Sunday, September 24, 1944 THE NEBRASKAN KU Squad Opens Year Against TCU LAWRENCE, Kans., Sept. 20, 1944 This weekend the Univers ity of Kansas football team opened a four game stand on con eecutive weekends on foreign fields. The Jayhawkers will meet four tough foes before perform ing for a home crowd. Starting Saturday night Coach Henry Shenk's youthful aggrega tion tangled in Ruppert Stadium, Kansas City, Mo., with the husky Horned Frogs from T. C. U. of Fort Worth, Tex. The two teams met two years ago and the Texans walked away on a 41 to 6 score. Denver U. is the next foe for the Crimson and Blue machine. This game will be played on Fri day night, Sept. 29 at Denver, Colo. Last year the Coloradans had eaesy pickings with the Jay hawkers. Coach Shenk plans to take a squad of about 30 on the trip. The next non-conference foe of the Kansans will be the bowl- minded "Golden Hurricane" of Tulsa university in the Oklahoma oil capital, Saturday night, Oct. 7 These two schools played back in 1933 and 1934 and the Tulsans won both by scores of 7 to . The Jayhawkers can hardly hope to bold the strong Tulsans in check The Crimson and Blue machine will open the Big Six season Sat urday afternoon Oct. 14 playing Iowa State at Ames. Last year the Cyclones won, 13 to 6. The Jayhawkers last defeated the Iowans back in 1941 by a score of 13 to 0. The Cyclones are re ported to have a tough aggrega tion again this season. The first game of the season for the Mt. Oread crew in Me morial Starlium will be with the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Satur day, Oct. 21. This will be Home coming for the Jayhawker alumni. Kansas has not defeated Nebraska since 1916. Last year the Scarlet and Cream crew won, 7 to 6. After the Nebraska game the Jayhawkers move up the Kaw to meet the Kansas State crew. Last year Kansas won 25 to 2. The last time the Aggies upset the Jayhawkers was in 194t by a count of 20 to 0. The Oklahoma Sooners close the home grid season for the Kansans in Memorial Stadium Saturday, Nov. 18. The Jayhawk ers wind up the season battling the Missouri Tigers in Ruppert Stadium, Kansas City, Mo. Nov. 23. Kansas sprang a surprise on the Tigers last year, winning 7 to 6. The Jayhawk squad this week is busy preparing for the all-important contest with the Texas Christian eleven in Kansas City, Mo. Coach Shenk gave his club ! new offensive formations and spent much time working on blocking and tackling. The Kan sas squad, about 30 strong, will leave here Saturday for Kansas City, Mo., and will spend the night in the city following Hie game. There are no "national" holi days in the United States, since each state flesirlPK rrn ilc nvi'n nh. tier va nee. The ancient Greeks had light signal system for transmitting messages between cities. r m ?1M Attention, Debuteens! Every girl can be a Pin-Up Cirl here. NEBRASKA BEAUTE SALON 219 No. 12th 2-2796 '44 Sooners Present Promising Squad, Face Tough Schedule NORMAN, Okla., Sept. 23. A formidable schedule, a promising wartime squad. That's the story of Oklahoma's 1944 football pros pects. Coach Dewey "Snorter" Lus ter's defending Big Six cham pions play the best clubs in two major conferences this autumn. Texas, Texas Aggies and Texas Christian, coached by Dana Bible, Homer Norton and I -co "Dutch" Meyer, will be encountered from the Southwest conference. Okla homa also meets all the Big Six teams, each with a rejuvenated outfit, and plays a late November clash with Coach Jim Looka- baugh's Oklahoma Aggies, who always shoot their best loads at the Sooners. The opener here Sept. 30 with the Norman naval air station Zoomers could be the hardest game of all. The Zoomers have a stout tailback-fullback threat in Len Eshmont and Emil Sitko. Both made the Ail-American service team last year. Eshmont at Del Monte, Eitko at Great Lakes. Previously Eshmont played at rordham, Sitko at Notre Dame. Lighter and speedier than last year, the Sooners this fall will blend their single wingback for mation with a single wingback T. The idea is to flank stronger and heavier foes, instead of trying to overpower them frontally. And with Dcrald Lebow, last year's all-Big Six tailback, and Tommy Meason, Ardmore fresh man, throwing, the Sooners may try to cut enemy communications by dropping airborn armies. Last year Oklahoma had throwers and receivers galore but passed only 620 net yards, as against 1.617 net yards gained running. The boys liked to run so well that the quarterbacks rarely called a pass. The Sooner staff of Luster, Dale Arbuckle and Bruce Drake is readying two back fields for. the 1944 wars. The No. 1 combina tion at present includes three starters from last year: Lebow, the 170 pound tailback, Charlie Heard, the 