i ..' . t n TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN. FRIDAY. APRIL' 15. 1938 PAGE THREE io. yjoiL II? filwond fiandol Jones to Close Door s on Spring ShopTomorrow Biffer Needs More Drills to Iron Out Kinks in 1938 Clan. DECATHLON MATERIAL UN PACIFIC COAST The Berkeley edition of the Uni versity of California thinks that the Los Angeles end of the school has two members of its track team that are due to take a crack at the Olympic decalnlon title in 1940. These two men are Wood- row Strode and Clavk Shaugh nessv. Berkeley Bear Coach Bru tus Hamilton thinks that Shaugh nessy is the better of the two and can outlast Strode in the gruelling ten event grind, but popular opin ion favors Strode. Hamilton should know, tho, as he was the man who coached the U. S. team that scored one, two, three in that event at Berlin in 1936. Shaughnessy is the son of the Chicago grid coach of the same name and is classed tops in the javelin. Besides the spear, Clark is said to be the master in the pole vault with the cross bar at 13 feet 6 inches. He also broad jumps around 24 feet. One Man Gang Strode is a giant Negro who played an awful lot of end for the Bruins last fall and whose full name is Woodrow Wilson Wool wine Strode. He throws the shot over 50 feet, the discus over 160, high jumps 8 feet 2 and runs the 220 lows in 24.2. The only cie pnrtment in which he falls short is the pole vault. A pole has not yet been perfected at UCLA that will hold the Strode weight, ana should one be made, west coasters pre afraid that Woody himself won't be Hble to lift it. Decathlon at K. U. Relays. Speaking of decathlons reminds us that the Kansas relays which will be held at Lawrence April 23 will afford the only opportunity for aspirants to get a little compe ition before Olympic ime. Three topnotch men have already entered the event Bt the Jaynawk meet William Lewis of Tipton, Mo., Wil liam McLane of Cape Girardeau (Mo. I Teachers and Charles Whit acre, unattached, of Ottawa are those that are scheduled to fight it out. Lewis is an 18 year old Neero high school boy who com peted in the decathlon last year. He won four of the ten events in 1937. but tlid not compete in the pole vault so finished well down the list. This year ne is ex pected to make a strong bid for the crown. McLane, a hurdler of note, won the all-around championship at the Illinois relays this winter. He has run the 120 highs in 14.8. 100 vsrds in 9.9. broad lumped 23 feet and pole vaulted 12 feet. Defending Champ. Dick Kearns of Colorado, win ner of the decathlon last year at Lawrence, has announced that he will defend his diadem. He won the national junior A. A. U. chan pionship in the high hurdles last vear and he Is also a crarK poi vaulter. When in high school Kearns was a one-man track team, There will be some good two milers on hand too for the relays with Little Bill Beiler. of Drake, Charley Mitchell. K-State and John Munske of Missouri. Beiler is the 120 ppunder w ho was second in the two-mile at tne national collegiate meet last year. Mitchell won the Big Six title in the event last spring and repeated Indoors this winter. Munske fas first In the conference two mile race last fall. A testimonial to tho stiff com petition offered at the meet ear year is the fact that the meet has been run every yearince 1923 vet the oldest record on the books is dated 1930, A cenvtnlint aire to top on your vtnlng drivt. Pltnty of park ing (pact. (Curb ry. Ice). TMI WMITI HOUte, N. K. on 77. Beautiful Olnlng Room Tool Sport Scribes Survey Spring Ceremonies Huskersto A est M Jays for Second Time This Year Major Jones eased up on his gridsters and sent them thru a light drill yesterday after the stiff workout and 70 minute scrimmage the day before, emphasizing in particular the ass, upon which he has e e n placing t r e s 8 during this last week of spring foot ball practice. Jones is not at all happy to have to close shop after Sat urday s scrim mage until next fall but wishes practice would continue sever al more weeks, giving him time to smooth out the rough places and polish up the precision and timing of the offense, but in particular to give that much needed experience .to what he terms green troops. Drill consisted chiefly of re hearsal of plays, with Link Ly man ironing out wrinkles in the line, stressing blocking and fast