Monday, October 14 )9t7 Pane A The Daily Nebraskan gam? PiUi'sbyroh Mm sleeps, 3 pa rules Weekened Huskers Suffer Third Loss By DEL RASMUSSEX Sports Staff Writer The valiant Huskers, pitting their injured team against a band ! of giant men from the east. Sat- play was an incomplete pass. On j the next play from scrimmage Jerry Brown trvd a quick kick which the Panthers had antiei- pated. Dick Carr of the Pitt line ...rknJ ....... U l..An kMiit- urday accepted their third loss of . . . .. . u. ,. 7T 3 u v j , ,v ; Nebraska line and blocked the the season at the hands of the, Pitburgh Panthers 34-0 ! bounding ball and easiW scamp- The game centered not around remaining the offensive aspect of the Steel , d of City club, but the defense these "ck l f the swf - i t .u - j . i.. the afternoon for the Pitt club ; seconds gone in' the ball game. against an undermanned Cornhusk- J m:.L - 1 : . . . ........ er squaa. mui a unc wm vw aged 220 pounds from end to end, the Panthers crushed every Husk er bid to hit pay dirt. The conse quences were shown in the final STATISTICS With a few plays left in the half ' the Pittsburgh team capitalized on another Husker bobble to bring their point total to 21. Jerry Brown, Husker fullback who drew j praise from the Panther team, was hit hard and fumbled the ball rr 1 t r I ' , jVVw ' K, 'r i I V: Blocked Vvf; - rr4 i . ...... . -, i til-ifftfffMrl-JaRffl trwit 1 , mtffHi Hit WliTHHW WHMlTTi I I Missouri Upsets SMU, ISC Downs Jayhawks In Big Eight Loop Tilts nkbbas rnrr ' on the Nebraska Vint Bwwu TUI ... r Raihlac Faisinc ftT Fenflltie Yanti Raahtnc Fasira Attempted Patxes Campleted .... Tarda Panta- Fmsr Inlmeoted Br rvnttnf Averaffa Fvata Had Blarkrd ... No m her Paul Keronw Tarda Fnl Rrtaraa . rsmblra (TMal) FamhlM Laat amber PenaHtes .... Panaltr Yards It 4 a ! Quarterback Ji im 33 yard line. Lenfcart spear headed the drive that took the Pitt team down to the Nebraska roune-y vi S-: ida.v Journal and Star Comhusker Jerry Brown attempted a quick kick early in last Saturday's game with the Pittsburgh Panthers hut the kick was blocked and turned into another Steel City touchdown. 1C i V a I U line. w iiv.. ... . ! Inhrt flinnwi short nass to end J,flr(ls 111 tw0 running at- ... .-n tjnmt nrvi Dick Ha.ev had Dassed I I rin. uoo wno was wcu currm ; - - - - -. 2 i by Huskers but emerged with the 10 ena Jlm ",los Ior B!,uu'7 ' t i aerial anvway. ' -vards. scored on one of the . t . . , , . . tn i n.ost outstanding plays of the iLwA-C "f -rS'eame- On the 19 yard line Scisly I the field in the third quarter and ; hM o. "s 'a coupiea wun i.ie lai-i u.cn . . , ,..r .,,, of statistics column where the Husk- .(Pittsburgh used their second and w dLs , b (he . i third strings accounted for the re-, . itoi a.;KitvH ftn th;. ers racked up only four first downs suit of the scoring in that period p,ay aj the gimt panther Une as compared to 2-8 for the Panther ; whkh was nothing. x , gTased every wouki-be Husker squad. i Towards the end of that period. tHceT fr0! -m front of Scisly as Time and time again one of the however, the Pittsburgh fans,, all , handily rolled over the goal many massive linemen from the j 40.000 of them, started crying forjline for a,t panther marker Pitt team would come crashing ; more points to raise their footbal! ' .w eam through the weary Nebraska line . ratings. Head Coach John Michel to throw the Husker backfield for I sen answered their bids by send- loss. If the opposing linemen weren't throwing a Husker for a loss they were contenting them selves with blocking punts, scor ing touchdowns or battering the Nebraska team unmercifully. ing in the first unit for the re mainder of the game to hit pay dirt twice more for the crowd. The first of these came when Jim Hergenreter signaled a fair catch late in the third quarter and Next week the Cornhuskers will return home to Memorial Stadium after four games away from Lin coln. The Scarlet will play hosts to the Syracuse Orangemen next week in Lincoln. Basketball Schedule With less than three minutes : then fumbled the catch. The ball gone in the game the Pittsburgh bounded from his arms and Panth teara had marched 71 yards in i er Ernie Westwcod dropped him eight plays to score after the open-: self on the pigskin on the Nebras ing kickoff. j ka 27 yard lire. Joe Scisly. 