The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 21, 1968, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1968
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
Miszou takes Saturday game, 16-14 .
Fumble,
punt 2nd
by Randy York
Assistant Sports Editor
The ball doesn't always
bounce your way. Notre
Dame discovered that this
year. Leroy Keyes and
Purdue discovered it, too.
Even Bob Gibson has
discovered it.
Unfortunately for the
Huskers, the ball did bounce
their way Saturday but at
the wrong times as Missouri
turned a fumble and two
weird punt plays into a 16-14
triumph.
One of the reverse-bouncing
punts by Mizzou's Steve Ken
nemore hit a Husker lineman
on the Nebraska 19 where the
Tigers recovered early in the
second quarter. Five plays
later, Missouri had Its first
touchdown. .
THE OTHER weird punt
transaction thwarted
Nebraska's momentum in the
third quarter after the
Huskers had sliced their way
within two points. It came
when Kennemore punted to
NU's Bob Best, who was
preparing to block on the
runback when the ball sud
denly bounced his way, nick
ed him and the Tigers
recovered.
Losing in such a manner
made the Nebraska locker
room a solemn place.
Co-captains Tom Penney
and Jim Hawkins called a
brief team meeting following
the game and warned against
a letdown at Oklahoma State
next Saturday.' The Cowboys,
who played one of the
toughest non-conference
schedules in the nation, were
crushed by Kansas, 49-14 in
their conference opener
Saturday.
"We've got to face up to
things," Devaney said. "We
can't monkey around with
. tri f I jt v - v?'
". iff j
".v, , . ' v '
f - x ' v. ' , " vW ii
Nebraska's
1 v5fWKJiSil-
.Trio Orduna hurdles over Missouri's
Roger Boyd,
to make a
first down for Big Red in Saturday's match.
New senator: students
should choose housing
Continued From Page 1
According to Olson, his
main goal as a senator will be
to influence tne senate
towards working to make the
iTniversitv relevant to
students.
"The University should be
designed to adapt students to
the hie they wisn 10 live,
Olson said. "I want to get the
Senate to find out what
students are really looking
for."
Students coming to the
University should be allowed
to live anywhere in Lincoln
reeardless of whether they
are men or women, according
to Olson.
"The only people who
should have anything to say
about the residence of a stu
dent are his parents," Olson
said. "The University must
stop looking at itself as the
chastity belt of the Midwest."
OLSOX, w ho was a member
of a committee to draft a bill
of rights as an undergraduate
senator, feels that some of the
original intent of the Bill of
Rights was lost in the passing
of the Student Academic
Freedom (SAF) document.
The original document
written three years ago con
tained a preamble and 17
amendments, the most con
troversial of which dealt with
housing, Olson said.
The SAF document makes
no reference to the housing
issue, he added.
"I don't know what hap
pened to the Bill of Rights,"
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Miscdloneous:
Olson said, "but the SAF
document is a step in the
right direction."
Olson, a gradute assistant
in economics, believes that as
an instructor and senator he
gets an insight into many
student desires and attitudes.
"Too often, senators,
whether they admit
it or not, are gunners," he
said. "They just don't un
derstand what students
want."
Olson voted "no" in last
week's Senate vote on the
postponement of "Time Out."
"The Senate was being
wishy-washy concerning the
'Time Out' issue," Olson said.
"One week earlier it had
passed approval of "Time
Out," and last week they
wanted to put it off."
The Senate should be made
to live up to what they do or
be represented in the eyes of
their constituents as ir
responsible, according to
Olson.
"I hate to see the Senate do
something and not do it well,
but having passed the 'Time
Out' resolution, the Senate
should go ahead with it," he
said. i
long-range thinking. We have
got to go after the next
game."
"We went for the long bomb
on the first play and it was
successful," Devaney said.
"But the first drive was the
only time we moved the ball
the first half." He added that
that the 45-yard pass from
quarterback Ernie Sigler to
Penney, playing for the first
time since the Utah game,
was underthrown and might
have been a touchdown.
"We made some defensive
adjustments in the second
half," Devaney added. "I only
wish that we had had that
type the first half."
DEVANEY CITED the
defensive play of Tiger
linebacker Rocky Wallace.
"He came down there real
tough," Devaney said. "We
probably should have used
that pass off the dive play to
keep him from coming down
so fast."
Linebacker Ken Geddes,
whose phenomenal defensive
effort produced 20 tackles,
didn't care to recount.
"I don't remember
anything," said the dejected
Boys Town graduate. "I don't
remember anything," he
repeated. "We lost, that's
all."
Missouri is better
defensively than Kansas as
far as I'm concerned," said
Sigler whose fumble in the
second quarter on the
Nebraska 18 set the stage for
the Tigers' field goal.
"Joe (Orduna) and Dick
(Davis) ran real tough and
the line kicked out real good,"
said Sigler. "It's a shame we
couldn't win."
