Friday, March 11, 1965 The Daily Nebraskan L'llllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllllllll Mil "I ' HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIII"! Stith Leads I Colorado Ace Finishes Fast Gardner's Season Stats '4 Best Ever In Big Eight Page 4 oDorts r i 1 1 . t: . . f ' : -4 ! 3 iiiitiUMniHiniiuiififiisiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiitiiitfiiiitiriiiiiiii iiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiittiiiiitifiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiittiriiitiiiiiiiijiiitiiiiiiiiiitiifiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiij The By James Pearrse Basketball is finished, in door track might as well be, wrestling is struggling through its last two weeks, only the NCAA remains for the swim mers, .the gymnaistics team is waiting for their conference show to open in Lawrence, OSU Picks Simmons Nebraska's versatile sen ior scoring leader, Grant Sim mons, headed Oklahoma State's 1966 all-opponent team. The 6-3 Cornhusker senior was a one vote pick over KU's Ail-American center Walt Wesley and Oklahoma's slick sophomore pivot Don Sidle. Of the 11 ballots cast, Sim mons collected eight. Wesley and Sidle each had seven while Delvy Lewis, Kansas guard, and Iowa State's Al Koch rounded out the top un it. The 1966 all-enemy club was made up of four seniors and a soph. Kansas Determined Kansas, determined to go all the way in the NCAA bas ketball finals this weekend, opens their assault on the title Friday night in Luibbock, Tex as against Southwest Confer ence representative SMU. In the Mid-East regional at Iowa City, Iowa, Kentucky's top ranked Wildcats tangle with the Dayton Flyers in first round action. You May Not Like It, But Give it a chance . . . The Parables Controversial Film From N.Y. World's Fair Showing Sunday, Mar. 13 7 P.M. First Baptist Church 14th & K No Cover Charge 1 ii if Make a NEBRASKA UNION James Sporting Kansas next weekend and with baseball still three weeks away this page is finished. With the weather fair and mild Ole Red decided to take the afternoon off and get an early start on the Intramural golf tourney. But look what happened keep off the greens. The Cowboys were im pressed by their Big-8 con ference foes. Out of a total of 55 votes cast, 54 went to Big 8 players. Balance was evi dent as nobody came close to a unanimous ballot. Here is a breakdown on the top two teams: Player School Rt. Clan Vt. Grant Simmlns, Nebraska 6-3 Sr. 8 Walt Wesley, Kan. 6-11 Sr. 7 Don Sidle. Okla. 6-8 Soph. 7 Dal Lewis, Kansas 6-0 Sr. 6 Al Koch. Iowa State 6-2 Sr. 6 Don Smith, Iowa Stat 6-8 Soph. 4 Earl Seyfert, Kan. St. 6-8 Soph. 4 Ron Franz Kansas St. 6-7 Jr. 3 Tom Baack. Nebraska 6-5 Soph. 2 (Eight players each had 1 vote. This included Jack Linta, Colorado; Ron Cole man, Missouri; Rob Vanatta, Missouri; Oscar William. Colorado; George Mc Neil. Southern Illinois; Mike Rooney. Oklahoma; Chuck Gardner, Colorado; and Rodger Bohnenstiehl, Kansas.) Wanting a shot at Kentucky with the belief that they can beat the Cats are the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers. Carrying a 24 and 2 record into the tourney the Hilltop pers feel they have been slighted by their ln-state brother and want a chance to show they can