v i '.'! Tuesdoy, April 3, 1956 On The Diamond Scene: Nebraska Wiras Thr : ' r . ' ' I Coartew Sunday Journal aod Star Brown and Coufal . . , By BOB MARTEL Nebraskan Sports Reporter The Cornhusker baseball squad is home from their first campaign of the season in which they won three games and lost four. Don Brown and Norm Coufal led the Nebraska hitters throughout the trip while Charley Ziegenbein's 5-3 victory over Baylor was the best Husker pitching performance of the swing. In the opening tilt, the Huskers gained a hard earned 1-0 victory over Tulsa. Nebraska scored the Husker Golf Squads Each Spring vacation produced various results for most University stu dents, but for the tennis and golf teams it produced near-disastrous trips to the Southwest. The tennis squad won one out of five while the golfers won one out of two dual meets but finished near the bottom in the 16-field Southwestern Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. The netters started out their southern tour with a victory over the University of Wichita Shockers 5- 2. They won four of five singles matches and split the doubles. At Norman, Oklahoma, the team met with strong wind, blowing dust, and a powerful Oklahoma tennis squad that downed the Huskers 6-1. Southern Methodist won its eight straight shutout victory of the sea son when they downed the Big Red 6- 0. Nebraska ended the trip by falling to Southeastern State Col lege of Oklahoma 4-2 and bowing to Oklahoma Baptist University squad 6-1. George Fisk was the individual standout on the week-long tour through the land of year-round sunshine. Riley Paces Gymnasts In NCAA Courtesy Lincoln Journal Bruce Riley . . . Huskers o n ly entry in the NCAA Gymnastics championships at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The agile senior place seventh in tumbling, tied for second in the highbar and placed ninth in the free exercise. The Huskers finished 13th. Illinois, de fending champions, again won the meet. NOW PLAYING FftEB . Dos omr T MAUMK )CunpoS I hi WALT DISNEY'S PEOPLE AND PLACES "S'AM" ofhem Sworn) Courtesy Lincoln Journal pace Cornhusker hitter. game's only run in the top of the ninth when Brown doubled, pinch hitter Jim Flynn was safe on an infield error which moved Brown to third and Don Erway lifted a sacrifice fly to left field to score Brown. Willie Greenlaw statrted on the hill and went four innings, strik ing out seven and allowing only one hit. Ziegenbein went the next three innings with winning pitcher Dick Geier finishing up. Brown led the victors with two doubles, while Gary Reimers and Erway collected the other hits. And Tennis Win One s Nebraska's linksmen did not fa , . anv bette After defeating ,11 Wichita 918Vi the golfers were swamped by the Univer sity of Houston 17-. They also lost the second match of the Houston series by a 4-0 Courtesy Lincoln JournalSCOre. Then the Moore Huskers juor- neyed to the Southwestern Tourna ment where they finished 15th. in team match totals. In fourball play, they finished last, one stroke behind New Mexico who they de feated in match totals. The netters have a one-week lay off before they take on Creighton University and Fairbury Junior College the next week-end. y .f. : Why the Prime Minister of Japan reads The Reader's Digest '7n this age of stresses, the work of The Reader's Digest, of which J am an avid reader, is of great significance. The Digest publislies the same articles simultaneously in all parts of the civilized world, and, by so doing, it deepens the mutual feelings of concern and good will among different peoples. I earnestly wish for its further development in this difficult world." Ichiro Hatoyama. Prime Minister of Japan In April Reader's Digest don't miss: CONDENSATION FROM $3.50 BOOK: "DELIVER US FROM EVIL." Fleeing the Reds, the Vietnamese came: old women with collarbones shattered by rifle butte, children with sticks driven into their ears. Courageous exploits of a young Navy doc tor who won the love and admiration of people who expected only death at the hands of an American. WHAT ABOUT THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS? How the dis covery of these now-famous documents (fragments of the earliest-known version of the Bible) throws new light on the origins of Christianity. AN EASTER SERMON. Here, in a condensation from Peter Marshall's sermon "Because He Rose," is Easter's stirring message of hope, as interpreted by the beloved chaplain. APPROVED KILLING IN MISSISSIPPI. A Negro boy, Emmett Till, was abducted by two white men and shot yet the jury found them not guilty. Facts the jury never heard in the"Wolf-Whistle Murder." Get April Reader's Digest at your newsstand today only 25? 