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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1964)
Page 4 The Daffy Nebraskan Thursday, November 12, 1964 Meet the Foe 03W OGffi I Meet the Foe: vz' Blocking Bobby Holm h Headliner x . rv A 1 f" v" J? ; : Bobby Hohn has been select- lvv! I ll 'N'"'"! ed as this week's Husker ; f VV. ' f Iv' I Headliner for his consistant I jd0:' s"1' ? i . . - JfV play all season and his great Ce! j.. t J' f ; ; I 'game against Kansas. ( $ ,v, I - ( I ' The 181-pound senior from ; '-fcV. Jf" r.. : 'V, . --. Beatrice has been tabbed by sVVf In v '3 ' Jk .' : fans and scouts alike as one x t"" -;' Oy&V. I t if sj I .Z':iQ of the best blockers in college ' vUj "'ihr ' l ' :J 'i ' 11 ' J ' ' football today. And he demon- MJ g'r'-rJ 1 ' ' T " v strated his fine blocking again riw 4L J1 " ' : : : 's; .. :k '"r::',-' . ' J? : J '; Hohn played fullback last rft0-"' ' . ' T , customed to his new Dosition. , 1 it ?'M f I 1 A .r i Among Hohn's twelve carr-, : i . ' . 1 1 1 I jb 4 . - les wprp nnp rnirrv-ninp varn s - - - - - . J .',"t .f J M f J' Hiw ' J . I - Kkff V! 1 fTTf t- Senior end Jack Jacobson is a Cowboy with plenty of class. The 6'2" 196-pounder is gunning for all-conference honors this year after garnering a second team slot last year. Jacobson goes both ways for the Cutchin-c oached Oklahoma State club. He was tops among OSU linemen last year, with sixty-nine tackles. Jacobson has good speed and is rated a fine pass re ceiver who runs patterns well. He was on the receiving end of twenty-two passes last year, and netted 282 yards. The former Ardmore, Oklahoma all-stater will face a tough test against the Nebraska ends who were rated by Kansas' coach Jack Mitchell after last week's game as "the finest group of ends I've ever seen." Big Eight Sports Shorts- Bobby gained 84 yards on twelve carries for an average of seven yer carry. Among Hohn's twelve carr ies were one thirty-nine yard jaunt in the second quarter setting up the second Husker touchdown which Hohn scored from the one. Among those in considera tion for the award along with Hohn were Joe McNulty who made several key stops in cluding the final two on the fourth quarter goal-line stand. Larry Wachholtz who played k- a fine game on defense oppo- site Gale Sayers, and Free man White who was on the . , receiving end of a 92-yard pass-run combination. silt Walt Garrison is a 200-pound fullback who packs a wallop. In fifty-nine carries last year he was never stopped for minus yardage. Garrison gained 387 yards last year for a fine 6.6 yard-per-carry average. Garrison is regarded as a 'smart' run ner with power. Big Walt has the power to blast into the line, and the speed and agility to pick his way if the situation calls for it. The junior from Lewisville, Texas, plays linebacker on defense. Here's the way Pat Quinn, the assistant sports informa tion director at Oklahoma State, describes 5-7, 155-pound Larry Elliott: "Larry is like a Volkswagon in with a bunch of Cadillacs. If he gets in a collision, he may get bent up a little, but he s gonna dent somebody, too. Kansas State has two sets of twins around this year one pair is for real, the Con dit speedsters, Jerry and Lar ry. The other pair is the "Bob bsey Twins" who share t h e name of Henry Henry How ard and Bob Henry. Henry (Bob) proved he can move in the opener for Kansas State, while Howard (Henry) is still trying to pop back from an operation late this summer on his leg. The "Henry" boys are called the swiftest on the club. Dean Charles Miller, who! recently bowed out as facultv representative at Nebraska, claims the institutional repre sentatives are a vital cog in any conference machinery. "I think the reason for being (faculty representatives) in the program is to establish a balance between the athletic programs and the academic ideas of the universities." He feels the four most im portant Conference achieve ments during his six-year ten ure were the upgrading of ac ademic requirements, the re- tHIeed. HuisBiet Cadillacs! duction of the number of trans fer students, the limitation of scholarships, and the change in Conference administration, which gave the executive di rector more authority. Miner actually served a short time on both sides of the "fence" he filled in as "athletic director" for the Cornhuskers before Tippy Dey was hired. Bob Hurt, sports editor of the Topeka Capital, following the 1964 Big Eight Skywrit ers' Tour, said that among the conclusions he formed was mat me uonierence over flowed with premium -type rookie backs who may re main in the background be cause the Conference over flows with premium-tvpe vet eran backs." He added: "The real value of the trip is meet ing the high-type young men who play in Big Eight uni forms. They are a varied and interesting lot . . ." From the "Coaches are su perstitious" file: Phil Cutch in, who watched his Okla homa State team win its first Big Eight Conference football game for him this year, ad mitted after the Iowa State game "I wore a new pair of cowboy boots today to see if I could change our luck. It looks like they worked (to t'.ic tune of a 29-14 win over Iowa State). My feet sure are sort-. but I have to keep wearing these boots 'til we lose. I hope I never have to take 'em off." Two Big Eight Conference trainers, Ray Bickerstaff of Iowa State and Dean Ncsmith of Kansas, share a theory that the heel cleats on football shoes are to blame for many of the knee injuries. "If I had my way," Bickerstaff says, "we would wear high-top shoes, even though they are two ounces heavier, ail the time. Then get rid of the heel cleats. That would cut down on the knee injuries." No smith is currently experiment ing with a new heel support that cannot stick into the turf when a player cuts suddenly that is when the cartilage often is torn loose. With a name like Robert E. I Lee. who is the top yard gain-1 er for Colorado, this sopho-! more halfback has to hail) from "rebel" land. He does Waco, Texas. ism" is? That is a new word Coach Clay Stapleton at Iowa State has coined to describe what is needed in a good quarterback in college ball to day. A quarterback that pos se sses "combinationism" wnu rimakp a pnorl tnilhufL- I in the single wing, according to Stapleton he can both run and pass well. Hale Irwin, sophomore quarterback at Colorado and a man who should know, says "golf has a definite carryover into football, developing men tal discipline and ability to think under pressure." Irwin has won the Colorado ama-l teur golf championship the1 past two years. 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