Berg To Cosich ball Nybbiii The University of baseball team began workouts Monday. From all indications, the Huskers should have an even Btronger squad than last year's team. Ed Berg yill be handling the i.&pllllliipll, MX X - a J Nebraska coaching chores for the team for the first three weeks of practice einre Tonv Sharon will still hp busy with his Nebraska B team basketball team. Berg will handle the Nebraska Nubbin squad when Sharpe re turns Bnd also take on some of the varsity duties to aid Sharpe. Berfi has nlaved four vears of professional baseball. He played two years in Alabama and two years with the Ontario, Canada, baseball club. The Daily Nebraskan will have a complete coverage of baseball candidates tomorrow. NEW MENTOR ... Ed Berg, University of Nebraska junior, will take on new duties as coach of the Nebraska baseball B team. Berg, who has played 4 years of pro ball, Is presently in charge of the varsity workouts. Husker Golf Hopes Hicjh By BOB DECKER Snorts Staff Writer Four returning lettermen and two newcomers to the Husker golf team brighten the prospects of Nebraska's outcome in the Big Seven tmlf stanrlinff! this year. The Cornhuskers finished in sec ond place in the 1951 season be hind Oklahoma. The returning vets are Joe Gif ford, Doug Dale, Dick Spangler and Irv Peterson. These aspiring tee artists will have added competition irom nmn Radik and Chick Battey. Battey is a junior while Radik is a fresh man. Chick was considered to be one of the top flight school boy golfers in the Lincoln area, but his golf ing was cut short last year by a severe injury suffered last spring. Radik has been heralded as one of the finest freshman prospects to attend Nebraska in recent years. Emil captured the Omaha Inter-City and Missouri Valley championships in 1951. During the past summer he qualified for the National Schoolboy finals, but fin ished out of contention. Emil also placed seconH in the state finals to add to his list of achievements. These two boys plus the return ing lettermen should give the Hus kers a formidable golf team dur ing the coming season. ssLuiitiisnVhMni TOP CONTENDER . . . Eddie Sarkisslan, one of the 38 stu dents left In the all-University table tennis tournament, will face some stiff competition when he meets F&i Haghiri this week. first Round Uminates 30 InTT Tourney The intramural table tennis tournament continues and only 38 players remain after the com' pletion of the first round elimina' tions. The second round of the tour nament started yesterday and all participants must complete their games and turn in the re sults to ffte Union activity of fice by 10:30 p.m. Wednesday. Remaining competitors: Fraternity 'A' LEAGUE I W Sigma Phi Epsilon 8 bigma Alpha Epsilon .... 8 Delta Tan Dplta fi Sigma Chi 5 Phi Delta Theta 2 Phi Gamma Delta 1 Theta Xi 0 LEAGUE n w Alnha Tau Omeea 8 Phi Kappa Psi 8 Sigma Nu Kappa Sigma 4 Reta Theta Pi . 2 Delta Upsilon 2 Alpha Gamma Kho ...... i LEAGUE ID! w Farm House 11 Brown Palace 6 Reta Kiema Psi 6 Pi Kappa Phi 4 Acacia 4 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2 Delta Sigma Phi 2 LEAGUE IV W Pioneer House 10 Theta Chi 8 Cornhusker Co-op 7 Zeta Beta Tau 6 Sigma Alpha Mu 3 Norns House i Delta Chi 0 (-season completed) Fraternity 'B' LEAGUE V w Sigma Chi 9 Phi Gamma Delta ....... 8 Sigma Alpha Epsilon .... 5 Phi Delta Theta 3 Sigma Phi Epsilon 2 Delta Tau Delta 0 LEAGUE VI W Alpha Gamma Rho ...... 