1 lit UA1LV iSLBUASkAIN, THUKSDA., Al'KIL 21. I93B IWGL rilKEE yjoit H icrfcnc p nr-nn cir TO ENTER KANSAS RELAYS SATURDAY 'Dark Horses Make Strong Title Bids in Kansas Relays CLASSIC SPOUT RETURNS TO CAMPUS The first week in May the cam. pus will have a chance to see one of the world's oldest sports when the first annual intramural fenc ing tournament is staged In the coliseum. This sport has not been prevalent in Big Six circles be cause of the lack of interest in the sport and, at Nebraska at least, because of the lack ot equipment Knights In armor were the first to engage in a sort of duel which has evolved Into the mod ern fencing bout. The games were started In the 16th century in Italy and soon became popu lar, spreading to Spain and France, where it became one of the principal pastimes of those countries. Its development was aided by the invention ef gun -powder which rendered armor useless. Without the armor, the fencers developed skill In the use of the weapons. Now one of the favorite sports of modern times, fencing is played with light foils or small flexible swords tipped with rubber buttons to prevent physical injury; There are three weapons used in the modern game: the foil, the epee, and the saber. The foil is a thin slender blade Which requires con siderable technique to manipulate die blade. The epee is a three cor nered sword dueling sword and the saber is a plain sword with a blunt point but sharp edges. Or. R. G. Clapp, director of the department of physical edu cation for men, claims that the sport provides a good means for physical development Enthusiasm for the sport is greatest In the eastern part of the country with the Big Ten conference being the farthest west that it has penetrated. Bill Crittenden reports that unusual enthusiasm has been expressed over the announcement of the forthcoming tournament in May. This may be the revival ef tha foil in this part of the country. Baseball Friday. Coach Wilbur Knight's baseball squad will open the home season on the Muny diamond Friday acainst the University of Missouri, he Huskers' first conference op ponent. The Oklahoma Sooner were on the Nebraska schedule for April 7 and 8 but snow forced the cancellation of the games. We got out our pencil and paper and figured up the following tabu lation of times at bat hits and nms for the tesm on its recent trip south. Here it is: Mills, Brock, Bolster N. U. Prospects With Record Tosses of Discus. Nebraska's chances to score in the discus in the coming Kansas Relays look very bright after yes terday's practice, in which two Huskers registered the best heaves T e x as Relays, which they have ever got. Boh Mills and Charley Brock both scored around 135 feet c o n si s tently, with Mills' best going for 150 feet. Brock was .just a foot be hind, with 139 feet. In t h e second place in this event went CHARLEY BROCK, n c h e g. T h e Lincoln JournaI.fi e Id in the Kansas Relays will be about the same as it was in the Texas Re lays. Judging by comparative per formances. Mills and Brock should take second and third respectively next Saturday at Lawrence. High Jump Close. Probably the closest event in the meet at Kansas will be the high jump. In the Texas Relays. Ray Baxter, Husker. tied for first with six other men at 6 feet 2 inches. Practirallv the same field r 1--i fit V A Heavy Firing in 16th Annual Tourney. Bill Broomfield, Southern Cali fornia broad jumper, was second in the lecent U. S. C.-California dual meet, but he received a big ger thrill out of it than did the winner. His best mark last year was 23 feet 6 inches not good enough to place in a single meet so his father offered him a new Lincoln Zephyr for all his own if he could do 24 feet against the Bears Bill jumped exactly 24 feet, one-half inch to the great satis faction of both papa Broomfield and himself, so now there's one more buggy on the Southern Cal campus. Though this Is time to talk of Dizzy Dean and such, that 1937 football season still pokes its beautiful head up every so often. Husker records show that in only three seasons since 1900 has Nebraska averaged fewer points per game than In 1937. The 1918 team scored S3 points In the short six game schedule, the 1919 schedule of eight games produced 65 points, and the 1925 team made 69 points In eight games, whereas last fall's team averaged 11 points in 9 games for 99 markers in all. The 1929 Defending Champions FaceAu;hi,lson, j'Jmi,ed 24 feet 73 " r inches uiirl tnn irua tio.t K LJ..U bard who jumped exactly the same distance. Now Atchison is deter mined to settle the matter once and for all at Lawrence by jump- LAWRENCE. Kas. Defeiuiinc i lnK 25 fevl- At Austin he had a champions are in for a rouch time I 'umP 01 " feet 3 inches, but fouled of it at the 16th annual Kansas ! 