Pitt clash
when nary a redshirt stood be
tween the Fanther star and the
double stripe.
Old Man Graduation, the grim
reaper of grid aces, may put a
. crim !no the 1938 Husker ag
gregation. Thurston Phelps, slated
to take Johnny Howell's field gen
eral post next
TYPEWRITERS
AM itandird maket for atlt or rent.
Uied and rebuilt machine en eaiy
termt,
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
1S0 No. 12 St. 62157
Lincoln, Nebr.
a
V TC CAN'T BE
MB- JepLctu'
When Mother and Dad it down to their
Thanksgiving dinner, you'll want to be
there. If you can't be there in the flesK,
you can thrill them with your voice over
Long Distance! It will make it a real
thanksgiving Day for them and for you!
SPECIAL!
Lonr Distance "nlfht rate" will be
la effect all Uy Novambtt 25thl
Unco!.. TUphon and Ttlegraph Co.
"A Nebraska Company fj - Serving Its Peopli
llrUi M
1 ii
7
FIRS! ROUND HER
I
Kit -Vy 'i., ,
Sig Nu-Phi Gam, DU-S. A. E.
Splashes Inaugerate
Second Matches.
The first round of the liiiov
fraternity water polo touinanu iu
will be completed tonight in the
varsity pool when Sigma Nu. who
won their first gmno over 1'hi
Delta Thcta 10 to 4, will meet Thi
Gamma Delia who drew a fnsl
round bye. This panic will start
at 7 o'clock. The other game
scheduled for tonight is the Delta
Upsilon-Sigma Alpha Kpsilon tilt
The Sig Alphs won their first
game by defeating Kappa Sigma
10 to 3 while the DU s drew a
first round bye. The only othei
first round game leil to be played
is the Delta Tau Delta-Pi Kappa
Alpha tilt, which has been post
poned indefinitely.
In the other first round games
played last week, the Acacians
romped Alpha Gamma Uho 2'.i to
5, the Chi Phis ciecisioned Sigma
Chi 14 to 1, Phi Kappa Psi de
feated Sigma Phi Kpsilon 12 to
4, and Alpha Tan Omega nipped
Theta Xi 7 to 3. In the other
scheduled game. Beta Theta Pi
won by forfeit from Xi Psi Phi.
X
i aim
r-e2ED AT rieXPlS OF PiejOVlDIMC; f
rLEMP PdTCMTTniPl.6 THREAT ro j RME'S SSOCvd
rkt.r'jr wiuDCAT ATTACK; on c
hour ambitious young fullbacks have been spending the whole season at Kansas State trying to
fill the shoes of Maurice "Red" Elder, for three years an all-star Big Six fullback. Head Coach Wes
Fry, former All-American from Iowa, has been working in all four at the spot. Fred Klemp, Bob
Briggs, Elmer Hackney and James Brock have given Coach Fry a formidable quartet from which to
draw. They'll all probably see action Saturday against Biff Jones' Cornhuskers who have only the
Manhattanltes to conquer for a Big Six title championship.
Lipscoin Itffiins Index
Cornliuk'r I'ielnrcs;
Deadline Set nt Dee. 1
Boh Lipscomb, index editor of
the Cornhusker, has started the
index of all the names of the stu
dents whose pictures will appeal' in
the annual. The deadline for the
pictures has been set for Dec. 1.
All members of the sororities and
fraternities who have not had
their pictures taken will be called
individually.
Statistics at the University of
Wisconsin extension division show
that persons from 4. 49 years
of age are bettei sninonts than
youths of 15 to 111. The older stu
dents received 2) A's and three
D's in college courses, compared
to 17 A's and 12 D's lor the
younger group.
Husker Chances for Supremacy
In Uig Six Conference Will Hinge
On Saturday Fray at Manhattan
HI HKKK-U II.DCAT .R1D HISTORY.
