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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 15

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Itnutagy JME We're Out To Be Best Pete Central, Waverly Gain Finals In County Meet By RON GIBSON Star Sports Staff Member Favored Waverly and Central High School reached the finals of the Lancaster County basketball tournament with no little difficulty Wednesday night. Waverly whipped an outmanned Hickman team, 6653, after Central (Sprague-Martell) had stopped Firth, 55-48, at Nebraska Taylor Gym. Waverly will be favored over a The Smile's The Thing (center) tries to in the fun are Bob McNutt (left), treasurer of the Alumni Club and Harry Meginnis (right), president. The Alumni Club sponsored the luncheon. (Star Photo.) Pete Elliott imitate the broad smile in his huge portrait that decorated the Cornhusker ballroom for the public affairs luncheon Tor him Wednesday noon.

Joining Elliott Central team may be without one of its mtr players tonight. Gam- time is 8:45. Central ace Gary Nannen turned an ankle in Wednesday semifinal game with Firth and sat out the last half. He may not be ready tonight. Should the sharp-shooting cousin of Nebraska U.

basketballer Lyle Nannen be sidelined, Central will be hurting. Sprague-Martell will need of firepower against the rangy Waverly club. Both semifinal games went almost to the wire, despite the final nr rgins of seven and 13 points. In the opener Central gained a 15-point edge i the third quarter and then hung on as Firth rallied. Central did most of the damage without the services of Gary Nannen, who got eight points before his injury in the second quarter.

shooting had sparked Central to a 25-16 halftime lead. Tonight's Schedule BAKKKTBAlili 7:15 p.m.—Hickman Firlli tion.) 8:45 p.m.—Waverly renlral (cliam- pionship). VOLLKYBAI.L p.m.—Waverly ti. Bennet (consolation). a p.m.—Panama vs.

Hickman (championship). In the third quarter, Boston's Higgins Gets 'Fat' Three-Year Pact By DAVE BOSTON Higgins, an affable Texan who won 1955 of the honors in his freshman season as a major league pilot, Wednesday was rewarded with a new three-year contract by the Boston Red Sox. Terms of the new pact w'ere not announced, but Gen- the last quarter. Firth pulled up eral Manager Joe Cronin indicated that Higgins received before its defense a sizable salary increase. Best guesses were that the Red Sox manager will receive $35,000 to $45,000 a year.

did a great job with the -----------------------------------------------club last year and was most de- mil serving of a new Cron-! brother Ron and Don Mitchell cracked three jump shots apiece to enable Central to pull away. Willard Tekolste and Norm Heitbrink began to click for Firth in in said. been with us a time and we want him to stay i with Higgins, who ended a fine playing career with the pennant-winning Red Sox in 1946, began his managerial career with the Boston farm club at Roanoke in the Class Piedmont League the following year. He worked his way up through the Red Sox system and last year was summoned by Cronm to replace Lou Boudreau as the Boston field nianager. After a poor start during which Higgins refused to panic, the Red Sox bounced back and were in pennant contention To Cost Over Million Bucks NORMAN, Okla.

(if) of Oklahoma athletics will cost more than a million dollars during the present school year but ticket sales, mainly to see the championship football team, are financing the program. A financial statement released Wednesday by the OU athletic department shows the net cost for the sports program during the 1955-56 year will total failed and Ron Nannen dunked a set-up to put Central out of trouble. Ron Nannen and tall Ray Palmer were high scorers with 14 and 11 points. Heitbrink and Tekolste made 18 apiece for Firth. CENTRAL 5 8-12 2 R.

Nannen 5 2 1-2 3 G. Nannen 4 1 1-4 4 D. MitcheU 4 0 2-6 5 Wendelin 2 5 8-8 2 Palmer 4 1 0-0 0 Frohn 1 Amen Hines 14 16 FIRTH Heitbrink Weber Buis Wis.sink Tekolste VerHoeff Firth Central 4-5 2 0-2 2 0-0 5 5-8 5 3-5 1 3-4 3 0 0-0 0 0 0-10 Totals 20 15-25 18 8 8 13 14 11 19 until late in the season. Higgins given a two-year; Subcontract before the start of the This includes a $105,000 annual 1955 season, but Cronin said that: payment toward retiring stadium agreement was and re-! bonds and $260,000 paid visiting placed by a new one which will schools. run through 1958.

