V Thursday, April 27, 1950 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE if " 6 lrame AK SX gSIV : ll ffe hLs )W I w Softball (L ) 9 f NU P, lAs. Pifl'f '' Aha Tau Omega became the W t( H Ul I t first Softball team to win three . Tf I sssfKissts v. ly i' 1 - iiunic"! ui x una rir art fhn mn - a aaBBWMa- a m sssssssv a h i mmw .t -wmssissss 71 Odd Mraike SkiinMIle print Medley TeBift Given upside CEiconee: Cooler. ehi To Compete in Vciyl'S' EC Stags Draft Whitehead Milton "Bus" Whitehead was the only University of Nebraska basketball player to be "drafted" by the National Basketball as sociation. Three ether Big Seven players were tabbed also. Whitehead was "drafted" by the Chicago Stags. The windy city crew gained rights to ten players as the play-for-pay league moved to save the Stags from withdrawing due to finan cial trouble. The Stags had been a "barn-burner" during the for mation of the league. Larry Faust, 6 foot 9 inch center from LaSalle university, was also taken by the Stags. Stroot to Stags. Don Stroot, Missouri's number one scoring threat and tabbed on the Daily Nebraska's all-Big Seven club, was drafted by the Stags also. The Minneapolis Lakers got the rights on Wayne Glasgow of Oklahoma and Kansas State's Clarence Brannum was picked by the Tri-Cities professional team. Jays Take First Conference Win Kansas University won their first Big Seven baseball tilt Tuesday afternoon, tripping oft beaten Missouri, 9-3. Playing on the Lawrence Field, Missouri's Jack Frier knocked out a home run in the sixth with no one aboard. The Tiger's won the tirst game Monday, 9-2. Kaiuu 001 043 Oil g 3 Miuouii 002 001 0003 Batteries: Sandefur and Morrow; KnKirrt. Ebturd (& and Alexandtr, Murrey. By Kimon Karabatsos Track Coach Ed Weir turns his sights to the Drake Relays to be held at Des Moines, Friday and Saturday. Spotlighting the Husker contingent will be Che shuttle hurdle relay team. Weir figures that this team will have the best chance in bringing home the first place trophy. Leading me nsi oi me crop Is Bob Berkshire.- At the Kan sas Relays, Berkshire skimmed through the 120 yard highs in :14.6 for the best time of his career. He was barely nipped at the tape by Big Ten conference champ Russ Merkel of Iowa, Merkel was timed :14.5. Weir will have to run off an elimination match this week to pick the four that will run in the relay Between Ray Magsa men, Wendy Cole, Bruce Engle and Don Bedker, there is not much difference. ' Best Crop The five above named hurd lers are, perhaps, the best crop 'ever raised at Nebraska. The Husker sprint medley team will have a chance to redeem itself at Des Moines. At Law rence, they won their section, but finished third in the time comparisons. Loyal Hurlbert, running the quarter-mile leg, was left in his blocks when he could not hear the starter's pistol on the staggered start. Harold Kopf, Harry Meginnis and Bill Baker are the other members of the sprint crew. Baker and Meginnis will run the 220 legs and JCopf the 880. Giving Hurlbert a good start and some good exchanges, the team might come up with some start ing efiects. In the distance medley, the team will be composed of either Wendy Cole or Leonard Kehl in the quarter, Hurlbert in the half, Kopf in the three-quarters and Lee Moore in the mile. Meginnis In 100 Meginnis will also be entered in the open 100 yard dash. Don Cooper and Kehl will carry the s'.arlet and cream colors in the pole vault. Cooper will have the same competition as he had in the Kansas Relays where he placed f-fcond with a 13-8 performance. Oklahoman Bill Carroll will be 6 Her his second consecutive pole vault title. He won the Kansas Relays top individual competi tors honors with a record break ing 14-5 vault. His vault erased the record held by Beef us Bryan for 11 J'e;.rs. Kehl, if right, could snatch the crown from both Cooper and Carroll. The ScoUbluff ace has still to hit his pace. Last year he won the conference indoor crown. All-conference football tackle. Charley Toogood and Wayne Fees will compete in the discus throw for the Huskers. Sees had a throw of 150 feet at Kansas but the throw was . disqualified because it fell out of the arc when a guest of wind caught it. Kansas Relay decathlon cham pion Jim McConnell may not compete at Drake. , If he does, Weir will use him in the shot ard javelin in the open compe tition. McConnell Doubtful McConnell won his second straight decathlon crown at Law rence, having to come from be hind and take four of the last live events. Altogether, six Huskers will be competing in 12 events. Weir has been forced to double up these six contestants. They are Meginnis, Magsa men, KehL Kopf, Hurlbert and McConnell. Only one Big Seven team will not compete at the Drake relays. All members of the Big Ten except for the new member Michigan State will be repre- Rented at the Des Moines event Last year the Spartans