I . X- -I t: Tuesday, November 14, 1950 PAGE 3 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 1 m The Nebraska Huskers will have to face a "fighting' mad" band of Cyclones from Iowa State and the top passer and re ceiver of the conference this Saturday in the home ground finale. A victory is necessary for the Scarlet to keep in running Xor the Big Seven championship. They can tie for the title by defeating Oklahoma in the last game of the season, Nov. 25, ? S.J "IjO.i Courtesy ij.ncoin journal FRAN NAGLE . . . directed the Husker offensive attack very well Saturday in addition to completing seven passes for 158 yards. providing that both the Huskers end Sooners win over dangerous opponents this weekend. While the Huskers will be op posing Iowa State, the Sooners will be host to the Missouri Ti gers at Norman. Everything to Gain Both the Cyclones and the Ti gers will throw everything they possess in their Saturday battles. They both have nothing to lose and everything to gain. For the Iowa Staters, it will be passer Billy Weeks leading the way. Weeks has been shin ing for the past two years with his brilliant passing, but has yet a chance to demonstrate his wares on the Cornhuskers. Last year, the Cyclone-Husker fray at Ames was played in a perpetual downpour of rain, and in a sea of mud which kept passing down to a minimum. A 70-yard punt return by Husker Harry Meginnis saved the day for Nebraska that afternoon as the Scarlet and Cream won, 7-0. For the past three years, the Cyclone faithful have claimed that Nebraska has "lucked-out" in their victories over the Iowans. They say that "passing Willy" will see to it that the Huskers have no such luck this year. Weeks to Doran And Weeks is just that. He could, and probably will, give the Nebraskans a long afternoon this Saturday. The conference's leading pass catcher will also be on hand to oppose the Huskers and the Weeks to Jim Doran combination is what the Husker coaches are Betting out to stop. Missouri climbed into third place in the league standings with their 21-19 win over Colo rado last Saturday. The Tigers, a prime favorite along with Okla homa in pre-season, will be an underdog to the Sooner although the Missourians have been strik ing a harder bargain every week. J-M Volleyball Thursday; 20 The intramural volleyball playoffs get under way this Thursday, Nov. 16, climaxing a very short season. Twenty of the 35 teams participating in the round robin play will go into the playoffs seeking greater lau rels or trying to comeback from Bierman Quits As Head Coach Of Minnesota The "Goodbye Bernie" signs in Minneapolis did their trick today as Bernie Bierman, head coach at the University of Minnesota for 16 years, resigned his posi tion. He asked to be relieved at the end of the present season. Bierman said he had had the move in mind for some time and that he felt this was as good a time as any. He said the move was not prompted by the fact the current Gopher team has failed to win a game thus far this season. He said that since World war II, the coaching job had been particu larly difficult. Bierman's over-all coaching record includes 162 victories, 57 defeats and 11 ties. In the 16 years he has coached at Minne sota, his teams have won 92 games, lost 34 and tied six. They were mythical national cham pions according to the Associated Press poll in 1936, 1940 and 1941. No Plans Bierman stated that he had no plans for the future and that he was not entertaining any offer of a coaching job at this time. Dana X. Bible, athletic director of the University of Texas and former Nebraska coach, declined comment today when asked if Bierman would be considered as head football coach at his school. Head Coach Blair Cherry will retire as Texas University coach after this season ends. Bierman's action was an nounced at a news conference in the office of the Athletic Director of MU who added that "Bierman could stay on in the athletic de partment in any capacity he wishes" and "we hope he will remain." Bierman became bead football coach at Minnesota in 1932 suc ceeding Fritz Crisler and coming Irom Tulane University. :l r II,! 