i iWednesday, January 31, 1951 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3 I I i. i . ' i S WVil BK:9L iWSSwJMiri Swimmers. Gymnasts, eave on Colorado Jaun BY BILL MUNDELL (Sports Editor, Dally Nebraskan) Three Cornhusker teams that are taking the Nebraska colors westward on a five-day tour of Colorado leave Lincoln at noon today. The Husker wrestling, swimming, and gymnastic teams leave in one body at that time with meets against Denver uni versity, Colorado university, Colorado State college, Colorado A. & M., and Wyoming univer sity lying ahead of them. All three Scarlet teams will face Denver and Colorado uni versities, the mermen and gym nasts tangle with Colorado State, the swimmers have another with the Aggies while the matmen journey to Wyoming. Coach Hollie Lepley is taking 12 men along to vie for swim ming honors. Captaining the splashers in their first meet with Denver will be Bill Greer and Bob Phelps. Balderson, Healey Coach Lepley will send Buele Balderson and Pat Healey into the meet in the backstroke event. In the sprints he will have Ted Kanamine and Tom Harley while competing in the distance events will be John Desmond and George "Doc" Hill. Co-captains Greer and Phelps will try for victories in the breaststroke while Eddie Craren and Pete Sluser will take the Scarlet and Cream into the diving event. Jim Peterson and Greer will team with Kanamine and Harley in the freestyle relay. From Denver the swimmers will go to Boulder to meet the tough Colorado Buffalos. The Buffs are expected to furnish the toughest competition of the trip for Coach Lepley's tankmen. Captaining the Huskers in this meet will be Ted Kanamine and Eddie Craren. From Boulder they journey to Greeley where they will engage Colorado State and Colorado A. & M. in a double duel and triangular meet or three meets in all at Greeley. Captains for this affair are Tom Harley and Doc Hill. Coach Jake Geier and his gymnasts precede the swimming meet at Denver with a duel scheduled at 2:30 p.m. Thurs day. Eight Men Coach Geier will have eight men at his call in the three meets. Scheduled to compete in the side-horse event are Bob Yarwood, Art Hillman, and Cap tain Al Dunavan. On the High-bar he will send Hillman, Paul Hughes, and Dunavan in action with the pos sibility that Bob Norton may get into the act. Norton also has a 0) 6) MOTS' The Self -service Bookstore It's so fast and easy you can do it between classes. It's conveniently located too, just north of Love Library. BUY YOUR BOOKS AT REGENTS The store where students get a break . mm llii I ... vfe y, ' - I " EDDIE CRAREN .... will be the busiest Husker on the west ern tour. Eddie is scheduled for the diving event in four swim ming meets and the trampoline event for three gymnastic meets. chance to slip in on the flying rings which is slated for Hughes, Jerry Tubbs, and Dunavan. In the tumbling event Coach Geier is sending Ira Epstein, Tubbs, Dunavan, and possibly Hughes into the fray while he has Dunavan, Tubbs, and Eddie Craren in the trampoline tussle. Eddie Craren will be the busiest boy of the week on the tour. He will be competing in the diving, in all four swimming meets and will carry the Husker colors onto the trampoline in the three gym battles. And to top it all, he is expected to take first place or come mighty near it all seven times. Four Lettermen Dunavan and Hillman will lead the way for the gymnasts as two-year lettermen, while Hughes and Yarwood have earned a letter one year each. Craren will be competing as a senior while Tubbs, Epstein, and ! Norton are all sophomores. I The Huskers will not be at full 1 VI at UKflSlTY BEGEHTS' BQQItST t ' ' i , n! I J1 I J ,"V',' ''."I'""' i'Ii- V.U'm 'Jiy...ta.A.l.aHJu.' TWBW Bf ...! . , !'..!... 