chargin, while the backfield under Jones and Presnell drilled on passes. The entire team seemed somewhat stale, with Bill Andre- son turning in the only good per formance of the day as time and again his fingers seemed covered with glue as he managed to hang onto almost impossible aerial heaves. Andreson is one of the better pass receivers on the squad. Calisthenics were in the order of the day to loosen up muscles and sore spots, and take out the kinks. These settlngup exercises are performed every day and pre vent to a large measure mishaps and injuries. Closing the drills, the four teams took certain assigned plays from the major and ran them off down the field, thus gaining practice working together in familiar un its. Finally each squad , m turn lined up before the goal posts and the record was 100 percent good, as each time the placekiekcr sent the pigskin twirling end over end thru the uprights. Those mak ing the placeklcks were Marvin Flock, Edsel Wibbels, Vernon Nep- rud, and Bill Andreson. The day was warm, with many of the players taking off their jerseys and shoulder pads, which weren t needed as no scrimmage took place, but merely a few drills on the dummies. ' I 'v' HI ! M If l Jn' ' if - 1 I y J VV -: y r2f V' u f hi BILL ANDRESON I P ' ,! Lincoln Journal. f -.'i! aiSiiteAaiiii;!! 5 ' v ' ' J ktnrnmmMtammmtmvmmmMmiimmkmimtwimmKMwmmiim(tfvv iwrrr r mnn i.'i.tirgMmtinilfifliinirimil i'oT inr mminmiinii iiiiiiiiiimimmiiii Milan ii-iiiri'iM Lincoln Journal. Left to right are seen John Bentley, Journal; Allan Gould, Associated Press editor; and Cy Sherman, old man of eportsdom from the Star. The. big city mogul Is assuring the 'ocal scribes that the Huskors arc without doubt one of the finest grid aggregations in the nation. Gould stopped off here a few week ago long enough to get a preview of the team he watched knock eff Minnesota on October 2 this year Jayhawks Resume Schedule After Two Weeks Confinement. Composite Choir to Sing for Early Assembly at Pioneer Park. The Bnpti.st churchek of the city are uniting In an Faster sunrise service next Sunday morning at 6:00 a. m. The hervii e will be held at Pioneers park. Cars will be provided at Kirst Baptist church and Second Bsptlst church for all who wifh to attend. A choir composed of people se lected from all the churches will furnish part of the music. A male quartet will alo contribute. Allen Waltz and llobert Ellsworth will plav a trumpet ilii't. Breakfast will be served at Sec ond Baptist church. 2lh and S Streets. Kcservatioi.ii may be m;ide by calling Mi Crai e Spin lit. tlx BHpti.st Student Secretary. UlMi2, by Friday. Any other college students who contemplate political careers may mark down the Spring of election years as the open season on worry ing. The primaries are dally draw ing nearer and a strenuous cam paign against the nominee of the opposing party is In prospect for fall. Tliry eagerly hope for no op position In the primary so that they won't have to make two hard fights Or, If they et by the primaries without opposition and live In states that are dominated by one par'.;., I1' ' i .ay walk Into another term ll!ioul any campaign. LAWRENCE, Kas., April 14. The University of Kansas track team gits back into action, after a two weeks rest, 4th a dual meet against the University of Nebras ka here, Saturday. The Jayhawks competed at the Texas Relays, April 2. and since then have been unable to work out outdoors because of weather. They have been keeping In condition on the indoor track, however. Injuries continue to dog the Jayhawks, with Chet Frledland, shot putter, the latest victim. Friedland cut his right hand se verely on a barbed wire fence and probably will not be able to com pete Satuiday. Don Bird, conference champion in the pole vault, is still on the sidelines with a dislocated elbow sufl'eud at the indoor meet and J. D. Richardson, sprinter, is nursing a muscle pulled at Texas. Kansas should show to good ad vantage in the middle distance runs, with Ernie Klann in the 8S0; and mile .and Dale Heckendornt in the 88U. Klann was second in both races at the Big Six indoor meet and Heckendorn ran a 1:57 half mile at Texas. Gopher 'Grads' Learn to Do It A La Emily Post I When at a dinner party, Mlnne-1 sola etiquette students do as the j uiiinei gucsia uu, uui vwieu hi it public restaurant they