0,1 " relays, April 23, it appears. Com petition is expected to be the keen- he est in years For example, Vein Sumner of Emporia teachers, who won ' the 120 yard high hurdles last vear. will be up against a top notch field oi nuraiers headed by Fred Wol cott, sensational Rice sophomore. At the Texas relays Wolcott bet tered the world record in the high hurdles with the blazing time of 13.9 seconds. Also from Rice Will come .lack Patterson, a veteran hurdler who can run the hurdles in around 14.4. Boyce Gatewood, a Texas univer sity sophomore, almost as sensa tional as Wolcfttt, will be in the race along with R. V. Wright of Oklahoma A. At M Bush Lamb of Iowa and Harvey Woodstra of Michigan State. Hubbard Returns. Bob Hubbard of Minnesota will endeavor to repeat his victory of last year in the broad jump, but to do that he will have to defeat an inspired Jud Atchison of Texas. Atchison has become greatly an noyed at his inability to down Hubbaid and is primed to make his supreme effort at the Kansas re I lays. I Here last year Atchison jumped . 24 feet I '3 incnes and lost to Hub- I. U. Relay intact University of Iowa sprint b . .. I ... II .. ..IS H llMNI M lMTgr ............. i kiii. ir IITH Ik I .AnMn ef .......... Harm Ik muimi rl KMfmii t ,,4 rr p .. .. w-hniaaX p Hrhr p 1 mJfmaa rf Mt.Mim r Haxkhm rl The team faced the piste 108 timf and garnered 33 bugle to compile batting average of .305. Friday. the Huskers will parade thc-ir wares before the home folks and it is likely that tlie batting will be better. They have had oiJy a few practice sessions since they tetumed from the south, and they may look a little ragged Friday but but 'he team has fine spirit and should play pretty good ball. R.O.T.C. IN BEGIN will compete Saturday, and there coach, was tne most interviewed is expected to be very little in ! man the world last week- He favor of anv one man was called t0 the telephone from Bob Mills and Invtn of Texas ! a dinner PartV- and uests heard Christian should m,t nr. rlns- such bits of conversation as. bard by one-quarter of an inch. At season shows only 93 points, but ( the Texas Relays two weeks ago that year the Huskers played i .. only 8 games, making an 11 5-8 point average. Lvnn Waldorf, Northwestern medley relay team is the only win ning relay team of 1937 which re turns intact, hut the four men who won the event as sophomores last year have their work cut out for them. Fourteen other universi ties have entered teams in the sprint medley relay and there are some crack outfits included. Dick Kearns of the University of Colorado will be on hand to de fend his decathlon championship, but sports experts are looking out of the corners of their eyes at sev eral "dark horses," who they be lieve may dethrone the Colorado ace. The decathlon, a gruelling ten event contest, will draw a record number of entrants. Fifteen entry blanks have al ready been received for the dec athlon and many more which were requested are expected to come in durig the next several days. Dick Kearns ot Colorado, winner of the decathlon last year, has announced his intention of competing again, but like others his entry blank has not been sent in yet. From the Kansas Relavs came the Olympic decathlon chamninrw of 1932 and 1936. Jim Bausch and I uienn Morns, and American Olym pic team coaches are watching'the decathlon at Lawrence for a suc cessor to these men. UflHOM ROPE BUCKING BEEF AT AG CIRCUS W 7 14 Pigskin Toters to Turni"0"1"1 wont bc s s!ow s he Cowboy, Play Numbers jS It'Z Game With CalveS. Nebraska's idea of a good time. Thurston Phelplis, who calls sig- Veisatile fellows are these foot ball players, who don't confine their antics to the gridiron but will calves at the Equestrian Circus at As college on the fair Saturday afternoon of May 7. Link Lyman has chosen 14 grid aters, who will team up in pairs and one will rope the calf, while the other examines the number on