Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1953)
Page 3 Wednesday, September 30, 1 953 THE NEBRASKAN mlhyske Klkk Griess, . Cochrane, Scott Big 7 Opener n Cornhusker IJ bd Cornhusker Coach Bill Glass- combination has Dan Brown, ford announced Tuesday that Sioux Falls, S. D., at quarter- Bordotns vetsran Nick Adduci may join back; Jon McWilliams, Sidney f the Nebraska squad this week, sophomore, and Bob Smith, The cnicaeo ruiiDacK was ine urana isiana. naiiDacKs. ana at. V V E, ifibi t is ia 422 75 S47 !l 2 2S6 2 613 12 10 29.0 M 5 4 1 e a d 1 n f (round gainer for the Corn hut Iters in 1949. Nick was dis charged from the army lait weekend. Glass ford F nrA a1m an- n 0 U n C e d Courtwy Lincoln Journtl some more Adduci ihIHm to his sauad. Emer son Scott, senior end, has de- m eldea to concentrate on ws studies. The greatest loss per haps is the departure of Ladd Cochrane, halfback. The soph omore has transferred to Hast ings College. The third man to turn in his Sm)th uniform was Demas Griess. The Bdfrn stocky guard from Sutton has decided to concentrate on nis Novak school work. mm Opponent! THE CORNHUSKERS, with ihe addition of the single wing n offense last spring, were listed M returnees to the ''rock 'em, sock 'em" griairun bi.uw But a abre-sharp passing attack In the first two games indicates that the Comhuskers are not going to , spend all their time trying to grind out yardage on the ground. Quarterback John Bordogna, rv-neir vn.. ana new back "Rex Fischer, XVH.V HUVIK, WHltUltt, 1U11UIM. The No. 1 line has Loehr and Bill Schabacker, Minden, ends; Korinc Ted Connor Hastings, and Jerry EciwJrd. Minnlck, Cambridge, tackles; goii vital ICS Uiaiiir, iuaua, uai uo, .hui and Jim Oliver. Shelton, center. NKBRA8KA Ol'FOXEKTfl Tcim ltl Awm ntMn. lit down paaaint yardt gained niahlnt rardi losl rufchinft net tainrd rmhini panet ttcmptrd pasaea completed Intercepted by yarda tainrd rutins coring panet total offentiv playt total net yarda tained vcratcoiienaivc play ptmti punt average penalty yardaie fumblci fumblei lotf SCORING PAT TI AH. Mai 2 0 0 1 2 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 -" i cm . , 25 Opponent o sso 39 Fiacher 5: Bordotna 21 Smith .. A m, " ream . . . BJ Opponent! . 113 34 s.ei K1CKOFV RETIRXB So. Vda. Ai. 5 75 18.0 3 4S H3 1 8 80 9 126 lTo I 6 00 ISO RlHIG TC YG VL NH At. 19 149 6 14:1 7.5 10 6S 4 54 54 ...... 2 8 0 8 40 ........ 3 11 0 11 3.7 24 93 13 SO 3.3 7 21 2 IB 27 19 67 17 60 2.6 8 15 4 11 1.4 t .... 1 ... 29 20 . 93 422 7S 347 3.7 t 02 50 39 541 5 8 !8UIV3 Art. Co. Pet. YG Int. TO 6 6 .833 117 0 1 17 12 .706 117 0 1 1 0 .000 0 0 0 24 !7 .708 2H8 21 10 .476 63 PARS RttrEIYIVG No. Ydt Korinek 2 A V.i.i.v S 32.1 khr 5 l j eater 1 0 Smith ...........1 3 Gohde 1 Schabacker 1 Bordotna. . . 1 TP PINT RKTVRNS 12 ft Bordogna , 1 6 Smith .2 6 Novak 1 1 FUchcr 1 Yds. 12 13 3 2 2 1 m i o o o i 0 0 0 Avg. 12.0 6 5 30 20 ft 5 3 33 Team 5 30 6.0 A 6 8 41 Opponent! 5 37 7.4 PUNTING INTERCEPTION RETURNS No. Ida. Ai. Blkd. No. Ydj. Avg 2 77 38 5 0 Wagner 1 3 3.0 S 213 26 6 0 Korinek , 1 2 2 0 30 8 290 257 20.0 32.1 Team 2 Opponent! 0 2.5 N-Men Hold First Meeting; Footballers To Be Guests xne univt'isiiy 01 iui iniiii anu scvci hi uuidtauuuis 1U 41H4 - 4 VV 111 1IV1U J. IO 1. I wt J 111 Ulllil T m f-sw Aasa.vaB Oakland, inc ol the 1953-54 school year to- euests. Amone the Alumni to be hnve comnleed 17 of 24 pass morrow evening at the Field- present will be Adson Dobson, rftprnvvts in two games. Oper- house beginning at 5:30. All N current president of the Alumni Mf the T formation the Club members are urged to wear N Club, past president Glen uns.r. .. i Tin- tViPir swPBtfrs RsWwin and Ellsworth Duteau. pa!r ,mL 'i.i-.