Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1961)
Friday, Feb. 24, 1961 The Nebraskan Page 3 rac 01 Could Snap NU Win Skein Nebraska's cindermen lay an undefeated season on the line Saturday" when they clash with the Oklahoma, defending Big Eight indoor champs, in the final indoor meet of the season. Meet time is 2 p.m. in the East Stadium. Many of the track events will be closely contested and several meet records could fall by the wayside. The 60-yard dash will be decided among Husker Steve Pfister, and Mark Sullivan and Dick Dorset of the Soon- ers. rnster and Sullivan both have turned in times of :06.2 In the 600 Bob Wilcox of Oklahoma has a mark of 1:12.5 and could break the meet record of 1:13.1. Sophomore Bill Kennv will carry Nebraska's hopes in me iuuu. Kenny nnished well ahead of the nearest man against Colorado and Kansas Mate, tsuaay btewart will be Kenny s biggest threat. Records Could Fall Meet records could also fall In the pole vault, shot put, and high jump. J. D. Martin will be out to regain the sta dium record which was taken from him by George Davies of Oklahoma State in the first meet of the season. Mike Lindsay, Big Eight champ in the shot put, should have no trouble capturing first place. Lindsay may be able to break the meet rec ord of 57-1034 which he set in 1959. The high jump meet record and stadium record will be threatened. Sooner Mark Brady turned in a 6-6 against Kansas last week. This mark would break the meet record of 6-43i and the Stadium record of 6-5. Fred Wilke and Vayden Anderson of Nebraska are expected to bring in the second and third spots. Husker -Ray Stevens could provide the Huskers with a double win in the mile and two-mile events. Stevens main competition in the mile will be Lee Smith and Paul Ebert, who has a time of 4:16.5. Ebert will also double In the two-mile race. "We already concede three first places to the Sooners in the pole vault, high jump, and shot put," said Ike Hanscom, field events coach, "but the broad jump will be wide open." All the contestants in the broad jump have leaps of 23 feet or better. Bob Knaub and Wilke have marks of 23-8 and 23-0 respectively. Steve Swaf ford of Oklahoma has a 23-6 leap, Don Warrick a 23-534, and Tom Raley a leap of 23-1. Linda Joyce Is Pin King Linda Joyce in the women's division and Ralph Holm strum in the men's division were the top bowlers in the finals of the campus bowling tournament held in the Stu dent Union. Miss Joyce bowled a nine game total of 1401 and Holm strum rolled a 1741 for nine games. Miss Joyce's 483 se ries and 179 game were also tops in the women's division. Phil Griess bowled the high game in the men's divi sion with a 232 and Holm strum had the high series with 601. v Members of the women's team are Miss Joyce, Mary Jo Mullen, Connie Stadler, Nina Morrison, Linda Lons brough and Peggy Mercia. Bowling on the men's team are Holmstrum, Stu Ketler, Richard Haase, Al Cummins, Keith Van Velkinburgh and Griess. k. .accords threatened i -J tag, (IT'S -; t ? L 1 1 i iii I Main Feature Oock Varsity: "The Misfits," 1:00,: 3:38, 5:57, 9:42. Sneak, 8:00. State: "Look in Any Win dow," 1:35, 3:37, 5:39, 7:41, 9:43. Stuart: "Beware This Stare," 1:00, 2:45, 4:25, 6:15, 8:05, 9:55. j Nebraska Want Ads Sr. WorS.1 1 i aa, IS aa. i-te I M I .Ml .SS I 1 OO i'l-ia I ' M t I ' I .60 I . I 1 t 1 M. Vi j 7 I 1.19 I 1 I T rj r I 1 M 1 1 I 08 i .M I l.so I i s ( i.zt knr-et rmlM apply to Wax A-i. which r PW tar within 10 ay .11 the l nptr cnrM. At. in n printed th elatnd rtto ,f ihe Hummtr Nbrmkn 1MB tr , PERSONAL T t helr bt! COED FOL- LIES. Ftbr. Z4, t:0 p.m., Pwrtiitit Cr viro5iii7R'',,tr n"- N mi )r lion trm. Employer'! Prrnnl T icmnt Berric. 