Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 10, 1958 KU Off To Boulder The Kansas Jayhawkers, fresh from a 102-46 romp over Nebraska, meet Colorado tonight in a game that could boost KU back into third place in the Big Eight. Buffs Deep In Cellar The Kansans will be playing at Boulder and this in itself always seems to be a threat to any team. Kansas, in its game there last year, had to fight off a stubborn Colorado team to come home with a 68-57 win. The game was tied with a little over five minutes to go but Colorado, losing their big center, finally went down before the Jayhawkers. This year, although Colorado is deep down in the conference cellar, the Buffalofoals will still be a threat to the Jawhackers. Saturday night Missouri squeaked by the Buffalofoals 55-51 in an overtime thriller that gave evidence that Colorado will put up a fight against anyone. Kansas' coach Dick Harp said Saturday night he believed the Buffalo-Joes would be tough and if anyone didn't think so, "just look at the fight they gave us out there last year." Haro cautiously added, "If we fight as hard Monday as we did tonight, I think we'll do all right." In the Nebraska game Saturday night, the Jayhawkers broke almost every record they could think of. Wilt Chamberlain broke the old conference scoring record set by Kansas University and other members of the Big Eight dominated the 35th annual Michigan State Relays at East Lansing, Michigan Saturday night. Coach Bill Easton's Kansas took four firsts and tied for another. Ernie Shelby won first place in the broad jump with a 24-foot $ \frac{4}{1} - $ inch jump. This was nearly a foot below his jump in Kansas' dual meet with Oklahoma last Wednesday. There is no actual team championship but Kansas was top scorer with 42 points, Oklahoma was third with 22, Kansas State took fifth with 18 points and Nebraska had 16 1/5 points to rank sixth among the field of 22. Olympic champion Al Certer took first in the shot put with a 54-foot 7-inch heave. He led a Big Eight domination in that event as Oklahoma took second and third, Missouri fourth and Kansas State fifth. Cross countryman Don Greenlee won first place in the 2-mile run. KU Romps In Relays The KU distance medley relay team of Ray Wyatt, Bob Tague, Jerry McNeal and Tom Skutke won the fourth first place for the Jayhawkers. High jumper Bob Cannon tied for first in his event to give KU its first place tie. Other scoring for the Jayhawkers included: Charles Tidwell, second in the 75-yard dash. Winner Dee Givens of Oklahoma defeated Tidwell by about six inches, the same distance. Tidwell finished ahead of Givens in the meet here last week. Verlyn Schmidt, fifth in the mile run. Ray Wyatt, tie for third in the 600-yard run. Kansas third in the two-mile relay. Shelby, second in the 75-yard low hurdles. Brian Travis, second in the two-mile run. The next meet for Easton's men will be Friday when they host Michigan State. High Scorers All Top 40-Mark Saturday Seattle's Elgin Baylor is sitting pretty with "four aces" today in his running battle with Oscar Robinson and Wilt Chamberlain for the national college basketball scoring championship. The race reached its most sensational peak of the season Saturday night when all three went over the 40-mark. Baylor scored 46 in a 107-71 victory over Gonzaga, Robertson connected for 43 in Cincinnati's 100-78 conquest of St. Joseph's and Chamberlain scored 46 in a 102-46 Kansas romp over a Nebraska team that has a 6-4 center as its tallest starter. Harp Empties Bench Kansas center B. H. Born. Chamberlain's 46 points broke the mark Born set against Colorado in 1953. John Cleland stole a Nebraska pass with 1:20 left in the game and raced almost full court to lay up a field goal that gave Kansas their 101st point, and broke the Kansas scoring mark. The record was set by the 1955 Kansas team against Rice. Former conference high for the Jayhawkers was 93 points, that being against Oklahoma in 1954. The Field House record for the Jayhawkers was 92 points which they picked up against Missouri last season. Harp emptied his bench, using all 12 players freely throughout the game. He played Chamberlain all the way until Wilt had gotten his 46th and record breaking point. Then, Probably the most excitement of the evening came when the loud speakers announced early in the second half that Iowa State had tied up Kansas State 51-51. Kansas fans then waited for word that might breathe life into the Jayhawks' hopes for a conference tie. Then, as the announcement of Kansas State's victory came, disappointment was apparent among the Kansas fans. It was Chamberlain who looked like a different man in play.Saturday night. He set a new school free throw record by hitting 18 of 23. with 2:19 left, he sidelined Chamberlain. The first parish meeting house in Concord, Mass. was rebuilt in 1901 on the site of the church where the Provincial Congress met in 1774. KANSAS CITY. Mo. —(UP)—Tex Winter, too busy with his tirrid Kansas State Wildcats to keep up with basketball coaching switches, looked more and more the prophet today as his club inched toward its second conference