The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 15, 1949, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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PAGE 4
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Friday, Tuly 15, 1949
Mud,Sweat
and
Cheers
br Rod Riggs
While plans are being formu
lated for the second postwar
Olympic games in 1952, it brings
to mind that two Nebraska ath
letes who represented the United
States in the 1936 Olympics. Sam
Francis, All-American fullback,
placed fifth in the shot put at
Berlin, and Paul Amen was a reg
ular on one of the two American
b;i: cball teams that played abroad.
Francis is an Army officer in Pan
ama now, and Amen is coaching
at West Point.
The late Henry Schulte. who
was recently elected to the Helms
Athletic Foundation Hall of Fame
as a track coach, was the Amer
ican decathlon coach in the 1928
Olympic games.
MORE REPORTS on the sum
mer activities of Cornhusker foot
ball players:
Frank Simon of Burchard is
making hay on a farm near his
home town. Others who are word
ing on farms are Dick Regier of
Santa Margarita, Calif., Art Bauer
ol Shubert. and David Jones of
Hastings.
Fred Hawkins, guard and Rob
ert Mockett, first-year tackle can
didate, are working at construc
tion jobs in Lincoln. Mockett, in
cidentally, is the grandson of E.
E. Mockett, captain of Nebraska's
first team in 1890. ,
Don Pedei-son of Lincoln is
working on a Colorado ranch
building fences and bridges.
Allied Blackett, 235-pound
tackle candidate from Omaha, is
working as an oiler on a dragline
foi the Union Pacific Railroad
neai Evanston, Wyoming.
GERALD FERGUSON, Scotts
bluif, is working for his brother
in a market. Walt Spellman,
Omaha, guard aspirant, is moving
furniture this summer and an
other guard .candidate, Milton
Schmidt, of Lincoln, is working as
a stockman in a warehouse.
Bob Schneider, Nebraska City,
is doing brick and concrete con
struction work in his home town.
Joe McGill of Omaha and Ted
Brilt. 205-pound tackle candidate
from North Tlatle, are also doinr
work of this sort.
Howard Fletcher, McCook. end,
fully recovered from an injured
knee, is working at a Lincoln
mortuary.
Gen. Sturgis . .
(Continued from Page 1)
losses and which drove an esti
mated 200,000 people from the
legion.
(5) The Corps of Engineers are
responsible for flood-control and
navigation dams, including five
major multiple-purpose dams on
the Missouri River one of which
(Garrison) will be the world's
largest earth fill dam.
(6) The vast program, with so
many participating state-federal
agencies, is being coordinated in
the Missouri Basin Inter-Agency
Committee, w has given the
program effi. direction and
functions in the interest of the
people of the entire basin.
STREATER SAID in part: "The
spectacular dam in the future will
not only serve to protect our
lands, homes and industries from
floods, but it will provide storage
water for irrigation of cur crops
in periods of drouth, dependable
water supply for communities,
production for power that will en
courage industrial growth, elec
tricity for power and light to the
farms, and better fishery, wild
life and recreational resources."
Pointing to a local application
of the Missouri Basin program,
Streater said "At the present time
it is estimated that over 3,000,000
acre feet of water leaves the
Platte river basin at Plattsmouth,
Neb., each year. After full de
velopment of the Platte River
basin under the present Bureau
of Reclamation program, only
1,000,000 acre feet of water will
leave the basin unused.
"A LOOK INTO the future on
the Platte river alone you will
see 16 new resrvoirs in addition
to the five existing ones, 1,500
miles of new irrigation canals in
addition to the existing 700 miles
of canals, 24 new diversion dams
in addition to the 13 existing di
versions, and 14 new hydroelec
tricplants in addition to the 13
now existing. Over 4,000 private
irrigation wells will be added to
the 6,000 now existing.
"Project this development on
one tributary alone to the entire
Missouri basin and you can see a
plan which will transform 5,000,-
000 acres of range and dry .lands
into crop producing areas; a
stabilized living for over 3,000,000
people; and an added cash value
of crops estimated at $300,000,000
annually. Add to these the value
of a stabilized livestock raising
and feeding industry and you
have some idea of the benefits
possible through the great Mis
souri Basin Project."
FAMOUS LAST WORDS: I
don't have to study for his final;
1 have his test from last semester.
Kccilal . . .
Miss Mary Louise Boehm, in
structor in piano, will present a re
cital at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the
Union ballroom. The program, part
of her work for the master of
music degree, will consist of a talk
on a Schumann composition which
she has analyzed and the actual
performance of the selection.
Gs3)
"THE MAN WHO PLAYS THE
SWEETEST TRUMPET IN THE WORLD"
m
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SPORTSWEAR . . . Second Floor . . . Phone 2-8511
MlnLLiEm & ' LP a n m e