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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1950)
Friday, October 27, 1950 THE DAILY NEBRASKAM PAGE 3 ere Are Your Winners Expert and Mo.- Colo.- 111.- Ohio St.- Turd.- Wis.- N.D.- Stan- rpnn.- Ky. rercentaires Ok. A&M Utah Ind. Iowa -'CLA H.XV. M St. JVash. . Navy Ga. Tech. BrReichenbach .738 Mo. Colo. Ind. Ohio St. UCLA N. W. N. D. Stan. Perm. Ky. CTBurmeister .688 Mo. Colo. 'ind. Ohio St. Purd. Wis. N.D. Stan. Penn. Ky. JerryWarren '.688 Mo. Colo. III. Ohio" St." Purd. Wis. D. Wash. Penn. Ky. Bill Mundelt .663 Mo. Colo". Ml. Ohio St." Purd. NLW. N7D. Wash. Penn. Ky. Bob Baiiks .638 Mo. Cola! III. OhiVSt. U?LA N- w- ND- VVash. Penn. Ky. Jacklfoheri 7638 Mo Coo. III. Ohio St. Purd. Wis. N. D. Wash. Penn. Ky DiciFFord 7613 MoT Colo. III. OhicTst. UCLA N. W. M St. Stan. Penn. Ky;; Frank Jacobs .613 Mo. Colo. Ind. b'hi'oSt7 Purd. Wjs. M St. Wash Penn. Ky. RodTRiggs i613.Mol Colo. jlll. Ohio St. UCLA N. W. MSt. Wash. Penn. Ky. In ( n . . it1 (J Courtey Lincoln Journal 10X STRASHEIM . . . slated to start for the Cornhuskers rs offensive guard. Don has been a reliable starter all year Sport Editor, Dally Nrtnukaa Nebraska's Cornhuskers went through their last practice on home sod before shoving off for Kansas Thursday afternoon and the situation brightened up a bit. Good news is that Bill "Rocky" Mueller will be in ac tion against the Jayhawkers as trill Don Bloom. Mueller, who injured a leg against Penn State has not been working out with the team this week, but Coach Bill Glassford said that he would see action. Bloom injured his neck in practice Tuesday night and has been wearing it in a semi-cast since then. Glassford has slated both to start against the Kan cans. Kay Curtis, bothered by back injuries all season, is also slated to start the fray. Ends Improve More good news came from the Husker practice field in the form of improved end play a xnlnerahle snot in the Nebraska line in early games. Looking pood and starting for the Husk- ers at offensive ends Saturday yoiideracDg IHli!jiskiP8 Leave for CCaonsais it , . - - - I Court sty Unroln Journal CHARLEY TOOGOOD Co-CapUins I-M Keglers Get Under Way; Skalla, Anderson, SAE High Intramural bowling got under ords of 2-1. The K. Sigs tripped way this week with ten matches j Pi Kappa Phi while the Nu's being completed in the four lea- I downed Sigma Alpha Epsilon. gues. Seven teams out of the 20 ' SAE's Hieh in action over tne weeK over the week are sporting perfect records of three wins and no losses with the other three winners getting a 2-1 record. Phi Gamma Delta tmd Delta Tau Delta are perched atop lea gue I after the first two nights' Delts downed Tau Kappa Epsilon. Skalla Tone Keith Skalla of the Delts reg istered the single game high score over the week with a 213 in his first line. In third place after the first week is Pioneer House with a 2-1 win over Sigma Phi Epsilon. I ineia ni, uigma cm, ana ! Delta Sigma Pi all snort nerfect w.-.m-H f i.-oo ,; ,r in first place in league II Theta Chi's downed Brown are and the Sigma Chi's tripped Beta Theta Pi. l''t- FiuPeIv thi" S 3;-t(Sio the weri h a 20 in th ' taVhcnl faulty trip-flmex-Sm Deft? uSonwhrthl I nalgame with the Kappa Sigs. ; Ped prematurely. Stinson, a Delta Sigma Ti earned f heir , i ' T uT, ' , ." ul"oul" three wins over Farm House. ! pfVn into com Tlie Pi's total of 802 in the final i iJCUUOn- second highest this week. Phi Delta Theta is the lone leader in league III by sweep ing their three games from Theta Xi. Kappa Sima and Sigma Nu are in second place with rec- Phi Dell Upset By SAE, 27-0 SAE turned giant killer Wed nesday ni;;ht at the ag campus as they stopped the rampaging Phi Delts cold in their tracks. It was the last game of the sea son for both teams and the Sig Alphs pulled the surprise of the season