180 pound halfback. Fred Riddle, Panther fullback, skirted end for 20 yards to set the j accepted the lugging chores here ball on the Nebraska two-j-ard ; and. on five consecutive carries, line. Then be plunged across to j toted the ball for 19 yards. On pay dirt on the next play to put the one foot line of the Huskers he the Panthers in front to remain on ; again took charge and crashed top for the duration of the game, j through the line to add to the Steel Next it was Nebraska's turn to City's scoring, drive with the balL which they j The other Pittsburgh tally came promptly did two yards on a line i on a 51-yard scoring march in the plunge by' Jerry Biown. The c'xti fourth quarter. After Scisly had Skirts In Sports By EMMIE UfPO Staff Writer Navy Middies Win Over Elliott's Bears Coach Pete Elliott's California Golden Bears suffered their fourth consecutive cWeat at the hands of Navy by the score of 21-6 Sat urday before more than 47.000 fans. California scored first in the second period as halfback Joe part plunged over from the one after tackle Curtis Iaukea had re covered a fumble on the 16. On three different occasions -y rambled down to within 15 ., rds of the California goal line, but each time the Golden Bear line rose up and squelched Navy's played Wednesday between Alpha Phis and the Kappas. ,was laughing at us. Several of us! the have even developed small inferi- iority complexes from the experi-i ence. Anyone conung over to, j learning how to hold the racquet Mtn rest oi tne class is playing, .u , ,.,u mm. t- t r .l , . lne ganiei leu quite oaa;v, oe-1 j . The final game of the girls' soc-Cause w knew the "audience" Bm the Wlddle power proved to ter-baseball tournament will be; was lauehine 1 at us. Several of ..; ' 100 mucn for -auIorn s Navy pushed across one touch down in the third quarter and ni.kcd na two more in the final Last week the semi-final con- ee Anyone conung over to. . . ... ... i.-, tests were very close, with the ' watcn shou d at least e honorable j conte!t Alpha Phis barely defeating the' enough to keep a straight face. It; CalifOTTUa-. offeniive punch was Alpha Xi Deltas, 12-11 and the . VOU:d mea' a practically at a standstill as Kappas downing the Alpha Chis.j There was one man over there; they were held to only 79 yards 11-10. 1 who kept running after the tennis on the ground in the first 55 min- The tennis quarter-finals were ' balls and rolling them back to us. j utes of play. And of those 79 rained out and only one game '; At first I thought maybe the P. E. i yards, 51 were picked up by Gabe was played. Kappas Ginny Falk ' department was paying him. . .'Arrillaga on a run in the opening and Billie Prest won over Donna but the teacher didn't look too en- minute of the game. Sawve'J and Jean Johnson. Tri Unused about his good work. Our Delts. If the rest of the quarter- i little group, however, was quite finals can be played the first of: happy to let him chase our balls, this week, the semi-finals are ex-'and had even thought of asking pec ted to start Thursday. him to come back regularly. Sud- la archery, the six top scorers den'y 8 wiw ba!1 ne the were chosen last Thursday. They(other side of the coliseum, barely are Jane Harvey, Kappa Delta, missing our friend and (unknown 337; Sandra Davisson. Kappa Del- to the teacher as of now splir.t ta, 318; Judy Lindgren, Gamma ; ered a ol glass in the window. Phi Beta, 291; Pat Arbuthnot, Tri0ur friend left. . . quite shaken Delt, 254: Marcia Ray, Alpha Phi,uP- I dubt if he will ever venture 288 and Marilyn Mead, A 0 Pi, 244. i aid again; he probably i tnougnt we rtion t appreciate his I assistance. Poor man. Dec. 2 iMon.) South Dakota State in Lincoln S (Thurs University of Wy oming in Lincoln 7 Sat.) University of Mich igan in Ann Arbor 9 Mon.) Notre Dame at Notre Dame 14 iSat Purdue University in Lincoln 16 (Mon.) Denver University iu Lincoln 19 iThurs (Alliens) 21 (Sat.) Marquette Univer sity at Malwaukee, Wis. 26-27-27 (Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.) Big , Seven Pre-Season Tourna ment at Kansas City, Mo. Jan. S (Mon.) University of Mis souri at Columbia 11 i Sat.) Kansas State at Manhattan 13 (Mon.) University of Okla homa in Lincoln 18 (Sat.) Iowa State in Lin-' coin Feb. 1 (Sat.) Iowa State at Ames 8 (Sat) University of Kan sas at Lawrence 10 (Mon.) University of Okla homa at Norman 12 (Wed.) University of Mis souri in Lincoln 17 Mon.) University of Colo rado in Lincoln 22 (Sat.) University of Kan sas in Lincoln Mar. 3 (Mon.) Kansas State In Lincoln I i Sat.) University