handle Rupp's Runts. Date for UNION BOWLING Weekends Ideal for Group Reservations Pearse, sports editor Life Look at his sad face, that weeping wood. Can you keep real golf hounds off the greens? Can you shut real golfers out of their own Holmes? My sense of justice says mis isn't tne fairway. Frosh Finish Nebraska's yearling basket ball team got off to a slow start this season, losing the first five games, but re bounded to win the last two of three encounters of the 1965-'66 campaign. McCook native Roger Leit ner was top frosh scorer with 153 points and a 19.1 average. California transplant Earl Page played only two games with the Nebraska freshmen but attained the second best scoring average of 15.5 points a game. IN LINCOLN ... Tomorrow Nite 8:30 N ff PERSON IN CONCERT pan ALL SEATS RESERVED TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT BOXOFFICE IM1H Wgg TONIGHT & TOMORROW 8 P.M.! UNIVERSITY REPERTORY THEATRE Presents tvrlW it A Musical chronicle of War Box Office Room 108 Temple Phone 2072-73 That late season rampage by Chuck Gardner not only let him sneak up and pass the field to win the Big Eight, Conference s scoring title, but it also let him plant the claim of having the best over-all performance since records in the four individual categories have been kept for Conference games. The Colorado senior red head not only edged Kansas' Walter Wesley and Missouri's Ron Coleman for the scoring top, but he also finished second in rebounding, second in field goal accuracy, and fourth in free throw percentage. This 1-2-2-4 finish is the best on record. Everyone knew that Gardner was there In the scoring race. After all, he had been the main early challenger to Wesley this year and he had finished fifth in the point derby last year when he was labeled the surprise of the season. But at the recent semester break, he broke his foot. He didn't miss a game; however, he was off his form and out of the scoring race. It was impossible for Gard ner to catch either Wesley or Coleman. He was so far out of it after the injury ,he would have to outscore Wesley, the defending champion, by 23 points in the season s nnale to win. What's more, Gard ner's average was just shy or 19 going into the last game. He would be fifth again this year. The rest has been appro- priactly recorded. His 42 - 39 back-to-back spree was the league's top for the year. His 42 marked a single game high and the 39 tied Wesley for the second-best honors. Gardner ended with 284, ar 20.3 average. Wesley had 283, a 20.2 stand ard. Coleman, who will be back next year, had 281, a 20.1 clip. His stampede showed 28 of 40 tries from the field, boost ing his shooting accuracy mark to almost 54 per cent. second in the Conference. He also added 25 of 29 charity tosses, pushing his average to almost 76 per cent, fourth in the league. His rebounding pace held at 10.1, which let him finish second. Gardner, however, wasn't the only all-around performer in the Conference. Kansas' Al Lopes also ranked in all four of the divisions. He was tenth in scoring, 13.9; eighth in rebounding, 7.1; eleventh in field goal accuracy, 47.7 per cent; and sixth in free throw accuracy, 75 per cent. Making a big jump the last All Gaines W L Pet. Pts. O.Pts. Kansas Nebraska 22 20 14 12 11 1 4 