TIIK DAILY M Bit ASK W, FRIDAY. SI PTLMRKR 23, 1938 nmrn Intramurals Add Track ' Frat Sport Council Eliminates Rifle Meet Twent y-thivc representatives ! met with Harold Petz, director of i tntra-mural sports last night at the j coliseum and mapped out their ac- tivitict for the coming year. Rifli shooting was eliminated by an almost unanimous vote, and a track meet, to be held In March Was passed. The track meet will fill In between the fall and spring sports. Tennis and coif will be played this fall Instead of in the spring; as It was last year. This is to give more time to the spring sports, and also it will not conflict with various university activities as they have before. Soccer was also taken up and a vote will be taken next fall as to whether they will have enough time to have it. In the future it is hoped that a new lighted baseball diamond will be constructed so that night Softball games can be played In the fall and spring. Varsity Qridmen Hit Pay Dirt Four Times In Clash With Fresh SPECIALS Regular 5c CANDY BARS FOB 1 5 CIGARETTES V. ( Hind. Old (iold, RillPlxh. l.ilvliIrA, k hvnlrrf Irld 15c. Pocket Thin TOBACCO Half & Half, Prince Albert, Velvet, Kentucky Club. . CHEAPPER SYSTEM 1325 0 St. Lincoln Between 13th & 14th 10c Yearlings Block One Veteran Tally Attempt on Ten Yard Marker Varsity footballers went thru one hour of offensive scrimmage with freshmen gridders yesterday, manufacturing four touchdowns, and failing on one occasion to hit pay dirt with four downs, after getting inside the ten yard line. The team failing to score was composed of mostly third and fourth string players, with Biff and staff watching mainly for mis takes instead of scores or yard age gained. Starting lineup for the two teams: Ynntlly Kiililer (rtmni Mills lli'hm . . Weill .. Hob nun llltpp Kruh. e Hunt . Wlrtnmn t Lelk .1 Kly a Myers i Tyrrell qb ie muter Gymnasts To Report Coach Miller Schedules First Practice Monday. First action In the fifth year of Varsity Gymnastics will be seen next Monday afternoon at the Coli seum. Ten or more experienced men are expected to report. Coach Miller announces mat an men interested in participating in gymnastics apply at his office at the coliseum or report tor practice Monday, 4 p. m. Promising candidates expected to report for this years squad are: I'lnrk h Unison hmld h Wsrtman (ullllmn lb Hartley Best showing of the scrimmage were the first two plays after Dodd returned the frosh klckoff 35 yards to the yearling 45. Then Harry H o p p scooted fifteen yards over tac kle and 30 around end for the first touch down. The next t o uchdown came after a series of seven plays with Mar vm Plock, Hopp P e t s ch an R o hrig alter natlng carrying Thn mml Hfthr ouj rxi-tiw. .i lK drove over from the ten yard line for the score and then kicked goal. Touchdown number three was scored bv the second string back' field plavine with second and third string linemen. Eight plays weri necessary to carry the ball over, with Luther scoring the points on a 15 yard end run. Luther carried (Continued on Page 2.) M U ( Southwick, Seler, Seidel, Wedg wood. Allen, Luke, and lettermen Proffltt, Cadwell, and Glass. The Nebraska team competes with representatives of the Big Ten and the Rocky Mountain con ferences and has in the past been placed against such schools as Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, and Chi- I caret. Most of the tilts will be scheduled for the second semes ter of this school year. At least two contests are to be held at home. As has been the custom in the last several years, the Cornhusk ers will probably receive a bid to the Rockey Mountain A. A. U. In vitational Meet. When not active, the Gym team will give exhibitions between halfs of basketball games during the coming season. prising. Alabama loo ;s stronger than U. R. C, but we J like to see Howard Jones' boys put down the tide. Iowa State is in this year with a team good enough to take Den ver, while Oklahoma can hardly hope to beat Rice. Last year the Sooners won while the Owls were mtifus Ernie Lain. Lain and Cordill should carry Rice past the Norman boys. Despite all this pre-season talk about pitying Pitt because of bad West Virginia, we think the Panth ers will come out on top. Ditto for Army over Wichita. Wichita and West Virginia have had too much publicity to take a surprise win over the big boys. In the other games it's Califor nia over St. Mary's, Purdue over Detroit, and Arkansas over Okla homa A. & M. Pick your own in the Idaho-Oregon State and Ore gon Washington State games. Locke Praises 'Pa' Soph Athletes Vie For Award Former Pupil Lauds Track's Grand Old Man "Coach Schulte h.is done wore for high school students of Ne braska than any other six or a dozen men." This was the praise heaped on the university's retired "grand old man" of the track world Thursday at the Co-operative club meeting. The singer of Henry Schulte's praise was one of his former atar pupils, Roland "Gyp" Lorke. hon ored guest at the meeting, and for many years world record holder of the 220-yard 'dash. In paying trib