Tuesday, Mar. 7, 1961 The Nebraskan Page 3 K appa SIg win Fr at 1 itle Prokop's 18 Sparks Win Over Betas By Cloyd Clark Kappa Sigma won the all fraternity basketball cham pionship by whipping Beta Theta Pi, 61-47, in Monday night's intramural play. Bob Prokop, all-University basketball center for the last four years, led his team with 18 points as the Kappa Sigs emerged from last night'!? play the only undefeated team in the tournament. The game was a nip and tuck battle during the first half with the Kappa Sigs on top by one point at both the quarter and halfway marks, 14-13 and 27-26. In the second half Steve Shoulders and Larry Brock haus sparked the Kappa Sigs to the final 14-point margin. Shoulders scored 15 and Brockhaus 14 during the game with most of the points coming in the second half. Brockhaus also started the Kappa Sig scoring at the start of both halves with a field goal. Bill Kendall with 14, Arils Brash and Don Douglas With 12 each led the Beta scoring attack. Navy and Gus II both fell to the Underdogs in the other championship play Monday liight. Dent college defeated the Navy shooters, 32-30, to erase the 39-29 defeat they had suf fered from the sailors in the quarterfinals of the tourney. Joe and Larry Lytle car ried the load for the Dents scoring 14 flhd 8 points re spectively. Tall man of the Navy squad, Mike Stacey, took the scoring honors for the losers with 12 points. These two teams will meet again tonight to decide the a 1 1-University independent champion. Gus I upset its upstairs neighbors, Gus II, 40-33, in the Burr-Selleck champion ship playoffs. Lacry Tomlison led the victors scoring with 16 points. Dick Muma grabbed the runner-up 8 p 6 1 with 10. Leo Fisher and Monte Klf fen each scored 10 points to lead Gus II. The Burr-Selleck champion ship Will be decided tonight in the rematch of the two Gus teams. Winner of this game will play the Kappa Sigs in the Frat-Burr-Selleck playoff on the varsity court of the Coli seum Friday. The tourney will end with the independent winner play ing the Fraternity-Burr-S e 1 leck winner for the all-University charnpipnship Satur day night. Theta Xi defeated Sigma Chi, 36-30, in the semi-final game of the C team competi tion. This victory will put the Theta Xi's into the final C team game against Phi Delta Theta tonight at 8:30 on PE Court 1. Other games: Maclan-A 1 . Zeta Beta Tu 0 (forfeit) 1'im.ucnirn vf us j 10 Law Collefe 36 Newman Club 39 X ' V I w t I f A ... - : . MX :::'::::.-:.. , :: v- -- mmuT, f k if '' - ka GRIDDERS ALSO STAR IN CLASSROOM Three Husker grldders check their sets of the American Peoples Encyclopedia which they were awarded when chosen as members of the Big Eight all-academic team. From left, they are Don Fficke, Pat Clare and Jim Huge. All had B average or above and were selected by votes Of 602 sports editors. NU Frosh in Finale Tonight Nebraska's freshmen bas- round bailers at the Coliseum, ketball team closes its season Tipoff will be at 8 p.m. tonight with a game against Coach Tony S h a r p e will Kansas State's first-year start Daryl Petsch of Marys- Petsch Leads Frosh In Scoring with 17 A By Dick Trotter Freshman basketballer Daryl Petsch, a 6-5, 195-pound "net scorcher" Is leading Ne braska's frosh in scoring go ing into the final game against Kansas State at -8 p.m. tonight oft the Coliseum maples. Petsch, Who graduated last year from Marysville, Kahs., High School has a total of 226 points in 13 games for an av erage of 17.4 per game. Also shooting well from the charity line,, he has. 48 free throws for 61 attempts for 78 per cent. No stranger to-high point honors, he was on the starting five at Marysville High for three years. As a sophomore Petsch av eraged 10.2, as a junior 19.1 and during his senior year he averaged 25.9 points per game for an overall high school ca reer average of 18.1. In his senior year he also