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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1947)
SunHay, Odob'er 5, 1947 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3 Huskcrs . (Continued from Page 1.) Harry Elliott's punt and recov ered for Nebraska on the Go pher's 19-yard line. Wiegand, Damkroger Click Wiegand unlimbered his arm again and flipped a 15-yard aer ial to Damkroger on the two. The DeWitt husky made a beau tiful one-hand catch and stepped across the double stripe untouch ed. Costello's kick was good and the Huskers trailed 14-13. But Minnesota roared back with a wealth of reserve power and tallied twice more before time ran out. Harry Elliott and Bill Bye sparked Minnesota on the ground and in the air. Bye engineered the first Gopher tally. He ran and passed the ball to the three-yard line. After Bill Elliott failed to carry over, the Gopher scatback slanted off tackle to score from two yards out. Big Don" Bailey came off the Minnesota bench to convert. Elliott Sparks Gophers Harry Elliott's passes accounted for the second Gopher tally. The shifty halfback completed a 17 yard aerial to Daugherty before hitting Bill Theile with a payoff pitch in the second period. Again Bailey trotted in to convert. Elliott's passing was a big fac tor in the mid fourth quarter thrust by the Gophers. After Cen ter Warren Beson recovered a Ne braska fumble on the Huskers' 38 yard stripe, Elliott tossed to Daugherty to the 12, and ran to the seven before carrying to the one-foot line. From there Jim Malosky went over on a quarter back sneak. Bailey's toe guided the conversion perfectly. The Huskers came back and moved to the Gophers' 25-yard line with a 35-yard heave from Wiegand to Alex Cochrane eating up the most yardage. But Beson intercepted Wiegand's next flip and started the Minnesota Jaug ernaut on another touchdown ram page. Don Johnson, 200-pound fullback, capped the 80-yard drive with a one-foot smash for the fi nal tally. Bailey's kick was true again. Myers' Punting Strong Jim "Squat" Myers put a spar kle of courage in the Husker camp with his booming kicks. The little Husker back directed a 40-yard boot out of bounds on the Minne sota four and added a 55-yard quick kick while averaging 47 yards. Damkroger's strong defensive play at end was also impressive for the Huskers. Game Captain Fred Lorenz turned in a strong performance at his guard post. Big Tom (Train Wreck) Novak rocked Gopher ball carriers with his vi cious tackling to stand out defen sively. Halfback Bill Mueller's fight and drive marked him with Wie gand as one of the Huskers' top backfield performers. MINNESOTA NEBRASKA Grant le Samurlion Wldseth It TooKood Nominelll Ik Hoy Tonnemaker . ...c Novak Olsonoskl rg gc) Lorenz Mealey rt Becker Halenkamp re Peaek Thiele qb Costello Bye lh Hutton Daugherty rh Moomey Adams (b B. Elliott 8core by quarters: Minnesota T 70 1428 Nebraska 0 0 6 713 8coring: Minnesota touchdowns Bye, Thiele, Malosky. Johnson, Extra points Bailey, 4 (place kicks). Nebraska touchdowns Damkroger 2. Extra point Costello (place kick). Minnesota substitutions: Ends, Heln, Marcotte, Blerman, Boltau, Stuhlman; tackles, Jaszowski, Carroll, Roetman; guards, Kissell, Besen, Hendrickson, Del iago; center, Edwards; quarterbacks, Majnsky. Anonsen, Zupetz; halfbacks, FauVe, Hausken, H. Elliott, McAllater: fullbacks, Johnson. Kuzma, Bailey, Beiers dorf. Nebraska substitutions: Ends, Bailors, Doyle, Damkroger, Cochrane; tackles, E. Thompson, Sim; guards, Bedlacek, Wllkins, Jacupke; center, Partington;' quarterbacks. Wiegand, D. Thompson; halfbacks, Mueller, Collopy. K. Fischer, Ackerman, Myers; fullback, Salestrom. Officials: Jay Berwanger, Chicago, referee; Cecil Muellerleile, St. Louis, um pire; Clay Van Reen, Bradley, field Judge; E. F. Barrows. Coe. linesman. CLASSIFIED LOST Black Lifetime Schaeffer Pen. Name inscribed. Return to Quentin 8. Jones. Huskervllle. 