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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1951)
Thursdqy, February 15, Husker Wrestlers Score 21-8 Win Over Wildcats By Shirley Murphy Slaff Sports Write.- Nebraska wrestlers snapped out cn their five match losing streak Wednesday night by dropping Kansas State 21 to 8. The Ne braskans won the falls and three decisions out of the eight squab bles. One match ended in a draw and K-State copped two deci sions. Herb Reese climaxed the eve ning by pinning Alvin Ogden (K State) in 1:38. The defending Big Seven champ now has a record of eight wins out of eight matches. Harold Gilliard dropped Duane Rieke in the 130 lb. division. Time of the fall was 3:57. Ken Brown started the night out right for Nebraska by winning a decision over Don Gerstner with 1 1 points to four in the lightweight 123 pound class. Russell Wins Bob Russell of the Husker squad won his first match of the season with a hard-earned deci sion over K-State's Dean Sheets. Ken Fisher followed the winning trend as he decisioned Lyle Lin nell in the 147 lb. fight with a margin of six points. Dave Mackie in the 157 lb. class and Don Rauh of the 167 class slowed down the winning pat tern by losing decisions to Wayne JO i i V- IT HAROLD GILLILAXD . . . Husker grappler of the 130-pound class copped another victory Ag YMCA Upsets Ag Men; Fiji Bees Topple Phi Delts The Bees of Phi Gamma Delta took over the role of leader in the fraternity "B" basketball chase Tuesday night as the jun ior Fijis ousted Phi Delta Theta B" from the unbeaten ranks. The final score read 27-24. The two outfits had been rated one-two in the fraternity B ratings and eighth and ninth in the all-university placements, but the Phi Delts owned the hifiher ranking. The Fiji win comes as sort of a mild upset. Maupin Sprees It was behind the 16-point shooting of Maupin that led to the Phi Delt downfall. The Fijis used Maupin's valuable points in the first half to register a 14-12 hall'time lead. From there on it was a battle royal. Pete Keene and Paul Gustav son accounted for all but foui of the Phi Delt points, but had no support. Each tallied ten. Paul Grimm of the Fijis collected seven. Meanwhile, another upset, this one of much larger proportions, was taking place on the Ag Col lege floor. Ag Men Tumble The Ag Men's Club "A" team, riding the crest of eight straight victories, ran into a keyed-up band from the Ag College YMCA "A" and fell to a 1-34 defeat. The Ag Men, In the last rat ings, were placed in the number one spot in the Independent standings and were ranked num ber five in the all-university rat ines. Pioneer Co-op stayed unde Jeated and chalked up win num ber seven Tuesday night by blai ine Cornhusker Co-op by a ii- score. The win pracucauy as sures the Pioneers the first place of league IV and keeps them ranked among the first ten in the university. Easy Win The Pioneers rolled to a 10-4 first quarter lead and stretched that to 20-6 at intermission. Cornhusker outscored the victor. 5-4 in the third period, but in the final Quarter the winners roared to ten while holding the losers scoreless. Dwehus led the winning Pio neers with 16 points while Beeiy accounted for six more. Hunger -lord -was high for the losers with our- Delta Sii Edee Teke Delta Sigma Phi proved that they were one point better than Tau Kappa Epsilon as they de feated the Tekes by that margin of r the second straight time. The Delta Biff were pushed !nto overtime to do it thia time, however, and almost wound up on the abort end of the ore As it wu .tboufh, they notched twa point la the extra period Jo the Tekea one to win 20-19. The Tekes, led by Jerrv Ewing kept control of the low pcoring affair for most of the way. The yowned a 4-3 firsi quarter lead and were tied 7-7 l.,".. f"" ;"7Z":: t;Ti quarter. Pettijohn Hits Jim Pettijohn hit for two quid haskets uu the fourth to five the i 1951 Richardson and Leslie Kramer respectively. The 