Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1960)
Wednesday, January 6, 1960 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 IM Basketball TODAY'S GAMES CTstontans v. Vocational Ed. Gooddtng vs. Burnett Inter-Varsity vs. The Losers Dental College Ti. Phi F.psilon Kappa Newman Club vi. Law Collese Physicist! vs. Navy ROTC Andrews vs. Gooddlng Kappa SUma-B vs. Sifma Alpha Epsi-lon-B Phi Delta Theta-B vs. 6 isms Phi Epsl-lon-B Alpha Tau Omera-B vs. Delta Twi DelU-B Slim Nu -B vs. Delta Upsllon-B TheU Xl-B vs Beta TheU Pl-B Phi Gamma Drlta-B vs. Farm Houss-B Nebraskan Want Ads No. Wordi 1 da. i da. 3 da. 4 ST t-10 I M !5Tj .88 I 1.00 .60 .80 1.05 I 1.25 1S-S0 .60 86 1.26 1.50 Si- 28-80 .70 1.10 1.46 I 1.T5 .80 1.25 j 1.66 T00 ! .80 1 1.40 1.86 I 2.26 86-40 I 1.00 I 1.66 2.06 2.60 TbSM low-cos rate apply to Want Ada which ara placed (or consecutive cars and ara paid (or within 10 days after the ad axplres or Is canceled. Ads to be printed In the classified action of the Dally Nebraskan must be accompanied by the name of the parson plaolng said ad. NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS If you lose your wallet, don't losa your head!!! Put a "want ad" In The Daily Nebraskan. Many a lost wallet has found Its way home through the NE BRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS. FOR RENT leaping rooms 19th and F. Well fur nished Parklng-Bhower-Gentleman. OA 3-4040. Lara basement sleeping room with bath. Ag students preferred. 1151 lciyiwiia Dr. Phone IN 6-6320. FOR SALE New Zeis Ikon Contr&flex Tsssar 2.6. Call IN (-7923 after 6 p.m. 26 off. GELDINQ spirited, but gentle. Ideal for teen-ager. For sale by parents whose daugher has discovered boys are more Interesting than horses. Dally Nebraskan Box 101. HELP WANTED Experienced hay-hauler. Must have de gree in Electrical Engineering. Wife must like horses. Bring resume to study room Ferguson Hall. REPAIR SERVICE For radio and television repair serv ice call John Terger, OA 3-6804. WATCH REPAIR tart the New Year out right. Take your watch to Dick's Watch Service. 1245 R St., Lincoln, Nebraska. College Nile Friday Turnpike Dancing 9-12 Reservations HE 5-9812 DaUy Nebraskan Sports Reeve Is Leading Mat Prospect Wrestling Coach Bill Smith will have to rely on newcom ers this year as his squad was hurt by graduation. One of these sophomores is Wayne Reeve, a 137-pound standout grappler from Indianapolis, Indiana. Reeve won his division in the Nebraska Invitational Meet, defeating four oppo nents on the way to the title. Winning titles is nothing new for Wayne as he copped State crowns in both Indiana and Texas, wrestling in AAU meets. His Hoosier championship came in 1952 and he added the Texas crown in '58. Last year he placed 6th in the National AAU Meet. Reeve is 27-years old, mar ried and has one boy. He is in Teacher's College, major ing in P. E, His interests cen ter mainly around sports. He began wrestling at the age of 15 as a sophomore in high school. He earned three wrestling letters at Indiana polis High. He also won two letters as a halfback in foot ball and two as a half-miler in track. After high school, Reeve served in the Army as a hu man guinea pig for medical research. During his stay at Bethesda, Maryland, he was subiected to test for research on various diseases. CU Basketball Court Changed To Benefit Fans In a move designed to bene fit spectators, the playing floor in Colorado Fieldhouse has been turned around so that it runs east and west, parallel to the 'permanent seats at the south end of the fieldhouse. Capacity is reduced ap proximately 800 seats to 6,000. But the majority of seats now are along the side of the floor rather than at the ends. , Lincoln totne Swinging Sweater Sale famous McGREGOR brand fabulous BURNISHED colors iH ' i Wilil tin 1 1 -urn t 'fit i - 111! ft I 4 m U t Cardigans, pullovers and vests in a wide variety of styles. Sizes 36 to 46 and small, medium, large and extra large. Now 4.96 to 14.21 Vi 4 off X MI Regularly 7.95 to 18.95 MEN'S STORE, FIRST FLOOR J Daily Nebraskan Star Is Turner ZIP V viXJL... p 4A ?S 1 1 it: i: x 'yl J) H , t , jy x " " 15 Husker Captain Named To All-Tourney Team By Norm Beatty For the second time this year, Herschell Turner has been named the Daily Ne braskan's Star of the week. Turner grabbed this honor via his sterling performance in the last eight Cornhusker basketball games. Although, the faltering NU cagers could master only a single victory since the Min nesota game, Turner re mained outstanding through out the barrage of near-victories. Hersch leads the Big Red in scoring with 153 points in the last eight games for an admirable 19.1 points-per-game average. This figure was boosted considerably in the recent Missouri game when H. T. dumped in 35 points to lead Nebraska to a 78-67 win and the number sev en spot in the tournament. The 6-2 senior and ail American candidate was named to the AU-Bie Eight Tourney team last week. This was the second time Turner has received this honor in as many years. The remarkable team cap tain and his variety of shots stand as Dig reasons wny me Huskers remain a dangerous foe to any takers. The Scar let has never been beaten more than nine points this season and may never be if H. T. has anything to do about it. Turner has been instru mental in several Nebraska games since he gained a starting role as a sopho more. His play in several stiring Nebraska games are already legend in Cornhusk er land. Wildlife Club The University Wildlife Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 202 Poultry Husbandry Building. Hersch Turner . . . Daily Nebraskan Star of The Week Sevigiie Expresses Optimism Over NU Track Prospects Optimistic is therrd that expresses Nebraska