8 Phi Karma Psi 7 Alpha Tau Omega 7 Kappa Sigma 2 Sigma Nu 2 Delta Upsilon i LEAGUE VII W Farm Houso 8 Beta Theta PI 8 Tuesday, February 19, 1952 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 3 Beta Sigma Psi Pioneer House Delta Sigma Phi4 ( season completed) Denominational LEAGUE VIII v ttKlU 6vm Teaum Place 0, ' U ISecoBid! T Gil awllc Newman Club 9 Lutheran Students 6 Presby House 5 Baptist House 4 Inter-Varsity 1 Methodist House 1 Independent LEAGUE IX w Doan Nuts 10 University Aggies 10 Red Guidons 9 Ag Men No. 1 7 Vocational Ag 5 W L Ab YMCA AGR Scrubs Ag Men- No. 2 LEAGUE X 8 3 1 . 1 W Dorm A Comets 8 Shortys 7 Dorm A Stars 7 NROTC 6 Nebraska Co-op 6 Dorm B-C 2 Delta Sigma Pi "B" 0 LEAGUE XI W M-Street Boys 7 Dental College frosh .... v Delta Sigma Pi A 7 Pill Rollers 7 Delta Theta Phi 6 Alibis 3 ASME 2 Dental Sophomores 0 ( season completed) LEAGUE XII W Rockets 8 Lillies 6 Pluggers 7 Bearcats 6 Warriors 2 Ramblers 2 Hawks 1 8 1 6 8 10 11 L 2 3 4 4 6 9 9 L 0 1 3 3 4 7 9 14 By RON GIBSON Sports Staff Writer The University of Iowa's Bym- nastics team put on a blazing fin ish to win a quadrangular meet frnm Nehraska. Colorado and Kansas State at the Physical Edu cation building baturaay. The Hawkeyes scorea points in the last three events to swamp the Cornhuskers. The final standings showed Iowa with 6GV2 points, Nebraska sec ond with 4312, Colorado third with 20 and K-State with 2. Nebraska got off to a flying otart.hw talrino n sprorid and a third in the side horse, but Iowa's Dick Dohrmann won tne event and Bob Lewis took a fourth for the Hawkeyes to make the score 10-10, with the Huskers and the Hawks leading the field. Tom Kidd and Paul Hughes finished one-two on the hori zontal bar to put NU out in front of Iowa 22-16V&, while Colorado and Kansas State lagged behind. Tnurn trainpH half noint on Coach Jake Geier's Huskers when Al Fiennri wnn the narallel bar event. Kidd tied with Colorado's Howard Huskey lor second ana third while Hughes took fourth. Then the Iowans began to clean up. Bernie Westfall, Jim Norman and Dick Turchin com bined for 14 points on the rings. Bob Hazlett, Bill Sorenson and Jim Izu collected 12 on the tum- hliniv mats. Iowa crowned the performance with a one-two-three sweep of the trampoline event. Frank La Due. Hazlett and Sorenson took first, second and third for . the Hawkeyes. In taking the meet, Iowa won all the events except the hori zontal bar. Placement points for seconds and thirds kept the Cornhuskers In the fight. Top performances were turned I I i ' ' V-ftf "v f"f JOB WELL DONE . . . Coach Jake Geier is justifiably proud of his University of Nebraska gymnastic team after they placed second to Iowa univer sity in its quadrangular meet with the Hawkeyes, Kansas State and Colorado. Easton Gets New Record Kansas university track coach hind the carrot-topped Jayhawk Dill Vn.4.A s.:n.As4 nMAhAK fj.(.4t haaa) caUah CrtstO'c ilY.O WOC LJllX AJCaiUtl OllUWltl lUOt j U-aUUCl . kJV.lfbV a " " last Saturday, when he piloted hisjan unofficial 9:39.4, which would 38 23 trouncing of the previous-' would have won the race ly unDeaxen neorasxa iracx team. For the Mount Oread tracksters, it. was the first indoor track vic tory over the Huskers in the his tory of the indoor clashes between the two schools. in by Dick Dohrmann, Al Fienup, Bernie Westfall, Bob Hazlett and r ranK i.auue ior iuw. ium jviuu Danny Fogel, Bob Yarwood and Paul Hughes pacea tne nusKers. Colorado's ace, Ken Dunstan, was the pointmaker for the Buffs. HigJiest score of the meet wu Westfall's 226 points on the fly ing rings. Dohrmann had 225 in the side horse event. Tom Kidd led the Nebraaka scoring with 16 team points. Kidd's total was also high for the meet. Tho nnarir&neular meet was also scored on an individual dual basis. Iowa won thre duals, Nebraska two, Colorado one and Kansas State none. The dual results: Nebraska 60, Colorado 3B Nebraska 74, Kansas State 21 Iowa 58, Nebraska 38 Iowa 76, Kansas State 19 Iowa 70, Colorado 26 -Colorado 68, Kansas State 25 Results Side Horse: 1. Dohrmann (I). 