The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 09, 1965, Page Page 4, Image 4

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Page 4
The Daily Nebraskan
Thursday, Dec. 9, 1965
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SPORTS
Jim Swartz, sports editor
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IGOAL
! DUST .
Squad Meet Draws Approval
By Jim Swartz
The Student Senate report last week on intramural fa
cilities brought long needed attention to a "minus" area of
the University's planning.
Any intrTnural program would seem to be for the in
terest and the welfare of the student, so it only follows that
increased and in this case new facilities are certainly in
order.
. The report noted that the possibility of lighting the pre
sent playing fields, this could be either temporary or perm
anent lighting and would result in the increased use of the
present facilities to four or five times their present use.
This would seem to be one of the improvements that cer
tainly could be made now.
Also, the possibility of the use the Lincoln Air Base ,
facilities also holds a great deal of promise for the future.
The unimited possibility of the Air Base facilities should j
prompt the University to purchase the facilities.
What is most important, and the point stands that the
University's population has expanded along with the intra
mural program and facilities for intramurals are shrink
ing. While there seems to have been some hasty plans made
to provide for other areas of student welfare (the now in
adequate but expanding classrooms and living units for ex
ample) the area of intramurals appears to have gone by
overlooked.
Gymnastics Coach Jake Gei
er expressed pleasure with
both the varsity and freshman
squad meet December 4.
'it was just a good o 1 d
hakedown to see what we
have and what we d o n't
have," Geier mused. "B o t h
squads are working out very
fine," he added.
Geier lauded four varsity
gymnasts for their perform-1
a nee last Saturday. Richard
Beran, varsity captain, I
worked well on the long horse. !
Geier also commended Allen!
Armstrong for a smooth job
on the rings and Pat McGill
for a polished floor exercise.
The gymnast coach men
tioned Bruce Jones for doing
a fine job on the horizontal
bar. He indicated that Jones
is coming along well for a
sophomore.
As a group the entire fresh
man squad worked together
quite well, according to Geier.
all the frosh making a good
appearance in the intersquad
debut. The first freshman
meet will be Jan. 15 on the
road against Mankato.
The varsity squad will open
up their regular season this
Saturday, Dec. 11, against Ft.
Hays State College. The match
will be at two p.m.
About this Saturday's open
er. Coach Geier said, "I just
don't know what they have, or
what to expect.
Lincoln Site Of AAU Mat Tourney
L' -coin will host the 1965
Great Plains Invitational
Wrestling Tournament at
Pershing Auditorium Dec. 10
and 11. The meet also comes
under the sponsorship of the
national Amateur Athletic
Union (AAU).
According to Newt Copple,
tournament director, this is
the second year running tor
the meet in Lincoln. This is
unusual in that the spectacle
has never been staged in the
same place in any two suc
cessive yearsi Copple said the
Nebraska Wins National Rushing Title
With Display Of Best Offensive Balance
By Big Eight Service Bureau
Nebraska has won the na
tional team rushing title. It
has also taken the Big Eight
Conference's total offense
championship, displaying the
best offensive balance shown
by a titlist. All this came dur
ing the year pass offense
came top side in the Confer
ence. The Cornhuskers averaged
404 a game, second-best in the
nation, and became the first
to go over the 400 mark with
out at least 300 a game on
the ground. Their rushing to-!
tal was 290, keeping the in
fantry tag in the league.
Passing Strong
However, pass offense was
sparkling. Three teams
passed at least 1,100 yards for
the first time since 1952. Iowa
State led with 1.418, a Con
ference top since Missouri had
1.762 in 1951. Colorado fin
ished with 1,217 and Nebras
ka. 1,140.
Now that it is over, more
passes were lofted, more
completed, and more yards
gained than ever before in
the league. Twice this season
Frosh Tie Varsity 47-47;
Road Trips Open Schedule
Perhaps the program isn't in the great design for the
future that is always talked about, but planners would do
well to place it there.
This isn't without paradox either, to see the work Ed
Higginbotham, who developed and ran the program from
its start until last year, be crowded out in the plan for the
future.
If the University has no future and present plan for the
improvement of intramural facilities, the University has no
future.
It takes no great amount of imagination to see the
possibility of the male population, with nothing else to do,
trying to rid their steam on the East side of 16th Street. An
incident that always ends in a disastorous and disgusting
way, however, the natural outcome if they are denied
a proper and supervised program.
We now have such a program, the number of parti
cipants has increased and the facilities have decreased. A
conclusive report has been submitted to the administrators
and action with a solution is needed immediately.