-j.,, rnr.inff ut Ooeninc the eveninc festivities Cheerleader Judy Wiebe will ? ctriT of 9 straight (8 by will be a look-see at the prac- also be a guest. SVb and i bv Fischer) be- tice session of the Husker foot- After- dinner entertainment Bordogna ana iu, . te After watching the wl feature gingers Lynn Hol- fore the final gunsounaea. gcariet gridderSi the ,and and Caroi unterSeher and THE RECORD gives the group will proceed to the Student talks by some of the Alumni. Huskers a -708 completion av- Union where movies of the 1953 The business meeting will in- ermaee Fischer has hit 5 of 6 N.C.A.A track and field meet elude discussion on nomination ( 831 for 117 yards and Bor- will be shown prior to the din- for the homecominr committee, rVnena 12 of 17 (.706) for 149. ner which is slated to begin at presentation of N Club awards K , s. im. n nation 7 f.fi nnrl hnnnrarr N Club member- nnrnncna ia . : ... j ....hi In the all-important pass .re ceiving department, Fullback Jim Yeisley, Coin, la.. Halfback Dennis Korinek, Ulysses, and End Andy Loehr, Turtle Creek, pa are leaders. Yeisley has grabbed off 5 for 84 yards and tanks 13th in the nation. Korinek pas received 2 for 97 yards, and Loehr, who played the Illinois game with a cracked jaw, snared t for 41. In all, the Huskers have run Up 266 yards on aeriais as com.- Team Preps For K-State NU Forward Wall Shines At shins a.i well a the election of a BILL GLASSFORD'S football vice-president. I'M Grid Openers Season Opens With Bang; ATOs Loom As Big Noise Bv FRANK SORENSON OVER IN league II Delta Up- Sports Staff Writer silon came from behind to over- UP 200 yaros on tteimia -u" xne Dail Degan luuuig muuuj ououuy - . a 4. Jtt Tjrr frf .v. iorq TTVT TnuA Chi frmr 2f5 tn 11. Si Etna UU pareo xo wo evening m w ;- : v V. 4u 1-Oregon and the Illini. football program as play got un- led 11 to 0 at the end of the Head Football Coach Bill fler way in leagues one and two. first stanza. Shortly after the Glassford has made no changes perennially tough ATO's second quarter got : a way, . . .. . v ,. . . - j . . a rA coriol a Inner nass naid off for the DUS In his XNO. I unii iic piccito aispiayea " eluu"u "" t his sauad for the Comhuskers' attack that tabs them the team and they failed only -11 to 6 at ftK Seven opener against Kan- to beat this year. Mac Bailey the R-Street grid- puted pass play resulted in a ders coasted to a 29 to 0 romp taUy for the E-Street gang and over a haplesT Delta Tau Delta they led 12 to 11. The winners uvci m . , .i. - ,n,r 11 more, tmntt team. Bailey, one oi lasi years wcnL uu w 6"' " "V K n TTnivPrsitv selections on the in the fourth while the losers sas State at Manhattan this Sat urday. A LAST-MINUTE switch be fore the Illinois game put Fischer ana coraogna in a university selections on wic m same backfield, along with Kori- mythical team, showed a style were held scoreless. TICK HI1U ICiaitJ. 20th in the country in rushing. Bordogna, T formation quar terback the past two years, will now assume the blocking back role in the single wing. Fischer, who also can quarterback the T, is running aiieix naiiDdCK npriods. six in Glassford's JNO. z nacKiieia . r ,v that kept the Delts guessing what t.e ATO captain was doing witli the the bail nexx. THE SCORING for the ATO's ma venlv V i quarters. The winners gar- . erabbine two passes for TDs rerpfi seven noints in both tne TTT mvc In League III Farm House fared well in an inter-campus tussle by blasting Theta Xi 30 to distributed among prniciR fnr the citv camous crew HOW THE STARS GOT STARTED ..... T I 1. tar .oliriL'Hy j i it win t.w Andy Loehr Andy Loehr Returns To End Corps iNamed Starter Next Saturday By GARY FRANDSEN Sports Staff Writer Surely one of the most wel come sights to the Cornhusker football faithful as well as to Bill Glassford is the long awaited return of end Andy Loehr. . . The Turtle Creek, Pa., junior suffered a broken jaw in