5-1060. BALLROOM dancing! Studio 2705 Royal Court. Nellie Speidcll. Telephone 3-5480. a - -s "T oltravi fall wailir u.-H.n ft " ' " ilrnnH frirnria ret lorether" over Soccer-Ball Begins Girls' IM Activities The girls' annual intramural soccer-baseball tournament will begin Monday, Oct. 6, it was an nounced Saturday by Mims Weeth, WAA vice-president. All games will be played behind the coliseum pormptly at 5:05 p. m. and all teams are required to be assembled and checked in by 5:00 p. m. Health permits for any girl not registered in a regular p. e. class must be filed in the WAA office by Saturday, Oct. 18. Schedule for the week of Oct. 6 to 9 is as follows: MONDAY Wilson Hall vs. Delta Gamma No. 2. Sigma Delta Tau vs. Kappa Delta. TCKSDA Y Terrace Hall vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma No. 2. PI Beta Phi vs. Alpha Chi Omega No. 2. WEDNKHDAY Chi Omega No. 2 vs. Blgma Knppa. Kernels vs. Delta Delta Delta No. 3. Till KSDAY Alpha Chi Omega No. 1 vs. Chi Omega No. 1. Towne Club vs. Alpha Phi No. 3. Records for last" year have been tabulated, and over 647 girls from 24 different groups participated in intramural sports during the 1946 47 season. Wilson Hall won the participation in all tournaments, and Alpha Chi Omega had the largest number of individual en trants in IM activities. Alpha Omicron Pi won the largest number of tournaments and Veter-Anns the second largest. VARSITY GYMNASTICS All men interested in groin? out for varsity gymnastics this season are asked to report to Coach Charlie Miller any after noon at 4:00 in his office, 206 Coliseum, or in the Coliseum basement. Individual conditioning- workouts will begin this week. Beta Sigs Cop 7-0 IM Thriler Striking in the last 10 seconds, Beta Sigma Psi eked out a 7-0 win over the Cornhusker Co-op crew in one of two intramural contests played Friday afternoon. The Beta Sigs, after squelching a late Co-op thrust, went to the air lanes with Merle Reilly pitch ing. Reilly hit Bob Bull with a long pass that carried to the 15 yard line with only 49 seconds re maining. The same combination missed on another attempted, but clicked on a third heave to the two-yard line. With less than 10 seconds left, Reilly hit Norbert Teiman in the end zone for the game-winning tally. Orv Schmieding ran the ex tra point over. In the other Friday test, YMCA scored early in the first half and portected its 6-point lead to cop a 6-0 decision from a scrappy Hus kcrville gang. A 35-yard aerial flop from Duane Parker to Ralph Kellog ac counted for the game's only score. The Presbyterian House team won a 2-0 forfeit decision when a complete Melting Pot team failed to appear. Minnesota Cops Two-Mile Event Minnesota's two-mile team came out on the low end of a 23-13 score to defeat the Uni versity of Nebraska distance run ners in a dual meet Saturday morning at Memorial Stadium. Dick Kitty covered the route in 9 minutes, 55 seconds to place first. Esref Aydin, Nebraska transfer student from Turkey was second. Aydin, running unat tached, was timed in 10:14. Stan Martin of Nebraska cop ped fifth while Don Thiel another Nebraska runner finished i n sixth place. Warren Koeniz, Ne braska, ran seventh. Roy Good and Tom Good of Minnesota finished third and fourth while S. A. elson, Minne sota came in eighth. IM Notes A new blowing program for the faculty members will get under way at once, it was announced Saturday by L. E. Means, intra mural director, following a meet ing of faculty and student repre sentatives from all colleges and departments on campus. Teams may enter from any de partment, school or college and entries must be filed at Intramural headquarters, 207 Coliseum, Ex tension 21, no later than 5 p. m., Wednesday, Oct. 15. Leagues and schedules will be organized for the year's play fol lowing the filing. Matches will be held from 4 to 6 p. m. on Mon days and Tuesdays with no team bowling more than once a week. 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