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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1952)
Fridoy, October 31 , 1952 to j date I Glenn Nelson .775 Bob Serr Jj775 .742" Bart Brown Tom Becker .725 Bill Mundell .692 Howard Vann .692 Ed Berg .692 Chuck Hasek .658 Duke M. Kushncr Amie Stem .658 Ga. Tech Mich. SL California Notre D. Michigan Eight Letfermen By GARY FR AND SEN Sports Surf Writer Eight lettennen will form the nucleus of the 1952-53 version of Coach Harry Good s Nebraska, basketball team. The Cornhuskers will be out to improve a 7-17 rec- ord and will have to face a rue- eed 18-eame schedule as well as the annual Big Seven Tournament at Kansas City. Missing will he the incom parable Jim "Bocky" Buchanan, one of the greatest players to have ever roamed the Coliseum maples. The elusive guard smashed two records ss he poured in 400 points for a 16.6 point average last year and compiled the astounding threa year total of 821 points. Only one senior, Joe Good, is back for another year of cage action. Good is a two-year letter- man who does equally well at either forward or guard station. Others reternlar to the scene ef action are renter Bill Johnson, guard Fred Seger, forward Don Web er, forward Stan Matske, guard Gerry Sandbnlte, forward Paul Fredstrom and Willard Fader, a boy who can play either for ward or center. Johnson. Seger and Weber arc juniors while the remaining four are only sophomores. All-Star IM Grid Teams To Be Chosen This Week "With the regular season com pleted and the playoffs slated to begin today, the Daily Nebraska Sports Desk is again receiving ballots for the All-Star Intramural football te a s. As i previous years, all teams and ssanagert are asked to vote far the top men they faced during the season's action, turning if possible, a first and NU Favored In MU Game The Comhuskers go into their game with Missouri Saturday as' a one touchdown favorite. j Bill Glassford, upon bearing the statement, said There is do such thing as a favorite. Each team will have 11 men cm the lield," Tbe Hnker eaach thinks thai (he XT." -ML1 time 1U be ether bita-ccarutr. affair. He fears (be Muxwari attack, wWeh racked up a If -4 win aver low a State tart week to keep its lead fa Kit Sevea standings. Mbmeuri coach Doa raarot, twtod for bis ability to iir kls team to tug spirit to prods pact victories, will be gunning rvnaiag for a second straight via ever XL'. Be offers depth, a good defense, and ene f tbe suest birbly respected pausing id tenure i tbe MuSwert. DAILY HEERASKAfl CLASSIFIED ADS -PH0KE 2-7031 LOST JAvmttnal JKI ljrt Chi Jdoime. VJr Cm Jdttim. h-Xt). . Jl yuu raoeuUy juottnfl 1ij 1 TOI)g lw.ttir jwHuit. cuuuiut U.m ttji&aita, -3S!ll. O ROOM AND JBOARD Khuiu. liigukm JHurrm Huuac CHti. mm. " s ft -s : z ' f " j . r : . "m73T '-i if -: ,,! i ' ' i ii ' i" - - "" 1 ; I 4 . , I ! 4 4 KEPICI t f g.-9 ' n imam T. fxdiiMiwi OummMfi -tiUxfmw'W shjici rw.ifT-mi VifKt or Cifurrttt Htite-iirow it mwrr, vast tuo tine juiram. flubs. V n. At tin. .i.wfl. teawrtsa Briat. Vmmm a .i.i.t.xiai sjj Here Duke Ga. Tech J Mich. SL I UCLA Purdue , f California Notre Dame Illinois Ga. Tech Mich. St. UCLA Go. Tech Mich. St j UCLA Ga. Tech Mich. St. UCLA Ga. Tech Mich. SL California Notre D. Michigan J Duke j Mich. St " Ga. TechFMich. St. j Ga. Tech I Mich. StT UCLA California Notre D. California Purdue ; UCLA .658 Ga. Tech Mich. SL California Notre D. Michigan I Good end Seger were both keyi performers in the Cornhusker scoring department of last season, Both boys tallied 194 points for runnerup honors, however Good had a 8.8 average wtule Seger former Omaha Benson flash, had a 8.1 mark. Others who were prominent figures in points scored -were Matzke with 162 and John- son with 155, Among the newcomers are six sophomores who shew plenty of promise. They are forwards Don Mnenster, Dave Fahrbach, and Lee Dobler; guard Murray Backhaus; and centers Gary Benselman and Frank FaHoon. As far as height is concerned, the squad av r erages sugnuy under 6'3" with the big man being Johnson, who sports a 67" frame. (Other sky- scrapers are F a g 1 e r and Renzelman who stand and 6'5M re -4 4 . J spectively. Trie Cwczr Intttd Joanwl shorty is Back- Good ha us who is the only one of the 14 who is under six feet He is 5'11". Good stated that much of Ne sesoad team. Only these mea that opposed the teams, daring the