SATURDAY, DECEMBER $, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 195~ ?AGE THREE Zichigan Wolverines Hunt for Second Win in Battle at Field House u ntet Battles Pli tt 0--- KEEN REBUILDS SQUAD: Wrestlers Prepare By DAVE LIVINGSTON THE OTHER How does a wrestling coach re- holder, footballt place key men at five out of eight O'Shaughnessy, weights? the 177-pound That's the problem Wolverine won his champ mat mentor Cliff Keen faces as he heavyweight cla prepares his grapplers for the sea- He will be c son's opener at Toledo University couple of othe next Saturday. Bennett and for Toledo Opener a By DICK LEWIS Dr. H. C. Carlson's University of Pittsburgh five opens its sea- son and at the same time provides Michigan's second dose of non- conference cage opposition tonight when the Panthers make a rare visit to Yost Field House. Game time at the State Street sports arena is slated for 8 p.m. * * * THE VENERABLE Carlson, now in his 32nd year of coaching with the same school, has split even in six encounters with the Wolver- ines over three decades. Pitt teams under Carlson have won 358 games while losing 235. Over recent years, however, the Pittsburgh basketball reE- ord has been mediocre. The last time Carlson produced a better than .500 season was in 1946, while last year the Steel City entry captured only ten of 22 t tussles. That Pitt aggregate made sports headlines when it suffered a bi- zarre 24-9 defeat at the hands of a control-minded Penn State squad. Things were so dull in this much-publicized yawn-fest that players agtually took a seat on the court during the course of the slowed-down "action". EIGHT lettermen return from the 1951-52 team that lost to Penn and beat Virginia, as did Coach Ernie McCoy's Maize and Blue. Foremost in the Panther hoop outlook is senior captain Mickey Zernich, one of the most prolific point-getters in the history of the Pennsylvania institution, Standing 6-2 and a fixture at one of the forward spots, the 165- pound Zernich has collected 536 points in two years on 182 field goals and 172 free throws. Last year he registered 159 rebounds and 63 assists. SENIOR ART Boyd, a 6-3 front- court performer, teams up with Zernich at the otner iorwara post. He is regarded as a better-than- average rebounder, but saw lit- tle action last season due to a broken shoulder. Pitt's tallest player listed on 'M' Gymnasts Host toPreps Coach Newt Loken and his Mi- chigan gymnastic squad will play host to over 200 state high school gymnasts this afternoon in the In- tramural Building. The occasion is a state-wide Gymnastics Clinic, sponsored by Loken, which will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. Features of the program will be demonstrations by two High School coaches. Norm Bennett, of St. Johns, will discuss creating interest in high school gymnastics. Gor- don Williams, of Pinconning, will give a talk and demonstra- tion teaching tumbling. Then for an hour and a half the high schoolers will work out un- der the supervision of Michigan's varsity gym team. the current roster is 6-4 Don Virostek, the first-string cen- ter. Virostek has been a regular since his sophomore year, scor- ing 338 tallies over two seasons and plucking off 190 rebounds as a junior to pace the Panthers. Junior Clarence (Dutch) Burch and football standout Dick Delt- rick are probable starters at the back-court positions. As a sophomore, Burch funnel- led through 225 points and to- talled 63 assists. He stands at 6- feet even. Dietrick is a bulky 225-pound- er who has been a football letter- man for two seasons and gained a starting court spot last spring. Carlson's front line reserves in- clude a pair of 6-3 second year mep, Bill Ruschel and Jim Mc- Clure, both listed as pivot opera- *. * I-M Matmen Seek Titles On Monday Grunts and groans will be very much in evidence beginning Mon- day, as the annual fraternity and residence hall wrestling tourney gets under way at the I-M build- ing. The tourney, which will run through Thursday night, will of- fer competition in eight weight di- visions for both the fraternities and the residence halls, starting at 123 pounds, and going through 130, 137, 147, 157, 167, 177, and heavyweight. * * * THUS 16 individual weight champions, and two team cham- pions will be crowned on Thurs- day night, when the four day tourney will culminate in the final matches. The finals will be open to the public. In the fraternity division, such returning champions as Delta Tau Delta's Bob Shetler and Jack Shaupp, Alpha Tau Omega's Mike McNerney, and Phi Sigma Epsilon's Stan Burns will probably return to give all comers a run for their money. The residence hall division will probably see Phil Hunt of Hayden and Seldon Chambers of Williams, both champs last year, return to, bid for another title. NEALE LANGILL . . . High-scoring Saint * * * MSC leers Wiii EAST LANSING - P) - Mich- igan State opened its 1952-53 hockey season last night by edg- ing St. Lawrence University's pucksters, 3-2. St. Lawrence will be in Ann Ar- bor tonight to help Michigan's de- fending NCAA champions open their season at the Michigan Col- liseum. STAR CLEANERS*- 1213 S. University DRY CLEANING SPECIALS FOR THE PRICE OF Save $1.00 on Every $3 of Cleaning 2-HOUR CLEANING AT REGULAR PRICE For Convenience.. Icers Make Puck Debut (Continued from Page 1) Don Moton, only veteran defense- men on the squad, will see the brunt of the defensive action. Last year's Wolverine team won 20 games against four defeats out- side of tournament play. * * * Heyliger-coached Wolverine hockey squads have a five year record of 100 triumphs and 14 losses in regular season play. Hockey Schedule DECEMBER 6 St. Lawrence University......Here 13 University of Toronto.:.....Here 19 Colorado College.............There 20 Colorado College ........... There 22 Denver University..........There 23 Denver University ........ .There JANUARY 7 Michigan State College...... There 9 University of Montreal.......Here 10 University of Montreal........Here 14 Michigan State College.......Here 16 University of Minnesota......Here 17 University of Minnesota ...Here FEBRUARY 3 Detroit Red Wings (Exhibition) ...............Here 11 Michigan State College......,Here 13 University of Minnesota..There 14 University of Minnesota..There 20 University of North Dakota...Here 21 University of North Dakota...Here 27 McGill University.............Here 28 McGill University...........Here MARCH 4 Michigan StateRCollege......There 6 Michigan Tech..............Here 7 Michigan Tech ..............Here See, ELNA... THE ALL-NEW PORTABLE See the portable that sews, darns, embroiders, mends, mono- grams better ... does every sewing job faster, and easier! Its miracle open arm permits almost invisible darning, sewing all hard-to-reach places as easily as flat surfaces! A magnificent Swiss precision port- able, built to last a lifetime! Its ingenious case gives you a full size comfortable work surface. Come in today for a free demonstraton AC-DC-Flly Guarnte4W $1.50 a week 'H P. JOHNSON COMPANY THE GENERAL ELECTRIC STORE 209 So. Fourth Ave. Phone 3-4124 * * * FROM LAST year's conference runner-up squad Michigan has lost such stalwarts as Captain Bud Holcombe at 167 pounds, heavy- weight Moose Dunne, 123-pounder Larry Nelson, Jack Gallon at 137 pounds, and Dave Space at 147 pounds. But even with this quintet of stars gone, Keen has a nucleus of two Big Ten individual cham- pions with which to start his re- building program. Norvard "Snip" Nalon, as a so- phomore in his first year of var- sity competition, grabbed the con-j ference 130-pound crown last March when he decisioned Michi- gan State's Dick Gunner in the Big Ten finals. Gunner had been the only man to whip Nalon, who is captain of this season's squad, in dual meet competition. Tickets for tonight's hockey opener with St. Lawrence are on sale until noon at the Ferry Field ticket office. Starting at 2:30, the ducats will be avail- able at the Coliseum. Students with I-D cards may purchase ducats for 60 cents. -Don Weir tured third-place in the Big Ten 157-pound bracket last year. IN THE OTHER five weights Keen must rely on men who, for the most part, don't have too much varsity background. Sophomore Andy Kaul has probably the most experience as conference title- captain-elect Dick has moved out of ranks, where he ionship, into the Lss. ompeting with a er gridders, Don possibly Gene the spot left va- 5-pound Dunne. er regular return- Ales Lee, who cap- Knutson, for I cant by the 21 The only othe ing is junior Mi he alternated with Gallon in the 137-pound class last season when he was the only freshman to earn a letter. The lone senior on the squad, Joe Scandura, will probably get the nod in the 147-pound weight division. He showed a lot of pro- mise as a sophomore, but was hampered last year by a back in- jury. THE NUMBER ONE man at 123 pounds is sophomore Joe Atkins, who got into three matches his freshman season as a substitute for Nelson. Bronson Rumsey, a junior, or sophomore Bob Weber will hold down the 167 - pound weight. Neither has ever been in a varsity meet. The 167-pound spot, vacated by O'Shaughnessy, will go to either Ron Horne, a junior, or Harold "Pepper" Holt, who wrestled two years ago but was out last season. 'O Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results 11 ME 1 MICKEY ZERNICH ... Pitt point-getter tors. Senior forward Chester Pa- lesko has been a steady relief per- former since 1950 and is sure to see some action. Michigan mentor Bill Perigo, successful in his maiden local ef- fort, is expected to field the same opening unit that ran up the bulk of the 80 scores against Marquette. This group consists of Milt Mead and Ralph Kauffman at the forwards, Paul Groffsky at cen- ter, and Don Eaddy and Ray Pa- vichevich at the guards. Diminuitive captain Doug Lawr- ence, injector of the spark that produced the triumph over the Hilltoppers, will rotate with the back-court duo, while John Cod- well will spell the forward tandem. Also available in an- attempt toz match last year's longest winning streak of two are muscular cen- ter Leo Schlicht, rangy forward Bruce Allen, and senior guard Carl Brunsting. This will be. Michigan's last home appearance until December 29. On that date the Maize and Blue take a breather from a rig- orous Big Ten schedule in a non- loop test with Butler. BANK BY MAIL S e A t t Fw w l t r . r FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenow Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sundav Morning Services. Dec. 7-God the Only Cause and Creator. 11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the morning service. 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P.M.: Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5, Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 E. Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister 9:45 A.M.: Student Bible class continues discus- sion of 1st Samuel. 