Hot Hawks Trounce Tigers By Jerry Klein The best offense is a mighty defense. And with that hustling, alert defense KU combined a determined offense, to simply outrun, outshoot, and outscore Missouri, 98-54, last night at Allen Field House. For the second time within the past ten days, a strong Kansas effort easily held Missouri to 54 points—previously winning at Columbia, 77-54. Missouri had no chance against Kansas. Guard Ron Coleman tried vainly—with 19 points—but the high-scoring Jayhawkers were too much. In all, well-balanced Kansas placed five men in double figures. Center Walter Wesley, the game's high scorer, tallied 25 points followed by Al Lopes, 14, Rodger Bohenstiehl, 12, Del Lewis and Jo Jo White, 10 each. Of the 12 men Coach Ted Owens played, 11 scored. IN THE FIRST 10 minutes, seventh ranked Kansas scored quickly and jumed into a commanding 26-8 lead. In this burst, Wesley and forward Lopes scored six points apiece. Shinn Earns Position On Scholarly Squad By Ron Hanson Mike Shinn, KU's all-Big Eight conference tackle, pounded the books as hard as he pounded opposing linemen this past season to rate a position on the 1965 academic all-America second team. Selected by the College Sports Information Directors Association on the basis of how well he performed in the classroom, Shinn, Topeka senior, merited the award by compiling a 2.3 grade average last semester. Majoring in aerospace engineering, Shinn has been an outstanding student throughout his four years at KU. SAID SHINN upon hearing of his selection to the all-America team, "Since this is the first notice I have had of this honor. I am very surprised. I must also add that I am very pleased. "When I was a freshman football player, the coaches told the entire team that three-fourths of us would not make it to graduation. That prophecy certainly came true because out of the 55 men with whom I played freshman football, only eight or ten remain here today." Relating his thoughts about playing football and attaining an education, Shinn said if a person really wants to do both he can. He also said it requires more work than most people realize. College football is a year round proposition, but so is school, and this is probably the reason why so many athletes drop one or both during their college career, he said. As for his future, the 6-foot-4. 240-pound giant has signed a professional contract to play football for the world champion Green Bay Packers. SHINN was the only football player from KU to make the all-America academic team, although there were ten other selections from other Big Eight schools. Shinn, who is married to the former Joyce Costello of Australia, said that next year, if he can, he would like to continue his education while playing football. He hopes to do graduate work at KU. Although playing football, particularly professional football, Switching from an early full court to half-court press, Kansas swiftly but forcefully applied pressure. Accordingly, Missouri made several bad passes, its icy shooting making matters worse. MIKE SHINN Sports High Grades takes as much mental preparation as it does physical, Mike Shinn has proved he is capable of both. Then the 6-11, 225-pound Wesley started a spirited rush giving Kansas a 53-29 halftime lead. As the half ended, Kansas played with substitutes Riney Lochman, Bohenstiehl, Pat Davis, Bob Wilson, and Fred Chana. In the first half, Kansas made 57.5 (23-40) per cent from the field, 87.5 (7-8) per cent at the Intramural Scores Independent A, Division V: Jollife—Bye; Pearson, 43—Grace Pearson, 33; Templin #1, 38— Battenfeld, 34. Independent C, Division I; Slicks—Bye; Navy won by forfeit; Lodgers, 31—Law #3, 28. Independent C, Division IV; Hawaiian—Bye; JRP #1 won by forfeit. 14 Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 16, 1966 AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO ALL GRADUATING SENIORS As the ragged, loose play continued, Wesley continued to use his three inch height advantage and experience over Missouri center Rich Milling. For Kansas points 67 and 69, Wesley slipped behind Milling and caught a lob pass from White, of course, dunking the ball. The walls of ivy will soon be replaced by less familiar ones; equally exciting, challenging, and self rewarding. For many years you have been preparing for this major step that leads from College to Career. NOW THE TIME HAS COME TO CONCENTRATE AND ACT; TO FIND THE JOB YOU WANT. With competition for career-launching jobs increasing at a rapid pace, A PROFESSIONALLY