Monday, Oct 17, 1960 v The Nebraskon Page 3 o Buffalo Tamers? me miners m To T : TSI l um SI Huskers Dump Army On Long Pass Play By Hal Brews Nebraska wrapped up its n or. conference schedule Sat urday with a 14-9 triumph over Army and now the Bus kers must concentrate on a tough conference slate for the final five weeks. The win over Army gives the Huskers a 2-1 record gainst non-conference foes and leaves them with a sea- . son record of 3-2 as they pre pare to meet Colorado Sat urday at Boulder. Nebraska with a 1-1 conference record can not be counted out of the league race vet. Colorado has a thre-gme winning steak after losing its ooeninff same to Savior, "fi-fl. The Buffs have scored de cisive wins over Kansas State, Arizona, and Iowa State and have a vera red 2ft points per fame in the last three games. Against common opponents Colorado has a , slight edge over Nebraska. Colorado de feated Iowa State, 21-, and Kansas State, 27-7. Nebraska downed Kansas State, 17-7, and lost to 'Iowa State, 7-18. Another superb defensive performance by the Huskers plus a little asqd offensive weapon gave the Huskers their victory over Army, The nine points scored bv the Cadets was the fewest Army has scored this season. The previous low was 16 in "a los ing cause against Perm State a week ago. Exchange Fumbles Nebraska stopped the Ca dets three times inside the Husker 12-yard line and twice inside the ten in the first quarter. Army drove to a first and ten on the Ne braska 12 with the opening kkkoff, but the drie was stopped when Tyrone Robert son recovered a Glen Adams'" fumble at the seven-yard line. On the next play Thunder Thornton fumbled 'with Ar-; my's Geerge Kirschen bauer pouncing on the ball Statistics Br ftaahta y pMMtltg , g T 'PfmaUtf ' Ruohlnit (Numixir af RtMhwO S Yitimlmr Tarda G.lnjid . . . . tnt )umhr Tarda ltd m t Tarda 4ialna im Forward Paaali .Yiumnar ftttomntxti n dumber tomnfotaa' H Wunttmr Aali tatmwantae' ... 1 Vial fardi tiainad 140 Yatal Urn (RiMbea and ftwwrtf) ,. . . . T7 Tntal Wat Yank .824 fiinni (Numbnrl f WW Yardc l.t Kt'tfcafta fNumhwr) Avarecr Tarda. n Ht-Hr RalurnB Mmltfr .Punt llffturM ..... It Y urds Punt Rpturna Tarda luekaff Brturoa ........ S3 1c -rcntion &aturna ffiammr) Tarns Hatvni fMimhle iNmnaei') 4 Rail ial t . Hull M On Dtiwn ,.... Prnalttr rNuntsar) . Tarn Pemiltarn . . M FiW -Gnnl (Ntrnibar Vtrmntrd) 1 dumber fHicoraaful a 4 1 us ' am M 341 1 w m m 4 Engineers and scientists who will achieve Bachelor rf Science of higher degrees by January or June of 1951 are invited to 01 CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with an engineering representative of the S0UGU8 AIRCRAFT COUFANY on Mmiii Oct 31 " America's most exciting space and defense proj ects, including SATURN, SKYBOLT and MISSILEER - and others of like importance have created outstanding long range opportuni ties at Douglas in the following fields: Electrical Electronics Mechanical Chemical Heronautical Metallurgical Openinp mist at Douglas locations in Santa Monica and El Segimdo, California and Char lotte, North Carolina. If you are a TJ.S. citizen who will earn a qualifying degree, please contact your place ment office for an appointment If unable to do ao, write toMr.CC. LaVene, , COUELAS AIRCRAFT CILfFAIY, IKC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvi, Santa Monica, California at the 13 and once again the Nebraska, defense was called on to stop the Cadets. Army moved to the five in three plays before the Huskers stopped fullback Al Rushatz on a fourth down play to take over the ball. After taking a punt from the foot of Archie Cobb, the Cadets again drove deep into Nebraska territory and were stopped at the nine-yard line from where Tom B lan da kicked a fourth down field goal to give Army a 3-0 lead. Nebraska nsed the pass only twice during the game, but it was a pass that gave the Huskers the margin of victory as quarterback Pat Fischer faked a aandeff to Thorntoa and as- Thornton went into. the waiter of the Army line,, Bennie Dfllard got behind Kirsebf nbauer, the Army safety man. Fischer hit DfQard with a long pass on the Army 23- j yard line and the 162-pound left halfback scooted into the,' end zone with his third touch- j down in two weeks to give: the Huskers a 13-9 advantage. Ron Meade sdded his second extra point kick of the after noon and the Huskers led, 14-8, m-ith 4:55 gone in the third quarter. The Huskers still had to hold off a determined Army