The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 05, 1964, Page Page 4, Image 6

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Page 4
The Daily Nebraskan
Thursday, November 5, 1964
v i
Husker Har tiers Take Even Record
Into Big Eight Conference Meet
The thirty-third running of
the Big Eight conference
cross-country meet will be
held on the Manhattan
(Kans.) Country Club course
Saturday (Nov. 7), starting at
10:30 a.m.
Defending champion Kansas
Is favored to capture team
honors once again in the
three-mile classic. The Jay
hawkers, undefeated in com
petition this season, return
three members from their
1963 championship team
which finished far ahead of
runner-up Oklahoma State.
The Huskers will be hoping
to better their sixth place
1963 showing as they take
two dual wins against two
losses into the fray.
Veteran Larry Toothak
er leads the harriers as he
has consistently turned in the
best performances this fall.
A senior, Toothaker will be
pointing toward a good show
ing. Junior Peter Scott followed
by Jim Scherzberg, Lowell
Stratton, Joe Perez, Tucker
Lillis and Jim Ryun round out
the Husker squad.
Robin Lingle, Missouri's ace
distance runner, will be back
to defend his individual title
won last year over the Law
rence Country Club course.
Lingle's chief challengers are
expected to be KU's John Law
son, Colorado's Dave Wighton
and Oklahoma State's To in
Von Ruden. I
Lawson finished third' br-?
hind Lingle and graduated;
Paul Acevedo of Kansas last1
year, while Wighton placed;
fourth for the Buffs. Von Ru-j
den was 15th as a sophomore!
last season and has shown
vast improvement thus far in
1964.
Other top contenders could
be KU's Herald Hadley, sev
enth last year; the Jay hawk
ers' Ken Holm, eighth last
year; Colorado's Mike Gal
lagher, a member of the
Buffs' 1962 title team who sat
out last year, and Conrad
Nightengale, K-State's prom
ising sophomore.
Oklahoma State could fur
nish the toughest opposition
for Kansas. The Cowpoke har
riers, behind Von Ruden and
Glenn Blakley, blitzed past
Oklahoma 15-50 and Arkansas
16-47 after being defeated by
Air Force in dual meets this
season. Blakley, a junior stri
der, placed 14th at Lawrence
as a rookie.
the benchwarmer
'eifiii e Comedy
Missouri coach Dan De
vine is the recipient of this
Week's Benchwarm
er Award.
During the game last
Saturday, Devine showed
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he knew a trick or two
about game and crowd psy
chology. The Devine trouble arose
after Missouri had been on
the short end of a couple
crucial measurements.
When a particularly impor
tant measurement arose in
the first half, and subse
quently Missouri had to
give up the ball on downs
deep in Husker territory,
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Devine exploded.
Apparantly suspect
ing foul play on the part of
the chain crew, Devine in
sisted on a re-measurement.
The results of the sec
ond measurement proved
the same as the first, and
Devine engaged an official
in heated argument.
In hopes of securing
crowd and official empathy,
Devine sent Tiger Fresh
man Coach Harry Smith
over to supervise the chain
gang.
Husker coach Bob De
vaney felt that Missouri
should not be allowed to
have a member of their
coaching staff in front of
the Nebraska bench where
the chain gang was oper
ating... Officials agreed with
hiin, and Smith impressed
Husker fans with his decep
tive run back to the bench.
The Devine sent another
man over to supervise, and
since this man was not a
member of the Missouri
coaching staff, he was al
lowed to stay and watch.
During all this time, the
game was held up, and the
players just stood out on
the turf. Someone later said
a few of them had hints of
smiles around the corners
of their mouths.
1
C J
an A.Jk. S'lta
$ it li l vui ft
nit-mi ju i
"The development
of management
is essential
to our goal of
great growth"
SB, .
"If X . 1
j .s o w j
At the 1964 stockholders meeting, Arjay Miller,
President of Ford Motor Company, emphasized thi
Company's far-sighted recruitment program its accent
on developing management talent:
"One aspect of our planning is crucial to the success of
everything else we do. It engages the best thoughts and efforts of
our whole management team, from top to bottom, throughout the
world. I am speaking of the development of management. The
Immediate future of our Company depends heavily upon the abilities
of the people who are now key members of our management team.
