PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1955; ,:r-.. Basketball Team Opens at Pitt lAl' Tankmen Expected To Dominate State AA U Big Turnout Watches 7-2 Pavichevich, Groffsky Lead Quintet; Williams at Pivot Maize and Blue Cagers Open on Home Floor Tuesday Night Against Valparaiso As in past years University of Michigan swimmers will again be expected to dominate the State A.A.U. meet, to be held this after- noon and evening in the pool at the Intramural Sports Building. The Wolverines stand on display for the first time this season with what is rumored to be a power- packed squad. Although the nata- tors are not yet at their peak spec- ENDING TODAY vIemce o~escrewn / ". The Thriller! ''I Released thru United Artists -Also - DONALD DUCK in WALT, DISNEY'S "NEW NEIGHBOR" Sport - News COMING SUNDAY THE STORY OF R ACEMOORE!Z ARNER BROS.cmIe TECHNICOLOR KATHRYN Shows Daily 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Mats. 50c, Eves. & Sun. 70c tators will have a chance to see the new faces on the team and formu- late opinions as to the tapke's' chances for the coming season. TWO 'M' SWIMMERS, Don Hill and Jim Walters will be out to de- fend titles garnered in the 1952 epic. Hill flashed through the 50- yard free style in 23.0 seconds for a new A.A.U. record while Walters captured the diving crown by out- pointing two other Michigan men, Charlie Bates and Bud Hurd. All three are again competing for the Maize and Blue. Backing up Hill in the 50-yard freestyle is a. formidable field including Tom Benner, Bumpy Jones, Bob Knox and Pete Dow. The 220-yard freestyle event fea- tures Ron Gora and Jack Wardrop while 'M' natators John Chase, Jim Kruthers, and Bruce Ward- rop handle the .100-yard back- stroke competition. Ice Victory' (Continued from Page 1) McFARLAND'S second tally came out of a scramble near the McGill net. Philpott tapped the puck to Lou Paolatto who centered out to McFarland, who in turn' sent the puck home. MacArthur's tally followed only 21 seconds lat- er, at 17:24 of the period as he blinked the red light after taking a pass from Mullen. Cooney bagged his "hat-trick" at 6:44 of the final period to wind up a fruitful evening of scoring for the Wolverines. Again- it was Mullen and Chin getting the assists on Cooney's goal. The only other goal of the con- test was stored by McGill's John- son with assists going to Ron Ro- bertson and Pete Jotkus at 16:25 of the period. As before, Michigan was again a man short at the time. The goal was scored on Bill Lucier, who replaced Ikola in the Michi- gan nets early in the last period. IKOLA AND Lucier both played brilliantly as time after time great saves kept the puck out of the Mi- chigan goal. Many times Ikola made sensational stops of McGill attempts, even when the Redman was in alone on a breakaway. Besides the great offensive work, the Michigan defense rose to the occasion as Haas, Paolat- to, and Dunn kept the McGill forwards bottled up most of the night. Tonight the same two teams will battle it out again at the Coli- seum and this time the McGill squad will be out to atone for last night's shellacking. The face-off is at 8 p.m. and if last night's game is any indication of what's to come, it should be. an exciting contest. By WARREN WERTHEIMER Tonight marks the opening of the 1953-54 cage season for the; Wolverine hoopsters as they en- counter the Pitt Panthers in the Smoky City. The home opener will be next Tuesday against Valparaiso. * * * BILL PERIGO, starting his sec- ond season as basketball mentor at Michigan, is extremely hopeful that his charges will better last year's record of 6 won and 16 lost. For tonight's contest, he will open up with Captain Ray Pa- vichevich and Jim Barron at the guards, Harvey Williams at cen- ter, Paul Groffsky at one for- ward spot and one of three men at the other forward. Either Tom Jorgenson, Milt Mead, or John Codwell will pair up with Groff- sky depending in part on the Panther's opening lineup. College Sports Editors Name Grid All-Stars The 1953 All-Big Ten football team was announced last night by the sports editors of the Western Conference college papers. The first team included Do- honey and Bill Fenton of Iowa at ends, George Jacoby of Ohio State and Stravos Canakes of Minnesota at tackles, guards Jan Smid of Illinois and Cal Jones of Iowa, and Jerry Hilgenburg of Iowa at center. The backfield was made up of Geil, Caroline, Ameche, and LeRoy Bolden of Michigan