The athletic department said it Praise From Cronin is a and have great confidence in Cronin said. wonders with our young players and if anyone can lead our club to another pennant, Higgins took over a Red Sox team which finished 42 games out of first place in 1954, and kept it in the. 1955 pennant fight until the final month. The club wound up fourth only 12 games off the top. will do better than we did last Higgins promised Cronin in a long-distance telephone call from his home in Dallas, Tex.

Higgins, who will be 45 in May, began his baseball career as a third baseman with the Philadelphia Athletics after his graduation the University of Texas in 1930. Six years later he was traded to the Red Sox and, at the end of the 1938 season, went to the Detroit Tigers. Basketball Scores STATE HIGH SCHOOLS Rrllwood Marietta 73 Seward Concordia 69 Sarient 4.3 Taylor 37 Cedar Rapids 77 Wolbach Arcadia Taylor 47 Praaue 8.1 Academy .18 Meadow Grove 63 38 Bartley 47 Edison raia 78 Arlinaton 57 Crofton 50 45 4 relghlon 77 Elfin 64 Clearwater 48 Eckley 7.5 59 Farweil 79 Cairo 62 Halsey Brewster 47 Imperial 68 Center .10 Madrid 70 Els(c 65 Beaver Crossinf 43 Milford 38 LANCASTER TOl'RNEi Semifinals Central 55 Flrlh 48 Waverly 66 Hickman 53 CROSSROADS TOURNEY Semifinals Benedict Bradshaw 43 CMca 3.1 Hamplon 32 LITTLE BLUE TOURNEY Semifinals Hardy 48 Bruninf 35 Consolation Chester 4S Aleiandria 27 COLLEGES Ohio U. 89 Toledo 79 Calvin 64 Olivet 50 Baldwin-Waliace Younfstown 89 Ball State 79 Indiana State 63 Honston 95 Miami, Fla. 77 Yale 76 Fordham 65 Tntculum 83 Maryville, Tenn.

63 PROFESSIONAL Ft. Wayne 101 Boston 100 Minneapolis 104 York 95 St. I.ouis 114 Rochester 106 Philadelphia 112 100 its budget is based on estimated income. Income for the first six months of this fiscal year totals $866,801.12, and is expected to reach the million-plus figure by June 30. Revnue from football ticket sales is $821,502.80, and should total about $850,000 when Oklahoma share from the Nebraska game at Lincoln is received.

The 1955 football team spent only $125,650 with the remaining money going to finance other sports at the university, the statement said. preen Bay Signs Burris, Morris GREEN BAY, The Green Bay Packers of the National Football League signed a pair of prize draft choices Wednesday, halfback Bob Burris and guard Cecil Morris of national championship team. Morris was Green No. 4 choice and Burris No. 6 in last draft.

Morris, 6-2 and 230 pounds and the heaviest man in fast line, will be switched to tackle, according to Coach Liz Blackbourn. Burris, 6-1, 193'pounds, averaged 5.2 yards per try in three years of rushing and is expected to add speed to the Packer backfield. 66-53 win over Hickman was unpopular with the crowd of approximately 800. The Vikings used superior height to good advantage but the fans were with the hustling little club from Hickman. Hickman used defensive alertness and good long shooting to stay with Waverly through the first half.

The Vikings scored in spurts and used Lee 15 points in the second quarter to stay in front. Waverly led at the half, 34-27. Jack Truax, a transplanted Lin- colnite, hit five field goals on long set shots and fast break set-ups during the third quarter when Waverly appeared to be pulling away. The Vikes led 51-37 after one of buckets but Hickman scrambled back to erase 10 points of a 14-point deficit. Hickman trailed only 5.5-51 midway through the fourth period after Bobby Jacobsen poked in a long one- hander.

Two throws by Truax made it 57-51 but Jacobsen responded with a jump shot to score last points. The Vikes riddled pressing defense to pull away in the final minute. Southpaw Larry Williams scored 17 points, Jacobsen had 14 and Dean Whited made 12 for Hickman. Snyder got 21 and Truax made 14 for Waverly. Dons After 40th Win Saturday By CHRIS EDMONDS SAN The University of San Francisco makes its bM for a new major college basketball winning record Saturday night in what stocks up as a in every respect.

For instance: The Dons are shooting for successive victory No. 40, a mark no major school ever has achieved. Opposing them will be the University of California, located at Berkeley just across San Francisco Bay. California is a member of the big Pacific Coast Conference, with an enrollment of some 18,000 students, while USF is an independent with a student body barely nudging 2,000. Russell Key Figure USF Coach Phil Woolpert was a college teammate of California Coach Pete Newell at Loyola of Los Angeles.

