The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 17, 1936, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBMASKAN
THREE
Team Sees Pitt Film; Must Hold Kaggies For Title
ACACIA, SIG ALPH
ANNEXSEMI-FINAL
10
CRITICS RESTS IN
COMEBACK TRAIL
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 1936.
ANSWER
GRID
SOCCER DECIS
ONS
Manhattanites Go Wild in
Iowa State Fracas
Saturday.
By MORRIS LIPP.
The Answer.
"When the battle breaks agalmt
you and the crowd falls to
cheer
When the Anvil Chorus echoes
with the essence of a jeer;
When the knockers start their
panning In the knocker's nim
ble way
With a rap for all your errors
and a Josh upon your play
There Is one quick answer
ready that will nail them on the
wing;
There Is one reply forthcoming
that will wipe away the sting;
There Is one elastice come-back
that will hold them, as It
should MAKE GOOD."
That's the meaningful placard
that hangs on the Husker's dress
ing room wall this week which
Cornhuskers will notice while get
ting: into their moleskins before
practices in preparation for the de
fense of their Big Six title from
Kansas State here Saturday.
The battered Scarleteers are on
the comeback trail. Pitt's power
nearly took the hearts out of the
fighting Cornhuskers, and the
question is "can Nebraska come
back?" The answer will be found
Saturday when the conference
leading Huskers meet their circuit
foe, Kansas State, which perenn
ially gives Nebraska its toughest
league battle.
Last year, Nebraska was held to'
a scoreless tie at Manhattan after
they had lost of Minnesota and
Pitt the two Husker conquerors
of this season. The task that the
Cornhusker coaching staff now
faces is getting the varsity back in
shape, both mentally and physical
ly. K-Aggies Pepped Up.
Kansas State Is all pepped up
following their decisive triumph
over Iowa State last Saturday and
la pointing for Nebraska. The
K-Ags have their biggest oppor
tunity of the year ahead of them
and they will spare nothing in the
attempt to tie the Huskers for the
conference title.
Confining their Monday session
to watching the slow motion-pictures
of the Pitt-Nebraska con
test and taking a short warmup
drill in sweat-suits. Trainer Cor
nell reported that every Husker
who clashed against the Panthers
is well worn-out", but no serious in
juries were sustained. Every man
will be in shape for the Kansas
State tilt.
It was a Manhattan-merry-go-round
Saturday in the home lot of
the Kansas Staters when they
went wild against the Cyclones of
Iowa State to win 47 to 7, edging
nearer a tie for the Big Six cham
pionships. A victory over the
Cornhuskers will give Kansas
State a draw for the conference
laurels.
Iowa State held the Jayhawk
farmers to one touchdown in the
opening quarter, and then the grid
game developed into a track meet.
The K-Aggies ran up 40 points in
the next three quarters to demon
strate the power they have in store
for the Huskers.
Elder Scores 3 Touchdowns.
Maurice "Red" Elder tallied
three. Howard Cleveland made two
and Bob Douglas accounted for
two in the touchdown scoring for
the K-Ags. Ted Warren added
three points with three extra-poini
conversions and Douglas made two
additional points.
Captain Clarence Gustine scored
the Cyclone's touchdown when he
broke thru the K-Aggie line to
block a punt, recover it and race
23 yards for the score. Everett
Kischer placekicked goal.
Several lucky "breaks" for the
Cyclones kept the K-Aggies from
scoring several more touchdowns,
but 47 points alone is impressive
enough to give the Huskers some
thing to worry about this weekend.
Statistics of the Kansas State
Iowa State game show that the
K-Aggie power is in their rushing
ability. They gained 555 yards by
rvhing, as compared with 46
ymds for the Cyclones. The K-Ags
made 22 first downs to Iowa
State's 5.
Mediocre is the description of
Kansas State's passing attack.
They only attempted 6 forwards of
which two were completed and
three were intercepted. Iowa State
tried 23 but only five were com
pleted. VETERAIS QUIGLEY
TO CALL RULINGS
FOR K AGGIE TILT
Veteran of. many a stormy foot
bail and basketball contest. E. C.
Quigley will referee the Nebraska
Kansas State grid games here
Saturday. His familiar cries of
"foul!" and "you can't do that:"
have often resounded in Ne
braska's field house.
Other officials are Ira Carrithers,
Illinois, umpire: Jack Crange. Illi
nois, headlinesman: Ted O Sulli
van, Kansas, field judge.