have a manual of special defenses or of fenses to fit all emergencies. The school has an etiquette course that teaches students all the finer and less fine points in eating. "Old grads" of the fall and win ter etiquette courses had a field day recently to exhibit their prow ess. With Mrs. Leora Cassidy, in structor, conducting, the class held a "demonstration" dinner in the Union building. Twelve "star" pupils sat at tahles in the center of the room, with the others ar ranged in a circle around them. Eight students showed to the class how to eat and how not to eat at a private dinner party. The other' four demonstrated the al ternative type of eating, the type of self-pieservation in vogue at the public lestaurant. And then after the dinner an umbrella court gave students delinquent in the skill a chance to ask questions, to brush up on food eating technique. Schulte Anticipates Tovgh Battle With Kansas, as Usual. Seventeen Husker cindermen will leave this afternoon for Lawrence, Kas., and the second dual meet of the outdoor season. This meet will be the second with the Jayhawks this year, the Huskers having won the Indoor meeting by a lopsided 81 to 23 majority. To morrow's meet is expected to be much closer than the indoor one, for which the Jayhawks had had little work. The Kan sas team is well balanced, and may upset me BILL PFEIFP Huskers, reign- i.min journal ing outdoor champions. The Scar let and Cream has had a week and a half of work since dropping the first dual meet to Oklahoma by a 71 to 60 count. Nebraska was handicapped in the Oklahoma meet SsiSL 9L By Qluw (BwibowsUi Jimmy Kilts, Rice coach, is wor ried about Ernie Lain's weight. That gentleman can't prow for ever, but when in high school he weighed 170, went up to 218 last year when he was the country's sophomore sensation, and weighed 236 when' he reported foi spring practice this year. Charley Bachman at Michigan State has a weighty problem on his hands, too. Two years ago, Los Bruckner, a 17 year old. looked lilc a great quurterhHcK prospect, but weighed only ie tween 155 and li0. so Bachman gave him some exercises. He leached 17". and last year whs regular field general for the Spar tans. Trouble is that he didn't stop growing, and new tips the beam at 225. Bachman is sadly trying to make' a tackle out of him. Warren Haves, 17. brothel ol by a lack of men, which will partly Rutherford Haves, former Kansa be lessened for the Kansas meet. Several mainstays of the team, however, will remain at home for the close of spring football drills. Among those who will not go are Jack Dodd, Charley Erock and El mer Dnhrmann Those making the trip include El HEREJPRIL 21-23 Annual Convention Obtains Oklahoma Professor as Speaker. April 21 to 23 has been set as the dates for the 26th annual spring convention of the Nebraska History Teachers association, which is being held in Lincoln again this year in co-operation with the Univerity and the Lincoln public schools. Professor Edward Everett Dale, chairman of the department of history at the University of Okla homa, will be the visiting guest speaker and will open the program Thursday afternoon, April 21, with an address on "The Gift of a Sense of Humor" at the Whittier junior high school. A r ' 4 4 i m end. died Saturday from a kidney infection resulting from a blistered toe. Last spring as a iunioi in high school young Hayes missed tying Glenn Cunningham's prep mark by two-tenths ot a .second, although he attended a high school with practically no training facili- hud moved to don Hank and , ties. His pa rent. - Bill Gish in the j larger tov.-n, and hurdles. Frank expecting him to and Paul Mon- j mark this spring son in the jave- K V. in S"ptemb lin. H a r w I n ' Dawson and Kansa ns weie shatter Glen's and enioll at If sruimr oractice lime ivorcn t Bob Simmons sn valuable around here, a game in the dashes, between the big name boys and Simmons, Paul u,,, ijull, ,,, )nVM mjj.Nt ,e m Byers, anil El- trrcsling not a game between h 11 wood Pankonin staters and unknowns, hut one be in the quarter tween hovs with names like mile, Wilson Grimm. Mann. Mills. Bchm. Brock. A n d r e w s, Al ; Um Phelps. Dodd. Hopp and BOB MILLS -.uci, u.mi.. i-iock, against riocnasiui. riui.i, uincm jounmi Brownlee a n d s c h I u c k e b I e r. G o e t o vvski. Roy Catch in the distances, Bob