1. ., ''MlWiuM'""1-' wmmimma: strength as Paul Hughes will still be handicapped with a bro ken thumb. Hughes was expected to miss both the Minnesota meet last Saturday and most of the action on the Colorado trip, but with his thumb tightly taped he picked up a couple of points in the Gopher tilt and has the de termination to do even better in the western jaunt. The Gymnasts will travel with the swimmers . to Boulder for their second meet and from there to Greeley for their third match. The Buffs of Colorado are ex pected to be the big obstacle for the Scarlet strongmen. The Buf faloes are the defending All College champs and appear to be just as strong as ever this year. Wrestlers in Action. The Husker wrestlers, under the direction of Coach Al Partin, will also meet Denver Thursday. Their meet is scheduled for 7 p. m. Coach Partin is taking 11 men westward to wrestle in the eight mm rl li m mi m mat men weight classes. Louis Caniglia will be the Nebraska hope in the 123 pound class while Harold Gilliland will be the Husker in the 130 pound class. Perry Leitel will shouder the NU burden in the 137 pound class. Two men in the 147 pound class are making the trip and both Bob Russel and Bill Jones are expected to see action. Ed Lane will carry the Husker colors into the 157 pound match while two men, Donald Rauh and Dave Mackje will be on hand for the Cornhuskers in the 167 pound class. Harley Richardson is the Cornhusker in the 177 pound match while Heavyweight Herb Reese will give the Huskers a lift in that class. Lane, Reese, Caniglia. Partin is depending on Lane, Caniglia and Reese to provide the stiff est competition for the Coloradoans. Reese was the only Husker to produce a win in the Huskers' opener with Oklahoma A & M and has a good chance of bringing home a couple of more first places. His toughest compe tition is expected from the Colo rado university heavyweight. Lane and Caniglia are depend able veterans and Coach Partin thinks that Lane, in particular, is one of the most improved mat men on the Husker squad this year. Aftor tVi Dpnver and Colorado matches, the grapplers will head north to Laramie to meet the Wyoming Cowboys. Call is Out f or Sports Writers ah nprsnns interested in writ ing sports for the Daily Nebra skan are asked to contact Bill Mundell in the next couple days. Thorp is room for several re porters who are interested in sports. The oruy requirement cu present is that you have some free hours in the afternoon dur ing the week. All those interested in worKing nr finHine out more about the work are asked to come to the Rag office in the basement of the Union. Mundell will be at the sports desk every afternoon from 1-2 p. m. and 3-b p. m. Workers are needed on the editorial side of the Corn husker. Anyone Interested please report to the Corn husker office between 2 and 5 p. m. any afternoon. mm E-Ril Basketball Powers Eoll On; Upsets Spice ftfond ay's Action The number one, three and five teams in university intra mural basketball continued on their merry ways Monday night as the I-M cage sport resumed its activity. Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Phi Kappa Psi all roared through their respective matches with comparative ease in winning their fourth straight games. The top-ranked Phi Delts were held to the closest margin of the three tussles as they dropped Beta Sigma Psi by a 36-22 score. With Chick Battey and Tom Led ingham leading the way, the Phi Delis ran up quarter leads of 6-2, 15-7, and 22-15 before slap ping the pesky Beta Sigs down for good in the final stanza. Battey was top man in the scoring column with 14 points while Ledingham ran a close second with 12. Dennehl topped the losing effort with ten tallies. No Competition The Sig Eps found no competi tion in Alpha Gamma Rho and ran to a 65-19 rout. The Sig Eps thus established the highest point total in this year's competition. The all-time high is 82, set by Alpha Tau Omega last year. It was 17-7 at the first quar ter and 25-9 at halftime for the rampaging Sig Eps. The AGR's were just as helpless in the third period and going into the final stanza the score stood at 40-11. Al Hansen chalked up 22 points during the evening to run away with the scoring honors. Team-mate Kay Curtis ran sec ond with a night's effort of 14. For the losing AGR's, it was Frost with six points. The Phi Psi's found things al most as easy as they lambasted Beta Theta Pi to the tune of 52-28. The Betas kept things close for one quarter and fell to the slaughter. Going into the sec ond period the score stood at 10-10, but that was the end of the comparison. Andersan and Reynolds Jerry Anderson and Bobby Reynolds combined to give the unbeaten Phi Psi's a push and they outscored the Betas 15-7, 16-9, and 11-2 in the remaining three chuckers. Anderson topped