3 3 .880 1919 1541 5 .800 1929 1803 11 .560 1805 1690 13 .480 1721 1773 14 .440 1818 1782 14 .440 1925 1922 21 .160 1344 1523 21 .120 1574 1910 Kans. State Colorado Iowa State Oklahoma Okla. State Missouri Conference Games W L Pel. Pts. O.Pts. Kansas Nebraska Kans. Suite Oklahoma Iowa State Colorado Okla. State Missouri 13 12 9 7 6 6 2 1 .929 1096 834 .857 1066 1004 .64.1 985 911 .500 1076 1092 .429 1014 1001 .429 923 954 .143 746 889 .071 868 1109 two games of the season to win an individual title was Missouri's Rich Milling, who hit 80 per cent of his free throws, 36 of 45. The season- CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY t fr IOWA STATE ,i M 3f9 Opponents 403 KANSAS STATE 14 399 Opponents 318 OKLAHOMA STATE ...... 14 277 Opponent! 321 COLORADO .. 14 343 Opponents 357 KANSAS 14 424 Opponents 294 MISSOURI 14 304 Opponents 428 NKHRASKA 14 423 Opponents 394 OKLAHOMA 14 4(17 Opponents . 433 TEAM LEADERS FG Pereentaie FT Percentage Rebound Fereentafe Nebraska 423-958 .442 Oklahoma 21.2-377 .694 Kansas 619-456 .575 Kansas 424-962 .441 Okla. Stat 192-283 .678 Iowa State 585-509 ,534 Colorado 343-779 .440 Nebraska 240-354 .677 Kansas Stat 541-484 .527 Oklahoma 407-935 .435 Missouri 260-387 .671 Colorado 503-451 .527 Iowa State 389-867 .425 Iowa State 276-414 .667 Nebraska 496-488 .5(14 Kansas State 399-953 .418 Colorado 237-367 .645 Oklahoma 512-527 .492 Okla. State 277-700 .395 Kansas 248-389 .637 Okla. State 388-527 .424 Missouri 304-827 .367 Kansas State 187-295 .633 Missouri 396-598 .398 SCORING FG FT-FTA TP Ayr. Gardner, Colorado.. 98 88-116 284 20.3 Wesley, Kansas .... 101) 83-137 283 20.2 Coleman, Missouri.. 100 81-110 281 20.1 Sidle, Oklahoma ... 94 85-123 273 19.5 Koxers, Oklahoma.. 50- 82 242 17.3 Smith, Iowa State . 85 69-126 239 17.1 Simmons, Nebraska. 80 68- 96 228 16.3 Baack. Nebraska . . 87 49- 62 223 15.9 Branch. Nebraska... 80 41- 56 201 14.4 Lopes, Kansas .... 76 42- 56 194 13.9 Peamster, Okla. St. 65 83- 82 183 73.1 Zieeler, Iowa Stale 68 43- 55 179 12 8 Seyfert, Kansas St. 71 21- 36 163 11.6 Williams. Colorado . 60 35- 55 155 11.1 REBOUNDING G. Rbds. Avi. Smith. Iowa Stale 14 186 13.3 Gardner, Colorado 14 142 10.1 Wesley, Kansas 14 137 . 9 8 Sidle, Oklahoma - 14 128 9.1 Rudd, Missouri 14 115 8.2 Rotrers, Oklahoma 14 108 7.7 Lantz, Nebraska 14 102 7.3 Lows, Kansas 14 99 7.1 Duarte, Iowa State 14 98 7.0 Koch, Iowa State 14 95 6.8 NU Sets For Nebraska, the 1965-66 basketball season was the "most." The Huskers set rec ords for the most points scored in a regulation game with 101 at Wisconsin on De cember 1, 1965. That same night Nebraska pumped in 39 field goals, most ever in a regulation game by a Husker contingent. On February 26 Kansas set a Nebraska record for most points by a Husker opponent in one game when the Jay hawks felled NU 110-73. Tom Baack set a record for the most points scored by a Husker sophomore as he t fg-fia Tom Baack 25 147-325 Grant Simmoni 25 131-267 Nate Branrtl 15 10-314 Sluart Lantz 25 125-290 Willie Campbell 19 73-170 Fred Hare 20 62-155 Jim Pamm 25 28-53 Coley Webb 24 15-52 Ron Simmons 17 17-35 Frank Empkey 16 5-31 Charlie Slone 6 4-9 Al Reiners 7 2-6 Dick Davidson 3 0-1 Nebraska Totals 25 739-170 Opponents Totals 25 718-1666 Individual Leaders Most Points 29 Grant