40 articles of lasting interest, including the best from leading magazines and current books, condensed to save your time. The Huskers next traveled to Houston and dropped the opener of a two game series 3-2. Errors proved to be the downfall of the Huskers who outhit Houston seven to five. Nebraska scored first in the opening frame when Jim Ku backi singled, went to second on an error and scored on Brown's single. First baseman John Bei deck's bases empty home run in the seventh accounted for the other Nebraska tally. Geier worked the first three innings and was the losing pitcher. Kubacki and Brown had two hits each for the Huskers. Houston" swept the series with a 6-1 win in the second game. The Texans scored six runs in the first four frames and coasted to vic tory. Billy Dube worked the first eight innings for Houston and blanked the Huskers. Bill Ledbet ter took over in the ninth and served up a home run ball to pinch hitter Gene Torczon. Starter Greenlaw was charged with the defeat. Brown had a double and two singles and Coufal hit two singles in three trips to pace the Nebraskans. Nebraska then journeyed across town and tripped the Rice Owls 8-5 in their series opener. All eight Nebraska runs were unearned, re suiting from seven Owl errors, Right fielder Marv Arensdorf with three singles and Coufal and Brown with two each were the leading Nebraska batters. Torczon who took over for Ziegenbein in the fourth was the winner. Rice came back the next day to play flawless ball and drop Ne braska 4-1. Brown's ninth inning homer accounted for the only Husk er tally. Geier was tagged with his second loss of the campaign. In the sixth game of the south ern swing, the Baylor Bears piled up seven runs in the first five innings to sock the Huskers 9-4 Nebraska was plagued by shakey fielding which proved to be their downfall. Greenlaw was the losing Ditcher while Al Karle led the Husker batsmen with two singles in two attempts. Ziegenbein used his strikeout pitch in the clutch to give Nebras ka a split in the Baylor series. The 5-3 victory can be credited to the lanky lefty and to shortstop Coufal. Bases on balls and wild pitches kept Ziegenbein in trouble most of the afternoon, but his ability to use the strikeout in the clutch kept him and the Huskers from having a disastrous afternoon. Norm Cou fal played erne of the better games of his career. He singled three times and tripled once in four trips and handled eight chances with the poise of a major league veter an. auoueBoe mm .hk wktmk0 THE NEBRA3KAN ellQck By BOB WIRZ I-M Sports Writer Two men from Canfield House pace this years Selleck Quadrangle "A" Intramural basketball team. Avery, Bessey and Fairfield houses each placed one man on the top five. Doug Chappell , ex-Scottsbluff High and Junior College athlete, is the number one individual star. Chappell played for the rugged Bessey five. Along with Chappell on the first five are, LaVerne Torczon, Husker football player, who played for Canfield and big Joe Houfek of Canfield. He is a repeater from last years team. Torczon and Houfek were the big scorers and rebounders for the Canfield team which was upset in From The Kreit's By MAX KREITMAN Sports' Editor So long, Phog . . . In a dramatic climax, the dean of American basketball coaches, Dr. Forest C. Phog Allen, bowed out of the coaching circles after 45 years as a cage mentor. In a ruling handed down by the University of Kansas, Allen had reached the manditory retirement age of 70 and could no longer be re tained in an official capacity. Allen, knowing full well of the ruling, appealed the decision to the University regents to give him an extension of one year. But the KU officials balked and assistant coach Dick Harp was elevated to the position of head tutor. Obviously, Allen had one motive in mind. With the coming of Wilt Chamberlain, KU's highly publicized freshman center, plus a nucleus of fine returning lettermen, Phog was looking for that last championship. The result of the debate was this. In Harp, KU has a man who has actually been running the ball club for the past two or three years. Kansas has gained a younger prodige of Allen's who has been schooled in the Kansas style of basketball for many years. For Harp, it is a promotion that has been coming his way for many years. The good doctor, Allen, should have bowed out of the picture in a graceful manner instead of the typical Allen way. What happened? . . . While the