pre season practice and equipped with a -special facial mask he re-eieved his first taste of ac tion as a starter against Illinois Saturday. AFTER -COMING through ,;'h cnavtarular nerform- ence in last year's hair-raiser at Boulder, climaxed by a grab c! a Johnny Bordogna pass that netted 53 yards and nearly a touchdown in the dying sec of Tii ifi-lS deadlock. uuu v .... - - Loehr is unusually small for a moriprn-dav end The 20- imT-niri flanker stands at a "short" S'10" and weigh 180 pounds. Tr, Tnii TV the rlassv TKE tpam rnmred over Delta Slema the third and nine in xne lourui. 2 ln other contests The aggressive tobjto around the circuit, the Beta Sigs Tau forwara wau gre-w .- from Acacia 27 to 0 pered the Delt cause while toe pi forfeited later's line showed class only on to Beta Tneta pi results of occasion by rushing me lau phJ Kappa Psis and Alpha backfield. ...... r.ama both lost in a double r a All TlMltTaTClTV uast yew forfeit. cnampions took b " defending their 1952 title by downing a strong Sig Alph team by 19 to IS. The winners were never led by the Sig Alphs except at the half, but weer pressed all the way. THE STARTING lineup made up of J. Benedict, Wayne Whit aker, Wendy Cole, Van Shaw, Jack Kooregni, Pete Sorenson and Don Peters ground out yard age on the ground and along the airlanes by displaying a sporadi cally classy attack. A nase in the tirst Quarter iea to six quick points for the Sig Trie tVipv then -went on to Ear ner six in the third frame and seven points in the final stanza while going scoreless in the The Kiff AlDhs tallied in the second on a quick pass after having one called DacK Decause it was caught by Gus Lebsock while out of bounds. The losers then went scoreless in the third quarters and scored again in tne fourth to end their scoring for the evening. WAYNE WHITAKER shook iCor some cood yardage nu merous times while Gus Leb sock was the big threat tor tne underodg Sig Alphs. Phi Delta Theta, led by cap tain Joe Carter, Charley Hunley and Don Becker, romped rough shod over the hapless Kappa Sig gridderg 51 to 0, thus stamping them as the favorites in league II. In registering their near-record romp, the Phi Delts passed with ease through a sieve-like Kappa Sig defense. The winners scored almost at will in all the periods. They tallied twice in thefirst, once in the second while grab bing a safety, twice in the third, and twice in the fourth frames. IN ANOTHER league I game, Sigma No. eased by the Phi Gamma Delta crew by a close 12 to 6. The yellow shirted Sig ma Nus led 6 to 0 at the half after tallying in the first stanza on a pass play. The Phi Gams, who hadn't showed too much the first half, but were contin ually pressing, came roaring back on a 40 yard march to tie the game up at 6 all in the third quarter. inois By HOWARD VANN Sports Staff Writer Last week's results in the Big Seven gave the sports world something to talk about It was just two weeks ago that most of the conference teams that saw action were early up set victims with possibly one exception Colorado. The teams that were to meet Big Seven squads in the next week to it easy and expected warm-ups for their tougher teams in the future. IT TURNED OUT to be a different story though. Prob ably the biggest upset of the day as far as Big Seven teams are concerned was the per formance of Missouri in their victory over highly touted Purdue, n Purdue with their all-experienced line which averages well over 200 pounds were be ing pushed out of the way by the hustling Tigers. Ed Mer rifield, who was a constant thorn in the Huskers' side last year at Lincoln, helped to pace the Mizzou win. Last year the Huskers had a let down and the Tigers rolled to a 10-7 win. There is no doubt in my mind that Nebraska has one of the best lines in the Big Seven. There was a 100 im