With competition limited to
only one swimmer for the
Varsity to every two for the
Freshmen, the yearling tank
ers used this advantage to tie
the Varsity, 47-47, Friday,
Dec. 3 in the Coliseum pool.
The Freshmen capitalized
on both relays and finished
1-2 in the 200-yd backstroke to
even the score. In the only
racing event that two Varsity
members were competing
Steve Goetz and G a y 1 e Mc
Adams placed 1-2 in the 200-
yd. Breaststroke.
Diving honors went to Steve
Sorensen and Terry Tice of
the Varsity.
Coach Dick Klaas s tankers
open the regular swimming
season on the road this week
end with a meet scheduled at
Wisconsin State College at La
crosse on Friday, Dec. 10.
The following day the team
travels to Madison to meet
the University of Wisconsin.
The Husker tankers do n o t
make their home debut until
Jan. 15 when they meet South
ern Illinois.
THE SCORING
400-sd. Medlfy Rfla-
t. Freshmen (Brzezinskl, Tidball,
hoom, Kathrien) Time 3:59.2
2. Varsity
JOO-jd. Freestyle
1. Nickcrson V
2. Cook F
3. Tidball F
Time 1:57.1
1. Gorden V
2. Kenagv F
3. I' If ers F
Time :23.2
S00-;d. lnd. Medley
1. Frank V
2. Schmidt F
3. Brzezinski F
Time 2:16.1
Bona-
1. Sorensen V
2. Tice V
3. Duvan F
Score 213.75
Dlvinf
Butterfly
1. Burchill V
2. Bonahoom F
l ifers F (Disqualified)
Time 2:13.0
1. Lodw-ig V
2. Kathrien F
3. Kenagy
Time :oO.J
All Big Eight Center . . .
Attitude Ingredient For Success
Boulder, Colo., -Take it from
Colorado's All-Big Eight Cen
ter Chuck Gardner, attitude is
just important as altitude in
a big man's basketball make
up. Not that Gardner ranks as
one of the highest performers
in the Big Eight conference.
He isn't. At 6-7 he's shorter
than 16 other men in the
league.
But he does rank as one of
the conference's finest play
ers and he's quick to point out
that the big reason for his
great improvement after a
relatively obscure season and
a third is due primarily to
attitude.
Not that he was lazy. B u t
rather that he was not playing
much and not accomplishing
much when he was on the
floor.
Gardner got out of the gate
quickly this season with a 28
point barrage against a good
Texas Tech team. Quite a
beginning when you consider
he didn't reach that total until
the Buffaloes' eighth game
last winter.
The Yardley, Pa. mathe
matics major, who carries an
almost perfect 3.6 overall
grade point average, never
hit double figures as a col
legian until he tallied 13
against Missouri in the second
game of the Big Eight pre
season tournament.
One he found the range,
however, he averaged 16.4 in
conference play to finish as
the fifth-best scorer in the
tough Big Eight.
So what c h a n g e d his at
titude? The answer is simple.
It was the greatest of all
attitude-changers, success.
"Until I had that pretty
good game against Missouri I
never really had any great
(Confidence or enthu
siasm about myself," explains
Gardner, a sandy-h aired,
freckled-faced young man who i
looks like a s t r i n g-beanish
Tom Sawyer.
"When I discovered I could
score in the Big Eight, my
confidence started to come,"
he adds. "With the confidence,
my attitude really changed.
Knowing that I was part of
the team really got me
charged up. I started getting
gassed up for the games. It
makes a difference. I could
hardly wait for basketball sea
son to get here this year. I
never felt like that before."
Gardner spent last summer
working as a roughneck with
an oil drilling crew near Pow
ell, Wyo. That heavy labor
should increase his durability
and strength.
If Gardner had a short
coming last year, it was that
he had a tendency to tire and
lose effectiveness in the sec
ond half. Part of his problem
was inexperience.
"I'm stronger this year,"
he says. "But I feel that my
biggest improvement physical
ly will come from knowing
how to relax. For example,
I've found that I can rest a
bit at the free throw line. I
couldn"t last year. I was tight
and tense everywhere and
you've got to learn how to
relax when you get the
chance."
What about this current
Colorado team which, despite
the early season losses of last
year's regular guards, P a t
Frink and Lynn Baker, has
gotten off with three straight
wins over Texas Tech, Tulsa,
and Northwestern.
"It's attitude
plains Gardner,
has tremendous
again, ex
"Our team
spirit. We
believe in each other and
we're for each other. There
aren't many of us so we know
we all have to work hard. And,
don't forget, everybody on this
team is tough."
