The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 21, 1960, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, Oct. 21, 1960
The Nebraskan
Page 3
Nil Set for Buffalo Clash
Huskers Seeking Third
Straight Win Saturday
By Hal Brown
Nebraska's gridders, look
ing for their third consecu
tive win, invade the home of
the Colorado Buffalo at Boul
der Saturday for an im
portant Big Eight clash.
Approximately 800 Nebras
ka students are expected to
be in the stands for the 3
p.m. (CST) kickoff. This
weekend is Homecoming on
the Colorado campus.
The last time a Nebraska
team won three successive
games in one season was
1955 in BUI Glassford's final
season. The Huskers of that
year defeated Missouri, Kan
sas, Iowa State, and Colo
rado on successive Satur
days. The Huskers have won two-in-a-row
only once previously
under Bill Jennings. Last
year's gridders defeated Min
nesota and Oregon State on
consecutive weekends, but
lost the next three to Kansas,
Indiana, and Missouri, before
upsetting Oklahoma.
A win Saturday would as
sure the Huskers of at least
a record comparable to last
year s 4-6 mark. Nebraska
must stop a potent Colorado
227 yards per game on the
ground and 84 yards per
game through the air.
The Buffs have four backs
who have gained more than
00 yards rushing. Senior
fullback Chuck Weiss leads
the ground-gainers with 189
yards.
Nebraska Native
Jerry Steffen, a senior left
halfback from Crofton, Nebr.,
is second with 153 followed
by Ted Woods with 134 yards
and right halfback Ed Cole
man with 121 yards. Coleman
KEAJ SCRvf YoiR. FRKs
"OF ALL THE SCREEN STORIES OF YOUNG MEN
IN ACTION, THIS IS THE MOST MOVING, THE
MOST HONEST, THE MOST MEMORABLE!"
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4B Jd 1
'. , ' ' k ax HALL BARTIETT i
' MS DH-n CORBETTM0RTSAHL-MST.CLASR
NHIM JOHANSSON
...bib bit I ram
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80 Years Your Store Full of New Ideas
11.58", m?::k" . -: ;' " .,nl W ; y
It W x M.,n ; .
Everyone's Talking About . . .
a zany, new trip through the required reading list
the most fiendish satire ever, The Classics Reclassi
fied. This omusing book retells seven great stories
including "The llliad," "Julius Caesar," "Ivanhoe"
and "Moby Dick." Retelling bears very little resem
blance to the original and Campbell Grant drawings
run wild throughout. Only 2.98.
Meet the Author
RICHARD ARMOUR
TODAY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21
Mr. Armour is the popular author of It All Started
With Columbus and Twisted Toles From Shake
speare. He'll be at Miller's Friday to autograph his
new book.
THE BOOK STORE 131 S. 13TH
Shop Mondoy :30 1:10, Thursday 'til t p.m.
Community lavlnai Sterne with tv.ry urchM.
is the onlv non-letterman In
the probable starting lineup.
Gale Weidner. the Buffs toD
passer, has lost the starting
quarterback job to Frank
Montera for Saturday's con
test, weioner, wno missea
last week's clash with Iowa
State because of an injured
hip, has completed 12 of 31
passes tor 218 yards.
Montera has a record of
six completions in 15 at
tempts for 68 yards. Right
ena Jerry Hillebrand is the
favorite pass receiver with
five pass receptions for 150
yards and one TO. .
Nebraska virtually ignores
the passing game and de-
enas on a hard-nosed de
ense for Its wins. Nebraska
has thrown only 28 times in
five games for an average of
5.2 passes per game. Ten
have been completed with
five others being pirated by
the opponents.
Opposing teams have cast
57 passes, completing 26 and
four have been intercepted.
but opponents have been able
to score only once with the
pass and the Pat Fischer-
Bennie Dillard combination
provided the winning margin
over Army last Saturday.
Fischer and Thunder
Thornton are the leading Hus-
ker rushers with 261 and 228
yards respectively. Fischer is
averaging 4.6 yards per carry
and Thornton is averaging 4.4
yards per play.
Bennie Dillard. used onlv
on spot assignments, is the
leading rusher average-wise
with a 7.3 average on six
carries. Dillard has handled
the ball only seven times but
nas scored three touchdowns
to rank second in the scoring
column for the Huskers.
Colorado is tied with Mis
souri for first place in the
Big Eight with a 2-0 record
while Nebraska is in fourth
place with a 1-1 mark. The
uutts are 3-1 on the season
and have a three-game win-
ning string after losing the
opener to Baylor, 26-0.
