Tuesday, January 12, 1960 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 NH To Face Bitffs On TV By Hal Brown Saturday's game with Colo rado at' Boulder will be the first TV "appearance of the season for Jerry Bush's Ne braska cagers. The afternoon game will be televised re gionally. It will also be a revenge match as far as the Husken are concerned as they will be out to avenge a defeat suf fered at the hands of the Buffs in the first round of the Big Eight pre-season tourney. The Buffaloes fortunes rest to a. considerable extent on. the shoulders of their sopho mores. Nine of the 15 mem bers of the Colorado roster are sophomores. ' Among the top sophomore on the Colorado (quad are Gtayal GHkey, Maurice (Wil ky) Gilmore, Wayne Millies and Roger Voss. Each of the above quartet stands 6-4 or better with Voss being the tallest at 6-7. Gilkey is a 6-4, 181-pounder from Aurora, 111. He is con sidered to be a good shooter T IT, SSI k - ' I THE BIG STRETCH AlMaxey (20) of Ne braska and Kansas' Bob Hickman (20) and Dee Ketchum (3) reach fortthe ball v ith Maxey in control during action in the Kansas-Nebraska basketball game. Num ber 42 is- Jim Kowalke of Nebraska and number 54 is the Huskers' Bob , Harry. Kansas won the game 60-47. Senior Captains Form Backbone Of 1959 Nebraska Tankers with an intense desire to play ball. He was an all-conference forward in high school. ' Gilmore, who stands 6-5 and weighs 206 pounds, naus from New .Can a an, unm. where he was an all-state per former on a state champion ship quintet. He can play out side, in the corner or in the post for Sox Walseth. . MUJies is a ruggea reoouna er at 6-4 and 214 pounds. He was an all-city center at York high in Chicago but will play forward for the Buffs. He was also a high jumper and sprinter in high school. Voss at 6-7 and 212 pounds is one of the bigtest men on the Colorado squad. He was a three-sport 'star at Austin, Minn. High School starring in basketball; football and track. Voss was coached in high school by Ove Verven; who ' discovered Burdette Hal dorson," Colorado's greatest, scorer. ..Third Place Sox Walseth, beginning his fourth year at the Buffalo helm, has four, returning let termen from last year's team which finished in a tie for, third place in the Big Eight with an 8-6 record. The Buffs had a 14-10 overall mark. Returning lettermen are Frank Javernick, Billy Lewis, Russ Lind and Glen Piper. Javernick, Lewis and Lind are seniors, Piper is a junior. Lind is the only returning regular although Lewis start ed a few games. Lind is a 6-1 guard and was third lead ing scorer on , last year's team with 243 points for a .10.1 points per game aver age. Lewis was the team's fifth leading scorer with a 5.9 av L erage and ' was the fourth leading rebounder with 93. Colorado and Nebraska have met 34 times since the series began in 1903. The Buffs have won 18 while Ne braska has come out on top in. 16 contests. """ 'r r - 1 TTiimn-nr iiiti mmt mtu,, m iwMiy :afrfrHwM WRESTLING ACTION Wayne Reeves, 137-pound Husker grapnlcr, forces Man kato State's John Lindeman to the canvas during their match last Friday night. . Lindeman won a 7-5 decision over the Ne braska sophomore. Reeves will be in ac tion against Minnesota and Iowa State Teachers this weekend. Titles Are 'Old Stuff To Jim Frank By Dave Wohtarth The captains of the Husker swimming team this year are Frank Tomsen and Ron Buck lin. These two finmen were instrumental in Nebraska's opening win ' -over Kansas State, 61-33, Dec. 17. Varsity Record Tomson swims the 200-yard backstroke plus being a mem ber of the 400-yard medley relay team. His best time in the backstroke is 2:21.8, the varsity record which he set against Grinnell last year. He also turned in a 2:24.2 to set a dual meet record at Kansas last year. , ' Tomson, an Omaha Benson product, took first in the back stroke against K-State with a time of 2:26.9 and swam on the 1st placej medley relay team. The 510", 21-year old vet eran is a Business Adminis tration student, secretary treasurer of the N Club, vice president of Phi Delta Theta Theta fraternity, a finalist for Trince Kosmet, former AUF officer and a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, Biz Ad Scho lastic fraternity. Tomson, who currently has a 7.3. overall average, plans Holstrom Tops Series, Game Marks Stradler's 210 First Jn Women's Bowl Ralph Holstrom topped the Student Union Men's League last week with the highest series and game bowled in leagues this year. His series was a 638 with a high game, of 255. Holstrom is a member of the Big Eight bowling team sponsored by the Union. In women's leagues, Connie Stradler bowled the high game of 210, and the high series of 460. League Standings: . , Won lt . Alpha Omlcorn PI Kappa Delta J Womem Dorm 2 Kappa Alpha Theta !5,A",?u, M'mm-na Dorm 1 JirSS Phi Beta Phi Af Women Fedde Hall Sum A Union H Home Ec if A Sec 11 37 Phi Kappa Pd "V4-17Vi Slxma Phi Epsllon 57 -21 ppta Sinma Pal JJ -21 Kappa Slama PM Gamma Delta 251? Sima Chi i 17 -3i Cmdranflc Mrlean , 5 '2 Seaton " 'ii ...... ..'4 .26 -26 26 -26 , 24 -28 to be married in June. He' feels that "the Husker first men are ahead of last year's pace, but the Husker swimmers lack depth. We should finfsh 4th in the Big 8." The other Nebraska cap tain, Ron Bucklifl, had a busy day when the Huskers toppled K-State. He swam on the win ning 400-yard medley re lay team, and took 2nd in the 200-yard breastroke. Earlier he had won the 200 yard individual medley but was disqualified. Besides these events Bucklin also swims the 200-yard butterfly and 100-yard freestyle when he is needed. 