Gardner's 61 points and 32
rebounds pace the Buffs as
they leave home for the first
time, playing at Wichita State
Saturday night. Then they'll
return home against Cin
cinnati next Tuesday night
before playing in the Sun
Devil Classic at Tempe, Dec.
17-18.
Orange Bowl Bound?
PLAN TO STOP AT
KIMBERLY MOTEL
158 St. AT COLLINS AVE.
MIAMI BEACH, FLA. 33160
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES
$7.00 PER PERSON DOUBLES
$2.00 EACH ADDITIONAL PERSON
OLYMPIC POOL
DIRECTLY ON OCEAN
PRIVATE BEACH
; W
Nebraskan
Want Ads
These low-cost rates apply to all clas
sified advertisinf In the Daily Nebraskan:
standard rate of 5c per wort and mini
mam cherie of SOc per classified inser
tion. Payment for these ads win fall into
two categories: (1 ads runnlnf lew than
one week is succession must be paid tor
before insertion. (2) ads running for more
that) one week will be paid weekly.
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE
WO Triumph Bonneville, tto cc. Like
New. SttO. Call 432-7161 before I p.m.
FOR RENT
Tw bedraa apartment: Married couple
ar women: utilities furnished; board if
desired. 43J-S9M afternoon or evenings.
Closa la campus.
SPORTS CAR FOR SALE
lSt M.G.T.D. 50,000 miles. Show Room
Condition. flSOO. til NerU 42nd. 466-647
HSUO
Free to
College
Students
25$ to others
A new booklet, published by a
non-profit educational founda
tion, tells which career fields lets
you make the best use of all
your college training, including
liberal-arts courses which
career field offers 100,000 new
jobs every year which career
field produces more corporation
presidents than any other what
starting salary you can expect.
Just send this ad with your name
and address. This 24-paee,
career-guide booklet, "Oppor
tunities in Selling," will be
mailed to you. No cost or obli
gation. Address: Council on Op
portunities, 550 Fifth Ave.,New
York 36, N. Y, UOA-00-00.
NEBRASKA UNION
ORANGE BOWL TRIP
includes
5 Nighls in MIAMI
Round-trip AIR FARE
Ground Transferg
Orange Bowl Came Ticket
Orange Bowl Parade Ticket
Hotel Accomodations (3 Nights)
Party in MIAMI
Student
Price
229
50
Faculty & Staff
Price
50
(245
Flight leaves Lincoln Tuesday, December 28, 1965 - Returns
Sunday, January 2, 1966.
Sign up in Orange Bowl Headquarters
South Lobby Nebraska Union
For Further details call ext. 2200
sd, Backstroke
1. Brr.ezinski F
2. Schmidt F
3. Gaeth V
Time 2:18.2
500-vd. rreestMe
1. Withrow V
2. Ronahoom F
3 Shearer F
Time 6.02.9
200-yd. Breaststroke
1. Goetz V
2. MoAdams V
3. Tidball F
Time 2:31.0
400-yd. FreeM.Tl Relay
1. Freshmen (Schmidt, Kenagy-Cook,
Kathrien) Time 3:33.6
2. Varsity
SCORING:
Individual Events
1st - 5, 2nd - 3, 3rd 1
Relays
1st - 7, 2nd - 0
Sitting-Pretty!
rt(jarvecf
DrEAM DIAMOND FLINGS
The aristocrats of the dia
mond world come to you on
their own precious little
thrones. Why? Because
ArtCarved rings really de
serve them! Their designs
are loftier, their brilliance
superior, their quality
world famous. Come all
our ArtCaned styles. From
$150 Up. " ".f w
Remember A Special
10 Discount to
All Students
On Any Merchandise
In The Store
Watches
Diamonds
Watch
lands
Transistors
Cameras
Portable
Sotrtos
TV
Top
Recorders
Typewriters
Watch
Repairing
Jswolry
Repair
"OPEN EVERYNIGHT"
To 9:00
Till Christmas"
the single-game-attempts rec
ord was broken to help push
the league total to 1,510. It
was back in 1952 that the pre
vious high of 1,376 was cast.
This year, 618 found the
mark for 7,938 yards. Before,
the most completions, 564,
came in 1951, while the yards
high of 6,975 was hung up in
1962. The percentage of suc
cess, almost 41. is down the
list, however. The best of
.454 was in 1959.