Simmons (Wisconsin), Nate Branch Oklahoma , (Torney) and Tom Baack Colorado (away 35 Most Field Goals 11 Grant Simmons (Wisconsin & Missouri, away S191 and Tom Baack (Oklahoma, away 27, Colorado, away 3 5 and Oklahoma State, home 37) Most Rebounds 17 Stuart Lantz (Texas) Most Free Throws 11 Nate Branch (Oklahoma, Tourney) Team Best Most Points 101 Wisconsin (NU record) Most Field Goals 39 Wisconsin Most Rebounds 61 Oklahoma State, home 3T Most Free Throws 31 Kansas, away 2'26 Season Record t04 NU vs. 82 Missouri 60 101 Wisconsin 88 82 Kansas State 71 75 Oregon Stat 63 83 Kansas 75 71 California 87 86 Oklahoma 78 70 California 68 45 Oklahoma State (OT) 41 75 Texas 64 85 Oklahoma 81 77 South Dakota 60 81 Oklahoma City 85 71 Stanford 67 (OT) non conference In Big 8 Tourney 81 Iowa Stat 70 69 Missouri (OT) 67 71 Missouri 53 92 Oklahoma 79 70 Colorado 63 61 Kansas 71 73 Kansas 110 (2nd place) 79 Kansas Stat 69 Conference Season 88 Colorado 95 7 Iowa State 74 85 Oklahoma Stat 64 Residence Hall Contracts 1966-67 Academic Year 1966-67 Residence Hall contracts will be available Monday, March 14th Off campus students may obtain a contract In Room 103 Administration Building. Residence Hall Students may obtain their contracts in the Residence Halls. 1 gc1 AJJV Onion Suuiog I CUk-jip! Mushroom Anchovy J t ll Moiiorollg Cheoso T . st 1 HoMbvrgtr il Croon Pepper Pepporonl I f wA fm Suprom i I Vi I 'Z Chooso f 4vVI 'iSousogt 4 Order By Phone Faster Service j I (ALLOW APPROXIMATELY 20 MINUTES) J OPEN I DIAL j cioso j I 11:30 AM 489-4601 Fridays A Saturdays 1 AM J DAILY All Othor Days Midnight j PIZZA TO? I "WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME" j jl 46th ft 0 Str Lincoln I long leader, Nebraska's Tom Baack, one of nine sophomores listed in the final rankings, finished second with 79 per cent. !( l'rt. ft Its Pet. reb pr D Ave. 867 .425 1(115 .397 953 .418 793 .398 7(10 .395 782 .410 779 .440 858 .416 91.2 .441 776 . 378 827 .367 898 .476 958 .442 919 .428 935 .435 940 .460 276 414 .667 585 251 1014 72.4 195 320 .609 5(19 298 1001 71.5 187 2'l5 .6.13 541 315 985 70.4 279 424 .658 484 248 911 65 192 283 .678 388 288 746 53.3 247 380 .650 527 238 889 63.5 237 367 .645 503 268 923 65.9 240 343 .699 451 278 954 68 248 389 .637 619 2K6 1096 78.3 246 355 .692 456 285 834 59.6 260 387 .671 396 285 868 62.0 253 357 .709 598 297 1109 79.2 240 354 .677 496 268 1088 77.5 216 343 .629 408 271 1004 71.7 262 377 .694 512 283 1076 76.8 226 344 .656 527 289 1092 79.9 Seyfert, Kansas State.... 14 90 6.4 Franz, Kansas 14 90 6.4 FQ Pereentaie (Minimum of 5 per famr) FG EGA Pol. Bohnenstiehl, Kansas 52 84 .619 Gardner, Colorado 98 182 .5.18 Seyfert, Kansas State.... 71 133 .533 Zlesler. Iowa State 68 132 .515 Williams, Solorado 60 118 .5118 Wesley, Kansas 100 201 .497 r'eamster, Oklahoma St. 65 132 .492 Smith, Iowa State .... 85 175 .485 Rogers, Oklahoma 96 200 ,4H0 Baack, Nebraska 81 182 .478 Lopes, Kansas 76 157 .477 FT Percentage (Minimum of 3 per game) FT FTA Pet. Milling, Missouri 36 45 .800 Baack. Nebraska 49 62 .790 Ziegler, Iowa State 43 44 .782 Gardner, Colorado 88 116 .759 Uwis, Kansas 42 56 .75(1 Lopes, Kansas 42 56 .750 Coleman, Missouri 81 110 .716 Branch, Nebraska 41 56 .712 Dinsdale, Missouri 40 55 .727 Simmons, Nebraska .... 