''i 1 1 f " . f i "1 5 i .Page 6 The Daily Nebraskan Friday, April 12, 1965 7-i East-West Shrine Game Devaney named head West coach Bob Devaney, University of Nebraska, will be head coach of the West squad for the 44th annual Islam Temple Shrine East-West Football Game in Candlestick Park December 28. Devaney's associates will be Dee Andros, Oregon State University, and Gene Stallings from Texas A&M University. The West staff was completed and announced today by T. H. Balliett. General Manager of Islam Temple's East-West Classic. This will be the first parti cloation in an East-West game for both Devanev and Stal'ings, but the second for Andros who was a member of the West staff in the 43rd East-West game which the East won, 16-14. Devaney 88-22-5 Devaney, who has been head coach at two schools, Wyoming and Nebraska, for only 11 seasons, is the game's winningest coach with a rec ord of 88 wins, 22 defeats and five ties. At Nebraska, Bob's Huskers have won 53 games against 12 defeats and cap tured the Big Eight champion ship four consecutive years of his six seasons at the school. Devaney is a graduate of Alma (Mich.) College and started h i s collegiate coach ing career at Michigan State where he served with both Biggie Munn and Duffy Daugherty. Devaney and Daugherty are great friends and are looking forward to the forthcoming East-West game when they will be coaching rivals. Dee Andros was one of the most discussed and honored coaches of the 1967 season when his Oregon State team gave Southern California i t s only defeat, after earning a tie with U.C.L.A. In his three seasons at Oregon State, An dros has built the Beavers into a solid contender for the 1968 Pacific Eight champion ship. Andros was a star guard at the University of Oklahoma following World War II dUr- ing which he served with a Marine Infantry division in the Pacific Coast and was awarded the Bronze Star for gallantry during the inva sion of Iwo Jima. Stallings, at 33, is one of the younger and more successful, coaches in major football. He has been head coach at Tex as A&M for only three sea sons, but in 1968 led the Ag gies to the championship of the Southwest conference and a victory over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. It was a coincidence that the last previous conference championship won by the Ag gies occurred in 1956 when Gene was an end and the cap tain of a great team coached by Bear Bryant. Before grad uation, Stallings had deter mined upon coaching as a ca reer:He began as coach of the S 1 - VV 1w A4 :i i K , v ! r V Will NU baseball team faces KU series on new field Bob Devaney . . . best in the West. A&M freshmen in 1957 and then migrated with Bear Bry ant to Alabama. Gene spent seven years with the Big Bear and then had the unusual satis faction of defeating Bryant in the Sugar Bowl. Balliet expressed the great est possible satisfaction with the West coaching staff and the belief that Candlestick Park will see another great classic next December 28. liuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiHiiiiMiiiiiiiiiim 1 Cheery Cheerleaders Trackmen plan busy Vacation' X'V ,'. J ' - V... These four freshman coeds tcere chosen Thursday to take their place on the 1968-69 Nebraska cheerleader squad. They are, from lefty Sue Mack, Kathy Drennen, Diane Dudley and Betsy Stilwell. f r I t MIME! Mike Nichols, best Director of the year .f1 .4 rS.M This is Benjamin. He's a little worried about his future. m uiiiiGuiiiE: 1 BAWCR3FT-. DUSTIN KGFFMAN KATHARINE BOSS GILDER W1LLINGHAMBUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON SIMON -GARFUNKEL M1KE NICHOLS TECHNICOLOR PANW1SW (HOW TIMESl lN :M :M - 7:M The Nebraska track team will not be on vacation next week like the rest of the students. This weekend thev will eo to Colorado Springs and after spending the first part of the break in Lincoln training. they will go to Lawrence Thursday for the three-day Kansas Relays. Coach Frank Sevigne an nounced that he will be taking the entire squad to Colorado for a triangular with Air Force and Occidental College. He says that he plans to have entries in every event though he does not yet know who will be doing what. Highlight of last week's competition in the Texas Re lays at Austin was the per formance of Cornhusker two m i 1 e relay team which smashed the school record with a fine 7:32.7 enroute to a fourth-team finish. The old record was 7:38.4 set by Ken Ash, Bill Melody, Knolly Barnes and Joe Mul lins in 1959. Splits for the new mark were Hugh McGovern 1:52.8; Les Hellbusch 1:53.6; Mike Randall 1:52.7 and Dan Mor- ran 1:53.6. "We were quite a bit behind when Morran got the