FOUR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1931 i II SQUAD WORKS ON AERIAL GAME IN Nine Men on Temporary Sick List Get Only Light Warming Up. VARSITY DRUBS FROSH No Serious Injuries From Mizzou Battle, Except O'Brien, Tackle. Handicapped by. blight injuries received at Missouri last week, the Cornhuslters turned to serious preparations for the Iowa game in practice Tuesday afternoon. With nine men on the bad list Coach Bible turned his attention to the remainder of the squad and &:nt them thru a long passing workout, Bauer. Elv. Justice. McPherson Koster, Kilbourne, Rhea. Joy and Sauer did not suit up last night but spent the evening in light warminr up exercises. These men are due 10 be in shape by Satur day, and the majority of them will .start. Going up against the freshman team, the Huskers had fair success with their passes and running plays. The team that took he lield aerainst the vearlinsrs was made up of Nesmith and Milne, encis; Bishop, Adam ana Holmbeck .alternating at guard; Hulbert and .Schmitt. tackles: CampDell, cen ter; with Roby, Miller, Paul, and Penny in the backfield. Petz was used "at the end position part of the time and Brown, Staab and Boswell were given a lot of work in the backtield. Passes Get Attention. The Nebraska pass defense which had such a hard time stop ping the aerial attack of the Mis souri Tigers will be given atten tion this week as will the passing offense which has not functioned properly at any time this year. The number of men battered and bruised as a result cf the hard contest of last week is larger than at any time this year. There were no serious injuries, however, with the exception of O'Brien. This Omaha tackle may not get back in shape in time to see action against the Hawkejes. Advance ticket sales point to a larger crowd this Saturday than ;t any home game this season. In spite of the poor showing made by the Hawkeyes up to the present lime, they are bringing a team to Nebraska that is in the best shape that it has been this year. Coach Joe Lehman, nubbins coach, is whipping his crew into shape fcr a tougn game with tne Kearney Normal school. Last week ICearney overwhelmed the Colo rado School of Mines. Coach Leh man has not as yet picked his men to make the Kearney trip. British Debaters Include Scions of Rival Politicians AMES. Ia., Two sons of rival political leaders in England will be united on the same side when the debating team from Oxford meets .in Iowa State college team here Nov. 12. The members of the Oxford team are John Archibald Boyd Carpenter and John Foot. Both of these men have been prominent in university activities, Boyd-Carpen-ter having been graduated in 1930 with an honors degree in history rind Foot having been graduated last spring with an honors degree in law. Boyd-Carpenter Is the son of Maj. Sir Archibald Carpenter, loader in the British conservative patty and Foot is a son of Sir t -aac Foot, member of the liberal delegation to the recent Indian round table conference. i; mx. W I pl'l p(M DP pt rlr.kft Kun.u. HtHla , . . , ItlH.l Mtn ., Itn.n. ... 'liinrl oklnimma I ihiii I oiiii I iiihi .mm . IMMI . OIIO I III; III Shl.K M HUM I.K. -tin.k II, H.. iilh lljiU.iln R. N.tiru.kit 1, .NiirlhM pilrrn 10. .trra.U l:l, Okluhoma U. Ni-kriitkl ft, kun.ii. 0. Nrhrku 10. Ml.miurl 7. Vol, 7: Ihh t l.lllriilli. Nm. 14: Kltii.H AKKlm it MMnlinllHn. Su, il: InUM Mule at MiM.tln. v. ilt; i'llt.liurgli Hi flll-ibilrnn. CLASSIFIED WANT ADS ONLY TEN CENTS A LINE Minimum Two Lines Lost and Found LOST B r o w n kid ftauntlet glove. Leave at Daily Nebraskan office, pk'ufle. Lost Small black notebook. ValiP able. Leave at Dally Nebra.ikan of fice. Employment ANT INTELLIGENT pernon may earn good Income corresponding for newspapers; all or Hpare time: no canvassing; aend for free booklet; tells how. Heacork, 414 Dun Bid., Buffalo, N. Y. Miscellaneous J-'OR PALE Hudson seal coat in ex cellent condition. Call E4944. ATTENTION STUDENTS! Zi'i dUcount on ticket "ntn Nov, 1. Jefltn t'if. 1411 O. For Rent DAT E ION PROMISE FIGHT SATURDAY HAWKE te: -xs'U Lv 'WITH Graham .. v' Y" i -Qureec tW h i LINE 1 I These thtee Hawkeye warriors promise to figure largely in the battle which Iowa will wage against Coach Bible's Cornhusker grld sters Saturday. Graham, quarterback, will probably get the signal calling job. Case, at center, is a good passer and accounts for his share of tackles in the center of the line. Hickman is the boy who put it over the Huskers at Iowa City last year. Ho .scored the only touchdown of the game for Iowa in the Hawkeye victory over George Washington last Saturday. AMES