68 96 .70B Sidle. Oklahoma 85 123 .691 Records packed in 386 points for the year. The 20 win 5 loss record was the most wins by a Husker team since the 1919-1920 sea son when the Cornhuskers won 22 while dropping but 2 de cisions. The twelve conference wins by Nebraska were the most ever garnered by a Husker 'five' in the Big Eight. The over-all three year rec ord of coach Joe Cipriano now stands at 37 wins and 38 losses and puts him in thirteenth place among Nebraska bas ketball coaches. prt. ft-rta pet. pf rb tp avg. .4.52 92-108 .852 57 106 386 15.4 .491 118-163 .724 68 62 380 15.2 .414 78-107 .729 66 170 338 13.5 .4.11 56-85 .659 90 199 3U6 12.2 .429 21-33 .636 53 119 167 8 8 .400 39-56 .696 43 101 163 8.2 .528 13-24 .541 17 25 69 2.8 .268 16-40 .400 27 81 46 1.9 .486 8 13 .615 7 10 42 S.5 .161 4-8 .500 17 29 14 .8 .444 3-7 .429 4 9 11 1.8 .333 2-4 .500 1 5 6 .9 .0110 0-2 .000 1 0 0 .0 team rebounds 145 .433 .431 4S0-649 .694 455 lOfi! 1939 77.2 366-575 .637 575 987 1803 72.1 I 4 f 4 Nebraska's wrestling team left Thursday for the Big Eight conference tournament m Manhattan, Kansas this weekend. Carol Stith's record of 9-2-1 was the best by a Huskcr wrestler this season. Coach Orval Borgialli's club finished the 19C5-'66 campaign with a 3 win, 14 loss record. Intramural The Phi Kappa Psi B team won the University B team championship in intramural basketball Wednesday by beat ing Abel XII 59-42. . The Phi Psi's got off to a slow stall; but were out in front by nine at half time and then rolled to a decisive win. John Roux topped all scor ers by dumping in 14 points for the Phi Psi's. Tom Mill sap and Steve Shefte both to taled 13 for the winners. Abel was led in scoring by Mike McNeil and Curt Nelson, each with 11 points. Championship Game Todav Rogers and Phi Kappa Psi A will battle today at 5:00 p.m. in the NU Coliseum to determine the All-University Intramural basketball cham pionship. The Phi Psi's are the Fraternity A champions while Rogers is the dorm champion. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS MCDONALD'S MENU 100 Pure Beef Hamburgers Tempting Cheeseburgers Old-Fashioned Shakes' Crisp Golden French Fries Thirst-Quenching Coke Delightful Root Beer Coffee As You like It Refreshing Cold Milk Full-flavored Orange Drink . 140 NO. 13TM ST. 432-1465 look for the golden arches air in T3BBB8BBS8BSEBBBBS I 1 i iyj PARAMOUNT PICTURES KURT UNGCR SOPHIA lOREN 'IlTft'lTll afltr 6 am, Ulh 1130 N a 1144 -P ST, 432 3128 p DIRECT FROM IT'S ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES if Every Ticket Hdder Guaraateed A Seat yf ,i '. C"tuty.fM -Z&ZiFy& ' "'1 Every Ticket Holder Guaranteed A Seat t r Scoreboard Intramural volleyball will start March 16 instead of March 21 as previously stated because of the large number of teams entered. House man agcrs should contact Intra mural Director Joel Meier concerning the change. Tonv Jack Ccsrtls lGtnss$9 NatalieWOOd namM knot MONDAY THRU FRIDAY $1.25 TILL P.M. THEN SI. SO CHILDREN 50c Attention! Nebraska Book Store's Big Spring Sale is Soon To Be Announced DOORS OPEN AT 12:45 NOW SHOWING 1 f " 1 fdtt PARKIN! far Stum I and N.broUo p.m. at: Rampark 12th t P o I o Stat Sccuritirt Self fart Cor Part Goroqr, 13th M DOORS OPEN 12:45 HELD OVER w3e TODAY AT 2:00 5:00 8:00