S ATURDTAY.APRIL 17,!19,5 THE Mt4CRIGAN"DAIT4Y PAGE 2THREE 0 9L111. i Lt1 > Cf Detroit Cops Stanley Cup In Overtime The Detroit Red Wings' TonTr Leswick pushed a goal past Mon-- treal Canadiens' Gerry McNeil at; 4:29 of the first sudden death overtime period last night at De- troit's Olympia Stadium to give his team a thrilling 2-1 victory over Montreal in the seventh and deciding game of the National Hockey League's Stanley Cup Playoffs. The all-important goal came after 40 minutes of brilliant goal- tending by McNeil and Terry Saw- chuck of Detroit, during which both teams .were held scoreless. Floyd Curry of Montreal had scor- ed in the first period and Red Kelly had countered for the Red Wings early in the second period for the only goals until Leswick's dramatic game-winner in over- time. DETROIT dominated the first two periods of play, but Montreal pressed play in the third period and threatened several times to climax its spectacular comeback from an early two-game deficit in the series to the retention of the Stanley Cup, which the Canadiens won last year. All thoughts of Montreal vic- ory were completely erased, how- ever, when Leswick brought the cup back to Detroit after a year's absence. Golfers Open Home Season. Host Detroit Squad Today I * V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V WV V V V V V V V V V V V ... V V V V V V -~ 4 MATT PATANELLI BOB HOLLWA DON DUFEK End Tutor . Line Assistant ... Backfield Aide Dufek, Hollway, Former 'M' Stars, Named Assistant Football Coaches By JACK HORWITZ Continuation of an annual ri- valry marks the opening of the home season for the University of Michigan links squad today when Coach Bert Katzenmeyer's: charges face the University of De- troit golf team on the University{ golf course. For the first time in the his- tory of this rivalry, the match will cover 36 holes, instead of the us- ual 18 holes. This will prepare the Wolverines for the Western Con- ference season in which all matches are 36 holes. .: * * MICHIGAN FANS will get their first look at three sophomores who will be in the Wolverine lineup: Bob McMasters, Chuck Blackett, and Dick Harrison will fill in the gaps left by the loss of Lowell LeClair, Bud Stevens, and Hugh Wright. Katzenmeyer will insert Cap- tain Jack Stumpfig in the num- ber one position with McMas- ters playing in the same four- some. Tad Stanford and Andy Andrews will probably face the second Titan twosome and Har- rison and Blackett will round out the Wolverine competitors. The Detroiters will counter with Ray Conlon and Captain Bill Huetteman in the opening four- some. From there on the lineup is indefinite with a possibility of switching the lineup from the pre- vious matches. * * * CONLON captured the third slot ,in the Missouri Valley Conference tournament as a sophomore last year and is expected to develop among the best of the Titan golf- ers. Huetteman had a poor sea- son last year because of an acute appendicitis before the season opener. Coach William Joyce will have two other returning lettermen in the lineup. Ray Maisevich and Ron Stelter, each with one year of varsity experience, probably play in the third and fourth po- sitions. Rounding out the team will be two Titan sophomores, Tom Chis- holm and Richard Black. Both men have limited competitive ex- perience and will probably be used sparingly during the season. * * * THE RESERVE strength of the Titan golf team is practically nil. Joyce is hoping to pick up a few good prospects out of the school's intra-mural tournament. The Titans have played Indiana and Purdue, losing to both, while the Wolverines have sustained two losses at the hands of Duke and North Carolina. From past record, the Maize and Blue are heavily favored to cap- ture this match. Michigan has captured 14 matches while losing only twice and tying one in the Detroit rivalry. od R . I,. With reserve cash on * .* save costly inter get better value ever aid to it REGULAR ANN AB MAIN AN STATE STREE 1108 S WHITMO 4 Mlon ey in the bank is something 4 Sto crow about! a had yu ca BU forcas restand"caryin chages a4 rime nyOencan BUYcorntcasd es nd 'aryig1hares'adD LID tie pe nann KD HUON SREET ET A NICELS RCAD bUTHUNIVRSIT >RELAKE MCHGA _r:__.rA!'r -r y ers a's--x- s a...rr _ra~t.a 4 ww TT VVVTV TWT4 y By WARREN WERTHEIMER Don Dufek and Bob Hollway, two former Michigan athletic stars .were named as assistant football coaches yesterday, while Matt Pat- -anelli was promoted to end coach to bring Michigan's coaching staff to full strength. The moves will permit spring practice to start on Monday, April 19. It had been previously post- poned from April 12 due to the vacancies left on the staff when end coach Bill Orwig was appoint- ed athletic director at Nebraska "THE GLASS MENAGERIE" "ARBOR PLAYERS TURN IN SUPERIOR PERFORMANCES" --Norm Mangouni, Ann Arbor News The Arbor Players made their stage debut last. night in Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie" and won the hearts of an appreciative audience in the Masonic Temple. Superior performances by every member of the four-char- acter cast guaranteed an artistically successful first production