Because ticket sales have b-i
so high, the conference champion
ship game will be broadcast thru
KFAB and any other radio sta
tion that wishes to place a micro
phone before the university's an
nouncer. Twenty-five percent of the Car
leton college faculty is listed in
"Who's Who." If you want the
figures, 23 out of a possible 85
have broken into this exclusive
volume.
Cameraman Catches Action Shots of Pitt Game
m A sk .. & ? '? w 0 w
HiJj? o f Wa ft
1. Francis tries to fight off a
clawing Panther after a stab thru
the line. 2. Lloyd Cardwell gallops
around Pitt's right end for the
longest run of the day 43 yards.
3. Howell stops 18-year-old Gold
berg after a gain thru tackle. 4.
Cardy whirls off tackle for a first
and ten.
Meteor of Propaganda Bursts
on Public Veiled as Publicity
for Merchandising- Finns
Crawford. (.Continued from Page 1.)
to ideas as to be pliable toward
everything. The occasional ped
dler with his wares is not the real
offender. We shut the door in his
face but open our minds to all
sorts of diverse influences.
"Civilization, together with ad
vertising, merchandising, and so
cial custom has been giving us so
lutions and we have been accept
ing them as a matter of course,
often without our even knowing
what t ie problem is. There might
well be a great sign, 'Let Us Do
Your Thinking for You,' spread
across the world. Shall we live in
the exclusive section of the city?
Shall we play bridge afternoon
and evening, even tho we heartily
dislike it? Shall we go on a re
ducing diet, even tho we are in
perfect health ? You might ques
tion these things, but skilfull pro
motion and in some cases civiliza
tion say 'yes' and you do as you
are told. You keep saying, 1
think I think so and so,' until you
deceive yourself into t i inking that
you really do think. Bui someone
else is doing the thinkirg Tor you."
"As We See 'Em"
by
Morris Lipp
BIG SIX STANDINGS.
w I t pet pts opp
Nebraska 4 0 0 1000 94 0
Kansas State ..2 0 2 .750 86 26
Missouri 2 1 1 .625 38 41
Oklahoma 1 2 2 .400 41 48
Iowa State 1 2 1 .300 35 105
Kansas 0 4 0 . 000 13 87
Coveted in conference competi
tion, the Big Six flag will be at
stake this Saturday in Memorial
stadium, and it's a powerful group
of Jayhawk farmers who will at
tempt to wrest it from the grips of
the Cornhuskers, very much weak
ened from the recent Panther
clawing.
Somehow or other, Iowa State
managed to hold Kansas State to
7-7 at first period time. Then
Wes Fry instructed the K-Aggies
to turn on the power. They did
forty more points of it, giving the
K-Ags a 47-7 victory and more
than an outside chance to tie the
Huskers for first place In the Big:
Six.
Remember the fumbling Tigers
from Mizwu? Well, they're not
the fumbling species any more.
They beat the Oklahoma Eooners
21-14 at Norman to show their
best form of the year In their first
circuit victory. The win put them
on the third place rung of the
ladder.
The Jayhawk football team is
almost as extinct as its alumnus
who ran for the presidency. Michi
gan State's Spartans came to Mt.
Oread to humble the Jays 41-0 in a
game as one-sided as the score in
dicates. Kansas is stuck in the cel
lar position this year, but with an
eye to the future, the Jays will
tackle their own freshmen in a
regulation game this Saturday.
Surprisingly enough, there
were few games that ended in
ties this past weekend. Scoring
was unusually high, indicating a
weakening group of forward
walls and a strengthening flock
of backfield artists. There was
also a lack of major upsets too.
Notre Dame's victory over the
Army topped the list of sur
prises. Washington's Huskies
routed the Trojans of USC 12 to
0 to make themselves No, 1
Rose Bowl candidate from the
west coast. Fordham, the east's
bowl-bound ball club, was idle
over the weekend but Is "in" line
for the offer to play amidst the
roses New Year's Day. Alabama
took Georgia Tech 20 to 16 to
strengthen its claim for bowl
chances. Coming from behind
in the final minutes, Stanford
took a 20 to 14 win from Oregon
State in a thrilling west coast
battle. This department fared
only fairly well in picking 'em
last week, missing 6 out of 26
for an 84 percent average.
