THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Sophs Hunt, Brooks, Smutz among 18 going to KU relays ITT rri Sports scribes pick Yanks, Reds to win flags this year Tues'day, 'April 16, 1940 ! 1 ) -.,! -" "i lwU V.ai -'-. .'..vv i A h . J; V Y v. f 1 1 1;' o in Sophomores, as usual, will carry the load Saturday as Ed Weir sends an 18 man Husker squad into action at the Kansas Relays at Lawrence. Harold Hunt, North Platte, the Biff Six's best pole vaulter; Goth enburg's Harold Brooks, Nebras ka's best distance man in years, and Bill Smutz, Pawnee City, Big Six indoor low hurdles champion, are in the entry list. Hunt is entered in the pole vault, Brooks in the four-mile re lay and the sprint medley, and Smutz is in the 120 high hurdles, the broad jump and the sprint medley. Littler a favorite. Red Littler, phenomenal sopho more sprinter, is one of the fa vorites in the hundred, along with Welby Williams of North Texas and Myron Piker of Northwestern. George Abel, another new man, is also entered in the hundred. The Husker sprint medley team will be picked from an all sophomore group including Littler, Smutz, Abel, Brooks, and Norman Davis, intramural "find" from Mitchell, Littler's home town. Edsel Wibbeln has the best com petitive mark of any man entered in the discus, although he faces stiff competition from Jack Hughes of Texas. Ray Prochaska, who will finish his football duties Wednesday, may not hit his best form this early In the season. Another footballer, Bus Knight, is entered in the javelin. Knight, who surprised by winning last year's Big Six crown, will have a star teammate in Herb Grote, sophomore. The Kansas meet will be Grote's first appearance in col lege competition, although he won the junior AAU championship and tossed the spear over 213 feet in the senior event last summer. Maynard Swartz, Omaha, will be making his debut with the Husk ers, having been kept out of com petition by a bad knee last year. Wibbels and Prochaska are en tered in the shot as well as th discus, and Bob Kahlcr, one of the team's few juniors, is in both the high hurdles and the high jump Sophomore Dale Nanncn is in the high jump and broad jump. The Huskers' four-mile relay in chides Bill Cook of North Loup, the Husker distance man who never did any high school running; LeRoy Walker, veteran from Has tings; Dale Garrcls, first year man from Diller who had a year at Doane, and Brooks. Journal and Star. H IT S Rifle team, freshmen get awards Eight rifle team members were awarded letters Saturday by the athletic department Freshmen awards go to fourteen basketball players and five swimmers. Rifle team letter winners are Chet Bowers, Council Bluffs, la.; John Burns, Casper, Wyo.; Sterl ing Dobbs, Lincoln; John Folsom, Lincoln; Eugene Jorgensen, Om aha; Don Melton, Wallace; Harry Uhrenholdt, Elgin. Swimming numerals went to Don Hilgcit, Lincoln; William Lee Hull, Fairbuiy; Charles Meshier, Tecumseh; Les Oldfield, Lincoln; Thomas Woods, Lincoln. Recipients of basketball numer als are Clyde Bronn, Roca; Lowell Armstrong, Lincoln; Robert Bram son, Omaha; Dale Bradley, Lin coln; Paul Dinnis, Lewiston; John Fitzgibbon, Tobias; Warren Gabel man, Tilden; Theodore Greene, York; Stanley Huffman, Elgin; Dean Jackson, Lincoln; Wayne Kellogg, Omaha; Robert Lovlck, Falls City; John Thompson, Lin coln Max Young, Lincoln. Knight searches for hitting as baseballcrs drill In effort to find some hitting power on his Nebraska ball nine, Coach Wilbur Knight sent his baseball prospects through an en longated hitting drill Monday aft ernoon. An Intrasquad game was held with varsity pitchers Harry Truscott and Raymond Doyle op posing each other. The first team infield was re vamped with Oscar Tegtmcicr taking over first, Bob Searle was playing third base, and Leonara Van Buskirk was subbing for Ber nie LeMastcr at shortstop. By June Bierbower. Funny part of last Saturday's scrimmage was watching the Yale first team drive to a score against the Harvard firsts, then letting Harvard's second team score on them. Of course, it was only a twenty-yard drive which brought the first tally scored against the first string Reds all year, who in cidentally were playing without their regular ends Prochaska and Preston. However, the H.U s de served it, because the Reds were given a chance on the Yale's 20, but they couldn't put it across. The Biffer, who was more or less "chaperoning" each team on of fense, called for Dale Bradley to throw the pass which Vike Fran cis intercepted, to start the Yales on their way. To even things up. he turned the ball over to the Harvards after the touchdown. Don Rubottom's touchdown against the Yales was the first scored by a reserve team against a first team this spring, too. The Harvard first team scored on the Yale first team a