Friday, December 7, 1951 , THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3 u pin) V Moss By MARSHALL KTJSHNER Assistant Sports Editor The Nebraska basketball team will run into what might well be its toughest non-conference foe of the season when it meets the veteran-studded Gophers from Minnesota this Saturday. Adding to the dismay of Coach Harry Good is the an nouncement that Joe Goad re ceived a sprained ankle in prac tice Wednesday and will miss the fray. Hie ankle is hot fractured. Good has been taking treat ments from the corps of Husker trainers and will receive medical treatment in the student health for the rest of the week. With Joe out, Coach Harry Good will have only one other starter to carry the burden. Jim Buchanan is the only other first stringer with this year's care outfit. Nothing has been definitely de cided concerning who will fill the vacancy of the Lincoln jun ior, but Good indicated that either Jim Snyder or Clarence Cook will get the nod. Snyder is a veteran of the 1950-51 squad and rot in enough playing time to win a letter. Cook is the former all-state ruard at McCook high schooL Coach Ozzie Cowles will bring his northland giants into Lincoln with plenty of experience behind them. Cowles has a multitude of both experience and giants, that is. For example, a look at the start ing lineup shows the starting Gopher lineup averaging over 6' 2" and the chart shows their average weight 203, a mark that would cause many a football coach to rub their hands. Dick Means, former all -state basketball player from Lincoln high, will be one of the senior guards opening for the Minne sota five. Means weighs 180 and stands 6'1". At the other forward position will be Glen Reed. A 183 pound, 6' Zlhn sophomore, Reed hails from the state of Wisconsin. His ability speaks for itself when one finds that Cowles has access to two other senior cagers at the same nosition. startinc at center for the Gophers will be sophomore Ed ward Kalafat. Weighing 244 and standins 6' fiVt". Kalafat was the main feature in the Gophers' 58- 54 loss to Bradley, This Montana ace looks like another Jim Me Intyre in the making. Opening guards ior tne norm land quintet will be Arthur An derson and Bob Gelle. Ander son is a senior weighing 195 and measuring 6' 4" toll. An derson is also from Wisconsin and Is a two year letterman. Bob Gelle, also a Gopher foot ball performer, will fill the other guard spot with his 215 pounds filling out a 6' 3" frame. He is the only starter on the team that hails from Minnesota, From the experience .angle, Coach Cowles' squad is composed of seven seniors, three juniors, seven sophomore and two fresh men. It becomes quite apparent that the two sophomore starters must be pretty sharp to beat out senior members with two years experience with the team. Stan Matzke will take the other forward spot and Bill Johnson will open at center for the scarlet crew. Buchanan and sophomore Fred Seger will spearhead the Cornhuskers from their guard positions. A run-down of the Nebraska lineup shows the possibili4y of two freshman starters; two soph omore starters; and one senior. This leaves the Huskers with a great gap of inexperience for a victory. "The boys will pick up needed experience against the Gophers. It will take time for the boys to become accustomed to college basketball." He was referring to the Iowa Teachers, Good said. "we showed possibilities. We need a grerat deal of Improvement in the way of team play," offense and individual defense. Probable starting lineups: NEBRASKA C. Cook or J. Snyder Stan Matzke Bill Johnson J. Buchanan Fred Seger MINNESOTA .G. . . Dick Means G Glen Reed .C Ed Kalafat .F Bob Gelle .F. . . A. Anderson 'Indicates starter Coach Tony Sharpe's Nebraska Nubbins will begin the evening program when they clash with the Offutt Air Base team at 6 p.m. Coach Sharpe announced that the Nubbins schedule has been changed . slightly and that his B team cagers will meet the Nebraska Wesleyan B team as a curtrain raiser to the Nebraska Northwest Missouri Teachers game Tuesday. B team basketball roster. M. Backhus Ladd Hanscom Tom Healey Ted Forke Ron Colton Ed Schmitt Don Muenster Chuck Jensen Fat Mallette Lee Dobler Danny Kuska Bob Kremke Joe Carter F. Loiuracre Sam Bell Rex Johnson IM Basketball Tuesday. Dec. 4 Voc. Ac 3? 1. M v Stars 34 IWn nn ' Bed Guidons 51 Ai YMC.A Shortys 41 rnm.t. Pill Roller 34 AS.M e'"". Rket 56 Pluggera Um. Aggies 30 Ai Men Vn. 1 2. ...18 19 32 31 18 .38 .28 Delta Theta Phi . 2S aiihi. io Hawks 30 Ramblers' !.'!!!.'!;!27 near t ats 1 Warriors 0 Delta Tau Delta. .40 Phi fi.m run. to Sigma Alpha Ep. . 51 Theta Xi .7 Wednesday, Dec 5 Voc. Ag 27 AGR Scrubs 13 Delia Sigma PI. . 