mmimmMasMmmiamtm 0 Tuesdoy, September 30, 1952 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Poga 3 The Lineup Chuck Klcisek Improved Hushers Role High Grade The Huskers had, what you might call, weekly quiz on Sept. 20 against South Dakota and they passed 46-0. Last Saturday Ne braska had a "six week exam" and passed agin 28-18. But let's grade them as we students here at the University are graded. Considering all phases. of Saturday's game the Huskers earned a grade of 6 or percentage-wise a grade of 80. Ten points were subtracted for the number of crucial fumbles in the bacKneia. ine jjucks- iirsx xoucnaown came as the result of a bad handoff from Bordogna to Reynolds. Subtract another ten points for periodic 1 lapses in Nebraska's pass defense. A fourth down riass completion by Oregon set up their second Back Into Action t , i k vS Klasek pass completion by Oregon set up score On the other hand give the Huskers ten points for the work of the offensive line for the top-notch blocking they did in Improving: the NU rround game. Add ten points for the defensive, line which kept the Dock offense stymied all night Add ten points for the offen sive and defensive performance of Bobby Rey nolds, who's back on the road to Ail-American. Add ten points for the tremendously Improved quarterbacking of John Bordogna especially from the split-T for mation. Add ten points for Reynolds' punting and Evans kickoffs which kept Oregon deep in their own territory. Add ten points for the periods in which the Nebraska pass defense was clicking. Add ten points for the Husker ground offense which ground out yard after yard and finally add ten points for the Nebraska pass of fense which clicked to Ted Connor and George Mink, rapidly im proving sophomore wingman. Add the points up and you get a grade of 80, or 6. Glance again at the 28-13 score and you can notice a surprised West Coast group of fans and sportswriters, who envisioned an easy Duck win, as well as a few surprised fans here at home. Next Saturday the Huskers begin Big Seven play and it is pos sible that Coach Bill Glassford's charges will run up against an un happy group of Cyclones smarting from a 33-7 licking by Illinois. Many fans waited last week for the touted Husker spread formation. Maybe it will be unveiled against Iowa State or should the Split-T continue the success it experienced at Oregon Husker fans might have to wait until the chips are really down. We picked this little story up in Colliers this week and thought we'd pass it on. It concerns Bill Glassford while he was still coach ing at New Hampshire. "As long as Bill Levandowski coaches football, hell always feel a special comradeship for any quarterback he sends in to play his first game. "Levandowski is .now a coach at Pinkerton Academy, Derry, New Hampshire. But he was an end at the University of New Hampshire in 1948, when Coach Bill Glassford (since move o Nebraska) converted him to second-string quarterback for his T formation. The first-team quarterback was junior Bruce Mather, and it was some time before Glassford got around to calling on green-replacement Levandowski. When he did, however, Glassford noted that Levandowski was very nervous. boss out there. Don't let any of these seniors confuse you. You're run-1 t-onunuing wiugnt ana t,; , cromoi vn' raiiinff fh- nlavs"" irest of this week, the I-M Post Game Gatehrings By KIMON KARABATSOS Staff Sports Writer A tip of the hat to Bob Reyn olds, Jerry Paulson, Kay Curtis, George Cifra, Ray Novak and Max Kennedy, but to Squire John Bordogna, a bow from the waist for their exceptional display pig skinology at Portland Saturday night. Rambling Robert gave a pre view of what the Webfeet could expect when he added insult to Injury when he scampered around end on the second play of the evening for six points. Oregon was hurt when Lou Novikoff fumbled, but when Reynolds went around the highly heralded Emory Barnes, who members of the press said almost single-handed stopped mighty UCLA just a week be fore, that was insult. Since this writer was unable to make the jaunt to the City of j Roses, I'll have to steal the words of KFAB's Lyle Bremser in des cribing the bruising play of i guards Jerry Palson and Kay Cut tis. "Tremendous, M a r v el o u s, Crushing," those were the words he used and if play like that doesn't deserve a tip of the hat, what would? In backs Ray Novak and George Cifra, coach J. William should be given an assist. In de veloping Novak, Glassford was