Colorado is averaging 28
points per game in the last
three contests . with the low
est point total being the 21
points scored against I n w a
State last Saturday.
Nebraska ho ds a slim 9-8-1
won-lost margin over Colo
rado in tne series history.
Intramural Meeting
Two intramural manager's
meetings will be held Monday
in Room 114 of the Phvsiral
Education Building. Fratern
ity managers will meet at 7
p.m. with residence hall and
independent managers meet
ing at s p.m.
Frosh Opener
Nebraska's freshman grid
ders will open the season Nov.
4 against Iowa State at Ames.
The frosh will host Kansas
State Nov. 11.
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(Sports Signals)
By Hal Brown 1
The race for the Big Eight football crown, which is
still wide open, should be cleared up considerably after
Saturday's action with all conference teams involved in
loop clashes. Of major importance are the Nebraska
Colorado game at Boulder and the Iowa State-Missouri
contest at Columbia, Mo.
. Missouri is in the favorite's role after
winning its first five games, but Colorado
is tied with the Tigers for the top spot. Both
have 2-0 records. Kansas' conference rec
ord is marred only by a 13-13 tie to Okla
homa. Only two teams that can definitely
be written off as title contenders are Kan
sas State and Oklahoma State. Iowa State
is virtually out of the picture with two
losses.
Oklahoma is ineligible to represent the
Big Eight in the Orange Bowl because of
an NCAA probation. If Missouri wins the Brown
crown or finishes second to Oklahoma, the Tigers would
have to ask the Big Eight faculty representative to waive
the conference rule against a team appearing two consecu
tive yean.
Even if the Big Eight waived the ruling, the Orange
Bowl committee could refuse to take the Tigers and hold
the Big Eight to the original ruling. The Orange Bowl com
mittee has to take the champion or the runnerup, unless
both are ineligible for some reason. If both the champion
and runnerup are ineligible, then the Orange Bowl commit
tee can select a team from outside the conference.
Any of the Big Eight teams, with the exception of
Oklahoma, may accept bids to other bowls and Kansas and
Missouri have already been mentioned as possibilities for
the Gator Bowl. Nebraska, with its 1-1 conference record,
is still very much in the race, but the Huskers must win
Saturday to keep their hopes alive.
Bob Ghilotti, Colorado end coach who scouted the Hus
kers last week against Army, says, "Nebraska presents an
unusual type of football. They've beaten two outstanding
teams in Army and Texas." Ghilotti picks Pat Fischer as
the player who gives the team its spark, but the Buffalo
aide can't make up his mind whether the converted half
back is a good quarterback or not.
"He makes a lot of mistakes and he doesn't pass too
well," Ghilotti said. "Then he turns around and makes a
play that beats you. He's won the big game for them. The
thing that makes him tough is his running. He runs the op
tion play well and is quite likely to change his mind on a
pass play and wind up running."
Ghilotti describes the Huskers as unpredictable in every
way. "They don't score a lot but they contain the other
team. They make you struggle up and down the field, but
they hang in there and beat you more often than not.
You've got to give credit to a team like that."
The potential is evident on the Nebraska team and if
they can continue to play as they did against Texas and
Army, then the rest of the league is in for trouble when they
meet the Huskers. It should be a very interesting race all
the way to the wire.
Now for a look at this week's games:
BIG EIGHT
NEBRASKA 21, Colorado 13 Nebraska stays in the.
title picture with a win over the Buffs to the delight of mi
grating Husker fans.
MISSOURI 28, Iowa State 7 Missouri should get its
sixth consecutive win of the season against a slipping Cy
clone squad.
KANSAS 35, Oklahoma State 7 The Cowboys return to
conference action after two games against non-conference
opposition and will run into a tough Jayhawk team.
OKLAHOMA 34, Kansas State 0 The Sooners should
have little trouble in trouncing the Wildcats for its first
conference win.
OTHER GAMES
Mississippi over Arkansas, Army over Villanova, Au
burn over Miami (Fla.), Oregon over California, Princeton
over Cornell, Clemson over Duke, Georgia Tech over Tu
lane, Dartmouth over Harvard, Ilinois over Penn State,
Michigan State over Indiana, Iowa over Purdue, Georgia
over Kentucky, LSU over Florida, Minnesota over Michi
gan, Northwestern over Notre Dame.
Ohio State over Wisconsin, Washington over Oregon
State, Navy over Pennsylvania, Texas over Rice, North
Carolina over South Carolina, Pittsburgh over Texas Chris
tian, UCLA over Stanford, Wake Forest over Maryland,
Syracuse over West Virginia, Yale over Colgate, Texas
Tech over SMU.
