Losing) Stairs Spke Sqyad Minnick On Second Unit? Wednesday, March 19, 1952 FIRST TF AM Don Holmes Nebraska Co-op Phil Haas Rockets Jim Evans M Street Boys Cliff Rogers Ag YMCA iviary Lawton Warriors Independent All-Star Team POS. SECOND TEAM F Gordon Pejsar Dental Frosh F - Leonard Wilson Rockets C Cecil Voils Delta Sigma Pi G Clark Betcke Lillies G Claira Johnson Lillies Honrable Mention: Chuck Huestis Dorm B-C; Charlie Bush Shortys; Bob Boesiger Dorm A Comets; Chuck Cham ley M Street Boys; Bill Kennedy Dorm A Stars; Ken LeGrand Red Guidons; Dick Doering Pill Rollers; Jim Worth Ramblers; Don Bitterman, Aon Powers Pluggers; Verl Claussen Bearcats. By BILL MUNDELL Intramural Sports Columnist Outstanding basketball stars that played on losing teams make up the raapority of the 1952 In tramural Independent All-Star team. A high tribute to those men Uho played terrific basketball but had little support from their teams Was paid by the voters of the top Independent aggregation. The Independent outfit is the third of the divisional teams to1 be chosen entirely by the man-1 agers and teams themselves. Three of the five men parti cipated on teams that never reached the playoffs while a fourth represents a team that lost its first round enoounter. Independent and All-Unaffili-ated champion M-Street Boys was the only squad amDngr the eight quarter-finalists, that placed a man on the first team. The lineup includes Don Holmes of Nebraska Co-op and Phil Haas of the Rockets at . forwards. Jim Evans of M-Street at the center post, and Cliff Rogers of the Ag YMCA and Marvin Lawton of the Warriors at guards. I The 1952 lineup presents every-1 thing concerning basketball: of ehraskan Lists Tourney Stars N fense, defense, rebounding and good floor performance. Holmes was the top man for the Co-op, a team that tied for fourth and fifth in league X and failed to make the tourney. Holmes joined the Co-op aggre gation in time for their fourth contest after the Nebraskans had dropped the first three. The voters gave evidence that the team would have made the playoffs had he played the en tire season. By far, the top scorer for his team, Holmes was also a terrific rebounder and gave his team a F J , , - 1 '' 1 ' S " y W i A P A THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Jayhawks ISaMfe mm n n nrn n lfavre 3. -Si- Defensive Daily Nebraskan A-Tourney Team FIRST TEAM POS. SECOND TEAM Harold Beck Minden F Wayne Copes Palmyra Glenn Sullivan Omaha Tech..F Allan Deines Scottsbluff Arvid Barney Northeast C....Ted Westervelt Scottsbluff John Neff Fremont G Jon Ericson Scottsbluff Ronnie Donahue Fremont G Bob Hansen Minden HONORABLE MENTION: Mel Mostoupal West Point; Lyle Mueller Seward; Bob Oakes North Platte; Larry Lytle Chad- ron Prep; Roger Clough, Joe Dedergren Uehling; Rich Halpine Creighton. Prep; Robert Burns Holy Name; Wayne Nomantube Falls City; Leonard DeBrie Gibbon. greater number of shots per game. Top man on an unforunate Rocket outfit was Haas. With this net-scorching artist in the lineup, the Rockets rolled to 12 consec utive victories and first place in a tough league XII. In the Rock ets' first playoff contest, Haas and Leonard Wilson won made the second team were absent and the high-f lying aggregation was handed their first loss of the year to drop them from further com petition. 'Evans was the only consistent performer on the champion M Street crew. With the rest of his mates running alternately hot and cold, this burly eager who looks more like a footballer con tinually bewildered his foes his hook-shot artistry. The only unanimously named eager was Cliff Rogers of the Ag YMCA who fills in a guard slot on the All-Star lineup. Rogers JERRV MINNICK tackle last, fall for Coach Glass ford's starting eleven, was placed on the B roster for Tues day's workouts. The new sy stem of selecting scrimmage teams enables a player to move up or down on the basis of his daily performance. A sizzling offense and an un- fire where he may. beatable defense is what is offered! Give this outfit a fmv nn;te ,7 in the lirst five men named