He later worked as freshman assistant when Newell coached at USF. He took over in 1950 when Newell went to Michigan State after winning the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) title. Newell now is in his second year at California. It adds up to everything a fiction writer could want for a a new national record, a neighborhood rivalry, big school against small, personal friendship of the rival coaches. Lone divergence from the standard plot is the fact that USF is a 4-1 favorite over California.

hopes of wiping out the 39-consecutive victory mark the school nov; shares with Long Island U. and Seton Hall hang, as they have the past two seasons, on All-America Bill Russell. The 6-10 center has been the key figure in the winning streak which stretches back to Dec. 17, 1954, when the Dons trounced Oregon State, 60-34. The last loss was to UCLA, 47-40, six nights earlier.

Russell Co. boast 13 straight triumphs this year. California has a 9-3 record, including losses to St. Southern California and Oregon. The closest the Dons have come to losing is a 7-point victory, 65-58, over Marquette.

The victory string includes a smashing conquest of California exactly one year ago. They rolled up an unprecedented 20-0 lead in the first few minutes of that game, then coasted to an decision. skating champ is the U.S. best hope for a gold medal in the winter Olympic Games opening today. (AP Wirephoto.) Grid Coach Cites High Goal As Program Basis By DON BRYANT Sports Editor, The Star Pete Elliott officially charted the course of Nebraska football at a public affairs luncheon at the Cornhusker Wednesday noon.

must be out to be the very best there he told 420 football fans at the event sponsored by the Alumni Club. Elliott said this must be the goal if success is to be achieved. must not be out to be as good as he said. are not out to beat Ohio State specifically as such. We must be out to be the best.

ball team and that is how many you win and lose. also don't have any idea about the personnel for next year. You know 10 times as much about the boys as I do because you saw them in nine more games than I This was the main item in the did- And. as you know, I got to points Pete listed as I do know and believe He elaborated on the point by saying: long as we are setting up a program, we should set the goal as high as possible. The players look at them in a little different aspect.

(Elliott, saw Nebraska while he was backfield coach at Oklahoma and the Sooners beat the Huskers, 41-0.) know about must believe in the goal and be- "ho get or what need, lieve they are great. We cannot visited with any boys have a specific opponent nor can but we are going to start short. I Iv chnrtiv All's Well With Albright Tenley Albright, right leg still world figure bandaged, flies through the air with the greatest of ease in her first leaping maneuver at Cortina Italy, since her recent training accident. The Snow-Starved Olympics ToGetUnderWayToday By TED SMITS CORTINA Italy light snow, the first in 15 days, fell on the starved slopes of this Alpine village Wednesday but it was only a tease on the eve of the seventh Winter Olympic Games. officials and.

competitors watched hopefully, snow drifted down for about half an hour. Then it stopped, before it could even begin to cover the bare courses. Then the clouds began blowing away. So this giant international spec- WAVERLVHICKMAN Girls' Volleyball GAMES THURSDAY SoHtkcast Floor N'o. 1: 7 p.m.—Latvians vs, Cardi naU (A); Queens vs.

Blue Jeans va. Standard Reliance Floor No. 2: 7 p.m—4ryini vs. First Presbyterian (C); Methodist VI. Trinity Lutheran (C): vs.

Midwest (C); vs. Belmont Girls' Basketball REBULTB WEDNESDAY Clasa A Lin coin Eniireering 26. Hotel D'Ham- htirger 24 (overtime); Elgin 27, Concordia Claaa A St. Cafe 2. Swtc Farm 0 (fofleh).

Warriors, Pistons Grab Wins In NBA PHILADELPHIA Arizin, scoring 26 points led the Philadelphia Warriors to a 112-100 National Basketball Assn. victory over the Syracuse Nationals Wednesday night in the second game of a doubleheader at the Philadelphia Arena. The Fort Wayne Pistons, Western Division leaders, edged the Boston Celtics 101-100 in the opener. The evening gave Philadelphia a lead in the Eastern Division. FPG Ruff 4.1-4 2 5-8 2 K.K’fman00-00 Kubik 0 2-2 1 Snyder 85-74 Whited 4 4-10 3 D.K’fman 00-0 0 Schmutte 1 2-3 2 Juathamer 4 May2 0-2 5 Spader1 0-0 1 Jacobsen 4 6-6 1 Truax6 2-2 0 Gillespie 1 1-2 1 Sundeen 1 2-4 4 Smoot 00-04 26 11-24 2(1 171941 14 Waverly 15 Hickman 5 22 15 Hawks Win 114-706 ST.