of Colo rado at Boulder Home games start at S p. m. By RON SHAHEEN Sports Staff Writer The teams around the Big Eight fared quite well against out-of- conference foes last weekend as they won four, lost one one. Last weekend's games fea tured a couple of upsets, the big gest one being Missouri's 7-6 vic tory over previously undefeated Southern Methodist. Missouri's touchdown was set up hy a Southern Methodist bobble deep in their own territory which was covered by an alert Tiger line man. A couple of plays later a ten yard pass from quarterback Phil Snowden to George Cramer, who made a squatting catch on the goal line, accounted for the touchdown. Big Charlie Rash, Tiger ! guard, booted the extra pom' j which proved to be the winning j margin. The rest of the game was played almost entirely in Missouri terri- tory. Time and again SMU drove .deep into scoring territory only ' to be battered back by the battling i Tiger line. In the dying minutes of the final quarter the stubborn i Tiger forward wall stopped the i Methodists one inch from a touch down as SMU could make only 2 feet 11 inches In three cracks at ' the line. I-State Upsets KU In the only conference game of i the week alert Iowa State turned j : three Kansas mistakes into touch- j ; downs and knocked off the listless Jayhawks, 21-6. j ; The Cyclones, playing only pow- i erfoorball from tne suigie wing, i vic tory in the second quarter as they scored twice. A Kansas fumble on their own nine set up the first Cylcone tally. Fullback Ron Pohl crashed over from less than a yard out to score the six-pointer. A pass interception on the Kansas of his career, one r.Mr '.rwwt on s 16-vard slash greatest game r coricnn thn hooted his scored the touchdown with a VII ..IV nil . ..... : .1 ...v.. thiid extra point of the day. j yard plunge. Scares OU ! saiwieters interception ui as they Lonehorn aerial on the 41 set up Texas Texas surprised many and tied'held mighty Oklahoma at bay for Oklahoma's final touchdown.With Dodd crashed over from the one yard line with the game-clinching touchdown and then booted the ex tra point. Halfback Bob Stransky, the na tion's leading ground gainer paved the way to a Colorado victory over Arizona as he tallied three first- After Arizona scored the first touchdown Colorado drew even, putting together an 88-yard scor ing drive featuring a 37-yard pass from Quarterback Boyd Dowler to End Ken Baker. Stransky's end run from the five capped the Y.. . : scored sufficient points for a ill JUUHUUl 25 set up the second Iowa State j TlM,day October 5th three quarters before going down to defeat, 21-7. The Longhorns, having ore' of their poorest seasons in many years, smelled a possible upset in the air as they refused to lay back and allow Oklahoma to domi nate the whole game. Texas d i c k e d off four of Oklahoma's passes and the mighty kicking and , half touchdowns. passing of back Walter Fondren kept the Sooners in the hole much of the time. Texas scored first to shock the Sooner backers, cashing in on a pass interception by Halfback Mickey Smith on the Oklahoma 18. I Fondren pitched to Monte Lee drive. from the Sooner five for the score, : The Buffs added two more u then added the conversion. the second period on long drive Oklahoma rallied to tie the game , which were climaxed by Stransky's early in the second period with 1 scoring runs of seven and eight a 66-yard drive. All-American pros- yards. pect Clendon Thomas capped the) The Bufrs scored their last two drive with a three yard burst to ' tallies in the last half. Sophomore score the touchdown. i Fullback George Adams scored In the waning moments of the one on a 26-yard interception third period the Sooners took the I return and a pass from Halfback lead for" good as they marched j Howard Cook to Halfback J i m 80 yards for another touchdown. Comer accounted for the final ! Jakie Sandefer, who played the i touchdown. Intramural Football Schedule Monday. Octolwr 14th '!