25 Frosh Dentals 24 Sigma Chi 27 Phi Delta Theta.. 95 AGR 35 Sigma Nu 29 Phi Kappa Psi 38 Delta Upsilon 20 Farm House .... 57 Acacia 32 Beta Sigma Psi . .27 Pi Kappa Phi 12 the fact that a good share of the comhusker co-op 55 Delta cm 15 Huskpr ratra tpam is rnmnncoH Sigma Alpha Ep.. .19 Phi Delta Theta B 17 MUSKer cage leam IS composed Theta Xi 31 Zeta Beta Tau .. 20 OI unaerciassmen. Brown Palace 41 Uelta Sigma Phi... 31 In reference to the team per- ttSSBW aui iiidin-c last wccivcnu agdiiiM Kappa Sigma .-..30 Beta Theta Pi 21 IN ' - s;iiiipiiiiil. 4: --X; ' w i I 5 w ; - , . .. .:- . S. II Thirty-Nine Wrestlers Slated To See Action Jn IM Tournament Semi-finals By GLEN NELSON Sports Staff Writer Thirty-nine intramural wrest lers survived the preliminary and second rounds of the all-University wrestling tournament. The semi-final and final rounds, previously scheduled for Thurs- Scott Hedden, Men's Dorm, is paired with Phil Visek, Beta Theta PL Hedden was 137 pound champ last year. The 137-pound class should fea ture some close matches. Three of the four remaining men earned wins by pinning their Wednesday opponents. Milo Brabek, Sig Ep, day and Friday of this week, have. inept Trm Thnmnmn. Phi Oam . . . ... . . . i r ' Deen postponed unm monaay ana Tuesday by AI Partin, meet di rector. A total of 52 fall points have been piled up by teams in a scramble for the championship trophy. Some of the fall points were won by virtue of forfeits however. Beta Theta Pi leads the race with il fall points, Sigma Chi is second with 10, and Delta Tau Delta ranks third with nine. Sigma Chi has the most men remaining in the meet with a to tal of nine. Delta Tau Delta and Beta Theta Pi are tied with five men apiece for the second high total. The Quickest match in the books was turned in by Serry Y eater, Delt 167-pounder. Yea rer threw AI Osborne, Alpha tau Omega, in :25 of the first round Wednesday. In the semi-finals of the 123 pound class, Marty Lewis, Sigma Phi Epsilon. will meet Don Peter son, Delta Sigma Psi, and Bob Glenn, representing Men's Dorm, takes on Gary Sherman, Sigma Chi. Sherman pinned Ross Hecht, Sig Ep, in 3:21 in the only 123 pound match in the tourney to date. The other three men drew byes. Only four men are entered in the ISO-pound class, so each automatically reaches the semis. Jerry Carnazzo, Delta Sir. rrap ples Dale Iiahn, Sigma Chi, and and Bill Burrows, Theta Chi, meets Richard Hldek. Brakeb has yet to wrestle in the meet, as he hurdled the pre liminary matches with a bye, and won a forfeit to reach the quarter-finals. Thompson pinned Dick Clark, Beta, in :41 of the first round; Barrows pinned Paul Cook, Delta Tan Delta, in 1:09; and Hldek threw Jack Gillespie, Beta, in :55. All four survivors in the 147 pound class gained the semi finals by virtue of falls. Hray O'Hanian, winner over Tom BeaL Delta Tau Delta in 4:57 of the second round, tussles Bob How ard, Beta who pinned John Ell well, Phi Gam, in 4:32. In the other 147 match Max Andrews, Beta, wrestles Dick Shellenberf , Sigma Nu. Andrews threw Dennis Wamsley, Phi Gam, in 1:12 of the first round. Shellenberg made quick work of Jerry Atkinson, Alpha Tau Omega, finishing the match in only .32. . Thre Sigma Chi's remain in the 157-pound class, assuring the Sigs three places in that weight. Eight men remain in the 167 pound division. Bob Berghel, Delta Tau Delta, tangles Royce Tonjes, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Don Lorenze, Men's Dorm, meets Ben Leonard, Sigma Chi, last year's champion; Bert Sample, Delta Tau Delta, battles Carl Ofe, Sig Chi; and Jerry Yeager, Delta Tau Delta, meets Claude Berreckman, Alpha Tau Omega. Tough combats are slated for the 177-pound division. Stan Snyder, Sigma Chi, is paired with Tom Harrington, Beta. Snyder won over George Kohde, ATO, in the prelims, - and - Harrington pinned Waldo Berg. Delt, m 1:50 Wednesday night Milt Dew hirst. Delta Tau Delta, is slated to meet Gary Ashbaugh, Sigma Chi, in the other 177-pound match of the semi-finals. Ashbaugh now has two falls to his credit. Seven hexrjweiMs-Te"stS31 tn the running. Ed Husmann, Pi Kappa Phi, meets J. Benedict, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Herschel Mor ton, Sigma Nu, fights Dick Pick ett, Beta Theta Pi; and Max Kit zelman wrestles Kenneth Kunes, Alpha Tau Omega. ,f. tilli lllllfe lit 1 ED BERG... Pro Baseballer Says School Comes First STAN MATZKE . . . outstanding Comhusker basketball player will meet the Gophers Saturday night at the forward spot. (Daily Ne braskan Photo.) Yanks Curb Radio' TV The World Champion Yankees announced a cut back Wednesday in radio and- TV coverage of their 1952 games in response to "an ap peal by minor league boss George M. Trautman for "reasonable restraint." Trautman warned at the minors' opening business session that the "umbrella" of "highly colored" . big league broadcasts and telecasts threatens to destroy the small circuits . Main Features Start State: "Hurricane Island," 2:11, 4:53, 7:35, 10:07; "Elephant Stam pede." 1:00, 3:42, 6:24, 8:56. Varsity: "Wild Blue Yonder," 1:00, 3:11, 5:21. 