SUNDAY, Ji ArUT,! TCUTf:AN UATTY ttT~~ bT~SUDY FIT REU~i ~ER.jE E ~tU~ Z~r.RUJ z _ M' Cage rs Edge Buck~eyes on TV, 78 74 GRADUAT ES (By August of 1959) (Salary $4802 to start) STATE GOVERNMENT OFFERS COMPREHENSIVE TRAINING PROGRAMS IN: PORT-WHYS Who's Who in '59 HE ANNUAL winter intrigue held by the collegiate football coaches is all over for another year. For the past week the coaches, ath- letic directors, faculty representatives, and most of the other import- ant persons from all college athletics departments have been tossing around ideas in Cincinnati. - Whether anything comes of these ideas, of course, will depend on the subsequent meetings of the NCAA Football Rules Committee, and the other groups that will take final action on most of the suggestions. There appear to be two major rules changes undergoing an in- cubation period at present. It looks like college football fields may look more like their professional counterparts next fall, as the Rules Committee may decide to move the goal posts back up to the goal line. They have been at the end of the end zones since the 1930's. The other change will also lean toward professional football, as there is a chance that free substitution, or something close to it, may be back in force. There can be little doubt what inspires either of these changes, since they both will make college football more like the professional game - which, by the way, is quite a financial success at present., Elliott Needs Coaches .. . THE GAME of college football may or may not change as a result of the Cincinnatai meetings, but there can be no doubt that foot- ball fortunes at Michigan have taken some sort of turn. This was Hump Elliott's first meeting as head coach, and one of special im- portance to him, since he is still searching for a staff to help him guide the Wolverines this coming year. Since he needs to have a staff by April for spring practice, ande obviously he will want to have plenty of time beforehand to work on plans, the chances are that Elliott will want to get his choicesU to the Regents at their monthly meeting this Friday.t There are a number of positions that have to be filled: in fact, they all may be. The Michigan coaching staff in the past has con- sisted, besides the head coach, of a backfield coach and assistant, a1 line coach and assistant, and an end coach, plus the freshman coach. Of this troupe, line coach Jack Blott, assistant line coach Bob Holl- way, end coach Matt Patanelli and freshman coach Don Dufek, remain from Bennie Oosterbaan's reign. There have been a number of well-calculated guesses offered by people who should know, and the majority of these say that only Hollway and Dufek will remain when Elliott is through selecting his1 crew. It is rumored that Hollway will move up to the head line coach Job, while Dufek will remain with the freshmen. It seems that Blott and Patanelli will be moved to other ath- letic department posts, either in the I-M system, or to assistantships. in other sports. At present Patanelli is an assistant in both basket- ball and baseball, and is one of the scouts for football and basketballl. Some Will Be New.. .. WHETHER OR NOT he retains the present holdovers, Elliott has a number of positions to fill. The most important one, and the one that has caused the most controversy and guesswork, is that of backfield coach. A number of names have been mentioned, including Jerry Burns (Iowa backfield coach), Dave Nelson (head coach at Delaware) and Hank Fonde (Ann Arbor high school coach). Apparently Burns has gone by the wayside, as he has had a num- $er of offers for head coaching positions, and he has a great winning combination under him at present. He will either stay or move up. Nelson, of course, would be moving down in rank, and also seems uninterested. A number of factors point to Fonde as the man. First of all, he and Elliott played on the same 'M' team (Fonde was understudy to Elliott at right halfback), and they have always been close friends. Up until last season, Fonde had a fabulous winning percentage with the Pioneers (65-4-2). This year's squad, however, split at 4-4, and it is certainly time to get out while he still has a record superior even to Paul Brown's famous Massillon teams. Not only that, but Fonde was assistant principal at Ann Arbor until he resigned that position to concentrate on coaching this fall. This came after Oosterbaan's secret spring resignation, and Elliott's knowledge that he would be