SFe'dnesday, November 25, 1942 DALY NEBRASKAN Ex-Wildcat Coach Coaches Wrestling MANHATTAN, Kas. Lieut. B. R. (Pat) Patterson, former head wrestling coach at Kansas State college, is serving as physical edu cation officer for the K-State Re serve Officers Training Corps ca det unit. A former national A. A. U. 126 pound champion from Oklahoma A. and M. college, Stillwater, Okla., Patterson is drilling the cadets in a "commando alertness" course designed by him for "touch ening up" purposes. NOW undtt-arm s Cream Deodorant Stops Porsplratlon 1. Doei not tot drestei ot men's thitts. Doei not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be wed tight after shaving. i. Instantly stops perspiration foe 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor. 4. A pure, white, greaselesi, stainless vanishing cream. I. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Launder, ing for being harmless to fabric " or j Alio In 10 and SH ian RRBH .Good HoowkMpint W7R FBI. NOV. 27 Adm. 1.00 Ea. Tax Included Athey, Hazen Are Still Hurt As UN Preps For Wildcats Dubious condition of Marv Athey and Jack Hazen was the top news on the Huskcr squad roster, posted yesterday by Mentor Glen Presnell. "Doc" Deppen, team physician, indicated that the condition of Athey and Hazen could not be determined until Thursday. "If Athey plays, his shoulder will keep him from doing any heavy blocking," commented the team doctor. Teams Announced. First eleven included Thompson and Nyden, ends; McNutt and Schleich, tackles; Duda and stran- K WMU. mm Hurry! Ends Today! martini STARTS THURSDAY 0 VASHINGmU Nj simjim'V It's the side-splitting screen version of the gret stage comedy! 0 athan, guards; Partington, center; Long, quarterback; Bradley and Sooper, halfbacks; Eisenhart, full back. Second team included Clark and Gel wick, ends; Byler and Sim, tackles; Bryant and vonGoetz, guards; Bachman, center; Me theny, quarterback; Riechel and Debus, halfbacks; Hopp, fullback. Harold Hungerford, injured against the Seahawks and left in an Iowa City hospital with a bat tered skull, was released yester day. Main news in the K-State camp una tVt( rntnrn nf MiUa 7.plp7.nnk ' to varsity action. Dressing Room . . . If word spread around the Hus- ker dressing room yesterday can be used as indication, the Iowa Seahawks just about typify the dream team. Ki Eisenhart grunted his say as he slipped on shoulder pads: 'That Evashevski is the best blocker I've ever seen. He hits 'em right at the knees and they fall like kindling." Performing in the backfield for the first time, Al Grubaugh found several of the Seahawk line giants unmovable: "That line was just like a cement wall. One time I ran into Schultz when I carried the ball and he really bounced me." End Bob Gillespie, who per formed credibly against the Bier- man team, had only praise: "They looked like the old Pitt teams. All precision. Boy could they roll!" Incidentally, Mr. Gillespie, whose previous game experience totaled one minute against Pitt, should convince Husker tutors that size isn't everything. Bob's pass snatching is superior and he plays his spot with all the finesse of a vet. Draft . . . dWhAiL ''Traill I By Norris Anderson Vf (Sports Editor) Z, , Dr. H. P. Thiclman, member of the mathematics faculty at .St. Thomas college, has been named assistant professor of mathematics at Iowa State college. RENT CARS Good cars at reasonable prices. Please minimize deliveries. Thanks. Always open. Motor Out Company 1120 P St. 2-6819 (Continued from Page 1.) might as well help the country. There won't be anything else to do." Ben Clark, Phi Psi: "Its great! Is is absolutely necessary to make men available for actual combat." Perry Fuller, ATO: "That's a heck of a question to ask at four o'clock in the afternoon! I wouldn't favor it at all. A wom an's place in this war is purely decorative. They are the coun try's best morale builders, not dungaree-wearers. I prefer grease paint to action." Jan Hoover, Theta pledge: "It is a very good idea. Women are soft now, but they can surpass men at anything if given a chance." Morrie Dingwell, Fiji: "It would be a good idea. The women haven't done anything so far, and now would be a good time for them to start." Apparently this was the best time for the women to start working, because "Ding" yelled at the reporter, "Why don't you take my order, anyway?" Marge Mengshol, Alpha Phi: "It would be unwise to conscript college women into war industries. They are bring trained 'or some thing definite and shOu.d be left in school." Ed Faytinger, Sig Chi: "It ia a swell idea to conscript the women because they never work in col lege anyway. It might be hard on the morale of the men left in school, but it would be good for the women." Allen Zikmund, Sig Alph: "I don't believe in it at all. The men can do the job by themselves. After all it's a man's war!" Not since the days wlion automobiles opened at tlie buck bas the Big Six league experienced such an unhappy grid term as the current annum. Urol hers Kellogg and Ware alone have loosened enough verbal lear ducts concerning Big Six grid play to qualify for a lifetime stall along the Wailing Wall. Big .Six representatives have sallied forth into outcon ferenec competition on 2S occasions. Only seven of those oc casions found league clubs emerging victors. Twenty victories went to outside foes and one fray ended in a stalemate tie. Such a record produces gross retrospect. In IJM8, wc had the Orange Bowl Sooners of Oklahoma. Mis souri's Christian-sparked .193!) eleven followed the Sooners onto the Florida greensward. Nebraska hit the highest peak ever attained by a Big Six eleven in 11)40 year when the llusker Stanford Rose Bowl clash went down in grid annals. Bob Stcu ber led Mizzou's once-beaten team into the 1941 Sugar Bowl. Not once did a Big Six team top a bowl opponent. Brothers Kellogg, Ware and remainder of the sportswrit ing wolf pact howl at the moon and want to know: Where the hell is the 1942 Big Six bowl contender? Somewhere, Mr. Ware, that contender became lost. Some where amid the amazing mess of upsets that mark this hectic wartime foolball. Mizzou with three losses in six starts and Iowa State's two wins in our attempts head the t -cords cf Uig Six teams in out- conference competition. roiv to back up your line TUNCY words are O.K. but before you try living up to them, try dressing up to them with Arrow shirts Your favorite Arrow will very possibly be Gordon, a fine ox fordbecause it's swell all purpose shirt. In regular or button-down collar. Sanforized la bel (leHs than 1 fabric shrink age.) $2.50. Get some Arrow ties too. $1 up. him Missouri 3 Iowa State 2 Kansas 1 Kansas State 1 Oklahoma 0 Nebraska 0 Totals L 3 2 3 4 3 5 20 T 0 0 0 0 1 0 .i ii ii ii i i iw ARROW Word from our K-State news informant reveals the fact that Alike "Jug'' Zeleznak, lad who tripped the Iluskers last term, was put in cold storage immediately after the Indiana game. Purpose of keeping dug from action against the Cy clones was to save him for Nebraska. Arrow Gordon Is B. S. 0. C ft V V x? 71 S r v. rh- i ry V. VrV ' I ' . r Big Shirt on Campus ALWAYS in a top ppot in campus popularity polls is Arrow's Gordon Oxford shirt with regular and button-down collars. Cordon fits you perfectly, because it is cut on the Mitoga form-fit pattern What's more, it can't shrink more than a microscopic 1, for it bears the Sanforized label. All for just a slight fee $2.50. Arrow ties are swell bosom companions for Arrow shirts! $1 up. MTT U. S. WAR tONDS AND $JXMPI ARROW SHIRTS