led his team in rebounding with a respectable average of 18 rebounds per game. To fur ther bolster his high School reputation he slammed the boards with a hot shooting percentage of 54 per cent from the floor. In the thinclad ranks at Marysville he grabbed I sec ond place in the state track meet in the high jump dur ing his senior year. Daryl, a personable, pleas- V PETSCH A ant featured lad is a member of Phi Delta Theta and is ma joring in architecture. He has a 6.0 grade average. Petsch feels the biggest change from high school to college basketball is in the faster moves td the boards and rougher checking in col lege ball. He feels his weakest point is defense, but he is working on this phase and says - he hopes to be up to par by next season td make a strong bid for a berth on the varsity squad. ajry- do girls rush to your hegd? Very likely-wf you've taken it into your head to use Vaseline' Hair Tonic! Downright heady stuff, this - made specially for men who use water with their "hair tonic. "Vaseline Hair Tonic is 100 pure light grooming oil - replaces oil that water removes. 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic won't evaporate, stays clear and clean on your hair. And just a little does ft lot I it's clear it's clean . . it's - ' 1 ' . - v V ) :i3lffj . I is i - I ai it HiWm I (if 'v lift I I I : MHHiKniMt III I I 1 W:r--riTiYll''!ll ville, Kans., Charles Jdhes of Washington, D.C., Bill Vin cent of Omaha, Dennie Puelz of Lincoln and Roger Denesia of Wayne. The young Huskers have a 2-1 record in their three regu larly scheduled games, win ning from Fairbury Junior College, 82-67 from Luther College of Wahoo and losing to the Iowa State freshmen at Ames, 72-60. Sam Somerhalder of Min den will be playing with the Kansas State freshmen. The scoring chart: FG FT-FTA PF TP AVE. O Petsdi ...M 89 Vincent ...13 8r Jones 13 TO Sladovnik 10 Denesia. . 13 37 Puelz ...12 33 Nannen ...10 28 Sieck 13 21 Johnson ... 7 15 Lemons ..11 111 Bartlett ... 4 10 Hord 11 4 KahroR ... i 1 48-91 7 20-38 17- 30 111-16 13-20 18- 35 23-37 3-6 -7 i-s 14 5-8 226 195 10 89 85 79 74 65 33 24 21 9 7 17.4 15.0 12.3 89 6.5 6.6 14 5.0 4.7 22 5.3 0.8 0.9 Mil Drops NV, 97-76 In Finale Missouri hit a season high scoring total and Tiger guard Joe Scott set a Missouri Field house scoring record with 46 points as the Tigers handed Nebraska a 97-76 licking Mon day night in the final game of the season for the Huskers. The Tiger win avenged two earlier losses td the Huskers and left Nebraska with a 4-10 conference mark and a 10-14 record for the season. Mis souri is 6-7 in the league and 8-15 overall with one game left against Kansas Saturday at Columbia. . The loss is the third straight for coach Jerry Bush's Husk er cagers. Scott got 21 of his record 46 points in the first half and added 25 in the sec ond period. Charles Henke added 22 to the Missouri total. The Tigers owned a 48-35 halftime advantage and the closest Nebraska came in the second stanza was at 52-45 on a tipin by Bill Bowers and two free throws by Tom Russell. Missouri then began to pull away and with Scott and Henke pumping' in points the Tigers raced to a 93-70 lead. Scdtt's record-breaking buck et in the closing minute made it 95-74 before Nebraska's Al Roots and Missouri's Walt Grebing traded layins in the final seconds. Five Huskers hit in double figures but it wasn't enough to overcome the hot shooting of Tlgefs Scott and Henke. Al Roots and Russell each got 15. Jim Kowalke added 14, Rex Swett collected 12 and Bowers dumped in 11. NEBRASKA MISSOURI f 7-8 15 Cox 0-0 2 Garrett 5-6 13 Henke 2-7 12 Scott 7-9 13 Lockett 2-5 14 Doughty 0- 1 2 Grebini 1- 1 3 Hunter 0-0 2 Houston 0-0 0 0-0 0 Russell Wall Bower Swett Roots Kowalke Buuck Yates Huge Grupe Elle Totals Nebraska M t I X 4 2 -3 10 2 5-5 9 8 5-7 21 18 10-13 46 0 0-0 0 4 1-2 9 1 0-1 2 0 0-0 0 0 0-1 0 26 24-3176 