Huskers Dominate
The last two games brought
no major changes in the team
statistical standings. Nebras
ka won the four divisions it
had led all year rushing
and total offense and rushing
and total defense. Defensive
ly, the Cornhuskers finished
with a 109.2 rush average and
a 202.7 overall mark.
lowa state won Dotn pass
ing honors, coming on f as t
late. Offensively, Tim Van
Galder's closing shots took
the pass-offense crown from
previous leaders, Kansas.
Kansas State, and Nebraska,
with its 141.8 average. Defen
sively, the Cyclones allowed
only 82.1, preventing Nebras
ka from equalling last year's
peak of five figure titles. The
Huskers had a 93.5 standard
for second.
tournament this weekend will
be the biggest to date.
Over 24 college wrestling
teams, including nearly all of
the Big Eight schools, are en
tered in the tournament. Cop
ple indicated that more than
250 individual wrestlers in
eleven weight classes will com
pete in the two-day match.
Entries are not restricted
entirely to college and uni
versity wrestling squads, ac
cording to Copple. Competi
tion is open and any ama
teur wrestler may compete.
Now in its fourth year, the
mat spectacle produces top
competitors. Copple said,
"Normally, the AAU champs
beat the college champs." He
added that this stands to rea
son because "for a pmon who
has been out of college three
or four years, as he goes
along he becomes better.
By open competition, Cop
ple said that even high sciool
age boys are eligible for the
meet. The AAU has no ?e
quirements as to any aca
demic standing; even a per
son who has never attended
school is not barred from
competition.
Olympic Rules Used
Copple said the tournament
will be run according to Oly
pic rules, noting the back
mark system in particular. In
this system, a wrestler is
eliminated by the black marks
he accumulates. A fall con
stiti.2s no black marks, de
cision is one. a draw is two,
a loss by decision is three, a
loss by a fall is four, and if
a man accumulates six black
marks he is out.
Under Olympic rules cuerc
are only eight weight classes.
However, Copple said that the
standard eleven collegiate
weight classes will be used in
the tourney.
In each weight class,
matches will go on until there
are only three competitors left
with less than six black marks
in each class. Then in a final
round-robin, the remaining
three will wrestle each other
to determine the overall
champion for that weight
class. The collegiate weight
classes range from 115 pounds
to the heavyweight category.
Entrants Are Scattered
Collegiate institutions par
ticipating in the meet are
Oklahoma State, Oklahoma,
Kansas, Kansas State, Mis
souri, Nebr ka, Colorado,
Wyoming, Colorado State Col
lege, Colorado State Univer
sity, Ft. Hays Cpllege and
Northwestern Missouri.
Others competing are Cen
tral Missouri Teachers C o I
lege, Westmar College, Su
ern Illinois, Illinois Normal,
Midland College, Omaha Uni
versity, Hiram Scott College,
South Dakota, Wesiern State
(Colo.), and Kearney State
College.
Of the entries processed so
far, Copple mentioned that
last year's Oklahoma State
champion has entered, and
will compete for on his own
this year.
Huskers' Opportunity
The Great Plains Invita
tional will provide a chance
for Nebraska wrestling coach.
Orval Borgialli to scout the
Kansas State WiHoats. who
have entered the tourney The
Cornhuskers meet the Wild
cats in Lincoln on Tec. 17.
Kansas State enters t h e
tourney on the heels of win.
ning a four-team meet at Co
lumbus. Ohio, last weekend.
The Wildcats finished with 69
points, followed by Onio State
with 65, Courtland (N.Y.) Col
lege with 40 and Hiram ( Ohio
College with 35
o
Thursday Mite
After your Thursday Nite shopping chores are through, grab your mate,
your date,-or if all else fails, grab the Salvation Army Santa Claus and
join the swingers at robbic's.
sound of the ECCENTRICS.
Chrismas cheer flows to the great
d(dJJd
"1 o 9
ItoncD s
"SERVING the Students of Nebraska"
5L
Foir (EdDdDaD SjpaDi'itis
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Table tennis tables in 5-f!.x9-f!. regulation size,
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plyblend 1cp, metal reinforced irame,
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York 110-lb. Milo barbell and dumboil com.
bination set, instructions 19.91
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AMF Blazer bowling balls, drilled, fitted. 14.99
Other AMF 19.98-29.91
Atkens figure ice slates. Leather uppers, in
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Sheffield steel blade. Men's 5-13 in black,
women's 4-9 in white. From 1.98 o 11.98
Children's , jjg
Shop 'til 9 Monday-Friday
Saturday 'til 5:30
Bring your credit plate & charge it
V - r r,;-