able to take full advantage of his style. Whenever the Ducks caught on to Cifra's style, in went Novak to throw their de fense completely off. Say Bill, isn't it nice to have a couple of excellent fullbacks around? Speaking about having good guys around, you don't have to be a bruising fullback to be wanted on the Husker squad. Let's take little Max Kennedy. Standing intramural tennis got oil to a, ting the results on the bracket beside Don Boll, you would say flying start Monday night as 22isheeta on the PE bulletin board, he was a midcet. Anyone from guraie tne io.i singles B th th winner and the actual' n.,, ic first round play-: crores should be Dosted. iefnoL- niwioc. v ae in f n "t , v - X w Kansas 2 Nebraska . 2 Colorado X Iowa State 1 Kansas State INJURED HUSKER READY . . . Bob Smith, who missed the Oregon game last week because of a badly bruised foot, was again in the thick of grid action Monday as the Cornhuskers began drills in preparation for their first Big Seven game of the season with Iowa State. Smith started at the offensive right halfback posi tion In Nebraska's initial game of ths season with South Dakota. (U. of N. photo.) 114 Men To Compete In All-U Tennis Meet HllLQSl Laydl Big Seven Standings All Games o 0 0 1 1 0 2 T 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma 0 Missouri . 0 Games This Week Home Team Visitors Nebraska Iowa State Kansas Colorado Kansas State Missouri Oklahoma Pittsburgh Coach Bill Giassiords corn- Pet 1.000 1.000 .750 .500 .500 .500 .000 Pts. 34 74 41 64 27 21 24 13 25 52 30 21 41 1951 Score 34-27 27-35 14-12 ,, no game husker gridders, who now have two victories under their belt, pleased their coach with their showing against the Webfeet of Oregon last Saturday. The Husker mentor Is far from over-optimistic over the win, however. Coach Glassford 'Cat Threat By BILL MUNDELL Intramural Sports Columnist Intramural tennis got off to a All matches will be the best two out of three. Winners of all matches will be responsible for. take little Max Kennedy. Standing men mau competition in for the stack of Bibles he was 10 feet tall I by the I-M officials. Participants I not reporting by 15 minutes be fore the scheduled time will lose jby forfeit. Any questions should be directed to Mr. Higginbotham. i Tn r-9GP rrKtrhps arp nndnnnprl c.,-j :U4 i ..u I - . . - - L -r- - iijdllil 11 ri V lllkfliL. I l V rl .1 UlCV LUU1U. ning the ball game! You're calling the plays!" o 1 "f 1 fflSw because of inclement weather, they couldn't complete a pass in "Mnra w frvrtifioH t .evnnrtnwciri riashpri hrnvpiw onto th fipiri. uui i iuuuvi ju. 4to vv"&;tnese matcnes will re rescneauiea 'v,.v i 1'iv. v..-u, . " - j ... - - - - - j . . Ilia iri I i III! V, He tooK charge ot tne nuaoie witn a iorceiui aaaress. "rvo up irom - "rv " any of you guys! ' he snarled. Tin running the show out here, and the coach will back me up!" There was a long, startled pause. Nobody said a word, while the seconds ticked off. Then, in a meek, small voice, Levandowski spoke again: "Anybody got any suggestions?" ic For those who are interested and still haven't heard. The pert majorette who performed with the South Dakota band was Miss South Dakota of 1951. Marlene Rieb, a junior at the Sodak school, placed first in the swimming suit division at Atlantic City and used baton twirling as her talent. She is a sorority sister of Nebraska's A grand total of 114 men have entered this year's bid for the All-University c h a m pionship and all but 14 of these will see action this week. Those 14 drew first-round byes. Four 32-berth brackets have been set up by the I-M Depart-1 ment to facilitate play this fall. QreOOn In Opener Men from the same organizations! O r have been spread throughout the 1QM Cancon four brackets as much as was pos-, 1 SJt 1 JCU3UIJ sible with the final determination! Oregon is scheduled to play in 'Huskers To Meet Nancy Norman, who represented Iowa tn the Miss America com- ,nf herth assienment beine decided Lincoln in the Husker nnener for petition in the same year. !by direct lottery. 