taking over. Presuming that Hollway moves up to head line coach, Elliott will be seeking an assistant. The big name so far has been Jerry Hilden- berg, who holds that position at Iowa presently. The other positions have engendered no scuttlebutt, since they will not appeal to name men, and will probably be filled with re- cently-graduated M' players. Elliott, only 33, is the youngest head coach in Michigan history, and it seems that he will be heading the youngest staff ever. By .next Friday, in any case, this should all come, out. * ECONOMIC RESEARCH EMPLOYMENT COUNSELING *HIGHWAY PLANNING *PERSONNEL INSURANCE EXAMINING INSTITUTION MANAGEMENT PROPERTY APPRAISING RIGHT OF WAY BUYING I .L 5J- -.F.A GEORGE LEE (35) AND JOHN TIDWELL (43) SCORE FOR MICHIGAN AS THE TV CAMERAS SEND THE GAME TO A REGIONAL ALDIENCE THE MICHIGAN CIVIL SERV- ICE COMMISSION is now re- cruiting applicants for its spring examination program. A large number of trainee positions in- volving extensive on-the-job development programs will be filled from this examination. These positions lead to full professional status in a given field. APPLICANTS must be college graduates by August, 1959. Varieties in majors required ac- cording to class, Those classes starred require submission of a transcript of your college credits. WRITE for application for ex- amination before January 28, 1959 to Michigan Civil Service, Lansing 13. Examinations to be held on Saturday, March 7, 1959 on the campus if the number of applicants warrant. Wolverines Fight Off Ohio State Surge; Lee's 23 Heads Scorers, Burton Bags 21 Statistics ' (Continued from Page 1) in - giving the hosts a 66-63 edge. The score came only moments after the Ohioans had missed six tip-in attempts in one backboard scramble. Lee was the next aid to the Michigan cause, as he tipped in a goal, pulling his mates out in front, 68-65. A minute later, it was Tidwell hitting from the out- side to quench Ohio hopes. Then, with 1:14 to play, Miller sank the first pair of five straight M i c h i g a n f r e e t h r o w s that clinched the victory. The members of this quartet, each scoring in double figures for the third straight league game, zombined for 70 of the Wolver- ines' 78 point total.' Lee's 23 spearheaded the attack, while Burton had 21, Miller 14, and Tidwell 12. Going into the game as under- dog, Ohio jumped to a quick 4-0 lead, then boosted its margin to 6-1 for the biggest gap it had all day. Lee Hits First Lee~hit on a jump shot and two free throws a few seconds later to get the Michigan attack rolling. It was his shooting and Burton's BIG TEN CAGE: Hoosiers Dump 'Cats* MSUPurdue Victors By The Associated Press EVANSTON, Ill.-Indiana's de- fending Big Ten basketball cham- pions handed Northwestern its first Conference loss of the season last night. 76-69, behind a bal- ancea scoring attack and a tight zone defense. All five Indiana starters scored in double figures. Walt Bellamy and Herbie Lee led the way with 18 points each. Gene Flowers had 17, Frank Radovich 13 and Bob Wilkinson 10. Indiana, scoring its second tri- umph in three league games, spurted to a 34-20 lead in the first half but Northwestern came and cut the margin to five points at halftime, 38-33. im * * * MSU 97, Illini 96 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-John Green's rebound basket in the last eight, seconds after teammate Bob An- deregg missed a free throw yes- Iterday gave Michigan State a 97-96 victory over Illinois. Green hit 23 of his 33 points in the first half as fifth ranked MSU came from behind for a 54-36 lead at intermission after hitting .568 per cent of its floor shots. The Spartans, gaining their sec- and Big Ten victory in three starts and handing Illinois its first con- ference loss in three games, built up a 68-56 margin with 15 minutes to go. Purdue 84, Wisconsin 61 LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's Veteran Boilermakers, upset in their first two games, got back in form last night with an 84-61 vic- tory over Wisconsin's Badgers. Six-foot-six Brian Kulas of Wis- consin was high scorer of the game with 26 points, but no other Bad- ger got over 10. rebounding that spoiled Ohio's chances for a first half lead. But Ohio, shooting a 40 per cent average from the floor dur- ing the initial half, wouldn't al- low Michigan to get a spread either. Michigan came out with a zone defense in the second half that stunned the visitors completelyj for the first eight minutes. New Defense