couple of Satur days ago, although last Saturday was the first time the Yale's could do it. Harry Hopp turned in two nice runs after he was apparently trapped trying to pass... the first time he got nearly 20 yards, and the next time around 15... al though the gains were due par tially to careless tackling, Hopp showed a fine change of pace and some powerful running on the two occasions. . .veteran guards Alf son, Abel and Schwartzkopf look better every day. . .behind them George Stearns, Howard Zorn, Lynn Myers and Francis Green lief, none of whom have had any experience, are all coming along fast... the Huskers are certainly not lacking in fullbacks. .. .Vikc Francis has been blasting 'em this spring Wayne Blue was smacking the second Yale line for four and five yards at a crack Saturday. . .little Ken Simmons has been a consistent ground gainer all season... he showed he had plenty of defensive ability in the Kansas State game last fall. ...Hank Rohn has been out most of the spring because of some bad teeth, but he proved his worth last fall. For the first time in history, every Big Ten school will be en tered in the Drake Relays.... A Southern Cal, sophomore, Leroy Weed by name, is said on good au thority to have run the mile in 4:12.8 in a recent warmup meet against the S. C. Athletic Associa tion.... Dean Cromwell, his coach, tho, padded the time up to 4:18.7, the way it appeared in the sum maries of the meet. .. .Oklahoma spring football drills will continue "indefinitely and maybe longer," according to Tom Stldham.... Russell Bradford, who went to Nebraska a few weeks, then was at Wayne a while, has shown up at Iowa State Teachers college. SAM wins handball title Victors get tenth title in 14 years For the tenth time in fourteen years, Sigma Alpha Mu took the intramural handball title, as they went into the finals Monday aft ernoon with the Sigma Nu s and won 4 to 0, without the loss of one match in the entire c h a mpionship contest. This victory climaxed a suc cessful attempt to continue the hold on this title as the winning singles team went through the season without a loss while their double team lost only one match. Irv Yaffe beat Bill Mowbray 21-8 and 21-10; the doubles team of Bordy and Woolf won over the Sigma Nu's doubles team of Wurtz and Dobson 21-8 and 21-17 in the other single match Finklestein elimi nated Howie Marshall 21-7, 21-9. Trophy (Continued from page 1.) ninth, and Frank Messersmith tenth. Schick junior second. John Schick carried off second prize in all classes in the junior division, with Verlin Johnson third, Don Roth fourth, Warren Hutchinson fifth, Norman Kruse sixth, Jack Plasters seventh, Carl Erwin . eighth, Harold Hansen ninth, and Norman Davis tenth. Twelve classes of livestock, three mvm yaffe Journal and Star. By Jim Evinger. . Everybody else is doing it, so why not the sports staff of the DAILY? Picking the ultimate out come of the major league races, we mean. A huddle was formed Monday afternoon and three, scribes came up with the results predicted in the following para graphs. Tuesday afternoon, the big league circus gets under way to last until the first week in Osto- ber. A lot of batting and pitching will roll under the bridge before me lortncoming campaigns will be concluded and the selections pre sented here are only the way the teams size up at the present and the way the three crystal gazers believe should be the final results. Sports Editor, June (Swami) Bierbower, Alex (Grantland Rice) Mills, and Jim (Yahudi) Evinger spent many a thoughtful moment before coming up with their se lections, so they must not be taken with a grain of salt. All three scriblers were unani mous in picking the Yankees to re peat in the American league, while in the senior loop, Cincinnati drew top honors on two sheets and the St. Louis Cardinals a first place on the other chart. The poor Phil adelphia Phillies and St. Louis Browns seemed doomed to finish in the cellars according to the chrystal gazers. The selections: Amrrlnui ljtaxm. J.B. NY. Bos. Clev. Det. Chi. Wash. Phil. St. L. A.M. N.Y. Boa Clev. Chi. Wuah. rt. Phil St. h National liwiif. J.B. cm. St. L. N.Y. Chi. Brk. Pitt. Bos. Phil. A.M. St. L. N.Y. Cln. Chi. Pllt. Brk. Bos. Phil. J.E. N.Y. Bos. C)v. Chi. Det. Phil. Wash. St. L. J.E. cm. N.Y. St. L. Pitt. Brk. Chi. Bos. Phil each of horses, beef cattle, sheep, and hogs, were judged by the con testants. Senior entrants gave oral reasons on eight classes and jun iors gave written reasons on four classes. DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE iA Good Teachers Agency" 1913 1940 COME IN AND SEE US 643 Stuart Building RENT-CARS Hprlnf Prlrliif will ke pleaMuit hi It nod rar a4 moat rmanaahle ra4a from th MOTOR OUT CO. 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