s THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27. MG asaTTT.enAY I a '1flTT aAR.v /G E;lan ichigan cers Stop renson Scores Twice in 3-2 Victory ver Minnesota as Coyle Regains Formy Gophers; Gym Team Loses Undefeated MSU Gymnasts Dump Wolverines, 60-52 ,(Continued from Page 1) antz, and the Wolverine defend- rs saved him the trouble several ther times. The only serious defensive lapse esulted in Rovick's goal when the efense was unable to clear the uck quickly and Minnesota was ble to work for a good shot at an pen corner. But other than that occasion, he defensive cover was nore than dequate as Coyle had to make butj I saves to the 32 that Minnesota's teinweg had forced upon him by he hard-skating Wolverine of- mnses. The first period started off with oth teams moving the puck well p and down the ice. The first lines f both the Wolverines and the -ophers formed smooth rushes, ut quick defensive plays on the art of the backmen always halted he attacks at the last minute. After a few minutes, play be- ime somewhat ragged and re- iained that way throughout most f the opening frame. The first' ;rong scoring try came midway irough the period when Michi- an's sophomore line of Beren- on, Jerry Kolb and Joe Lung- amer broke into the Minnesota efensive zone. Old-Timers Game The- Annual Old-Timers Hockey Game, featuring form-j er Michigan greats, will bej played this morning at 10:00 a.m. in the Coliseum. No ad- mission will be charged. A 20-foot slap shot by Lung- hamer forced Steinweg to make a great skate save, as he did the splits. Later, after Michigan had missed a power play opportunity, the Go- phers took the attack as Minne- sota captain Jerry Melynchuk led his line down the ice on a rush. Melynchuk picked a loose puck out from in front of Coyle and slipped it through the melee for the evening's first score. Close MICHIGAN Coyde G Watt D Nielsen D White C Bochen W Mattson W Call MINNESOTA Steinweg Westby Young Melnychuk Gratstrom Rovick SPARES: Michigan: Kolb, Lung- hamer, Berenson, MacDonald, Ma- teka, Hinnegan, White (C), Palen- stein . Minnesota: Norman, Alm, Rantz Mahle, Johnson, Rovick, Rasmus- sen, Benson, Meredith. FIRST PERIOD: Scoring: Minne- sota: Melynchuk (Grafstrom, Mere- dith). Penalties: Michigan: Lung- hamer(tripping) 2:24. Minnesota: Johnson (holding) 3:00; Meredith (tripping) 13:17. SECOND PERIOD: Scoring: Mich- igan: Berenson (Palenstein) 2:04. Penalties: none. THIRD PERIOD: Scoring: Michi- gan: Berenson (Lunghamer, Watt) 2:38; C. White (Hinnegan, MacDon- ald) 3:18: Minnesota: Rovick (Ben- son, Rantz) 15:05. Penalties: Min- nesota: Melynchuk (elbowing) 3:45; Michigan: MacDonald (holding) 3:45; Palenstein (boarding) 9:25. Score by Periods: Michigan 0 1 2 3 Minnesota 1 0 1 2 Saves: Coyle (Mich.) 5 11 5 21 Steinweg (Minn.) 11 16 5 32 With only two seconds showing on the clock, Michigan apparently tied the score. With a face-off in the Gopher defensive zone, Michi- gan coach Al Renfrew put in Bob White to draw the puck back to Berenson for a last-second shot. The strategy almost worked as Berenson drilled one at Steinweg, who fell on it just at the goal crease. The officials ruled that it had not crossed the mouth. Berenson Tallies It was Berenson that did tie the score early in the second period with the first of his two goals. The redhead broke down the ice with his line for a three-man rush, but saw an opening and turned on a burst of speed to outdistance the Gopher defensemen. The husky redhead broke in alone on Steinweg and beat him, head-on, to bring the score to 1-1. Michigan's two scores early in the last period wrapped up the game, but Minnesota didn't give up, as Rovick narrowed the margin with less than five minutes to play. Minnesota coach John Mariuc- ci pulled out all stops (and this includes his goalie) in an attempt to tie the game in the closing sec- onds but the Gopher attack fell short. Time Change Today's hockey game against Minnesota will be played at 2:00 p.m. in the Coliseum in- stead of at 8:00 p.m. Tickets go on sale at the Athletic Admin- istration Building at 8:30 a.m. -Daily-Dave Giltrow THE WINNING GOAL! -- Michigan's Carl White (17) drives home the final Michigan goal In the 3-2 win over Minnesota. White connected after Dale MacDonald (behind net) had centered the puck to Al Hinnegan (center) who then passed to the sophomore wing for the tally. Michi- gan's win brings the team record to 7-6 In WCHA play. BROTHER SUCCEEDS BROTHER: .Dave Jenkins tops Olympic Skatingy 4* SQUAW VALLEY (A - Dave