regular seasoa and the play offs shsald be considered in the balloting. , The teams are asked to vote for seven men on each team, desig nating backs and lineman, but they need not place the men at any one position. The final tabu- jltticn will consist of four back and three linemen. Because of the vartoaa leagae separattona, the final teams will be determined by percentage ml possible votes rather than total Bomber of votes. Therefore, if a team plays five games and a maa that team receives first team votes from all five oppon ents, be will get the sted ever a man wha receive six first-team votes from sevea ppoaeaU. Both first aad second team votes will eooat towards the final tobmlattoa, five poiaU far a first-team baltot and three far a second 'team ballet. All ballots should be turned in or sent to the Sports Desk or any of the sports writers. Teams that have not gained . tbe playoffs should vote immediately, the others as soon as possible. A ballot need not contain the names of 14 men. any number will be counted, but 14 is the desired number. HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ? Do yva aomttimes wonder why it is that Oiristian Science brings happiness tad hetdom from worries and fears? You will learn some of the reasons if you will aocrpt ! invitation to tius lecture. Even if yon are only tJiglidy interested, or evtn sJu-ptical, litis lecture will interest yoa. Yon are imiitd to come and bring your friend to A FREE LECTURE -CHEISTIAJf SCnZCEi THE nYELATJON OF GOD'S ViklTilll COODKESS. Sy i&hn S. Smmmi, CS. of Chut go, IZUtuU lilexnber cf tk Board oi Leo tuxtfchip of be Motiber Cburdh, The Tirst Church of Christ, Sdentiri, is Bortois, MiUlKSil'built'tts. FEDAY. OCTOEES 31 cd t PJ-L ia Tte Firit Cksith ci Chrnl, Sde&Iist 9- Your Winners I Navy Notre D. Mlchiffgn j Notre D. Michigan j Notre D. Michig Nervy Michigan Michigan Wisconsin Illinois fRice Notre D. Notre D. Michigan oont (.eflsm braska's success will depend on the Improvement of the first year lettennen. The Husker head mentor also seemed to think that Kansas State is def initely the team to beat in the coming Big Seven race. The powerful Wildcats, under the capable leadership of Jack Gardner, have a well-balanced! crew that possess plenty of speed as well as height Their sopho more crop is also to be of excep tional ability. . As for the mnnernp . spot, well, Good feels the remaining six teams should stage quite a scrap to determine who will foUow the heels of the high flying Cats. Official practice sessions will open Saturday for the Cornhusker basketeers. Up to this time, the ; squad candidates have been shoot- , ing ana scnmmagmg among inem- K4TC9. Included in the attractive 18- game scneauie wui ix uome con tests with the University of Cali fornia, Harvard and Springfield (Mass.) College. The home opener) as well as the season's initial test' will be on December 6 when Ne- braska will play host to the Uni- varsity of South Dakota. All home . games start at 7:30 pjn. Basketball Schedule Beme Games Ixc SS l mtriMj at CaHforah ta. Rarnva Jam. IS I aHnfty af Hmnt Jaa. IT ! MM CBat 1mm. It IrtwdT af Mtaaari Fck. T Earn hamt Pk. t t ui-MMty af C Ml nil Feb. SS Cammr mt Oitili iim Games Away Dec H Miami U a Mfcwi ia bat. t WiaiWiT at faarta. HL Imc t Bm ia Tnman Laaaa Otr Jmm. S CDlarata at BmMot Fa. 1 kanai mt Lawnaca Mi la Oktaaataa Xraa fM. tl Ml unit al Cili III Mana S tm Gtm at Amta Maria It . '' a JjtflJi f. '. j'JIi W)" jj?S:3 1 I -rmTinws wrra Na orEM vita ! tj-u I ; I .l-.T".-.-,;m.-.mr. r-;.;WHri.J iiX."".'.,j.-r'-nnnr -n'r- ',T'"..,'. '"" " r-.Z., ,,.,m Jf-'';' y.i--mr. aSa.. . .-g 1 vr I I i 1 y O-Ov 1 - i ir' i i ill " I: MAIE A DRAMATIC ENTRANCE I CRISrV RUSTLING TAFFETA! j i Full skirted, 1cm scoop oediline, covd stitdaed pkaJcd ydc I j I 9-1 f sues. So cud fjuliaa for a budget price! j I Budget DrwttThlri Floor THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Wisconsin j Texas j L State K. State Utah Rice I SMU Okla. Kansas Colorado Wisconsin Texas 1 Okla, Kansas Colorado Wisconsin Texas j Okla. Texas Okla. Kansas Utah Texas Okla. Kansas j Colorado Texas Okla. Kansas Colorado Texas Okla. Kansas Colorado Texas Okla. Kansas Colorado Texas Okla Kansas Colorado Texas Okla. Kansas Colorado- Texas Okla. Kansas Colorado-' Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Tough Foe Big 7 Leading Tigers By GLENN NELSON Sports