Perigo stated after the game that this was one of only three times that he used a zone since he began coaching here. "We had to do something to protect the middle of our defense against Huston," he said. "The zone also set up our fast break." The breaking game enabled'the Wolverines to get their 11-point margin. But then Hoyt and Hus- On Radio Michigan's basketball team will leave at 2:30 p.m. today for Madison, Wis., where it will meet Wisconsin in a Big Ten clash tomorrow night. The game will be broadcast by WUOM-FM, 91.7 megacycles, at 8:55 p.m. (Ann Arbor time). Announcing the game will be Bill Stegeth. ton began piercing the zone withI their deadly shots. Two Bucks Score The pair combined for 24 of the Bucks' last 30 points. Their shooting helped Ohio edge Michigan, 35-33, on field goals. But the losers' cold night on free throws - they hit only four of 12 tries - proved costly. In their first Big Ten game this year, they made 26 of /29. Fouls Help Meanwhile, Michigan stepped to the charity line and sank 12 of 21 attempts, Michigan had only' 10 fouls called on its team - its lowest total this year. It was this low foul total and late-game poise that prompted Perigo to comment: "We are be- coming a real steady ball club." OHIO STATE Furry, f HOyt, f Husaton, c Niehaus, g S ieg fried, g Roberts, f Barker, g TOTALS MICHIGAN Burton, f Lee, f Farris, c Tidwell, g T. Miller, g Rogers, c TOTALS H1ALFTIME: Ohio State 34 35 4-12 16 FGFT PFTP FG 4 7 10 4 6 4 0 8 5-9 10 3-5 2 0-2 5 2-3 6 2-2 2 0-0 33 12-21 1 21 a 23 4 4 4 12 0 14 1 4 10,78 FT PF 0-0 2 1-1 2 1-1 2 1-5 5 1-3 3 0-2 2 0-0 0 TP 8 15 21 9 13 8 0 74 Michigan 36, lave aWORLD of FUN T ravelwith HT . Unbelievable Low Cost , O Days from $645 43-65 Days fm$998 o many fours include college credt.* SE 9 Also low-cost trips to Mexico 1 $169 up, South America $699 up, tiawaii Study Tour $549 up and Around the World $1798 up. Ask Your Travel Agent 26th 332So. Midign Ave. Year W tULB t. mC. Chkago 4, HA 7.SS _. -- . i Subscribe Who isn't at exam time? But the dog days will soon be over and (so they tell us) a new era awaits. When that breathing spell comes, maybe you should take a glance at the future. Have you given much thought to financial planning? Probably not. That's why we sug- gest a talk with our campus representative. Starting your life insurance program now gives you a head start, and offers the advantage of lower premiums! 227 MUNICIPAL COURT BLDG. ANN ARBOR, MICH. NO 3-4151 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life'Insurance Company of Philadelphia I ..- (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boysl"and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.") I I ____ THE DATING SEASON to The Michigan Daily I have recently returned from a tour of 950,000 American col- leges where I made a survey of undeirgraduate dating customs and sold Zorro whips. 1 have tabulated my findings and I am now prepared to tell you the simple secret of successful dating. The simple secret is simply tiis: A date is successful when the man knows how to treat the girl. t V " ' .t i 4+ ,. ' , . s 1 STANDINGS W Minnesota........ 1 MICHIGAN ....... 2 Michigan State .... 2 Illinois. ........ 2 Northwestern ..... 2 Indiana .......... 2 Iowa ..i.......... 1 Purdue .......... 1 Ohio State ........ 0 Wisconsin.........0 L 0 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 Pet. 1.000 .667 .667 .667 .667 .667 .500 .333 .000 .000 MICHIGAN EDGES IOWA, 56 -55 H: Gymnasts Defeat Hawkeyes, Gophers Special to the Daily IOWA CITY, Ia. - Michigan's gymnastics team got off to a win- ning season here yesterday after- noon as they nipped Iowa by a single point and swamped Minne- sota in a double dual meet. Coach Newt Loken's Wolverines had to come from behind in the last event to nose out the Hawk- eyes, 56 V2,-551', while they easily disposed of the Gophers, 73-39. With the pressure on, Michigan tumblers Bill Skinner, Jim Brown and Dick Kimball placed second, third and fourth behind Iowa's Staffan Carlsson to outpoint the Hawks, 9-7, in that event. 