Friday, November 1, 1940 DAILY NEBRASKAN '7 Oklahoma-Nebraska lineups SOONERS exp ht wt. pos. Jennings 2 6-1 173 le Eason 1 6-1 210 It Harris 1 5-11 230 ig Speegle 2 6-0 182 c Lahar 2 5-11 214 ig Teeter 0 6-3 218 rt Smith 1 6-3 195 re Whited 1 5-10 190 qb Jacobs 1 6-1 17 lh Mathews 1 5-9 162 rh Martin 2 6-1 185 fb HUSKERS Preston 1 R. Kanler 2 Schwai Ukopf . . 1 Burmss 2 A If son 2 Behm 2 Prochaska 2 Petsch 2 Hopp (e-c) 2 Luther 2 Francis 1 exp. hit. 6-3 6-3 5-9 4 5- 104 64 6- 4 6-3 6-1 5- 11 6- 0 6-2 wt. 191 220 175 188 188 200 198 175 193 180 201 Oklahoma presents versatile offense; large, powerful line He's Just a fella Mined Franck. . . . He was romping around with the Gopher varsity fen the field house last Monday afternoon. . . He had been looktng at the light signal practice that the Minne sota players had been partaking in. . . A request to don a sweat suit and frolic a bit with the Gophers enticed said Fvanck. . . His face was somewhat familiar to Gopher players. . . He ran in a similar fasMon, kicked with the same mo tion, and pissed the same way that they were used to ob serving. . . FRANCK AGAIN. For this fella Franek was only a high school player but one af deserving notice. . . Yoti ae this fella has a brother. . . H5e name happen to be George Franck and the younger fella is Harry Franck, jr. . . Junior Franck Ic a star back field performer far Davenport (la.) high school's team. . . Al ready this year, Junior had seam-! pered ta six touchdowns, four in one game. . . When asked tf he was coming to Minnesota next fall, Harry said, "Boy, I'd sure like to. This it the swellest place I've ever seen!" So, thoae Minnesota fans may still be seeing more of the Francks even after George graduates. . . Good news, eh, Huskers? . . . According to Sheldon Beiae, Gopher backfield coach and chief scout. Bill DeCorrevont la not the Purple top threat, but that Red Hahnenstein is the main North western headache. . . Infirmary note: Don Frtz, ace Husker baefcetbaiter, H more or less hospitalized for the time be ing. . . Worry, worry, those ton ails have finally been removed. . . HOLDOUT An wmpire holdout: Yessh, Bill Stewart, famous ice hockey referee and manager and baseball umpire, wont officiate In the National Hockey league this year. . .His Nebraska Football Party It infra ry ta If linn, OfcWthorw Nowwhw 1. 1M. THlKMUaV MTOIIK Mat. :M p. m: Mtnaaarl rariny train PMI f ! ar'PajfWWry. lt:M a. n- Ijrmv 1-Jawra, Mtaaaarl rrlrv I I. mn.v, mtTKMitra ut. 1:15 a. a: Antra Kam CHy. MIR atari I'aclfV R.R. (:-: a. m: Irrrafcfaat, Wfar Prtraai Dtonr. S:.1a a. a: Laava Kmm City, Frtra .Jam. It ana: l-atra, Vilpra 9mrr. S:45 p. m: Arrtva Oataaiia City, Prta l-lnr. S:M p. m: ttaa a OhMdMrnw tMN- 4 m: Una tm Tft rMhun, Clana: fllR frfct. rstHsMaafc Wy a P9fW& wfc0fja$ p. m: Dfiwitr, OfclalMwiM. BHtnrr Ho I. 1:M p. mi Mto. I:0 p. m: l.ttil m. RATIRDAV, NOVKMBEB tVO. :!N a. m: Rrpakraa. OtHarwana RHImorr Hotrt. 11:M a. fa: 1-aatai, Qajaaiaia BIH morc H-r1. It aaaa; 1av y Vm for Karraaa. 1 p. m; Arrrov Nm man. 5 iSS p. iwj Oaasa. (:!MJ p. m: Inff Normaa. : p. An Okaaam Oty. : p. n: ninnrr, Oklahoma Ant- VnBa aa'W1 aC Vjaj fssja CBBkfTasTaVJa'saa4 . :M p. ra: lmvc Oklahoma City, Finm 1Jar, Sprrtal trate. Sl'NDAV, NOVEMRt'R JI f :9S a. m: ArrfVe Kaaaaa VHy. t a. m: Lravc Kanaaa Ctoy, Mlanoarl lAc, ?prtat aratw. S:-:M a. m: nraahfaai, M! art Twciflc Ptt. 11 :M p. m: Maw, PWHaaart Pft nincr. 