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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1938)
1I1L' UA1L1 fNLBUASkAX ILlMJAV. Xl .i. to. yjoiL Trackmen Drill For Saturday's Tri-Team Meet NEW 101 STATE II RECREA 1 Distance Between Schools. Lack Of Money for iVon-Paying Sports Limit Programs, Savs Dr. Clapp 0PENS0NMAY12 Huskers Face K.U., K-State In Triangular Contest At Lawrence. BASEBALLEUS 1MPKOVE SOME Despite the fact that the Husk ers dropped both games to the K-Aggie aggregation last weekend, the Scarlet baseball team showed a great deal of improvement. Not that the Huskers are now in vincible and should be headed for the championship tar irom n. It was the steady pitching of Rube Denning that kept Nebraska as nearly in the running as pos ible. If it hadn't been for the fourth inning. Of course the fourth had to be played but just for the heck of it just discount the fourth Inning. Denning only allowed one run to cross the platter while the Huskers scored one of their own in the eighth. Denning was on his way up the river when the Aggies found him for five hits in the fourth Inning and coupled with errors and balls in the sun and one thing or another, K-State pushed across six runs.. It seemed that Russel Behr would likely replace Denning on the mound.. With nobody down Dohrmann and English both came thru with nutnnt in the tall grass and Denning whift them by Howard Myers for a fan an dthe side was retired. From there on in, Ne braska played errorless ball and Denning allowed only four hits. Lack Spirit. The main trouble with the team seemed to be the lack of spirit which is necessary to pull them thru tight places. In the scarlet half of the fifth Elmer Hampl, the Aggie hurlcr, filled the bases with two down and Amen came to bat. Wes Frey sent in Jim Brock to face the Husker first sacker. Amen popped up in front of the plate and Willis Myers came from be hind the platter to make the out put and end the Huskor threat. Nebraska's stocks in the dia mond game have fallen so low that v.nsns is exnectine to start offf their winning streak against the luckless Huskers at Lawrence. The first game of the series was played yesterday. Iowa State will be here this weekend to meet the Nebraska squad. Last week the Cyclones halved a series with the conference champs, Missouri, on the Ames diamond. Hacknev Wins Again. voVimsUn s hones for a win in the shot put at the annual Big Six nfei-onrp track and field cham pionships here a couple of weeks from now took anoiner iurn uuw.. -.r.H Saturday when Elmer Hack rey, the one man gang from K-State, registered another win ,r T?nh Mills of Nebraska. The Wildcat pushed the iron ball out 50 feet 5'i inches while Mills was second with 48 feet 3'i tnches. Jud Atchison, Texas broad jumper and football player, fi nally realized his ambition at the Drake relays last Saturday. Atchison and Bob Hubbard of Minnesota have been engaged in a broad jumping duel which started last year at the Kansas relays. Atchison leaped 24 feet V2 Inches, but lost by '4 ,ncn tc Hubbard who won the event. At the Texas relays this year Atchison jumped 24 feet 7? Inches then saw Hubbard jump exactly the same distance to tie him. At Lawrence th's year for the 16th annual Kansas relays Hubbard won the event with a leap of 24 feet 8 Inches with itrhimn nowhere near him. Dawson of Nebraska took second. But Saturday Atchison finally drove home his fiist win over the Gopher when he jumped 24 feet 9 inches to win the broad jump event. Bernard Coan of Knox col lege was second and Hubbard placed third. CATHEDRAL CHOIR SINGS ON MUSICWEEK CONCERT NBC Carries Choral Salute As Music Lovers Begin Commemoration. The Lincoln Cathedral choir, un der the direction of John M. Ros borough, was again aired over tho national airways Sunday night lit 7:50. The event was In commemo ration of the 15th anniversary of the national music week and was broadcast by WOW and NBC from the Hotel Paxton in Omaha. The program for the week will Include schools. churche3, llbrnries, theatres, music clubR, women's club and numerous other organ izations over the nation. The chorus sang "So Soberly and Softly," "Ave Maria," 'O Praise Ye," "God's Son Has Sot Me Free," "O Gladstone Light," and "Sing Ye to the Lord." Puss Erwin, Texas Christian university ace shot putter, prac tices form 15 minutes a day In front of the mirror. Coach "Pa" Schulte put his track squad thru a strenuous workout Monday afternoon in preparation for the annual tri angular meet Kansas, Kansas State and Nebraska this Satur day at Lawrence. Eldon