177 pound battle between Harley Richardson and Frank Salomen ended in a draw. Well Earned The Husker matmen's victory was well earned. K-State showed a lot of spirit fight. The proverb, "the bigger they are, the harder they fall, showed up in the wins on the line-up. Both teams were out to win and gave a fascinating showing. Jackie's bout was one of the most interesting although he didn't chalk up a win. Both men refused to fall until the last or the second period. Time was taken toward the beginning for Mackie to tape some bothersome fingers. Another grueling tussle was the draw of Richardson and Salomen. The Husker wrestler scored his lone point in the sec ond period when he managed to untangle himself from his op ponent's grasp. Salomen scored his point in the third period on the same account. The undefeated Reese pro vided the thrill of the evening with the fast and furious pinning of the other heavyweight, Ogden. The fall was a proper ending to a battle hard fougTit. The 21 to 8 victory by Coach Delta Sigs the lead for the first time. With time running out and the score 18-17, Delta Sigs, Ewing hit on a free toss to tie the contest and send it into over time. ' The Delta Sigs controlled the ball for most of the overtime and with time running out, Bill Wil son crapked the Teke defense for a two-pointer. A desperation shot by Ewing was no good, but he was fouled while shooting as so got two chances to tie it up. He made his first good, but his second try rolled in and out and the Delta Sigs had their win. Pettijohn led the contest's scoring with half of the Delta Sig total, ten for - the evening. Wilson and Bob Hallock each added four more. Ewing hit for nine for the Tekes while Osch ner got five. The win boosts the Delta Sig record above the .500 mark with a 4-3. MAIN FEATURES START I STATE: "Golden Twenties,";! 1:05, 3:44, 6:23, 9:02. "Outrage," f 2:18, 4:57, 7:30, 10:15. ! I HUSKER: "The Fuller Brush iGM," 2:35, 5:39, 8:43; "Convicted," 1:00, 4:04, 7:08, 10:12. I VARSITY: "Sugarfoot," 1:42, 3:46, 5:42, 7:37, 9:34. m m ft m M RANDOLPH SCOTT . "SUGARFOOT" in TECHMCOIjOR WITH ADELE JERGEXS IJ ii RAYMOND MASSEY J TAKu WARNING! IK lMihM TOVX.H1: "OUTRAGE" INTBOM W MALA POWERS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LUCILLE BALL is "THE FULLER BRUSH GIRL" CO-HIT II BRODERICK CRAWFORD I1 glenn ford in "CONVICTED" mmmm ! Partin's team is the second this season. Husker wrestlers de feated Denver university earlier in the season. Robinson Stops LaMotta in 13th Sugar Ray Robinson is the new middle-weight champion of the world. Sugar Ray won this title (his third championship crown) Wednesday night by scoring a technical knockout over champion Jake LaMotta in the 13th round of their scheduled 15-round bat tle. Robinson kept on even terms with the Bronx Bull for eight rounds and then cut loose. The new champion all but floored Jake in each of the remaining five rounds, but LaMotta would not go down. At the finish, LaMotta was a confused and practically sense less bag of muscle. His tremen dous strength refused to let him go down but he could not protect himself from the furious pound ing of Sugar Ray. LaMotta didn't throw a punch in the final three rounds. He just stood there, absorbing a ter rific beating. on -A i 1 Wednesday night by pinning Duane Rieke of Kansas State in 3:57. The Huskers won 21-8. 3 " if '.J ' r P Is MISS JOStUSE UOr FVA Vogue Pattern Stylist, Commentator RllGHT Ai the pre, the fahion-lalirfe fctory oi Spring 51 . . . pmiend by VOGIE, in our coJriplele-oe6'overaf:e showing. We'rr heading toward a ;a&on of eofiaess: in silhouettes with taped-tight waistlines, oewly-wrapped skirts, with more and moe halter bareness. Fabrics appear lighter in weight and color . . . note the butterfly silks, the importance of lilac. Come Thursday and Friday to this exciting edition of fashion as you make it! UlilliwUiMliJUll luiltiUUililliiilM THE DAILY NEBRASKAN l-M Handball Hears Champ The