ill Wednesday, January 10, 1962 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 .Devaney Anxious Devaney Meets Players, Press; Fischer WilVRemain as Assistant i Bv Dave Bob Devanev. who is exoected to take over the Nebraska football coaching post, met tirst time yesterday, then had fired at him by the Nebraska Devaney, who will take as soon as the Wyoming Board of Trustees release him from his contract, expressed his desire to get to work on iua new jod. He called the Nebraska job a "step up" for him and said, "I think the people of Ne braska are interested in foot ball and with this attitude, will provide us with the help to make a successful pro gram." He described the Husker gridders as "enthusiastic and interested." "This squad is bigger than ours (at Wyom ing) for we stressed speed and quickness. "Around 200 pounds is plenty big for a football player but we're not against a 250- pounder if he likes to hit peo ple and can move.?' May Cancel Alum Battle The 46-year old coach said that he and his staff will have to evaluate the squad thoroughly this spring. He plans a spring session of four practices a week but may not end it with the traditional spring game with the Alums this year. ''We may not have it (Alumni-Varsity game) this year. If the alums are organized and put in at least a week's practice, it's worth while, otherwise it's not." Devaney, who describes himself somewhere in between hard-nosed and easy-going on the field, has his work cut out for him between now and spring training practice. "Things To Do' He listed as things to ac complish "Recruiting is the number one item, but we've a lot to do on campus also. We will study the films, evaluating the players now in school and figuring where they will fit in. We've got to see that the players are eligible and to ac quaint ourselves with them the best we can." 'What's Shown' In connection with spring drills, Devaney, who was head coach at Wyoming the past five years, said, "We won't wait "fer any boy to get into condition. We're interested in what happens not potential, but what's shown." - "Everybody has a chance to make the team, although we will take last fall into con sideration. The new Husker assistants will depend upon which men come from Wyoming, accord ing to Devaney. Jim Ross, who coached the ends and de fensive backs, accompanied Devaney on the trip to Lin coln and will become one of the new coaches. Cletus Fischer, who has been assigned to contact high school coaches and visit in the area for recruiting pur poses, will remain as an as sistant and Devaney said there was "a possibility of one other of the Nebraska assist ants" retaining his job. Wyoming Assistants Devaney had from six to seven assistants at Wyoming and expects several of them to make the switch to NU. Some of these men may fig ure in the scramble for the DAILY NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS fOLicr Classified ads for the pB NrbrukkB must be entered two days in advance nd must be paid for in advance. Correction will be made tf errors are brought to our attention within 48 hour. - WANTED WANTED: Flower. Trip o Denver for twn- 1 Africa's fiszis: are tksy reslly a thrcst? The American Nazi Party Is a nest of hatemongers. nd It's only one of 1,000 radical right-wing groups. In this week's Post U. S. senator speaks out In "Voice of Dissent" He rips Into home-grown fascists. And tells why he thinks they're even more dangerous than Reds. The Saturday Ewrn'm POST O WIU6 MOW M M Wohlfarth the Husker gridders for the an hour s session of questions Dress, radio and TV corns. over as NU head grid mentor head coach's spot at Wyom ing, however. Devaney's expressed reac tion to the Wyoming trustees decision to wait until the regn- lar Feb. 2 meeting to take action on his request for a release from his contract as "I'm still waiting." "I will honor the contract if they demand it, however, requested the release early and they indicated I would get it," he stated. No Grid Transfers Devaney said he didnt an ticipate any Wyoming foot ball players to transfer to Ne braska and indicated he cer tainly wouldn't encourage this in any way. The former Michigan State assistant said he em ploys a multiple offense type of football, a variation of the original Spartan brand. De vaney's formations include a double wing with a split end, the use of a slot back and sometimes a spread or a T formation. The line is us ually unbalanced to the right. "At first, we will be limited till the players get acquainted with the formations," he ex plained. Conferences Equal Comparing the