team for another 25 minutes. Army took the ensuing kick- off and moved the ball from their own 30 to the Nebraska 11-yard line in six plays for a first and ten. The Nebraska line stopped Rushatz for no gain and after! Adams gained five, two passes by Elanda fell incom-j plete and the Huskers took' over. Donovan Rashes A fourth quarter Army drive was stopped on the Ne braska 39 as Larry Donovan put a rush on Elanda and forced him to fumble the ball. Dwain Carlson pounced on it with about one minute to go. Meade hung onto the ball and dropped ts the ground for three straight plays and then on the fourth play, the Husker quarterback re treated and tried to rm out the clock but he was tackled with abo two seconds re maining. Army called time out im mediately and Elanda tried a long desperation pass into the end zone that sailed over the head of the intended re ceiver as the final gun sounded. The Cadets made the score 8-0 with a second quarter TD as Rushatz dived over from the one-foot line to cap an 88-yard scoring drive. Army elected to go for the two pointer but a pass from Elanda intended for Jim Con nors was incomplete. Fischer returned the ensu- Welding Engineering Mechanics Physics Mathematics - Astronomy fotro-Physics E ' C , i If - : i . I 1 I ..' w o r " M r I lllMIMMllTimml..lllflMlimnlmmM M ., , HUSKERS HALT CADET Don Frkke 50 and Dennis Steawe U) halt the progress of Army's Glen Adams during Saturday's game as Noel Martin (43 and Roland MfTtek TSi rash in to kelp with the tackle. Cadets in the picture are Harry Miller (65), Al Yaoderbnsi (Ml, Dale Kahns (78), and Al Rashatx (31). sng kkkoff from the the to the Nebraska 22 and then en the first play, the Hnsker quarterback raced 4 yards to the Army 14. Thornton gained five to the Army , Dillard moved the ball U a first down at the three in two plays. After Thornton 'picked 3rp one, Fischer "moved the final two yards to paydirt with 2:25 remaining an the first half. Meade added the extra point and the half ended with Army leading S-7. The kicking of Archie Cobb Individual Statistics Times Ord nta dimt Xrt I've. FianhBr m It H fi.B Hillnrt s s j ,n.s White B ii n.7 Thorntnn Jl) as I) as . ClBre n 31 ii) n 5.7 PaimBB I I 11 S.O Haadr 5 1 18 -12 -2.4 atL. 'nmp In '6 tncnoa. YOa. Fiachur . , . . i 1 i SI faeB alnnelvlnr Clanjilit Yank Toonhdoww Dillard ..... J 57 1 lunttiir lumbar Yards awe-rawr 'Cabb . 6 . 384 SN4I Clare . a ait 3H.0 MIMT Rl'-sHfrJC Timet lrd date l.tmt Sri a vs. Blanda 13 IS 0 KirN(!henauctr 31) 7 73 12 17 511 7 73 12 12 Adnnifi IS Ruahatt IS Pappaa 4 5.2 S.K a.o 1.7 Cunnors ..... 7 PISSING fttt. Camp. la"a innmv. Yd. Blanda It) in 1 W Eokent . . . S 1 S 12 mss KBf5Eri'niG CauKnt Yards YnnidicdDwn KirachenDBUer 2 111 - Fuelliart 4 ' 4 tl Zmuida Elleraoa Adams . 2 37 " . 1 21 ., 1 'D (I W!WTING Hunhor Yards avrrnar sm is Stanley 6 Unbeaten Grid Teams Risk Marks By Chip Wood Six intramural fothall teams lay their undefeated records on the line in , games played today and tomorrow. In league S Theta Xi B (3-0) plays Phi Delta Theta B (0-3) Monday. Canfiald -(20). plays Boucher in league 6, and Play Boys (2-W go against the Ptenegades (0-2) in league 9 Tuesday. Sigma Alpha Mu (3-0) plays Brown Palace (2-0) in a game that .could decide the winner jof league 3. The schedule : . Monday: " Cijy Fields KE Benton vs. Bessey NW Delta Tau Delta B vs. Sigma Chi B - SE Seaton I vs. Maclean SW--5eaton II vs. Selleck Ag College Fields E Phi Kappa Psi B vs. Alpha Tan "Pmega B N Theta Xi B vs. Phi Delta Theta B i Tuesday: City Fields KE Boucher vs Canfield KW Brown Palace vs. Sig ma .Alpha Mu SE Senior Dents vs. law College SW Renegades vs. Play Boys Ag College Fields E Phi Kappa Psi A vs. Kappa Sigma A W Delta Tau Delta A vs. Beta Theta Pi - 2 Events on IM Track Schedule Qualifying rounds for the intramural 880-yd. run and the pole vault will he held tonight on the Stadium track. The B80-yd. run wiH begin at 5:00 p.m. and the pole i vault will start at 7:15 p.m. 1 AIM played a vital factor in the game " as " Ms " pnntts piat She Cadets inside their wna J5 on three occasions. A Cobb pnat at the close of the third quar ter hit at the goal line and took a backward bounce to land n . the four-yard tale where it rolled dead. He punted dead on the Army 12 at the opening of the second quarter and a fourth quarter punt by Cobb was taken by Connors at the seven and returned 'only to the 18. Army rai more thai ri-r as many plays as the Huskers with the Cadets running r passing 73 times and Nebras ka getting only 38 plays. Army led in first downs. 