provement over their opener in blocking and tackling. AMONG THE players who were singled out by Nebraskans who were at Illinois were Char ley Bryant, Don Glantz, Min nick, Connor, Schabacker, Loehr and Oliver on the line and Bordogna and Korinek in the backfield. Twice when Husker runners broke away the had a blocker in front of them once Bryant and the other time big Jerry Minnick. A word of praise should go mi t tho Husker head men tor who pulled a surprise move by employing tne r lormatipn. Now the big question is, "What formation will the Huskers use next week?" No matter what thev decide on there is iust one thing that I would like to say. Everyone knows of the letdown that can follow as sparkling perform ance such as the one the Ne braska team gave last Satur day. I SAID last week that no one should sell the Huskers short and I will go out on the limb again this week as en dorsing a Husker victory, BUT the boys down at Manhattan will be out for the taste of vic tory after their upset 14-13 de feat by Colorado A and M last weekend. If NU plays like they did last week and continue to improve as rapidly as they showed they could do, the conference battle could turn out to be a "dog eat dog" Affair with the Huskers coming out better than was anticipated. Nebraska's last five games are all conference bat tles three of them at Lincoln. Taking a closer look at Ne braska's opponents we see that Colorado rolled to its second win of the young season against favored Arizona and I-State being trounced by Northwest ern, 35-0, 5-wm.imi .win. i miimn iifinini i inn mil iiui.jufaw.iiwu.iuiiiiuiuiwii w 5 -'5: " ' it L ' Ail sCp-- 7 - X j ! I 7 - N Club Executive Committee . . . Courtw Llncota StaT Pictured above is the N Left to right are Dave Grad Club Executive Committee, wal. Cliff Dale, Jim Ceder- dani, Bin uues ana uanny Foge. This planning com mittee will discuss N Club Big Seven Studies Plan For Post-Season Play Plans for the Big Seven to get back into post-season ball moved to the committee stage Tuesday. A special committee was to De pin study of the nroDOsed Orange Bowl tieup with the new Atlantic Coast Conference. A ban on post-season activity has kent Big Seven clubs out of bowl play since 195L plans concerning the aca demic standing of athletes at the first meeting Thursday, Oct 1, at 5:30 pjn. in th Fieldhouse. AT miLLER'S"" l!!i!!K zwtsmmjm i I sr 4? J SADDL&MOC3 by regular 1.98 TAILORED BLOUSES Aca and NYLON Soft luxury fabric, precision tailored with full French cufh. dyed-to-match thank bwrtonv long sleeves. White end 8 glo rious colors. Sizes 32 to 38. Turn 1005 O ST. Sandler of Boston says anything a saddle can do, SADDLE MOCS can do better. They're softer, lighter, brighter and come in new bantam- m weight suedes. You'll love these new self-color saddles. jf Colors: blacky brown, nary, and gray m.LLER yoP PAm Hours: Thursday 10-8:30 Other days 930-5:30 1225 O-Just West of Miller's Main Store TilHIIIIIBI! i:B!l!"Vil!lsli!IIIBll jwmmmmcmsmsaa Patrice Munsel says: "When I was a kid, I wanted to be a lady football player. Then 1 dreamed of another career whistling! Somebody discovered I had a voice, bo I took singing lessons. I worked hard at it then I won the Metropolitan Operp fi'ditions when I was 17." f STARTED SMOKING CAMCLS BECAUSE A FRicND Of- AfAc ASKED ME TO TRY 7VEM. NO OTHER CIGARETTE EVER. GAVE ME SUCH PUASURS. CAMELS TASTE SO GOOD AND WEYkE SO MtlO ! IV' liii wnt mi i hi imwm. i v .v pa c t i ' m ID ? a 1 Start smoking Camels yourself! t v - vs."lr ,Vv Smoke only Camels for 30 days and find out why Camels are America's most popular cigarette. See how mild andfiavorfula cigarette can be I shd Flavor wB mm i mm K035 mm "THAW ANY OTHER. CIGAPIeTTE I ' ; . i I 4 if I , 1. . (r . F t ' t . r tt f u tiff - '(-I i h lV"' V i 7, i1 ; f;- I- i'5