If;ir Wlnni-r Jfrf
ID! I Nrhml AH- 0
IHI2 Nrhrailm SO-
lm:i Nrhrk ?-
ltIM Nchratkii SI-
ll n Nrbruoka HI- II
Mill Ni'hrnkn 14- 0
Nfhrnsliti 21-0
lllJII phiHl.ii .14-1 J
I'lj 4 .Ni-r.rii.kH 24- 0
nei rir -o
mo.: v.. I .. t. II
year, may lose i i .nikii 3:1-
out on a year's ! '' .Nrbnuka -
.. J JVt .Nvbrmka 10-
varsity compe-, ,h!,n,, s,f hi- h
tition, if h e Nrnk-a -s
l!i;v: M-nrft.kn -
l!i:t .rlriik - l
1!04 -haniHi Mm IS- 1
Ifl.m Tie O- A
lOSO Ni briika 40- (I
Gam-, won: NrhrmNii it. Kimiei Stnlr
i. Hp KHmfK, 2. l-nliit. Nciiri-il: Ne
bntnka Still, kfui.n, SI:iIp i2.
p a s s e 8 his
freshman law
subjects this
year as he's
been passing
that inflated
leather into the
arms of receiv
ers. The Kxeter
forward
expert got thru
h i s reauire-
THURST0N PHELPS ments in t h e
Kmm Lincoln jnumst arts and sci
ences college in his first two years
of Nebraska while playing frosh
football. The Big Six rulebook
says that when you're eligible for
a degree as Phelps will be if he
gets thru his first year in law
school-you are ineligible for
football, even if the degree is not
accepted. The rule may be cir
cumvented If Phelps flunks (which
this heady man won't do) or if he
just fails to take enough hours
to get that A. B. degree. 'Tis a
sorrowful rub when education and
athletics conflict like this, but me
thinks the call to both duties is
equally strong and will result in
seeing Phelps back in the mole
skins, worrying over law case
utterances that will escape the
Brown Derby award.
The Nebraska gridmen, perched
atop the Big Six conference with
two triumphs, no defeats and two
line fnrf k'anuiic Slate NTov 27
P fv.SJI ! at Manhattan in their finale. The
Huskers' chances of winning their
third consecutive conference title
hinge on Saturday's fray.
At present, the Nebraskans
pace the loop with a percentage of
.750 and are followed by Oklahoma
with .700, the result of three wins,
one defeat and a like number of
stalemates.
Twelve Seniors Lost.
In the Manhattan game will be
12 seniors attired for the last time
in Husker moleskins. Those who
will make the bon voyage are El
mer Dohrmann, Staplehurst; Paul
Amen, Lincoln, and John Richard
son, Eau Claire, Wis., ends; Ted
Doyle, Curtis, and Fred Shirey,
Latrobe, Pa., tackles: Bob Mehr
ing, Grand Island; Lowell English,
Lincoln; Perry Franks, Hamburg,
la., and Gus Peters, Lexington,
guards; Art Ball, Fremont; John
Howell, Omaha, and Harris An
drews. Beatrice, backs.
With the exception of Charley
Brock, who has another season of
competition remaining, the '37 line
will be riddled by the surge of
graduation, six members of the
forward wall being lost after Sat
urday's title game.
H.O.T.C. Touch Football
Tilts Slated lor Today
Weather permitting, the final
league games of the R. O. T. C.
intramural touch football pro
gram will be played this after
noon at 4:45.
Company C Engineers will
try to keep its slate clean in
League III when it engages
Company F Infantry which has
only lost one game and can tie
the leaders if they win. Battery
C Field Artillery takes on Com
pany E Infantry, and Company
A Infantry No. 2 plays Com
pany G Infantry.
i t" eAlLTHtlf I
. w
Wrestlers Mew National
Tournament Films Today
Pictures of the National Col
legiate wrestling championship
held last March in Terre Haute,
Ind., will be shown at 9 o'clock
this morning and 2 o'clock this
afternoon in the coliseum. Jerry
Adams, wrestling coach, invites
all varsity and frosh matmen and
those trying out for the first team
to be on hand for these films.
