DAILY NEBRASKAN 3 after a punt return,... he did so with Husker and Jayhawk cheers alike rinerinrr in his ears. . .He was really the standout of the day for the K. U. team. . . . Now that Miller has been suf ficiently cared . .Wednesday, October 15, 1941 for, we can turn 6 v TTUIL I By Boh Millet 1 L J Since there hasn't been much chance to give some credit to a defeated but gamely fighting team from Lawrence, we thought that this would be a good chance to tell some of Die things that oc cured to us... As it appeared the K. U. team had a good back field but the line lacked that some thing that should be present... In our estimation, the Kansas player of the day was by all means Ralph Miller, the slight 170 pound quarterback who fired the deadly missies into the Husker defenses for repeated completions. .. .This Chanute, Kansas flash was the big noise in the Jayhawk offense and defense. . . During his stay in the game Miller was In- s t r u mental in keeping the Jay f hawks going. . . f x 1 He accounted for the maior- tl ! ? - i tty of the 17 completions re- suuing rrom it attempts Miller had his fust year on the v a r s i ty team in 1938 and in the next Lincoln Journal. season, he led the nation's passers with a com pletion average of .622. . . In 1940, however, he was forced out of competition due to an in jury that he had sustained in the fifth game of his sophomore year. He was hampered all the '39 sea son by the injury but it was the following season that he had to have two operations upon the in jured member In Saturday's game he won the admiration of all the fans when with all the sureness in the world he stepped back and waited pa tiently until he saw one of his re ceivers out in the open and then he calmly let fly with one of his ac curate thunderbolts His passes weren't masterpieces from the standpoint of a perfect spiral but his accuracy and speed with which he threw them accounted for the high number of completions. Official figures released by the K. U. athletic department show show that Miller completed 13 out f 21 passes during the afternoon and his passes amounted to 93 yards for the afternoon's perform ance. . .Statistics reveal that this boosted his season average to.542, a figure that will probably reach the 1939 proportions. . .His pas ses thus far have netted the Jay kawks a neat 254 yards . . . When be was forced to leave the game in the third quarter due to good shaking-up when he was tackled Each time you taste ice-cold Coca-Cola, you are reminded that here is the quality of genuine goodness. Experience... many a refreshing experience... has taught people every where to trust the quality of Coca-Cola. OTUEO UNDER AUTHOHITt OF THE COCA-COIA COMPANY Y LINCOLN COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY 2120 (1 ST. PH. 2-5357 u r attentions toward the Jay line . . . While the line as a whole wasn't particularly ef fective, there were several in dividuals that played over their heads for the entire after noon in an ef 8oa luxe fort to stave off certain de Lincoln Journal. feat.. Bob Flu- ker was the best man that Kan sas put on the field in the line. . . On offensive he shown on down- field blocking that didn't do much good and on defense he was on every play that came his way If there had been seven Flukers n the line, the story would have been very different. . .He filled the guard position so ably that he got every sports scribe's vote as the individual lineman of the day Monte Merkle came the nearest to duplicating Fluker's show on me oiner side of the center in the opposite guard position ... He was harder than the other linemen to block with the one exception and he gave his best in a losing battle. Once more in the backfield Ray Niblo attracted notice as a suc cessor to Miller, his imitation of Miller's style of rjassine was not all that could be expected... Ray Evans had a share in the back's spotlight turning1 in a good game that boasted of sev- eral runs o f longer than five yards and he j was on the cat- f cnine end or 7 most of Miller's passes . . The ymm, way it looked ' P- after the game f ? was that Kan sas had a better than Avprnpe "'"""" backfield play- VV5 i n e behind a . . . . ljim'om journal. worse than av erage line . . . Individual performers need some recognition, thoue-h. when thev that was nearly decided before it was played. That was our purpose Indiana Set Drop Huskcrs With the major pouring it on this week to prepare the Huskers for Saturday s homecoming game against Indiana, word comes from the Hoosier camp that "Colonel Bo's boys will be ready. According to latest reports, the Hoosiers, for the first time this season, will be at full strength. A pre-seaaon crippled starting back field, which has not yet had a chance to prove itself, will be ready Saturday. A line in which Bo has juggled " ' !j I ...... - P' til Prof. Roscoc Pound Tried Sports Forecasting in 1900 Prof. Roscoe Foimd, head of the law school at Harvard University, viewed Nebraska's progress as a rising gridiron power with consid erable optimism in the Sept. 18, 1900 issue of the Hesperian-Ne-braskan, student newspaper. Sports scribe Pound, whose sis ter is Dr. Louise Pound of the present Cornhuskcr faculty, wrote for heartier support from the stu dent body. "As we are about to enter upon the second decade of football at the University of Nebraska, a brief retrospect from a veteran football crank may not be out of place. Football before 1890. "Prior to 1890 