FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1954 DON'T BE SLOWED UP! THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Sigma Chi Wins, 27-23, PRELIMINARIES TONIGHT: In IM '3' Cage Playoffs 'M' Determined to Halt IlliniReign in BigTenTrack 464 No waiting - or parking problem! ICE CUBES KEG BEER (Continued from Page 1) Delta Tau Delta Downs Chi Psi, 28-24; Fletcher Tops Newman in Independent Tilt i Open 10 to 10 Sunday 12 to 7 Phone NO 3-7191 114 E. Williams " BEER * WINE ! SOFT DRINKS U U i , ,,. By ART EVEN Sigma Chi outlasted Phi Delta Theta, 27-23, in a "B" first place basketball playoff last night at the IM building. The Sigma Chi cagers drew first blood and roared to a 9-3 lead. Then the Phi Delts, under coach Tom Jorgenson, Wolverine hoop- ster, began to click and scrambled to an 11-10 half time lead. THE WINNERS dumped in two quick buckets as the third period opened and were never seriously threatened after that. Phi Delts' Jim Barger and Mary Nyren of Sigma Chi shared scoring honors with wine each. Delta Tau Delta led all the way in another "M" first place playoff, downing Chi Psi, 28-24. Jack Demarest's 10 point first half splurge kept the Delts in contention as they held only a two point margin at the half, 16-14. s* s FLETCHER HALL beat New- man Club in an independent semi- final contest, 32-28. In a fourth place playoff Chi Phi coasted to a 41-14 victory over Acacia after holding a 25-0 half time lead. Chi Phi's scoring was well distributed as Gil Rod- ger sank 14, Dick Fink 12, and Russ Patterson 10. The most lopsided scpre of the night was registered by Delta Sig- Entries in the Union's ping pong, pool, and three-cushion billiards tournaments may be made from 11 a.m. to 10:30 ;,m. today and tomorrow in the Union billiards room. The finals of the tourna- ments will be played at the Union Open House on M9Iarch 13. ma Delta in a professional frater- nity game. Led by Dick Hamilton's 29 points they romped over Alpha Rho Chi, 69-5. * * * LAMBDA CHI ALPHA and Sig- ma Alpha Epsilon met in the only social fraternity second place play- off tilt with SAE coming out on the short end of a 36-24 count. In other fourth place play- offs, Phi Sigma Delta lambasted Delta Sigma Phi, 34-9, and Al. pha Tau Omega tromped Tau Kappa Epsilon, 45-29. The lone residence halls contest found Williams House absorbing a 28-16 licking at the hands of Adams House. ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA andI Theta Xi were victorious in pro- fessional fraternity games as they trounced Delta Sigma Pi and Phi Due to the Western Confer- ence Swimming Championships, there will not be co-recreation- al swimming tonight at the Intramural Building. Hovrever all other co-recreational activ- ities will go on as usual. -:Earl Riskey Kappa Sigma, respectively, 36-25, and 38-22. In second place independent playoff Michigan Co-op smashed AFROTC, 46-30, the Hypo-Jets beat Standish-Evans 31-28, and the Phagocytes defeated Chem- istry, 28-21. I-- ] "TA" But quarter mile titlist Jack Carroll will forego his specialty in. favor of the longer 600 yard dis- tance, while George Lynch, who has been bothered with a foot in- jury, will have to be considerably faster than he has all season if he successfully defends his two: mile championship against suchI competition as Iowa's Rich Fer- guson, Gene Matthews of Purdue, and teammate Ron Wallingford. CANHAM HAS put in a lot of hours figuring the most profitablel way of spreading his middle dis- tance talent among the events from the 300 to the mile. He will use sophomore Pete Grey, who hooked up with Illi- nois' Gene Maynard in a record- shattering dead heat in the 880 two weeks ago, in the 1000, along with senior Roy Christiansen. Ross and John Moule, a senior{ who has become a star in his own right, will tangle with Maynard in the half mile, with Moule also TU) i ~ Sk dE~ U ~ . GRANT SCRUGGS, who gave" Illini ace Ralph Fessenden a run for his money when they tangled in the dual meet, and sophomore Pete Sutton, carry Michigan's hopes in the 440, while John Val- lortigara and Dave Hessler hold the Maize and Blue chances in the 300. Vallortigara is also en- tered in the 60 yard dash, while teammate Geof Dooley will join Carroll in the 600. Any chance of Michigan cut- ting into the Illinois monopoly in the hurdles rests with Jim Love, a senior who will face Illini Willard Thomson in the highs and defending titlist Wil- lie Williams in the lows. Canham will counter the Illinois and Michigan State power in the mile relay (where the meet