title in three years. Winter, who when queried Sunday night if he had any interest in returning to Marquette, admitted "I didn't even know Jack (Nagle) had quit," said before the season began that this was potentially his finest squad. Winter Not Considering Move Back To Marquette BOSTON — (UP)— Ted Williams' .388 batting average in 1957 was the highest in the major leagues since 1941 when the Boston Red Sox Slugger attained the peak of his career with a .406 average. The Wildcats, with a 16-1 record and six straight Big Eight victories, now pace second-place Oklahoma by two full games with Kansas a half notch below. Regarding the Marquette job—a post Winter held in 1951-52 and 52-53-Tex told the United Press he was unaware that Jack Nagle, a former assistant to Winter, had resigned on Saturday. He also scotched reports that Marquette officials had contacted him regarding the job. Williams Holds Highs Winter said "I feel I am well established here at the present . . . but I can say that I left Marquette to come here with some reluctance." The boyish pilot added that he was well satisfied in his present post. During the colonial period, tobacco, rice and indigo were the three principal crops in the South. Manufacturing Engineer Lee H. Baker, like many other engineers, mathematicians and physicists, came to IBM directly from college. Here he tells how he found an excellent opportunity for creative engineering in his area of the expanding electronic computer field. What's it like to be with IBM? "It's difficult," Lee Baker admits, "for a college senior to feel confident when choosing a job. For four years the college student has been trained to be critical and deliberate about making decisions. Now, faced with the biggest decision of all, he has only a few months in which to have job interviews, weigh the facts, and select a company—not to mention passing exams and graduating at the same time." Lee Baker, with a B.S. in Industrial Administration, came to IBM in 1953. Starting as a Technical Engineer in Production Control, he was immediately assigned to the General Manufacturing Education Program—a ten-month course with rotating assignments in all phases of the work—manufacturing, purchasing, production. In addition to formal classroom study, he spent some time in the Boston Sales Office, calling on customers with an IBM salesman. His career was temporarily interrupted by two years with the Air Force in Japan. Back at IBM in 1955, he has since been promoted to Production Control Engineer. His present job is to design systems to insure a smooth flow of work through the plant where the famous electronic computers are manufactured. "It Designing a control system takes creative engineering ability to design these systems," he says, "and it takes administrative ability to 'sell' a system to higher management and make it stick." There are many creative opportunities in IBM Manufacturing Engineering for men with B.S. degrees in electrical, mechanical or industrial engineering. You may be concerned with the analysis, design and procurement of tools and equipment needed to produce a wide variety of computers and other business machines. Or you may deal with plant layout, methods, production control or systems testing. "So much of our work is creative that it is often necessary to produce unique manufacturing equipment. This affords a chance for creative engineering of the first order." Many creative opportunities How to select an employer To the college senior faced with a job decision, he Is it interested in you long - range management development? Will it treat you as an individual and match your abilities with the most challenging assignments?" has this to say: "Pick your employer by this simple test: Is the company expanding fast enough to provide adequate scope for your talents and ambitions? For his part, Lee Baker feels IBM has met this test. Since 1953, he has seen new plants open, dozens of new products evolve, hundreds of "Selling" the system management positions created. Increased stature, responsibility and reward have come his way. And he Company growth means opportunity knows they will continue, for IBM sales continue to expand. Recently married, Lee Baker advises seniors to pay special attention to company benefits. "They may seem like a yawning matter when you're single, but they mean a lot when you assume family responsibilities. IBM benefits are certainly generous." This profile is just one example of what it's like to be with IBM. There are many other excellent opportunities for well-qualified college men in Research, Development, Manufacturing, Sales and Applied Science. Why not ask your College Placement Director when IBM will next interview on your campus? Or, for information about how your degree will fit you for an IBM.career, just write to: Mr. R. A. Whitehorne IBM Corp., Dept. 812 590 Madison Avenue New York 22, N. Y. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION DATA PROCESSING • ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS • MILITARY PRODUCTS SPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • SUPPLIES • TIME EQUIPMENT .