The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 24, 1969, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1959
PAGP 4
V
- --W
Ping pong by Frank Fong from Hong Kong third place finisher
in the International Ping Pong tournament sponsored last Satur
day by the Nebraska Union Special Events Committee and the
Nebraska International Association. Rauf Piskin beat Mamoru
Shimosi for first place in the tournament. Dave Alverson took
fourth.
19 vote passes committee
'Average' bowler
scores league high
Inconsistent bowling finally paid off
for Mary Doak.
After seven years of bowling, she
rolled a 204 game for the Diblio
Maniacs bowling team in the
Nebraska Union's Monday afternoon
faculty bowling league. It was this
season's top women's faculty member
score and was also the day's high
for both men and women. It is her
career high.
"I'm really just an average
bowler," she said. "If I maintain my
135 average I'm happy. I really don't
know what happened that day when
I rolled the 204."
She said she usually bowls in
consistently, adding that the game
before her 204, she hit a 146 score,
slightly above her average.
A public service librarian with Love
Library, she has bowled with four
other men on the faculty team for
three years and bowled with the Ivory
Towers faculty team for five years
previous to the library faculty crew.
"The team is a good way to meet
other faculty members," she explain
ed, "We really don't get a chance
to see each other too much and this
is one way to meet other people."
Although she said she probably
could add 20 pins to her average with
more practice, she added that she
only bowls for enjoyment.
"I'm never shooting for a perfect
300 game," she said. "But I try to
do the best I can."
Will inconsistency strike again?
Live-in gives
new perspective
continued from page 1
The system can be changed, Adler
added, but if people say the system
must be done away with it will eat
them up.
"The minority citizens in the U.S.
aren't going to be pushed around
anymore," according to Adler. "But
still the institutions and people aren't
responsive."
With existing pressures, as people
feel threatened they move to the right,
he continued. They look for the simple
answer, the simple solution.
.The most important aspect of the
"live-in" for the students who
participated was that they heard
points of view they had never heard
before. They saw some of the hate
from the black perspective and they
heard the reasons why.
They felt for a short time the
frustration, the hopelessness which
surrounds blacks everyday. They
learned of their own ignorance, and
that they could discount many of the
white middle class myths they grew
up with.
. Most significantly, they learned that
the black community still has enough
hope in salvaging a workable society
that they will take the time to invest
that hope in white youth.
NU track performance
pleases Coach Sevigne
Nebraska voters may get another
chance to lower the state voting age
to 19 years. The Unicameral's
government and military affairs
committee last week amended LB 168
so that it now would lower the state
voting age from 2 lto 19.
As presented, to the committee in
its original form, the proposal would
have extended suffrage to 20 year
olds.
The committee passed the bill by
a vote of 7-1. The bill now goes to
the floor of the Legislature for its
next vote of approval.
-
SEN. TERRY Carpenter, who
chairs the committee, spoke in favor
r " n -n le bill at the hearing.
This marks the second reversal
Carpenter has taken on this issue in
the last five months.
Nine witnesses unanimously en
dorsed the bill. The only issue of the
hearing, Carpenter said, concerned to
what age the suffrage should be ex
tended. Senator Elvin Adamson, prime
sponsor of the bill, said he preferred
age 20. Although he would withdraw
as a sponsor if the age was lowered,
he said, he would not oppose it if
only lowered to 19.
Adamson and concurring witnesses
argued that since age 19 was rejected
by the voters in November, a com
promise of 20 years would be the best
hope of passing the needed constitu
tional amendment.
Dave Piester, president of
Nebraskans For Young Adult Suf
frage, disagreed. Piester pointed out
that the amendment lost by only 8,379
votes. Such a failure "cannot, under
any circumstances, be regarded as
a mandate" opposing 19-year-old suf
frage, he said.
Nebraska track coach Frank
Sevigne said he was pleased with two
facets of Saturday's Nebraska maul
ing of Iowa State and Pittsburg State
of Kansas.
"We're pleased with the records we
broke and that we had no injuries,"
he said, "But next week we'll find
out how good we really are."
The Huskers were not pushed at
the East Stadium Saturday in rolling
to 111 points while Iowa State had
33 and the Kansans had 19. But next
week Nebraska travels to Kansas City
for the Big Eight's indoor cham
pionships, where NU placed fourth in
1968.
