THE DAILY NEBIUSKAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 193ft THREE - MusEters, SoidlDairiia 1 U u U u wvi huh if Year-Bast 0- (Continued from Page 1.) reached the line of scrimmage. On a triple reverse, Hopp lost 2 and a pass from Hopp to ProehasUa was broken up by Clascn. On fourth down, Hermie Rohrig missed an attempted field goal, his first miss of four during the afternoon. Chance Again, toward NOTE! By Norman Harris Jayhcwks Outrun N.U. Fwo-Milers Mirchel!, Hofsess Pace Winners; Weir Plans Sooner Jaunt . 4 1 No. 2. the end of the third quarter Graham. Hoo- 3 Bier captain and i fullback, funi s' J bled on his own 21 where Husk er Charlie Brock recov ered. R o h r ig was stopped at right tackle for no gain, but on the next play Harry Hopp drove 9 yards over the same spot, then drove the Hoosier 10 . . . goal to go. Rohrig made four on a full spinner on the right side and Calli han picked up one thru the mid dle. Hopp was knocked out of bounds by Oliver on the six, then completed a pass to Rohrig . . . which lost four yards, the ball, and ended the best chance of the afternoon for a score. Chance No. 3. Two and one-half minutes after (kA Dtit stf tho castnH half ftftpr ' aiaiv hik . . -. ....... - Bill Callihan picked up the Indi ana kickoff on his own 25 and had run it clear to the Indiana 24, another Husker offense fizzled. Rohrig lost one, Callihan fumbled but recovered, and Dodd lost three on a reverse. Rohrig failed on an attempted field goal , . . another Husker chance blown. Chance No. 4. Early in tii final period, center Bob Burruss intercepted one of Mr. Nicholson's passes on the Hoosier 30 and ran to the 20. giv ing the Huskers another chance for gold. Luther picked up one on a half spinner, Phelps drove for two. then was held to no gain on a right end try. Phelps' pass to Grimm was incomplete in the end zone . . . goodbye scoring chance. Chance No. 5. Four minutes later, Harry Hopp intercepted another one of the ver satile Nicholson passes and ran to the Indiana 23. The Huskers were penalized 5 for too many times out as Hopp was hurt on the play. Rohrig punched the line for 6 on a full spinner. Fans began to vision 6 points. Hopp made one over rieht tackle. Hopp carnea again, this time for 4. Fourth down and 4 to go. What to do about it? Rohrig missed his fourth try at a field goal, kicking into the wind at an SAVE WITH SAFETY 35cBromo Quinine 29c 50clergens Lotion. .39c 50c Woodbury's Cream 39c 60c Sal Hepatica ...49c 60c Bromo Seltzer . . 49c 1.20 Syrup Pepsin . .89c l.OOLavoris 89c l.OOVitalis 89c Eaton's New Writing Papers are now in. 50c 59c 75c $1.00 See Them free Delivery UNI DRUG Glenn McMillan 14th & S B3771 angle. All of his kicks had been from more or less of an angle and were ex tremely diffi cult. Altho the wind was at his back on his first attempts, it was a cross wind, hindering i n- fil idinS -HERM ROHRIG The Huskers gained 129 yards net to the Hoos iers' 59. Hopp's kicking average was especially good, considering his kicking into the wind half the game. He averaged 36 yards, wan one kick made short to keep from rolling over the goal line, five of them into the wind. Indiana's kicking average was a fraction over 30 yards. Outdown Hoosiers. Five to four was the Husker margin in first downs. Three passes did fleet and awake red shirtea backs nip from the ozone to stop Hoosier threats ror me nusKtxs, nupp, rwiiriK, lji Dodd and Callihan proved their Ph worth as the Buffer's first string ers by playing almost the whole game, being out about hair tne fourth quaiter. Bus Knight looked slick for the few minutes he played. On the line, Brock, Mills and Muskin stood out on defense, with Behm and Mills combining on of fense to open holes for Husker backs. "rMHka Indian Srman 9 Hnrrtu Mill. Hut I Mn.kln lirnn Brock Nln ilvrrwm ft- MlkM Hrhm Strvm) T-rM-haaka, r Junr-'irnk 'Hon .q. .. Herbert Unrig h Brlnrlr ilWll n 'lw :alllhn f r,rmham I Official.: Rrfw. ClaM: mi, H. .. Hrdrn: km4llnHnt Hit Taylor; jflrM jodrr, Ira (arrilhrr. Many are the betters, the "wiseguys" who are moaning to night because they gave six, seven, or ten points and took the Hoosiers. Few are those who fa vored the Huskers. Nebraska outplayed Indiana, came so close to winning that it isn't even funny, held the Hoosiers completely at bay throughout the afternoon. The closest the McMil linmen came to the Husker goal line was to the Scarlet 32, where a fumble ended the threat. Ne braska's pass defense clicked nicely. Punting was good. Passing was a fizzle, with only one pass being completed and that one lost four