1:M p. ia: Arrrvc l.hiwla. salary demands have been turned down. . . Ol' Freddy Fitzaimmona, portly Brooklyn chucker, had a big year in baseball. , . However, five o tljose National league wins were from the lowly Phils. , . George McAfee wa a great player for Duke last year. . . But this fall, younger brother Wes matching strtde for stride of hht elder brother's gridiron ability. . . Coach Wallace Wade of the Dukes thinks McAfee a juat about as good aa they come. . . McAfee follows his coach's golden rule for passers: "Throw the ball with the Wea of not having K intercepted rather than with the Wea of com pleting it." . . . Iowa State started its basket ball drills lat Monday and five regulars have been reporting regu larly from last year's squad. . . Principal loss to the Ames cage court was Coach Louts Menee's son, Bob. . . In the infirmary a la the infirmary this week are Joe Weinberg, senior; Charles Har ris, graduate student; Milan Ha pala, graduate student; and Ivor Fitiz, senior, who waa admitted for tonsilectomy. By Oklahoma sporta service. NORMAN, Okl., Nov. 1 Ne braska, the team that might have tied or beaten mighty Mirmestota and been leading the nation's foot ball parade today had not Com husker Walt Luther's 66-yard touchdown run against the Golden Gophers been recalled for a dou ble offside penalty, win try to cinch the 1940 Big Six champion ship against Oklahoma here Satur day. Bayed on by an all-time record audience of 35,000 Oklahoma farvs, Coach Tom Stfdham's big Sooners will try valiantly to repeat their 193S feat of belting the Scarlet Jersied invaders the last time Ne braska played In Oklahoma's red tile stadium, brt this fall Major Lawrence "Biff Jones' Oornland Cat-o'-nine-tails will rate the nod of the bookies because of their destructive second team which Oklahoma, probably cant match. Kickoff at 2:30 Kickoff will be at 2:30 p. m. and even tho it should rain every day before the game, the tremen dous fan throng will see these two fine teams kick, pass and run on turf aa dry as a boiler room floor since Oklahoma's new field cover will blanket the playtng rectangle and both end cones every night this week. . Each team possesses superlative running, kickmg and forward passing. Nebraska overwhelming ly out-rushed Kansas 264 net yards to 22 and Missouri 273 to 27 m her last two games, has two grand punters in Harry Hopp and Herm Rohrlg and fetched five of her six touchdowns against the tough Minnesota, Indiana and Mis souri teams by means of forward passes off the lethal throwing arms of Hopp and Rohrig. Versatile offense. Oklahoma has also a versatile offensive. Sttdham's big Sooner first team impressively began the Oklahoma Aggie game, Texas and Iowa State games with long power drives to touchdowns without sur rendering the ball and the Sooner punting, forward passing and place-kicking has been top-notch. In Indian Jack Jacobs, Nebraaka will be meeting her first gennine triple threat of the season. In George Franck of Minnesota the Cbmhuskers encountered a slash ing runner who gained 122 yards against them but didnt pass. Hal Hursh of Indiana and Paul Christ man of Missouri pestered the Cbmhuskers thru the sky lanes but didnt worry along the ground. Triple threat Jacobs. But Jacobs is good at every of fensive chore. In Oklahoma's four previous games this year, the Creek Jim Thorpe has gained 306 yards rushing, has forward passed 447 yards, run back enemy kicks 143 yards and brilliantly punted for an average of more than 48 yards besides playing a swell de fensive safety game. Until he grows tired from the pounding of two fresh Nebraska teams, this bow-legged Indian youth should keep the Nebraska secondary and tertiary on its cleated toes. Bill Cross, Sooner business man ager of athletics, has engaged 5,000 bleacher seats to be installed around each end of the Sooner cinder running track where grade and high school student spectators will be seated so their usual seats in the east stadium may be sold to overflow spectators. "We are going to have plenty of room for everybody," Cross promises in spite of the fact the previous attendance record at Norman. 