by the newly-formed repertory group. Acting in a horseshoe arena with the audience on three sides, the Players made the most of the intimate arrangement by skillful expression of their roles. Williams' prize-winning "Menagerie" is a delicate play which requires a great amount of acting restraint and' poised delivery. Robin Hall gave good evidence of thisin the role of Amanda, a faded Southern belle who doggedly keeps her son in a warehouse job while hoping to marry off his shy, crippled sister. Mrs. Hall successfully moved from scenes of domineering to self-pity to gayety. Her role unifies the actions of the Wingfield family, whose members seek refuge from their frustrations by living in drea mworlds. Ted Heusel was warm and sympathetic as the Gentleman Caller. His tender and touching scene with Laura, the crippled daughter, was sensitively done. Jim Bob Stephenson, in the difficult dual role of the badgered Wingfield son and the play's narrator, managed both with understanding and poise., Nancy Born, playing the crippled sister, is convincingly passive while living in a fantasy world with her menagerie of glass animals. As Laura she comes to reality only briefly when she meets her high school idol, who appears in the play as the Gentleman Caller. Heusel also deserves praise for a mature job of direction. The characters seemed to come to life through his efforts. The scenery was appropriate and adequately fitted the mood of the play. Tonight is the last performance, at 8:15. APRIL 17TH ANN ARBOR MASONIC TEMPLE ... 327 S. 4TH AVE. Tickets Available at Masonic Temple Box Office, 1 to 6 P.M. Phone NO 8-9259 Also at the Music Center and J. T. White, assistant line coach, left for a position as end coach at, Penn State. ** * HOLLWAY will become assist- ant line coach in the fall although during spring practice he will han- dle the ends. Patanelli, who is moving up to end coach after be- ing defensive end coach last year, is presently occupied as freshman baseball coach. Dufek will help backfield coach Don Robinson. The other positions will re- main the same with Jack Blott the line coach, Wally Weber the freshman pigskin mentor and Cliff Keen assisting Weber. All but Keen are Michigan grad- uates and Keen has been a member of the Wolverine coach- ing family for three decades. Hollway had been serving as line coach in football and head basket- ball coach at Michigan State Nor- mal College for the past year. While at Michigan he played end on the great 1947-48-49 Wolver- ine teams that won three Big Ten titles and one national crown andI captured the Rose Bowl contest in 1948. * * *f ACTUALLY Hollway has coach- ed at Michigan before, helping guide the freshmen football and basketball squad following his graduation in 1950. He then moved to Maine where he was a backfield and assistant basketball coach. A year ago he joined the Michigan Normal athletic staff. Dufek is probably best remem- bered by Wolverine fans for his sparkling performance in the 1951 Rose Bowl encounter when he tallied both touchdowns as Michigan came from behind to win, 14-6. He served as an assistant pig- skin coach at Ann Arbor high for a year after his graduation, but he gave up coaching for the business world. Recently he expressed a de- sire to return to the gridiron wars. PATANELLI, along with his po-; sitions on the football and base- ball staffs, is also assistant tobas- ketball coach Bill Perigo. He came here with Perigo two years ago from Western Michigan where he, was an assistant in football and baseball. During his college days at1 Michigan, Patanelli earned eight letters in three sports, baseball, football, and basketball. He cap- tained the 1936 grid outfit. He entered the business field after graduation and, with the excep- tion of four years in the Navy, he remained there until he took the Western Michigan post, This is not the first time that Hollway and Dufek have been under head coach Bennie Ooster- baan. The two Ann Arbor residents played for Oosterbaan coached teams during their college career. Oosterbaan expressed himself as being "very pleased with the addi- tion of Hollway and Dufek to the Michigan coaching staff. They are both fine men and they are highly recommended as coaches by those under whom they have served.. I think they'll do a very good job here' at their Alma Mater." II! AAew Read and Use Daily Classifieds rl , Iii" - WHAT COLOR GOES WITH BLUSH? .. A;. t , A ., ISSOCIATION LUTHERAN STUDENT ) (National Lutheran C Hill and Forest Avenue Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor Easter Sunday-6:30 A.M.: Praise. 8:00 A.M.: Easter Breakfast. 