the tail, and if it corresponds to the number they have been as signed, they wili jerk it off and race with it to the judge, the first there to receive the trophy. If they have the wrong number they let the calf go and seek another bossy cow. The basis of Lyman's selection of the pigskin players is not known, but Roy "cowboy" Petsch, one of those chosen, should be good if he lives up to his name tCharlie nals. may be able to call the cows home. lne plan of a calf roping cou- omp around roping bucket i test had originaly been a wild cow milking contest but Lyman sug gested the former and pointed out its greater practibility. He states in part "Happy to play a part In Farmer's F a 1 r a m proud of the school Ac col lege compares favorably with any in the United States glad to give a because we get many good men from the col lege." .Major Jones was very en-thusiastic about the plan auai m the shot put. Irwin won this event by 1 inch over Mills at Texas, and Mills will wipe out this defeat. bettered Irwin's relay mark of ifs feet 5 1 i inches several times this year, even getting a few practice heaves over 49 feet. His best in competition is 48 feet 7';. inches. Yes. we have some promising fresh men," "Our biggest problem is in be out' to lne backfield." "1 would say we Mills has nave lne nucieun ior a strong line, etc., etc. as koa u a sponswnier had called, Waldorf said, "No, it seems as though a journalism pro fessor assigned his class to inter view me alwut our football pros- Another very close event should j Pecls Ior "exl ana l"Bl wtt be the 100 yard dash, which Rice's interview ."so. m. Fred Wolcott won with a :09 s ''. ; iU'VU 1 I BOB MILLS I Teams to Meet at 5 O'clock; Must Show by 5:15 Or Forfeit. The R. O. T. C intramural wft I'Sl! tournament iartl yesterday when four league sur.f Into ac tion wUA five games. All gsmes are playe4 on th "Rusrisn fists" at i oclok. Forfeiture follows if oti tesm Is not present by 5:15 Post ported gsmes inuw be plsyed within two dsys ot tb original date and at 30. League rhairipionshipa will )cMd by Msv 10. aftd the semi finals and fUiafs will be run within th ri'xt week. The first, otil and third pUu winners will be given individual awards. The schedule: k i.7 .. i if - A Kl Hd'i t .... ' 4 A S . . I"' ... I Jtf . Hoq Btt. A1. -- A Inf. . A - Ail Co. Int.. - A Uf. M I IM C .. S Art Mi' it! 0 ur v, l tt. C J. Art. "-"" C Its. O Irl I 1 ur . An. R itr! C Int. w. C M - lMn J SNVi . t a An Mi'Sr? Ut a " '- t. r in i K Uf. n A Art I IH a M s4 - A Art. r a uc . ut. - ..- -e-l 4 fx- M ui. o ros i -i D Itf. r M H.T II - t fc4. . C Art i -! II Ui. M Itif i t Uf . C Art - r M - M UC . f. rt. I- t iti. t) rs C Art. m. H .,( S-Ki-M I U Intl. M Uf. I -t mark at Texas. Nebraska's Harwin Dawson beat this time last wefk. when he was clocked in :09.7 for the century. Wolcott wa high point man in the Texas Relays, scoring victories in the 100 yard dash and the 120 yard high hur dles. Relay Prospects Bright. Other events in which the Husk ers have good chances to score Saturday are the distance medley relay in which they took third at Texas, the javelin in which Fiank scored third at Texas, and the broad jump. Nebiaska did not score in the broad jump at Texas, but Dawson has beat Storer of Kansas State, who was fourth this year. The squad that will tnke pnit in the Kansas relays, as tenta tively named by coach Schulte yesterday, will be the snie. with only two exceptions, as the tc-air. which met the Jayhawks in the dual last Saturday. The charges include the dropping tfrom the quad 'rtf Rov Gatch. two rr.iier. and Julian Byer. quarter miler. and the sddine -.f Charley Brock, shot nnC discus, and Jack 'Dodd. sprinter ind broad jumper. The probable entrant are J.r.m. Jack Dodd. Charley Brock. Bob Mills. Bill Pheiff. Harwin Dawwm. Bc.b Neumann. Verl Athcy. Bob fSimmons. Klwood pankonin. A! Kuoer. Paul Owens. John Bfown- le. Wilson Andrews, P-ay BaxKr ' Fldon Frank, Bill Guh. r,d Don . Monson. ' Tn-Color Meet Today. The season's second outdoor in- I color meet is sc heduled lor tin ( afternoon. The first outdoor fron meet was won by the Often team. Three of the Indoor m-ts went tc ! the Red team and one to th Ofsnge. ! Three men who have jut e- cently trsnsfeired their stbletu actmtles from football to tra.:k alto transferred th pl-fulre which that ter:7d the fjttjil