Orduna, before 66,289 spec
tators (second largest in
Nebraska history), turned in
another top rushing job.
Orduna's stabs through the
stingy Tiger defense produced
88 rushing yards.
"WHEN YOU FUMBLE as
much as I have," Orduna
said, "you've got to do
something. So I try to run
hard with the ball instead of
fancy dance."
"Dick (Davis) does a ter
rific job of blocking up front,"
Orduna said. "I'm sorry to
say that I don't, although I
try to do the same job up
front."
"It depends on attitude,"
said Davis. "You see a guy,
yet you don't see him. It's like
a bear being there, but you
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don't want to see him."
a bear being there, but you
don't want to see him."
Davis offered no alibis for
losing. "The bad breaks are
made by the opposing team,"
he said. "Consistency is the
important thing. Sometimes
we do things extremely well,
like the finest team in the
nation. Other times we
don't."
Orduna's three-yard
touchdown burst in the open
ing quarter was right. Davis's
two-yard touchdown in the
third quarter was right. So
were Paul Rogers' two con
versions. Add Geddes's 13
solo tackles and seven assists
plus linebacker Jerry
Murtaugh's IS stops. Throw in
Penney's 113 yards on four
catches, Davis's 52 rushing
yards and Mike Wynn's
defensive end play.
BUT Missouri won.
Quiz Bowl
Results
the first quiz bowl matches
were held Thusday night and
the results were as follows:
In the upperclassmen
teams, it was Nifty
Niners 150, Beta Theta Pi
"B"-55. Bete Theta Pi
"A" 260, Alpha Gamma
Rho 0. Unteachables 115,
Phi Mu-35.
House of Suppiluliumas 80,
Delta Tau Delta 50. HLF
Peasants-225, Theta Xi-120.
HLF Workers 210, Zeta Beta
Tau 120. Alpha Phi forfeited
to Love Memorial Hall. Chi
Phi 240, Glenn House 140.
In the freshmen division it
was Tanker Frosh 120, Delta
Sigma Phi "C"-95. Phi Delta
Theta (The Phikeias) 85,
Glenn House Freshmen 75.
Alpha Gamma Rho 95,
Cather 1270. Luck 7-175,
Farm House Frosh 60.
Cornhuskers C o - o p 190,
Hous3 of Suppiluliumas 40.
Custer Kids 190, Beta Theta
Pi "C" 100. The match
between Alpha Xi Delta and
Smith 5 will be replayed.
CQfTiifUj.
12:30 p.m.
Placement Luncheon
1:30 p.m.
University Television
3:30 p.m.
Union Trips & Tours Com
mittee 4:30 p.m.
Xflsscls
A. W.S. Sorority Court
7:00 p.m.
UNICORNS
7:30 p.m.
Mathematics Counselors
8:00 p.m.
Students for Peace St
Freedom
9:00 p.m.
Afro-American Collegiate
Society .
Placement
Interviews
Rag placement Interviews
Meadaj, Oct. 11
TOW CORNINO CORPORATION
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COLGATE PALMOLTVE COMPANY
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DOW CORNING CORPORATION As
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GENERAL ELECTRIC As before
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PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY
ATOMIC ENERGY DIVISION As
before
SHELL COMPANIES As before
STANLEY CONSULTANTS. IN
CORPORATED B.S. Arch. ., B.S.,
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Wednesday, Oot. SS
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RADIO DRAWING
To Be Given Away Nov. 15
Attendant on duty Wed. & Fri.
2-6 p.ni.
Will give a free drawing ticket
with each load of washing
Norgo Launderama
1430 N. 35th
Harriers defeat
Missouri champs
Nebraska cross country
runners upset Missouri's
senior star Glenn Ogden and
downed the Tigers 21-34
Saturday morning at Pioneers
Park.
HUSKER PETE Brang won
the meet with a 14:42 time
over the three-mile course
and NU's Greg Carlberg took
second with a 14:45 clocking.
Ogden finished third, five
seconds behind Brang at
14:47. .
Other Husker top ten places
were run by Mel Campbell
(fourth); Jim Lang (sixth)
and Mike Lee (eighth) as both
teams placed five men hi tlw
top 10.
Assistant coach Dan Brit
tenham said all Nebraska
runners except one Improved
their times from last week's
outing against Kansas State
despite running on a slower,
muddler course.
"I don't want to take
anything away from Ogden,"
he said. "He is recovering
from an injury and that might
have hurt him Saturday, but
our team ran a fine race."
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Good ideas
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So do careers.
Let's talk about it on
Wednesday, October 23.
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Boeing has exciting new projects on the way up,
too. The 747 superjet world's largest and fastest
commercial jetliner, scheduled to make its first
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They can help get your career off to a dynamic
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Warned: SAK with heart as bis as mouth,
i all p a p. 435 aiu.