football, except the old helter-skelter kicking game with an indefinite number on each side and every man for him self, was unheard of in Nebraska. In '8S)-'90 McClatchie, '91, who had played at Olivet, preached the gos pel of scientific football and vol unteered to coach. He aroused not a little enthusiasm, though ham pered by a notion then prevalent that players ought to be elected by ballot, and began our football his tory with a series of class games, an institution which, with slight interruption, has been handed down to the present day. "I was away fiom the Univer sity at the time, but on my return in the fall of '90, full of the en thusiasm kindled by seeing the Harvard season of '89, including the games with Yale and Prince ton, I was amused and amazed to see some two dozen men, in their shirt sleeves, some in overalls, but most in their every-day trousers, and all wearing suspenders, en deavoring to learn the elements of football by the light of nature and their recollection of what they saw the year before. "Some of the men who played mat year had not a little natural sophomores and veterans, veterans and sophomores, will probably find two sophomores starting with five veterans. Present lineups indicate that there will also be two sophs in the backfield. Outstanding in the backfield is Soph Billie Hillenbrand, whose work in the left halfback slot has placed him in the hallowed group pre-seasonally picked as "backs of the year." Another sophomore, Lou Saben, will most likely hold down the blocking back assign ment, while two juniors, Dale Swi hart at right half, and Earl Dolo way at full, will complete the quartet. Sophomores who have proved themselves worthy of first Btring places in the Indiana line are Tac kle Freddie Huff and Center John Tavener; from all reports, these . . . Results Shown Here ability and would have done well in time with proper training. Dr. Frothingham, who had seen the best of tootball, did what he could for them, and as opposing teams were equally raw, individual strength and athletic skill took our first varsity team trium phantly through its first season. Another year saw our first hired coach in Lyman of Grinnell, who had played at Yale. Lyman was given about ten days to do what he could with green men. "The score in a game with Iowa that season was not pleasant to think of, but Lyman had set us in motion, and we repaid Iowa with interest later. Advent of League. "Then came the leaeue. No one mourns its death, but it was a great event in our football history. From the dav it was organized. Nebraska has had good football. Jnere have been off years, but there have been years of triumph as well, and as one looks back over ten years and calls to mind J. H. Johnston. A. E. Yont. Flin- pin, Budd Jones, Dern, Thorpe, Wiggins, ueorge Shedd, Melford and Benedict any of whom could have played in any company he cannot but feel ample satisfaction. Need of hearty support. "The most immediate need is hearty support. There, too, there is room for improvement. Prob ably nowhere else is it respectable, or even safe, to look over the canvas, or sit in trees or windows in plain view, and steal half a dol lar's worth of football. Some of the best men in the University have clone this in time past, and have done what they could to make it respectable. Football is a democratic game." Ed. note This article was taken from an article appearing in the Nebraska Alumnus. two will brine- the varsity sonh total to four. In the Husker camp, linemen were warned that unless "a bang up job of rushiner" is carried out. Brilliant Billie Hillenbrand may pass me flusters Oizzy." Whether or not the word from Bloomington is a word of fair warning, whether or not the Hoo siers have selected their fourth game to come up to pre-season predictions, whether or not either of these things is true, it's a gen erally known fact that the colonel and the major will make Satur day afternoon an interesting one Cagerg Meet Tonight Ad Lewandowski broadcast a calf for all varsity men to re port to the coliseum basement at 7:30 tonight for physical ex aminations. All men must be there. Practice for the varsity squad wilt be in the coliseum Monday, Thursday and Friday afternoons st 3:30 and Tues day and Wednesday evenings at 7:15. Cotntnr Ort. 14 Art If Nhaw and t!U Crmt it'! i'irce Orch SfiOAt By Susan Shaw Don't forget the Rkling Club picnic today at six. If you contact any of the officers pay your 25 cents at the WAA office. Meet at Grant Memorial Hall. Joyce Junge, Pi Beta Phi. and Lila Howell, Kappa Alpha Theta, will attend their first WAA coun cil meeting today as newly elected secretary and assistant conces sion manager, respectively. President of the Bowling Club, Georgia Swallow, announced that all students, fellows included, are to bnng their indentification cards to the next meeting. It will be held at the Lincoln bowling alley Thursday from 4 to 6 p. m. Special rate for club members is 25 cents for two lines. Fimcral- ( Continued from Page 1.) heart, who represented Nebraska at last year's Rose Bowl game. Affiliated with Sigma Nu fra ternity, Reichstadt was known to his friends as "Dutch," and maj ored in pre-medicine on this cam pus. He was a parachute and tech nical supply officer at the Albu querque base, having graduated from Kelly field and having served at Randolph snd March fields. Sigma Nu fraternity members will attend the funer.al in a group. 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