Friday, December 14, 1956 THE NEBRASKAN Boilermakers Next: Page 3 U'UusitHng IHIissSieii's A0ef By WALT BLORE Sports Editor How long can one team domi nate another conference? This question will be answered Monday night at Lafayette, Indi ana when the Purdue Boilermak ers of the Big Ten conference entertain Jerry Bush's hustling Huskers. After taking it on the chin two Rights in a row against the UCLA Bruins, the ' Cornhuskers have roared back and downed three Big Ten teams in a row. It will have been exactly two Weeks . ice the Bushmen downed defending champion, Iowa. After the Hawkeyes came Michigan and Wisconsin. All three times the neighbors from the Western Conference were baffled by a tight zone defense. Since Purdue is the fourth team the zone will be tried on, it's prob able the coaching fraternity in the Big Ten has given many tips to Purdue Coach Ray Eddy on the make-up of the Husker attack. Tne Boilermakers finished in a surprise tie for third in the con ference and have a firm nucleus to repeat their 1955-56 finish. The key man is Lamar Lundy, 6-6 center who serves as end on the Purdue gridiron squad during the fall. Lundy is an excellent re- bounder and when he gets his court legs back, he contributes heavily to the scoring attack. Purdue will offer height in oth er positions, too. Frank Cummings and Wilson El son, 6-8 and 6-6 respectively, pro vide heighth under the boards. Cummings is a veteran, but El son is a sophomore. At the guards, Eddy has anoth er veteran performer and an un tried soph. Five-foot seven-i n c h Joe Campbell is the vet while 6-6 Bob Fehrman is the sopho more. Purdue has plenty strength un der the boards and on defense but at times in the early season has trouble mounting a strong of fense. Their defensive strength shows up in last year's statistics when the Boilermakers tied Iowa for defensive honors in the con ference. The Huskers have overcome their troubles that plagued them all through the previous campaign. First, they have a consistent bal anced attack. The Bushmen have had five different high point men in five' games. Secondly, they have been able to keep the foe on its toes at all times instead of suffering obvious mental lapses during crucial mo ments of the game. Third, through the addition of Strictly' Sportstalk By BOB MARTEL Nebraskan Sports Reporter Alabama Bound . Fullback John Bayuk and tackle Dick Stapp of the Colorado foot ball team have been extended bids to play in the Senior Bowl Game at Mobile. Alabama. January 5. The two Buffalo stars will accept the bid providing there is no question of loss of eligibility for the orange bowi game against iem son in Miami on New Year's Day. They'll be the first Colorado players ever to participate in the Sen ior Bowl event. The Phantom Strikes . The University of Wisconsin had in its employ a young undergrad uaet whose duty it is to broadcast all Badger football and basketball games. wfcil 5rinir th WisrvMisin-Nehraska contest last Monday evenine. Chuck Neinas, the congenial man at the mike, ran Into a little diffi . ? culty. ! The line between the Coliseum and the Lincoln Telephone Company went dead and Chuck didn't eet on the air until the second half. After the game a telegram was delivered to Chuck which read, Best first quarter you ever broadcasted. Signed: The Phantom." Nebraskan Honored ... A survey By sports illustrated Magazine reveals mat aimosi nan ; of the candidates nominated by 81 universities and colleges for the Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary All-America roster have made their careers in the business world. The Sports Illustrated awards will honor 25 senior letttermen in the year 1931. Its purpose is described by Managing Editor Sidney L. James of Sports Illustrated: "This time the honors will got, not to the dashing youngsters of 1956, but to a nationally chosen group of their football predecessors of 25 years ago who have most distinguished themselves in their chosen fields of life. We believe that our Silver Anniversary All-America will do much to emphasize the pursuit of the rounded human values in which athletics and education are joined." One of the 81 nominees is Charles M. Justice, industrial relations analyst for the Atomic Energy Commission in Albuquerque, New Mexico. "Chick" Justice lettered In football 1929-30-31, and track in 1930-31, and has had a varied career since graduating from the University of Nebraska in 1932. Justice was head football coach at the University of New Hamp shire and later Personnel Director of the Burlington Transportation Company. He started as a high school coach at Cambridge, Nebraska, then moved to Omaha Central High School. Justice was named an assistant football coach at New Hampshire in 1937, and became head football coach in 1942, and directed the team to its first undefeated season in the 76-year history of the school. He was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Navy in 1944, serving un til the war s end. Justice was an all-state tackle at Grand Island High School in 1926 and played in the East-West game at San Frncisco in 1931. Hats off to Mr. Charles M. "Chuck" Justice from Nebraskan Sports Staff. 6 8 Ron Parsons and the improved performance of 6-7 Terry Howard, the Huskers now have a reliable tall man under the basket. Parson's ankle has apparently responded to treatment and Rex Ekwall hasn't been bothered by a cold. All in all, it might not be such a long winter. Gophers Again: Minnesota Again On Schedule Nebraska and Minnesota will resume football relations in. 1959, according to Athletic Director Bill Orwig. The series will be resumed on Sept. 26, 1959, at Minneapolis, with the Cornhusker campus the follow ing year on Sept. 24. Both games will be Minnesota's opener but the 1959 contest will be preceded by an encounter with the Texas Long horns for the Cornhuskers. While the Golden Gophers hold a heavy edge in the long series between the two rivals, dating back to 1900, some of the great Ne braska games of the past were played with Minnesota. In the 30 games that have been played since the first one in 1900, Minnesota has won 23, while the Huskers have been victorious in five. Two games have ended in ties. The last Husker victory was in 1950 when Bobby Reynolds and Ron Clark paced the Cornhuskers to a 32-26 win in an offensive donnybrook. Nebraska's Orange Bowl-bound 1954 team was downed by the Gophers 19-7 in the opening game of the season. It was that game that several members of the coach ing staff called Nebraska's best effort of the season. Two non-conference dates in 1959 and one in 1960 remain to be filled, Orwig said. Tankmen, Gymnasts Swing Into Action ,fr, I I, rust "OQr-i- ft JV ' -jr G0LDENR0D 215 North 14 The varsity Swimming and Gymnastics teams will open their regular season this week. Coach Hollie Lepley's tankmen will travel to Grinnell College Fri day with high hopes of winning their first test of the year. The men who are expected to bolster the squad's hopes for the match are Gene Cotter, last year's Big Seven Diving Champion and Carl Bodensteiner, outstanding jun ior letterman from Lincoln. The Gymnastics squad will tan gle with the freshmen Friday and then journey to Manhattan, Kan sas, for their meet with Kansas State. Coach Jake Geier has high praise for his matmen and thinks that they will have another fine year. 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