Ze Teachers and against Mark Banks's Drake University Bulldogse Iowa State, our noxt opponent, heavy and oggressive, had been highly touted. Our situation looked none too promising. In fact, the weok's proparntion was most disappointing. In the earlier coaching days, I had formed the habit of taking a pencil and pad to bed with ma, ottachinzg +:om to the pote by a pieco of etring. Solutions to my knottiest proolems scemec always to come to me in the eeric hours, during the meanderings of tho eubsonseicus. Invariably, they would vanish under the: spell of daylight and the arduous duties accompanying it, unless I scribbled then down on this ~ for reference in the a I oe explain the twilight zone between a dream and o hunch. In fact, I cannot logicaljy exp.ain either.a dream of o hunch, The psychologist might rough- ly explain a dream as forecs driven by nervous or montal currents that we do not “understands yet the incubation period might have been in previous reactions, _ occurring possibly months or years before. The currents cr forces might have jJelled for a period, and then might flow at a most unexpected time, This funding of all the years of experiences night gush out into a sudden perfect conclusion. Possibly, out of the. exhaustivo drean theories of the psychologist, might come an explanation of this drean, Howevor, whether apparition, vision, premoni- tion, presentiment, or hunch, I shall relate the dream here as I told it on that day to the football HREM I sow an vcs with the faces of 11 Kansas gridiron warriors thoreine Each face was set out in bas-relief. in the fusolage of that ship, as it took off on old McCook Field. sind five of those men, whom I saw in the fuselage that night, were not to have been in the anticipated starting line-up of the following Pie: In this dream, the Iowa State team had kicked off to Kansas. The Kansas stew ship had sailed to the north and over the east gonl. In despair, the Iowa State players had folded their hands on their hips and gasped. This dream aione was enough to convince mo that the men that I saw in that ship would be in my starting line-up. Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg was the quartorback and field general. Ten minutes before game time we were huddled in the dressing room for final instructions and line-up announcenents« The anhouncenent came as a blast. "Boys, I had a dream last night. I beliove in hunches, I saw o Kansas air- plane with the faces of eleven of you taking off. Some of the faces in that ship have not been seen in a starting line-up this year. But today I'm going to play you just that way. Your ship swung from the west to “he north and arose above that Towa State team, as you continued eastward to the goal line, "I saw Harley Little playing right half back. And with the ball tucked undor his arm, he started from noar our own goal line and I watched him as he crossed Towa State's goat line, with the bail in his possession, "Dutch, listen; if we win the toss, I want you to receive. And whoever re- ceives the kick-off must carry it up to the right and center of the field, as far as possible. On the next formtion, you call Harley Littie's signal, 46 -= right half around left end, Do you year me, Dutch? I mean it."