ute to his former mentor, Locke pointed out the various conipeti tives tests which Schulte worked out to aid in the development of both scholars and thelctes. Schulte made a brief address. Students Apply Oct. 3 ! For $100 Prize Sophomore athlete Interested in the Joseph Simon cash award of one hundred dollars may secure application blanks from the office of Dean C. H. Oldfather of the arts and science college. William Pteiff was last gear's ' winner. Candidates will be Judged i on .scholarship, athletic prowess, ; and all around ability, whioh they displayed during their freshman ; year. All applications must be filed in the dean's office before 4 1 p. m., Oct. 3. r Frosh Qridders Promise Varsity Qood Scrimmage Improved Squad of Nine Teams Ready for Fray After only a few days of work, Coach Adolph Lewandowski is very much pleased by the im provement of the 128 members of the freshman football squad. This came after two complete teams had scrimmaged against the var sity. With nine full teams to throw against the varsity Saturday, Lewandowski hopes to put a pre sentable team on the field. In the tentative starting lineup it seems that Bob Ludwick of Lincoln and Jerry Dutcher of Benson will get the call. Wayne Blue of Tecumseh and Vic Schleich of Lincoln have been getting the nod at tackle, while Ed Schwartzkopf of Lincoln and Phil Bordy of Silver Creek have been stationed at guard. Hut) Monsky, Omaha, should be the first string center. In the backfield Howard Zorn, Dalton, quarterback; Dick Debban, Elwood and Henry Rohn, Fremont, halves; and Jack Stubbs of Nor folk are slated to get the call. Doug Hudson of Curtis and Herb Grote of Benson should see lots of service in the backfield. A partial list of teams, names and positions follows: Get Your Parker Quink at GOLD'S Street Floor IP 070" By Norman Harris Event the Fastest Foiaimaiisi Pea Performs Far Bettor When Filled with this Modern Ink . . . A Marvelous Creation! Created by Parker to guard pens from pen-dogging inks . . . Ends t9 of the fountain pen troubles There is not and ntver has bten any othtr pen desigicd to handle all kinds of inks good and bad as well as the revolutionary Parker Vacumotic. One reason is that this modern invention has no rubber ink sac, no lever filler, no piston pump. It is filled by a simple diaphragm, sealed in the top, where ink ran never touch or decompose it working parts. 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Yet Quink costs no more than ordi nary inks small bottles, ISc and 25c, If you use an ordinary pen, you need Quink even more than does a Parker Pen owner to keep it in writing condition. If ju use a Parker Pen, you'll be thrilled and surprised by the way it performs when filled with Quink. For until we created Quink and the Parker Vacumatic Pen, there never was a really scientific writing com bination. Those who can afford the beat will not rest until . they have them both. The Parker Pen Company, Janesville, Wis. HP to9 Today we come out with our five-star, super special tip on to morrow's football game not one of these things such as the day's best bet being Hampden-Sidney for the reason that it has no game scheduled. Ours is a real game and after burning the midnight oil for hours pondering the ques tion, we are picking the Husker varsity to beat the freshmen in fact we'll be in Siam Monday if they don't (that's where Henry McLemore said he'd be if Joe Louis didn't beat Max Schmeling in their first meeting in the ring). In making this prediction we real ize what a burden we're placing on the varsity, for when the sports writing tribe begins to peer into the future it's a warning for foot ball teams to rush foi the nearest bomb-proof shelter. Speaking seriously, though, the coaching staff will ai.-ect the team's play, on the field, and in sofar as that goes it won't be an actual game. However, it will give Biff a good line on his men for the Minnesota game, and will mark the first appearance on the Husker gridiron for about a hun dred freshmen. If the game goes like most of the frosh-varsity games, it will be more or less of a touchdown parade on the varsity side. In fact, last time the frosh scored a toucnaown in tne annual game was when Steve Hokuf was play ing witn them in 1931, the year he was forced to refrain from varsity competition. However, once in a while the freshmen turn on some passing fireworks, which bring a first down or two, 'and 1'iere's always the possibility of a fleet youngster getting loose on a punt return If the varsity lets down. Ad mission is only a quarter, while to see an Icy league team murder an early season setup you would pay ten times that much. The frosh are not weaklings, so you'll see Just as good a game as many a regu lation contest. In the day's other games Texas seems to have a little edge over Kansas tho the wish may be father to the thought here. D. X's team outweighs the Jays eight pounds to the man, but even so, a Kansas win wouldn't be too sur- 71 PARKER PENS Sold by BOYD JEWELRY CO 12TH & 0 ST. 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