UNION
K Organized
K Union Hands tl
2
F LrHov 1 . r.Hiii;lian, u
V 11150 Ji'lliTMin . i 4M4. BM.SU J
. Bi'fk-.lnni.-blliMi-UbMin. ?!: d
f (in. -Mill. I 2JI1S, BI!'4o, 4-'.'li;4 J
f John r. Cnx Vnriltv Club nrrii. .
, 210 No. jftth i.!i;:ii 1
f Coy r pKlni-r. S10 S. SSth . K'Miil t
Eiirl Hill, 512.1 N M. .. B84:l
f rtnvr Hnnn, ns So. illh . Blood I
f Ken N'plwn, S200 R . a
. r;iis. i .mm i
Jlniy Miholn, nil I. St.. HIM:
t MpI Frti'r. JKin V 67th .MS7I" J
i Ed Shrffrrt. 2;22 l.'vcrclt Y'ifM t
os. iwe J
WEEKS
(mom
PLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
IOC L,NE
LOST TikiIpiI iPHthcr kpy h"lrtcr.
V. C Jplfem, 1'nlvPinity Dolly I'ppl.
LOST 'Rlnek fonllH-r ruin purse rnn-
tnlnlni' mnney mill Dfltii l hi UPlta
pin. Kinder rPlurp to Ruth Borne
niolpr, KK3H. Rrwurd.
LOST: Kappa Key. with imnif Mury
Ij. Jones Inscrlhfd. Call B-74M. Rc-trd.
MIAMI LOOKSJT HUSKERS
Jonesmen Eligible for Grid
Tilt in Orange Bowl.
Coach Lawrence "Biff" Jones'
Cornhuskers have been selected as
one of 16 teams eligible to play
In the Orange Bowl grid game on
New Year's day at Miami, Fla.
Other elevens being considered
are Lafayette, Fordham, Holy
Cross, Colorado, Pittsburgh, Villa
nova, Detroit, Duke, North Caro
lina, Alabama, Louisiana State,
Vanderbilt, Auburn, Texas and
Baylor.
" Egg! I j
Dean T. J. Thompson announced
that Thanksgiving vacation is
scheduled from Wednesday noon,
Nov., 24 to Monday at 8:00 a. m.
Nov.' 29.
Our Rental Department
Features
SAFETY-RENT-A-CARS
Extra good cars with heat
ers. Reasonable prices.
MOTOR OUT COMPANY
B6819 1120 P St.
TUXEM SHJ1TS
For Stent
We also have a Limited
Supply of good Tuxedo
Suits to Sell . . .
500
to
while they lut
KWm CLEANERS
223 No. 14th -
B-2772
Menl Save by Choosing a
TUXEDO OUTFIT
Tuesday at GOLD'S
Group 1
Reg. 23.64
1975
Tuxedo Suit 18.50
Arrow Dress Shirt . . 2.50
Dress Tie 55c
Studs and Links 1.00
Hose 25c
Suspenders 59c
Collar 25c
Reg.
23.64
Group 2
- Reg. 34.35
Tuxedo Suit 27.50
Arrow Dress Shirt . . 2.50
Arrow Dress Tie ... 1.00
Studs and Links . . . 1.50
Suspenders 1.00
Hose 50c
Collar 35c
Reg.
34.35
Perfectly tailored Tuxedos In single or double breasted styles.
Your choice of black or midnight blue. Every Item is from
our regular stock and Is offered at this combination-group low
price for a limited time onlyl A complete size range.
GOLD'S Men't Store nth St.
,vs..... l....sX
:i h
r4S
V
For Formal Wear, Men's
Dull Calfskin Oxfords
Meet all the requirements for
formal wear. Light weight con
struction, leather heels, plain
tips. Smart appearing and com
fortable. Flexible soles for
comfort when dancing.
GOLD'S Men't Store 11th St.
065
illl