State. Hockey Statistics i TODAY thru Sunday EVERY DAY ,HE DEFIED DEATH! cocat -echnicolor The master daredevil's sta tory TONY JANET CURTIA LEIGH I AlsoI Despite the fact that he is not starting, Don Eaddy is slated to see plenty of action, it being Peri- go's plan to rotate his threeI guards. Bruce Allen, reserve for- ward and Jay Vawter, 6-8 sopho- more center are the other two players making the trip. THE WOLVERINES, who con- quered Pitt last season, 85-78, will have a distinct height advantage. Aside from Vawter, who figures to see little action, Williams meas- ures 6-8, Mead stands 6-7 while Groff sky and Codwell are listed at 6-4. Ernie Bryant and Dave Duessel at 6-5 are the tallest Pan- ther cagers. Pitt is rebuilding this year in two ways. They will be led by a new coach, Bob Timmons, and only four lettermen return from last season's squad. Timmons took over when the famed Dr. H. C. Carlson retired last spring. Of the four who earned their 'P' in basketball last year, two were starters on the 1952-53 Pitts- burgh five. Dutch Burch, this sea- son's captain, who averaged just under 12 points per contest and Dick Deitrick, just out for prac- tice after a season as end on the football team, will be the players around whom Timmons will try to build his '53-'54 quintet. THE OTHER lettermen are Duessel and Bernie Artman, who saw mostly spot action last year. Up from the freshman squad are Sutton Tait, a rugged rebounder, Tod Matthews and Gene Cercone, two small hard-driving forwards and Bryant who operates out of the pivot. Timmons expressed himself as being far from satisfied with the Panthers performance in a pre- season exhibition against the Goodyear Wingfoots. The Wing- foots, an AAU semi-pro five, top- pled Pitt by a 64-43, count a week ago. The new coach has been exper- imenting with different combina- tions during the past week in an effort to come up with a starting lineup for tonight's game. * * * WHILE THE game at Pittsburgh will not be on the radio in Ann Arbor, most of the Wolverines' 22- game schedule will be aired lo- cally. All of the home games and all of the Conference away games with the exception of Iowa are to be broadcast. Stations WUOM and WHRV will carry the games with the former feeding the games to the Ann Arbor station. Bill Flem- ing, sports director of the Univer- sity station will be the sportscaster. MICHIGAN DAILY Phone NO 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .60 1.34 1.96 3 .70 1.78 2.94 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Blue Hufzman bicycle No. 18541-C, license 2657. 545 Mosher. FOR SALE 1949 STUDEBAKER Champion, 4 door. Heater, good rubber. Priced to sell. Huron Motor Sales. Ph. NO 2-3163., )191B BRAND NEW Webcor phonograph and tape recorder. Excellent buy. Call NO 3-0521. Extension 627. )88B ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Box, 39c; shorts. 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store. 122 L. Washington. 114B FOR SALE____ NEW UNDERWOOD PORTABLE - $55. Call NO 8-7385. )198B 1952 PACKARD - Standard four door. Excellent condition. $1350. Call Ted Pattinson NO 2-2080. After 8:30 p.m. or Saturday or Sunday. )200B ROOMS FOR R ENT WOMAN STUDENT wanted to share in- expensive apartment. Centrally locat- ed. Call Lynn Snyder, evenings and weekends, NO 3-0334. )20D1 FOR RENT FURNISHED campus apartment, 3 rooms and bath for 2-3 men. $100. Phone NO 3-8454. )180 HALF of well furnished 4 room apart- ment, occupying entire floor. Near campus. Includes bath, complete kitchen, ample storage. Share with one responsible grad student or pro- fessional man. Beginning February. $40.00 monthly, including phone, utili- ties. NO 2-9185. )20C PERSONAL SHOPPING is as close as your phone when you order magazine subscrip- tions from Student periodical Agency, NO 5-1843. )42F HELP WANTED CORONNA PORTABLE-Call NO 2-7326. STUDENT to wait table for meals. )56B Phone NO 2-6422. )46H 1952 CHEVROLET Convertible. Radio and heater, power glide; twin spot- lights. 20,000 actual miles. Black and red trim. A sharp car. $1345. Huron Motor Sales. Ph. NO 2-3163. )190B OUR CHRISTMAS TREE is available to you for making your personalized photographic Christmas cards. You may use your own camera (or ours) and we will furnish the lighting and helpful suggestions. Purchase Camera Shop, 1116 S. Uni- versity. Phone NO 8-6972. "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" )186B RADIO-PHONOGRAPH table combina- tion, 3-speed changer. $60. NO 32554. 