165 pound wingback and Homer Sparkman, the 148 pound blocking back. Billy! Wright, a 170 pound fullback from Lubbock, Texas high school. is playing departed Bob Brum- lcy s spot. It s an all-navy quar tet. The No. 1 outfit is nearly all civilian. Meason, the 17 year old Ardmore boy, is at tailback and Basil Sharp, 190 pound Pawnee boy, at fullback. Both were high school players last year, but good ones. Archie Bradley, sub end of the 1942 team, is at wingback. The blocking back is 18 year old Don Weir, a sandy-haired naval COLLEGE DAYS Are Here Again They look smooth the war is still going on ... so last year's wardrobe has to stretch farther. We have been giving fine campus service for years. Come in soon ABLE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 223 N. 14 played at Kerrville, Tex., high school. He is the son of Hienie Weir, center and captain of Dana Bible's great Texas Aggie outfit of 1921 that licked "Bo" McMillin and the Centre college Praying Colonels at Dallas in a post-season upset, 22 to 10. Oklahoma's problem is develop ment of reserve linesmen. The Sooner backs clearly overshadow ths forwards. Gone from last year's short-handed team are two all-Big Six linesmen, Tackle Lee Kennon and Guard Gale Ful ghum, not to mention Guard Don Link, also a starter, and such let-V-12 lad. whose last football was termen as Omer Buigert, Lewis Dunn, Jim Desmond and, Joe Breeden. Don' Tillman, fighting 165 pound guard who played 60 min utes in Oklahoma's surprising 20-13 trimming of Missouri for the conference title, hasn't report ed yet because of an operation on his eye. Replacements for all those departed gladiators arei weak. Luster's 1944 outfit must also contend against precedent. No Oklahoma team winning a cham pionship ever repeated the fol lowing year. Tom Stidham's Soon ers of 1938 had even better pros- MV You'll Look Your Best v Y " ' A - N' 1 ( Cardigan or Lapel Collar Styles 8 V - IT 100V. wcolen, I I I t-vH ' vYL I 1 A Id I V lk JE? tA V.-f A cardigan nH with a 1 I $jf I k I lift ' I i 'I I l,ar for "sati'lity . . . I I 7lP I I : I ' It J" J tr J wear yours to class for I ' P' f V-'' I I ' It 'A': A ' JL:; dates or town wear. Or M f I i K,V J Hfy; y'jOX ' "-. .) M 'j W Prefer the easy if I f , i ' r 1 graee cf a- lajcl collar 1 ! J , ij -1 . iWvH loeking all woolens. I J. ,h V; -k 1 MA V. - Bright new hade and 1 It '. J H W -1 ir" of course, felac k or brown. I I ; ' Jj Sizes ! to 18. 1 I 'I li 6. f 5 HOLD I.. Ikui ntr. i I ' ' i 'W - 4 ' 5 i ITT 1 ) 1 ' ... I V ' I ' I ' f I l';t I ( l" ill f t, I HBencla WttrimaBEBg Wayne Van Home With the season opener against the Minnesota Gophers now less than two weeks away, another upset seems to be in store for the Husker squad. Duane Berkey, 210 pound center, is slated for army service in the near future. Berkey returned to his home early this week and received his 1-A classi fication sometime Tuesday. The loss of Rcrkey would weaken the center of the line considerably mid perhaps cause considerable jug gling in the starting lineup. Junior Collopy, top defensive back and all-slate star of last year, is being worked in the pects in 1939 but finished third. Bennie Owen's undefeated Okla homa teams of 1911, 1915, 1918 and 1920 lost a total of 15 games in 1912, 1916, 1919 and 1921. Everybody points for a defending champion. The 1944 schedule: Sept. 30 Norman NAS Zoom ers at Norman. Oct. 7 Texas Aggies at Ok lahoma City. Oct. 14 Texas at Dallas. Oct. 21 Kansas State at Nor man. Oct. 28 Texas Christian at Oklahoma City. Nov. 4 Iowa State at Ames. Nov. 11 Missouri at Norman. Nov. 18 Kansas at Lawrence. Nov. 25 Oklahoma Aggies at center position in the event that Berkey should not return at all. Collopy had been alternating with Buzz llollins at fallback but his outstanding" defensive record is enough prof that he will be in valuable intbe center's lineback ing position. The possible drafting of Berkey by the At my would raise to throe the total of fust-string guilders lost since the start of the season. The other men loit are Dob Schleiger, piomising Oiniilia North sophomore, lost to the armed forces, and Bert Gissli-r, veteran wingman, Vvho left leienlly to help his father on the farm. Oklahoma City. Dec. 2 Nebraska at Oklahoma City. Night games. The use of visiting cards is gen erally believed to have originated during the regin oi Louis XIV of France. Iceland spar, 'a transparent ele ment which has the property of polarizing light, is mined in New Mexico. Colorado has 16 national for ests, five containing more than a million, acres each. Among the AiaVts, sacred trees are believed to be haunted by angels or jinns. Most of the American buds known as hawks do not kill poul try or small birds.