Reynolds to join elite company By Virgil Parker Journal Sports Editor Nebraska All-American halfback Bobby Reynolds and 10 other former college football greats will be inducted this year into the National Football Foundation's Hall of Fame. In addition to Reynolds, who led the nation in scoring (157 points) and touchdowns (22) in 1950, the others named include "Mean Joe" Greene, a defensive tackle who emerged from little North Texas State in 1969 to become the keystone of the awesome Steel Curtain defense which paved the way to four Super Bowl victories for the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1970s; quarterback Bob Griese (Purdue, 1963-66), who went on to play 14 seasons - two of them climaxing with Super Bowl victories - for the Miami Dolphins; and Lance Alworth, an Arkan- stood as a single season Nebraska record for 32 years until broken by Heisman Trophy ' winner Mike Rozier, was inducted into the Lincoln Journal's Nebraska Sports Hall of Fame in 1982. Reynolds, who was also a two-year baseball letter winner at Nebraska and is a partner in his Lincoln insurance agency, still has an honored spot in the NCAA record book. His average of 17.4 points per game scored in the nine Cornhusker games of the 1950 season, has never been surpassed by any major college player. "I am obviously very pleased," Reynolds said of being named to the national Hall of Fame. "It is certainly the ultimate honor for a college football player." See REYNOLDS on page 12 Bobby Reynolde sas halfback (1959-61), who became one of the first superstars of the American Football League, with the San Diego Chargers. Reynolds, whose 1,342 yards rushing