3 .91 1 ' I 'it I i .M Every time Oklahoma team and Nebraska's Bobby Reynolds take the field from now on they are setting new records and each time they are breaking their own records. Sooners Stretch Mark The Sooners stretched their modern victory streak for major college to 28 games by beating Kansas at Lawrence by 33-13 score. Reynolds scored 23 points against Kansas State and rolled up 141 yards rushing. The points brought Bobby's 'point total for the year to 126 for seven games. That eclipses the old league mark of 121 by Missouri's Bob Steuber in 12 games in 1942. The 141 yards brought his total land efforts to 1151 yards by rushing. That bettered Steube'r's total of 1098, also set in 1942. In other action this week, Kansas State will be host and r Courtesy J-lncoln Journal JIM LEVENDUSKY . . . shone brilliantly on defense for the Huskers in the little time he played against Kansas State. definite underdogs to the Kansas Jayhawks at Manhattan while Colorado will take on the Uni versity of Oregon at Boulder. BIG SEVEN STANDINGS w 1 t pet pts opp Oklahoma .,...4 0 0 1.000 138 38 NEBRASKA ..3 10 .7.V) 141 100 Missouri 2 1 1 .62.1 103 86 Kansas 2 2 O .600 ft 108 Iowa Stat 2 2 1 .Mill 75 87 Colorado 2 4 0 .333 127 114 Kansas State ...0 A 0 .000 41 182 ALL GAMES w 1 t pet pts opp Oklahoma 7 0 0 1.000 214 79 NEBRASKA ....5 1 1 .7RK 212 15ft Kansas 6 3 0 .825 231 Ifil Missouri 3 3 1 .500 130 141 Iowa State 3 4 1 .438 135 153 Colorado 3 4 1 .438 175 159 Kansaa State ..1 7 0 .125 109 261 BCORINO ALL GAMES td pat pts REYNOLDS, NU 18 18 126 Stlnson, KU II 0 66 Hoilel. CU 11 o 66 Vessels, Okla 9 0 54 HoaK, KU 8 0 48 Stephens. Mo. 7 0 42 Doran, la St. ... P 0 36 Williams, Colo ....... 5 1 31 Amberg. KU 6 0 30 RIG SEVEN REYNOLDS, NU 10 13 73 Model. CU , fi 0 54 Stlnton, XII 6 0 36 Vessels, Okla, 6 0 30 Stsphens. Mo. 6 O 30 Hoag. KU 4 O 24 Doran. la St ... 4 0 24 Olorloso, Mo 2 11 23 Williams, Colo. 3 1 19 ADDUCI, NU , 2 0 12 SIMON, NU 2 O 12 REGIER, NTT .....2 0 12 Anderson, Okla 2 0 12 Grav, Okla 2 O 12 Heatlv, Okla 2 O 12 Arnold. Okla , 2 0 12 Ackermann, Mo 2 (i 12 Klein, Mo 2 0 12 Schaake, KU 2 0 12 Smith, KU 2 0 12 Weeks, la St 2 O 12 Venika, Colo 0 12 12 Mosher, Colo .....2 0 12 Playoffs Start Teams In a poor early season showing. All 20 teams will see action Thursday in first round play and then the playoff action will cease until after Thanksgiving vaca tion. Twelve teams will battle for the All-Fraternity championship in which four teams will get first round byes. Four teams will tus sle for the All-Denominational championship and four outfits will vye for the Independent title. All-U Title After the three crowns have been won, the Denom and In dependent title-holders will tan gle for the All-Unaffiliated crown and that champion in turn will face the Fraternity cham pion for the All-University championship. The first rounds must be played this Thursday so Wed nesday night will be used as "tie-breaking" night. All teams that have any chance of finish ing among the first four in their league are asked to be ready to play Wednesday night if they should finish in a tie with any other outfit in their league. Leagues I, II, IV, and V could very easily result in ties among its members. Only league III seems fairly safe from ending the season with tics. Team managers are urged to keep close account of their position in their respective league and keep their outfits available to play Wednesday. The standings as of Saturday, Nov. 11, are: Klmim No I'hl llt'llR Thrill 7 Helta HimIIihi 5 Hlirnm Aluli KimIIihi . . , A Alpha. Tau Omnia A Kanna Hlxma 7 I'hl (lamina Delta 4 iMKiie II W Slum I'hl f'.rMlIwi H I'hl Kann l'l H Beta Kln l'l 7 Delta Thu Dvlla 4 Beta Thela I'l 5 Hlirnm I'hl K Alpha llannna Hho 4 lwKtte 111 W Rmwn IV law . , . 14 Hiaiiia 'Alpha aili ...18 Kami lliniee 13 Delta Hlirma Phi.. 1. 2 111 1 1 II Thela Chi 5 Thela XI 4 I'lnneer IIohm 4 Zi'ta Beta Tau 1 20 J-eaXlir IV W L Lutheran Htiident House......... A 1 Newman I'lllli 7 Bnpllet House ft I'resbv limine 1 MethmlM House K Alt VMCA 2 laKue V W Cosmopolitan Club 1H A. H. M. K JO Men's llnmi H CiirnllUHlinr Coop K Ait Klen'N Chll) 0 iJimpeHnH H Ni'hraska Coop 2 4 4 8 10 O 15 W ft 0 12 18 i " 5 I m Li ft CHANGED MY MIND Gehlbach (52) and Dave Torbett (41) are both unsuccessful in their attempt to stop Reynolds. Fran Nagle (21 ) is circling back to help team-mate Bobby while Frank Simon (81) is charging downfield . The action took place in the first quarter of the Husker 49-.il vic tory over Kansa s State Saturday. Fiji's, ISAE's Reach Top in Bowling Leagues; Delts Hit A newcomer is atop league I standings in intramural bowling this week, another newcomer has climbed into a tie for first place in league III, while the leaders in leagues II and IV increased their margin over the field. Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon were the title as pirants that made the biggest climbs over the week of competi tion. The Fijis took two of three lines from Delta Tau Delta over the week to hand the Delts their first defeats of the year and also to send them down to second place in league I. The Sig Alphs collected five wins in six tries during the week. They allowed Beta Sigma Psi to win their first game of the year while tripping them 2 to 1 and then downed Theta Xi three straight. Sigma Nu, last Bob Reynolds Leads Nation In Scoring Nebraska's Bobby Reynolds appeared today to have a stranglehold on college football's 1950 point scoring leadership. The sophomore flash ran wild in the Huskers' 49-21 rout of Kansas State Saturday, scoring three times and getting five con versions to boost his pacemaking point total to 126. That figure and his 1,151 yards rushing con stitute Big Six and Big Seven records for a season. Bobby now has 18 touchdowns and 18 conversions in seven (;onrtesv Lincoln Journal BOB REYNOLDS 126 Points games. And Nebraska still has two games to go this season Iowa State's this Saturday and Oklahoma a week later. Tied for second place behind Reynolds are Bob Courtney of Canterbury college (Indiana) and Bob Miller of Emory and Henry (Va.), each with 114 points. Courtney lost his tem porary lead over Reynolds over the weekend when he scored only one TD and that was Can terbury's season finale. Johnny Bright, Drake's star, scored four times Saturday in beating Iowa State, 35-21, and raised his point scoring total to 108, good enough for fourth place. That was Drake's last scheduled game of the season but it enabled Bright to break the record for total yards gained. His 2,400 topped the old mark of 2-187 set by Frankie Sinkwich of Georgia eight years ago. The scoring leaders: R Ki-a' l VI fc.i.,iiiiiir'w, JfL td pat i Pts 18 18 0 126 19 0 0 114 j 19 0 0 114 18 0 0 108 13 15 0 93 15 0 0 90 14 0 0 84 14 0 0 84 13 1 0 78 13 0 0 78 13 0 0 78 Courtney, Canterbury Miller, Emory & Henry ... Bright, Drake Thomson, Dana (Neb.) Wrisrht. W. Texas St. Smith, Tex. A. & M. William, So. Dakota St. 1 Payne, Gust. Adolphus 1 Curry, La crosse T. . Lornnis, La Crosse T. . KNU Schedule Tuesday 3:00 Sweet and Lowdown. 3:15 Blues and Boogy. 3:30 Musical Antics. 3:45 Meet Dr. Professor. 4:00 Campus News and Notes. 4:10 Sports. 4:15 Coed Review. 4:30 Mid-Country. 4:45 riatter Chatter. 5:00 Sipn Off. S - e w could be Bobby Reynolds' words to Wildcat John Schwerdt (45) as Bobby fakes a punt and runs in an at ra. Schwerdt missed Bobby, but another Aggie caught him before he picked up the needed yardage. Walt " A a . 1 T .1.1.. TT1 TV T 1 f1 m r mvinlim-if-r l-v Ir T f nO I n week all alone at the top of league III, won two of three lines from Pi Kappa Phi to keep at least a share of the lead. League I Other action in league I saw Alpha Tau Omega trip Sigma Phi Epsilon 2 to 1 and Delta Up silon sweep three from Pioneer House. Forfeits in that league were three from Tau Kappa Ep silon to Delta- Upsilon and three from the Tekes to Sigma Phi Epsilon. League II .saw unbeaten Delta Sigma Pi accept three forfeit wins from Beta Theta Pi to re main in first place with a 9-0 record. Theta Chi won two of three each from Phi Kappa Psi and FarmHouse. The Phi Psi's in turn took two out of three from Sigma Chi and the Sigs won from Brown Palace 2-3. In league III Kappa Sigma beat Phi Delta Theta 2-1 and Beta Sigma Psi downed Pi Kappa Phi by the same margin. League IV League IV saw the Methodist House lose six games three on forfeit to Delta Theta Phi and the other three to Dental Col lege Frosh. The unbeaten Luth erans continued in first place in that league with three straight wins over Delta Theta Phi. The standings after three weeks are: 1acue I Phi Oamma Delta, 10 1 Delta Tail Delta 1 2 Delta Hpsllnn 9 8 Alpha Tau Omefira II 4 Hlema Phi Knsilon A Pioneer House 2 7 Tau Kappa Kpsllon O 12 League n Delta Sllfma Pi 0 Thela I'hl s Sigma Chi 1 Phi Kappa Psi f Farm House Brown Palace 3 fl Beta Theta J'l I League in Kltrma "Nu R 4 fcixma Alpha Kpsllon K 4 Kappa Sigma Phi Delta Theta Beta Sigma Psi 3 Pi Kappa Phi Theta Xi 2 ' League IV Lutheran Mil. House fl ID Dental College Frosh 8 n Alpha Kappa Psi J I Delta Theta Phi Newman Club 2 Methodist House Meetings Set For Interested Independents A special call is being made by the intramural department this week to contact all independent men who would like to play basketball in intramural compe tition this winter, but who do not have a team with which they can play. The 1-M Department is hold ing two special meetings this week, one on the city campus and one at Ag College in an ef fort to find out how many men would like to participate in the cage sport and also to help