THEMICHIGANDAILY__i r AA UMeet To Provide Stunts at Half Of Purdue Tilt Basketball fans will be intro- duced to another piece of gym- nastic equipment during half-time of the Michigan-Purdue hoop con- test Saturday, when eight nimble members of the Gymnastic Club and Newton Loken, assistant sup- ervisor in physical education, put on a long horse exhibition. Bob Willoughby, Lyle , Clark, Dave Lake, Pancho Saravis, Bob Schoendube, Loyal Jodar, Glenn Neff, and Bill MacGowan will fol- low Loken through the vaulting feats, with the aid of a spring board. The second of a tour of Michi- gan cities, by the Gymnastic Club, will take them to Muskegon on Tuesday. The show, which con- sists of trampoline stunts, tumb- ling, and a work out on the high bar and rings, will be given in connection with a YMCA member- ship drive meeting at the west coast city. During the next two months the club will perform at Kalamazoo; Lakeview, Bay City, South Hav- en, Frankford, Saulte Ste. Marie and Marquette, and in iddition to these cities, exhibitions at Al- bion and Michigan State College are also on the docket. Thinclad ,9 s First Test TOUGH BREAK, VIC: Wolverine Hopes Dampened As Balestrn Suffers Injury Indoor Track Season Opens with Annual Meet at Yost Field House on February 1 By ALYS GEORGE Track will hold the spotlight at Yost Field House February 1, when the Michigan AAU meet will provide the first competition of the 1947 season for the Wolver- ine thinclads. With the entries for the meet still coming in, over 200 track- men are expected to churn up the cinders. Full squads will come from Ohio State, Michigan State, University of Detroit, Baldwin- Wallace and many other mid- western schools. In addition to the collegiate athletes, high school and club trackmen will don their spikes. Full Program on Tap A full intercollegiate program of events is on tap for the even- ing with four invitational races for high school athletes, and two AAU events, a 56-lb. weight throw and a mile walk also scheduled. National Collegiate and AAU title-holders will be on hand to answer the starter's gun. Harri- son Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace's NCAA and NAAU king may enter the high and low hurdles while Bill Clifford of Ohio State, last year's indoor mile champion, will match strides in the mile with Quentin Brelsford of Ohio Wes- leyan, who holds the NCAA cross- country title. Wolverine Entries Uncertain Michigan's entries in the mid- dle distance events depend on whether Coach Ken Doherty sends a 2-mile relay team to the Mill- rose Games in New York, which are held the same evening. With Hugh Short, Dick Forrestel and George Shepherd on hand Michi- gan's chances to dominate the quarter-mile are good. In past years the Michigan AAU meet has been one of the high- lights of the Wolverine indoor season and the stiff competition offered by this year's list of en- tries will furnish a measure of Michigan's track power this sea- son. All second semester fresh- men, sophomores and juniors interested in trying out for track manager positions should report to either Don Canham or Bud Low at the Yost Field House between 3 and 5 p.m. any afternoon this week. With Michigan's toughest hock- ey weekend approaching, Wolver- ine hopes were somewhat damp- ened yesterday as it became doubtful whether ace defenseman George Balestri would be avail- able for the two-game series with Minnesota Friday and Saturday. Balestri Has Nine Goals Balestri, whose unusual total of nine goals for a member of the rear guard ranks second on the team in this department, sustained a knee injury in the Queens game last weekend and has been unable to report for practice sessions as yet this week. He also was out earlier in the season because of his knee and his absence was greatly felt as the pucksters dropped a 6-3 decision to Dart- mouth. If Balestri cannot perform, this would leave Coach Vic Heyliger with but three defensemen against the always tough Gophers: Cap- tain Connie Hill, Herb Upton, and hard-checking Bob Marshall. Minnesota Tough Coach Heyliger still plans to use his revamped forward lines against the onrushing Norsemen. Gordon MacMillan, who scored two goals and an assist in last Saturday's game to take the lead in scoring with 20 points, centers the number one line and is flanked by Lyle Phillips, high goal pro- ducer of the squad with 10, and Al Renfrew, recently moved up from the second line. The num- ber two line will see Bill Jacobson at center and Ted Greer and Dick Starrak at the wings. CHICAGO, Jan. 15--P-tom)-The City Council today authorized Mayor Edward J. Kelly to extend Chicago's official bid for the 1952 Olympic Games. A resolution, prepared by Kelly and adopted by the Council, also authorized the formation of a 100- man committee to work toward bringing the games here. Kelly said the competition could be held in Soldier Field-"One of r _:I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Jan. 17, between the hours of 9:30 and 11:30, and 1 and 4, at the of- fices of the University Musical So- ciety, Burton Memorial Tower. After 4 o'clock no passes will be issued. Women students attending the "Final Design" Ball on Jan. 17 will have 1:30 permission. Calling hours will not be extended. All Students: It is