THE "i!'IrCUTG A N n &rr.v V..Vr% vqft A AW - - 1 l Il . 11111 =H11 I. EN L Z----. -JMI AY, MARCH The DEL RIO ... known for its good pizza, also SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - STEAKS - CHOPS - CHICKEN .25c DELIVERY FOR ANY NUMBER. GANG UP and get your pizza delivered for a few pennies. QUALITY COUNTS Specials served daily. OPEN EVERY DAY 122 W. WASHINGTON ST. Phone NO 2-9575 111 Trails MS for Swimming Title Steuart Wins 1,500 Meters; State Leads byTwo Points FACES MICHIGAN STATE: Ice Squad Closes Play on Weekend U ... RAMO -WOOLDRIDGE invites v By DICK MINTZ Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Barrel- :hested Bill Steuart bagged the first title of the 49th annual Big Ten Swimming Championships here yesterday to give Michigan State a scant two-point lead in team scoring. Michigan, Indiana and Ohio State were tied for third with five points apiece, after the finish of the meet's first event-the 1,500 meter freestyle. The Wolverines' John Urban- scok and Pete Fries, placed fourth and fifth respectively to account for the Wolverines' point total. Steuart, the defending cham- pion, broke away to an enormous ADVANCED DEGREE CANDIDATES in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING PHYSICS MATHEMATICS MECHANICAL ENGINEERING to discuss with members of our Technical Staff professional research and development oppor- tunities in the following general fields: MISSILE ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS ADVANCED COMMUNICATIONS INFORMATION PROCESSING SYSTEMS DIGITAL COMPUTERS AND CONTROL SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTATION AND TEST EQUIPMENT BASIC ELECTRONIC RESEARCH ELECTRONIC RECONNAISSANCE AND COUNTERMEASURES MICROWAVE TECHNIQUES OPTICS AND INFRARED AIR NAVIGATION AND TRAFFIC CONTROL ANTISUBMARINE WARFARE ELECTRONIC LANGUAGE TRANSLATION NUCLEAR ENERGY APPLICATIONS APPLIED MATHEMATICS BASIC AND APPLIED PHYSICAL RESEARCH Appointments for interviews on Monday, March 9, can be arranged through the Student Placement Center. RAMO-WOOLDRIDGE P.O. Box 90534, Airport Station Los Angeles 45, California A DIVISION OF THOMPSON RAMO WOOLDRIDGE INC. I early lead in the lengthy race. At " the half-way mark Steuart led by ten yards over his closest rival, John Parks of Indiana, who fin- ished second. Only Parks pres-~ sured the South African Olympic star into bettering his last year's winning time by almost four sec-. onds with an 18:36.6 timing. Falls Off Pace The Wolverines' John Urban- scok who was expected to take a third got off to a slow start and fell far from his usual pace. The tiring sophomore allowed Ohio State's George Oneka to overtake him on the last 60 yds. of the race to steal third place. Urbanscok beat Oneka only last week in the 440-yd. freestyle and seemed to have gained strength doing it Coach Gus Stager commented that Urbanscok had alreadyB turned in better times in practice* BILL STEUART but lacked the experience of . retains title swimming under the pressure of a championship meet. Pete Fries, Wolverine, who has swum in many championship meets since he first starred as a -w freshman three years ago, placed C O R E fifth, three seconds behind Urban- scok's fourth place time of 19:08. The swimmers went 65 lengths of the new Michigan State Nata- ,Independent torium plus 15 yards. CMS 37, TEP 20 Points were scored ona754 Rabble Rousers 39, Wesleyans 25 3-2-1 basis. Gamma Alpha 31, Evans 23 Hawaiians 31, Sempervians 16 Joe Henry of Ohio State added Speedboys 45, ERI 25 his sixth place point to Oneka's Grid 5 69, Buckeyes 26 total to give Ohio State the sec- Kice Kepers 34, Fylgo 21 ond place tie at this early stage Crescents 21, Mavericks 20 of the championships. Frederick 41, Tappan St. 5 28 Cooley Elders 36, Sweepers 35 Divilig Foresters 34, Psi Kids 17 Michigan showed a powerfully Fraternity Professional balanced attack in the semi-final Phi Epsilon Kappa 37, Alpha Kappa Kappa 20 round of the one-meter diving. Nu Sigma Nu 36, Psi Omega 25 , Joe Gerlack topped the Wolverine Phi Delta Chi 29, Alpha Omega 24 scorers with 275.5 points as he Phi Alpha Delta 23, Phi Delta Ep- iln14 followed behind Ohio State's Sam ,Phi Delta Phi 29, Delta Theta Phi 20 Hall who gained first with 280.2 water Polo points. Sigma Nu 1, Theta Chi 0 Following in order were Ron Kaa Pi Epsilon , Phi Sigma O'Brien of Ohio State, Dick Kim- Chi Psi 1, Delta Tau Delta 0 ball, Michigan; Estel Mills, Iowa; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1, Beta Theta Nat Smith, Ohio State; Tony Tur- Phi 0 ner, Michigan; and Ernie Meis- COLLEGE BASKETBALL ner, Michigan. N. Carolina State 75, S. Carolina 72 Eight EvMat Tonight Manhattan 93, Lafayette 62 EightEvens ToightDuke 78, Wake Forest 71 Eight events are to be held, be- Marshall 90, Miami (0) 79 ginning at 7:30 p.m., in the 200- St. Johns (N.Y.) 57, NYU 55 yd. butterfly, 50-yd. freestyle, 200.