Editor The Nebraska-Missouri clash at Memorial Stadium Saturday is tabbed as one of the top games of the Big Seven this season, as the second-place Cornhuskers will be trying to tip the Tigers from their top rung on the conference ladder. Coach Bill Glassford is still un certain about his opening lineup for the game. George Mink, of- tensive end starter who put out for the season with a broken collarbone at Colorado last week. nas left an open position in toe NU offensive lineup. Andy Loehr, Turtle Creek, Pa. pS3'grabber, will no doubt get the nod. The glue-fingered sophomore performed grace fully at Fobem Field la BeaUer. If Loehr starts at left wing, then Emit Radix, another sophomore newcomer, may be starting on the opposite side of the line, according to Glassford s present pains. Ted Connor will again open at left end u ienr is piacea at ngnt Several baekfield mea may be moved Into the starting offen sive Uncap, as the Hasher eeach has beea working alternately with tw backfield eembiBa ttans tn aerlmmage this week. John Bordogna directs both out- as quaneroacx, wiw tsiii P"Jer. JD5UU Korinek at btfbcks and Ray Novak as full- hMP a aha unit mwM Tn ralA vmw vaa wu uiut eusvi, agu VTJC( dahl and Bob Smith at the half back spots and George Cifra at full in the other combination. The probable affenstve Bae pbtees Harvey Goth and Jim Oliver at the tackle positions; Kay Curtis aad George Pre ehaaka, gvards; aad Bob Ober Ua, center. Oberlin, along with guard Jerry Paulson, missed last week's game Birtkday Cards See one of the finest and largest selections in Lincoln Goldenrod Stationery Store 215 North 14th Street 1 Kansas j Colorado For NU at CU, The defensive squad probably win Include Bill Schabacker aad Dennis Emanuel, ends; Jerry Minnick and Ed Hus mann, tackles; Max Kitselmaa and Don Boll, guards; Vert Scott aad Carl Brasee, line, backers; Dan Brown and Jim Teisley, halfbacks; and Cheek Chamley, safety. Missouri, which juggled its starting backfield before dropping the Iowa State Cyclones, 19-0, last wee, wiu nang on to its backs, Tony Scardlno at quarterback, Jim Hook at left half, Bill Rowe kamp at right half, and Nick Car ras at fullback. Nebraska medics are still an. certain whether Boh Reynolds will be ready for action Satur day. He will certainly kick points, Glassford said. Reynolds led the Huskers to a 40-34 victory over the Tigers in 1950, scoring three touchdowns and four extra points in the wild scoring affair. The NU-MU game is picked by many to be another high-scoring one this year. Coach Glassford seemed very concerned Thursday about his team's spirit Tbe NU tutor said that his men have much less spirit now than at this time last week before their tie with the Buffaloes. Main Feature Clock (gratlaha fanashaa by Tataten) State: The Brigand," 10, J:52, 6:44, 9:36. "The Mine With the Iron Door,,,,2:46, 5:3. 8:30. Varsity: "Springfield Rifle," 1:26, 3:26, 5:26, 7:26, 9:26. Lincoln: "Everything I Have Is Yours," 1:27, 3:29, 5:31, 7:33, 9:35. SffSS- -"ow-GARY COOPER " 1 "131 dPL&WL ' 'mm "SPRINGFIELD RIFLE NOW IM TZCSICOUX THE BRIGAND" A Confession From on Elder Citizen to 21-year-old Voters: When I was a twenty-one yecr-old citizen, jo 'emment and those who managed it didn't make much difference. Just a few people that we called "politicians" took an interest in government As the years went by, the gov ernment began to control our economic, social and political lives. We were slow, very slow, to recognize that some cf our liberties were being threatened. We didn't realize foot the planning by bureaucratic government Involved control cl the human Individual from the cradle to the grave. Business and professional men considered a "politician" as anything but "an individual skilled arid trained in the art of government" What we for got is that in any group we have good and bad people. We turn over the management of government to the younger men and women as a group, they control the majority vole and actually have more concern about the future cf our country than any other age group. We, the elder citizens of this nation, turn over a government that is indebted- Ve mortgaged your future and the future of many generations to come. We turn over a country that has been forced to accept bureaucratic control that soinetimes and in many ways encroaches upon the liberties of the individual. We turn over a