The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 19, 1954, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Wednesday, May 19, 1954
THE NEBRASKAN
Page 3
Sixteen Huskers In Big 7
Trade Meet This Weekend
Ken Reiners Top Scarlet Threat In Boulder Affair
Biff Seven Outdoor Records
J(V) :08.4, Hubert Meier. Iowa Suit. if30
iM :20.8. Thine Baker. Kansas Slate!
1952.
410 :47.1. Than Baker, Kansai Stale.
1943.
tS0 1:50.8. Wet Santre. Kansas, 1D33
Mile 4:06.3, VVea Same. Kansas. 19S3
2-Mlle 8:19. Bruce Drummond. Oklahoma.
1 953.
Mich hurdles :14.2, Medill Cart iter, MIs-
aouri. 1048.
Lowhurdles :23.2, Don Smith, Kansas,
Choi pill 53M0V. Jim Allen, Colorado,
1050.
Discus leO'-SU". . Edsel Wibbeli, Ne
braska. 1B40.
Javelin 21'-4", Herb Grole, Nebraska.
1940.
H irhJumn '-7 ", Tom Scofield. Kansas,
Broad tump 24'-ll V. Neville Price, Ok
lahoma. 1953.
Fo)e vault 14'-1", Bill Carroll. Oklahoma,
1949.
Xliie relay 3:15.4. Kansas Stale, 1953.
A 16-man Nebraska track and
field squad" leaves by train
Thursday night for Boulder,
MU Tigers
Stop Fading
Husker Nine
The fading University of Ne
braska baseball team dropped
their third straight Big Seven
game Monday as the high-flying
Missouri Tigers stopped them
3- 1. The game was held on the
Columbia diamond.
Walks hurt the Husker cause
most of the way. Starter Brian
Sievers, a sophomore lefty, .nd
his successor, righthander Tat
Mallette rave up 11 walks be
tween them while Ed Cook of
Missouri allowed only one free
pass. Only one Husker reached
third base after the third frame.
,The loss gave, the Huskers a
4- 7 record in Big Seven play.
The win enabled the Tigers to
hold their first-place lead over
the Oklahoma Sooners.
Vebraska
ft o Won If
Rem 2b
Novak lb
Cilcscf
Becker rf
Backhaul c
Mallette P
Stcverk p
Coulai as
3 0 2 0
4 12 2
4 14 4
4 1 S 0
3 110
3 110
2 0 5 0
10 10
10 0 2
2 10 3
Missouri
Dickinson ss
Musprave rf
J Scn'kertf
Gleason c
R.Sch'kr lb
Ilocrr U
C o 2b
Savers
Henson If
Cook p
ab h o a
3 0 2 4
3 2 0 5
3 10 0
4 2 2 0
3 9 9 0
3 2 9 0
3 0 2 1
10 3 1
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 1
Totals 30 6 24 11 Totals 25 77 12
Savers walked lac Docrx in eichth.
Nebraska i .001 KK) 000 1
aiissouri 000 021 00s 3
R Ralston. Dickinson, Cox. Cook. KBI
Novak. 2fl Giles, Skkel, R. Schoom
makw. SB Cos. S Rolston, Dickinson.
DP Cmifal, Seta nd Novak 3. Dickinson
Cos and R. Schocmasaker. Lil Nebraska
4. Missouri 11. BB Seivers 6. Mallette 5.
Cook 1. SO Sievers 3. Mallette 2, Cook
7. HO Sievers 3 in ; Mallette 4 m
SH: Cook C in 9. W Cook. L Sievers.
V V. Rabec and A Jordan. T 2:15.
Colo., where the Cornhuskers
compete in the Big Seven Con
ference Championships on Fri
day and Saturday.
That Husker hopes lie chiefly
in the field events Is indicated
by the fact that 11 of the 16
squad members wil compete in
those events.
Last year Nebraska finished
third behind Kansas and Okla
homa when the loop meet was
held at Ames, la.
Best chance for an individual
event title for the Huskers is in
the shot put where Ken Reiners,
Indianola junior, has pushed the
iron sphere past the 51 -foot
mark.
The Nebraska travel squad:
Jim Hofstetter, Kearney, pole
vault and hurdles; Phil Heidelk,
Fairbury, high jump and relay;
Ray Kelley, Danbury, high jump
and broad jump; Merle Brestal,
Chappell, high jump; Cliff Dale,
Falls City, shot put and discus;
Ken Reiners, Indianoia, shot put
and discus; Leonard Rosen,
Omaha, shot put and discus; Jim
Tangdall, Superior, discus.
Charles Hunley, Falls City,
javelin, 440 and relay; Charles
Gibson, Lincoln, 440, 220 and re
lay; Ladd Hanscom, Lincoln,
broad jump; Warner Olson,
Holdredge, hurdles; Bob Ander
sen, West .Point, 850; Brien
Hendricksen, Lincoln, 440, 220
and relay; Harold Wray, Spald
ing, 2-mile, and Carl Vondra,
Omaha, javelin.
Nebraska Golf, Tennis Teams
End Play With Big 7 Tourney
The University of Nebraska
golf and tennis teams both end
their spring season action with
the Big Seven meets in Boulder
Friday and Saturday.
The rollers warm up for the
bir affair with a dual meet
against the Colorado Collere team
in Colorado Springs on Wednes
day. The netters also see action
before competing- in the confer
ence championships. They meet
the University of Colorado team
in a dual on Thursday.
Coach Bob Hamblet named
Dick Anderson, Jack Moore, Tom
Tolen, Dick Lauer and Herb
Mayer to make the western trip.
