Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Monday,, March 5, 1962 Maskers Add 2 More To Mat Victim List Wrestlers Up Record To 9-2-1 By BOB BESOM Sports Staff Writer Husker grapplers played poor host in a weekend stand at the Coliseum, sneaking past Omaha U. Friday night, 14-12, and thoroughly trounc ing the Air Force Academy, 19-9, Saturday. The series at home wrapped up ieDrasKa's 1961-62 dual action. Coach Bob Mancuso's boys finished 9-2-1, boasting the top dual showing of a nusKer mat club since 1929 Ob tap for the Nebraska wrestlers next are two of the country. Mancuso's crew will leave Thursday for the Fri day-Saturday Big Eight af fair at Ames, la., then will be whiplng into tip-ton shape lor tne Mar. 24 NCAA fi nals at Oklahoma. Three Husker seniors with stood weekend challenges and finished unbeaten in dual competition. He avyweight jim Kaschke provided wild finales both evenings. And Mike Nissen moved up to the 130 pound weight di vision and had little trouble racking up a pair of wins. Harold Thompson, on t h e other hand, ran into a little static Saturday night. The number one ranked 157- pounaer in the nation won easily over Omaha's Jim Howard Friday, but trailed, 4-3, leaning into the final stanza oposite Falcon DeVere Henderson before picking up his third fall of the season In 7:29. Going into the last match against Omaha U., it was up to Raschke to make or break tin Huskers. And, as in four previous duals in which the match depended on the 240 pounder from Omaha, Ras chke came up with the nec essary tallying. Raschke, who needed a "pin to win," kept Omaha U's Art Fergu son, trying to avoid a fall, on the defensive, 1 Ferguson, behind 5-12, was penalized three times for stal ling and with three seconds remaining in the match, ref eree Chuck Bryant disquali fied him. Husker Dick Van Sickle, a Junior from Omaha, added a pair of victories to his record while previously undefeated Dave Cook took his first dual loss against Omaha. Cook tore a ligament in nis leg wiring the battle with Louie Milioni and was sidelined Saturday night. - Air Force Academy Results 1 : IT'S A PIN FOR NU Harold Thompson, Nebraska 157 pounder and top-ranked in the nation in his weight class, overcame a 4-3 deficit to pin his opponent, DeVere Hen derson of the Air Force, in 7:29 to help Nebraska to a 19-9 win over the Falcons Saturday night. Swimmers Take 4 th In Conference Meet Highest Finish for NU Coach Klaas By AL HANEY Sports Staff Writer Coach Dick Klaas's swim mers finished fourth in the Big Eight swimming champi onships which ended in Ames Saturday to give him Klaas highest finish since coming to Oklahoma was first with 119 points followed by Kansas with 110 points, Iowa State with 87 and Nebraska was fourth with 48. Colorado was fifth with 34 and Kansas State finished last failing to score. Oklahoma State and Missouri don't have swimming teams. Three records were broken during Saturday's seven events. George Winter of Kansas wered the 100 yard backstroke mark of 58:0 set by Bud Pierce of Iowa State in 1961 to :57.3, finishing, just ahead of Pierce. The 400 yard freestyle rec ord set by Oklahoma's Peter Duncan in 1955 was chopped from 4:39.0 to 4:31.5 by an other Oklahoman, Charles Schuette. Kansas's 400 yard medley relay team set a record in )ampuA akndwi ICt-lbi. Die Van Sitkle. Nebraska, de cision rd John Haluska, 4-2. 130-lbs Mike Nissen. Nebraska, dec!- Lnwl Jim Wnnris. 8-1. 137-lbi. Jim Fainvon, Nebraska, deoi- sjimwd Bill Sweet ay, 7-4. u-7.il.. Thad Wolfe. Air Force, At- 157-lbs. Harold Thompson. Nebraska, i-A iuvm-. Kftnriprann in 7:39. i7.lha. Terry Isaacson, Air Force, de- Vm Fay. 7.3. i-njh. ftnrae Bruns. Air Force, de- aUimi RAnVm Ottoman. 54. Hr.vTvrirht Jim Raschke, Nebraska, sttnmd Charles Mahan in 8 58. iimihi u. Results ISMbs. Ilck Van Sickle. Nebraska, 4eciKioned Dick Bottoroff. 74. 130-lbs. Mike Nissen, Nebraska, dec! J J TIM ITiivB. 1-1 i.s. Louie Milioni. Omaha V., de- cto'rmed Dave Cook. 5-3. , 147-lbs. Andrs McWIlhams, Omaha U. j .LUmJ .Tnfcn Mrlntyre. 6-2. 