( Fields XE Manatt vs Selleck XW Hitchcock vs. MacLtMui SE Gus I vs. Andrews SW Bessey vs. Avery Ag Fields East AGR vs. Farm House Sooth Seaton II vs. Benton West Boucher vs. Seaton I bince rresnman girls win soon be able to participate in activities, a special soccer-baseball tourna-; ment will open for them Tuesday. Oct. 22. Anyone passing through the coli seum on a cold, rainy day last week probably got a few chuckles out of watching the girls' tennis classes in action. Some of us more unfortunate athletes who are just The Little Giant Cafe 23 J No. 11th Giant Hamburger 25c Meals & Short Order STORMY WEATHER Even though the weather has ben rather dismal lately, there still are places (3 to be exact) that will give you that extra lift. I'm swaking (of course) of the three Kings Drive-ins in this fine town of Lincoln. The striking interior, pert waitresses, and that wonder ful aroma of delicious food all work together to cheer you up on a rainy day. Brighten your day the King's way! touchdown. A few minutes later j Fullback Terry Ingram scored i from the one. Lyle Carlson who hasn't missed , a conversion attempt thia year ' booted both of the extra points. : . The Jayhawks attempted to make a contest out of it as they scored early in the second half j to make the score 14-6. They; ! moved 54 yards for the touchdown, ' j most of them via the passing of i j Quarterback Wally Strauch. Hoin-i 1 er Floyd scored the touchdown on j a short plunge. Iowa State added an insurance touchdown in the fourth period i after grabbing another Jayhawk I fumble, this one on the Hawker's I 33. A few plays later hard running j Dwight Nichols, sophomore tail- City Fields VE XW SE SW Ac Fields East Presby House vs. Wesley Rous Newman Club vs. Alfa Cow Alfa Phi Epailon Kappa ya. Chemist Dents vs. Navy ROTC Burr A vs. Burr C West Burr D vs. Burr B Wednesday, October 16th City Fields XE Beta Theta Pi vs. Sigma Chi XW Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Sigma Jj SE Alpha Tau Omega vs. Delta Tan Deha SW Delta Upsilon vs. Phi Kappa. Psi Ag Fields East Theta Xi vs. Phi Delta Theta West SAE vs. Kappa Sigma TWday. October 17th City Field XE Beta Sigma Psi vs. Pioneer Coop. XW Pi Kappa Phi vs. Delta Sigma Phi SE Brown Palace vs. Cornhusker Coop. SW Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Zeta Beta Tau Ag Field East Delta Sigma Pi vs. Alpha Gamma Sigma West Farm House vs. Ag Men South Acacia vs. Sigma Alpha Mu ' " 4 v . -ft , i 1 m m i-7 f ' '" l i Yuwf A. Volar Joined General Electric'! M:ssile and Ordnance Syitemi Depart ment in after receiving fan B. S. in h. K. from Roberts College, Istanbul, Turkey (1949). and hii Ph. D. from the t al if orti la I usti tu te of Tech nolsgy (1954). I r as 1 w. -7 Pick of the campus... 72 mam 'Arrant Tnmivaj ecsi&es coenfort and good looks. Tb madras fabric comes la newsmAing miniature ptads mtd stripes. Collar buttons down, in froM and at center tack tmd then it a box pleat in back 0 shirt. Shirt shown $5.95. Square crew neck sweater in 100ol $10.00. CK . toixdf IS Co, Inc. ARROW - CASUAL WEAR fiOt in fashion ' I !'tf,K '(It;' j ; , I h;" J , ' 1 f I II if 1 1 im 11' in 1 .I uni 11 ' iMiiiaiMMMtiiriMi mu- iiwiii laiiw 1111111 iwr" f r V'- : i ' ti I, f w-A- X 1 " f( ' ( f m - W m til m iihhi it In a big company, a young man can get to tackle big jobs" "The thing that has impressed me most in my two years at General Electric," says 28-year-old Yusuf A. Yoler, manager of Aerodynamics Laboratory Inves tigations, "is the challenging: opportunity open to young people here. My field is guided-missile research the nation's top-priority defense job. Because of the scope of the company's research and development program, I've had the opportunity to work with tech nical experts in many related fields. And I've seen at firsthand the responsibility which General Electric has given to younger men proof to me that in a big company a young man can get to tackle big jobs." a The research being done by Dr. Yusuf A. Yoler is significant not only to himself, but to General Electric and the security of the nation as well. At present, the company is participating as a prime contractor on three of the four long-range ballistic missiles pro-. gramed by the U. S. government. Yoler, who Is play ing an important role in thia work, directed the design and development of the world's largest hypersonic shock tunnel a device which will "test-fly" missile nose cones at speeds over 15,000 mph. Progress in research and development aa well as in every other field of endeavor depends on how well young minds meet the challenge of self -development At General Electric there are more than 29,000 col lege graduates, each of whom is given the opportunity to develop to his fullest abilities. In this way, we be lieve, everybody benefits the individual, the com pany, and the country. Tfogress Is Our Most Important Product GENERAL ill ELECTRIC