LOUIS Pettit and the St. Louis Hawks control late in the tHird quarter and held on for a 114-106 National Basketball victory Wednesday night over Rochester despite the tremendous work of Maurice Steves, who jammed in 29 points in the last half. Stokes finished with 56 points wid Pettit, tlie top NBA scorer, with J3. Panama, Hickman Win girls won their 11th straight game, defeating Walton 23-9 in the semifinals of the Lancaster County volleyball tournament at Wesleyan Wednesday night. Panama will play Hickman, 22-18 winner over Bennet, in the finals tonight.

Panama led 9-2, at halftime; Hickman made a four-point 13-9 halftime lead stand up against Bennet. Colorado Scores Over AF All-Stars BOULDER, Colo. (INS) A spunky Colorado University basketball team bounded back from a last-second defeat Monday night at the hands of Iowa State to de feat the Air Force All-Star team 72 to 63 Wednesday in Boulder. Although unscheduled, the game was a major victory for the college team. The defending Big Seven champs, now tied for the conference lead, played it nip-and-tuck until the last three minutes, when they started pulling away from a desperate air force team via charity lane.

The halftime score was 39-38 in favor of C.U. NCAA Plan Is 'Poaching' Says Cushing A -i NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Assn.) was accused Wednesday of poaching on the small college basketball tournament field. President Herbert L. Cushing of Kearney State Teachers College, chairman of the National Association of Intercollegiate Ath letics (NAIA) Advisory Council, said NCAA plans staging an annual small college cage tournament starting in 1947 could be fatal to the The NAIA has held its own tournament for the last 15 years and has depended on tournament revenue to provide operating funds for the organization. of revenue, from the tournament could be almost fatal to the Cushing said.

In a prepared statement he asserted that the NAIA considers the NCAA plans definite intrusion on a field now being well served the NAIA, and further feel that their action represents a Johnny-come-lately attidude, since they have neglected small colleges for a period of 30 It was the NAIA, not the NCAA, which took the initiative in providing national basketball tournaments and track meets for small Colleges, he said, schools do not need an NCAA-sponsored a Cushing added. serve the interests of one group, the NCAA the interests of an almost entirely different group. Our tournament, with 32 teams representing all sections of the country, is exactly what the small schools want and need. An NCAA tournament would be Failure of the NAIA due to lack of operating funds would leave the small colleges without a voice on the national level, he said. much hard work has gone into the NAIA to make it an organization which definitely protects and benefits the small colleges and we cannot allow it to die Cushing said.

are prepared to do what we must to protect NAIA rights from NCAA encroachment in any tacle of snow and ice, an eight million dollar undertaking har- rassed by the snow drought and racked by injuries, opens formally today with skiing conditions still hazardous. No more snow is in sight. Still another headache for officials appeared when ice hockey referees threatened to stage a walkout unless they were given better living quarters and compensated for expenses. The 15 referees, representing each of the 10 countries in the tournament. held an angry meeting and issued a formal complaint.

Some said unless the situation was remedied they would go home. Hockey officials promised remedial action. Opening ceremonies will consist of the usual parade of athletes, flag-raising and oath-taking ritual and lighting of the Olympic flame. Two hockey matches Italy vs. Austria and Canada vs.

Germany- complete the first activities. Competition flares into full force Friday with opening runs for the daring two-man bobsleds, the 30- kilometer miles) cross-country ski race for men, the giant slalom and four ice hockey games, irifcluding a crucial opening match between the United States and Czechoslovakia. The giant slalom, in which Mrs. Andrea Mead Lawrence of Parshall, is defending champion, will be staged on the Tofana Piste, a shift from the original site on Faloria Mountain. Faloria, desperate for snow, turned up with jagged rocks, bare groupd and lightning ice winch sent several of the leading ski stars tumbling on the mountain side.

Most of the more than 3C casualties to date have been skiers, among them Leslie Streeter, American downhill ace from Northfield, who suffered torn kgaments and a fractured shoulder in a spill. Doubles Play Action Brisk Action in the doubles division of the City Bowling Tourna ment continued brisk Wednesday night as the lead changed hands for the third consecutive day. Henry Herzog and Harold Feath ers bowled a 1250, inducing a 96 handicap, to replace John Price and Robert Anderson as doubles leaders. Price and Anderson had knocked Bedric Wanek and Marv Summa out of the lead Tuesday night. Wanek and Summa are still the scratch leaders with an 1183 Major changes in the singles had V.