1307 L, HI. HE 2-M2X i BIG MEN IN KU LINEUP Nebraska will find out Saturday night whether Jay hawkers Wayne Hightower and Bill Bridges can effect ively cover a man moving on the outside. NU Hopes to Break Long Drouth at KU By Hal Brown Nebraska has never won a basketball game in Allen Fieldhouse at Kansas and if they are to do it this year it will be of the major upset variety. The Huskers won the last game ever played in Hoch Auditorium on the Jayhawker campus with a 66-55 win in 1955. Kansas moved into the present arena a few days later. Saturday's game will be the first of two unenviable as signments for the Huskers this weekend. After the Kansas game Nebraska returns home to face Kansas State Mon day. The Wildcats and Jayhawks are tied for the top spot in the Big Eight with 8-2 records. Nebraska is in seventh place with a 3-7 mark. Nebraska brbke a seven-game losing streak with an 83 61 victory over Oklahoma in the last outing Monday night. The Huskers nearly upset the Jayhawkers in their Lin coln meeting before Kansas pulled out a 38-33 win. The score was tied at 15-all at the half and with eight minutes left in the game Nebraska led, 26-24. Hopes for Same Defense Husker coach Jerry Bush said he hopes the Jayhawkers use the same type of defense that was employed here. Bush said that both he and his players are convinced that Wayne Hightower and Bill Bridges, the big men in the Kansas lineup, are not as effective trying to cover a man moving on the outside. The Nebraska mentor indicated he would start the same lineup Saturday night that opened against Oklahoma. This would find Tom Russell and Ivan Grupe at forwards, Bill Bowers at center with Rex Swett and Jan Wall in the back court. Grupe broke into the starting lineup against the Soon ers when Jim Kowalke injured an ankle against Oklahoma State. The Husker from Byron scored 15 points in his start ing debut. , Bush was elated with the Huskers showing against Ok lahoma. "After seven straight defers ;t would have been real easy for our lads to figure that this season was over," Bush said. "Instead, they got up o f f the floor and really played effective basketball." MIKE'S PARA LAND SERVICE 17th & Vine HE2-2077 Is Offering four Choice Lubrication FREE WM Aa Oil Caaaga (W Carry Mm Popular Irwt Of Oil) OR WASH AND LUBRICATION All SarYica Calk $1.50 $2.00 SAVE EVERY DAY OV GASOLINE SUPER REGULAR J2. SUPER ETHYL . . STOP IN SOON AND UT US PROVE TO VOU TNAT "SERVICE IS OL'R BUSINESS" 17th and VINE We all make mistakes... K V" i i ' UN ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE v ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Don't meet your Waterloo at the typewriter perfectly typed papers begin with Conasable! Yon can rob out typing errors with just aa ordinary pencil eraser. It's that simple to erase without a trace on Corrasable. Saves time, temper, and money! Your choice of Corrasable in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin in handy 100- sheet packets and 500 -sheet boxes. Only baton makes Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPEK CORPORATION (ij) PITTS FIELD, MASS. Nebraska Faces Illinois In NROTC Tournament By Cloyd Clark The Navy ROTC basketball team will go to Chicago this weekend to play in the National NROTC basketball tourna ment. The Nebraska sailors will face the University of Hlinois ROTC team in the first game of the Chicago tourney. The tournament is composed of the four winners of the regional tournaments. To qualify for the tourna ment, Nebraska - beat the Kansas ROTC team, 61-59, in the regional tournament held ui the Coliseum in January. Tuesday night, the Navy squad whipped the Dents, 39 29, to advance to the quarter finals of the all-University in tramural tournament in the independents division. Mike Stacey, 6-5 center, has been the season's high scorer with' a 20-point average. Lt. William F. McCauley is the coach of the Chicago bound hoops ters. Members of the team are: Mike Stacey, Tom Simmons, Dean Prazak, Dick Ratzlaff, Jim Davis, Bob K r a 1 1, Don Schaefer, Bill Dick, Wayne Howlett, Russ Frericks, and Fred Howlett. Three Meets Set For NU Mermen Coach Dick Klass's swim mers face a full round of ac tion this weekend as they conclude the regular season before going into the Big Eight championships March 2-4. The Husker mermen will meet Pittsburg State of Kan sas at 7:30 p.m. Friday and will take on Grinnell and Kan sas State in a triangular Sat urday at 3 p.m. Both meets will be in the Coliseum Pool. Sunday the Huskers will participate