STORY TELLS Work of New Iowa State Coach Described in News Dispatch. AMES, la., Oct. 30 of man is this fellow What kind George F. Veenker? Iowa State college students, still glowing over the victory achieved last Saturday by the veenner coached team are busy asking this question this week. They find thai they like the answers. They iind tnat George, veenner a sturdily though far from heav ily constructed man. about thirty five years old and about 5 feet 10 inches tall is a man for whom his players would cheerfully walk through fire. They tmd him sharply critical on the football field, yet able to temper his criti cism with the kind of humor that often drives harder than anger would. They are coming to know him as an exacting taskmaster tho be is anytning but a slave driver: they are realizing that in their new coach the Cyclones have a football psychologist and a foot ball strategist. Veenker believes in fundamen tals. "We spend half our time, during piactice on the elements of football," " one oC the squad re marked the other day. "Here it is the middle of the season, yet' he sent us against the bucking ma chine this week. He doesn't believe it's enough to tell us about charg ing and blocking and tackling and following the bail at the start of the season, and then to forget it. He keeps us at it. And I guess it shows in our games." Ask any Iowa State rooter who saw the Iowa State team outplay and outgame Missouri Saturday whether it shows! Doesn't Overwork Team. Again: "He works us plenty hard,' said this man. "While we're out there we keep everlastingly at it. But we haven't been on the field later than 5:45 yet -none of these three and four hour practices. As a result, we don't get fed up with it it's easy to keep up the old fight." Veonker on the practice Held has his own methods of making his in structions felt. An end in scrim mage fails to turn back the oppos ing oall carrier. "The sideline's a better tackier than you are," Veenker tells him. A 'back running interference fails to move fast enough, gets in the ball carrier's wav. "Get out of here," Veenker grins. "Try your kind of football with the third team." A linesman misses a tackle. "I guess you don't understand,'' Veenker says sadly. "The idea is to stop the fellow with the ball." Spurs Men On. On paper such remarks may sound sarcastic. On the field, said as Veenker says them, they're good-natured they're pointed, and they never fail to spur the men to greater efforts. The coach is a football psychol ogist. Early in the season he was heard to remark that he hoped to build up confidence in his men: "By the time of the Missouri game," he said, "I'm going to Eend. them out there believing that they can even lick Ankeny high school." The eagerness of the 20-or-so men on the squad is evidence enough that he has inspired the confidence he desires. He held such veterans as Nolte, Nagel and Bob Smith out of the Missouri game until they were "r'arin' to go," and when they did get in there was no stopping them. Furnishes Plenty of Plays. He believes in a well -equipped team, too. He has given his eleven a wide variety of "scoring plays" the type of play to be used but once in a game, and to use with a perfection of execution that makes it ft sure ground-gainer if sot a touchodwn play. The variation on the old Michigan "Statue of Lib erty play" which completely fooled Missouri and scored the Cyclone's second touchdon was one of Satur ciny'a pxarnrlps; the end-around play which beat Simpson was an other. As they find out about this Yel- ; frfenn TO HUSK With Our Opponents At Vermillion: South Dakota 10, Sooth Uiikolik State 0. At Kvnn.ton: Northumtprn Hi, llllnala 8. At .Normun: Iowa Stut 13, Oklahoma IS At Lawrenre: Oklahoma Amies ia, Kan su 7. At Iowa City: Iowa 7, Georse Washlne ton 0. At Moritiiiitown: Kan. uk State 19, Wet Virginia 0. At Stale (ollrgr: Pittsburgh 41, I'cnn State tl. are better and better satisfied. They believe that, in him, the col lege has found a Moses to lead Cyclone football fortunes out of the wilderness where they've wal lowed for three years. I Injured Oklahoman Vets Are Ready to Start in K. U. Battle. EXPECT 15,000 CROWD NORMAN, Nov. 3. Recovery of their scoring efficiency and an ap parently successful hospitalization of most of their wounded, no one of whom was reinjured in the con test against Iowa State, are rea sons Sooner followers have for ex pecting a terrific football combat at Owen field this Saturday when the ponderous but extremely mo bile Kansas Jayhawkers entertain the Sooners before what is ex pected to be a homecoming throng of 15,000 people. Not