'Best Ever' "Those three boys turned in their best tumbling performances ever," Loken declared. "They cer- tainly came through in the clutch." In the other event the Wolver- ines depended on good team depth to stay even with the Iowa squad, and the same depth completely crushed Minnesota, Sophomore Rich Montpetit per- formed well, getting firsts on the side horse and in free exercise against Minnesota, plus four sec- onds. one third and one fourth in other events against the two teams. last year, place third, while Iowa's other trampoline aces, John Mc- Curdy and Bill Buck, were fourth, and fifth. Iowa's top man was Carlsson, who took three other firsts be- sides tumbling. He was one of the top men in the Conference last year, but will graduate this Feb- ruary, and will not be around for the 1959 championships. MINNESOTA MEET FREE EXERCISE: I. Monpetlt Mich.), 2. Dozauer (Mich.), 3. Hoech- erl (Minn.), 4. Marion (Mich.), 5. Roller (Minn.) TRAMPOLINE: 1. Kimball (Mich.), 2. Cole (Mich.), 3. Newman (Mich,.), 4. Webster (Mlinn.), 5. Wolf (Minn.) HIGH BAR: 1. Hoecherl (liinn.), 2. Dozauer (Mich.), 3. Stall (Michi.), 4. Marion (Mich.),.5. Webster (Minn.) PARALLEL BARS: 1. H o e c h e r l (Minn.), 2. Monpetit (Mich.), 3. Marion (Mh.) 4. Dozauer (Mich.), 5. Roller (Minn.) SIDE HORSE: 1. Monpetit (Mich.), 2. Hoecherl (Minn.), 3. Stall (Rich.), 4. Roller (Minn.), 5. Marion (Mich.) STILL RINGS: 1. Schwartztops (Minn.), 2. Marion (Mich.), 3. Iloech- f erl (Minn.). 4. Monpetit (Mich.), S. Dozauer (Mich.) TUMBLING: 1. Skinner (:Mich), 2. Brown (Mich.), 3. Kimball (Mich.), 4. Wolf (Minn.), 5. Roller (Minn.) TOTALS: MICHIGAN 73, MINNE- SOTA 39, IOWA MEET FREE EXERCISE: 1. Carlsson (1), 2. Monpetit (M), 3. tie-Claus (1), and Dozauer (1), 5. Buck (1) TRAMPOLINE: 1. Kimball (M), 2. Cole (M), 3. Tim (1), 4. McCurdy (I), 5. Buck (1) SIDE HORSE: 1. Buck (1), 2. Mon- petit (M), 3. Stall (1), 4. Marion (MT), 5. Carlsson (I) HIGH BAR: 1. Carlsson (1), 2. Mon- petit (M), 3. Claus (1) 4. Dozauer (M), 5. Marion (1I). PARALLEL (BARS: 1. Carlsson (1), 2. Buck (I), 3. Monpetit (M) 4. tie- DIozauer (I) and Marion (1). STILL RINGS: 1. 'Marion (M), ?. Novak (I), 3. Carlsson (I), 4. Mento (I), 5. Dozauer (M). TUMBLING: 1. Carlsson (I), 2. Skinner (1), 3. Brown (M), 4. Kim- ball (M), 5. Buck (1) TOTALS: MICHIGAN 56', IOWA 551. For that "Regal" effect n - for i-Hop 59 - ~ 131EAUTIFUL 0~ 0 NECKLACES BRACELETS EARRINGS & PINS BRUNDAGE GIFTS 307 SouTiH SrA ii Sumii T -4- C}-}{}, ,}{}*C' ---Cot^---}}{) ---yC ---( --- - ) « { ----y } --- o And how does a girl like to be treated? If you want to know, read and remember these four cardinal rules of dating: 1. A girllikes to be reated With respect. When you call for your girl, do not drive up in front of the sorority house and yell, "I ey, fat lady !" (Aet out of your car, Walk respectfully to the door. Knock respectfully. When yourr girl comes out, tug your forelock and say respectfully, Good evening, Your Honor." Then offer her a Marlboro, for what greater respect can you show your girl than to offer Marlboro with its "better makin's," fine flavor and new improved filter? It will indicate immediatelythat you respect her taste, respect her discernment, respect her intelligence. So, good buddies, before going out on a date, always remember to buy some Marlboros, noW a'ailable in soft pack or flip-top box at your friendly vending machine. . A girl likes a good lister. Do not monopolize the conversation. Let her talk while you listen attentively. Make sure, however, that she herself is not a good listener. I recollect a date I had once with a coed named Greeleve-Sgaoosa ovey grlut unforunateyalener, not a talker. I too was a listener so we just sat all night long, each with his hand cupped over his ear, straining to catch a word, not talking hour after hour until finally a policeman caMe by and arrested us oth for vagrancy. I did a year and a day. She got by with a suspended sentence because she was the sole support of her aged housemother. If. A girl lils to be tk10n to nice placs. B"'nice"pl"es I do notmeanexpensive places. A girl does not demand luxury. All she asks is a place that is pleasant and gracious. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, for example. Or Alount Rushnore. Or the Taj Mahal. Or the Bureau of Weights and Measures. Find places like these to take your girl. In no circulnutances mu.t you take her to an oil-cracking plant. 4. A girl lkes a man to bc well-informed. CQome prpare pd ith a few interesting facts that you can drop casually into the conversation. Like this: "Did you know, nookiepuss, that when cttle, sheep, camels, goats, antelopes, and other members of the cud-chewing family get up, they , 71 RICHARD MONPETIT ,.. side horse winner I where will YOU live Next Semester? in Co-ops you get: .-- mk ^ A . . .U.I I .I - . . ^, '- WORRIED? EXAM TIME is OutlinenTime Use our condensed I I III I