all-university handball tournament took another step in naming the All-U champion last week as the field narrowed down to 16 remaining men. Only the finalists in the seven individual leagues remain along with two semi-finalists. Either Brown of Phi Gamma Delta or Perry or Sigma Alpha Epsilon will lose out in league IV and the same is true in league VII with Perrine of SAE and Pomeroy of Beta Theta Pi re maining semi-finalists. Stan'bury and Rochman Dick Stansbury of Presby House and Bart Rochman of Sigma Alpha Mu will meet in the next round to determine the champion of league I. These two men represent the only survivors of those houses in the tourney. Howard Hansen, an independ ent, and Doug Peters, Beta, are the finalists in league II. The winner here will capture the second league's honors. . Another Beta, Bill Rogers, will face Jim Quinn of SAE for the third league title. Ted Cannon of Phi Gamma Delta will oppose the survivor of the Brown-Perry match for league IV honors. Don Strasheim of Phi Gamma Delta meets Don Schultise of the Betas in league V. Dave Avery, Beta Theta Pi and Doug Dudley, SAE, are the sole survivors of league VI. The final league, No. 7, sees jKen Minnick of the Betas meet ing the winner of the Perrine i Pomeroy tussle. Betas High i Out of the 16 remaining men, iBeta Theta Pi is represented by 'the greater number, giving the I Betas a strangle-hold on the team honors. Six of the 16 are : Betas while Sigma Alpha Epsilon lis not too far behind with four 'men. j Phi Gamma Delta still has three men in the tourney while there is one man each from ; Presby House and Sigma Alpha Mu and one independent sur vivor. As soon as the seven league winners have been decided, play will begin for the All-U cham- ipionship. The seven league win ners and one of the league runner-ups will make the eight bracket tourney. The one runner-up will be chosen by lottery. The pairings for the final tourney are thus: Winner of league I versus winner of league III; winner of league V versus winner of league II, winner of league IV versus winner of league VI; winner of league VII versus the one runner-up. Team champion of the tourney will be the team accumulating the highest total of points, scor- f ing five points for each man ad 'I vancing to the next round. It is currently a three-way jracf rPtwAefI? tne.4 e s !JIS 'and Sig Alphs with the Betas having a slight lead. liil!!,Pfll;BliillPW!'liP flKLLER I presents: VOGUE 9 Fashion Headlines of Spring '5 Displaying our By-the-Yard Collection in Exciting Outlines by VOGUE THURSDAY, 3:00 p.m. FRIDAY, 12:30 FRIDAY, 3:00 p.m. Spec Lutach-llour AUDITORIUM ASMS, NU Cindermen 'Shape-Up Struggle With Tigers For By Don Sampson Coach Ed Weir's Cornhusker track team runs up against their stiffest competition of the sea son when they journey to Co lumbia to go against the veteran laden Missouri university thin clads. The Tigers have had only one meet this year, trounching the Iowa State Cyclones, 87-17. The Huskers downed the Cyclones, 82-22, in the year's first meet. Last year's Husker tracksters were dealt a 62-41 2 defeat by a hot Mizzou outfit, which ran without the services of its ace miler, Bill McGuire. McGuire Great The Tigers, like the Kansas U team defeated last week by the Huskers, is strong in the dis tance events. In Bill McGuire they have a past conference in door and outdoor mile winner. McGuire clocked off a 4:17.3 time against the Cyclones, Boh Fox finished second to Herb Semper of Kansas in the outdoor two mile race in the Big Seven Con ference meet at Lincoln last spring. Sophomore Pete Gallup posted the top times in the mile and two-mile in the postal meet held among Big Seven freshman track teams last spring. Bob Krueger will . go after points in the two-mile after being shut out by the strong Kansas aggregation. Nebraskans Ken Jacobs, Gene Yelken, and Jay Ziegler will go against lettermen McGuire and Chester Franz in the mile. No Lettermen in 880 