ALTHOUGH SEVIGNE said Kansas
with distance runner Jim Ryun, shot
putter Karl Salb and hurdler George
Byers is definitely favored in the 41st
annual event; he added that Kansas
State, Missouri and possibly
Oklahoma will fight for first division
berths.
"We'll be in there fighting, but we
need help to win the meet from other
schools," he said, adding that
Nebraska has a chance if other schools
can eat into Kansas totals taking
points from the strong Jayhawks.
Although Sevigne failed to single out
this year's squad as his best ever
at Lincoln since the team has only
run in four meets, he said he is hoping
for one of the best Nebraska
performances ever at Kansas City.
NU certainly achieved a good
showing Saturday winning 13 of 15
events and setting two school marks
and tying another.
NU'S MILE RELAY team of Bob
Pierce, Ron Lange, Garth Case and
Clifton Forbes set a stadium record
of 3:18.9, and two-miler Mel Campbell
raced to a 9.08.3 clocking and Greg
Carlberg also set a record with a
9:08.5 timing. Husker hurdler Fred
Nicholl tied a school peak with a :07.3
60-yard high hurdle mark.
Other Nebraska winners included
N.S. Hurd in the long jump, Jack
Todd in the high jump, Lennox
Burgher in the triple jump, Bob Tup
per in the mile run, Clifton Forbes
in the 60-yard and 440-yard dash, Case
in the 600-yard run.
Other winners were Dan Morran in
the 1,000 yard run, Mike Randall in
the 880-yard run and Joe Orduna in
the 60-yard low hurdles.
Sevigne said he would not decir'
where each Husker would perform t
Kansas City until Friday mornina.
Friday's schedule include
preliminaries, semifinals and broad
jump finals.
HUSKER INDOOR dual scores:
Nebraska 106, Southern Illinois 29,
South Dakota State 13.
Nebraska 73, Kansas State 45.
Nebraska 93, Colorado 29.
Nebraska 111, Iowa State 33,
Pittsburg State 19.
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Despite loss, Husker coach
sees improvement in team
by John Dvorak
Nebraskaii Taff Writer
Hopefully, the defensive Improve
ment shown by Nebraska's basket
bailers in their Saturday night 79-73
loss to Kansas will carry over to
Monday's 7:35 p.m. coliseum game
with Colorado, according to NU coach
Joe Clpriano.
Despite losing, Cipriano said the
Huskers played aggressively, used
the oress well ihowA genuine
Overall defensive Improvement.
"Center Leroy Chalk did a fine Job
on the boards," Cipriano coommented.
"Also, Tom Scantlebury had one of
bis best games defensively,"
THE JAYHAWK's 6-9 Dave Roblsch
was too much for the Huskers. He
finished with 27 points and 11 re
bounds. The Huskers were led by
Scantlebury's 18 points. Chalk finished
with 17 points, hitting six of seven
field goals and five of five free
throws.
"Tola good an effort would have
meant victory over a lot of other
teams," Cipriano said, "this is the
Improvement we have been wanting
to see. It would have been a long,
hard summer if we hadn't seen this
ItnprovemenL"
"" Again, the coach intends to alter
the starting lineup for Colorado, which
lost 80-76 in overtime at Iowa State
Saturday.
Scantlebury and Marv Stewart will
be at guard. Chalk will start at center
and Gratopp and Kenny Cauble at
forward.
THEY WILL have to stop CU
forward Cliff Meely, and guard
Gordon Tope.
"Meely is something else again,"
Cipriano said. "When he goes inside
a big man has to cover him, but
if he ?oes outside s little guv has
to take him." It will be up to Cauble
and Chalk to stop Meely, who scored
40 points against Iowa State.
One man the Huskers won't face
is 7-2 center Ron Smith, who has run
into scholastic problems. "The loss
of Smith has hurt the Buffs on the
boards," Cipriano said. "But CU is
versatile; their players can do a lot
of things."
"Tope, who is only 5-11, has been
especially tough for the Huskers."
Cipriano continued. "He is difficult
to cover, and brings the ball up well
against the press."
"BECAUSE OF Colorado's speed we
won't be able to use two big men
against them," Cipriano added. The
Husker's tallest man, 6-8 forward Jim
Brooks, is out anyway. He has again
come down with mononucleosus and
will probably not see action.
"If we can just defense them, we
can beat them, Cipriano emphasized
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