Frank, third in the javelin throw at the Drake relays with a toss of 195.05 feet, heaved the spear 200 feet 5 inches during the practice. John Brownlee, distance runner, ran the two-mile in 10:33, the half mile in 2:10, and then set a fast pace winning a trial quarter in 53 flat. Bill Gish ran a fast 300 yard race in 32:9, leading Pinker ton by a few feet. Six football candidates and like ly starteis in the initial game of next season, Bill Pfciff. Charlie Brock, Kav Prochaska. Edsel Wib- bels, Vike Francis, and Robert Mills, were shoving the Iron pill around and tossing the discuss in practice heaves. Wibbcls threw the plate 150 feet 6 inches for the best throw of the afternoon. Squad in Good Shape. The squad destined to make tho trip to Kansas this Saturday is not as yet designated, but it is ex pected to be nearly the same as the squad which made the trip to Kansas two weeks ago for a nuai meet there. Possible additions may he made, however, before the official group is designated by Coach Schulte. Victor Brewer of Walthill. weijrht and broadjumn star. worked out with the varsity squad receiving construtlve criticism from Schulte and Petz In regard to his style in throwing the discus and broadjumping. The track squad is expected to be intact for the meet since no one is harboring ill of any great seriousness. Eldon Frank, afflicted with an Infected jaw as a result of a bad tooth, is said to be in top condition. "Pa" Schulte predicts John Brownlee to run a very good race this weekend if trial runs are any indication. Intramural Results In In intramural aiwirt nit wnrd ure kept ill Ihr nirr nf tho irolf nd trnnln matrra. Tin- l"t ri'iill nre u follmvii: l.NTKRKRAIKRMTV iOI.F. iliiHrtrrflnnK. Phi (iainma DHta won rnm Alpha Minna riu. sunn 'u won from DHIa Tail Drlla. Mima C'hl won from Drlta I pullnn. Alpha Tnn Omeia won from hrta Hlgm I'si. Hlcma Alpha Kpollon n Irnm Acaria. sljma Phi Eptllon won from I'i Kappa Alpha. Itela Thela I'I won from I'hl Dflla Tan. Kappa Sigma won from Fill Kappa fl. hmlfinalw. NlKma Nu won from Phi (iiiniml Ui'ltn. Alpha In ii Omrga won from Slrnia I'hl. Mlicma Thi hpjilnn won from Slimia Alpha hptilnn. Kappa Wsma won Irnm Hcla T'hcta I'I. INT'fcllr'RATrJtMTY T EN Ms. ijnartprtlnalfc. Alpha Tail Omnia ovrr Ijwilia (hi Alpha. Kluma Alpha fcp.llon over I'hl IMta Thela. I'hl Knppa I'nI nvr Aracla. Kappa Murna ovr-r Mtina Nil. I'hl r,amma IMta over Alpha Mirma I'hl. Ilrlla I pillion ovrr ( hi I'hl. Mgma I'hi Cpailon ovrr 1'hrta Sigma rai. IMTKHKKATKRMTV HOKTR A I.I.. M I'M I'hl II). Alpha Tan Omrga 1 farm HoiMr a, Slm(i Nu 7. DHIa I'hii Delta 2ll. Mirmn (hi I. I'M (iamma Delia S. I'hl Alpha Drlfa 2. DHIa Ipvllon .1. Mlcma Alpha Mn H. nrana I.I, .(a llrta Tan I. Project Includes 18-Hole Golf Course, Bridle, ' Foot Paths. CYCLONE CINOERMEN AMES, la., May 2. Everything is in readiness for the opening of the 150 acre Iowa State College recreational area May 12. The area and the 18-hole golf course it includes will be dedicated at an official ceremony on the opening day of Veishea, annual three day exposition of "Iowa on Display." The opening of this area of scenic beauty and sporting value marks the ciimax of 2' 2 years of work and planning. In the summer of 1935 the college administration announced its plans to construct the golf course and the surround ing recreational area in the na turally beautiful confines of North Woods. The first trees were removed by a detachment of Allies CVC work ers in August, 103". In December of the same year the Works Pro gress Administration .stepped in to help and has since then, born working on the project. The pro ject has from the first been a co operative venture. All the various departments of Iowa State college joined with the athletic depart ment to make the project possible. Perry Maxwell Supervised Job. George K. Vceukcr, Cyclone athletic director, has licon in di- Lai k of finances, lack of inter est shown by many directors of athletics in any sport that does bring financial gain to the insti tution wherein it is piacticecl. and the far distance between schools of higher learning in the middle west involving a high cost of transportation in regard to inter collegiate meets; these were given by Dr. R. A. Clapp, director of physical education, in an interview today, as the main reasons why many students do not have a chance to participate in some form of athletics The doctor declared that here at Nebraska those in control of athletics have a broad minded viewpoint and are very much i.i ! favor of all types of sports, and desire to