"In the longer run, our future depends on what we are doing at
the present time to attract and develop the people who will
be making the major decisions 10 to 20 years from now. We are
developing management competence in depth in order to attack the
problems that will confront a company of great growth and
great growth (both in profits and sales) is exactly the goal
we have established for Ford Motor Company.
'We are continuing to emphasize recruiting. Last spring, 180 of our
management people devoted part of their time to recruiting
outstanding graduates from colleges and universities throughout
the U.S. Last year, these efforts resulted in our hiring over
1,000 graduates, 220 more than the year before.
"We are seeking and we are finding young men and young women,
too with brains and backbone people who have the ability and
the desire to make room for themselves at the top. We give our
trainees challenging assignments with as much responsibility as
they can carry. We promote them as fast as they are ready. Those
who are interested In easy security soon drop out. Those who
have what we want stay with us, and move up quickly to Increased
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For
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Gary Duff is beating the
enemy with something more
than his kicking toe this sea
son. The spare Kansas senior
is one of the Big Eight's bet
ter defensive halfbacks.
Nobody could have said it
better than head coach Jack
Mitchell following his club's
last-second 15-14 conquest of
Oklahoma when he exlaimed
. . . "Duff made so many
good open field tackles he re
minded me of the Dutch boy
with his finger in the dike."
A week later at Stillwater
it was Duff's tackle, with the
assist from linebacker
George Harvey, on Oklahoma
State End Tony Sellari, at
the goal line, which short-circuited
the Cowpokes' two
point bid in a 14-13 Jayhawk
er win.
Overall, Duff has scored 61
individual or assisted tackles,
slightly more than eight per
game. He plays the left in
side spot in KU's four-deep
defense. He hasn't neglected
the magic toe either. Going
in against Nebraska Saturday
in a battle for the Big Eight
lead . . . both clubs are 4-0
in conference play . . . Duff
is' just three conversions short
of Don Fambrough's varsity
record of 49 compiled during
the co-title years of '46 and
'47. Duff has punched home
13 in succession this season,
save for a blocked attempt
against Syracuse. He had col
lected 33 points after thru
his first two years.
Oddly, he hasn't been
called upon for a field goal
try yet although he started
the season with five, just two
short of the varsity record.
"I like defense fine,'
smiles the crewcut battler,
who wrestled at 167 pounds
for the Jayhawkers last win
ter. "The toughest thing is
training yourself to read the
keys quick enough. We key
off the backs in the top of
the T. or the two there and a
slotback. There is so much
diversification on offense now
then we've got to check all
three of them every play. The
toughest thing to follow is
cross action in the opposing
backfield.
"The only way to learn
quick key reading is practice,
practice, practice. You might
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learn it another way, but it
wouldn't be natural.
"Another thing you've got
to learn is to react to t h e
ball, once it is thrown, not to
the man. Coach Lee (Ben)
keeps pounding at us about
this. Our first responsibility
is the pass, of course.
"One thing I have learned
to do pretty well so far is
get to the position I'm sup
posed to on the field then
reacting to the ball, whether
it's pass or run.
"Oklahoma State and Wy.
oming has been the toughest
to read for me so far. Both
faked real well. Oklahoma
State ran the belly sesei
well. Wyoming ran lots of
cross-action."
WEEKEND SPECIAL
FRI. fir SAT.
2c UNDER
MAJOR
BRANDS
FREE
Grease Job with Oil
Change and Filter
(All motor brands of oil)
PLUS
STUDENT
DISCOUNT
JIMS SUPER SERVICE
17th & Vine
Nebraska Union Presents:
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IN PERSON
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Friday, IVov. 6
8:00 P.M.
PERSUING AUDITORIUM
Tickets on sale by receipt at:
NEBRASKA STUDENT UNION
MILLER'S DOWNTOWN & GATEWAY
Ticket Prices: $2.50, $:j.00, $3.50