by dropning the Phi Delts, 6-0 in an "A" engagement. The game was much more one sided than the score indicates. On two other occasions the SAE's narrowly missed touch downs. They were residing on the Phi Delt two yard line when the contest ended. The game's one lone touch down came in the second quarter as Joe Gifford heaved a fifty yard puss to John Leach who caught it in the end zone. Phi Delt defenders knocked down a Bob Scoville to Gifford aerial , try for the extra point. I Sig Alph completely bottled up the Phi Delt offense which ! had bdfore been one of the most leared in the league. i Courtsey Lincoln Journal DOX BOLL . . . gets the nod for a starting guard berth on the Husker defense platoon at Lawrence Saturday. are Frank Simon and Dick Regier. Sophomores George Taynich and George Prochaska have also shown a bright spark and are slated to start the defensive ends. Charley Toogood will see ac tion on both offense and defense at Lawrence. Charley and Curtis are the only ones named by Glassford to start on both units. Toogood was chosen as co-captain of the fray along with Bill Mueller. The Husker squad lost another man Wednesday when Bob Schreiner of Hastings dropped football this year. Bob had made little progress from an early sea son appendectomy. He is a soph omore. At Lawrence, Coach Sikes sent his club through another offensive-defensive drill. It was obvious that "Churning Charley" Hoag will not carry all the of fensive load against the Huskers as a new star, Wade Stinson, is coming up fast. Qfincrifi TTrl j Stinson, a tightly-wound Kan- rh5't s r Courtwv L'ncnln Journal BILL MUELLER The Sig Ali-hs hud the top game score of the week, however, as they chalked-up an 816 in their first game with the Nu's. B. Roeser of Sigma Nu had a credi- table 517 for three lines Knchelek of the Pi Kaps turned , Pi Kans gaining the thi-d game ! from tiie KS boys by the slim ! margin of 775 to 770. In league IV only one match has gone into the books. The Lu theran Student Association down ed the Newman Club keglers three straight to take the lead in that league Andreon Has 530 Anureson ana uison came Andreson and Olson Pal-!f,,or tthe,r Jlin 1,ns' ; ,so,i s tos iM th flrst ' Alpha Kappa Ps. cne x i: a .1 Anare- rst week. Dental 17,..rt,.V,.r. ...... i i .i : .a Grid Play oi is Are Postponed The intramural department an nounced Thursday that the be ginning of the football playoffs will not be P'riday as previously scheduled, but will begin Mon day instead. Six fraternity "A" games will be on tap at 4:30 p.m. at the Ag College fields. EAST MILLS 70th and South DAKCE SATURDAY, SEPT. 16 JIMMY WHITE ORCHESTRA ALWAYS THE FINEST IN DANCING Adm: $1.00 Tax Incl. Vi-, i .v-i . in h n CHnnn r. kirthnt't lim i- rr.rn ; VOrO CTTlfathorl hPt'Dnrt rPPftpTll. I -ins rL ui c wub nihil UJJJUI1 Ldi JXl trie jjcuiruoiH, van vni uivuuac Courtsey Lincoln Journal VERL SCOTT . . . stellar line backer starts his fifth contest in that position for the Cornhuskers. sas halfback with a badly crip pled hand, will go into Satur day's battle with Nebraska sec ond only to the Cornhuskers' Bobby Reynolds among league ground gainers. Underpublicized and underrated at the season's start, the lightning little guy to date has unreeled 429 yards and five touchdowns, not only good enough to pace the Jayhawkers' new overland attack but also to rank 18th on the national tables. Wade passed his illustrious teammate, Charlie Hoag, in their own private derby last week when he rolled 116 yards against Oklahoma A. &M. as Kansas reaped its fourth straight vic tory, 40-7. The big clip here was a 68 yard dash off a counter play. Stinson's sudden burst to prominence this season . . . his senior hitch . . . has fitted the Jayhawkers with a slashing tri dent, of which Hoag and Full back John Amberg form the other two prongs. Their com bined Tunning has lifted Kansas to sixth among NCAA giants with an average of 303. 