Page 4. University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 7, 1957 B' Team To Play For March of Dimes By JACKIE JONES Daily Konson Sports Editor The Jayhawk "B" basketball squad will meet the tall and talented Kansas State yearlings in a benefit game Friday night for the March of Dimes. Tip-off time for the cage clash will be 7:30 in Hoch auditorium. Admission price is 50 cents for everyone, and the entire proceeds will be turned over to the March of Dimes campaign. The young Jayhawks are undefeated in action this season, but will face their best opposition in a giant-sized pack of Wildcats. The game should be equal in thrills to the rugged varsity battles between the schools. The Wildcats will boast such players as Jerry Jung, a 6-foot 14-inch ALLEN KELLY KEN BULLER freshman from Hutchinson, and several other boys who top the six and a half foot mark. The Jayhawks were dealt a blow K-State Ball Players Attacked By The Flu The flu bug may take an active part in the Big Seven conference race. He invaded the Kansas State basketball camp and attacked three of the players. Jesse Prisock, a regular, is under a doctor's care after taking penicillin shots, and Gene Stauffer, a sophomore, is in the student hospital. Jerry Jung, 6-11 center of the team team, also has been stricken. No others are ailing yet, but Coach Jack Gardner is plenty worried. Kansas State has an important conference battle with Missouri at Columbia Saturday, and the Wildcat "B" team meets the Kansas "E" team Friday. Feb. 8, in Hoch auditorium. when Eldon Nickelson, 6-foot 6-inch freshman from Pittsburg was hospitalized, but the Kansas coach will rely on several boys who should provide plenty of speed. Coach Harp expects to start Kenneth Buller and Jerry Alberts at the forward positions; Wesley Whitney, a 6-foot, 3-inch sophomore from Newton, at center and Allen Kelley and Jerry Bogue at the guard slots. The Kansas "B" team has won all four of their games this season, defeating: Forbes Air Force base of Topeka, Olathe Naval base, Baker university and the Missouri "B" team. Norway Picked To Win Crown Norwegian athletes apparently aren't going to serve as the perfect hosts for the winter Olympics which get underway at Oslo next week. Picked to win the Olympic team title in a United Press canvas of European sports experts last week, the Norwegians displayed championship form as they completely dominated pre-game meets during the weekend. U. S. hopefuls, meanwhile, put up a game fight in most of the warm-ups but were forced to settle for the runner-up spots behind their more experienced and adept Norwegian rivals. In the "Little Olympic games" at Oslo's Bislet stadium, speed skater Finn Hodt, the Norwegian outcast, captured first place in the overall standings by finishing first in the 1,500 meter sprint and seventh in the 10,000 meter endurance race Tuesday. He wound up with the winning low of 201,507 individual points. Ken Henry of Chicago emerged as the leading Yank skater with 205,303 points in the final standings that earned him fifth place. Pat McNamara of Minneapolis was 11th with 207,330 points and Charles (Chuck) Burke of Chicago was 17th with 212,208 points. The U.S. skaters did come away from the "little" games with one consolation. They won't have to face Hodt in the big show. The Super Market Spring Food Values Ready To Eat 12 Oz. Can PREM or TREAT 47c Cold Stream Ready to Eat Tall No. 1 Can SALMON 55c Banquet Brand 3 1/4 lb. Can One whole chicken ready to serve. CHICKEN $1.49 Country Fresh Dozen EGGS 35c Pure 1 lb. Box LARD 17c Ann Page-Pineapple Plum 1 lb. Jar PEACH PRESERVES 25c Frigidettes - Frozen 2 - 12 oz. Pkgs. LIMA BEANS 25c Libby's Frozen 2 - 6 oz. Cans ORANGE JUICE 29c Norwegian was barred from competing in the Olympics last week on the grounds he served as a Nazi collaborator during the last war. The Norwegians also were supreme in a ski-jumping tournament at Geithu, Norway, in which Art Tokle of Brooklyn, N.Y., turned in the day's longest jump but had to settle for fourth place in the final standings because he failed to score enough points on form. Small Fan Likes Clyde The winner was Svein Lein of Norway, whose best leap was 218 feet, six inches. Tokle soared 227 feet, 11 inches but he only wound up 215.6 points, compared to Lein's 216.3 points. The U.S. Olympic ice hockey team managed to save the day by defeating Switzerland, 6 to 4, in warmup at Zurich, but almost got involved in a riot. Angry Swiss fans stormed the penalty box to fight with the Yank players and had to be dispersed by police and officials. A 12-year-old basketball fan who saw all of the games at the preseason Big Seven tournament in Kansas City apparently knows what to consider when judging basketball teams. 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