give all students a chance to engage in some activity. He added, however, that finances here would' not permit such a course to be followed. A Squad for Everyone. "Many students, he said, 1 the university and are int in football or some oth of athletics. During their ect charge. Perry MhnwcII of Ardmore, Okl., one of America's the east the colleges are close to- foremost golf architects, has su-1 pother and intercollegiate meets pervised the construction of the , arc easy to hung about and cheap HUSKERS FIRST DEFEAT Nebraska Leads in Doubles, Drops Single Matches Friday, 13 to 5. The Iowa State linksmen handed the Huskers their first defeat of the year Friday, 13 to 5. Nebras ka had a 4 to 2 lead at the end of the morning's double matches, but the Cyclones came back to win all the single matches, held in the afternoon. In the doubles, McF.ntire and Andreson started the Huskers off with a 2,i-l!i victory over Hall and Anderson of the Cyclones and Mowbridge and Schwartzkopf tied with Iowa State's Schreiber and Vifquain, l's-l's. In the single matches, Hall downed McEntire, 3-0, Anderson of Iowa State took the measure of Mowbridge, 2i-,4. Schreiber de feated Nebraska's Anderson, 2'i s, and Vifquain outshot Schwartz kopf, 3-0. I Classified ADVERTISING 10C KRUNE IST: A bl(t coal wllh a Kilpairlrk labtl Saturday noon. rindr call B T41S. Rooms for Girls FOR SUMMER Out Whr Iff C'aol Nar At Collrgf. Rtflnra In mi Inn. Nlrr hom. Ra onabla rani will pay for bin far. 1339 No. 37th M-1734 BEAUTIFUL COEDS CAUSE CHICAGO U. WILDCAT SKIRMISH CHICAGO, 111. Northwestern university and the University of Chicago are still battling for the most beautiful coed honors, and the former has won the first round. The battle started way back when some song writer wrote something about "Northwestern for her pretty girls. Chicago's where they roam," and the latest skirmish was prompted by this paragraph in a University of Chi cago student magazine: "There hasn't been a really beautiful woman around here since Little Egypt reared her skirts on the world s fair midway in 1893." That started a hot argument, and the appointment of a beauty ludfi-inc committee and the com mittee, working from photographs selected Joy Hawley, a Northwest ern coed as the most beautiful on the Maroon Midway. After the announcement . was made, a wave of laughter roareu from the Purple campus clear across Chicago to the Midway and the judges hurriedly explain ed that the photographer was Ht fault for putting a Wildcat rood's picture in with the group vicing for honors at the university that Rockefeller bui)t. .lev. II. Erck to Attend Convention in Chicago Rev. H. JCrck, Lutheran student pastor, will be in Chicago Wednes day and Thursday attending the annual convention of Lutheran university pastors. The convention will be attended by Lutheran pas tors from all parts of the United States who are Interested in uni versity and college groups. Rev. Erck will be back on the campus Friday. University of Wichita municipal administration students govern the city of Wichita for a day as one of their class project. The average co-ed spends more on refreshments and entartalnment than she does for cosmetics and beauty treatments. Dr. John Clouse, University of Miami, has revealed that the num ber of students majoring In physics has doubled In the last five years. Baseball Squad Hits Road To Lincoln for Games Friday, Saturday. AMES, la., May 2 -A dual track meet with the University of Mis souri here Saturday headlines a seven event athletic program for the week at Iowa State college. Cyclone tracksters clash with the Missouri Tigers in a unique meet unique because the last two out door meets between the schools have resulted in identical scores: 65 2-3 for Missouri and 65 1-3 for Iowa State. A polo game and a tennis match complete the week's program for local fields. The Cyclone riders op pose Michigan State in a return game here Saturday afternoon. State Teachers will come to Iowa State for a return dual match in tennis also on Saturday. The Cy clones beat the Panthers 6 to 0 at Cedar Falls. Bascballers at Nebraska. The Iowa fclate baseball nine which refuses to be counted out of the Big Six conference hits the road this week for loop battles with the university of Nebraska at Lincoln Friday and Saturday The tennis team plays Grinnell on the Fioneers home cotut Friday. Iowa State's best golf team of all time will also take the road this week. The Cyclones, victorious in four duals including a 13-5 win over Nebraska s Big Six cham nions. face Caiicton college at