1953 on Sept. 19. The game will The University of South Dakota band received somewhat of a All men should keep up to 'terminate the present home-and-rough reception to Lincoln last Saturday. Just outside the capitol city aat concerning the pairings ihome two-year contract between the three chartered busses which carried the band were stopped byj which are posted on the bulletin Ithe two schools, the state patrol and arrested for speeding. Two hours later and minus t board in the physical Education I . Nebraska's schedule next fall $36, the bus drivers were permitted to rejoin their passengers. I Building. Failure to know about 1 !nPiHPc ramP with ih ntw iv . . . j i . .1 . :n i . i . . He should come in right handy against Iowa State Saturday aft ernoon on Memorial field. Poor little Iowa, they won't be walking when they get to Nebraska. It says here in the Husker brochure of 1952 of John Bor dogna, "... rattled a bit in Fran Nagle's shoes last fall but . . . should get about some what noiselessly this fall." He might have made that 66 yard run very quietly, but in yours truly he raised quite a storm. Not only did the Squire handle the squad with a bit of genius in mixing his plays, but he also strutted his own running ability. ' I. minm frm ' - - - "' was particularly pleased with the blocking and tackling dis played in the game. But he warned Husker followers of be coming too optimistic over the young season. "We are a young team," the coach commented following the team's return, "so don't get too optimistic over what we will do in the future." The Iowa State Cyclones, who suffered a 33-6 setback at the hands of Illinois Saturday, could offer a much stiffer resistance than their record shows ia the initial Nebraska Big Seven en counter of the -1952 season. . The Husker team is still re ported in top condition, having no major injuries reported from the Oregon contest. Glassford had praise for the showing of the NU defense, es pecially in the line and on pass coverage. Ball control, also, he said, played a big part in Ne braska's superiority during the game. Duane Hess Wins Crystal Ball Contest Hurlers Picked jMusidl, Fain Win Crowns con tains only that match number and the date and time. Matches one to five were sched- Stan Musial of the St. Louis juled for Monday at 5 p.m. and Cardinals and Ferris Fain of the 'matches six through 11 were to Philadelphia Athletics won the '' have been played at 7 p.m. National and American Leamiel Tonight, Tuesday will see iith.n.i, 1 mr P-ii-r m m uaiung cnampionsnips lor tne sec- i maicues at o u.in. auu huui- throughout the major portion of nd year straight i1" 15r20 V P;m- WedPesdav, the season, he has compiled a It was the first time in 38 years schedule calls for numbers 21 15-4 record. , that two league champs have re- j through 25 to be played at 5 p.m4 I peated the feat in a consecutive and,ma,tcs at prn;, . year j All of Thursday's action will be The man with the name on -' , 'at 7 p.m. with matches 23-37 California's team is fullback John1. V5aJ'' ""lischeduled to reach ccpletion with oinitei ffig V2Si2WJtche, 38"42 scheduled Oiaate lor au American nonun t-nicago to win nis sixtn national i jf0 specific times have been and new holder of the all-time i-ague crown wun a .asxi aver- rushin? mark !"e' 1 am lea -eveiana s uaie rusning marK . . Allie Reynolds has been chosen by Yankee manager Casey Stengel to pitch the opening series game for New York. Manager Charlie Dressen named Joe Black of the Brooklyn Dodgers to face the Yan kee all-star. Black is an outstand ing- rookie on the Brooklyn cub. Sav. toll trip taslrmastprs Stu- his scheduled match will result I schools in thP Bis Seven race, and ber. Meek. Enele. Ward. Faurot, in that player's match being jgames outside the loop with Ore-iSikes, Fesler and Wilkinson, who forfeited. ,'gon, Pittsburgh, Miami and Illi-'are you going to concentrate on All matches have been assigned i nojs. tstoDoine in the Nebraska lineuc numDers ana ine scneauie LANE BROWN ...Kansas State's number one passer last year, will undoubtedly be one of the top wildcat threats against tne Huskers on Oct. 11. Halfback Brown gained 500 yards, com pleted 36 of 96 tosses and kicked 7 of 11 points-after-touchdowns last season as a junior. The 'Cats dropped a close one to Cincinnati U. last week, 13-6. Lynn 'Pappy Waldorf, the highly-successful California mentor, has coached only one other team that has met the University of Missouri. That was his 1934 Kansas State club that whipped the Tigers, 29-0. Duane Hess was named the win ner of the second Crystal Ball contest, picking all but one win ner correctly. It was the Oklahoma-Colorado battle, which ended in a tie, that kept both Hess and the second place winner, Paul Hoffman from having clean slates. -Both Hess and Hoffman failed to call the Sooner-Buff draw, but otherwise had perfect scores. Hess was the fourth entry and Hoffman the ninth and