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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1942)
4 Sun3ay, NovemKer 8, 1942 DAILY NEBRASKAN 3 TP. u 1 By Norris Anderson , V (Sports Editor) " , '1 J r'J , 3 . S-PND AGGRESSIVE FAST ANw A kTrTR AS A SOFHoro WE wk OUT PR0 WORIES 4 ri ii AT AND '( r WEED J7IS LNE -BACKING LlNE-PLUJGMG I5C0NPARC0 WITH -r-i ir-" n rcT 1 1 -AM A I WAV Rr miJNTPD oATO V? YARfe WHEW TZEGOWO 6ETSTWI Eastern Team Tops Cyclones PHILADELPHIA, Pa , Nov. 6. V i 1 1 a n o va's offensive-minded gridiron combine spearheaded by fireballer, Al Postus soundly thrashed Iowa State's Cyclones 32 to 6 at Shibe park, Friday night. Eleven thousand spectators watched Al Postus heave two touchdown passes and blast across for two other scores to submerge the Cyclones, who never had a chance after the opening quarter. Postus ignited the scoring by hurling a 38-yard aerial to Steve Todmy-S til t P. M. HELD OVER Today and Monday BUxtng with heroic action "THE NAVY COMES THRU I Hilh PAT O'BUEN CEOEGB Ml'RPBT JANE WYATT HERE'S OUR NEXT TREMENDOUS SHOW! ROUGHHOUSE ROMANCE SET TO MUSIC! Hot and sweet tunes! Long and loud laughsl And a Kiss-Blitz courtship that racks a year's loving In one week I MARTIN Pfm, fV ruAyMft , victor iucutrv i Tfc "J TIM WMIIAN Pritko but the Iowans spured by Royal Lohry and Paul Darling crashed right back being held for downs on the Villanova 3-yard stripe. A play gone Lohry setup a Darling touchdown with a 48 yard punt return. Minutes later Postus tossed to Bill Sullivan in the end zone and followed in the second r quarter with a 12 yard gallop into goal dust Again it was Mr. Postus who set up another touchdown with a brilliant third quarter punt return Our cigar whittles gradually from a big black creature to a moth-eaten snipe. We are at the end of our rope. So isn't Jack Eckhart, sports editor of the Kansas State Collegian. From Jack's Corona comes this bit of subsidized mayhem: "Speaking of financial situations we'd like to offer a sugges tion for post-war Kansas State football. . . . Offer $50 per month athletic scholarships for good football players. "Disregard the player's home state, find brilliant backs and hard-charging linemen who play football for something besides fun. Wake K-State football a business proposition. A good football team is one of the best advertising projects that a college can have. "They give long-haired fiddle players scholarships to con tinue their study of good fanning methods. If these things are beneficial to the welfare of a college, why wouldn't the foot ball plan work? Four votes for subsidization legally!" Just like displacing Kansas 3.2 beer with Kentucky rum is Senor Eckhart !s proposal. Press gentry collected verbal momentum, in a pre-game hotel session yesterday morning. Momentum of chatter gath ered, smoke clouds thickened with the atmosphere. Best story aired concerned Mizzou's erid tutor, Don Faurot. Matters were growing worse every moment during the Mizzou-Great Lakes battle. Mizzou was undergoing a thoro overhauling and Faurot was fodder for a nervous breakdown. He sat on the bench, muttering dire things about all his players. One player's name was mentioned time and again. Pretty soon he felt a touch on his arm. "Listen coach," said the player. "You've been giving me the devil and I'm not even on the field. I've been right here all along." "What's the difference?" Faurot barked. "If you had been in there things would have been much worse." Amidst the clamor and jangle of the bid for the league title comes a business date on the Husker calendar which pro duces gross retrospect. Said date deals with the trek to Pittsburg next Saturday for battle with the "de-emphasized" Panthers. Retrospect helps us recall vividly the Panther-IIusker game at Lincoln one year ago. Nebraska played its heart out thruout only to see Special Delivery Jones deliver the mail for a winning Pitt last second touchdown. and then tallied the same touch down himself with a 3 yard blast. McCarthy's 75 yard run with seconds to go accounted for the finale. TODAY AT 12 NOON! The First Time Anywhere at . . . 25" 20c I ' ; , ,; IB I Plus Second Vmt..1 V .WALTER BRENNAN J0AJ1 LtSLIt Tippee Tops Team Totals AMES, la., Nov. 6. Howard Tippee, Des Moines left naiiDacK, is the Iowa State "average" leader according to the latest figures re leased by the American Football Statistical bureau. Tippee has the best punting av- A 1 A. t. erage, 39.7 yaras; me oesi rusn- ing average, 4.6 yards; the best pass average, 13.1 yards per com pletion, and the best total aver age, 4.4 yards. Tippee'a defensive weaknesses have permitted only infrequent usage so his totals have not been big in spite of of his high, average. LI v ' J mm mm 1 .ullliilfiQIl d Mil P" " Coming Next ERROL FLYNN "Gentleman Jim" 8tr. Men Z5o F.y wra w "Not a Ladles' Manf'j Q , STARTS TUESDAY