0 yards per game, highest in Red and Blue annals. Hoag is rolling at 421 net in 75 carries, despite the oppositions' constant ganging of his favorite lanes, while Am berg is sixth among conference , runners with 273 in 39 lugs. Good rerformance : t'sed in only one game as a sophomore, and only for spot assignments last autumn, btin son wasn't considered seriously in KU's first string plans this season. Hal Cleavinger, well -regarded Manhattan sophomore, drew most of the starting calls at right half during the early miiling. But Stinson changed this in the opener against Texas Christian with a hard-ripping performance. He gained only 51 ! yards in 14 carries but it was the manner m which he tore through tough tackling from the Frogs' eight and nine man lines that impressed the coaching : staff. He, like KU's team, has im- proved each week. While the ; enemy watched Hoag, the fear some Oak Park, 111., whizz, Stin son has made the most of his opportunities. You could say i that's been his formula all the way. ! Stinson reported as a fresh ' man three yesrs ago with a six 1 man high school football back- ground, a carload of determina : tion, and that badly shattered ; left hand. He was fresh from a j two-year grind in the hospital where the army medics per formed a minor miracle in re storing fingers and palm that at Camp Robinson, Ark., when the accident occurred. Gangrene hit Stinson's forearm three days after the explosion and he nearly lost his entire arm. The Huskers' starting lineups: miFEKMVU . iprirf I'Hyiltfh T OiltrlMy TwlfWd (. Don Hull ii l-:d UtitniHtiii T IHckfiwelPln : (.Minr1 I'riM'ha.Ua I.R VTl Scott I B Kol Mullen Hit Kuv ilrtlx UK Dun Klmilll 8 Kon ( lark V. Frank Wlmnn T rhaiipy I nogtiod i Art Bhii'T Jw MrOIII 4, Hon KtrathHm T Mall .jwllinao IH' k lirnlt-r K Fran Naitlr I.H H.l. H. vihMiI. mi Hill Mwlipr J'K Kay ( urtlH ' 1 '"'" .mum., " v7 .. t. .... . t t t TOMORROW NIGHT! SATURDAY, OCT. 28, 8:30 P.M. 1950 FIREMAN'S BALL University of Nebraska Coliseum Admission -ONLY $1.00 Fer Person, Tax Incl. Know Your Huskers This year as last. Bill Glass ford has a talented backfield from which to pick. One of these backfield men that he will be counting on will be Jack Carroll, Courtwv Lincoln Journal a senior halfback, who hails from MeCook, Nebraska. Jack is 23 years old. weighs 160, and stands 5-9. He grad uated from McCook High School where he lettered three years in football, two years in basketball, ana also was on their boxing team. Jack is a senior in Teachers College and he is affiliated with ! Aipna iau imega fraternity. Taus Crush Kappa Sigma ATO "A" footballers continued their winning ways Wednesday evening as they roared past a completely demoralized Kappa Sig "A" outfit, 27-0. Dick Bick was the big gun for the Taus as he passed for all four touchdowns and two of the three extra points. Knox Jones also turned in a top-notch performance, catching three of 'the four TD passes and carrying j for the other extra pomt. The first score came on the Bick to Jones combination with Bick tossing from the 20 yard stripe. Jones skirted end for the extra point and the Taus held a j 7-0 first quarter lead. Kappa Sig managed to hold j during the remainder of the first half, but the ATO team went in- ! to high gear in the third quarter I as Bick tossed to George Mackey j for the second Tau touchdown. It was Bick again tossing for the : extra point, this time with Kirk . Lee on the receiving end. : Early in the fourth period j Bick tossed a 45 yard strike into i the waiting arms of Jones in the end zone. Fred Cady took a pass from Bick for the extra point. Later on in the stanza the Taus added insult to injury as Bick fired a ten yard shot to, yep, you guessed it, Jones for the final tally. Sin Nu EJjics Phi