NU Golfer Named
Gordon Grid Head
Dick Anderson, one of Coach
Bob Hamblet's ace University of
Nebraska golfers, has accepted
the position of head football and
track -coach at Gordon High
School in northwestern Nebraska.
Anderson was an outstanding
all-around athlete at Fairbury
High. He was the number one T
quarterback on two powerful
Doane College football teams in
1950 and 1951. He was a Nebraska
College Conference selection both
Tears. For the last two years, he
has been at the University of Ne
braska.
Gordon, 'a Class B school, is a
member of the Northwest and
Panhandle "B" Conferences.
Anderson and Tolen are the lone
Delts Edge Sig Alph Club 9-8;
Delta Sigma Pi Also Triumphs
By FRANK SORENSON
Sports Staff Writer
In the Fraternity "A" League
tourney. Delta Tau Delta edged
the Sigma Alpha Epsilon crew
9-8 Monday for the trip to the
final game with the unbeaten
Phi Kappa Psi aggregation.
The DTD's led at the end of
the first frame 5-4 in a hit-infested
affair which saw the
SAE's Chuck Smith bang out a
grand-slant home run for the
four tallies.
The losers then came with two
more markers in the third in
ning for a 6-5 lead only to have
it erased in the following frame
when the Delts collected three
runs for an 8-6 margin.
In the fifth inning the losers
tied it up on two errors, a field
er's choice and two stolen bases.
The game was then forced into
an extra inning with the Delts
finally coining across with the
game-winning tally on a hit by
Catcher LeRoy Butherus.
George Null twirled a one-hit,
one-run game in leading his Delta
Sigma Pi team over the Tau
Kappa Epsilon nine 7-1 to gain
-the final game in the Fraternity
B" tourney. They are slated
to play the unbeaten Pi Kappa
Phi team in the double-elimination
affair. "
Null fanned five while giving
up the only safety to a lone TKE.
Ray Scbeifelbein collected the
only TKE ma after being walked
to first. -
Phi Epsilon Kappa, coming
from a fourth inning 2-1 deficit,
romped over a strong Newman
Club team 11-2 to gain the berth
in the final game of the Class
"C" Independent Softball tour
Bey. Don Langdon, Gerry Oehring
and Dave Lynch led the triumph
with a homer apiece. Langdon
led the way with three safeties
in five trips to the plate.
Pitcher Ray FaUstead aUowea
nly six scattered hits in regis
tering his second conquest against
one loss. Numerous walks bad
the twlrler in trouble in many
instances, however.
Langdon hit his homer in the
third frame to give the winners
a 1-0 lead only to have the New
man boys blast out hits coupled
with ' errors for two runs in the
third.
In the fourth the winners found
the range and went ahead 4-2 nd
then scored four runs in the fifth
and three in the sixth stanzas,
while holding the contenders
scoreless for the rest of the contest
Softballer Boich
Tosses Nifty Gem
Amie Boich has done it again,
The strong-armed University of
Nebraska intramural softball
standout, threw a no-hit, no-run
game for Strauss Merchants
against City Merchants Monday
night as the Lincoln city softball
season opened.
Strauss Brothers, defending
state champs, won the Triple A
League game, 14-0. Boich fanned
12 batters and didn't allow a run
ner to reach first base.
Boich has also been pitching
for the strong Industrial Arts
team in University intramural
play where he has already tossed
one no-hitter. The Arts club are
also defending All-University
champs.
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seniors, Lauer is a junior and
Moore and Mayer are both sopho
mores. Roy Colson, Jim Campbell,
Marshall Becker, Norman Veit
rer and Bill Roy will compete for
Coach Ed Higginbotham's tennis
team. Colson and Campbell are
the seniors while VeiUer, Becker
and Roy are only sophomores.
Last season the Husker links
men finished fourth in the Big
Seven meet with a 958 total. They
were 49 strokes back of the cham
pion Iowa State crew who had
a 909 mark. Colorado was second
and Oklahoma finished third with
Kansas State, Kansas and Mis
souri bringing up the rear behind
the Huskers.
The tennis squad finished sixth
in 1953. Only Kansas State was
in back of the Huskers who .had
picked up 4 points. Colorado cap
tured the title with 15 points. Ok
lahoma, Kansas, Iowa State and
Missouri were also ahead of Nebraska.
NU Fencing Team
Slated For Action
The University of Nebraska
Fencers Club will send a 10-man
delegation to Fort Riley, Kan.,
Sunday to compete in an invita
tional fencing tournament spon
sored by the U. S. Army.
Besides Nebraska, the meet
also will include fencers from
Missouri, Kansas, Iowa and Ok
lahoma. Cornhusker participants will be
Richard DahL Lincoln, foil and
sabre; John DePutron, Lincoln,
foil and epee; Cyril Harvey, Lin
coln, epee; Rudolf Link, Lincoln,
sabre; Robert Kunecke, Lincoln,
epee; Jim Rogers, Lincoln, epee;
Douglas Henry, Omaha, foil; H.
J. Ball, Lincoln, foil; Robert Day,
Lincoln, sabre,- and David Kiit
ler, Lincoln, foiL
Missouri Murders Nebraska 18-1 To Insure Tie In Big Seven
The Missouri nine obliterated
a weak Cornhusker squad as
they whopped the University 18
to 1 in the second of a two game
series played at Columbia, Mo.
The win for Missouri clinches
at least a tie for the Big Seven
Conference championship. The
I lone Husker run came from Gene
Gastineau In the seventh inning.
NORTH AMERICAN HAS &UUT MORE A,RJtAN'
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He'll win his wings, because those who chose him
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You too can know the same thrill that young
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Youll meet them alL Planes like this T-28, North
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Yes, there's high adventure ahead for you, if you
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