Jenkins, a slender 23-year-old medical student from Western Re- serve in Cleveland, won the Men's Figure Skating Championship of the Winter Olympics yesterday with a spectacular free style exhi- bition that erased the early lead of Karel Divin of Czechoslovakia. He succeeded to the crowd last won four years ago at the Cortina, Italy Games by his brother, Hayes. Never before has brother followed brother in a Winter Games Cham- pionship. Jenkins gave the United States its second gold medal, the first having been won by Carol Heiss of Ozone Park, N. Y., in Women's Figure Skating. Heggtveit Wins Slalom Anne Heggtveit, 21, Ottawa blonde, won the Women's Slalom Ski Race in 1:49.6 and Betsy Snite of Norwich, Vt., took second with 1:52.9. Penny Pitou of Gilford, N. Track Squad, Swimmers Travel Today H., who won second place silver medals in the Giant Slalom and Downhill, fell on her second run and finished in 2:19.8 for 35th. Russia lodged a formal protest against Sweden as the result of a spill in the Women's 15 kilometer (9.32 miles) Cross Country Ski Relay Race, first of its kind in these games, challenging a gold medal winner. Sweden won the race in 1:4:21.4 with the favored Russians second. The International Jury declined to act until it could see movies of the incident. These will not be available before Sunday night. Hockey Team Faces Russia American hopes for a third gold medal rest with its scrappy ice hockey team which Thursday up- set Canada 2-1 and rested yester- day. Today the Americans meet Russia in a game that probably will decide the championship. It will be televised nationally, be- ginning at 4:30 p.m. (EST) by CBS. Russia has been tied by Sweden 2-2. Eugeni Grishin of Russia won his second gold medal of these games and his fourth over a four- year period by skimming through the men's 1,500 Meter Speed Skat- ing in 2:10.4. However, he had to share first place with Roald Ed- gard of Norway, who made the same time. Each received gold medals. By CLIFF MARKS Unbeaten Michigan State dealt Michigan's gymnasts a bitter de- feat last night, 60-52, in a tense, hard-fought meet which wasn't decided until the last event. The Wolverines took a 49-47 lead into Tumbling, which under ordinary conditions would have meant a cinch victory for the hosts with Capt. Bill Skinner and Jim Brown, NCAA finalists last year, on deck. However, State has three good tumblers in John Daniels, Charles Thompson, and Steve Johnson who finished one, two, three, edg- ing out Michigan's two hopefuls. The margin was so close that the tumbling slam by the winners was deceiving, as only four points sep- arated the five tumblers. Daniels had a score of 91.5, Thompson 90.5, Johnson 8. Brown 88, and Skinner 87.5. Coach Newt Loken sadly said that Skin- ner was Just not up to one of his best performances, and Brown himself admitted that he rein- lured his ankle during his per- formance, although not using this as an excuse. State Wins Ninth Michigan State, pushing the season record to a 9-0-1 (Iowa, also unbeaten, tied them) was led by Angie 'Festa who scored 16 points for the night, and Daniels, who won the only two events he tried. However, it was the visitors bal- ance that turned the tide, al- though Michigan's little scrapper, Rich Montpetit, recovered from a near disastrous fall off the High Bar to capture top scoring honors with 19 points. Teammate Al Stall also came back strong with 15 Bitter Defeat FREE EXERCISE -- 1. Daniels (MSU), 93.5; 2. Moutpetit (M); 3. Festa (MSU); 4.. Skinner (M); S. Basset (MSU). REBOUND TUMBLING - 1. Francis (M), 91; 2. T h o m p s o n (MsU); 3. Osterland (M); 4. Temple (MSU); 5. Johnson (MSU). SIDE HORSE -- 1. Montpetit (M), 93.5; 2. Stall (M); 3. Feinberg (M); 4. Browsh (MSU), 5. Shorr (MSU). HIGH BAR - 1. Tarshis (MSU), 96; 2. Stall (M); 3. Festa (MSU); 4. Durkee (MSU); 5. Montpetit (M). PARALLEL BARS - 1. Montpetit (M), 89.5; 2. Festa (MSU); 3. Do- zauer(M); 4. Stall (M); S. Browsh (MSU). STILL RINGS - 1. Festa (MSU), 93.5; 2. Durkee (MSU); 3. Stall (M); 4. Montpetit (M); 5. Browsh (MSU). TUMBLING -- 1. Daniels (MSU), 91.5; 2. Thompson (MSU); 3. John- son (MSU); 4. Brown (M); S. Skin- ner (M).