Northfield, Minn.. Saturday. Next week will find the Cyclones In ten athletic contests, all but one of them on the Iowa State campus for the entertainment of visitors to Veishea, annual three day exposition of "Iowa State on Display." golf course while Jay Armstrong, graduate landscape architect, has aided in fashioning the area. Entire hillsides have been torn away in the construction of tne 18 hole course. Tons of soil have been moved. Four thousand trees have been removed and 5,o() oth ers planted in more advantageous locations. Last summer S00 truck loads of sod were placed on the hills which were eroding. Yardage Variable. This will be one of the few IS t . -1 t fresh man year tney go out and una that they have no chance of mak ing the squad so they quit sports iiliogpthor. It would be fine if we had a system like some of the schools in the cast so that these students could still play football ami receive some recognition. If we could have nine or ten squads then everyone who wanted to play would have the chance to do so. In all lines of sports it would be fine if some such system could be carried out giving all students some form of athletic training. "We are not situated like most of the schools in the east, how ever," continued the doctor. "In I ' 11 1 '. II I III ' 1 ; ' H i - ' - 1 . 1 i'iri'ifta-wllalW'A'1ltAi DR. R. A. CLAPP. 1 -blnci.ln .limi'iisl If freshmen football squads ot 1937 are half as good as turn fol lowers claim, the tridirnn squads 'of 1940 should be beyond human description. For instance : One easlci n coacti when asked last fall what the strongest team in Hint part ot tin country was, replied. "Dnrtniouth's freshmen " Washington's ficshm'iii beat the varsity in a scrimmage during the week before the Hus kies tied California. V. S. C. nas, among others, the People's man. Rice is said to have its greatest frosh in history, and so is Car negie Tech. If one is to believe re ports concerning Indiana's pros pects, tne hoosrts nave mo'v good first year men than they t;n: crowd on one team. "Pis said that Kansas varsity men last fall called their freshman squad "The Thun dering Herd." and talis of tlv: year, was asked what he thought of the fencing meet planned for May 12. He replied that he was not in charge of the meet itself but that he had heard that it was .,..oi 'prowess of actual and fictitious ly carried on. In this section of the country the cost of transpor tation to other schools ot the Big Six or Big Ten would be very high. Take the case of intercollegiate wrestling meets, quite otten the cost of getting a wrestling team to another school to engage in a meet amounts to $300." Cost High, "Even the cost of organizing a system ot athletics that will en able all students to participate he said. "Altho is not the type of sport that will appeal to the average person 'ike football, it is a very good form if I exercise and as a lot more action connected with it than most peo ple imagine. A fencing meet does not have the action and the color of a boxing meet, but it does get away from a criticism that if made quite often against boxing: that boxing is quite often danger ous and injurious to those who go into it too rigorously. A hard blow on the head in a boxing match may cause serious effects, but with the protection afforded those who participate in fencing there is little likelihood that a fencer will be hurt." The doctor stated that, fencing has died down as a sport at Ne braska not because of lack of in terest on the part of the students, but because of lack of money in the departments to promote fenc ing as a sport. "At one time." said have spread hole college golf courses in the,,..,,, is fl,lil0 hjrjh Also sonn: uniLeci oloic nicj ii i unique 0f these attempts do not turn out that it borders on the present athletic plant. The par 70 course can be plnyed with a total yardage of from 5,596 to 6.573 yards. This is made possible by teeing areas. some as large as a third of an acre, which reniace ordinary tees. From the appearance of the area it is apparent why Director Veenker prefers to call it a recre ational area rather than merely a golf course. It includes 3'; miles of cinder bridle trails, foot trails for hikers, a cross country running course, and many picnic areas. The natural beauty of the spot has been enhanced in the construction of the area. Princeton Deals With First Case Of Spring Fever The melancholy days are here, the saddest of the year; with trees and grass and shrubs so green, and classes bare and drear. Well, anyway, spring has came, and with it the