2. Yarwood (N). 3. Kidd (N). 4. Lewis (I). 5. Gough (C). o. Behrens (N). Horizontal bar: 1. Kidd (N). 2. Hughes (N). 3-4 (tie). Dunstan (C) and Westfall (I). 5. Fienup (I). 6. Witts (I). Parallel bars: 1. Fienup (I). 2-3 (tie). Kidd (N) and Huskey (C). 4. Hughes (N). 5. Beatty (KS). 6. Duggan (I). Flying Rings: 1. Westfall (I). 2. Dunstan (C). 3. Norman (I). 4. Turchin (I). 5. Blaha (C). 6 (tie). Kidd (N) and Hughes (JN). Tumbling: 1. Hazlett (I) 2. Fo gel (N). 3. Kennedy (N). 4. Sor enson (I). 5. Izu (I). 6. Dunstan (C). Trampoline: 1. LaDue (I). 2. Hazlett (I). 3. Sorenson (I). 4. Hodge (N). 5. Bussing (C). 6. Kennedy (N). r"-' m wt" nmm wiw I 1 -s- a if I Morten Sohlioo Bill Walton uan Hnffmaa Jerry Spltrer Frank hristenien Bill titaslcr Tom Prettymaa Rassell Blden Martian Prtrtc James Iilncoln Have Noble Paul Oalfer . Jerrr Barrel Toa Tharkrey MUroa Wmim Fraak Ckapma (JcraM BHnas' Boh Hole Jerrr Jm (iaylord Hmilh Tonis Anvelt Milt Pewhirtt Gale Randel dent Yost A rim Thiesfeld Iennl Wamsler Mike Dellsi Rl garkissiaa Fax Haghiri Gordon Hk Paol JohnstoB , Kent Kelley Charles Betzelbener Ross Hecht Marshall Knshncr Raymond Pred (orae Karabatsoi Gsrry Fdlmaa Courtesv Lincoln Star. UNOFFICIAL RECORD . . . Clayton Scott's 9:39.4 clocking In the two-mile run Saturday against the University of Kan sas, was a new Nebraska rec ord for that event. However, ac cording to Coach Ed Weir, in ordet for the mark to go down as a new record, the individual must win the event. As it hap pened, Kansan Herb Semper clipped off a 9:30.4 to take the event. TTnivprsitv nf Nphraska athletes made $12,000-during the 1950-'51 school year selling concessions at Cornhusker athletic events. Ath letes get four cents commission on each item sold. Profits provide money for Grants-in-aid. uross sales totaled $65,000. TJinptv-foiir ner pent of the sea son football ticket holders at the University of Nebraska have ap plied for tickets again for the 1952 season. A year ago there were 17, 268 season books sold. More than a mile of film was nrnrpsspri on each football game i played by the University of Ne braska in 1951. Sound was piacea on the game films for the first time. Sportettes By DENNY BOHRER WAA Sports Columnist iit;i tiii tv,,. intramural rliirlrnin tournament last Fridav VV XXCLti 1 fc... ... v . v v. " " ' with a team average oi ioo.o. witson oeieaieu mc uauuua ucwa, who had a team average of 119. There were four girls on each team and the scores of each girl were added up. The members of the winning team are: Marcia Burklund, Mardelle Lamp, Arlene Nielson, and Jean Nelson. The girls' basketball tournament is approaching the second week of play. This basketball tournament is a single elimination tourna ment for the first two rounds. Then starting with the third round, the rest of the tournament is going to be double elimination. The tournament is still in the process of the first round. The games being played this week are as follows: Monday, the Delta Gamma fourth team will encounter the Gamma Phi Beta first team; Tuesday, Kappa Kappa Gamma second team versus Delta Gamma third team will be on the agenda. Wednesday, the Wesley House first team Will play the Alpha Chi Omega third team; and the last game of the week will be the Chi Omega second team playing the Kappa ivappa uamma win u Hm, m t" will be played Thursday. mi. - i.vi. tin.mi4 ic in V10 fntirtVi rnund. and the X UC IdUlC tenuis