Odds and ends: "Jack" Grover,
Kansas City attorney and former
Big Six official, suffered a heart
attack after the Pitt-Husker game
and was rushed to a Lincoln hos
pital. . .Placed under an oxygen
tent, his condition is still serious
..."Hank" McLemore didn't have
much to say in the press-box after
the game, but an article from
Nawth Carolina by this Unipress
scribe is all Sam'l Francis for All-
American McLemore wasn't
going to select an All-American
eleven, but Sam'l's versatile show
against Pitt made him change his
mind . . . Everyone looked for Gold
berg and LaRue to make the
I threat against the Huskers. but it
turned out that Greene, Urban and
Stebbins Pitt "unknowns" were
the powers In Pitt's offense. . .the
Kansas State-Nebraska champion
ship tilt will go over the ether
waves as present ducat sales indi
cate a possible sell-out. ..Panthers
had 25 huge flagons of Smoky
City water with them on their
westward trek ... Foreign water
might slow 'em up, thinks Jock
Sutherland. . .Watched D. X. walk
out to midfield to congratulate
Jock Sutherland after the game
thru binoculars. . .his steps lookeo
awfully slow, even reluctant...
Huskers of '21 the last Scarlet
team to beat Pitt watched the
game from the Nebraska bench,
chewing cigars to frazzles. . .Bill
Daddio, Pitt's exceptionally fine
sophomore end, suffered a frac
tured ankle in the encounter. . .He
was Pitt's best man on the line. . .
Bob Mills, sophomore left tackle
understudy, found himself rubbing
Heitkotten
QUALITY MEATS
AT LOW PRICES
Makers ef Pin Sausages
and Barbseued Meats
B.M48 140 SO. 11th
'YOUR DRUG STORE
When La need of Drug Wants or
Fountain service Phone B1068.
We deliver free.
The Owl Pharmacy
P it. at 14th
Phone B1063
shoulders with Pitt, and he did a
plenty fine job of it. as motion
pictures will attest. . .Summing up
the Pitt game for once and for all,
it was lust a case of too much
power. . .Howard Cleveland, Kan-
You Can Depend
on the Man Who
Advertises
Daily Nebraska
sas State quarterback, is tops in
Big Six scoring. . .his two touch
downs against Iowa State boosted
his points to 36... Here's hoping
that Game Captain Cardwell can
beat
running
NINE times out of ten you will find that the man
who advertises is the man who most willingly re
turns your money if you are not satisfied.
He has too much at stake to risk losing your
trade or your confidence. You can depend on
him.
He is not in business for today or tomorrow
only-hut for next year and ten years from next
year. He knows the value of good-will.
You get better merchandise at a fairer price
than he could ever hope to sell it if he did not
have the larger volume of business that comes
from legitimate advertising and goods that bear
out the promise of the printed word.
Coura-sy of the Nebraska Aiumnun.
against the Jayhawk farmers...
it's his ladt appearance on Me
morial field, along witb Sam
Francis, Ron Douglas. Les McDon
ald. Jack Ellis, Ken McGirnis, Virg
Yelkin, and Dick Fischer.
Ep, Phi Psi Dropped
From Title Race by
Winning Clubs.
Acacia and Sigma Alpha Kpsi
lon continued their winning ways
in intramural soccer as both scored
goose-egg victories in the Femi
final games played last night on
"Russian Flats." As a rpsult the
two teams will meet for the title
later in the week.
The victory of Acacia was most
impressive as they waded thru the
Sigma Pi Epsilon hooters by a.
3 to 0 score. Scoring early in th!
first period, the winners were
never in danger of being hoarled
by the Sig Eps. Redfield of Aca
cia toed the first counter home to
start his team off on another vic
tory, a habit which the Acacia's
oAAm trt havp rirpttv wrll nrrfprtpri.
The second period passed with
neither team being able to pene
trate into scoring territory. The
third quarto saw the winners put
the affair on ice as Adelaack and
Chaim teamed up for a goal and
Roby followed suit with another
kick into payoff territory for the
final counter.
Altho the score of the Sig Alph
Phi Kappa Psi game shoivs but
little margin for the winners, it
fails to show the superior play of
the Sig Alphs who were a con
stant scoring threat and only by
sheer accident or superb defensive
play in the goal area were the
victory so close. The lone score of
the game came as H. Williams of
the S. A. E's finished a goalward
march with a placement thru the
goal markers. For considerable
time it looked as through the Phi
Psis were to be successful in the
defense of their goal but the ulti
mate payoff came late in the
fourth quarter for the decision.
Comparative power of the two
teams fails to give either an edge
in the finals but the ability o
Acacia to cash in on the smallest
break may be a determining factor
in the outcome of this event. De
fensively the teams are well bal
anced as the scores of yesterdays
games indicate, and the game will
more than likely go to the boys
who eet the breaks and take ad
vantage of them.
Intramural Director Harold Pctz
issued the statement that indoor
sports competition would begi:i
after the pending holidays. An
nouncements concerning the re
spective dates of the events will
follow as he arrange them.
Sig
)