on the vantage, and who's going to stop, was a prime example of the fact Daily Nebraskan All - Tourney ,them, for then Neff and Donahue; that one man cannot produce a teams. Last year s Class A cham-play keep-away from their hp-'champion team. jjiuii, rremoin, ieaas me way and! in wildered fops the selections with two of the first! Just snnnnsimr snmothinir t, five berths. John Neff and Ronnie' prevent any of our racers fmm displaying their form (they might break a leg), then take a look at their replacements that make up the second team. Heading the list are three rep resentatives of Class A champ acousDiuii. uenter soot is occu pied by Ted Westervelt while at a Tho HpfW,. nf m,M o'Suara ar'l forward position, re- eia"?S'S.is Jon Ericson Helping Deines with the for ward duties is Wayne Copes of Palmyra and rounding out the second five at guard is Bob Hansen of Minden. Donahue are the two Tigers land the two guard spots. The forwards are Harold Beck of Class B champion Minden and Glenn Sullivan of Omaha Tech while the center post is held down by Lincoln North easts Arvid Barney, the rebounding of Beck and Bar ney tossed in for good measure. There is no question about the po tent offense. All five stars can scorch the nets from anywhere on the court, but for the sake of uni formity, let's let Barney and Beck take care of the close fir ing and Sullivan and Donahue ink the long salvos and let Neff AT miLLER'S Named by the voting teams as the outstanding Independent eager, his team, nevertheless, wound up in sixth place in league VIII, far out of title contention. Rogers is a cinch to finish among the top three scorers in the University this year. At last check before the playoffs he was the number-one man with an average of over 20 points per game. He may suffer in the fi nal tabulation of total points scored because his closest com petitors participated in several playoff contests. The Warriors, a team that fin ished eight full games behind the Rockets in league XII and far out Ten more stalwarts that starred of the playoffs is represented by in the 1952 tourney , gain honor-husky Marv Lawton. Lawton tied able mention to complete the list! Haas for second place in the num of the top 20 perfoimers that ex-jber of votes garnered and was a hibited their wares on the Coli- scorer and rebounder deluxe for seum maples last week. I the oft-beaten Warriors, ilil'lL,., Fash ion's last word is getting 'round 'round your throat, 'round your middle O! what a hoopla about accessories! Spring necessaries are the "well-marked waist" and trie "cultivated throat-line" . . . and without them, your smartest costume is like a room without furniture. See our lavish new collections (fresh with new arrivals every day!) of wonderful ideas to give your dress the 1932 dateline. We can sketch just a few . . . see them all in our sparkling First Floor! Glassford Shifts NU Grid Team Coach Bill Glassford's Husker grldders had another rough day of toil on tap for Tuesday's practice session. "We'll have to hold off scrim mages until we can work out side," Glassford said. "But that won't stop us from having good contact drills inside the field house." Several changes were listed in Glassford's lineups. He had an nounced Monday that his first team consisted of Bill Schabacker and Dennis Emanuel, ends; Jerry Minnick and Ed Husmann, tackles; Carl Brasee and George Pro-j chaska, guards; Verl Scott, center;' John Bordogna, quarterback; Bill inayer, and Bob Smith, halfbacks; George Cifra, fullback. Tuesday's number one, or "A" team lineup listed Schabacker and George Paynich, ends; Don Boll and Husmann, tackles; Brasee and Prochaska, guards; Scott, center; Bordogna, quar terback; DicVs Ralston and Max Kennedy, halfbacks; and Ed Gazinski, fullback. The second unit had Ted Con nor and Emanuel, ends; Jim Oliver and Minnick, tackles; Jerry Paul son prr Kp Curtis, euarri?; Bob Oberlin, center; Dan Brown, quar terbacK; Thayer and Smith, half backs; Cifra, fullback. Coach Glassford posted teams A to I, to place squad members on scrimmage teams. As soon as weather