in an AAU meet at the Coliseum with prelimi naries beginning at 10 a.m. and finals getting under way at 3 p.m. Is COLLEGE NITE 70th 8 Sumner TONIGHT, FEBR. 24 Ray Rosenow ORCHESTRA Tha Big Sound hi Dance Music For Ret. Ph. IV 8-2825 4 tit lhm Phi P sis Disqualified Kappa Sigma defeated Beta Theta Pi, 55-52, and Beta Sigma Psi downed Ag Men,' 45-28, Wednesday night in battles between the un defeated In the Fraternity A division of the intramural basketball tourney. Phi Delta Theta thumped Alpha Tau Omega, 34-16, in the Fraternity-C division. The ATOs, losers to Phi Kappa Psi earlier in the tour ney, were advanced when the Phi Psis were disquali fied. , Ed Higginbotham, director of intramurals explained that the Phi Psis were disquali fied for using one of their own men as an official. Hig ginbotham also said the offi cial used a fictitious name. Tourney scores: Tfclrf Round: Fratrattr-C Phi Delta Theta 34 Alpha Tau Omcsa IS Frateraltr-A Kappa Siona 55 ... .Beta Theta Pi St Beta Sigma Psi 45 As Hea S Burr-Selkck-A Hitchcock 58 Andrawi 4 Gua H 51 Burnett SS Indeaendent-A Navy ROTC J .Deata SS Pacera 36 plar Boya 31 Secoaa Boaad: FrateraKr-B feiftma Chi S Phi Kappa Pal forfait) Student Union Tour of Europe Membership Limited To Undergraduate and Recent Graduates of Nebraska I otca State Missouri Kansas State 62 Days All Inclusive lv. Montreal June 22. . .Ait. Montreal Aug. 12 Sailing on Canadian Pacific's EMPRESS of ENGLAND Mary Jane Mulvaney Chaperon F or Folders and Information See . . Bill McKinnon, Student Activitiec Office or Write Lincoln Tour & Travel Agency GATEWAY SHOPPING CENTER Lincoln, Neb. Ph. ID 4-5902 QUO xrce nnnr alter K n m i U-fritfc4 BOOKS OPEN I2.-4S a?UlUU 149 N 1h STARTS TODAY Ths strangest story THE STRANGE STORY ..- W lnt WEIRD v child. m DEMONS! Scienca-Fiction has avar told! v I H f 1 ( mm EECRCE SAKDIRS mzm SilELLET A99 11-17? Sm meviM for Ian! Join aar STUDENT MOVIE CLUB 562 PRO WIS, Ann YFYTnYYTntTi THE DIVERSITY OF ELECTRONICS ACTIVIH AT HUGHES PRO- Linear Accelerators VIDES AN IDEAL ENVIRON- Ray. ai Nuclear Fission MENT FOR THE GRADUATING a Remote Handling Dev.cea Photoconductiva Materials THESE ACTIVITIES INCLUDE: a Polaris Guidance Development ArmyNavy Computer Systems Space Ferry - Fixed Array Antenna Fire Control Radar Systems Pulsed Doppler Radar and Anti-Submarine Warfare Naval Tactical Display Systems a 3-Dimensional Radar Air-to-Air Missiles Space Propulsion Systems Tunnel Diodes Infrared Devices Satellite Active Repealer Development Wide Band Scanning Antenna Feed Systems y a Microwave Antennas and Radomes Guidance and Navigation Computers Satellite Communication Systems Satellite Reconnaissance Drone World-Wide Communications Networks Electroluminescence Solid State Display Devices Terminal Communicationa a Une-of-SiohtUHFand VHF Relay Systems Air Traffic Regulation snj Landing System j Pincushion Radar Logi-Scale General Purpose) Computer a Radar Closed Loop Teste Missile-Range Ship Instrumentation Precision Trajectory Measurement System Space Vehicle Subsystems Telemetering Systems Radiation Sources, Detection, , Handling Equipment and Effects Analysis Inertia) Missile Guidance Systems a Machine Tool Controls Microwave Tubes Transistors and Diodes a Rectifiers a Thermal and Magnetic Relays a Crystal Filters a Digital Components and Devices a Plasma Physics Research '4 0 is f , riK In V v! LJ immi 1111 i iim.nU in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS AND PHYSICISTS B.S., M.S. and Ph.0. Chine and Summer Graduates) Members of our -staff will conduct . CAMPUS INTERVIE7S , March 6, 1961 Find out more about the wide range of programs, unique Professional Register, advanced educational programs and relocation allowances offered by Hughes. Fer interview appointment or Informational literature cansak your College Placement Director. Or write Hughes College Placement Office. P.O. Bo 90515, Los Angeles 45, Cslifornm. HUGHES r- L HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY Culver City, El Segundo, Fullerton, Malibu, Newport Beach, Oceansido. Los Angeles, Calif.; Tucson, Arizona '1 P i t I-- r