sulphur and molasses days. Every class period sees weary eyed students come drag ging into the room, take a look at the uncomfortable chairs into which they are supposed to fit themselves" for the next hour, and then go out again to loll on the grass or take their ease in the dark cornels of coke joints. At any rate, our watchful par ents can't accuse us of being a worthless, no account generation, unless they want to cast reflec tions on themselves. Ever since schools were invented, students have been deserting them with the advent of spring, to seek what little coolness may be found else where. Even in the severely puri tanical colonial days of this coun- I trv college scholars used their In- The management, arrangement j genuity to aid their personal com- of contents, financing, and general I fort operation of the Student Union so well. The intramurals here at Nebraska have helped some but they are not entirely successful." Turning his attention to some of the specific lines of sports other than the most outstanding ones, the doctor said that he could rec ommend boxing and all forms of track, and in fact he was in fa vor of all types. Dr. Clapp, who has taught the fencing class here at the university for a number of against other students in the same the doctor, "the Big Ten schools and many oi me tsig hix scnoois had fencing teams but then the Big Ten quit the association and the Big Six could not accumulate enough funds to continue the nrac tice. The Big Ten still does have fencing meets, however, but most of the fencing nowadays is piac ticed in the east and abroad. I would recommend fencing as a wonderful form ot exercise for anyone, however, and 1 think that many students would find it an ideal form of exercise." UNION OFFICIALS MAKE EASTERNCAMPUS TOUR Chancellor Escorts Group On Trip to Survey Other Unions. building has been based on a sur vey of other universities having Student Union buildings by Chan cellor Burnett and a committee of ten. The group visited Iowa State university at Ames. .Iowa univer sity at Iowa City, and Wisconsin university at Madison on November 4-8, 1936. Accompanying Chancellor Bur nett on the triD were Regent A, C. Stokes of Omaha; Amanda E. Heppner, dean of women; Dr. E. F. Schramm of the geology depart ment and faculty adviser of the interfratemity council and Kosmet Klub; L. F. Seaton, operating su perintendent; Prof. L. B. Smith, architectural department chair man: Walter Wilson, an architect, who designed the university plans; Arnold Levin, Student Council president, and Marylu Petesen, stu dent council vice president. Sigma Delia Chi Hour AI Man, Plana Banquet Sigma Derta Chi will hold a luncheon meeting Wednesday noon at the Capital hotel. Larry Hall, of the Lincoln Associated Press office will be the speaker of -the day. Following the luncheon, election of officers or the coming year will be held. Further plans for the Gridiron dinner, which is scheduled for May 13 in the Union, will be discussed. Princeton Takes Steps. To prove this, a correspondent oft Associated Collegiate Press went browsing among antique col lege rules, and dug up the follow ing edict, passed by the Princeton university board in September of 17M1: "Whereas, there is a peculiar disposition in the students to go home some days or weeks before the May vacation and the presi dent is obliged to spend near half his time for almost a month be fore to hear a great variety of pleas and pretenses for that end; and oftentimes half or more (of the students l upon a variety of pretenses have got liberty to go home before the time appointed which is attended with many in conveniences; It is ordered that this practice be prevented for the time to come, and that none be allowed to go home at that time unless by reason of sickness or some such extraordinary occasion, and that no pretenses be made that a horse is sent unless there be also a letter from the parents or guardian to the president sig nifying some extraordinary rea son for it. And that such stu dents transcribe this order and send it to their parents or guard ian some months before the vacation." "It is not too much to say that forces playing on education from without, forces over which educa tors themselves have little or no direct control are making It nec essary for educations Institutions to redefine their goals." University of Chicago's Trof Newton Ed wards points an unwavering finger at one cause of what many call today's educational revolution. ENGINEERS' NIGHT CLIMAXES YEAR'S WORK THURSDAY (Continued From Page 1.) campus at Omaha