KU decision was the talk of the Midlands, another de cision became a heated issue of the whole nation. Adding more wood to the fire they started by anning ace miler Wes Santee from ever running as a amatuer again, the AAU put the clamps on five collegiate cagers who wound up their college play this season. Darrell Floyd of Furman, Joe Holup of George Washington, Tom Heinsohn of Holy Cross, Sihugo Green of Duquesne and Julius McCoy of Michigan State were given the thumbs down sign from the AAU this week. Whereas Santee was banned for taking excessive funds, the five cagers were given the heave-ho for expressing their desire to tour with the Harlem Globetrotters after the East-West all-star game. In the eyes of the AAU, this indicated they were professionals. What puzzles me is why the Union suddenly puts the clamps on these boys after allowing this so-called violation to go on for four years hense. Since 1952, many cagers have toured the country with the Globe trotters. Yet many of them participated in the East-West game. What puzzles me is where the committee is suddenly finding all these pros. Another question is why more athletes haven't been put by the wayside already for violating the amateur code. I think that an investigation should be conducted within the AAU. This attempt to clean up the sports scene is turning into more of a wholesale laundry. LUCKY DROODLES! PURR-FECTLY HILARIOUS! WHAT'S THIS? For solution io teste . mmmmmmmmmmmmmm st -, t u A f t - - Av vis . . . I 1 V '' ' I j. MMmmmmm.. V ' fe " Wlll-LIT TUNNH . VV ' ASC. . . ; - - v. ffSEteL. - Jl : lUCKT -' (STRIKE --lUsTOlf j Will kzSmSSm- SMIMiiBWM myCEra'.- ' CIGARETTES 'j LI5SCIBGS "FASMj DGWGQ - GA.T.C moDucr iJh' League ASI-Sygb1 Toaim Selleck A.. All Star Team First Team Second Team LaVerne Torczon Canfield f Ken Johnson Avery Doug Chappell Bessey f Laverne Rogowskl Bessey Joe Houfek Canfield c Don Trout Bessey Dick Prusla Avery g Gene Torczon Canfield Kent Niemeyer Fairfield g Dick Relmer McLean Honorable Mention: Wayne Copes, McLean; Don Logerwell, Andrews; Dean Flock, Manatt; Jack Sprague, Selleck; Stu Schmidt, Gustafson II; John Bierbower, Seaton II. the play-offs. Dick Prusia, another Husker foot baller, was the Avery leader who won top honors. Prusia was a con sistent cog in Avery's drive for the title. Rounding out the top five is Kent Niemeyer who was a big gun for Fairfield. Ken Johnson, a teammate of Pru sial on the Avery five, leads the sec ond unit as he just barely missed Sports Desk Korner see paragraph below. YOU'RE ON THE RIGHT TRACK when you light up a Lucky, because Luckies taste better. Only fine tobacco naturally good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste better can give you taste like this. All of which goes to explain the Droodle above: Light-up time in caboose, as seen by halted motorist. Switch to Luckies yourself. You'll say they're the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked. DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIESI Luckies lead all other brands, regular or king size, among 36,075 college students questioned coast to coast. The number-one reason: Luckies taste better. . or a spot on the first five. LaVern Rogowski also was in the running. Rogowski played for Bessey. Don Trout of Bessey was the second team center. Trout played the post spot and was a big rebounder for his team. Gene Torczon of Can field and Dick Reimer of McLean round out the second unit. Torczon, a Husker baseballer, was the small man on the tall Canfield out CHICKEN 5-2178 Free Delivery Open Seven Days A Week li5 So. 25th St USE NEBRASKAN To place a classified ad Stop in the Buiineti Office Room SO Student Union Call 2-7631 Ext. 4226 for Classi fied Scrvico Hovrs 1-4:30 Uon. Ihn hi. THRIFTY AD RATES No. words 1 1 day 1 2 days 3 days4days 1-10 $ .40 .65 $ .85 $1.00 11-15 .50 .80 1.05 1.25 16-20 I .60 I JB5 I 1.25 1.50 21-25 .70 I 1.10 1.45 " 1.75 26-30 j .80 1.25 1.65 2.00 I Chanor. Fresher, SmooHiotn AMERICA'S LCADIMQ MANUFACTURER Or CIQAKETTEE Page 3 fit and was the playmaker. Reim er played a similiar roll with McLean who went undefeated until playoff time. Several other men pressed for .top honors. This list includes Wayne Copes of McLean, Don Log erwell of Andrews, Dean Flock of Manatt, Jack Sprague of Selleck, Stu Schmidt of Gus II and John Bierhower of Seaton II. DELIGHT Hi BOW Senrs 85c -1.35 ... 95c Mm. 8naek., SMaw MH O WATCH SAND ON FBICKLID Willi David Hunt tf.Y.U. I HOOFMUNTS OF ROCKIN HOHI Charlet Thornton Northwestern Stat C.) eertt ricultural ' interest- 3 V I f X it i -a