for mulate some independent bas ketball teams. Thursday will be the meeting night. The meeting on the city campus is being held in the Physical Education Building in room 101 at 5 p.m. The meeting on the Ag campus will be at 7 p.m. in the gym in the Ag Ac tivities building. All men who are interested to any degree are urged to be at one or both of the meetings to get further information. If a lew men would like to participate together, the remainder of your team could be found at or by these meetings. These will be the only meet ings of this kind for basketball, so everyone interested is asked to attend. Irish-Navy Spl it Hinted The "Washington Evening Star , said today that Navy is ending its football series with Notre Dame afttr .24 years in which they've won four games. The Star said the Fighting Irish, dropped by Army in 1947, will not appear on Navy's 1951 schedule for the first time since 1927. It said that "indications are that Navy will adopt a long range policy of playing "moder ate" schedules. The Middies continually have one of the roughest schedules each year of any college football team, very much so as compared to the schedule of their arch rival, Army. Army can boast of defeating only one good team a year while the Middies face ten of the strongest in the nation. In South Bend, Athletic Direc tor Ed Krause said that the Irish will play Navy in Cleveland, Nov. 2, 1951. He attributed re ports that the series might end as untruthful rumors. YJ ' sir : Wrestling Tournament Start Announced by The 1950-51 Intramural Wres tling Tournament will start Tuesday, Dec. 12. Preliminaries are scheduled for each of the eight weight classes, and will begin at 5:15 p.m. The weight classes this year are as follows: 123 lbs., 130 lbs., 147 lbs., 157 lbs., 167 lbs., 177 lbs., and heavyweight. Organizations may have as many entries in each weight class as it wishes, but an individ ual contestant may enter but one class. Scoring for the 1950 meet will be on a 4-place basis with first place receiving 8 points; second place, 6 points; third place, 4 points, and fourth place, 2 points. Trophy Awarded A trophy will again be award ed to the team champions, with Sigma Nu copping last year's Your College Clothing Store Here's the Complete Works ... In One Conven ient Package . . . Featuring Six Famous Brands TUXEDO OUTFIT A I tlie Amazingly Low "I'l'ice Of Here's Whal You Get: "Afler-Six" Tuxedo Arrow Dreas Shirt Wembley Tie SMank. Studs and Links Interwoven Sox Jarman Tux Shoes And All of This Yep ... ihih it, really n acmip. Ve'Ve eatlicind topctlier all tlie nncemiary item for formal wr . - . and puckaped them at -one low prke. And look ! Every one has a lanious Lnind name . . a lirund yoiTU rei'.ognlse for myle and quality. Don't miiw thi opportunity to purchatie a complete formal outfit at one, low price. Auk uny of the college board Xellowc about tin . . and they'll tell you it an -unbeatable value'! By the way, if you have dress bhoee. . - well sell you the woilu (minus the Bhoee) for only $53 pry w. v4 ' ' V "" J - M Dept. honors. Medals will be awaraea i to the individual champion in each weight class. ! All contestants must have had j a minimum of five practice ses- j sions between the dates of Nov. ' 27 and Dec. 8 before they be come eligible for the meet. The varsity mats in the Coli seum basement are available be tween the hours of 3 and 6 p.m., daily. It is important to have your name on the intramural prelim inary wrestling practice list. If your name is not on the list, you will not be eligible for intra mural wrestling. Weigh In Contestants must weigh in from 3 to 6 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 11. Pairings will be posted on the Intramural bulletin board the morning of Dec. 12. For Only $5 MAGEITS Second Floor Know Your Huskers At Coach Bill Glass ford's call at end this year, will be Rich Novak, who hails from Omaha, Nebraska. Rich is 22 years old, weighs 192 and stands 6-0. He gradu ated from Omaha South High Schools in January of 1947, and r.nnriRKV Lincoln Journal RICH NOVAK while there, he earned three let ters in football, one in baseball, and one in basketball. In high school football he played full back, at Nebraska he has taken on the job of a defensive end. Rich is a brother to Tom Novak who played last year, and to Ray who is a freshman. Rich is a senior in Teachers College. NEBRASKA Stationery 10c, 89c and $1.50 Goldenrod Stationery Store 215 orth 14th Street ! '-4 I i r i 'I ' " H.i nm ' f V ' ' $ A - i ' It if, ' f 4 lr.... fl 4 'I ' 3 Ji "7 T "J Sr. '" V ? ft. i V