Icnker room dunr g the la'k few days of sprlf g drill. Tbe three men. Bill Caliban, Charley Brock, and Roy Pet h. were in the drMing ttni deu they met Johnny Howell. while f'xrtbsller rd now fepoftifjg spcns for the Lincoln Ktsr The men eized iirtH ad cstnel hln out or,to the frK of the football seaNm. whete they pnxjeeded to "lnp" turn. Ttiey had little trouble until after they h4 iem'(vec his sh'- pufs shofts. aijd jac ket and started on Mi sweater. After irtiugglirg lot sometime to take off his sw-tr. they Rve up and let him go. AlUt Johnny had dressed, he start'! ' the gat, telling the boys that he "had to rnske the evening edition." Ths report says that the major ity of the prospective teachers be ing trained In our colleges "ej hlbit Inferiority In contrast with non teichera in nearly every depsrt ment of study; an they show up badly when compared In the sime tests with students four ysr be low them who represent the edu cation problems with which they must be prepsred to deal." ' BOXING MATCHES SLATED ON FARMERS' FAIR MENU The Carnegie corporation has endowed a professorship of library : service at Columbia university, first of its kind in the world. iiW.. f ! ADMA DOBSOM .incoln Journal. Brock Micht to be h natch for any,""" evc" "l'eu to give prizes to Titter and it j insui'e its success by stating, "If Joyd Grimm is tht?V Jon't. 1 will." However, the 13 grim as nis Farnier's Fair board is awarding lame denotes '8 troPnV to tne two members of .t ought to be a ' tne "vinnine team, while runners long day for , UP wil1 ribbons some Babj beet Tliese calves, aren t exactly oush - overs as Ability to simultaneously twirl two batons has won a movie con tract for Rith Gifford, drum ma jor of the Pasadena junior college band. kg College Men to Compete For Awards; Dunne To Referee. The first 'Ag college boxine tournament will be a big feature i of the Farmers Fair, which is slated for Saturday, May 7. Med als will be given to the men plac ing first and second in each divi- i sion. All matches will consist ofj three two minute rounds, with a one minute rest period between I I rounds. They will be refereed by j I Wes Dunne. Verne Renoldson wiil serve as time keeper. Anyone registered In the college of agriculture is eligible to parti cipate In this meet. Regular work- ?ach weighs be tween 400 and iOO pounds. Marvin "Rab bit" Plock is the tennis coach at ,n ntrn tha :,,. ; ha . 0 West Virginia university. 'speedy as his name, while Harry T. Ennis ROY PETCH Lincoln Journal. The DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE "A Good Teachers Agency" 1918-1938 C.nme in awt Sr It 643 Stuart Btdg. Lincoln. Nebr. Northwestern university stu-! 0UM Ior entrants wiu De new dents have formed a Better Gov- ln -ne -"ege Activities building ! eminent league to fight machine : 'rot 0 10 acn nigm unui the 1 politics in Chicago. I day ot the matches. 1 The dates of all men entering j University of Kentucky studAts will be given free ring side seats I walk 600.000 miles per month. ! for the matches. mm 000 if Ml BILL BAIldETT 35c For Better Hiirrati l ne new Palm Beach Slacks For classroom, camprs, ciancrs, dates tnd other active iporu, the new Palm Beach slack are de rigueur. There' nothing like them to smarten up an odd jacket or sport coat, They tail through a tifF tenni or golf match without losing their handsome drape. They wash and clean like new. Your favorite clothier can show you a complete slack wardrobe that meets every requirement of good teste and good value. See the Fairway model, for general infor mal wear, and the Golfer, hose reversible bottom keep die divot out of your cuffs. Aik to see the new Airtones, whites, stripes and plaids. Palm btach Suit I . . , , Palm Beuh Ertning Formal a s JI7.7J 20.00 jlsi.aii It anashf r Trrt it rrsrii in If IT tlAtt THIS um ITI ClNLILl tALU ttACH GOOOALl COMPANY CINCINNATI Locally Owned . . . Lm-aUy tmtrMU d JoAjrWih 29.50 UIT TLdw 2375 O Sport and Plain Backs O Double and Single Breasted O English Drape models O Greens -Greys -Browns These suits are really a marvelous bar gain. Latest spring cuts and colors at this very good price. Sale lasts this veek only. men's Store GOLD'S 11th Street matched and Slacks oats ar;d slacks that were purchased together to provide just the right con trast. 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