+ Healthy Track Team Set To Invade MSU Tonight, 'I p s after 'missing' In "Rebound Tumbling." Montpetit won the parallel bars immediately after his unfortunate slip which Loken said was a defi- nite factor in the loss. The fall cost Montpetit about 10 points and at least a third behind Stall and Stan Tarshis, State's Nation- al Champion. Spartans Start Fast The Spartans lumped off to an early 17-15 lead after two events, but Michigan slammed the side RICH MONTPETIT ... meet's high scorer Tankers Travel to OSU To End Dual Meet Season By HAL APPLEBAUM - called front line- Thev incl e: horse to go ahead 287-20. Ta rshis' magnificent performance on the High Bar coupled with a" third and fourth, cut the margin to 33- 31. This is when Montpetit came back with a brilliant routine in Parallel Bars, and with Wolf Do- zauer doing a one hand hand- stand for third, and Stall taking fourth, the hosts stretched their lead to 44-36. State grabbed first and second on the Still Rings to narrow the gap to 49-47 and their tumblers took it from there. A sideplay to the meet was caused throughout by State's Coach George Szypula who dis- agreed with Loken several times on the management of the night's proceedings. With tension at Its peak before tumbling, he refused to let the tumblers warm-up due to a Big Ten rule. Usually, this rule is waived by both teams, but Syzpula figured (rightly) that Brown might have thrown his double back somer- sault with a warm-up. However, the Michigan ace said that he couldn't have done it anyway. By TOM WITECKI "All healthy and all entered" for the first time this year, Michi- gan's defending - indoor track champions meet a powerful Mich- igan State squad at East Lansing tonight. The Wolverines, who have been handicapped by injuries and ail- ments in earlier meets, will enter a full squad with the exception of two-miler Wally Schafer, who has a cracked bone in his right foot. In addition, Coach Don Canham will not be holding anybody back against the potent Spartans, who rate as one of the Wolverines' chief competitors for the Big Ten' title. The chief Spartan threat is 600- 'M' Matmen Face MSU, Michigan takes on its biggest rival for Big Ten wrestling su- premacy when it tangles with Michigan Sate tonight at East Lansing. Both squads are undefeated in conference dual competition. Mich- igan's only loss of the season came in the opener against perennial powerhouse Penn State, 19-12. Michigan State enters the meet with a 6-1-1 record. The winner will probably be established as favorite in the upcoming Big Ten meet which will be in Ann Arbor March 4-5. A decisive match may well be{ the heavyweight tilt in which Michigan's Fred Olm comes up, against unbeaten (9-0-1) Michigan State sophomore John Baum. The Wolverines will depend heavily upon their three unbeatenw men, Dennis Fitzgerald, Mike Hoyles, and Karl Fink as well as Ambi Wilbanks, Fritz Kellerman, and Jim Blaker. Fitzgerald is also untied while Hoyles has been tied; once and Fink twice. The match between Michigan's Dick Fronczak and State's Bob Moser may be a preview of the conference 157-pound champion- ship. Michigan captain Mike Hoyles will find his work cut outt for him in the person of soph1 George Hobbs (8-0-1).1 yard world record holder Willie Atterbury, who can run a good race in any event from 300 to 1,000-yards. Backing him up is another versatile runner, Brian Castle, who ran the 600 in the fine time of 1:10.5 just last week. Two sure winners for the Spar- tans should be Mike Kleinhans, who has topped the 14' mark regu- larly in the pole vautl (something no Michigan man has come close to doing this year) and Big Ten mile champion Bob Lake in the two mile. Wolverine favorites for firsts are Big Ten champion Tom Rob- inson in the 60- and 300-yard' races, Dick Cephas and Steve Wil- liams in the high jump, Big Ten champ Les Bird in the broad jump and Terry Trevarthen in the shot put. Juggling Act Coach Canham, will juggle his top runners; Ergas Leps, Tony' Seth, Dave Martin, Earl Dear- dorff, Bryan Gibson and Marsh Dickerson into the various events between the 440 and the mile. Where they run will probably de- pend a great deal on where At- terbury and Castle are entered. In the hurdles, the Wolverine duo of Cephas and Bennie McRae should have things under control, while the mile relay race is rated a tossup. Tonight's meet will be a warm- up for both teams in preparation for next week's Conference indoor championship at Ohio State. Spahn Signs 'With Braves MILWAUKEE (P) -- Warren Spahn, the Milwaukee Braves great lefthander, came to terms with General Manager John McHale to- day for the 1960 season. Spahn, whose 21-15 record last year gave him his unparalleled marks of 10 seasons with 20 or more games won, settled with Mc-' Hale in a telephone conversation from his home at Hartshorne, Okla. Terms were not disclosed