Gams. 6-0 Sigma Nu's "A" football team wpited until late in the game to score six points and take a tightly contested ball game from the Phi Gam "A" squad, 6-0, at the Ag campus Wednesday night. It was a see-saw battle until midway through the fourth quar ter when Bob Hinde intercepted a Phi Gam pass on the Phi G 40 and ran it back to pay dirt. Later in the period saw the Sigma Nus threatening again only to have their scoring opportunity thwarted when Jim Schlieger in tercepted what was intended lor a touchdown pass. V it V .a 'if rCSilBUCil YO 'froiica in The Nebraska frosh left at 7:30 a.m. this morning enroute to meet the Colorado freshmen Saturday afternoon on the Boul der gridiron. The Junior Husk ers will be seeking their second win in as-many starts against the Coloradoans. The Junior Buffs will be no pushover, however. The Husk ers' opponent is heralded as the best Freshman team the Colo rado campus has ever seen. The Buff outfit will outweigh Coach Ike Hanscom's boys in the line by 18 pounds per man. The backs are a little evener distributed but the team as a whole will outweigh the Huskers by 15 pounds per man. Coach Hanscom will try to overcome this weight advantage by speed and deception. He will call on John Bordogna of Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania to lead the frosh attack at quarter back. The out-of-state frosh drew a lot of praise from those watching him perform against Weeks to Test Okla Defense That age-old argument about the irresistible force and the im movable object is going to get its 1950 twist in Ames, Iowa Sat urday when Iowa State plays host to the University of Oklahoma's all-conquering footballers. Bill Weeks, brilliant young Cy clone passer, will play the party of the first part the irresistible force, and the entire Oklahoma j team will play the party of the second part the immovable ob- i ject. Most recent national statistics show Weeks to be the leading j passer in the nation with 63 com- j pletions. The same issue of fig- ; ures shows that Oklahoma is the best team in the nation's defense TUl cent of eompletion for just 45 yards a game. Weeks has aver aged 183.6 yards of completions a gatne. Weeks has had plenty of prac tice working against tough de fenses. His own Cyclone team mates, in Big Seven statistics, have permitted only 29.1 per cent of completions for an aver age of 71 yards a game. So the Iowa senior will have had plenty of work against the difficult rie- ' Senses even before Oklahoma trains its big guns his way. A year ago Weeks completed 18 of 27 passes against the Sooners. collecting 281 yards for his work for the day. Jim Doran caught 203 of the yards for a new national record in that depart ment. P filacers Stop Theta Ai, 64) In one of the tightest contests of the evening. Brown Palace stopped Theta Xi. 6-0. Wednes day at the Ag Campus. The game was nip and tuck j ' through the first three quarters with neither team managing to score. But the Brown Palace seven capitalized on a Theta Xi miscue in the fourth period to score the deciding points. Mel Williams snatched a Theta Xi aerial on the midfield stripe and raced down the field to the tally. 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Also available for Ike's call on the offense are Dick Westin, Bobby Decker, Dennis Emanuel, and Rav Novak. Slated to start on the offen sive line are Bill Giles and Ladd Cochran at the ends, Jerry Min nick and James Jones at tackles, Marvin Anderson and Harvey Goth at guards, and Jim Oliver at center. On the defensive line will be George Bauer and Jerry Paulson at the ends, Jerry Minnick and James Jones at tackles, Marvin Anderson and Cliff Dale at the guards. In the backfield the defense will find Jim Tangedall and Bill Schabecker at the linebacking posts, Sarette and Westin at the halves, and Bobby Decker at safety. Hanscom named Decker and Gallagher as game co-captains. The Husker frosh will be out to avenge the 28-19 loss suf fered by the Nebraska varsity at Boulder two weeks ago. The trip to Boulder calls for lunch stops at McCook both go ing and returning. The gridders will stop at the Shirley-Savoy Hotel in Denver and drive over to Boulder Saturday morning. They'll return at 8 p.m. Sunday evening. Tekes Blast Farm House Turning in the second big up set of the evening, TKE downed Farm House. 