Schwartzkr.uf, Roiirig. Knickiehm, Mlils and Eill Pfelff in the shot j Nuornbei ger. Bruensbach. etc. ai put snd discus, Ray Baxter and though there is a lesser numbei ot Frank In the high jump, Veil tongue twisters than of the other Athey and Bob Neumann in the soit. Nothing like Nebraska for a pole vault, and Dawson and Neu-j little variety, either in weather or mann in the broad jump. football names. b and Daily O'Collegian. Oklahoma A. -. : & M. rag. Rave quite a little space convocation Friday morning with 'to an interview Elmer Dohrmami Professor Dale as the speaker, agnve while in Stillwater with the dinner at the University club that j baseball team... Tom Meanv of evening and sessions through Sat-'the New York World, Telegra.n urday morning have been arranged I says the Yankees are giving ur by the comimttec. Joe Di Maggio for Lent . . . Elniet Bess Alexander of York is presi-tho Elephant Hackney of tii dent of the association this year, 1 Oberlin Hackneys is blossoming Frank H. Heck of Peru is vice-(out as a shot putter. .. He won th.i: president and Carrie Roberts of . event in a K-Aggie meet again! university 1 Lincoln is secretary-treasurer. Fort Haves, with a toss of I'1' 4-.' Evansvllle College frenhmen de feated I ha seniors In a true-false quit. HOW WILL YOU LOOK? If one of these candid camera fiends map you unaware? You'll never hav to worry If you let us clean your clothes regularly. Our faat service, ex cellent work and special clean ing: process make It possible for you to loolc your best at all times. CALL B4003 BAND BOX Cleaners snd laundtren RIQIvTUICK mm CYCLONE BASEBALL TEAM TO MEET IOWA TEACHERS Mentor LcRoy Timra Pleased Over Prospects for Aggie Outfit. AMES. Is.. April H.- The Iowa State College baseball tesm jour neys to Cedar Falls tomorrow for Friday and Saturday games with Iowa State Teachers College. A year ago the Cyclones repulsed the Pantheis 1-0 and 10-5 oil State Field here. Coach LeRoy Tlmm was pleased at the hhowlng of the Cyclones in their 7-1 and 14-tt wins over Sump ,ion Monday and Tuesday. "It's quite evident," fimm pre dicted, "that we will have a good defensive club, especially In the in field." The Cyclone mentor could also see poKsibllltles of strength at the plate though his men made only 15 hits in the two games. Eleven new Iowa State players got their first taste of varsity competition in the opening series. Floyd F. Kishline Relates Farm Power Problem to Ag Students. Floyd F. Kishline told 60 stu dents and visitors at the Nebraska college of agriculture Wednesday night that it alcohol from farm products is used successfully ss a motor fuel It will require the com bined efforts of the agricultural engineer, the chemical engineer, anil the mechanical engineer. "No one branch can do it alone" I he said. Kishline Is chairman of the De troit section of the Society of au tomotive engineers and chief en gineer for th Graham-Paige com pany. He spoke on "Evolution of Farm Power." Kishllns traced the history of farm power from hand labor to the present, and predicted that fu ture tractors will have lighter, higher speed motors. "The auto mobile type of engines will be adapted to tractors just as It wss adapted to trucks," he said. The mollification by congress of the capital gains and undistributed profits tax, which seems very re mote from collegiate Interest, is really of important significance to tins year's graduates. Many econo mists claim that this tax is the underlying reHson for the pro nounced slump and that with its repeal business will pick up. Sur veys shows that thus far there is a decided decrease as compared with M37 In the number of place meiits In business of college sen ions who will soon complete their courses. A University of Oklahome pro fessor has figured out that only 10 percent of hla studenU "crib" at exams. Spring It Here . . , i',rl Your V Ail SIidh Made l.lk Afr SI) olhrr ihw rt-iulrtni hi rmwnahl prWr ml llir UNITED SHOE SHOP Srxi U I nit '4 I lfr ktnr 101 .So. Illli THE MOGUL BARBERS I Iain ut 127 North 12th BLEND YOUR TOBACCO WITH TIIE HONEY HONFY IN THE IOWI (Ttllow) HoNIYlnYllo-Bot Imprevca til tobtccat. You pind it Itait 110 (or tcbiccoln yur tl prnl on Yfllo Bolt intliM thit I JO worth ol tobcco (tt Iwict ioodl 0t yours. V ft f1 i i GIFTS Jhom. 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