might well be decided) with Carroll, Scruggs, Bob Brown, and either Gray or Sutton. A TRIO of Wolverines, headed by Roger Maugh and including John Hilberry and Bob Appleman, will enter the stiff pole vault com- petition, while Junior Stielstra, Bill Michaels, and Tom Hendricks all rank among the top Confer- ence broad jumpers. Sophomore Mark Booth and COLLEGE BASKETBALL George Washington 76, Washington & Lee 64 Maryland 75, Clemson 59 Furman 84, Davidson 68 Duke 96, Virginia 68 LATE HOCKEY SCORES Boston 1, Montreal I Detroit 3, Toronto 3 I The performances of these 23 Wolverines in tonight's prelimin- aries will go a long way toward determining how effective Michi- expected the mile. to give Ross a fight in senior Dave Heinzman will chal- lenge the supremacy of Illinois' * * * Ron Mitchell in the high jump pit. gan's bid will be in the finals to- morrow afternoon. An unexpected effort in any event, such as the broad jump or pole vault, which are wide open, could open the road to a Wolver- ine victory. aan eal LtUs vvrestln n qil In Bid for Conference Crown will conduct PERSONAL INTERVIEWS on campus MARCH 11 and 12 Group Meeting will be held at 5:00 P.M. March 10 Boeing has many positions open for graduating and graduate students. These opportunities are in all branches of engineering (AE, CE, EE, ME and related fields). Also needed are physicists and mathematicians with advanced degrees. Fields of activity include DESIGN, RESEARCH, and PRODUCTION. Your choice of location: Seattle, Washington or Wichita, Kansas. A group meeting, first day of campus visit, will precede personal interviews. Details of openings, nature of assignments, company projects, etc., will be explained. Married students are invited to bring their wives. Come and learn about these excellent oppor- tunities with an outstanding engineering organiza- tion-designers and builders of the B-47 and B-52 multi-jet bombers, America's first jet transport and the BOMARC F-99 pilotless aircraft project. For time and place of group meeting and for personal interview appointments-Consult your PLACEMENT OFFICE ALNPMAW " (Continued from Page 1) The returning champions are headed by Michigan's captain, Norvard "Snip" Nalan, who wears both the Big Ten and NCCA 130-pound crown. Nalan, who also held the Big Ten crown during his sophomore year, was named along with Il- linois' Pete Compton as the out- standing wrestler of last year's Big Ten meet. The Wolverine captain's toughest competition will no doubt be with Jim Sinandinos of Mich- igan State who has compiled a 7-2 record .this season. A N O T H E R Wolverine, Dick O'Shaughnessy, will not be able to defend his 177-pound title because of a knee injury received prior to the Purdue meet between semes- ters. During the last three years in dual meet competition he won 19 matches, lost but two and was tied .twice. In these dual meets he usually wrestled in the heavyweight class against men who some- times out-weighed him by fifty pounds. However when he en- tered the championships last year at Bloomington, Coach Keen switched him to 177 pounds. Keen explained this by saying that O'Shaughnessy had been constantly s p o t t i n g opponents anywhere from fifteen to fifty pounds in the heavyweight class, and that if he could wrestle men of his own weight he would have a better chance to win the crown. * * * OTHER returning champions are Indiana's Charles Pankow at 147 pounds and Michigan State's Bob Hoke and Vito Perrone at 157 and 167 pounds respectively. How- ever all may not wrestle in the same weight classification as they did last year. Andy Kaul, junior letterman from St. Mary's, Pennsylvania will enter the Conference meet with a record of 18 straight vic- tories during the last two years of dual meet competition. He was runner-up at 137 pounds last year when he lost to Pete Compton of Illinois in the fi- nals. He will be provided with some top competition when he faces Len Vyskoscil of North- western who has a 7-1 record, and Ed Casalicchio of Michigan 'State who has a 7-2 record. Representing Michigan at 147 pounds will be sophomore Don Haney of Canonsburg, Pennsyl- vania. During the season Haney compiled a 4-0 record at 147 pounds and a 3-1 record at 157 pounds. Other Wolverines who will be traveling to Michigan State to rep- resent the Maize and Blue include Frank Hirt, John McMahon, Bron- son Rumsey, Harold "Pepper" Holt, and Bob Hurley. I The HAIR STYLING of the future is here NOW! 6 EXPERTS TO SERVE YOU 715 N. 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