PREPARED RESUME IS ESSENTIAL IN OPENING THE BEST DOORS!! Your resume, when written by a Professional Writer, will pinpoint Your Assets, and present them in a clear positive way. It will save you Valuable time in contacting the career opportunities You want. At the RESUME BUREAU your resume is written by professional writers, with specialized knowledge of personnel practices, and wide experience in the Business and Technical worlds. TIME TO START YOUR CAREER CAMPAIGN!!!! Learn how we can help you to Sell Yourself, and find the job you've worked so hard to prepare for! Write TODAY RESUME BUREAU, 47 Kearny St., San Francisco, Calif. Write TODAY TWO FOR THE SEESAW University Theatre Experimental Series foul line. Missouri, bothered by the irritating man-to-man Kansas defense, hit only 9 of 25 for 36 per cent. The Tigers converted 11 of 16 foul shots for 69 per cent. OVERALL, Kansas shot 52 (42-81) per cent compared to Missouri's 29 (17-59) per cent. From the foul line, Missouri made 67 (20-30) per cent, Kansas 61 (14-23) per cent. by William Gibson February 17,18,19,and 22,23,24,25,26 Led by Wesley's 13 rebounds, Kansas out-rebounded Missouri 61-27. Missouri committed 19 turnovers, Kansas 17. Students $1.50 and $.75 with Registration Certificate Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. THE SECOND HALF was merely an encore as Kansas continued to apply pressure while Owens substituted freely. Biggest lead of the game, 85-40, came when White, a 6-3 guard, tossed in a 25-foot righthanded jump shot with 6:01 left. Kansas made few mistakes in the second half. It was fact but sounded like fiction. For example, it all started when streaking 6-1 Lewis intercepted a pass, dribbed up the middle, and flipped the ball to a cutting Wesley who naturally dunked the ball. Kansas is now 17-3 with five games left to play. What's new? DOOBIE DOO. A hardback novel by Ivan C. Karp that is not only unrequited, but, according to some early readers and reviewers, un-American. DOOBIE DOO is the history of a pioneer of pleasure who has his cake and eats it without dire results. Except to the cake. It is an investigation into the dazed plight of sophisticated, husbandless city girls which raises the question: How much love should wisely be given to the desperately needy? Until it was published last month, we had dozens of lines like this to use describing Doobie Doo. Now the reviewers have taken it away from us. (See below.) Nearly all of us have had a marvelous time reading it. "Doobie Doo is a novel with convoluted plot — complete with subplot that in the end gets properly hooked up with the main plot — [which] is a parody of novels with convoluted plots and a spoof of the spoof genre and is awfully funny ... The chief performers in it, Lickey-cutty outfits, Isabelle Kneedel, a misfolded who works, on the harpischords his occasion, in a company that manufactures clavichords, harpischords and harpischord kits, and the two beautiful girls between whom he divides his evenings fair and square ... "Whoever said that life was real was living in a dream world, and the only thing I do in this full of such profundities as this which, while they bring the reader to the brink of infancy, do not bog down the narrative." — JEAN STAFFORD "A wildly funny avant-garde novel with a message. The message list is confusing, refused to sing commercials," - CHARLES PENN, N. Y. Times "An outrageously funny novel . . . a little Rock and Roll running amok just what the American movie needs at this stage. Hook on hours again." -DONALD D./JONES, Kansas City Star "A doozey . . . Karp has real talent. He is funny, hip, cynical, brazen — and he can write." —JOHN BARKHAM, Saturday Review Snaidite "Roy Lightenstein has helped . . . with a Pop book jacket that billboards a red-dotted glimpse and a great, cliff-hanging tear, poised on the lower cilla. But what Karp does with this hokum is to reach right inside the tear. Fanny tear. It is not empty, but full of salt, humor, danger, and importance, important, reflections that from Today's Living, the sparkle and plenty that so many shmoeks is missing from Today's Living. Funny, funny, save tears." —BROCK BOOWER, Book Week DOOBIE DOO is published by Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York, which usually devotes this column to Anchor Books, but couldn't resist the temptation to slip one special hardcover book in. DOOBIE DOO sells for $4.50, and like Anchor Books, is available at one of the best equipped booksellers in the country - your own college store.