18 5; rushing yardage, 184-141; passing Yardage, 140-57; and total yards, 224-3 9R. Fischer led Nebraska rash ers with M y&r&s in 10 plays tor an SJ average. Thornton added 39 yards in 18 plays and White and Clare ea'h gained 11 yards In three and four carries irspctively. ' Adams was the leading rusher for Army with 7 j-ards in 13 carries for a 5:2 average. Blanda hit 10 of 19 passes for 128 yards. w - - f lawwamaMI jam-jw. wwm mm wr m lliW mnMiiiiiiaLiuiluii.liiliii .iiiiu iiiiaijuaiwiimni.iim.l.,iliimmi.iij.iin.iiiinnpjLH S' V"- , v -. . , !: . f .A J STU'S EXPLAINING HOW MACHINES WILL SOME DAY "OUTTALK" PEOPLE - ""Stu" Smith graduated from Southern Cal with a powerful 3ren for excitement. His kind of excitement Engmeering. He got, what he bargained for (and a little more) when he joined Pacific Telephone. One of Stu's early assignments was to find out how existing Long Distance -networks .could he used to pipeline high speed "conversations'' between : computers in distant cities. The fact thafhe 4id a fine job did not go unnoticed. Today, four years after starting his tele phone career, Senior Engineer Stuart Smith heads a staff of people responsible far telegraph and data transmission engineering in the huge 26 Bowlers Record Top Pin Scopes Nebraska Boidsng Team Announced Twenty-Six 200 games mere bowled in the finals oi the Big Eight Bowling rol off to .61ermir?e Nebraska's varsity and pacer teams.' The members of the Big Eight BowJing team and their scores for 12 games are: Dick Babst 2249, Dick Haase 222X Ralph Holmstroin 2177, Marv Cohn 2170, Keith Van Velkin burgh 2164, Matt Brawn 212G, David Shepherd 2125, Don Stone 2100, Jerry Dondlinger 2098, Philip Greiss 2094, Stn Kutler 2091, and Dave Teach man 2070. Babst, the top bowler ia the final rol off, bowled five games over 200. His average for the 12 games was a 187. Babst and Dale Fernau had the high games in the roll off each rolling a 234. 'Our number one aim w to have in aU management jobs the most vital, intelli gent, positive and imaginative men toe can pomibly find. Frederick E. Eappw. 'Prati&ent American Telephone t Telegraph Co. Husker Harriers Win Nebraska's cross country runners won a triangular meet from Iowa State and Drake Friday with a low score of 29 to Iowa State's 40 and Drake's 54. Ray Stevens led the Hus ker victory with the first place in 15:24.2. Bill Kenny look fifth, Clarence and Joe Scotl took sixth and seventh, and Rich Kier placed tenth. Coach Frank Sevigne had words of praise for the cross country team. "The Scatts are sbapicg wp teal fine," he said "If the whole team keeps im Touch system or hunt-and-peck Results are perfect with RATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper UlaAtifw year typing talmfcs ywu can rum mt meat, jeaa4ot&3st wwi the first time, viih Eaton's Ccxrrlsaliie Boni Paper. RfLaf.OB vhyz CinrasaUe has a ifcail surface it mses litkeai 49 tram. Just the &dt of an ordinary pesiw3 eraser anlrjpoaphicalermrs disappfiar. JJi storjurs, m smudges. Saves time, temper as j rowwy! CarrSBbl is auallabic In seuartf igMs Iron oniso to haavy bond . !hi tiani))' 1DO-fihBt paoketa ana S0O heot iwain tse. 1 ina flualbj lawforaill yourtyt csignmnnts. Only Caion malwt erwiatil ConSsattla. EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND A Berkshire Typewriter Paper Los Angeles area. As a pioneer in this new data transmission field Stu predicts data processing machines will some day do more "Long Distance "talking" than people. Stu contacted 12 other companies before join ing Pacific Telephone. I don't think there"' any limit to where a man can go in the telephone business today. Of course, this isn't the place far a guy looking f or a soft touch. A man gets all the opportunity he can handle right from the start He's limited only by how well and bow fast he can cut iC If Sttfg talking about 1he Mni of jopportunitjt you're looking for, just visil your Placement Ojfict for literature and additional information. BELL TELEPHONE proving, we should do real fine in the rest of the meets. The three-mile course at Des Moines, Iowa, was alter ed because of some construc tion work, Sevigne said. The alteration m a d e the course slightly over three miles. OI Grid Scores Friday Theta Chi 7, Ag Men ft Alpha Gamma Sigma 26, Pi Kappa Phi 6 Pioneer 20, Delta Sigma Phi 0 COMPANIES : -vf