wmiim.v... -- - . . winner will be decided by next week. The girls still remaining in the tournamem arc. ouuure iuisou , Eddy Wesley; Barbara Biba, Alpha Phi; Janet Quinn, Chi Omega; Jean Blickenstoff, Wesley; Joyce Loose, AOP; Yolanda Davis, Chi Omega; Jessica Brown, Towne club; Wanda Barrett, Lutheran Stu- dent association; uaroiyn uurnans, uii vmega, m"iaii uumuisb. Wesley; Margaret Moore cniumega; r at wifamw , ou wood., 07.5 set in 1951 Alma Stoddard, independent: joan oavagc, uuks", '"v"- , ,, . . . Itc- rhi nrr.Pta. 1 Clayton acott was secona oe- The Jayhawks broke another old streak when they turned back the Kansas State trackmen at Manhattan for their first win since Easton took the reigns in 1947. The Saturday meeting of the Hawks and Huskers marked the 13th time the squads met. Last vear the J&vhawks scored their ! second tightest margin against Ed Weir's team by losing 4&-ss. The meet was the scene of the setting of four new dual track records. Sophomore Wes Santee rrl thrniiph a 4:17.6 clockine in h mil, run to renlace the old record set by Harold Brooks of Nebraska in 1940. The old marK was 4:22.1. Nebraska's Don Bedker ran a 07.4 time in the 60-yard high hurdles to replace Jack Green- gWM,M...lii i .jaaajiwnsiSSi.M.. '" ! u W:i ' Courtesy lincoln .Tonrnal. UPSETS NEBRASKA TRACK . . . Bill Easton, Kansas univer sity track coach, Saturday pi loted his Jayhawkers to an in door victory over the pre viously unbeaten Neb r a s k a track team. , Main Feature Clock Schedule fr'tirnlshrd by Theatres Varsity: "Man In the Saddle," 1:35, 3:37, 5:39, 7:41, 9:43. Esquire: "Lost Horizon," v:iz, 9:22. State: "On Dangerous Ground, 1:00. 3:55. 6:50. 9:45; "Whip Hand," 2:33, 5:28, 8:23. Grid Players To Play Off Handball Duels Ralph Fife, originator of the TianHhall tournev for football players, announced Monday that all handball matches scneauied for last week must be completed Coach Fife has arranged matches for all the aspiring foot hnii r-nnriirlntps for the 1952 sea son, and the need for completing the matches on schedule is urgent r hovinff their Barnes com- nieoH aro Vipine held ud in their quest for the four prizes to be awarded, winners oi xne a, d, and D brackets will be presented t.hp bnvs still in the Carl Brasee. Verl Scott, Dennfs Emanuel, Jim Jones, Tim Krone i ipnrpe viira. acii Kunes and Don Hewitt. Ball Players Moved Three Lincoln Athletics baseball players have been moved to the parent club's newly-purchased Ottawa, Canada, chattel, Fran Nagle, manager of the Lincoln club, announced Monday. The three are outiieioers iom Kirk and Eddie Boehm and third sacker Bob Gardner. The move, according to Nagle, was a combination advancement for the three as well as a move to show more new faces at Sher man field. Norway Leads Olympics Norway retained undisputed lead of the Olympics Monday af ter sweeping three gold medals. The Norwegian team possessed 74 points. Austria, second in the competition, had 41, while the United States, third, had 34 and a half. jfifa RANDOLPH'Aj IDA LUPIH0R0BERT RYAN, with WARD BOND CHARLES KEMPER I'l.llS Chess Tournament There will be a meeting of all students interested in enter ing the all-University chess tournament Wednesday at 4 p.m., in parlor Z of the Union. The first round will begin Saturday, Feb. 23, in Room 313 from 1-5 p.m. If students are interested but will be unable to attend at this time, contact Dick Kelly. The two winners of the tour nament will represent the Uni versity of Nebraska In the Big Seven conference chess tournament. 1 4J worldi K'W" ?EdI yu 1 prs Sat. AlatliR'eH I rt.m. Snn. 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