157.) be. Harold Thompson. Nebraska, decisioned Jim Howard, 7-3. lffi-lbs. GecTOT Greenshaw, Omaha U slec'sioned Ken rax. a-i. 177-lbs. Wayne Backus, Omaha U., de- elsVjncd Gordon Caipimn. (Hi. . HeatrweisTtit Jim Raschke, Nebraska, mn aver Art Ferguson by dlsqiisliiic READ NEBRASKAN ADS EVERYONE'S LAUGHING ABOUT EAST BERLIN AFTER SEEING THJ ApSW ajtftssurejlrss fksf , SosHt Ox.- fa JAMES ewr MOftST lUCHHOtf Pamela mrm wo. 3 Mre f t f not,, showing; at thc ADDED is f 41,,'it"Kflfc i j I ) 4W(sf INTER-VARSITY CHRIS TIAN FELLOWSHIP will hold its weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. There will be a group discussion of the Book of Acts in 332 Student Un ion. i Sr Today is the last day to sign up for the Midwest Col legiate Student Tour of Eur ope. Those taking the trip will leave Montreal June 21 for 62 days , in the British Isles, Scandinavian Pennin sula, and European continent. Applications for the tour are being taken at the Student Union Program Office. THE ASSOCIATION OF CHILD EDUCATION will in stall new officers tomorrow at 4:45 p.m. in 200 of Teach ers College. the preliminaries with a 3:49.7 timing. The team of George Winter, Bill Murdock, Don Kemp and Bill Mills then came back to win the event in 3:50.0. Nebraska's team of B i 1 Henry, Vern Bauers, B i 1 Fowles and Phil S w a i m turned in a 3:54.6 in the pre liminaries and came back with a 3:58.3 time to finish third. Husker Vern Bauers f i n ished second in the 200 yard breaststroke with a 1:06.5. just 1.5 seconds off the first place time of winner Bill Murdock of Kansas. Bauers' second place finish was the highest individual finish for the Huskers in the three day meet. NU's Bill Fowles turned in :57.0 clocking in 'the 100 yard butterfly for a fourth place finish, just 1.2 seconds behind winner John Kemp of Kansas. Bill Henry and Larry Fer- rell took third and fifth re spectively in the 100-yard backstroke for the Huskers. Henry's :58.5 was just 1.2 be hind first place winner George Winter of Kansas. Ferrell had a :64.5 for filth. Husker Phil Swaim had a :52.5 clocking in the prelimi naries of the 100-yard free style but finished sicth in the finals with a :53.3. The Huskers' Chuck Levy was fifth in the three meter diving with 277.95 points. Iowa State's Fritz Hagen won the event with 405.90 points. Nebraska's other diver, Jay, Smith, suffered a deep cut on his left hand when he hit the board while practicing and did not compete in the finals. Four school records f e 1 1 during the three days, with Bill Fowles pacing the Hus kers with two. His 2:16.9 200- yard butterfly and his :57.0 100-yard butterfly were both school records. Swaim's 2:13.8 in the 220 yard freestyle and Bauers' 1:06.5 in the 100 yard breast- stroke accounted for the other two. DAILY HEBnASCtAH I m Titles at Stake Tonight, Tuesday ip(0mr Three intramural tourna-lgins in the IM basketball ment "A" basketball titles could be decided tonight as the final week of firing be- Huskers Seek Last Win On Road at OU Tonight Wildcats, i Butts lied By DAVE WOHLFARTH Sports Editor Nebraska will try to sal vage a win in its last road game of the year when the Husker cagers meet Okla homa at Norman tonight. Coach Jerry Bush's crew will be fighting for fifth place in the Big Eight standings af ter Saturday night's loss to Oklahoma State, 65-64, at Still water. The one-point loss dropped the Huskers out of a fourth place tie with the Cowboys. Nebraska has won four and lost eight in loop play. Okla homa is in sixth with a 3-7 mark. In their only previous meet ing Nebraska edged the Soon- ers, 57-56, in Lincoln. A 45-foot desperation shot with one second left cost the Huskers the game that would have practically cinched a first division finish in the con ference standings Saturday night. Mo Iba, who recently re turned to the O-State lineup after suffering a knee injury, fired the shot that gave the Cowboys the win to climax a red-hot battle. Nebraska held a one-point 64-63 advantage with four sec- Big 8 Standings Colorado 11 Kansas State 11 Iowa Slate I Oklahoma State .... 