permits, the gridders will get game condition workouts. Kansas will initinto tho 'Rio' beven's tenth bid for the N.CAA basketball championship Friday when it tackles hustling Texas Christian in the first round of the Kansas City Regional. It will be the Jayhawkers third try under Coach F. C. "Phog" Allen, who tucked away his 29th title in 52 years of hardwood tutoring in the con ference finale in Boulder March 10. KU waived a fourth tour in the tourney in 1943 when it lost eight souadmen to the serv ice after sweeping undefeated through the o'? Big Six. The Jayhawks reached the king row in the second year of the 13 year old meet, bowing to Indiana, an invited entry, 60-42 in the fin als at is.ansas city's Municipal auditorium. Two other Big Seven entries, Oklahoma, in '47, and Kansas Statt last year, also missed me crown cy a single game. This represents the high water mark of conference en deavor. However, under the old tourney alignment, the Fifth District, which embraces the Big Seven and Missouri Valley, has produced more champions and runners-up than any other section of the country. Oklahoma A&M won the title in 1944 and 1945, then lost to Kentucky in the .1949 finals. Bradley, which nipped KU in a 1950 Fifth Dis trict playoff, lost to CCNY in the finals. This record, plus three runners-up from the Big Seven, has given this district a loiai or seven titiists and run- ners-up in the meet's 13-year-old history The new four-regional arrange ment now will throw the two Fifth district titans into Kansas City against lepresentatives from the Southwest and Border conferences. St. Louis' Missouri Valley kings open Friday's carnival against New Mexico A&M of the Border. By reaching Saturday's finals the Jayhawks and Billikens can re enact tho traditionally rugged bat tle which used to mark the meet ing of Fifth District aspirants. Here are the season's records of the two crnmmons: KANSAS (22-2) T. ('HRISTIAX (21-3) 57 Baylor 4 80 .Xhllcnc-i hrKI. SH HI Denver S TB Abilene-l hrUI. 4:1 also baffeed tho lpaffnm fnnthall crown and went on to the Cotton bowl against Kentucky. Kansas mounted a 8-2 grid record and lost only two games in a 24-contest basketball season. Kansas already owns victories over three Southwest foes this year, having felled Baylor, SMU, twice, and Rice, during its early 13-game victory streak. However, the Christians thumped these clubs a total of seven times during the winter and were slightly more impres sive than KU in so doing. They own an average of 9.5 over SMU against a 12-point mean for Kansa Both rivals met the Mustangs twice. KU whipped Rice, 68-48, here, but TCU was only 7-tenths of a point behind this spread in Dlavinsr the Owls jtwo home-and?home conference eusdgeiiieius ana once on a neu tral floor in thes Southwest tour nament. The Purple flogged Bay lor an average of 13 points in two games. Kansas whipped the Bears, 57-46, here in its opener. In bowing only to Arkansas, OCU, selected at large for the Corvallis Regional, and Man hattan, TCU mounted its best record of all time at 21-3. Buster Brannon's five could avenge the Toad's upset 13-27 football de feat at the hands of Kansas last September, by derailing the Big Seven powerhouse Friday. Like Kansas, the Christians will present two all-league selections in Georga McLeod, 6-7, 218-pound center, and Johnny Ethridge, ngntning 5-8 guard. Clyde Lov ellette and Bob "Trigger" Kenney .have earned similar accolades for the Jayhawkers. TCU also will present four senior regulars as will Kansas. Kappa Sigs Lead In Rifle Crown Battle A3 Creiehton 74 8 ML" 58 SMU ... an nice 65 47 52 Manhattan 51 f7 ( armius .... 55 7 tin II,... , Ii.. . - 48 49 H.irilin-Sim'ons :i7 'HC '. 