7:31, 9:44. Esquire: ' "Oliver Twist," 7:24, 9:20. MB The Yankees immediately an nounced they will authorize no national network or "game of the day" presentations and will cut other broadcast activities wher ever possible. Trautman's remarks came as the minor leaguers rolled up their sleeves to tackle problems after two convention days spent prin cipally in their annual player draft. The minors' executive pointed out that the number of leagues under his jurisdiction has declined from 59 to 49 in the past two years with attendance falling from 43,700,000 to 27,500,000. Baseball Commissioner Ford C. rYick urged - major and minor executive to co-operate more closely and not "sit in their own moated castles" selfishly unaware of each other's problems. By RON GIBSON Sports Staff Writer Any would-be professional base ball players in the audience? Here's a word of advice: "Go to college first, and then if you're a standout you can play professional baseball. That way ysu have an education to fall back on." This is the advice of Ed Berg, a junior in Teachers College at n.ii..'""- . I, ::::-:-:: --mf r x- TED BEEG No Previous Experience To Wrestler BY GEORGE PAYNICH Sports Staff Writer Wrestling offers the average college youth a wonderful oppor tunity for participation in inter collegiate athletics. Husker wrestling coach AI Partin believes that for the lad too small for basketball or not talented enough for the grid sport, wrestling provides a na tural outlet for some sort of athletic action. Partin also believes that the mat sport is one of the few college sports not requiring previous ex perience. He cites last year's squad as an example. Of the eight lettermen of the 1951 squad only four had had previous ex perience. Partin said the four boys with no experience had developed quickly. This was possible due to a little interest and work. With the loss of key men due to graduation, Partin is again looking to newcomers to bolster his squad. the University, Ed has been a pro ballplayer for four years. Berg started his professional career in 1947 when he was a freshman at the University. Since the fall semester of every year, then he has gone to school in dropping out every spring to play baseball. After signing with the St Louis Cardinals, Ed, a second baseman, was sent to Tallassee, Ala., the Redbirds' affiliate in the Class D Georgia-Alabama, Ontario, a Card farm club in the Pony League, also a Class D circuit. Berg played the keystone po sition for two years at Hamil ton, and in his last season was chosen the team's most popu lar player. Ed has decided to quit the dia mond sport for a while, in order to finish his education. He plans to major in journalism. When he finishes school, wants to be connected with baseball in some way. What did he get out of his pro career? Here's what Ed has to say: I got to travel all around the country, ad I was able to meet a lot of different people from so many different places." During his four-year tenure in the Cardinal organization, Berg played ball with some promising young stars. Some of his team mates were Ben Boyer, who later played for the Omaha Cards; Tom Keating, who played for Rochester in the Triple A Inter national League; Dave Johnston, who .went to the A Columbus (Georgia) Cardinals; an Bob Tif fenauer who is listed on the "big" Cards. Although Berg is ineligible for college baseball because of his pro career, he doesn't feel that it was a mistake to play pro ball. Ed said he thought the Cardinals had always given him a fair deal, and that they were one of the best clubs in baseball. Ed's not through with baseball, though. The redheaded seconded sacker plans to play semipro ball next summer, just to keep in touch with the game. There once teat a girl named Ruth, Who for boys had a very tweet tooth, She upped and asked Paul, To the Black Masque Ball; Now her data book is full it's the truth. WANT ADS r WHEN YOU WANT RESULTS TJSX, DULY flEOeMftAK YM2T ADS CASH RATE! 4 Om I f Hart WmU ) Pay ttay Dr Pu rtra Pari bars 1-U ) J .al M fLM li t IS- M M n-n I .w li " t-f JS I IM f LM IM vn U Ul I IM IscMo addresMS when figw tag 900. Bring ads to Daily Nebraskaa basin cm office. Student Union, or anal! with correct amount sad Insertions wired. tvml mlt . . . till tut to u ... 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