5 NEBRASKA 4 Pet. Pti Odd. .17 751 89 .817 2S 5!1 .615 M 8.14 .417 6t7 m JXU 7.1S 130 .300 .179 6.1$ .850 77J 79 .181 688 764 onds remaining when Cow. boys Eddie Buch outjumped NU's Tom Russell and ticDed the ball to Iba who fired the long, arching shot from near miacourt. The game was close all the WSV and the IpoH rhanaaA hands nine times in the first Mi..S2rtV....V.:: ' half alone. Neither team was K,n" ' Airman nlinnil It.. A. I I w ..Mu WJiuureiflaniive Kansas State's fi0-4fi sween PlntS- nast PnlnraHn Kntnrrtnv nicrht Nebraska, after trailing 38- monopolized the Big Eight 35 at the half, came back to limelight last week. K-State go ahead of Oklahoma State shattered the Buffs hopes of in tne final minutes only to marenmg through the Big lose its fourth game of the Eight undefeated and earned season by a one-point marein. a tie for the number one peg ine loss was also the third on tne conference chart in defeat in a row for Nebraska the process. and lowered the Husker sea- Both clubs are 11-1. m StStWsl 4a O Iff I tTTl oun ictuiu w o-io. While tne league nower. Daryl Petsch, sophomore houses were battling it out NU guard, was the game's at Manhattan, Nebraska and nign scorer with 24 points uwanoma State were involved while Bunch led O-State with In a skirmish to decide the 19. Russell added 16 a n d fourth notch. Oklahoma State Charley Jones hit 12 to aid edged NU, 65-64 tne Husker cause. The final chanter of I9fil, OKLA STATE 62 Bl2 Elfht P3?P histnrv NEBRASKA 7 2-2 16 Epperley 3 7.10 1 will be written this week with Russell Petseh Vincent SWI'tt Jones Bowers Slad'nik Grupe 1 1-1 2a BSncrnn I li 19 the whole leaSue involved s 12 un& 1 U I . c"Ple games tonight c Si Semper s VL "I couM important in the fi u-i 4 wuey 1 n-n 2 He ins 0 0-0 Totals 27 10-16 64 Totals N-hraska Oklahoma State Attendance: 27 11-14 65 . . 35 4 38 2763 3,500. Gymnasts Finish With Win The Husker ..gymnasts wound up the regular season with a win over the Air Force Academy and Colorado University Saturday at the P.E. Building. Nebraska trounced Air Force. 65-47, in one . half of the double dual meet and rolled over Colorado, 77-35, to complete the weekend compe' tition. Nebraska, having lost only to Denver and Mankato, will carry an 8-2 record into the All-College Championships at Boulder, Mar. 16-17. The Huskers captured first in 5 of the 7 events, with Sophomore Dennis Albers taking the top honors in free exercise, trampoline, and tumbling. Gene Hart won the sidehorse and Louie Burkel grabbed first in the high bar lor tne other Nebraska wins Albers added several points Help Wanted Agriculture Union Monday Wednesday Friday 10 o.m.-12 noon Apply Mr. Borne Nebraska City Union nal standings Kansas State at Oklahoma State, and Colo rado at Missouri Also on tap tonight is a Kansas-Iowa State battle at Ames and the Huskers at Oklahoma Kansas State will be here torNebraska's total by plac- at tne Husker grounds Ing Second in the side horse !Siay- .d tLhursda.y j y,iu i , vivianuiua niu ue ai .Missouri. and high bar and fifth on the rwi, e a v cf,n i : j , Oklahoma State and Kansas onn imga. nc nuJbeu piac- at Co orado will terminal tho ing in me parallel Dars when Conference action Saturday. ne missea a Dar and fell off the apparatus. tourney. Defending A 1 1-University and Fraternity champion Kap. pa Sigma-A meets Sigma Phi Epsilon-A in the finals of the Fraternity-A division. The Sig Eps handed the Kappa Sigs their first loss In two years a week ago in the only previous meeting be tween the two teams. If the Kappa Sigs win to night, a rematch will be staged tomorrow night in the double elimination tourney. The Burr-Selleck-A crown Is on the line tonight as Can-ficld-A and Seaton II-A tan gle. Canfield won the first meeting with Seaton and looms as the favoike to re peat. If Seaton wins, the two will play again Tuesday night. Navy ROTC, defending In dependent champ and a strong threat for this year's All-University crown, will meet Dental College in the other 'A' finale tonight. The two teams will battle for the Independent 'A' tour ney. If any team suffers its first loss tonight, than another playoff will be necessary Tuesday night. Fraternity and Burr-Selleck 'B' finals and the Fraternity 'C championship are also scheduled tonight, along with continuation of the "Cornhus ker" Tourney and the Ag Col lege Tourney. Tonital's Schedule Af Cotlere Ag College tourney. P.E. Court 1 5 p.m. Siema Nu-B vs. Phi Kappa Psi-B (Frat.