but Spahn, the Braves highest paid performer, probably received more than $70,000. BENNIE McRAE ... hurdling debut Cagers Meet MSU Here Michigan's victory starved bas- ketball team will be making the last home appearance of the 1959- 60 season tonight when it meets arch rival Michigan State in Yost Fieldhouse at 8:00. The Wolverines, still seeking their initial Big Ten victory, will get only limited service from Capt. Terry Miller who has spent the past week in health service with a bad case of swollen glands. To make things worse, the Wol- verines will be facing the Big Ten's leading rebounder and third leading scorer in the person of State's Horace Walker. In 12 con- ference games the Spartan ace has pulled down 216 rebounds and tallied 302 points. Walker led all scorers with 24 points when the Spartans downed the Wolverines 89-58 in the Conference opener on January 10th. Michigan fans will have their eyes focused on Wolverine scor- ing leader John Tidwell (20.4 per game) who needs only 31 more points to surpass M. C. Burton's season record of 460, set last year. With three conference games re- malning Tidwell is a cinch to break the record before the sea- son ends. Two seniors will be making their last home appearance in Michi-. gan uniforms tonight, guard Terry Miller and forward Lovell Farris. Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Michigan will try to return to the win column today when it meets Ohio State here in the season's last dual swim meet and final tuneup for next week's Big Ten Championships. Last week the Wolverines suf- fered their first dual meet defeat in four years, bowing to Indiana 58-47, and Michigan Coach Gus Stager hopes that today's meet will provide the stiff workout that his team needs before meeting the Hoosiers again next week. Although Ohio State is not ex- pected to give either the Wolver- ines or the Hoosiers a battle for the two top spots, they are ex- pected to fight it out with Michi- gan State for third place honors in the conference meet. The Buckeyes beat the Spartans 57-48 in a dual meet last week and have shown this season that only Michigan and Indiana are their superiors. "I expect a real good battle from Ohio State," said Stager. "They ma ynot be able to beat our top men, but they will push everyone and make all the races close." Standouts for the Ohio squad are divers Sam Hall and Tom Gompf, breaststroker Tom Kovacs, freestylers Chuck Bechtel, Don McPhee, and Bill Van Horn, Art Wolfe, butterfly, and Tom Mur- ray, backstroke and individual medley. Making the trip for the Wolver- ines are the members of the so- i~~c 1~ 11. 11 1C1,u t Carl Woolley, Frank Legacki, Jim Kerr, Dennis Floden, Andy Mor- row and Bill Darnton, freestyle, Ron Clark and Ken Ware, breast- stroke, Dave Gillanders and Terry Slonaker, butterfly, Alex Gaxiola, John Smith and Fred Wolf, back- stroke, Chuck Babcock, individual medley, and divers Bob Webster and Joe Gerlach. SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Duquesne 64, Toledo 51 West Virginia 117, W. & Mary 83 Texas 71, Arkansas 57 Maryland 66, Clemson 59 (dbl. ovt.) Texas Christian '67, Rice 65 (ovt.) NBA Boston 128, Minneapolis 11 COLLEGE SWIM Indiana 59, Iowa 40 COLLEGE HOCKEY Denver 5, Michigan State 0 Warroad 5, Michigan Tech 4 COLLEGE GYMNASTICS Southern Illinois 61, Minnesota 51 Illinois 61, Southern Illinois 51 Illinois 63Y, Minnesota 52% You're looking for a job. Not just any job, but one where you know for sure you'll be doing exactly the kind of work you are most interested in. One that will give you every chance to grow with the company. Sure, fringe benefits are fine. Link Aviation offers as good or better than the rest. But how about the day-to-day operation? What kind of assignments will you get? Check these opportunities available right now at Link: " servo-mechanism design work * analog computer design, solving linear and Many of the above techniques are used in current Link projects, such, as building jet simulators for the Boeing 707, Douglas DC8, Convair 880, Lockheed Electra, the Navy's A3J jetfighter, or the fire control on the B-58. And there are others that we can't talk about just yet. There they are . . . some of the current op- portunities at Link, both in Binghamton, New York, and in Palo Alto, California. If these or similar positions interest you, contact your Placement Office for an interview LAST CHANCE February-only Specials Starting TODAY I DIAL NO 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR TWO ACADEMY I