55 6R Teas Tech Kappa Sigma leads the way in the intramural rifle tournament as the teams ready themselves for the semi-finals. The Kappa S1ES StlU have two tarns in tho tourney and are well positioned so iney cannot meet until the fin als if each wins its spmi! matr-h Tau Kappa Epsilon and the Hot Shots are the other two remaining teams vying lor the I-M championships. Kappa Sigma number one ed , ged Theta Xi by but four points in that quarter-final match. The Kappa Sigs posted a 1095 score to 1091 for the TX's. Theta Xi had dropped Phi Delta Theta with an 1104 score in order to meet the Kappa Sig marksmen, but couldn't duplicate the score which would have given them a victory. Tau Kappa Epsilon which meets iht Vnnni Ciffn in 1 I icita uiga in me deans sque ezed by Delta Sigma Phi, 1021 1001 in their quarter-final meet ing. The Delta Sigs had easily dis posed of the Tekes during the re gular season in breezing to the'" league championship, but found their shooting eyes off the mark when it counted. The Tekes had beaten Phi Delta Theta, 986-917 to advance to their match with the Delta Sigs. In the lower bracket, the Hot Shots posted the top score in the quarter-finals by dropping Delta Upsilon, 1143-1017. The DU's were far off their 1084 mark they fired by dropping Beta Theta Pi, but even that score wouldn't have carried much weight against the Hot Shots who are aptly named. The final ouarter-final matr-h saw the number two Kappa Sigma outfit defeating Inter - Varsity, 1037-985. The I-V boys had re ceived a forfiet from the Ag Mon'a Club in the previous round. TCU, KU's Friday opponent in the first round of the Kansas City NCAA Regional tournament, placed fourth amon? tho nation's defensive powers during the regu lar season with a 49.4 average. 7(1 Colorado 56 5S Nebraska 91) Kansas SI. (ot) KM (i'l iiice 75 Mi.tsniirf 71 Oklahoma . 6(1 Missouri . . . K9 N ebraska . . fil Kansas St. 4. Okla. A&.H Hii la. State . 73 Colorado . . 55 la. State Mil Nebraska lift Okla. A&M (i5 Missouri 74 Oklahoma . . 7K Kansas ,Kt. 72 Colorado . . 65 51 Yandcrhilf 48 Tex. A&M 5S SMU 2 Texas 59 49 f.S r8 Ifi 54 55 li! 55 42 Kice .10 75 liaylor 57 41 0(T (i 51 .Arkansas . . 56 52 Texas A&M . 41 SI like 49 51 Texas . 47 58 Texas A&M . 44 .in lias lor H K Arkansas 56 (II KML" 611 1691 J378 1178 1189 At. 711.5 57.4 At. !.3 49. 1 Spread 13.1 Spread 11.9 Although KU has met both St. Louis and A&M previously in basketball, Friday's collision with TCU will be the first court meet ing between the two schools. It also significantly will mark the continuation of a banner year for both schools. The Horned Frogs nrdGM shims V, THE RUBBING with f & mMrnmnmn . .... PLlliUU SHOE PUUMI MARINES PREFER ECllHfl 3S(o I SURVIYS MOVE Covert Scuff Marks! Give Shoes Richer Color Shoe Polish llst-Wl ne Ian . itowN . iiuc . dark tan mid tah OXtlOOD MAHOOANV COIOOVAM NEUTDAI Ask ony Serviceman OS MOD FX: The wide, wide "fas cia" all embrac ing belt. Here, oft Ul.uk calf, 6.50. D a g t r-buckle with ornate metal work. By Mickey, 4.50. Beautifully contoured to smart bark width . . . confetti - colored cut outs. By Mickey, 6.90. V'V 4 X IBs mp for eacV Barbara h Jcon" lflivei drawn 1 Handsome, two-tone Mickey belt, studded with brass rings. 7.50. Dozens of other Belt styles, 1.95 to 7.50 In a cigarette, taste makes the difference and Luckies taste better! The difference between "just smoking" and really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky ... for two important reasons. First, L.S.M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco . . . fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better . . . proved best made of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better Be Happy-Go Lucky! Buy a carton today! L.S.M.F.T- ludy Strike Means Fine Tobacco v4 anl rar' T-te--hl T1il'fl Me;k Universe String tie, here in "poodle print II. Creat, crushed scarf of vivid rayon - taffeta plaid, 1.95. Why lie ONE on when 2, 3, or 4 do more? OS MODEL i Take 3 for newest excite ment! You'll be smarter, chin - deep in delightful "Wing Tip" ties by Vera. Striking pat terns, 1.95. Permanently pleat ed, and potent color tonic Tiny tie, 65c. All, and more! in NECKWEAR . . . First Floor ITI iLLER t PAME A STRIKE J J c-l x ?-..-. J - T,. ,1,1 raoovcT or AMERICA'S LIADINO MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTE! ulna;;; Auui jLuuI.u.l.ihl.,, ....,iu.ai;iaii.!i1uj,,.;...i,i,i,i,i,:,,iiJ;.i.ii;;i;;j.ii:i,.;:;iii. "Hiimiiii tl