Saturday a full schedule li booked for the week end for both students and faculty Classes at the college of agricul ture will be dismissed Friday and Saturday for the Farmer's fair. A general convocation of engineer ing, law, and pharmacy college students will be held in the Social Science auditorium Friday morn ing at 11 o'clock. In the afternoon the engineers will go to the park for the field day activities. Banquet Friday. Engineers will close the Friday program with a banquet in tho Student Union building, with Gov ernor Cochran, former state engl neere for Nebraska, as the prin cipal speaker. Professor Bingham wili be toastmaster, and Oz Black will provide entertainment with a chalk talk. The distribution of the sledge will also take place. Students in the engineering col lege have developed an efficient inspection route for visitors to fol low Thursday veiling. Beginning at 12th and T, the program will in clude some unusual demonstra tions by the chemical engineers in Chemistry hall. Included will he the uses of the electric arc, the manufacturing of artificial silk from liquid, water that can be turned into wine and the produc tion of different colors from the same dye. From Chemistry hall the program moves to Nebraska hall, where displays have been prepared by the new military en gineering unit, featuring the art of moving heavy objects with blwk and tackle, a demonstration of the weapons used by army engineers, as well as a demonstistion of the peace time projects carried on by the engineering corps. Move to Studio. Leaving Nebraska hall the pro cession will move to the campus studio, where the work of the architects will be shown. Sketches and designs of all types of home and business establishments and a variety of water color paintings will be displayed. Next comes an outdoor exhibit and movie ar Iranced by the civil engineer. En tering the Mechanic Arts hall the public will find a variety of In teresting demonstrations, includ ing a safety exhibit, water power projects, and exhibits giving a cross sectional view of highway and bridge construction. Leaving Mechanics Arts building, visitors will have an opportunity to se how steel bars are tested, how they ran be tied into knots, and a demonstration showing the resist ance of shatter proof glass bom barded by steel balls. Ag Engineering Shown. The exhibition of the agricul tural engineers will be displayed Just north of the electrical engi neering building. A display of ir rigation equipment and the possi ble uses of electricity on the farm will be featured. Entering the elec trical engineering laboratories, spectators will be given the op portunity of turning a hand gener ator to see how many electric bulbs he can light, to watch the perfect operation of an electric motor made from a tomato can, and finally, to witness perpetual motion, the lie detector and an ex hibition of the most modem method of clearing dust and smoke from the air. Pattern making equipment will be displayed by the mechanical en gineering students in their build ing. The foundry will be in opera tion and all machines and other wood working power tools will be in actual use. Women in the Case. Women in particular will find something of beneficial interest in the pharmacy college's annual .show. For the first time the fac ulty and students will present sev eral charts' showing the various types of foods consumed today and the amount, of vitamins tha'. each contains. Housewives will learn just what constitutes' a bal anced diet from Miss Helena I. Redford, resident pharmacist in the department of student health. Besides the vitamin display pharmacy students have arranged demonstrations revealing the de tection of poisons, others dealing with color vision tests, the action of drugs on a turtle's heart, and the routine followed in the com pounding and dispensing of prescriptions. Special Guides. aska freshmen thruout the country. So it goes. It would appear to be, a wonder that some of the poor, incompetent varsity buys of Hto" are alive today. Howevci. oven tho tho new players arc good. tiel fall will probably see Ictternieii holding down a fair share of pusi Hons when the going gets tough, for the actual time played m game does most towanj making a football player Archie Harri. 