this determined the winner. Third place prize money goes to Jim Wells, who missed the Oklahoma-Colorado tie and the Washington-Minnesota go. He was the seventh entry and therefore rated the nod above the others who missed only two contests. First place prize money is five dollars. Second place is three, and third is one dollar. STUDENTS! California career The well-knit Long Beach lad set the new record by hurrying j The Cornhuskers have now com for 122 net yards against College picd a greater total of yards of the Pacific, and this total! gained by rushing than they had boosted his all-time score to 1,785 j accumulated by the end of the yards, incidentally, me name is;igsi season, pronounced ( o-SHEVski ) Coach Bill Glassford called upon every man in his 28-man Main Feature Clock Varsity: "Affairs In Trinidad." ' suad to see action gainst P"0" set for Saturday's and Sunday's action which include matches 43 through 50. Participants may play at their convenience when courts are available. They should arrange with their op ponents on a time. Courts will be open from 8 a.m.until noon on Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday with sched uled matches setting court pref erence. Second round action be gins next Monday. 1:09, 3:14, 5:19, 7:24, 9:29. State: "The Wild Heart," 1:00, 3:47, 6:52, 9.55. "Lilli Marleine," 2:22, 5:27, 8:32. amSMB STARTS TODAY I. Trf-? w f J U I v.- A "6ILDA" ri i . ' i V f I ' 1 "; - ' i - lit':; WmE3 JENNIFER JONES TIIE WILD HEART" "LILLI MAULEIXE" USE DAILY NEBRASAN QkAM$bd (Ma To place a classified ad Stop in the BusineM Office Room 20 Student Union o Call 2-7631 Ext. 422f for CUui fted Servico Hours 1-4:30 Hon. thru hi THRIFTY AD RATES No. words 1 day j 2 days 3 daysJ4 days 1 week 1-10 $ .40 .65 $ .85 ( $1.00 $1.20 11-15 .50 JO 1.05 1.25 L45 16-20J 0 .95 1.25 L50 J 1.70 21-25 1 .70 1.10 J 1.45 1.75 J 1.95 26-30 .80 1.25 1.65 2.00 2.20 i r Write a Lucky Strike jingleli FOR SALE LOST ot WSBER oil, 1J colon and use- Id wmo room Anlrew Hall: lane, man'i aarlea. Durablt earTylnf can. CaU -15 old rln; crown ttlng. BentlmnUi between 1:10 a.m. I p.m. value. Return to H07 Andrew ior reward. for Bui Air Fore New "Officer Cnl- . 1 form. Tailor Mad, size 42. With Vv A kITP ft Shirt, Tie, Belt, and Hat. And Officer TTll;fc Green Blou. Nice 40. it intereited. Cashier for afternoon work H 30-5:30 call -TJl affr P.M. Apply to peraon Llneoln Theatre. llOOMS FOR RENT UUNPRIEiT 327 B. Uth. Two Urn Room, twin bed. MORROW'S Belf-Bervlce Laundry. 1034 boy, reasonable, Btudest Hotel. 6-3020. Que SW Ko (ervtc cnarge. 1 NO bOX tops! NO ENTRY BLANKS! It's WSy Just write a 4-line jingle based on the fact that LUCKIES ARE MADE BETTER TO TASTE BETTER! class- ftS ' ,m HEII All TNI IMSTKUCTIONS L Write your Lucky Strike jingle on a plain piece of paper or pott card and send it to Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N. Y. Be sure that your name, ddres. college and -cjaai are included and that they are legible, W Base your jingle on any qualities of Luckies. "Luckies are made better to fas ta better," is only one. (See "Tip to money-maker.") 3. Every student of any college, university or post-graduate school may submit jingles. 4. You may submit as many jingles as you like. Remember, you are eligible to win more than one $25 award. Here's your chance to make yourself $25. Just write a 4-line Lucky Strike jingle, based on the fact that Luckies are made better to fasfe better. Then, if we select your jingle, we'll pay you for the right to use it, together with your name, in Lucky Strike advertising . . . probably in this paper. Read the sample jingles on this page. Then get the gang together, break out the rhyming dictionary, and start writing. It's fun ! And we're buying jingles by the bushel ! Hint it you can sing your jingle, it's a good one) Hint tiit more jingles you write, the more money you have a chance of making. Hin r be sure to read all the instructions ! TIPS TO MONIT-MAKIRf To write winning Lucky Strike jingle, you're not limited to "Luckies are made better to taato better." Use any other sales points on Lucky Strike such as the following: L.S.M.F.T. Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco Luckies' cigarette-tearing demonstration Luckies taste cleaner, fresher, smoother Be Happy Go Lucky So round, so firm, so fully packed So free and easy on the draw Buy Luckies by the carton Luckies give you deep-down smoking enjoyment t,a COPK., THE AMZSICAN TOIACCO COMPANY 1. t i i I i ? i' 1