essential that registration and classification be completed according to the pub- lished alphabetical groupings. Do not come to the gymnasium be- fore your scheduled time for regis- tration. Each alphabetical group will be admitted during the time scheduled for that group. Be on time. Registration Material: School of Forestry. Students may obtain registration materials January 27 in Rm. 2048 Natural Science. Registration Material: College of Architecture. Students may ob- tain registration materials from their counselors February 4. College of Engineering Regis- tration Material: Students en- rolled in the current term should call for Spring term registration material at Rm. 244, W. Engineer- ing Bldg., beginning Tuesday, Jan. 21, from 9 to 12 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Applications for grants in sup- port of Research projects: To give Research Committees and the Ex- ecutive Board adequate time to study all proposals, it is requested that faculty members desiring grants from the Research Fund in support of research projects dur- ing 1947-48 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 7, 1947. Requests for continuation of present pro- jects or renewals of previous re- quests should also be made at this time. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Secretary's o f f i c e, Rm. 1006, Rackham Bldg., Telephone 372. Willow Run Village Program: West Court Community Bldg. Thurs., Jan. 16, 3 p.m., Bridge; 8 p.m., Psychology Class; 8 p.m., Art-Craft Workshop. Fri., Jan. 17, 8 p.m., Classical Music Record Concert. Lectures Wood Technology Lecture Post- poned. The lecture on Wood 1- Technology by Mr. Leo Jiranek scheduled for January 16 has been postponed until further notice. University Lecture: James J. Sweeney, former Director of the Museum of Modern Art, will lec- ture on the subject, "Henry Moore and Modern Sculpture" (illus.), at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: J. B. S. Hal- dane, F.R.S., Professor of Biome- try, University College, London, will lecture on the subject, "Re- cent Work in Human Genetics," at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rack- ham Lecture Hall; auspices of the Laboratory of Vertebrate Bi- ology. The public is cordially in- vited. University Lectures. Dr. T. C. Lin (Lin Tung-chi), A.B. '28, Vis- iting Chinese Professor of the United States Department of State, will lecture Friday, Jan. 17 at 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- tre, under the auspices of the De- Will the contact with the West RELAXATION IS WISE! Let us give you a Facial, Scalp treatment for those Exams . . . a needed lift for that outstand- ing Blue Book. Your tonsorial queries invited. Today! The Daseola Barbers Liberty off State partment of History and the De- gree Program in Oriental Civiliza- tions. The title of the lecture is as follows: "The Emerging Ethos." (Continued on Page 4) _: 1 DELIVERY SERVICE DISCONTINUED Until Further Notice COFFEE - ROLLS HAMBURGS Open Daily 9:00 A.M. to 1:00 A.M. E: j . f!= WALTER S. GIFFORD CHESTER I. BARNARD President of the American Telephone President of the New Jersey Bell Tele- and Telegraph Company. Started as phone Company. Started with the a clerk with the Western Electric Bell System as a clerk in Boston in Company in 1904. 1909. WILLIAM C. BOLENIUS ALLERTON F. BROOKS President of the Wisconsin Telephone President of The Southern New Eng-. Company. First telephone job was in land Telephone Company. Started as New York City as a traffic inspector engineer's assistant in New Haven in in 1921. 1911. VICTOR E. COOLEY President of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. Started his tele- phone career as a clerk in San Fran- cisco in 1911. A. WE ARE OPEN FOR BUSINESS at 115 W. LIBERTY (Just Beyond Main St.) We have served Michi- gan Students for 25 years. It will pay you to come and see us, RIDER'S "fThe Pen Hospital" JOE E. HARRELL President of the New England Tele- phone and Telegraph Company. Started with Bell System as a clerk in Atlanta in 1913. PI These are presidents of' operating telephone companies of the Bell System. They all started at the bottom of' the lad- ( der. . . Nine years ago the Bell Systein first published an . advertisement like this, except that there are now thirteen . new faces in the pictures. These new presidents also started 'R at the bottom. Name RUSSELL J. HOPLEY President of the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company. Started as collector in Fort Madison, Iowa, in 1915. *" * * January Clearance Sale All-Wool Sport Coats in solid colors and checks Formerly $27.50 The Bell System aims to keep the opportunity for advancement open to all. One of its traditions is that its executives come up from the ranks. That has been true of the business for many years and nowhere is it better illustrated than in the careers of the men who now serve as presidents of Bell Telephone Companies. As a group, they have put in 611 years of telephone service, an average of 36 years each. WILLIAM A. HUG] IFS President. of the Indiana ',11Btell e- l!)lone Company. Starteld his telephon,, career as a gound man in KansaC i y in 1917. f Sh. A . :.>::*:K.. -.- .x .,- ,.., . :: :°.,t : . Y., ____?.; ?... ird,. . ., 1 . '. ...r .............