1946 FORD Station Wagon. New tires, radio and heater. This week only, $345. Huron Motor Sales. Phone NO 2-3163. )189B TWO DOOR, 1949 Ford Custom Eight. Clean, smooth running, already win- terized. Priced for quick sale. Call NO 8-6613 after 5:30. )185B NEW AUTO, deluxe, overdrive. Delivers for $1952. Best offer over $1000. See at 1236 Washtenaw. Then call NO 5-4205. )183B DOUBLE COIL SPRINGS-$8.00; Steel Folding Cot without mattress, $8.00. Hostess chair, good springs, needs up- holstering, $1.00. Two large side- boards, $10 each. Large walnut ve- neer table, and five chairs, $20.00.1 Coal hot water heater, $5.00. Swervil top chrome stool, $4.00. Phone NO 2-9020. SIAMESE KITTENS-Two females and one male. Phone NO 2-9020. )188B 1952 CHEVROLET 2 dr., power glide, 11,000 actual miles. Fully equipped. Huron Motor Sales. Phone NO 2-3163. )192B 1948 CHEV. 4 dr. One owner. Radio and heater. Very clean. Huron Motor Sales. Phone NO 2-3163. .)193B FOR SALE-Pontiac Sedan, only 6200 mileage-$135. Drive home Christmas.' See Davis, 1420 Cambridge from 1 to 3 o'clock. )197B BABY PARAKEETS-Various colors, $8 each. New and used cages and bird supplies. Mrs. Ruffins. 562 S. 7th. )196B BABY PARAKEETS and breeders, sing- ing canaries, cages, supplies. 305 West Hoover. Call NO 2-2403. )195B TAILS-Van Boven full dress suit, size 38 long, like new, only $25. Phone NO 3-1511, Ext. 579; after five, call NO 2-3824. - )198B MEN and WOMEN: We need representatives in your locale to help f111 out an organization for business surveys, delinquent account listings, polls, and public opinions... Ideal part-time work. . . Choose your own hours ... Your nearest telephone may be your place of business for surveys not requiring the signatures of those interviewed . . . Send $1 for administrative guarantee fee, applica- tion blank, questionnaire, planof operation, an dall details on how you may manage a survey group for us . GARDEN STATE and NATIONAL SURVEYS, P. O. Box 83, Cedar Grove, New Jersey. )52H CARRIERS for The Michigan Daily. Early morning hours. Excellent pay. Openings now and next semester. Call Circulation Dept., NO 23-24-1. WANTED-Young lady for part time work at soda fountain. Swift's Drug Store. 340 S. State St. Phone NO 2-0534. )53H BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITERSI Portable and Standard for rent, sales and service. MORRILLS 314 State St.. Phone NO 827177 HOME TYPING-All kinds by profes- sional secretary. Fast, accurate ser- vice. Reasonable rates. Campus lo- cation. 820 ,. University. Phone NO 8-7391. )171 Help Fight T B BUSI NESS SERVICES RADIO0SERVICE Auto - Home - Portable Phono and T.V. Fast and Reasonable bervice ANN ARBOR RADIO AND T.V. "Student Service" 1214 So. Univ., Ph. NO 8-7942 Il blocks east of Past Eng. )31 WASHING, Finished Work, and Rand Ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. ree pick- up and delivery. Ph. NO 2-9020. )21 YOUNG MAN, M.A. 1 yr. PhD., English, U. of M. Now working in engineering research. Would like to work athome editing, arts, science, literature, ad- vertising, ghost-writing, secretarial services. NO 2-8257. )231 MISCELLANEOUS THE FALL ISSUE OF GENERATION is now on sale at the Union, League, and local bookstores. I t ARE YOU OF A MEMBER THE D. S. A.? ,I s TERROR-RULE SMASHED! WARNER EBROS. ' Iu Cinena SL ui/I Presents MARLON BRANDO VIVIAN LIEGH in STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE Saturday, at 7 and 9 Sunday at 8 only 50e FIRST PERIOD-1-Michigan-Coo- ney (Mullen, Chin) :41; 2-Michigan- McFarland (Philpott) 5:26; 3-Michi- gan-Philpott (unassisted) 8:15; 4-Mi- chigan-Cooney (Chin, Haas) 13:05. Penalties: Michigan-Philpott (hold- ing) 2:15; Mullen (hooking) 7:33; Mc- Farland (interference) 14:06. McGill-- Robertson (high-sticking) 6:23. SECOND PERIOD-5-McGill-Bour- goin (Johnson) :40; 6-Michigan-- MacArthur (Paolatto, Philpott) 17:03; 7-Michigan-MacArthur (Mullen, He- bert) 17:24. Penalties: Michigan-Dunn (inter- ference) :32; Mullen (holding) 5:50; McGill-English (charging) 9:54. f THE ANN ARBOR CHILDREN'S THEATER offers its first production adapted from Hans Christian Anderson BY RICHARD McKELVEY THE ARTS THEATER i I, LOVEJOY-*FLDON 2091/ E. Washington Sat., Dec. 5 Sun., Dec. 6 3:00 P.M. 2:00 P.M. Admission 75c Sun., Dec. 6 4:00 P.M. NO 8-7301 '41 I I F; I llr I I I o 0 I )I ?:: -I U}J:+ .::..... ... i'ig ..::: :: :; i :ii::::-i . : w:. % :: 'ss " -:: :::?. : .:?:: :.. : - :{.ii