'Buck' thinks that Nebras ka should knock off Colorado and Kansas State. He predicts a 3rd or 4th place finish ior the Husker tankmen in the conference. , Top Thrill The 21-year,old, 6-0 grad of Lincoln Northeast recalls his top thrill at Nebraska as & sophomore when he won two events against Colorado State in the opening meet. Bucklin is married and has one son. He is a member of the N Club and Beta Theta Pi fraternity and is enrolled in Business Administration. Besides sports he is also in terested in art. In high school he lettered three times in swimming and once in football. He was Mid west AAU Champion in the 200-yard breastroke and run nerup in the Junior National AAU Meet. In the 220-yeard breastroke in 1957.' Buck's best times include a 2:23 in the individual medley, a 2:40.0 in the breastroke, a 2:33.5 in the butterfly and a : 58.5 in the freestyle. Fashion School Offers Grants Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers in New York City has announced that up to four . fashion fellowships will be awarded this year to senior college women. Each fellowship covers the full tuition of $1,350 for the one-year course. , . Graduates of the school hold jobs in buying, advertis ing, styling, radio and tele vision, and magazine editor ial work, s Senior women may secure registration blanks from the Fashion Fellowship Secre tary, Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers, 851 Madi son Avenue, New York 21, New York. Registration closes Jan. 27th. j f is Everybody's Business . . . and especially the business of American Stores Company. With almost 800 modem supermarkets in Jhe Middle Atlantic. states, and food processing plants across the Coun try, ASCO offers fine career opportunities in a vast range of occup'ations. Lincoln Packing Division , AMERICAN STORES CO. nothing new to Jim Frank, Nebraska diver. The sophomore diver en Dick Klaas' swimming team was state diving champion two years (1957-'58) as a member of the Lincoln South east team. He was also se lected to the high school all american swimming team both those years. The 5-IIV2, 145-pounder let tered three years in swim ming and twice in baseball at Southeast. He was a sec ond baseman on the South east nine that won the 1958 state baseball championship. Frank's team defeated Lin coln Northeast 4-2 in a 14- inning game to capture the crown. He lists winning the state diving title two years in suc cession and playing on the state championship baseball team as his tw 0 greatest sports thrills. Frank is majoring in Den tistry and works as a life guard in Lincoln during the summer months. He finished third in Diving m Saturday's dual match against the Kansas Jayhawks. HOLLYWOOD BOWL Open Bowling Weekdays Till 5 Sat. All Day, Sundays Till 5 24 Lanes Automatic Pinsetters Restaurant . . . Barber Shop 920 X. 48th PIIOIVE EV 6-1911 A I if ?m ' )zty fit i . - uj Dick Ernsdorff studies a microwave site-layout chart atop a moun tain near Orting, in western Washington state. On assignments like this, he often carries $25,000 worth-of equipment with him. r Here, Dick checks line-of-sight with a distant repeater station by mirror-flashing and confirms reception by portable radio. Using this technique, reflections of the sun's rays can be seen as far as 50 miles. He wears two kinds of work togs For engineer Richard A. Ernsdorff, the "uniform of the day" changes frequently. A Mondayxmight find him in a checkered wool shirt on a Washington or Idaho mountain top. Wednesday could be, a collar-and-tie day. Dick is a, transmission engineer with the Pacific "Me phone and Telegraph Company in Seattle, Washington. He joined the company in June, 1956, after getting his B.S.E.E. degree from Washington State University. ''I wanted to work in Washington," lie says, "with an established, grow ing company where I could find a variety of engineering op portunities and could use gome imagination in my work." Dick spent 2 years in rotational, on-the-job training, doing power and equipment engineering and '"learning the business." Since April, 1959, he has worked with micro wave radio relay systems in the Washington-Idaho area. 1 When Dick breaks out his checkered shirt, he's headed for the mountains. He makes field studies involving micro- Dick stops by the East Central Office building in Seattle to look at some microwave terminating equipment. It's involved in a 4000 megacycle radio relay system between Seattle and Portland, Oregon. wave systems and SAGE radars and trouble-shoots any problem that arises. Jle also engineers "radar remoting" facilities which provide a vital communications link be tween radar sites and Air Force Operations. A current assignment is a new 11,000 mc radio route from central Washington into Canada, utilizing reflectors on mountains and repeaters (amplifiers) in valleys. It's a million-dollar-plus project. I don't know where an engineer could find more inter esting work," says Dick. You might also find an interesting, rewarding career with the Bell Telephone Companies. See the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES In the Engineering Iab in downtown Seattle, Dick calibrates and alfgns transmitting and receiving equipment prior to making a path loss test of microwave ciriuits between Orting and Seattle. 'A n rlll ii iiiiiiiaj yjwwwwwyarwM im ' Benton Five Acea Andrewa Boucher Fnlr!ieid Hitchcock Rrlleok Counaelort Camleld 1 Hitchcock Kern on 2 Oilfield 1 Burnett Avery iWleld .....'22 -30 1 -33 , 320, N, Street 35 -19 27 -2S 27 -25 : ,27 -25 ... 27 -2S " 26 -26 .23 -29 29 -il Lincoln I -'&t A t -M ' . Nebraska 1