Thursday, October 1, 1942 DAILY NEBRASKAN Boss Bierman Leads Hawks To Home Field MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Lt. Col. Bernie Bierman will celebrate his homecoming to the University of Minnesota campus Saturday when he guides his Iowa Seahawks into battle against the doughty Minne sota Gophers. Bierman, who will be aided by former Gophers Dallas Ward and Phil Bengston, will be attempting to break a Gopher win streak that he helped build. Six former Minne sota football performers, who no one ever dreamed would again play in Memorial stadium, will don grid togs for- Bierman Saturday. Ray Antil, end in 1934; George Svendsen, center in 1934; John Kulbitski, tackle in 1937; Charlie Schultz, tackle in 1937; Gene Flick, center in 1941, and Judd Ringer, end in 1941 are the six ex-Minnesotans who will return for battle against their alma mater. Two other former University of Minnesota men, Pat Maloney and Fred Baston. are on the Seahawk squad. Baston, son of former end coach Bert Baston, was a prom ising sophomore end on the Gopher squad last spring while Maloney is a former national speed skat ing champ. In order to fill graduation gaps, Gopher Mentor George Hauser and his new staff Red Dawson, Bud Wilkinston, John Roning, and Jim Kelly have had to put on a small juggling act with their performers, but the experiments turned out well. Temporary loss of Bill Gar naas, injured against Pitt, will be felt in the backfield. BARB ENTRIES Rollie Homey, mtra-mural director, announced Wednesday that all barb intra mural en tries are due Monday noon, Oct. 5. Nearly 400 Cross Country Men Out For Ioiva Squad AMES, Iowa, Sept. 30. The biggest cross country squad in the country, nearly 400 men, is report ing at Iowa State college. The huge squad includes fresh men and upperclassmen, according to George Bietnall, the Cyclone c:-;h. Roughly two-thirds of the group are participating in the gi gantic hardening program fos tered by the college. Marlowe Burgy of Ames is the only major letter winner back from 1941 but he has veteran com panv in Duane Dankel, Glidden, and Gay Wilson, West Liberty, minor lettcrmen. Other upperclass men include Don Andrew, Titon ka; Gerald Fisher, Nashua; Har old Iverson, Stanhope; Herman Bailey, Ames; and Jack Gibson, Perry. Gibson won a track letter as a half-niilcr last spring. Newcomers to the squad are Roger DcWolf, Rolfe; Paul Fow ler. Fort Bennig, Ga.; Paul Kop rucki, Davenport; Bob Lary, Mar ion; Harold Matcjka, Omaha, Neb.; Ait Munsell, Des Moines; Bruce Merten, Sioux City; Lee Richardson, Council Eluffs, all nu meral winners; John Staley, Fred erick. Md.; and Gerald Secor, Melbourne. Cincinnati School Introduces New Military Course CINCINNATI, Ohio. (ACP). When the college of law, Univer sity of Cincinnati, opens October 5 for its one hundred tenth year, students will find a new course on military law and defense legislation. Dean M. L. Ferson points out that although the college of law has seen its students and gradu ates go Into four earlier wars, starting with -the Mexican war, this is the first course of its kind in the college's history. "The course will familiarize the student with military law and as pects of defense legislation affect ing the rights, duties, and privu eges of the individual, all to the end that he may more efficiently serve his country during the emcr gency," Alfred A. Morrison, as sistant professor of law, explained. Professor Morrison will give the course. Thecourse will cover these six major topics: Constitutional ex tent of military power; organiza tion of the army, including con scription laws; military law proper, listing its sources, mili tary and civil jurisdiction, courts martial and their procedures, and Garnass Out .'! A f 7 ) ' : xf i if y ; i X X b Bill Garnaas, ace Minnesota quarterback, may be out of ac tion in the Gopher-Seahawk tilt Saturday. Garnaas is one of the top blocking backs in the United States. offenses; articles ow war; the se lective training and service act of 1940; and soldiers' and sailors' civil rights and the civil relief act of 1940, Did You Know That? Louis K. Manley, formerly dean of the University of Pittsburgh school of business administration, has been named dean of the gradu ate school at the University of Miami. W. M. Kiplinger, noted Wash ington observer, is a graduate of Ohio State university. Huskers Practice Passing Attack Varsity football drill in the Memorial Stadium yesterday consisted mainly of passing of fense and defense with a par tial scrimmage against the frosh. This may indicate that the Huskers intend not only to stop the passing threat of Iowa State's Royal Lohry but also to create successful air attacks of their own. Did You Know That? First eroup of 1,600 enlisted members of the WAVES will be trained at the University of Wis consin, Indidana university and Oklahoma Agricultural and Me chanical college. Responding to a call at Em poria, (Kan.) Teachers college, the fire laddies found an optical illu sion instead. Floodlights striking millions of insects gave them the appearance of sparks jumping from the roof. Harvard university is the oldest men's college in the United States. A group of graduate and under graduate students has formed a historical society at the University of Wisconsin. Ruffing Hero Of Inaugural '. Series Game , SPORTSMAN'S PARK, St. Louis. Thirty-eight year old Red Ruffing pitched one of the top games of his brilliant career" here today as he held the St. Louis Cardinals hitless for the first seven and two-thirds innings of Wed- nesday's opening World Series" game. Ruffing's feat of going seven and two-thirds innings with-i out yielding a hit sets a World Series record, exceeding the seven and one-third frames of hitless,, baseball hurled by Erb Pennock of the New York Yankees in 1927. Ruffing went into the ninth in ning holding a 5-0 lead over the' Cards. Then Terry Moore singled" sharply to right on the next play. The Yanks added a run an inning' in the fourth and fifth stanzas and salted away three more in the eighth. Harry Gumburt, a right-,, handed flipper, replaced Morton Cooper on the mound for the Card inals in the eighth, then Lanier, opened the ninth inning. The lineups: POS. NEW YORK (A) ST. LOUIS (N SS Rizzuto (.284) Marlon (.278) :iB Rolfc (.221) Kurowskl (.250) RK Cullenbine (.290) . . .SlauRhter (.3173 CF DiMaggie (.304) Moore (.285) LF Keller .(286) Musial (.318) 2B Gordon (.320) Brown (.2561 C Dickey (.295) W. Cooper (.283) IB Hasaett (.285) Hopp lb (.258) P Ruffing (14-7) M. Cooper (22-7) For Your Coking Rendesvous "on Campus" BUCK'S COFFEE SHOP 1131 R Street M. L. Sperling Approximately one out of every three students at Hamilton col lege is taking special college work intended to prepare him for mili tary service. Nathaniel Blaisdell, graduated from Brown university in 1883, recently was elected president of the Brown Club at Alta, Califor nia for the forty-fourth year in succession. , Patton park, located on the Muskingum college campus, cov ers less than l350th of an acre. It is the home of one tree, three stones and approximately 200,000 blades of grass. Seventeen-year-old Shirley Haines is NOT attending the Uni versity of Maine. She had intended to enroll, but when her brother en' listed'in the service she voluri teered to drive a tractor on her hr . I) I :& I vi 4 r. Choose them tailored in tweeds or herringbones . . . choose them bold in bright colors 'or plaid . . . choose 'em dressy and demure in dress maker styles . . . you'll find them all at Magee's.flll wool suits $19.95 to $35.00. la For combatant duty against those cold winter breezes . . . lor evening glamour on those important dates . . . see them at Magee's ... zip lined coats, herringbones, tweeds, fleeces $19.95 to $29.95 ... fur trimmed coats $29.95. Of course, every coat is 100 wooL father's farm.