government that on the record is corrupt and degenerated by those who, through devious methods, have taken away the reins cf ccntrcL We turn over a nation that has committed American soldiers and American dollars to a conflict that the head of our government and those in our State Department refuse to classify as a war. In short, as elder citizens, we have recklessly used up the financial resources of our nation. We have not taken sufficient interest in government to assure that we have more good people in the management of government than those who must be classified as bad. Ve now know our multiple mis takes. We learn from the examples of others. Our example has not been good. We hope thai the young voters will learn from our mistakes. Integrity, honesty and leadership are descriptive adjectirss. They can hardly be used to describe the present crimlnistration leaders or those who have cow received the blessings and support of the present administration. Ve need a fresh, new, ciean group of men in government who will man age the affairs of our government under true and tried traditions of behaviour and thought and philosophies. Only a vet for Dwighi Csenhower and Senator Nixon will help solve problems in Washington that we, the elder effisens, permitted to start through cur lack of interest in government Intramural Touch Football Playoffs Will Begin Today Intramural touch- footballers begin playing for keeps' Friday as the 1952 playoffs get, under way Thirty-two teams remain in con- tention for. the four I-M titles, fraternity "A" fraternity "B", In dependent and All-university. Eight fraternity "A" outfits place their regalar-seasoa rec ords en the block in Friday's enrtala-rclser. Eight more con tins the struggle 8aturday morning while the Independents and Bees square-off Monday and Thursday, respectively, In their first-round battles. Leading the way Friday will be the Alpha Tau Omega Beta Sig ma Fn and Phi Kappa Psi Pio neer House contests. All four out fits copped their respective league titles and it will be featured as the battle of giants. All but the Taw's, sport undefeated records as they face their crucial first-round game. Adding to the spice ef open ing day will be the contests be tween Phi Gamma Delta and Farm House and between Aca cia and either Phi Delta Theta What's with Funnybone? . MLLE knows and telh'all - By Mllc ve mean Mademoiselle the mag, of course. And in the November 'book (issue' to ams amateurs, that is) you'll learn the big lowdown on the state of entertainment; U.S.A., learn that buff is a jazz enthusiast, funnybone a comedi an and planet a super star of stage, screen or what have you. The jargon, in case you haven't latched on, is yarietese, the language of Variety the show biz bible. In eight pages of Yarie tese Mile covers the entertainment water; front from video to the Met, from ballet to discs, tells about popular, upswing of gabdiscs. Jazz blows hot, blows cool. Some sayj it's dead. Mile says it's far too healthy to call for doctor, much less undertaken Radio's being worried into quality up-j beat. TVs the villain; every branch ofj entertainment--pubs, pix, show biz j sees video as its enemy, the ogre that is taking the food from its mouth, the mite from its mitt But pix (foreign and do mestic) contend they're OK, thank you; and niteries counter video with big name' orks (bands a la pre-W II). Complete entertainment tip-offtakes' more room than we've got. For all hdoj November Mademoiselle's your magJ! Catch it October 31 on your local newsstands. '3 Published try the U cf Dan Tolman. ChtfTVtB or Delta Tau Delta. ATI Friday contests are scheduled for City fields at 4:31 p.m. Saturday morning at 10 a.m. will feature the second bracket of the "A" first-round. Slated for battle are Delta Sigma Phi against Theta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon against Delta Upsilon, Sigma Al pha Mu against Beta Theta Pi snd Kappa Sigma against either the Phi Delta or Delts. Top contest Saturday fs fig ured to be the Sig Ep-DU af fair. The DUs are asbeaten ' while their opponents own an Impressive 4-1 mark from the tough league I and are the de fending -A" and All-University champions. ONE HOUR Washed and Dried CBtapw Tina Stating Laaaeiy Ban Automatic Machine Attendant Service 16th A N Drive In Parking buff? Planet? N Eisenhower Creep ' r 3 t i V - f- i K 5 V - ' 1 I V I s 6 1