18-2, Wednesday night at the Ag Campus. bailers dominated pla'y through. out the contest as they scored touchdowns in each of the first three quarters and kept the Ag men from scoring until the final quarter. TKE's first touchdown came to Dale Johnson, who 1 made a sensational catch in the end zone. Tom Sterkle attempted to run for the extra point but was stopped short of the goal. Johnson's interception of Rol and Reynolds' pass set up the comnH TKf TD. It fsmp on a lone pass from Cannaday to Sterkle in the end zone. Can naday's extra point pass to Davidson fell incomplete. The last touchdown was set up when the hard-charging TKE line broke through and blocked a Farm House punt on the 15 yard line. On the next play Cannaday fired a pass to John son for the touchdown. A Ster kei to Davidson extra point pass was incomplete. Farm House's only points came late in the game when the Ag men's line broke through and blocked Sterkel's punt forc ing him to fall on the ball be hind the goal line. DANDEE DIAPER SERVICE "DOUm PROTECTION" Baby talk magazine free each month. For informa tion call the "Double Pro tection" diaper service, H20 So. 12th St. Ph. 3-EE53 ft ft- Tel. t-KSl ...i. f- -si,.... .r. u 9 F m - at Experts Choose Fighting Irish Although sports expert throughout the nation predict that Notre Dame's ten year streak without losing two games in a row will be broken this Satur day, six of the nine Daily Ne braskan prognosticators atand fast with the belief that the Fighting Irish will at least keep their record intact this week. The gridders from South Bend, Ind., will take on the improved squad from Michigan State. Other games which will cause some de bate as to their outcome will be the Purdue-U.C.L.A. tilt, the Northwestern-Wisconsin match, and the Washington-Stanford battle. On these games five of the experts pick Purdue, North western, and Washington, while the other four choose the teams' opponents. Teams receiving all nine votes are Missouri, Colorado, Ohto State, Pennsylvania and Ken tucky. Ijast week's top picks were Bill Mundells Navy over U.S.C. tab. Frank Jacob's selection of Indiana over Notre Dame, and Rod Riggs choice of U.C.LA. to down Stanford. Due to these picks, these three were the only ones to achieve percentage gains. To us so little, to them so much. Give today to AUF. Sammies Edge Delta Sigs, 8-7 Delta Sigma Phi almost hand ed the Sigma Alpha Mu footbal lers their second upset in as many games Wednesday even ing. But the Sammies managed to stave off a late surge and over come the Delta Sigs, 8-7, in an overtime period. Sigma Alpha Mu took the lead in the second quarter as Paul Gaiter tossed to Jack Swedelson for six ponts. Gaiter passed again for the extra point, this time to Gil Rosenberg. The two teams played on an even keel after that until the last play of the ball game when Bill Wilson, operating off of the T formation, tossed a pitch out Tw . 1 1 a j . i : I u aiicn iuctjjjuu vwiu r&ui?u end for the score. It was the same running play that clicked for the extra point enabling the Delta Sigs to tie the SAM's 7-7 at the end of regulation play. But the Sammies pulled them selves together in the overtime Perid to take the 8-7 victory. For a better world, donate t AUF. MIDNIGHT SATURDAY OCT. 28 DOORS OPEN 11 P. M. 0 r AT 2 TIIEATiiES EPW'" ' .'i AND jll. REGULAR PRICES i M 1 1 i T -rt 1