-B). 6:30 p.m. Delta Upsilon-C vs. Sirma Phi Epsilon-C (FYat.-C). 7:30 p.m. Canfield-B vs. Andrews-B (Burr-Selleck-B). 8:30 p.m. Beta Thela Pi-A vs. Boucher A (Cornhusker). P.E. Court t 5 p m. Sigma Phi Epsilon-A vs. Kap. pa Slcma-A (Frat.-A). 6:30 p.m. Canfield-A vs. Seaton IIA (Burr-Selleck-A). 7:30 p.m. Navy vs. Dental Coilem (Ind.-A). 8:30 p.m. Kegs vs. ATO-Slf Nu win ner i Cornhusker). . ,,rer"e 1. Dennis Albers N) SohomberKer (AF) 3. Charles Williams "ave "arae" Steve Swihart , Trampoline 1. Albers (N) 2. Weaver .J i-aua senroaas to 4. Swihart N) 0. uavia iumer u;). Sidehorse 1. Gene Hart (N) 2. Al bers (N) 3. Smull (AF) 4. Rausch F) 0. uarren may tj. . High bar 1. Lou Burkel (N) 2. Al. eers (N) 3. Paul Kos (AF) 4. Hardee a. nes itoian to. Parallel bars 1. Kos (AF) 2 Burkel (N) 3. Nef (AF) 4. Warden (C) 3. Rich ard McCoy N). Still rings 1. Harmon (AF) 2. Rausch (AF) 3. Warden (C) 4. Burkel (N) i. Al bers (N). Tumbling - 1. Albers (N) 2. Williams (N) 3. Weaver (AF) 4. (tie) Wardell (C) and Hall (AF). BE Our MODELS are in demand PREPARED TO EARN BY TRAINING UNDER COMPETENT DIRECTION 1129 R St. HE 5-2502 Eno skills which enhance business or so cio! contacts and everyday living as well. TRAIN to ADVANCE in the profitable career of modeling. 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P. Colbert, Chairman, Committee on Occupational Placement. li you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer f - v I " h mA ' l S"ti'3 i J ye". ,V-J i i o . ' w . t- tf I 'l'A mmmmmi i r if " fro JL"$ Learning never stops for engineers at Western Electric There's no place at Western Electric for engi neers who feel that college diplomas signify the end of their education. However, if a man can meet our quality standards and feels that he is really just beginning to learn . . . and if he is ready to launch his career where learning is an important part of the job and where graduate-level training on and off the job is encour aged we want and need him. At Western Electric, in addition to the nor mal learning-while-doing, engineers are en couraged to mov e ahead in their fields by sever al types of educational programs. Western maintains its own full-time graduate engineer ing training program, seven formal manage ment courses, and a tuition refund plan for out-of-hours college study. This learning atmosphere is just one reason why a career at Western Electric is so stimu lating. Of equal importance, however, is the nature of the work we do. Our new engineers are taking part in projects that implement the whole art of modern telephony, from high speed sound transmission and solar cells to electronic telephone offices and computer-controlled production techniques. Should you join us now, you will be coming to Western Electric at one of the best times in the company's history. In the management area alone, several thousand supervisory jobs are expected to open up to W.E. people within the next 10 years. And our work of building communications equipment and systems be comes increasingly challenging and important as the communications needs of our nation and the world continue to increase. Challenging opportunities txlsf now al Wsm (Isctric for tlsctrlcal, mechanical, industrial, and chemi cal engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business majors. All qualified applicants will re ceive careful consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For mora Information about Western Electric, write College Rela tions, Western Electric Company, Doom 6206, 222 Broadway, New York 38, New York. And bo sure to arrange for a Western Electric Interview when our college representatives visit your campus. T A Y HSHursctUtlMS WMI Of IM I Principal mtnufscturlng locations at Chicago, lll.i Kearny, ft. j., Baltimore, Rd.i Indlantpollt hid . Aii.ntnw. ...... . m. Winston-Salem, N. C, Buffalo, N. Y., North Andover, Mass., Omaha, Neb., Ksnta, Clh Ito , Engineering Research Center, Princeton, ft. 1. T.lete Coloration! Moth! Ut ?oc XT&llfSZ? wiiion csnisrs in jj cities ana installation headquarters In It cities. 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