10:00 A.M.: Bible Study. ASSOCIATION Council) Sunrise Service of A modest little freshirian named Caspar Doyle found himself getting quite neurotic. It seemed that every time a girl looked at Caspar, he blushed. His sallow little cheeks turned a violent crimson. Then he would blush more because lie was blushing. le didn't get very far with tie ladies and began brooding. Fortunately, he was a wealthy modest little freshman, and he finally bundled his problem off to a psychiatrist. "I even hate my shirts. .I know when I wear a white shirt it's only going to make my blush look redder," he dolefully intoned from the couch. The head-shrinker's eyes lit up with dollar signs. He said: "Ahem. This trauma is obviously deep-seated and will take a long time to unravel. But meanwhile, try wearing some Vanahue shirts. Van Heusen makes them in lots of colors that will tone down your blush and you're bound to like the smart new collar styles. For your practical side, they're fine smooth broadcloth, color fast and Sanforized. See my nurse for the bill, please!" Caspar bought Vanahue in all the colors and smart new collar styles for $39 each. It worked. So many of the girls look at him now, he blushes constantly. Everybody thinks he just looks rugged and virile. 11:00 A.M.: Festival Service. 7:00 P.M.: Easter Program given by students. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH William and State Sts. Minister-Rev. Leonard A. Parr Two Services- 9:30 A.M.: The Seventh Great Saying: "The Asterisk of Death" (Longfellow). 10:30 A.M.: The Eighth Great Saying: "I must have another Continent" (Columbus). Student Guild will meet at 7:30 for open house at Guild House. All students are cordially invited. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone NO 2-1121 Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor 6.30 A.M.: Easter Sunrise Service, West Park Band Shell. Speaker: Dr. Kenneth Pike. Public welcome.~ 10:00 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: "The Certainty of the Resurrection." 6:00 P.M.: Student Guild. 7:30 P.M.: "The Challenge of the Resurrection." Wed. 7:30: Prayer Meeting, A warm welcome awaits you here. Come and hear the Word of God. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M., 9:00 A.M. Sunday at 8-9:30 A.M., 11-12. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center. THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY in Ann Arbor presents Series of Introductory Talks on Theosophy every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Place: 736 So. State St., Telephone NO 2-6295 Public is cordially invited. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister Donna B. Lokker, Program Assistant William S. Baker, Minister to Students 6:30 A.M.: Easter Sunrise Service, 7:30 A.M.: Easter Breakfast. 8:00, 9:15, and 11:00 A.M.: Easter Worship. 645 P.M.: Special Easter Program. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. George Barger,,Minister 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon: "The Other Side of Darkness." Nursery for children during service. 9:45 A.M.: Church School. CONGREGATIONAL-DISCIPLES STUDENT GUILD 7:30 P.M.: Open House at Guild House. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synods 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAI, CHURCH 306 North Division St. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Dr. Robert H. Whitaker, Chaplain for Student Foundation Mrs. Elizabeth M. Davis, Social Director 7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Sermon. 10:00 A.M.: Student Breakfast, Canterbury House. 11:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Sermon. 5:00 P.M.: Family Festival Service. During the Week: Holy Communion on Easter Monday, Easter Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 7:00 A.M. and on Friday at 12:10 P.M.; Student Tea at Canterbury House on Tuesday and Friday from 4:00 to 5:30 P.M.; Canterbury Club on Friday at 7:30 P.M. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron, Phone NO 8-7332 Rev. C. H. Loucks, Pastor and Student Counselor 6:30 A.M.: Easter Sunrse Service-First Presby- terian Church Lawn followed by .breakfast.. 9:30 and 11:00 A.M.: Two worship services: EasterAffirmations-Reverend Loucks. 6:45 P.M.: Roger Williams Guild. Carol worship service. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. April 1 8-Doctrine of Atonement. 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. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium (Formerly at Y.M.C.A.) Sundays: 10:15, 11:00 A.M., 7:30 P.M. Wednesdays: 7:30 P.M., Bible Study. G. Wheeler Utley, Minister Hear: "The Herald of Truth" WXYZ-ABC Net- work Sundays: 1:00-1:30 P.M. THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw, Phone NO 2-0085 Edward H. Redman, Minister 11:00 A.M.: Easter Services for Church and Church' School. Church School Pageantry. Service of Parent Dedication Sermon by Edward H. Redman on: "Victory in Spite of Vicissitudes." Unitarian Student Group goes to Toledo to view art exhibits. w I it I BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor William H. Bos, Minister to Students I 7:00 A.M.: Early Service Sermon. Rev. Press, "God's Joyous Gift to the World." 10:45 A.M.: Worship Service Sermon "The Dawn of a New Day." 7:00 P.M.: Student Guild. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Merrill R. Abbey, Erland J. Wangdahl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 6:30 A.M.: Student Sunrise Services at the Pres- byterian Church. Identical services at 7:30, 9:00, 10:45. Topic for all three services "Easter Challenges the World" - *- . . . . . . J : ~ - I / cool, genuine mU 1U i aL1IULs i 11 I I