Korbelik and J. Fiddell moving into fourth and fifth. W. 631 is still the high scratch. There were no team changes.

DOUBLES 1. H. Feathers (96) 1250 2. J. Anderson (138) 1244 3.

B. Summa (54) 1237 4. L. Craves (189) 1222 5. L.

Riddell (Ill) 1221 6. A. Fletcher (93) 1213 7. V. Nielsen 8.

W. Pierson 9 A. Schwab'er 10. Bice in the 8INGLE.S 1. V.

White 2. W. Raack 3. R. 4.

V. Korbehk 5. J. RiddeU 6. .1, Luse 7.

E. Maser 8. Odle 9. W. Roberts 10.

R. Riehling In the TEAMS 1. Cushman's CB (X34) 2919 2. Bros. (B.M.) (339) 2919 3.

Gas Hefvice (531) 2893 4 Stahnke Flu.mbing Und.) (342 2881 5. Storz Beer (Elks) (345 2880 6. Royal Crown Cola (Elks) 2867 7. Bethany Plumbing (537 2866 Tony it LuUi's (Elks) (420 2860 9. Luth (7 m.

Church) (417) 28.57 10. (W (306 2847 In the NU Track Go Entries Are 'Thin' Entries for the Iowa State-Nebraska indoor meet Saturday afternoon at the stadium reflect how thin the Huskers are in several events where only one or two entries are listed. Jon McWilliams, who tied the meet record with a :07 performance in the ilow hurdles and won the high hurdles, will be the only Nebraska champion back to defend his crowns. Raymond Kelley, winner in the high jump, has graduated. McWilliams also placed in the 60-yard dash and broad jump for a total point production of 16, the top individual performance of the 1955 meet.

Henry Philmon of Iowa State broke the only record a year ago when on his last broad jump he got out for a mark of It displaced a record that had for 25 years when Cobe Tomson jumped It will mark the dual meet debut of several Husker sophomort's. These include Robert Elwood, F.lli- ot, Duane Eversoll, Grand Island; Bill Hawkins, Beatrice; Bernie Randolph, Lincoln, Larry man, Neodasha, Randy Clark, Melbi'ta, and Bill Marten, Beatrice. Randolph is the lone entry in the pole vault. He has done 13-8 in a practice lift. Coach Frank Sevigne believes the meet will be close.

Provided, he said, the Huskers come through with their top performances each event. any of our lads fall below their practice showing be in Sevigne said. The entries: State, Jatk H-iwhdkfr. Frank Jolly, Ken Nimmo; Nebraska. Hob Eiwood, Hugh Osiri.ra.

fiO-yard State. John Stod- geli. Don Graves. Brooks Voting, Jerry Lang. Hank Philmon; Nebra.ska, Charles Gibson, Jon McWilliams.

we set a time for reaching the goal, but the goal must be high in all athletics, and we everyone in Nebraska must believe iiivthat Elliott cited the great spirit of Notre Dame and said former players there have told him the greatest halftime pep talks they ever hearii were the ones when the coach said: Notre Dame. the the time comes we can say to our boys you are Nebraska. You are the when have a he said. Also in the know and believe category were: Crisler, my coach at Michigan, wrote a book and said that the most important things in foot -1 ball were tradition, coaching and raw material. the three, 1 feel tradition is the most important and something Nebraska has.

It's the most important reason why 1 was anxious to come here. Nebraska has a great football tradition and great pride in its university and state. for coaching, excluding myself, I feel very, very fortunate in being able to assemble the staff we have. Bill Jennings, whom 1 have known and worked with and whom I respect very deeply, is one of the tmest coaches in the country. And 1 feel that a real break for me to have him leave the business world and return to coaching.

I know also tliat Dee Andros and Gene Slauber are the very best. material certamly is important and it must hpe ability. Football players able to block, tackle and move movement and quickness are all important today. We must get material tliat is comparable to other schools and Nebraska deserves and should get good material. "The basis for our Nebraska teams will come from Nebraska.