This corner picked 19 right with nine wrong and two
ties for a .667 mark last week. The season record stands at
105 right, 38 wrong, and seven ties for a .723 percentage.
VocAat t m V ! n v ( si t m
Ill..iJ. DOORS OPEN 12:
140 N 13 th
STARTS TODAY
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13th ft M Auta Park, 13th ft Q.
Main Feature Clock
State: "The Sword and the
Dragon," 1:48, 3:54, 5:42, 7:39,
9:38.
Varsity: "All the Young
Men," 1:38, 3:37, 5:36, 7:34,
9:34.
Nebraska: "Our Man In Ha
vana," 1:00, 5:10, 9:20. "On
the Beach," 2:50, 7:00.
Lincoln: "The Secret of the
Purple Reef," 1:30, 3:10, 4:50,
6:30, 8:10, 10:05.
Stuart: "The Captain's Ta
ble," 1:35, 3:35, 5:35, 7:35,
9:35.
Nebraskan
Want Ads
CLASSIFIED AD POLICY
Ada to bo printed In the classified
aectlon of the Dally Nebraskan must
be accompanied by the name of the
person placing said ad.
FOR SALE
Triumph TR-3. See 13?7 H St.
tops. X1600. GR 7-8343.
Both
ivory 1952 Ford Convertible, Fordo
mattc, white top. continental kit, ton
neau cover, white walls, snow tires,
47.000 miles. Keys, Andrews 305.
LOST
Glasses In brown case. Call ID 4-4528.
LOST Tan McGregor jacket, size 48,
in Soc. Scl. 209. Reward. Phone
GA 3-7061.
Black leather billfold. Ke:p money, re
turn billfold to Gerry Dodendorf,
3101 Selleck.
APARTMENTS
Apartments available for 3 or 4,
Cooking facilities, private baths. 1919
"A", inquire Z4ui u; u
EMPLOYMENT
Wanted: Busboys and dishwashers
Free meals. No experience necessary
Apply Delta Sigma Phi house or call
HE 2-SHHB.
CAKES
Beautifully decorated cakes made to
order . . . weddings, special evenui,
parties. Phone IV 8-1588.
PERSONAL
Sharon Is the one so
Rnlr iiiat fnr flin.
Homecoming Queen Sharon Anderson
Vnti. fnr niadvs Rolfsmever the
thinking man's Homecoming Queen."
Sigma Alpha Mu Can
Cinch League 3 Title
By Chip Wood
Five crucial intramural
football tilts are scheduled
Monday night.
Sigma Alpha Mu can take
the league 3 crown by defeat
ing Beta Sigma Psi. The Samr
mies are undefeated and the
Beta Sigs have a 2-1 record.
League 2 leader Phi Gam
ma Delta goes against Farm
House in a game that should
decide the title. Farm House
and ATO, the second place
teams, play in other action.
Kappa Sigma A and Phi
Kappa Psi A play Monday in
a game to decide the co-holder
of the league 1 title now
held by Sigma Chi.
The only major action Tues
day is the Theta Xi B team
game with the Phi Kappa
Psi B squad. The Theta Xi's
are undefeated in league 8 and
could wrap up the crown.
Intramural schedule:
Monday:
City Fields
NE Cornhusker vs. Brown
Benton Cops
IM Crown
Benton's intramural foot
ball team captured the
league 5 title Monday night
by defeating Bessey, 12-0,
and the Theta Xi B squad
defeated the Phi Delta Theta
B squad, 27-6, to assure the
Theta Xi's at least a tie for
the league 8 crown.
In action Wednesday Phi
Gamma Delta defeated Phi
Delta Theta A, 20-19, to keep
the Phi Gam's out in front
of league 2 and assure them
of a tie for the title,
Alpha Tau Omega broke
the Farm House win skein,
19-12, to keep ATO in the
league 2 race.
Tuesday s games were post
poned due to inclement weather.
Palace
NW Kappa Sigma A vs.
Kappa Psi A
SE Sigma Alpha Mu vs.
Beta Sigma Psi
Ag College Fields
N Phi Gamma Delta vs.
Farm House
E Alpha Tau Omega A
vs. Theta Xi A
Tuesday:
City Fields
NE Phi Kappa Psi B vs.
Theta Xi B
NW Dental College vs.
Senior Dents
SE Delta Tau Delta B
vs. Alpha Tau Omega B
SW Sigma Chi B vs. Phi
Delta Theta B
NOW SHOWING
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MARY ERICKSON
i Your Best Vote For Homecoming Queen i
is y If
Wfr, ly
' ? ' 1 I I I i j
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