The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 04, 1952, Page Page 3, Image 3
TuesHoy, November 4, 1952 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Pog 3 NU Title Hopes Dim; Outside Chance Seen Bif Seven Standings W i M Issouri t S 0 Oklahoma S 0 Kansas 3 1 Nebraska I 1 Colorado 1 1 Kansas Htate . . . . 0 4 Iowa Dial 0 S T Pel. 0 i. mm 1 .87.1 0 .7.11) 1 ,2.1 t .5011 0 .001) 0 .000 PF OP s.t 1.VI 110 fl.1 70 A M GAMKS WIT Pet, 0 1 .017 .857 .714 .(14,1 .4111 .14.1 .143 20 12 It 140 PF OP Oil N7 170 60 14(1 117 13 A.1 .1 2 0 174 7 192 Oklahoma S Kansas S i 'olorado 4 Nebraska 4 t Missouri 3 4 Kansas Blata .... 1 It Iowa titata 1 Results Last Week Missouri 10 Nebraska ( Oklahoma Iowa State 0 Kansas i Kansas Slale (I Colorado 20 Utah 14 Games This Week Nebraska at Kansas Colorado at Missouri Drake at Iowa Hole Wyomlna at Kansas Ntala Oklahoma at Notre Dame By GLENN NELSON Sports Editor With their slim chances for the Big Seven crown all but erased after a dismal 10-6 loss to the Tigers, the Cornhuskers dug in Monday in preparation for their game with the Kansas Jayhawk ers this week end. The Huskers will ffo Uito the game at Lawrence as two touch down underdogs. Kansas came back from a 6-6 halftime tie with the Kansas State Wildcats Saturday to win, 26-6, at Man hattan. Coach Bill Glassford, who scoffed at Nebraska's pre-game favorite role for the Tiger clash, claimed that the NU tackling and blocking was far off the pace which the Cornhuskers threw against Colorado. The Husker head taskmaster will no doubt drill his men thor oughly this week on fundamentals. Pass defense and pass protection have been the main details for the past few weeks. I The Huskers will face two other major powers In their last two games of the season, and will probably be picked as un derdogs for the remainder of their schedule. Oklahoma, currently ranked second to Missouri in Big Seven ratings, is a heavy favorite to win the conference crown. The Sooners' only miscue was a tie with Colorado at Boulder. They crushed Iowa State, 41-0 Satur day. The Husker-Sooner contest will be the final game of the season for the two clubs. It will be played at Norman on Nov. 22 Minnesota, a highly-regarded team playing a rough Big Ten schedule, is the pre-game favorite to beat Nebraska in the Lincoln team's Homecoming game on Nov. 15. Nebraska has an outside chance at the conference title, however, should they beat both Oklahoma and Kansas while Missouri loses to both the league powers. Both of the remaining Big Seven games on the Cornhusker slate are out-of-town appearances. This presents more hazards in the path of the unpredictable NU team, which loon as two giant hurdles. It is. a cinch that the Huskers' position in the Big Seven at the end of the season will be higher than that of last season, how ever. Their 1-5-1 record barely kept them out of the cellar po sition in 1951, which was held by Missouri with a 1-5 showing. The Iowa State Cyclones and Kansas State Wildcats, both beaten earlier in the season by Nebraska, are knocking on the basement door. The Ames club holds down seventh place at the present with five losses against no wins, while K-State has 0-4. Sparks Defense 1. , . , ) 1 w Cappa oyrD' By BILL MUNDELL Intramural Sports Writer The 1952 Intramural football playoffs continued Saturday morning with three more grid outfits putting their footballs away for the year and a like num ber looking forward to the second round of play. Kappa Sigma, Courtesy Lincoln Journal WING WIZARD . . . Bill Schabacker, 6-foot. 180 pound junior from Mlnden, has been a consistent spark In the magnificent Hus ker defensive play. It was Bill who constantly dropped the Tiger quarterback, Tony Scardlno, on the famous Split-T option play, causing the Missourian to fumble and set up Husker offensive inarches. Seven Lettermen Pep Caae Hopes For CU Seven lettermen are Included among 17 University of Colorado basketball candidate's who'll an swer opening roll call Saturday in the first official day of the practice season. And an eighth. Don Bramby, is due to report after the completion of the football Season. Coach H. B. (Bebe) Lee starts his third campaign at the Buf falo helm with the best assort ment of talent of his regime. Heading the list of returnees are Frank Gompert, Art Bunte and Tom Harrold. first, second and fourth high Buff scorers re spectively last year. Gompert, who scored 279 points, and Bunte, who tallied 276, are again expected to lead Colorado Doint-makers. Harrold. a good Glenn Nelson, sports editor, and floorman, tallied 124 last year, Other lettermen returning are Bob Lawson, Ken Munns, Bob Stewart and Jim Armatas. Armatas won two letters in the 1949-50 and 1950-51 seasons before entering the Air Force. He played last year with the Tinker Field, Okla., Air Force team and is now back at Col orado as