counting Bill Pansze's smoothly executed 77-yard return of an Iowa State punt and Mike Massad's feat of leaving one Cy clone tackier prostrate on the turf as he ran over three of them in that spectacular 50-yard run with an intercepted pass, the Sooners Saturday unleashed an attack that five times wheeled the leather into easy scoring distance, only to have unlucky fumbling, a wild pass and two placekicks that went awry preclude tallies, any one of which would have won the game. A Better Sooner Offente. Thi Sooner offense looked bet ter Saturday than it did in the Ne braska, Texas and Kansas State games all put together. Massad and Dunlap were hitting off the Ames tackles with stunning im pact, Captain Warren got off sev eral of his short hopping runs, once flitting down to the Ames' 3 yard line after galloping 33 yards with a lateral from Duulap, and Pansze showing a suuiprising aptitude to catch forward passes. Dunlap's quick punts from short formation and the blocking of Watkins, Tee!, Whittington and Curnutt all .howed that the Okla homa attack now carries more point and polish. Kansas feat of completing eight of twelve passes for 85 yards against the Oklahoma Aggies in dicates that the Jayhawkers will be formidable in the air as well as off the ground here Saturday. Under Coach Bill Hargiss the Jayr have always been dangerous over head despite the fact their teami usually average about 190 pounds to the man. Cripples Showed Their Spunk, Ted Owen, the Sooner trainer, was drawing satisfaction from the fact that the seven Sooner cripples, any one of whom was considered sufficiently feeble to fall dead if an enemy player leaned too heav ily against him, survived the Iowa State fray. The game is expectet. to be fiercely waged as Kansas has lost three consecutive games and Okla homa four, although none of them by decisive margins. . For instance the Jayhawk defeats were 0-13 to Kansas State, 0-6 to Nebraska and 7-13 to Oklahoma A. & M., while Oklahoma's were 0-13 to Nebras ka, 0-3 to Texas, 0-14 to Kansas State and 12-13 to Iowa State. Pioneer Fruit Store Is now featuring a special PLATE LUNCH. All home-cooked food. Alio HOME-MADE PIE3 Give us a try. Pioneer Fruit Store YES POINT E Iowa's Grid History Shows November as a Month : ' Of Upset Wins. PLAY IMPROVES Fashion Defense for Aerial, Running Attacks of . Nebraska Backs. IOWA CITY, Nov. 3. Novem ber, month of traditional Univer sity of Iowa football upset vic tories after drab October games, brings road contests with Nebras ka and Purdue and the home stand against Northwestern. Nebraska! to be met Saturday at Lincoln, is the first objective of the Iowans. Heartened by their 7 to 0 victory over George Wash ington university in an intersec tional game last Saturday, the Hawkeyes now are learning their lessons for the invasion of Husker domain. Line Play Improves. Improved line play, especially at the tackles and ends, and the first real offensive drives of the season, lead the Iowans to believe that they have a chance to -upset the Nebraskans. All of the athletes came through the victory without mninr inluries. If some of the Iowa blocking VinH Viopn hptter. the nlunres of Captain Sansen, who gained half of the team's Z3S yaras, ana me dashes, of Randahl Hickman, would huvp hppn even more devastating to the Colonials. Coaches now are attempting to remedy the . errors in that department. Iowa also is fasnlonlng a de fense for the running and aerial nttnrlr nf TJphraska. The Husker backs, Bauer, Kreizinger, Master-' son and sauer, an can pass ana run, with Fullback Sauer as the key man and hardest driving ball in rpcpnt Nebraska history. KYpizinp-pr is the only veteran, but the sophomores are so good that they beat lettermen out of regular positions. Ends Drill on Offense. Hawkeye ends, chief of whom are Merten and Swaney, are being worked on offensive tactics. They turned in their best performance of the season on defense, but were much less effective when the team had the ball. Iowa's squad, numbering about thirty-three players, will depart Thursday night for the Nebraska capital. It will be the twentieth game in the Hawkeye-Husker series. STANDARD RENT-A-FORD CO. New cart for rent. We call for and deliver. B1644 R GAME EW HOPES I DONT FORGET To Write Your DAD ! I Today , ' j Next Saturday y November 7th is Dad's day. You'll want him to be here to enjoy a real day. Q O O A . great Day for A Qreat Dad The Daily Nebraskan Selleck Receives Block Tickets for Aggie-IIusker Fray Ticket for the Nebraska Kansas Aggie game at Manhat tan November 14 have already 'been received by John K. Sel leck. 1,000 seats