The only event in which the Tigers boast no lettermen is the half-mile. In this event the Huskers look good with Hobe Jones and Jacobs ready to run. Jones, winner of the 880 in the first two meets, withdrew from the event because of illness against Kansas, and Jacobs took a 2:01.2 victory. Sophomore Gallup and Bert McVay will carry Missouri's colors into the race. The Tigers do not appear to miss the lack of veterans in the event. Gallup covered the distance in 1:58.2 in the Iowa State dual. Jones will run into another stiff opponent in the quarter mile. Senior letterman Randy Vanet, who was clocked in :50.9 against the Cyclones, will be out to hand the speedy soph his first set back. Champ Will Jump Tiger Bob Gorden will pro vide the toughest opposition of the year for Nebraska high jump ers, Dick Meissner and Irv Thode. Gorden, who tied for first in the conference outdoor meet last spring, registered a top jump of 6 feet 7?4 inches. The top mark of Meissner's career was set last jiirs'Bi'ra PAifTE tt ia.l Shoving) Fourth Floor ill In iiiB:iac:;;;a;,iiii&iu J it" -jj',x,'r" v TIGER ACE . . . Bill McGuire, Missouri long distance star, will be seeking important victories in the mile and two-mile against the Huskers in the crucial dual meet between the Tigers and Huskers in Colum bia Saturday. Saturday when the Omaha sen ior leaped 6 feet 5 inches. Gor den won the Cyclone dual with 6 feet 3'4 inches. Other heretofore successful Huskers who will be hard pressed to repeat their victories are broad jumpers Glenn' Beerline and Irv Thode. The two sophomores, who have finished one-two in every meet thus far, will be jumping against two seasoned veterans in Laddie Stovall and Lome Buch ner. Clark Ties Record Missouri's sprinter Byron Clark, who won the indoor 60 yard dash at last winter's Big Seven meet, equalled the conference record in a qualifying heat with a :06.2 clocking. Husker sprinter Lee Alexander will probably have to better his :06.5 time of a week ago to beat the speedy Missour ian. Dan Tolman, Bruce Engel, Wendell Cole, and Don Bedker will run against sophomore Bill Fessler and letterman Frank Bardot and Bob Foster in the 60 yard high hurdles. Tolman turned in a fast :07.8 time against Kansas. Fessler won for the Tigers last week with a :07.7 clocking. In the Lows Tolman, Cole, and Bedker will run in the lows against Fessler and letterman Harold Carter. Cole has had some fast times in this event and could come through with a victory. The Nebraska mile relay team of Len Kehl, Jack Scoville, Bob Barchus and Bill Hein is un defeated :n three meets and will iirsriiiEra::' r-,.-"- . T,rtv i .'" .-r -.,-;-. - .-:"-. j'''-'-''-fi''''' ;? "" '''''ftjr f'iti y"'-,--'.-.-v, t ' Courier V$m PAGE 3 LEE ALEXANDER . . . Husker sprinter will face the Big Seven indoor record-holder of the 60-yard dash in the Miz-zou-Nebraska clash. be carrying this record into ac tion against the Tigers. Missouri chalked up a 3:30.2 time against the Cyclones. The Huskers' best for the year is 3:29.6. Vault to Cooper? A prominent Missouri weakness is in the pole vault, with Dick Moore the lone returning letter winner. The best Missouri vault against Iowa State was 12 feet. In this event the Huskers are well fortified with perhaps the conference's two' outstanding vaulters in Don Cooper and Leon ard Kehl. Cooper has been hit ting 14 feet with consistency, and Kehl turned in a 13 feet 6 inches vault against Kansas. Blair sophomore Paul Grimm will probably have to better his winning mark of last Saturday, 45 feet 71,! inches, in order to beat Missouri's letterman, Phil Brusca. " Summer Courses UNIVERSITY of MADRID Study and Travel A RARE opportunity to en joy memorable experi ences in learning and living! For students, teachers, others yet to discover fascinating, his torical Spain. Courses include Spanish language, art and cul ture. Interesting recreational program included. 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