Page 5 Fambrough Elevated on Football Staff Following Resignation of 'Pop' Werner Thursday, February 5. 1953 University Daily Kansan A. H. "Pop" Werner, KU football line coach since 1949, has resigned his position and Don Fambrough, a Kansas assistant the past five seasons, was named his successor by athletic director A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg. Werner is leaving coaching to enter the insurance business in Harrisburg, Fa. His resignation becomes effective March 1. Werner came to Kansas in 1949 and put together two of the best blocking lines in Jayhawkher history. The 1950 forward wall blocked to an all-time KU record of 3,116 net yards and ranked fourth on the NCAA tables on a per game average basis. Although it had only three regulars returning in 1951, the Kansas line posted a 276.4 rushing average rank 17th in the nation. DON FAMBROUGH Werner's first collegiate job was at Morris-Harvey where he coached football and basketball in 1937-38-39 He moved up as line coach at William and Mary, Auburn, and then the Brooklyn team of the All-America conference of pro football before coming to Kansas. He was a three-time all-Southeastern conference guard at Duke and was graduated from the North Carolina school in 1933 with a degree in electrical engineering. While at William and Mary, he also coached baseball and handled New York Yankee pitching star Vic Raschi. Fambrough, a former Kansas line great, has completed five seasons on the KU staff. He was freshman coach in 1949-50 and was freshline coach in 1948. He became a varsity assistant in 1951. 'POP' WERNER Fambrough has been called the finest all-around guard in Kansas football history. He was co-captain of the 1947 Orange Bowl squad and was a regular with the Big Six co-champions of 1946. He started his collegiate career as a freshman fullback at Texas University in 1951. He was shifted to blocking back in 1942, then entered the Air Force in 1943. He played with the Salt Lake City Army Air field in 1943 and with the Second Air Force team in 1944-45. Fambrough, a hard driver and meticulous instructor on the field, helped rebuild the Jayhawker defensive lines the past two seasons. Fambrough, 30, is married and the father of two sons. His Lawrence home is at 2223 Tennessee. Lonborg said he hopes to find another assistant to fill Fambrough's job left vacant by the promotion. Wild Scoring Night for East Cagers New York—(U,P)—A wild night of scoring, during which no fewer than seven major-college stars scored 30 or more points in a single game, left basketball records shattered in the dust today. Larrupin' Larry Hennessey of Villanova, trying to make up for the time he lost during a half-season's ineligibility, turned in the top performance in the nation last night—a 44-point show that led a 93 to 80 victory over Canisius college. The second highest score was accomplished in the same city where Ed Garrity tallied 40 points to pace St. Joseph's to a 111-92 victory over Rhode Island State. And Bill Baird of Rhode Island was right behind with 34 points. Garrity's total was a new field house record and St. Joseph's total was a new mark. That spree broke the single-game scoring record for Philadelphia's Palestra stadium, 41 points by Villanova's Paul Arizin in 1950, and his 18 field goals broke the court mark of 16 held by Ernie Beck of Penn. Dave Gotkin tallied 32 points as he paused North Carolina State in a 91-51 rout of South Carolina. It was an important triumph for State, which is ranked No 8 nationally, because it was the second conference record of 10-2, compared to 13-2 for firstplace North Carolina. Jack Sallee of Dayton racked up 30 points, but his team bowed to Western Kentucky, the nation's 15th- ranked team, 88-77, Big Art Spoelstra scored a more modest 28 for Western Kentucky, which now boasts an impressive 18-3 record. Harold Haabestad of Princeton set a new school scoring mark when he tallied 32 points to lead a 72-61 victory over Colgate. The old record of 31 had stood since 1932, before the "adding machine era" in basketball Clarence Hannon sank 34 points for Army as the Cadets whipped Swarthmore, 76-60, to run their record to 9-3. Tom Gola just missed the 30-mark when he tallied 29 to lead La Salle, the nation's sixth-ranked team, to an easy T3-61 conquest of Loyola of Baltimore. Notre Dame, ranked No. 14 nationally, also had an easy time defeating Butler, 80-58. In other leading games last night: Cornell downed Syracuse, 69-65, as Lee Morton tallied 29 points; Penn scored eight straight points at the end of an Ivy league game to beat Columbia, 63-56, as Beck scored 24 points; Temple stopped Delaware cold with a zone defense and won, 84-45; Norm Swanson of Tulsa tallied 23 points as DePaul wilted. Virginia rallied to beat Drake, 77-71, Florida beat Auburn, 66-62, and Georgia Tech beat Georgia, 78-73, in the Southeastern conference; William and Mary beat VMI, 88-54, in the Southern; Louisville edged Xavier (Ohio), 72-69, and Loyola of Los Angeles downed Pitt, 73-70. Cagers Polish for Missouri Kansas University's cagers went through their final drills this week in preparation for resuming round-ball activity against Missouri here Saturday night after a two and a half week layoff. Preparing to defend their string of home court victories and seeking a comeback after the Jan. 20 loss to Colorado at Boulder, the Jayhawkers were pushed through a stiff series of practices beginning the middle of last week following a week's layoff for finals. The Kansans, currently holding down the third spot in conference standings, must successfully march through a 3-game string of home contests in the next seven days if they are to still figure in the conference picture. Following Saturday night's outing against the improved Tigers, Coach F. C. Allen will send his outfit against Oklahoma the following Tuesday and Nebraska one week from Saturday. LaVannes "Scooter" Squires, Wichita junior sideline before the season began with a lung ailment that necessitated his dropping school for a time, rejoined the team for practices last week. However, Dr. Allen hasn't indicated whether the speedy Squires will be played in the remaining games. Squires would probably get another year of eligibility by remaining on the bench during the remaining eight games. However, the chances are good that the Scooter will see game action if Allen feels his would be a valuable addition to the outfit. The only dark spot in this week's sharpened roundball drills was a charley-horse that has slowed starter Harold "Pat" Patterson. However, the injury has improved through the week and Patterson should be in good shape by tip-off time. Footballer John Anderson was moved into the Kansas second outfit this week in the only major switch in Jayhawker ranks. Jerry Alberts, Lincoln Ill., sophomore who moved over to make room for the hefty Nebraskan, has been alternating at the post this week with Eldon Nicholson in the reserve quintet. Mittens Say Stop, Too Omaha, Neb. — (U.P.)—Safety patrol boys at Holy Ghost school here are wearing dual-purpose-mittens this year. The mittens not only keep hands warm but also serve as stop signs when held up. They feature a large yellow and black shield shaped like the conventional stop sign. On 45's PRETEND - RALPH MARTERIE HOLD ME, THRILL ME - KAREN CHANDLER HAVE YOU HEARD - JONI JAMES 925 Mass. - YOUR NAME GOLD-STAMPED ON WALLET - YOUR NAME PRINTED ON ALL CHECKS - NO MONTHLY SERVICE CHARGE - NO MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED - 10# per check used...No deposit charges. Douglas County State Bank "THE BANK OF FRIENDLY SERVICE" Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Telephone 3200