track coach Frank Sevigne's atti tude toward the coming in door track season. When asked to appraise the present Husker squad, Se vigne said that the team will have more over-all strength than any Nebreska team he has coached. "Our chances of winning the conference this year are the best since I've been here," the coach said. "In checking each schools losses through graduation and ineli gibi'ity, and comparing fresh man postal times of last year, I wo u 1 d say our chances of winning the indoor championships are as good as any school in the confer ence," Sevigne said. In summing up the team personnel, Sevigne said that the distances would be the strongest events, with Joe American Horse and Bill Melody in the mile and two mile. Joe Mullins and Ken Ash, a pair of two jar lettermen, give the Huskers a lot of strength in the middle dis tances wihch are the 880, 1,000, and 600 yard races. Mullins won the indoor 600 'ast year in the conference championships at Kansas City, Mo. and the outdoor 880, setting a new conference rec ord of 1:49. Backing up Mullins and Ash in the middle distances will be senior Jerry Marples and sophomore Rich Kier, a New York import. .I r ' 1 ' Rich Kier Bush Calls Kansas Upset His Top Sports Thrill Upsetting Wilt Chamber lain and the Kansas Jay hawks two years ago ranks as t he number one sports thrill for Husker basketball coach Jerry Bush. The Nebraska mentor rates the victory over tth Jay hawks above the many out standing moments in his own star-studded collegiate and professional basketbal1 ca reer. He was an Ail-American in both 1937 and 1938 at St. John's College in Brooklyn. Later Bush was named to the All-Professional team five times. The "Coliseum Bear" is now in his sixth year as Corn husker head coach. Bush came to Nebraska from the University of Toledo, where NOW SHOWING OAKY COOK as Major Them IltslWf" ft retirement from professional competition in 1947. A third-place finish in 1954- 55 is the highest conference standing during Bushs' ten ure in Lincoln, and the over- al1 mark of 12-13 last year is Nebraska's beet in the last five years. Bush, whose first name is Gerard, not Gerald, began his professional basketball career in 1938 with the Kate Smith Celtics of the now defunct American Basketball League. The "Bear" later played in the old National Basketball League with the Akron Fire s tones, 1939-41; Rochester Royals, 1942; and the Fort Wayne Zollners, 1943-47. Bush p'ayed on three world championship teams wh i 1 e he aas with the Zollners, and he joined the Detroit Eagles in the world professional tour nament in 1941 and 1942. The Eagles won the title both years. David Niven E .w- 'IN A fey STORY OF TOGETHERNESS. BEFORE AND AFTER MARRIAGE! m spy Anniversary The hurdles will be well taken care of by Milt Haedt, Bill Fasano, LeRoy Keane, and Bob Knaub. Bob Cross, one of the brightest prospects according to Sevigne, will double in the sprints and broad lump. Also broad jumping wi'l be Knaub and Kier. The other field events will find Jim Kraft pole vaulting, Al Wellman the shot put. and Larry Janda in the high jump. "The Man Who Saw God" is Steve Allen'i favorite joke. He read it In the Realitt, m unique magazine of freethought criticism and satire. Sericnil article on interfaith marriage; the psychology of mythj anti contraceptive laws; the semantics of God; a poem that caused a campus controversy. Satirical critiques of professional beat niks; H-bomb tests; the FBI; telethons; the AMA. Columns on church-state conflicts; censorship trends. The 3 Issue described cost $1. They're yours free with a subscription. Rates; $3 for 10 issues; $5 for 20 issues. The Realist, Dept. C, 225 Lafayette St., New York 12, N. Y. Alag AhofL the only gift shop designed exclusively for Men gifts for every occasion LINDELL HOTEL 13th & M A Campus-to-Career Case History i i tv'& 1 A fx iP' ! . -n j! ''' '. V'A 'My talk with the Bell System interviewer is really paying off Today, less than five years since he grad uated from Michigan State University, Donald J. Zigman is an Accounting Man ager for Wisconsin Bell Telephone Com pany in Oshkosh with seven supervisory and 93 clerical employees reporting to him. His group handles billing for 350, 000 telephone customers and processes $1,500,000 in revenue each month. Don has moved ahead fast and stead ilybut no more so than the Bell System . interviewer told him he might, "That guy made a real impression on me," says Don. "He didn't guarantee a bright future for me. He simply described the kind of varied job experience I'd get, . outlined the on-the-job training I'd go through, and pointed out the advance ment opportunities I'd have along the way. The only thing he promised me was that I would have 'maximum exposure for self-development' Ho was 100 per cent right there. My training has been terrific and I've had every chance to ad vance that I could possibly hope for.". After joining the company, Don spent! eight months in the Plant Department learning the roots of the business. He got experience as a lineman, installer and repairman. He was transferred to Ac counting in December, 1956, working in the Methods and Results section. Thir teen months later, he was Supervisor of that section and, 14 months after that he became Accounting Manager. "How much farther I go now is entirely up to me," says Don. "One thing I know: the opportunities are here" Don Zigman graduated with a B.A. degree in Economics and English. He's one of many young men who have foupd interesting careers with the Bell Telephone Companies. Learn what opportunities you might have. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus and read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office. ELL TILIPHONI COMPANIES