a senior. Despite the fact that seven of ten lettermen plus Armatas are Nelson, Serr Hit 9 Of 10 Sooner-Irish Clash Saturday To Be Telecast Over Country A coast-to-coast telecast of the Notre Dame-Oklahoma football game Saturday, November 8 at South Bend, Ind., will be broad cast by two Oklahoma TV sta tions, WKY-TV of Oklahoma City and KO-TV of Tulsa. Kickoff will be at 1:30 p.m. The game will match Notre Dame, monarch of American football from 1913 through 1949 and Oklahoma, which has the best national record of wins and losses over the span of the last five years. Bud Wilkinson, Oklahoma coach, and Frank Leahy, Irish mentor, will guide their respec tive clubs. Bob Serr are holding tight to first place in "Here Are Your "Win ners" by picking nine of ten games correctly last week. Both prognosticators tripped on the Michigan-Illinois tilt Illinois pulled an upset by dumping the Wolverines, 22-13. Six Other predictors, Bart Brown, Tom Becker, Howard Vann, Ed Berg, Marshall Kushner snrf Arnio Stppn nailer! eisht for 10. The game most missed, were on hand, Colorado's! 952-53 cage the Michigan-Illinois and Cal- ionunes may lie in me nanus oi UCLA tussles, Assistant Sports Editor Chuck Klasek, and Bill Mundell missed three games. Both picked Duke over Georgia Tech; Klasek picked Purdue to subdue Michigan State while Mundell gave Navy the nod over Notre Dame. Upset of the week went to Berg who picked Illinois. All prognosti cators save Brown almost had heart failure on the Colorado Utah fray. The Buffaloes won in the dying moments on a pass in terception, 20-14. Nelson and Serr remain on top. Klasek moved to last place after missing three. Mundell dropped from fifth to seventh with Vann and Berg moving into the vacated space. The rest of the standfngs stay the same. a relatively inexperienced per former. Center Burdette Haldorson, tallest player on the squad at 6-8, is rated the key man by Lee. If Haldorson can come through with a good season, the Buffs could compile their best record since joining the Big Seven Conference five years ago. Non-lettering candidates In clude Dennis Barber, Jim Budke ley. Jim Grant, Bob Jeangerar, Bruce Klaas, Charles Mook, Wil bert Walter, Cliff Alderson and Jerry Greene. Eleven of the 18 are sopho mores, 6 are seniors and one a junior. The Buffs open a 22-game slate December 6 when they entertain Utah State at Boulder. tone Senor Cager i I if I t " I A ? V I I I - - - - r- mniawiiTTiei imr-r-r.r iT"3 eftann s aaaemsnssaawaawaia Post Game Gathering By HOWARD "VANN Sports Staff Writer The Cornhuskers now have lost two games out of their seven con tests so far. In both of their losses and in their best game of the sea son tie with Colorado, the defense has stood up but the offense has lacked that extra scoring punch that could have meant victory. The Missouri Tigers gave an exhibition of defense that would be commendable in any game. Time after time the Missouri team stopped NU thrusts within the Tiger 20 yard line. On the line it was Jim Martin and a 6'6", 198 pound tacgle named Don Rutter who were con stantly hampering the Huskers. Offensively in the backfield it was Bill Rowekamp and the tre mendous running of Jim Hook that kept the Tigers in the game all the way. Defensively, Harold Thomeczek and Ed Merrifield stole the show. Although it was a dismal day for the Huskers, there were a few moments when the fans got a chance to cheer for the home team. The passing of John Bordogna and the brilliant showing of Andy loehr on aerial attacks was to ad vantage of the NU team. Bob Rey nolds leaping catch just out of the end zone in the third quarter showed real effort. The NU defense was not as sharp as it has been in the past, but in the second quarter just before the half ended the Husker line held deep in their own territory. Bill Schabacker continued to show outstanding form as he partially blocked a punt and continually hampered the Tiger quarterback, Tony Scardino. Ed Husmann was dumping the MU backs for long losses along with Jerry Minnick. Verl Scott, and Dennis Emanuel. On the second half kick-off Bill Thayer completely faked out everyone on the field as he started for the right and then shifted to the right and took off down the sidelines to the MU 25. This was by far the best run by a NU man all afternoon. The officiating of the game was at times very spotty again. One play in particular was when Reynolds was running downfield to catch a pass, he was pushed by a MU man but when he went to the referee in protest, it was to no avail. Many times Husker defenders were warned and penalized for pass interference, when, from the sidelines it looked like good defensive ball. The Tigers were extremely sportsmanlike in their upset vic tory. Many times they gave the Huskers a pat on the back, and after the game they were very free with handshakes. Don Faurot