have been re served for the Nebraska section In the game to determine the Big Six championship. $2.50 is the price for this important game. General admission student tickets for the Iowa-Nebraska game will be on sale at $1.00. COACH BLACK CALLS FOR CAGE ASPIRANTS Basketball Season Opens on December 12 With South Dakota Contest. FIFTEEN MEN APPEAR With the opening cage contest with South Dakota scheduled for Dec. 12, Coach Black made his first call for varsity basketball candidates yesterday. Despite the fact that a few of the basketball players are engag ing on the gridiron, a squad of 15 men responded to the initial call. Of these fifteen there is only one letter man. this only one being Art Mauch from Bassett. Bob Lackey, of Los Angeles, Calif., and Her man Levison, Omaha, both saw considerable action last season. Outside of these three men, the re mainder of the candidates were men up from the frosh squad. The men making their first bid for varsity competition were as fol lows: Walt Henrion, Wichita, Kas., Wally Norton, Crete; Kurt Lenser, Hastings; Charles Scheinost, Greg ory, S. D.; Art Hoag, Lincoln; Fran Crum, and Madison Letts, both of St. Joseph, Mo., Paul Mason, Omaha; Kenneth Lunney, York; and Bernie Wischmeier, of Lewiston. Most of the practice period was spent in passing, individual de fense and fundamentals of hand ling the ball. The final ten minutes of the period was spent in the form of a scrimmage. Party Gowns, Tuxedos WHEN THEY NEED CLEANING AND PRESS ING YOU WANT THEM TO HAVr. THE BEST OF CARE JUST CALL F-2377. Cleaners I Modern ISoukup & Westover 111 -rioor Two. I "27th. Year In Lincoln" III 'M 1137 p v vfif i IN THE MORNING KING KOSMET'S COURT AT NOON DAD'S DAY LUNCHEON IN THE AFTERNOON A REAL FOOTBALL GAME DINNER WITH YOUR DAD , Your Newspaper E FOR KAGGiE TEAM Iowa State Gridders Stage Heavy Workout for Crucial Test. CONTEST TOP HONORS AMES. Ia. After making his debut in Bix Six conference circles both at home and abroad with vic tories, Coach George F. Veenker, Monday began laying careful plans for the invasion Saturday of the menacing purple powerhouse of Kansas State. Back from their win over Okla homa by a 13 to 12 score, the Cy clones were inspired as they began preparations for their biggest test of the season. Captain Roger Bowen, Sam Et- zel and Frank Nolte suffered in juries in the Sooner game but all three arc expected to be in good shape again Saturday when the Cyclones and K-Aggies battle to break the three cornered tie in Big Six flag race. The reappearance of Warren Duesenberg in the lineup at Okla homa after a two week layoff be cause of injuries proved a big fac tor in the Iowa State victory. His defensive work in backing up the line was little short of sensational. He made tackle after tackle to keep the Sooner backs from gain ing ground. Saturday's Dad's day contest, besides featuring two teams unde feated in conference play, will see the two high scorers in the Big Six in action. Dick Grefe, Iowa State's blond backfield ace, forged "Your Drug Store" Call tis when you need drugs quick. Also snappy lunches or a real box of chocolates. The Owl Pharmacy 148 No. 14th & P. Phone B-1068 QudgeOsienzel Go Announces a Limited Exhibition of "Never Alone" The immortal Herbert de Mareau's internationally famous war painting, now installed in special set tings on our Fourth floor. See "Never Alone" without charge. It is presented to the Lincoln public in Into the lead by scoring two touch downs and a kick from placement after touchdown against OklahomaV in a brilliant individual perform ance. Ralph Grahman, rated by sports writers as another Jim Bausch, has six touchdowns to his credit to equal Grefe in scores from scrlrb-t' age, but the Cyclone halfback hn forty points behind his name bh-. cause of four place kicks after touchdown. . . . . . i. . , i ... When lajt heard from, Robert; "Junior" Brandt, Delta Tau Deltja pledge of last year, and George; McFarland, member of Delta Chi, were in New York City prepara tory to working their way too France on a tramn steamer. Thv had Just returned from XTuba anjl had landed their job after a two day sojourn of "necessary fast . ing." Z Underwood Typewriters J; See the New Portables -t Excellent Typewriters for Rent Ribbons and Supplies Underwood Typewriter Coa 1342 P St. B25?a; Thursday's Specials Women's and Girls' Half Soles and fQg Heels YUC Men's and Boys' 90c Half Soles..., .While You Walt, ot Fret De livery. Complete' Satisfaction Guaranteed. BASEMENT. the interest of Art. ' I -4. - ' fc El -I 1 ., ..... 1 I FOR RENT 1518 Q, pleasant mwlem B-7819 1301 O reotni lam me.