Skyline Con ference to the Big Eight, the soon-to-be Scarlet boss said, "When we first came into the Skyline Conference the Big Eight was stronger but the teams have balanced out since." Devaney will leave Lincoln tomorrow enroute to Chicago to attend the NCAA Conven tion. He then plans to spend some time in Ohio with Tippy Dye, NU's new athletic direc tor, then return to NU. He and his family will move to Lincoln as soon as they find a house. (Devaney has two children 20-year old Mike, a junior at Wyoming, and 17 year old Patricia, a senior in high school.) Devaney said the two prob lems which he has encount ered at Nebraska and plans to check into are (1) the scheduling of players' classes to permit the athletes to at tend all football practices and (2) Nebraska's scholastic re quirements, in comparison to the rest of the schools in the Big Eight. OPPORTUNITIES FOR EE, ME, PHYSICS AND MATH MAJORS AS FIELD SERVICE ENGINEERS IN THE MISSILE SYSTEMS FIELD AC, the Electronic Diviwon of General Motor, presently hat petition available for Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Physics and Math majors to work os Field Service Engineers on missile systems. You will work on AC't all-inertial guidance system utilizing digital computers for the TITAN II missile. When you. join us you will be given a three-month training course that includes these interesting subjects: WEAPONS SYSTEMS THEORY OF GYROS THEORY OF OPERATION OF GYROS IN A STABILIZED PLATFORM STABILIZATION AND MEASUREMENT LOOPS OF A , PLATFORM THEORY OF OPERATION OF ERECTION LOOPS THEORY OF AIRBORNE DIGITAL COMPUTERS OVERALL SYSTEM CONCEPTS Following this training period you will be assigned to installation and check-out of the guidance system for the TITAN II. Assignments will include positions at military installations or in Milwaukee. Contact your College Placement Office regarding a General Motors-AC campus interview or send the form below to Mr. G. F. Raatch, Director of Scientific ond Professional Employment, Dept. 5753, 7929 South Howell, Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Thiiradejy, January 11, 1962 An Cqual Opportunity tmpleyw AC $PARIC PLUG THE ELECTRONICS DIVISION OF GENERAL MOTORS MILWAUKEE LOS ANGELES BOSTON Achiever Imrfi'f CrfeVmee Syrw far . TAN mail lee . . . emWnej Woripof'onaf fvetarm far the S-MCSD mnd -47 mitamh . . . ACIiwverfene atehile mdifhphmm , for mar Wermotiea reoardlne NeM wlrh AC. mni fhle ferra tot Mr. O. . Dept. 5751, AC spark Maa DMaieti Wilwfc 1, Wlwsnila tr"T crrr and statu Nebraskan Sports Devaney Liked Husker football players ex pressed favorable opinions of Nebraska's choice for football coach, Bob Devaney, follow ing a twenty minute talk by Devaney yesterday. The players interviewed said they liked Davaney's straight forwardness and the way he laid it on the line regarding his future plans. Some com ments: Gary Toogood I think he will be a good coach. He told as he expected a hard-nosed football team and both Spring and Fall camps would be real tough. I like th.; ,'dea and I think most of the players also like it. Larry Donovan I like his straight forwardness. He told us what he planned to do and just what he expected from us. Winning is the important thing. When you talk about football being fun you mean winning football. Bob Jones He talks like he knows what he wants and how he wants things done. Jed Rood I like him. He seemed real straight forward and presented a new and fresh point of view. Monte Kiffin He didn't beat j around the bush and that's what I liked about him. He said he wants the players and coaches to be close. I think he's a good man. Ron Gilbreath He told us what he wanted and I like the way he comes to the point. He seems to have a good personality. Chick Garner I think he is going to be all right. He has a way of expressing himself well. NU Coach Denies Vincent Transfer NU basketball coach Jerry Bush has denied rumors that sophomore Husker center Bill Vincent will transfer to Creighton at the end of this semester. Bush said yesterday, "Bill has thought about it, we've talked with him and I think he'll stick with us." iarvlee InatnMrity epperlunttlae ' y JrHONL. to Take Over NU Duties STAR OF WEEK Cager Ivan Grupe is the recipient of this week's Daily Nebraskan Star of the Week award. Grupe, demonstrating a new found shooting ability, has been the big gun in the NU attack in the last two weeks. Recent Point Splurge Earns Grupe Award By Jerry Hansen Ivan Grupe is this week's Daily Nebraskan "Star of the Week". Grupe was warded this for his brilliant play in the