made a very good impression and walked off with many- honors. The Spartans were forced not to enter because they bad a cross sectional meet against Southern California and Yale at Los Angles. The ace combination of Bill Mack and Jack Dianetti in the distance runs and relays will not be present The stroke of good luck for the Huskers made their chances brighter for an upset victory in the sprint and distance relays. Last year, Michigan State won the hurdle schuttle relay, with Illinois and Wisconsin just ahead of Nebraska. With the Spartans out of the way, the road la wide open to Coach Weir and his hurdlers. Iowa might pull surprise with their Big Ten champion Merkel showing the way. Illinois and Wisconsin were both bit are oy graduation. A near record number of chools and participant art ex pected at the gala event. Accord ing to official releases from Des Moines, the number is expected to fall short of the alltime record set in 1939, but the field will probably be the largest since then. Thirty-Nine Given Letters At Colorado ; Frank Potts, director of ath letics at Colorado University, an nounced the names of 39-athletes who received letters for partici pation in winter sports, and 13 freshmen basketball players who received numerals. , Dempsey Warns of T-V Dangers Canadian sports . promoters were warned Tuesday to "keep clear of television"- by Jack Dempsey. Making an address before a dinner meeting of Montreal Sportsmen, Dempsey told Canad ian promoters "not to make the same mistake that is being made in the United States." He stated further that in the United States "many money grabbing stadium '6wners are selling out their shows to televi sion and sport is gradually being taken away from ;the original promoters." . , ' Patterson Cuts Frosli Squad; Varsity Downs 'Greenies,' 7-1 BY IRA EPSTEIN. (Staff Sports Writer) The Freshman baseball team got their first taste of competi tion Tuesday as they tried their wares against the Varsity nine. The Varsity silenced the Year lings. 7-1, but Freshman Coach Patterson cited that his boys played better ball than the score indicated. The freshmen looked ragged in places, but considering the fact that they hadn't been outside too long, their performance was as good as can be expected. Leach Looks Good Looking exceptionally bright in the infield was John Leach who held down third base. Leach was the only boy who played the entire game. Other boys in the starting line-up were Reid Lowes, shortstop; Jack Shull, catcher; Howard Herbst, first base; Fred Cadys, leftfield; Bobby Reynolds, second base; Clyde Snook, right field; Cliff Hopp, centerfield, and Dick McCormick at pitcher. Yesterday, Pattepon cut his squad down to 43 men, including 14 pitchers, 7 catchers, 12 out fields, and 10 infielders. Because of a limit on space Patterson announced that he can't keep every man out for the squad, but they are all invited out again for fall practice. He expects to make another cut in the near future. Boys vieing for pitching chores are Mel Bremer, Bob Brum, Dale Bunsen, Win Cadys, Charles Goll, Earl Hatches, Everett Kimball and Bud Lade. Others are Dean Lincott, Dick McCormick, Hank Millen Donald Richardson, and Clyde Snook. Behind the plate are Jack Russell, Jim Justice, Ralph Mar shall, Buck Osborne, Ron Raitt, Willard Speck and Jack Shull. Working in the infield are Marvin Lawton, John Leach, Reid Lowes, Jim Ogden, Ronnie Oknoutka, Bob Reynolds, Clay ton Curtis, Tom ' Grasshans, Howard Herbst and Frank Hoff man. Taking a hand in the outfield are Fred Cadys, Gerald Dunn, Bill Echhardt, Bill Garber, Cliff Hopp, Gus Lebsock and Bob Lang. Alpha Tau Omega became the first Softball team to win three games Tuesday night as the Taus ripped Delta Upsilon to the tune of 15-3. The Vin gave the Taus sole possesion of fire r.w. i League I with a perfect record A-fVV o "orne-runs sparked the ATO 11 hit attack. Don Coupens clouted the first homer in the first inning with one mate aboard to help the Taus along in their seven run frame. Ben Munson contributed the other four-bagger in the fifth with the bases empty Dick Bick was the winning pitcher, allowing the DU's seven safeties. Dwight Griswold served as his battery mate. On the mound for the DU's were Sween ey and Britt with Peterson catching. Phi Delta Win . The SAE's threatened constan ly, but didn't have necessary scoring punch as the Phi Delts won a hard fought contest by a 2-1 margin. Paul Blumer was the hero of the Phi Delts, pitching a one hit ball game in addition to mov ing the winning run into scoring position with one of the two Phi Delt hits. Both of the winners' runs scored on infield outs. Jack Burris of the Sig Alphs, holding the victors to only two safeties, held them . in check most of the game. , Sigma Chi kept their record perfect by taking their second contest, a 10-4 victory over Phi Kappa Psi. Brandenburg was on