yards. The Huskers' scoring punch was sitting up on top of the press box yesterday, or else wandered up to sit with the Tassels. Any way, it wasn't on the field. Every time the redshirts would shift into high gear and come down the field. the clutch slipped and the machine started to back-peddle . . . just like last week. But Indiana had been favored, Indiana outweighed Nebraska, Nebraska fa-ns were betting against Nebraska, sportswriters were wary of picking a winner, but favored Indiana a little , so under the conditions, I think Husker fans can ask no more. Nebraska didn't lose . . . they did outplay the Hoosiers . . they played college football yes terday . . . they made mistakes, but so did anyone who bet on Indiana. Next week the Huskers face the strongest team in this part of the country, perhaps excepting Ne braska ... so, until then ... all we can do is hope . . . and please lot's not rive ooints and take Oklahoma without first thinking ! of Hopp, Rohrig, Callihan, Dodd, j Brock, Muskin, Behm, Seeman, Mills . . . and the rest of them . . . they're good and you know it . . . last week they were mediocre . . . but yesterday they were good. Oklahoma beat Kansas, 19 to 0 . . . three straight wins . . . Rice, Texas, Kansas . . . but Sooners, here we come! track for a race with the Missouri distance men Oct. 29. John Brown lee expects to be back on the squad for that meet. Finishing order: First and second, Mitchell and Hofsess (KS: third, Inland (KS; fourth, Kuper (N); fifth, Moore (N); sixth and seventh, Clingman and High (KS), eighth, knight (N); ninth and tenth, Walker and Butler (N). Led by the cinder burners Mitch ell and Hofsess, Ward Haylett's Kansas State two milers handed the Cornhusker cross country team their first defeat of the season, taking them by a score of 36 to 19. Mitchell and Hofsess, who fin ished one-two in the Big Six meet last spring, led the field from the start to finish In a dead heat in the fast time of 9:57.6. Al Kuper, running the distance for the first time this year, was nosed out only six inches by Lelpnd of Kansas State in the fight for third place. Del Moore, a sophomore from Barlley, running his first race for the varsity pulled in with fifth well ahead of High and Clingman of the Aggies who crossed the line In another dead heat for 6th and 7th places. Jim Knight took eighth for Nebraska with Butler and Walker finishing in the third dead heat of the race for 9th and 10th positions. Butler had been with the leaders earlier in the race, but sore feet forced him to fall back. Next Saturday Coach Ed Weir takes his Scarlet and Cream run ners to Norman, Oklahoma, for a meet with the Sooners. They will return to the Memorial stadium George Bros. Collegiate Shop Home Coming! House Parties! This Is Where We Shine! Many New Novelties Coming In All the Time! Smart Number in Paper Mache Hats, Cowboy, Derby and as sorted. Special Yellow Friendship LEIS. Attractive Table Covers Napkins, Doilies Nut Cups and Place Cards GeorieBporj Everyone's Wearing Them! Student pep sections yesterday resembled a true collegiate student section at a college football game. Gone were the lackadaisical spir its and the lazy, half dead sem- ilance of enthusiasm. The awak ening came when fans and stu dents alike saw that Nebraska did , have a football team. Cheer lead-1 ers sweated and yelled themselves , hoarse. If they got to see much of the game, they were lucky. The new yells went across with i a bang. The cards during the hair were neat, Tne big appie wun Herbie Ksy was swell. All of which went together to finish up a perfect afternoon, even though Indiana tied the Huskers. The brisk wind that blew re minded one of Gabby Harrigan's State college team in Its stadium in "Hold. That Coed" ... but the i Huskers didn't have a female full back to buck the wind! LINCOLN IUNIOR LEAGUE TOWN HALL SERIES PraMnlt BOAKE CARTER Tn Wpr tm fhr Nnra" Miucan rHKATm., kt. m FRANK CROWENSHIELD T4r mt VaaMr Fair How ln Thrr Dn II" CORNHI'HKKR ftM.IJUKHf NOV. tt MELCHIOR PALYI OORNHI'KKrR r1I.IJtOOM IKC. IS S00-Y0NG hi Oilwar A.tiiaa fci The 4fcn Kan" J4N. 11 CORNHl'MifcR RAMJMrOM EERRT SEIDL CANBY "Tkr KOUnr Vmn HH Worlf COKNRIKIIKI RM.IJtOOM FKRM, 1 SR. GEORGE RAIGUEL Affatra CORNHl'MKKR RtlXJtOOM MAR, 1 SEASON TICKETS $A GOOD FOR ALL ( LECTVEES Single Admission to Boake Carter $1.00 LIBERTY THEATRE Hints to Attract a Girl. 1. Get a car. 2. Comb your hair. 3. Get a car. 4. Slick up. 5. Get a car. 6. Earn some money. 7. Get a -r. This list is sometimes entitled 'The big four." 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