Kansas-Nebraska game. He was high point man in Huskers Host Triangular Jake Geier's unbeaten Ne braska gymnastic team will host Fort Hayes and Colorado State in , a triangular meet this Saturday. It will start at 3 p.m. in the P. E. Build ing. Geier named Dennis Albers, Charles Williams. Louis Burkel, Dick McCoy, Larry TeSelle, Robert Kuhn, Steve Swihart, Tom Sitzman, and Gerry Harvey as the Huskers to participate. The Huskers, undefeated in dual meets last year, beat Kansas State 64-46 in their opening match of the season - Tareyton l V delivers Lf7i i r. the flavor - -. j DVAL FILTER DOES IT! V Tareyton' Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!' says Juliua (Cookie) Quintus, ace javelin man and B.M.A.C. (Big Man Around Coliseum). "A Tareyton would even make Mars mellow," gays Cookie. 'Tareyton's a rara avis among cigarettes. It's one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus. Pick up a pack today and you'll find there's Pliny of pleasure in Tareyton." V i M T if f V i ' ' : -v : ' that game with 17 points and also hauled in 15 rebounds. His good overall play was capped by his last second lay up which gave Nebraska a 69-67 victory. "Big Ive," who comes from Byron, Nebraska, has come into his own this year as a junior. Since the Christ mas break, he has averaged 12.4 points a game, including Nebraska's West Coast tour and the pre-season Big 8 tournament. Ivan is a junior in eligibil ity although this is his fourth year in school. He is in Arts and Sciences working for a major in physiology. When asked what he thought of tonight's game with Okla homa, Grupe said. 'They are not as fast as some of the teams we have played and we could beat them. They have won two games so far and will be tough to beat." He also commented that the Big Eight Conference would 'be a wide-open race this year and that anyone of the schools could win it. Huskers To Play Sooners Tonight Coach Jerry Bush will open with the same five cagers that started against Kansas when Nebraska plays Okla homa tonight at 8:05 p.m. in the Coliseum. Both the Huskers and Soon ers are undefeated in confer ence play. Nebraska tripped KU 69-67 last weekend and Oklahoma won its first two starts, knocking off Iowa State and Missouri. Oklahoma was fourth in the pre-season Big Eight tourney and is 4-8 overall, but is one of the hottest teams in the league right now. NU has won five and lost seven. Bush indicated he will start 6-7 Tom Russell, 6-5 Ivan Grupe, 6-5 Daryl Petsch, 6-4 Chuck Sladovnik and 6-1 Rex Swett against OU but will again rely heavily on his bench strength, composed mainly of vet Bill Bowers and sophs Charley Jones, Bill Vin cent, Dennis Puelz and Neil Nannen. Oklahoma w ill counter with a tall lineup, including 6-7 Warren Fonts and 6-4 Jack Lee at the forwards, 6-7 Stan Morrison at center, and 6-3 Tom McCurdy and 5-9 Eddie Evans at guards. Evans, the Sooner spark plug, was an all-tourney se lection in the Kansas City tourney. Bush said Oklahoma had "good overall size" and that he was expecting a battle of the boards." 'TWIST TWIST CONTEST First Place Couple Second Place Couple Third Place Couple LPLi West O COLLEGE NIGHT Featuring "The Quidons" FRIDAY, JAN. 12 St ,MM IO-ll Ofl e.Sf nCW...H .Jfefcai. :.:i:':S:.::;:i: ;:;:.-::: :.''!ii:f .: fiM :iv...V:Si PURE WHITE OUTW fILTER DUALFILTER Tareyton faint t Sf.m CymKpj2imk wrnMtiaMm3im IM Cage Slate Tonight's Games 1 K CmK i 5 05 p.m. Pioneer v. Ancit P.E. Car t 5:05 p.m. Delta Sigm Phi v. Pi Kip P Phi Thursday's Games Af relief 6: IS p.m. Alpha Gemma RJm-A va. Farm rfoune-A 7:15 p m At Men va. Cornhuatter-A 1:15 p m. Alpha Gamma Sima-A vs. Browa Palace-A P.K. Ceart 1 5:05 p.m. Siirma Chi-C va. Kappa Siema-C :15 piu. I'ntearhablee VI Phvsicltta 7:15 p.m. Pharmacy vv TTie Loeere 815 p.m. Beta Theta Pi-C va. Phi Kap pa Psi-C v P.E. Ceart t 5 05 p.m. Alpha Tea Omeca-e) vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon-B 15 p.m. Sirma Cht-8 va. Kappa Sigma-B 7:15 p.m. Beta Tbeta Pi-B va. PM Kappa Psi-B 15 p.m. Phi Delta neta-8 va Sifma Nu-B Vanity Ceart IS p m. PM Gamma DeUa-B va. Delta IpsiJcm-B 715 p m Sitma PM EpsvlonB va. Theta Xi-B 1:15 pm Delta Taa Deka-B t. Beta Sigma Pat-B Preaa Ceart :ii p m. Sigma Alpha Fsloa-C vs. Phi Delia Theta-C 7: IS p.m. Delta Sigma Pi-B va. Alpha Gamma Rho-B I ts p.m. Oanmuskera vs. Farm Hoose Travel X times faster than imagination and. 4' TIME II $25 .......e..e.. $15 ...910 nri SL WW .1 2 ACTIVATD CKARCOAt INNER FltTER cSh5hM mm -57.. 1 . Ea. . '''':::::::':.:::'::::-V:-':::.:::': ; ::.:: ::? 7 1 t 1- 4 J s. i SCHOOL. DEOKK- avauaiuty OATt