the mound for the Chi's, holding the Phi Psi's to five hits while his mates were collecting seven off the efforts of Britten. Betas Repeat A three run homer by Bob Kasmarek in the fourth inning supplied Beta Theta Pi with the winning markers as the Betas won iheir second contest, 6-5 over defending champion Alpha Gamma Rho. Knebel on the mound for the AGR's held the Betas to only three hits, but his mates couldn't match his per formance in allowing the six runs. Roth and Weekes were the two Beta hurlers, giving six hits. Other scores of the day found Sigma Alpha Mu losing their first game of the year, 6-8 to Brown Palace; Zeta Beta Tau making it two out of three with a 9-5 win over Farm House; Kappa Sigma winning over Phi Gamma Delta, 9-1; the Delts hitting Beta Sigma Psi, 10-5; and the Sig Eps over the Phi Psi's, 9-1. Whom -ore yom coiling out?' Cerv. Vrbka and Kopf Lead Huskers in Batting, Pitching Two of the key factors In volved in the Cornhusker base ball team's second place tie in the Big Seven at the present time can be credited to the hitting of Bob Cerv, Weston, and the pitching of Lin Vrbka, Utica. The diamond crew has won seven and lost three games to date, in both conference and non-confer ence games. Cerv, who has hit safely In 10 straight games, tops the Ne braska hitters with a healthy 489. He also leads in doubles with four, triples with two, home runs with four, stolen bases with six and total bases with 43. In the hurling department, Vrbka, the sophomore right hander, has notched three vie tories in as many starts, includ ing Big Seven triumphs over Missouri and Kansas State. He has been tagged for a slim 12 hits in 24 innings and owns a 1.1 earned run average. Bob Camp, West Point senior, who has one win and one loss in four starts, three in relief roles, has the lowest earned run aver age, 0.9. Del Kopf, Lexington, another sophomore righthander, who has won his first two games, leads in strikeouts win 15. The Batting Averages Name Games Bob Cerv 10 Hobe Hays 3 Bill Denker 10 Bob Diers 10 Tom Novak 8 Buzz Powley 9 Bob Grogan 8 Bill Jensen 8 Ray Mladovitch 10 John Rego 6 Bob Lohrberg 3 Bill Fitzgerald 3 AB R H TB Pet. 47 14 23 43 .489 10 1 4 4 .400 45 4 15 25 .333 43 15 12 22 .279 29 4 8 10 .276 27 4 7 10 .259 31 11 8 9 .258 32 6 8 11 .250 32 8 7 13 .219 20 6 4 5 .200 7 0 1 2 .143 7 111 .143 NAME Lin Vrbka 3 Del Kopf 2 Bob Camp 4 Ernest Behne 2 Bob Jenkins .. 2 Dick Curley .... 2 The Pitching Averages IP H R 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1000 1000 .500 .500 .000 .000 24 12 13 6 19Z3 12 13 12 8'3 9 11 12 so 11 15 7 11 6 4 BB ER r ave. 3 3 1.1 2 2 3 5 5 5 3 6 5 7 1.3 0.9 2.0 5.4 3.S XX I Xxt7 . : x, J' ' !X. H .. J vvnwAvn vriif Tim (j-i rati a vaiitttfti from firvittjthliiff will no fume the role of dark horse in a star-studded pack of stratospheric artists at the Drake Relays Friday and Saturday at Des. Moines. Sooner Bill Carroll Is favored. Guaranteed Watch Repairing By Your Campus Watchm alter FIX YOUR TICK WITH DICK DICK'S WATCH REPAIR IN THE NEBRASKA BOOK STORE r-Lh "ZX" i. it " .''t f , 4 tt- Cfftf. Pau Bitskey. AhWfeSury, 38 Mr (ntefigence, US. fir force 0 An excellent student at Middlebury Col lege, Vermont, Paul found time to win the coveted All Sports Trophy in his senior year. He graduated in June, 1938. His big plane education was topped with 23 misHionii over the far-famed Hump," flying C-54 tranHports. After V-J Day, he itayed on in the Far Eant until March of ' 1948 specializing in Air Intelligence. -Muffin - -f-5&& He then joined a coated paper mill firm as research and control man. Pearl Harbor changed all that Paul went to Maxwell Field to begin Aviation Cadet training. Back home, after accepting a Regular Air Force Commuwion, Captain Buukey went to Air Tactical school, was there rated an outstanding student, and won assignment to Command and Staff school. An outstanding Cadet, 2nd Lt. Paul , Buskey was held over as an Instructor after graduation. Then he was assigned as ' a pilot in the Air Transport Command. Today, Captain Buskey is an Air Intel!! genre Officer on MATS Headquarters Staff at Andrews Air Force Base neat Washington, D. C. He looks forward to rewarding future in the U. S. Air Force. If you ere tingle, bstwean the ages of 20 and tWl, with at least two yean of college, consider the many career opportunities at a pilot or navigator In the U. S. Air Force. Procurement Teams are visiting many colleges and universities to explain these career opportunities. Watch for them. You may alo get full details at your nearest Air Force Base or U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station, or by writing to the Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force, Atti Aviation Cadet Branch, Washington 25, D. C U. S. AIR FORCE ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS! 'i 1 1 it . i, 'i if r, f,i. i A . K 1 K 1 l" -