2' pound Nc i gro end. who starred on Indiana s freshman football squad is tl.j I same New Jersey Han is wh.i ! broke the accepted world's record J with a 375 foot discus throw early ! last summer, and who was named on the All America high school ! track and field team as shot pul ler. At present Indiana is moan ing because this year's track tea,;, has no weight men to go with the star distance runners, but next year, when Harris, who has hjok'.i the school records in both the slvi and discus, is eligible for competi tion, the distance men will be gone. However, most outside mI servers (and Jimmy Crowley it FordliHini are moaning about the long train ride from New Jersey to Bloomington. Roger Eason. 'Jno pound all stalu tackle from Oklahoma Cily Cen tral, was leading Oklahoma high school athletes in the state meet in two events, with a 17H.95 foot javelin loss, and 122 ft. 3 inches in the discus at the end of last Friday's preliminaries, but didn't stay for the finals Saturday. His javelin mark stood up for first place, but another boy beat his discus effort by five inches. OU, yes, we nearly forgot to tell why Roger didn't stay for Saturday's finals. He left for Evanston, I'll., to visit one Lynn Waldorf. North western coach, there. One boy who is a fro.-h at Nebraska this year, visited Evanston last spring.' but evidently preferred the shores of Salt Creek to theme of Lake Michigan. John Mimski of Mizzou. wiiom Pa Schulte thinks is the onung miler. is ninth child in a family of 13... He and Notre Lnn!"'s C.reg Rice, whom Munski outran in the last lap of the four mile re lav at Drake last week end. were high school rivals in Montana... An lowa State student daily col umnist commended Schulte for Un sportsmanlike way in which be took the Oklahoma defeat, then added praise of Schulte's coaching ability. .Gilliam Gralnn. Texas 1'. sophomore who won the javelin toss at the Texas. Kansas and Drake relays, is 25 veais old... rat Murphy I that's his real nainei Authorities announce thai 'csmnan irrinis man at wanning groups desiring spe. ,al guides will Uon university, is 2S. be able to obtain guide service bv making arrangements with Dean : O. J. Ferguson of the engineering j college. Special events will be an- I nounccd over tne public address system Thursday evening Harry W. Brown is general chairman in charge of the pro gram, and Harry Langston is secretary-treasurer. Depart mental chairmen are: Civil engineering. Will Reedy. Denver. Colo.; elec tric eturlneering, Milton Mohi. South Sioux City; mechanical. l)olo' ltir til f. liclirr nl 9:.'M, I.iiiiKni EijjH cl. rio-kaii (lio-fii for I'liclr Sam" rim ir ( nip. i Continued From Page 1 i turns, etc. Tins seems h long way to go when it is considered thai the men have had no previous training before entering the corps. It is difficult for h layir'.an to understand how it is possible for Harold Brown, Chester; agricul- i ''w niHtrrial to be transformed tural, Dick Coleman. Stapletoti; chemical. NormHn Stout, Casper. Wyo.; architectural, Frank Han- way. Broadwater; -ad military en gineering department Cramer, Lincoln. KFOR PREVIEWS IVY FESTIVITIES TONIGHT AT 8:15 l Continued From Page l.i A mysterious voice will chime in some Information about the election and tapping of Innocents Finally. Bobby will be led to the A. W. S. tea dHiice at the Student Union. The Kampus Kulendar commit tee calls students attention to the time of the program which will be 8;15 p. m. instead of 7:1,V Tlu. remaining four programs of the series will also be broadcast over KFOR at 8:1V into the finished product in such a hhort titm It is eqiiHliy diffi cult for h new student to visual ize such a change, but the method J o h n i of instruction, the choice of equip ment, and last, but most impor tant, the selection of only the most desuable students, mentally, morally and physically. Is a com bination thit insures the gradua tion of pilots who are second to none and who can step into the cockpit ot any HiiplHne with the assurance if mastery. Few fail to complete Ihr course but it can be said, "They have lost little and gained much." The University of Wisconsin has a new department for the study and teaching of Gaelic. Mils Teachers Agency t E. Milli, A.M. '29, M.iojgpr Specially needed: Odd combinations of subjects. B55-56 Stuart Bldg. Lincoln. Nebr. DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE A Oood Ttichtrf Agency" 1B18-1S38 C.nmr in mni I't MI ttuaii Bldfl. Lincoln, Nbr, Store Your Winter Garments Many MudeiilM and faculty nieniler.s arc using our new fumigated .storutfe Yinilt to store llifir valued clothing through 1 lie mumier mention months. When Ihey return to school lirxt full 1hty know that their garments will n in perfect Kha'pe. It Kiives nil the bother of moving it to und from votir summer home. Call us loilny. Jhe GLOBE LAUNDRY B6755 1124 LSt.