baton," Sevigne said, "And Dan did his best to narrow the gap early, but it took too much out of him and he couldn't finish strong. We'll run it better." J by George Kaufman Sports Editor Nebraska's baseball team, considered before the season as an outside choice for tie Big Eight title, must look im pressive this weekend in a three-game series again t Kansas. After racking up a 3-1-1 Field re-sodded record at Houston, the Husk. ers jumped into the confer. from Oklahoma with a 1-2 came back were in both games ..nd could have won them, but the play- ers Douncea back Saturday ind did i good job. We were leased with a number of hings and look forward to )laying Kansas on our new y constructed diamond." high hopes but league record. Nothing proven Nothing was really proven, however, except that NU needs a better record aga" st the Jay hawks to get serious about the championship. Coach Tony Sharpe's players won a 2-1 decision and lost 6-4 and 5-4 in 14 innings, which is hardly a decisive se ries. Since the Sooners were al so highly regarded in pre season opinions, it only proves the Huskers c"" 'Uy almost any league team even ly. But now that they're sad dled with two losses, they must play better than even ly from now on. We were disappointe ' about dropping two games at Oklahoma," Sharpe said. "We Husker Happenings Friday Baseball Kansas, double header at NU diamond, 1 p.m, Saturday Baseball Kansas, NU dia mond, 1:30 p.m. Track Air Force and Oc cidental at Colorado Springs Golf at Missouri. The Husker playing field was re-sodded last fall and iharpe said it is in excellent condition. One of the things Sharpe was pleased with was the emergence of a solid mound crew. Al Furby, Keith Winter and Mick Logu have looked good as starters and Bill Adams dight-inning relief work in the overtime loss at Oklaho ma shows he will add depth to a back-up crew headed by veteran Charlie Green. Logue, a Grand Island pro duct like Furby, worked the only win in Oklahoma last week. The doubleheader today starts at 1:30, "vith a half hour break between the j games, and the Saturday con-1 test begins at 1 p.m. I -Baseball in Beatrice Frosh meet Pershing Nebraska freshman base ball team, coached by Phil Krous, will journey to Beat rice Saturday to meet Persh ing College in a doubleheader. Coach Bob Gates' Generals recently took four games from Houston and present a formid able hurdle for the Husker yearlings. Krous has tabbed this bat ting order for the 1968 frosh debut: Dennis Hodges, Norfolk, rightfield; Jim Campbell, Lin coln, left field; Pat Elgert, Fairbury, third base; Bill Fagler, Lincoln, first base; Randy Spiehs, Grand Island, catcher; Tim Kingston, Bro ken Bow, centerfield; Mark Johnson, Carroll, shortstop; Bill Peppel, Naper, second base; George Hinman. Lin coln righthander, pitcher. Mark Paulsen, lefthander from Griswold, la., is slated to pitch the second game. Read Nebraskan mm Bim SUPPER CLUB LINCOLN. MM DOUBLE FEATURE ENTERTAINMENT ill twr Piano Leung from 6 P.M. Nightly Linda Newell n itago Hilton & Conrad Pint txlro etfdtd attraction, our fobulovi fool at prtitnttd by Chtf Don Jorh. r-. vi-iiiiiiuii LINCOLN 434-7421 54th & 0 Street ONIGH 7 PJW. 9 PM. SAT. & SUN. CONTINOUS FROM 1 PM. in Current Movies i m , m Timet Furnished by TlM.ter. Ttauni an. Ukt taooi .m. kM do LINCOLN CooperLincoln: 'Bonnie and Uyde', 7:00, 9:00. Varsity: "Blackbewda Ghost' 1:00. 3:06. 5:12, 7:18, 9:24. Stale: 'The Graduate', 1:00, 3:00. 5:00. 7:00, 9:00. Stuart: 'Planet Of The Apes', i:uu, 3:vs, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20. Joyo: 'High Wild And Free', a: is. Nebraska: 'Stay Away Joe', x:io, 3:1)5, 5:05, 7:05, 9:05. 84th & O: 'In The Heat Of The Night', 7:30, 11:08. 'Duel At Diablo', 9:25. Starview: Cartoon 7:30. 'The Bible , 7:45. Last complete show, :uu. OMAHA Indian Hills: 'Gone With The wind , 8:uo. Dundee: 'Half a Sixpence', Cooper 70: 'Dr. Doolittle', 8:00, M A 346-2859 14th & Douglas TONIGHT 8 P.M. SAT. & SUN. 2 & 8 P.M. 2 ACADEMY AWARDS 20th Century-Fox presents 1 'A I Ow s' I V I I LL1U iTfii?y AN ARTHUR P JACOBS Production Produced in TODO A-0' Color by DELUXE KMIDUkl AM FIIICM ATtNttl: a pm KVMINOf p.m, un, thmugi Tkarm. TICKETS ON SALE LINCOLN TICKET AGENCY Srsart Thaatrt Itfcby Al I 1 1 RESERVATIONS for thes Cooper Theatrcfc I IkIUHII Call 432-7571 1 Stuart Theotre Loooy, 8:30-4:-30, Monday through Friday. 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Imaginative, end painstakingly prodaCtlArch4K kVinittn, ivm rosi ROODT McDOWALL- MAURICE EVANS' MM HUNlER-JAf.lES WHiTMORE-JAMES DALY- fAKAVISION AND COLOR BY DELUXE PRICK MM.-TIwn.i 1.N PrL-(it.-tm.i 1:N b t i 8pX 14 TH AND 0'