Some of the players will come from other states, of course, but we want Nebraska boys interested in the university. will never have a great football team until all Nebraska boys want to come to the university very Oil this point, Elliott told the group, everybody's job to help attain our high goal. Everybody Nebraska must help; everything you do to help the university as a whole, as well as football is important. You can do a lot to build up in our young people the general feeling that Nebraska is the Classing himself as most confused citizen of Nebraska at the present Pete also pointed out the I do not know how many games win or how many we'll next fall or any year. And there is only one way to measure a foot- ly, very Then he said, I do know we must have set beliefs and believe strongly in them if we are to succeed.

why I believe 100 per cent in setting our goal at Nebraska as high as Elliott was introduced by Athletic Director Bill Orwig and in turn introduced Backfield Coach Bill Jennings, Harry Meginnis, president of the Alumni Club, was toastmaster and introduced Gov. Victor Anderson. Mayor Clark Jeary, John Selleck, former chancellor and present comptroller of the university and Hermie Rohrig of Omaha, Ken Hawkins of Omaha, Bob Phelps of Lincoln and Jim Beltzer of Grand Island, all officers of the Alumni Club. Campy Signs For Record High $42,500 BROOKLYN Roy Campanella, three-time winner of the National League Most Valuable Player award, Wednesday became the highest salaried baseball player in Brooklyn history when he signed his 19.56 contract for an estimated $42,500. The star catcher, rated the best in the National League if not in the majors, got his salary boost after a remarkable comeback last year following a dismal 1954 season due to a hand injury.

From a batting average low of .207 which included just 19 home runs and 51 runs batted in during 1954, the 34 year-old receiver climbed to .318 last year, clouting 32 home nms and driving in 107 runs. comeback, more than anything else, was responsible for the easy pennant triumph and their subsequent World Series victory, their first in history. Campy clouted two home runs in the series against the Yankees and it was his (louble in the fourth inning of the final game that led to first run in a 2-0 triumph. He was chosen by the baseball writers as the most valuable playei, an honor he had won twice before. Only Stan Musial, Jimmy Foxx, Joe DiMaggio and Yogi Berra have won the award as many times.

As expected, the Dodgers declined to disclose exact figures but they admitted he got a 12-per-cent increase over his last year's salary. Pro Standings E.1STKRN DIVIHIOV Pet. Philadelphia .......28 1.1 .680 Hosii.n .......24 IS .571 New lork .......21 21) .512 Syracuse .452 DIVISIO.V Fort .2.118 .561 Rochester 25 .4.12 Vllnneapolis ttt 25 .4,12 SI. Louis IS26 440-yard State, Tom Dille, Del Dreyer, Dale (7randficld, Ancel Covey. Dnk Marsh.

Jerry Nebraska. Bob Andersen, Robert Niemann, 60-yard high State, Dill WenUel, Bob Mayberry, Lang. Marshall; Nebraska, Bill Hawkins, Bill Marten, Dean Brittcnham. 2-milc run Iowa State, Jolly. Floyd Mann, Nimmo; Nebraska, Lee Carter, El- wooJ, 880-yard State, Hawbaker, Grandfield, Mark Stolze.

Meyer, Covey; Nebra.ska, Duane Eversoll, Osmcra, Don Wilcox. 60-yard low State. Wentzel, Maybt'rry, Lang. Marshall, Nebraska. Hawkins, McWillirtms, Dole vault Iowa Stale, Harold Jerry Fellinger, Jack Dec; lier- liandolph Shot Phil Delavan, Jake Kalrh Voder; Nebr.iska.

Ken Ueiners, Leonard llosen. Larry Smith. I Broad jump -Iowa State, Jiin Stewart, niilmon; Nebraska, Ladd Hanstom, Hawkins, MtWilliams. High Stewart, Dick Marsh, Brooks Young, Bob Clark; Nebraska, Merle Brestel, Dale Knotek, Bandy Clark, Lany Gausman. (114) 1206 (174) 1204 (114) 1196 (231) 1195 (99) 680 (36) (75) 661 (36) 657 (36) 634 (57) (90) 640 (93) 634 P.m.

Lincoln FOUR GIRLS TEAM WRESTLE Next Monday I Arena Carol Cook China Mira Jane Mull Dot Dotson JACK PESEK FKEE Bl.S—7:45 and 8:10 p.m. ffoni loth A via 17tb a ro arena I'arking lot will be patrolled! General Children to (ien. Adni. Hewerved Ringside ........................81.50 Tlekets on Sale at smoke Shop 121 No. 12lhi Uhooe 8-6241 MMD MELLOW MAGNIFICENT 6 TEARS Bourtjon -86 proof WOKTMY OF A GREAT MAMi Canada Alt, Itenrlortc N.

thaig KT.

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