- klaha 6, braska 54 yd. backstroke, 220-yd. freestyle, Virginia 66, Maryland 65 100-yd. backstroke, one-meter NBA diving, 200-yd. individual-medley Minneapolis 135, New York 115 and 400-yd. freestyle relay. Philadelphia 106, St. Louis 101 Conference Votes Today Over Rose Bowl's Fate By BUZ STEINBERG Michigan's hockey team will be at Michigan State tonight for its last weekend series of the 1958-59 season, and will return home to- morrow to complete the home- and-home affair. Coach Al Renfrew and company have hopes of avenging their- two, previous losses of 3-1 and 5-2. Once more the question will be, can a team with lack of depth beat an opponent who has an ex- cellent bench? Wolverines Handicapped Also, there is a possibility that the Wolverines may be handi- capped with the loss of Barry Hayton who had received a deep face injury when a reserve's skate came down on his head during a practice contest yesterday. The slash required ten stitches and hasr put Hayton out from today's work- out session at least. On the other hand, the strong determination and will to win has shown up strongly as the Wolver- ines have time and again come back after a first night's loss to a second night's victory. As a matter of fact, this year Michigan has beaten every one of the teams from the old Western Intercol-I legiate Hockey League with the exception of the Spartans. Michigan State has already proven itself to have class and ability. Five Seniors Play In Saturday night's contest five seniors will play in their finalj collegiate hockey game for the Wolverines. Jay Katz, who has been out most of the season with an ankle injury, may not see any action since the injury has not fully healed. Others, who are grad- uating and should play in tomor- rw'% game include Ross Childs, who will start in front of the nets, Don Gourley, Hayton, and leading team scorer John Hutton. The rest of the team consists mainly of sophomores who give a favorable sing of amuch stronger squad next year. The potentiality of a once-more top Michigan hockey team is in the building stage and if it continues as ex- pected, Renfrew should be able to muster one of tne better teams in the country. In a special feature for the Sat- urday affair the top ex-Michigan hockey players will meet at 2 p.m. j in an exhibition of "real" hockey, Those who are returning to play in this crowd-pleasing contest in- clude Michigan greats Ross Smith, '50, Dick Starrak, '49, Jack Mac- Donald, '50, Keith Crossman, '39, and Jim Bearrisford, '36. Admission is free and everyone is invited to come to the Coliseum. t{ JOB OPPORTUNITIES! A General Motors representative will be on campus March 11, 12 and 13. Contact your college placement office to arrange an interview. . I JOHN URBANSCOK ... places fourth EUROPE Dublin to Iron Curtain; Africa to Sweden. You're accompanied-not herded. College age only. Also short trips. $721-$1390 EUROPE SUMMER TOURS 255 Sequoia (Box 4)-Pasadena. Cal. i 4 J 1 * I cNS\PN I MADISON, Wis. W)-- The Big Ten is expected to take an in- formal vote today on its sentiment fpr continuation of the Rose Bowl football game. The present Rose Bowl contract expires after the 1960 New Year's Day game. If a majority vote for continuance is reached, the mat- ter will go before faculty. boards for final approval and be officially voted upon at the conference meetings at Michigan in May. The Big Ten opened a three-day business session yesterday with faculty representatives and ath- letic directors approving a plan to permit one expense-paid campus visit of a prospective athlete. This is in line with the NCAA recruiting policy, which has been frowned upon by the Big Ten. Heretofore, alumni or any other organization not'connected directly with the university, could invite a Nat's Scoring Tops Records SYRACUSE (A') - The Syracuse Nationals set their all-time high for total points, and cracked club records for field goals (57) and finished with a 43-point fourth period for another mark as they won their sixth straight home court game against Boston last night, 142-118. The Nats shot .557 per cent for the game, 57 for 122, and their scoring was well balanced with eight men in double figures. Dolph Schayes scored 25 points, John Kerr 22, and Bob Hopkins 20. Bill Sharman led Boston with 23, but had only four field goals. prospect to the campus for a visit and pick up the tab. Along these same lines, the Conference also will act to permit off-campus contact of a coach with a prospective athlete. This also is permissable under NCAA regulations but has been shunned by the Big Ten in the past. The Conference decided to allow telephone calls by a coach as part of the contact. All the proposals must be voted by each individual institution within the next 60 days. The eligibility committee turned down a request by William Steuart, Michigan State swimmer from Johannesburg, South Africa, for an. extra year of eligibility. He competed in the 1956 Olympics after his 20th birthday, ORCH ESTRAS by BUD-MOR featuring Blaser-Johnson Johnny Harberd Boll Weevils The Kingsmen R. G. Quartette Jim Soluri -- Men of Note Andy Anderson JYour imagination has a chance to soar at, General Motors GM positions now available in these fields for men holding Bachelor's, Master's and Doctor's degrees: Mechanical Engineering * Electrical Engineering - Industrial Engineering " Metal- lurgical Engineering * Chemical Engineering Aeronautical Engineering - Ceramic Engineer- ing -s Mathematics Industrial Design -s. Physics " Chemistry " Engineering Mechanics. General Motors engineers pre-check -inertial guidance systems for ballistic missiles in a "raceway" simulating actual missile wiring. Men like these are deeply involved in today's fastest moving and fastest growing industry ... electronics. At General Motors engineers and scientists have a chance to develop their talents to the fullest ... to let their imagina. tions soar. You, too, can have a chance to put your imagination into operation at GM. 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