28.091 established here two years ago when Nebraaka in vaded and waa repulsed 0 to 14, may be toppled by almost 7,000. I-M chairmen AH fraternities who partici pated in Intramural football thaa fall are urged to tend in their choicer for an all-opponent team. This team is to be made up of teams In the fraternity" awn league and can not include their members. This list must be turned in by Saturday af this week to the Daily Nebraa kan where the votes will be tabulated. Tha deadline wtH positively be Tuesday. Members, remind your ath letic chairman ta determine this list as cooperation win be appreciated. Women's swim tryouts start Permits needctl for I-M preliminaries Saturday Women's intramural swimming will start Saturday afternoon from 1 to 3:30 with fie first prelimin ary meet. All women who wish to swim m the final must participate and oualtfy m either the pre liminary meet Saturday or the second prenminary which will be held Nov. 16. Health and swimming permits are required f al women not now enrolled in swimming clas-ee. Practices are not reqnired. Events Include 25 yard free, back and breast strokes; 50 yard free, back and breast strokes; 166 yard free style relay; 75 yard medley and diving. Five women may enter on a relay team of which four may take part m the 106 yard free style and three in the 75 yard medley. The names of women who plan to swim in the first preliminary should be Hi the WAA office by Thursday night. The advance sale waa IS, 000 a early as Tuesday. The Nebraska and Oklahoma two-mile teams, each all-victorious this year, will race between halves, probably cm the grass around the football field itself. Drmmutive Bob Girm, Nebraska's smeoTNiuered ace, atnd Bill Lyda, Oklahoma's well-muscled striker, should contend for first place with Harold Brooks of the Cornhuskei s and Dick Smothers of the Sooners sprinting it out for third. -ten r si 1 Ui 1-4 .: i -w f V A Hr' onothar ol liioa fomovt Ke C'oiaVt le run up your latriioa Kora. Wpor It rt f onw rtrrai, rfara rwa r payiraa. Its nmtt lirt--paM(il linaa aad mH Kancrafaro' loHarlrMj will awr ymtt laeroaflSitraa1 goad loaVi la enry aarMrrrrtg. TifMia-Kyht, boot. weaoa wooJ ia toh pottari and deapar tonat . . . bottom all tha way down with o fly (rant from bah ta haat. Srvat 12 ta 20, oboul T5. ot tha laading (larva ttiravflHawt tht country.1 Par tho Kan C basics traw h yaar city, writ KIN MVCl, 101 WM 9lh Hraa, Now tar mm --aatJa. V a, & . 'aa COLLEGE MEN PREFER . . ARROWS, if for no other reason than downright good looks. Yoni always cm Arrows worn by men who know and un derstand about the finer things of life. Yet, Arrow shirrs cost no more ! For two dol lars you get the inimi table Arrow collar, Mitoga-fit body, and a style of "savoir fahV that comes only in Arrow shirts. Come in before the game for your Arrow selections. t. I it A 1 1 jX9 in 11 ? WE MADE IT! ... and arc we proud of that handsome Gordon Oxford fhirt! In fact we have proadly shnted college men for genera tions and today Arrow is still the favorite to wia on say campus. Cordon Oxford has the famoas button -down Dover collar, Sanfor-ized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage Ict-s than 1). Invert $2. today in this time-honored ce lebrity. Another buck will boy an Arrow tie to top it off. Sec your Arrow dealer today. ARROW SHIRTS