The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 04, 1941, Page 7, Image 7

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    Friday, April 4, 1941
DAILY NEBRASKAN
7
i
:AY vwssm odd wjhHto thrsick
Team passes
competitors
with 4 firsts
Grabbing firsts in the 40 and 60
yard dashes and the broad and
high jumps, Alpha Tau Omega ran
away with the third annual frater
nity intra-mural track meet in the
stadium last night.
Delta Upsilon with 32 points.
Beta Theta Pi garnering 18, and
Sigma Phi Epsilon taking 17
points, trailed the ATO score of
47.
One record was set last night in
the relay, and two made Wednes
day in the preliminaries stood. The
two lap relay team of Gerald
Davis, Stan Huffman, Bill Latta
and Jack Stukey running for the
Betas won that competition with
a time of 55.1 upsetting the old
An eye on
Girls
Sports
By Dorothy Martin
Track team leaves for coast
next week: meets California
W club initiates
seventeen men
Spring is hire in full force as
evidence shows by the notices
posted on the bulletin boards in
Grant Memorial. Spring sports are
popping out of hibernation to greet
the sunshine outside. Badminton
birds are flying around the gym
and tennis balls are banging
against the walls to show that the
By Bill Palmer.
"My biggest battle will be with
the weatherman," Track Coach
Ed Weir said several days ago
deadlines for entries are nearing.
record of 56.3 held by Phi Gamma The badminton deadline was ye-
terday while the baseball and ten
nis entries must be in by 6 p. m.
April 9.
Still in progress but Hearing
completion is the ping pong tour
nament. The singles tournament
has reached the quarter final
round. Georgia Swallow, Pi Phi,
plays Mildred Clymer; Kathryn
Kellison plays Harriet Black. Al
ready advanced to the semi-final
round is Lou Ide, Pi Phi, who de
feated Elaine Linscott, 21-19,
21-14, and Merriam Mann who de
feated Virginia Stoddart, KAT,
21-13, 21-10.
In the doubles tournament, Jean
Osborn and Wanda Seaton, KAT,
have advanced to the quarter final
round and will play Jerry Grins
pan and Sarah Miller, SDT, Geor
gia Swallow and Lou Ide, will meet
Olive Sorenson and Jean Hazen,
Tri Delt, in a semi-final match
while Mildred Clymer and Mar-
Delta set in 1939.
Records stand.
Neither Ralph Worden, ATO.
who broedjumped 22 feet li
inches in the preliminaries, nor
Kerwin Eisenhart, Phi Gam who
threw the 12 pound shot 49' 2"
Wednesday, had to compete in
those events last night as their
record-breaking marks stood
against finals competition.
Merlin Stackhouse, ATO and
freshman university trackman,
was the standout of the meet as
he won the 40 with a 5.7 time, the
60 lows in 7.4, and the high jump
with a 5' 7-V leap; took second in
the 75 dash; third in the broad
jump with a try of 21' 1;" and ran
a lap in his relay team which
placed second.
DU's star was Marvin Athey,
who won the 75 dash irj 8 flat, took
second in the broad jump with 21'
24," tied for fourth, fifth and
to compete with the California
Bears, who have been benefited
by warmer climate as well as
a huge field house which permits evening,
javelin and discus throwers to Lettermen
worn out indoors all winter ng,
the Cornhuskers have not had
much outdoor exercise.
Seventeen varsity athletes were
initiated into the "N" club in cere
monies at the coliseum Tuesday
Lincoln Journal.
ED WEIR.
and Weir's was a losing battle
Thursday as drizzling rain again
kept the varsity clndermen inside.
Leaving next week for the coast
Meet confirmed.
Confirmation of the meet next
Tuesday with Utah on the way
westward came yesterday as Cali
fornia offered no objection, Weir
said.
Early in the week the Weir
men got in good outdoor workouts
but were forced inside, where they
ran on the under-stadium track
and studied moving pictures of the
IC Four-A tournament, on Wed
nesday and Thursday.
While outside, despite a wet
track and a heavy wind, Gene Lit
tler ran a 300 yard distance in
31.9. Ray Prochaska, Scarlet and
Cream platter tosser, heaved the
discus out 149 feet this week.
Bears rate high.
Rated as one of the top track
teams on the far side of the
Sierra's, the Bears should prove
stiff competition for the Husker
lads. In Grover Klemmer, the 440
man nosed out at the Sugar Bowl
by Littler, the Bears have a quar-ter-miler
who will give the red-
taken in were John
Fitzgibbon, John Thompson and
Max Young, basketball; Eugene
Littler, track; Don Hilgert, Clif
ton Lambert, Les Oldfield, Carl
Rohman, Tom Woods and Bill
Hull, swimming; Herbert Jack
man, Jack DeBusk, Ken Husemol
ler, Roy Shaw and Foster Smith,
wrestling; and Ray Griffin and
Emil Placek, gymnastics.
head an argument the full dis
tance. . California's Biles has cast the
javelin 206 feet, a mark outdis
tanced by Herb Grote, UN tosser.
Prochaska's discus antics also
outdo the Bears' Wolf in that
event.
The Bears dominate in the high
and broad jumps, possibly the 880,
two mile and the mile relay. Close
competition should evolve in the
dash, and the pole vault, while the
Huskers should take the 220, and
the shot easily. Whatever the
score the match should be close.
Two home economics freshmen
at Syracuse university have "com
muted" from Puerto Rico to
schools in the United States for
four years.
sixth in the high jump and placed j?rie Schrader tangle with Jean
sixth in the shot.
Chamber of Commerce
extends lunch invitation
All university students are urged
to eat lunch with their high school
friends who are coming to Lin
coln almost every day for their
annual senior sneak day and are
entertained at luncheon at the
chamber of commerce, according
to an announcement from the
c hamber. Groups who are here to
day are seniors from Superior and
McLean high schools.
Beg your pardon
In a headline error in yes
terdays DAILY, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon was named as winner
of interfraternity ping-pong.
The story correctly stated that
Zeta Beta Tau beat SAE for
the championship.
Coffee and Ruth Chapline, AOPi
Kathryn Kellison, by the way,
was runner-up in women's singlet
in the first annual Nebraska closed
table tennis tournament held last
Saturday and Sunday at the Muny
recreation center. She will be one
of the remaining contenders to
watch as the drive nears the end.
An odd sight in the gym last
Tuesday afternoon was the 1890
gym suits being used in one of the
classes. They created quite a stir.
Kniss conducts
tennis exhibition
Howard Kniss, touring tennn
pro, traveling with Bill Tilden and
Alice Marble, who will give an ex
hibition in Omaha Sunday, con
ducted a tennis clinic on the coin li
in the coliseum Thursday after
noon.
KiUfcs was obtained for the clinic
by Joe Stanton, Lincoln pro.
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