11:00 A.M.: Church Worship. Sermon: "The Word of Life." 7:00 P.M.: Roger Williams Guild: Rev. Kuizengo of the Presbyterian Church will discuss with us the question, "Can Human Nature Be Chang- ed?" The Presbyterian Guild will be our guests. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Leonard Parr 10:00 A.M.: Church School. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship: Sermon "A Migh- ty Army on Wings" Rev. DeWitt Baldwin. CONGREGATIONAL DISCIPLES GUILD 7:00, Sunday, Dec. 7-Another party to mend, sort and pack clothes for Korea, as ^well as a report from the Cleveland Workcamp group. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Rev. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Rev. Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister Rev. Wi. S. Baker, Student Minister Sunday Morning Service: 9:00 and 11:00 A.M. Advent Communion. Sunday Morning 10:00, Student Bible Seminar. Sunday Evening, 6:45, Westminster Guild. Meet at the church and the group will po to the First Baptist Church to join with the Roger Williams Guild. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Avenue Edward H. Redman, Minister Mrs. W. S. Bicknell, Parish Assistant Mr. E. J. Schuss, Student Advisor Miss Jane Townsend, Organist 10:00 A.M.: Unitarian Adult Group-Discussion of Mrs. Sophia Fahs book, "Todays Children and Yesterday's Heritage." Unitarian Church School - Nursery through Sixth Grade. 11:00 A.M.: Services: Guest Speaker-Dr. Rudolf Dreikurs, Chicago Psychiatrist on "To Live As An Equal." 5:15 P.M.: Junior High Group at Wayne Whit- aker home, 406 Lenawee. 7:15 P.M.: Unitarian Student Group at the Church. Group discussion of new Beacon Press book on "McCarthy." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH No. Division at Catherine Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Miss Ado Mae Ames, Counselor for Women Students 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion (followed by Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House). 11:00 A.M.: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. Sermon by the Reverend Henry Lewis. 6:45 P.M.: Canterbury Club (University stu- dents), Canterbury House. 8:00 P.M.: Choral Evening Prayer with Anthems (provided by The Alice Crocker Lloyd Memo- rial Fund). Wednesday and Thursday 7:00 A.M.: Holy Com- munion, followed by Student Breakfast at Canterbury House; Friday 12:10 P.M.: Holy Communion; Friday 4:00-6:00 Student Tea, Canterbury House. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill Street at South Forest Ave. Henry 0. Yoder, D.D., Pastor Sunday-9:25 A.M.: Bible Class. 10:30 A.M.: Services at the Center and Trinity Church. 10:45 A.M.: Zion Church. 7:00 P.M.: Rev. Martin Heist, Missionary, Speaker. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wongdahl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 9:30 A.M.: Discussion Class Pie Room. 10:45 A.M.: Worship: "A Gift For God" Dr. Large preaching. 5:30 P.M.: Supper and Fellowship. 6:45 P.M.: Worship and Program. A Student Panel consisting of Chester Leathers, Chheng Guan Lim, and Barbara Fredericks will speak on "What Christmas Means To Me." Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily, UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue , (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Service, with sermon by the pastor, "Advent's Annual Assurances." Sunday at 5:30: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Suoer-Program. Friday at 8:15: Annual Christmas Party. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone 2-1121 Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00 A.M.: Bible School. 11:00 A.M.: "The People of God and the Word of God." 6:30 P.M.: No Guild supper. 7:30 P.M.: "Was Calvary Worthwhile?" Wed. 8:00: Mid-Week Prayer Service. A Friendly Church Where The Word Is Preached. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor William H. Bos, Minister to Students Irene Applin Boice, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.: Worship service, sermon by the Pas- tor, subject: "John, the Herald of God." 7:00 P.M.: Student Guild at Lane Hall. Speaker, Doctor G. J. van Wylen, of the Engi- neering school. Subiect: "Problems Engineer- ing Can Not Solve." THE ANN ARBOR BANK STUDENTS ... Shop Every Evening Until 9 P.M. at I BALFOUR' S Our Christmas selection is complete * Complete oflerings in gifts, wrappings, corsages, greeting cards and personal items. 4 small deposit will hold any item. "ome of the Official Michigan Ring" 1321 S. University BOB CARLSON Ann Arbor, Mich. Owner-Manager Eim m m m m m m m m y State Street at Nickels Arcade Main and Huron S 1108 South Unviersity , lS WHILE WE TEACH YOU a worth-while and very important profession. That's right-we pay students during their four to six week training period. How- ever, this is only one of the many advantages to working at Michigan Bell. STOP IN at our Employment Office and let us tell you about the many positions we have to offer in MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tapoan Sts. Rev. George Barger, Minister Sunday, December 7 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship Sermon: "Take the Offensive" Nursery for children during service. 9:45 A.M.: Sunday School. CONGREGATIONAL DISCIPLES STUDENT GUILD Student Guild House, 438 Maynard Street Marilynn Williams, Associate Director Tuesday Student Tea: 4:30-6:00. Sunday, December 7, 7:00 Congregational Church. A s~eond nparty to sort. pack and mend clothes CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) I 11 11 II 1I ti