Totals Issouri Attendance 1,500. S7 23-32 97 35 4176 48 4997 Husker Thinclac 7th in Loop Test By Janet Sack Kansas had little difficulty in regaining the Big Eight indoor track championship as they scored in 12 of 14 events to amass 61 points to Oklahoma's 34y2. The Huskers finished seventh with a total of 12 point. Oklahoma State and Missouri tied for third and fourth with 15 9-10 just ahead of Kansas State's 15. Iowa State finished eighth with 6. One of the best perform ances of the evening was turned in by Rex Stucker of Kansas State. Stucker-came within inches of landing a rare triple win. Stucker won in the 60 highs with a :07.4. He came back in the 60-yard dash to be beaten by inches by Larry McCue of Kansas who was clocked in :06.3. In the 60-yard low hurdles Stucker won with a :06.7 ty ing the Big Eight record held jointly by Bob Derrick of Oklahoma, Keith Gardner of Nebraska, and Charlie Tid well of Kansas. In the mile Bill Dotson of Kansas won in 4:08.9, the sec ond fastest time to be run on the board oval. Nebraska's best individual performance came in the mile as Ray Ste vens posted a 4:15.5, a career best, to finish fourth, inches behind Billy Mills of Kansas. Mulllns' Mark Falls Jim Heath of Colorado broke the only Big Eight rec ord in the meet when he ran the 600 in 1:12.1 to topple the 1:12.3 set by Joe Mullins of Nebraska. LeRoy Keane fin ished third for the Huskers. The two - mile run was a dual between Mills and Bob Hanneken of Missouri with Mills leading by about a yard most of the way and winning it in 9:17.4. Nebraska's other points came in the 60 highs with Bill Fasano picking up a fifth. The Huskers scored in the shot put with Al Wellman tak ing fourth with a toss of 53-iy4, his best effort. Larry Reiners landed fifth position with a 50-7V4. In the 880 Clarence Scott of Nebraska placed fifth with Bill Stone of Oklahoma State winning in 1:53.3, slightly be hind the record of 1:52.5 set by Wes Santee in 1953. Fasano and Wilke tied for fifth in the high jump with the winning leap turned in by Sammy Pegues of Oklahoma State at 6-6. In the pole vault George Davies of Oklahoma State vaulted 15-4 on his third try to best J. D. Martin of Okla homa who placed second with a mark of 15-0. Jim Kraft of Nebraska tied for third, fourth and fifth at 13-6 with Don Meyers of Colorado and Roger Schmanke and Jack Stevens of Kansas. Deadline Today For Volley Rail Entries for the Intramural volleyball competition are due today at 5 p.m. in the Men's PE building. The tournament will be ar ranged with fraternity A, Sel leck and Burr A, B teams and independent teams. All fraternities, Burr Hall and Sellack Quad will be en tered with an A team. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Manatt, Kiesselbach, 1 Iranians and Ag Men captured the Frater nity, Selleck, Burr, Indepen dent and Ag College titles last year. This year's all-University champion and B team cham pion will be presented a trophy. Play will begin March 14th. IM Cage Slate Tonight: PE Court 1 6:30 Beta Sigma Psi-B vs. Delta Tau Delta-C 7:30 Gus II vs. Gus I 8:30 Phi Delta Theta-C vs. Theta Xi-C PE Court 2 5: Manatt-B vs. Mac-Lean-B 6:30 Whits vs. Delta Tau Delta-B 8:30 Navy vs. Dents iliMtJillirf ImJP ill mA KTY MUTUAL the company that stands by you To: the College Man with Success in his Eye Liberty Mutial Insurance Companies furnish pro tection to their customers for virtually all forms of insurance except life insurance. Together these companies form the largest mutual casualty-fire insurance company in the country and Liberty has been the leading writer of workmen's Compen sation Insurance since, 1936. x Other major lines: automobile, accident and health, general liability, fire, marine and multiple peril. These combined casualty-fire companies have en joyed a history of consistent growth. 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