brought a keyed up football club to NU and they played to win. HIGH-SCORING HUSKER ... Joe Good, who doubles at both forward and guard on the Cornhusker cage squad, is the only senior to report to Coach Harry Good this season. The two-year starter was second only to Jim Buchanan last year in scoring for Nebraska. The NU basketball squad began practice Saturday. (Dally Nebraskan Photo by Glenn Nelson.) ONE HOUR Washed and Dried Cheaper Than Beadinf Laandry Berne Automatic Machines Attendant Service 16th & N Drive in Parking Theta Chi and Sigma Phi Epsilon took the big jump and joined the four Friday winners as second round participants. Winning Fri day were Phi Kappa Psi, Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Sig Eps Win 19-14 Sigma Phi Epsilon climbed from behind into a big lead and then fought off a late Delta Up allon rally to win a well-earned 19-14 victory. Both teams were co-champions of their respective leagues and the DU's were un beaten going into the fray. The losers got off with a bang DU Dick Long intercepted a Sig Ep pass on the first play of the game and returned it to the vic tors' 15-yard line. Once they had the ball, the DU's lost no time as Tom Tolen passed the distance to Long and again to Gene Gray for the extra point. The Sig Eps took over on their 15 and demonstrated the power that carried them to the 1951 All University title. Six plays, mostly on the ground, carried the pig skin to the DU 15 from where Ted Kratt flipped to Bob Svanda for the tally. Still trailing 6-7, the Sig Eps began to move again in the sec ond canto. The drive again car ried to the DU 15 and this time Kratt toted the ball across the goal on a wide end sweep be hind terrlfio blocking. Kratt pitched to Al Hansen for the point and the half ended with the Sig Eps on top, 13-7. Another 15-yard scoring punch sent the Sig Eps to victory in the third stanza. Again it was Kratt pitching and this itme Bill An derson was doing the catcmng ana it was 19-7. Midway in the final chucker, the losers got their offensive gears oiled and cn the strtr gth of Tol en's aerials, moved to the Sig Ep 17 from where Tolen fired to Ron Ovendon for the score. Ovendon also gathered in the pass of the fourteenth point. The winners stifled any last second-rally by the DU's towards the end of the fray as Kratt in tercepted a Tolen heave and the Sig Eps stalled out the remain ing seconds. Kappa Sigs Edge Kappa Sigma and Phi Delta Theta hooked up in a real thriller as the Kappa Slgs out gained the Phi Delts by a scant two yards to win in yardage overtime, 8-7. - It was 7-7 at the completion of the regulation timing and the winners roared off in fine style, amassing 31 yards m their four attempts. The Phi Delts were al most as good, nowever, as tney piled up 29 yards in their first three tries and had the game on their fourth attempt, only to have CATALOG FREE Fim ORDER 112 PAGES OF GREAT ARTISTS - ORCHESTRAS Select Records Desired OPERA SYMPHONY BALLET JAZZ You deUrmine priea yoarself. Deduct from the .Ublished list arlee. east f nallln. iafea with arst raer.l Addrett Dept. a pass fall through the arms of a receiver 15 yards downfield. The Kappa Sigs scored their seven counters early In the con test as Ed Berg fired an 11-yard aerial to Stan Ebner for a touch down three minutes deep In the initial period. Berg also connected with John Gibbons on the vital extra-point pass. Both teams battled on score less terms until the final four minutes of the game. Louie Roper and Tom Harley co-operated to nudge the losers Into a 7-7 tie at that point. Roper's 19-yard heave found Harley la the end-zone for the big one and the same two produced the tying counter. 1st Period T.D. Is Edge Theta Chi scored a first-quarter touchdown and extra-point and then spent the rest of the contest fighting off Delta Sigma Phi to win a 7-6 ball game. Jack Nichols gathered in a 26- yard first quarter heave for the winners to put them ahead and it was enough to win. The Delta Sigs narrowed the count in the second canto on a four-yard aerial from L. G. Law rence to John Kelley but the im portant seventh point was kept off. the books by the Theta Chi de fenders. The second half found both teams threatening, the losers three times, but the defense pre vailed and the TC's were In the second round. Main Feature Clock (Schedules fnrnlshed by The ten) Varsity: "The Quiet Man," 1:36, 4:16, 6:56, 9:16. State: "Toughest Man In Ari zona," 2:53, 6:11, 9:31. "Oklahoma Annie," 1:23, 4:41, 8:01. aila mil f tSARKirtss!: 3 al lOrlARA AHOWIUlMd BARRY miih: AND THE : i TMCOL0IU trs BRBmrrAKiNs amo Ksrrm: I I jomn foetrs GatATisT ntuMm THE QUIET MAN I M to TECHNICOLOR JQM WAYNE-MAUREEN 00 BARRY FITZGERALD f VAfiO BONO YICT08 MdAttFl WL0RU) HATWICK FRANCIS FOSO STATE -Now- "TOL'GHIST MAN IN ARIZONA" . and i. 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