the scoring With 13 markers while Reynolds tallied 12. Yapp was high man for the Betas with ten. While these three powerful outfits continued their sweep, the number eight team in the universtiy, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, .he class n Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests 1 . lumber IK jj (i OPOSSUM ' cigarette mildness by the quick-trick method! He tried the fast inhale, fast 1 exhale test a whiff, a sniff and they still left him up in the air! But then he got his feet on the ground. He learned that there is a reliable way to discover how mild a cigarette can be! And that test is . . . The sensible test ... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test which simply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke on a pack after pack, day after day basis. No snap judgments needed. After you've enjoyed Camels and only Camels-for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat,- ' T for Taste) , we believe you'll know why ... found things not so rosy. The SAE's fell before a resurging band of ATO's by the score of 33-36. The Sig Alphs had things their way during the first half and led at intermission by a 24-18 score. Jones and Sloan went to work for the Taus in the second half, however, and the SAE lead disappeared quickly. Jones topped the victors' scor ing with 12 points as did Leach for the losing Sig Alphs. Sloan got eight for the Taus along with Shainholtz for the SAE's. More Upsets Another upset was in the making while the Taus were dis posing of the Sig Alphs. Sigma Nu, far down in the standings, came through with a surprising easy victory over Phi Gamma Delta. The Nu's outscored their rivals in all four quarters to take the win, halftime score standing at 18-12. Andy Bunten led the vic tors in the scoring with 15 points while Smith added eight. Gerry Robertson of the Fijis tallied 13 for the losers. Kappa Sigma, ninth in the fraternity "A" ratings, were also victims of Monday night upset wins. The Kappa Sigs ran into a Delta Tau Delta buzzsaw and were stifled, 21-38. Elmer Vandel was the big thorn in the Kappa Sig side as he tallied 13 points for the Delts. Percy Curtis helped the losers with eight. Pioneer House Rolls Pioneer House, the univer sity's ninth ranked team, ran true to form, however. The Pi oneer men annexed their fourth NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY WILL PLAY ALL HOME GAMES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA COLISEUM SCHEDULE JAN. 31 DOANE COLLEGE FEB. 3 YORK COLLEGE FEB. 9 HASTINGS COLLEGE FEB. 14 .....OMAHA UNIVERSITY FEB. 16 WAYNE STATE FEB. 22-23 CHADRON STATE MAR. 2 PERU STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA STUDENTS WELL BE ADMITTED FOR 50c WITH I.D. CARD "Thereby hangs a tale!" B - .v, -..w 4 . . .... ' ' '5 ' ' clown went out on a limb and straight victory by downing Delta Sigma Phi, 34-19. Held to a 10-6 first quarter score, the Pioneers broke loose in the second stanza to pile up a 22-8 halftime lead and coasted in from there. Wes Beery, Dick Dwehus, and Don Dutcher were the big guns of the Pioneer attack and meshed 10, 10, and nine points respectively. Bob Hallock pro vided the best scoring effort for the Delta Sigs with a total of six. Powerful Brown Palace, loser only to Phi Kappa Psi, rolled to an easy 47-17 victory over Pi Kappa Phi. The Palacers opened the initial quarter with a 12 point spurt while holding the Pi Kaps to five and outscored the losers from there on. Stretleckl Paces Palacers. Strlecki was high for the Pal acers with ten markers while Hansen added seven more points to the third Brownie win. Loerch's six points was high for the Pi Kaps. Sigma Alpha Mu ran up aa early 10-0 lead and then had to fight off a band of determined Tekes to win a 2-19 contest. Jerry Ewing led Tau Kappa Ep silon with nine points while Weinberg scored seven for the winning Sammies. Farm House did the expected to Theta Xi as they downed the TX boys, 32-25. The Aggies rolled to a 20-14 halftime lead and then matched points with the losers from there on in. In the final cage game of the day, it was all Sigma Chi. The Sigs crushed Delta Upsilon by a 53-20 count. tried to provj t 1 In 111 V- - i Just North of Love Library than any Other clgsmo! ' - " - ----