WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE RAN' WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 111 Tracksters Top Ohio (Continued from Page 1) Wolverine Ron Wallingford won the two-nile run easily in the time of 9:26.0. OSU's Lloyd Bartel was a distant second, and Geoff Dooley of Michigan placed. The hosts' Bob Appleman and Tom Skimming staged a brilliant battle for vaulting honors, but set- tled for a tie when neither could top the 13'4" mark. Mark Booth annexed the high jump with a leap of 6'3%" and Dave Owen won the shot put event with a 49' 5%" toss. John Johnson sped to victory in the 60-yard dash by edging teammate John Vallortigara. His time was :6.3. Williams of the Buckeyes, reputed to be one of the Big Ten's fastest sprinters, disap- pointed and finished third. Michigan's mile relay team had little trouble in whipping the Co- lumbus quartet. Dave Hessler took an early lead, Dick Flodin length- ened it, and Laird Sloan and Scruggs coasted the rest of the way. Jim Love came up with another winning performance when he copped the 65-yard high hurdles I-a JAMES STEWART Memorable in "The Miller Story" and Window," NOW ... . 0 . Glenn "Rear as the ,t stranger with a gun . . MATS. 50c - EVES. 80c Coming o TECHNICOLOR FUN! "SO T HIS IS PA RIS'' Dial NO 2-2523 for Information in the time of :8.5. Jesse Blount was next, followed by Buckeye Geie Stevenson. Summaries POLE VAULT-1. Tie between Bob Appleman and Tom Skim- ming, MICHIGAN, 13 feet 4 inches; 3. Dave Caldwell, OSU, 12 feet. SHOT PUT-1. Dave Owen, MICHIGAN, 49 feet 5% inches; 2. Hugh Henning, OSU, 45 feet 22 inches; 3. Ken Bottoms, MICHIGAN, 44 feet 8 inches. HIGH JUMP-i. Mark Booth, MICHIGAN, 6 feet 33% inches; 2. Tie between Stan Menees and Howie Liverance, MICHIGAN, 6 feet. BROAD JUMP-i. Lee Wil- liams, OSU, 22 feet 8% inches; 2. Junior Stielstra, MICHIGAN; 3. Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN. ONE-MILE RUN - 1. John Moule, MICHIGAN; 2. Jack Clements, MICHIGAN; 3. Guy Beretich, MICHIGAN, 4:13.9. 60-YARD DASH - 1. John Johnson, MICHIGAN; 2. John Vallortigara, MICHIGAN; 3. Lee Williams, OSU, :60.3. 440-YARD DASH-1. Meade Burnett, OSU; 2. Al Roberts, OSU; 3. Dave Hessler, MICHI- GAN, :51.0. 65-YARD HIGH HURDLES- 1. Jim Love, MICHIGAN; 2. Jesse Blount, MICHIGAN; 3. Gene Stevenson, OSU, :8.5. TWO-MILE RUN -1. Ron Wallingford, MICHIGAN; 2. Lloyd Bartel, OSU; 3. Geoff Dooley, MICHIGAN, 9:26.0. 880-YARD RUN-1. George Jones, OSU; 2. Hobe Jones, MICHIGAN; 3. Don Bartels, OSU, 1:58.4. 65-YARD LOW HURDLES- 1. Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN; 2. Lee Williams, OSU; 3. Jim Love, MICHIGAN, :7.4 (ties Yost Field House record). ONE - MILE RELAY - 1. MICHIGAN (D a v e Hessler, Dick Flodin, Laird Sloan, Grant Scruggs); 2. OSU, 3:20.8. -Daily-John Hirtzel BOTTOMS UP - Michigan's Bob Appleman isn't bothered by dizzy spells as he vaults over the bar during yesterday's track meet. His 13' 4" effort was good for a first-place tie. Trabert Takes Tennis Crowen NEW YORK (P)-Tony Trabert conquered his Davis Cup team- mate, Hamilton Richardson, for the National Indoor Tennis Cham- pionship yesterday in a bitter three-hour struggle which left both players near exhaustion. The scores were 11-13, 7-5, 9-7, 6-3. Despite the closeness of the sets, it was a dull match which thor- oughly bored an overflow crowd of 3,000 at the Seventh Regiment Armory. Unexciting Match Fans called it the most unex- citing national final since Art Lar- sen whipped Herbie Flam for the grass courts title at Forest Hills in 1950. But in contrast to that pat-ball battle between retrievers, the Tri- bert-Richardson duel was a match of two killers with giant services who went for all or nothing. State Lloyd, ATO Annex I-M Relay Titles Take Half-Miles In Close Finishes By ED SALEM Lloyd House and Alpha Tau Omega took top residence hall and social fraternity relay honors yes- terday afternoon at Yost Field House in the annual intramural half-mile relays. The race, run off during yester- day afternoon's Michigan-Ohio State track meet, found Lloyd, Gomberg, Taylor, and Williams in the fiials of the residence hall di- vision, these houses having quali- fied in the ,preliminary heat last week. At the end of the first lap, Lar- ry Green of Lloyd and Bob Sharp of Gomberg were neck and neck, with Williams and Taylor follow- ing in that order. In the next two laps, Murray and Tullsen of Lloyd opened up a ten-yard lead, and a final spurt by Jack Watson of Lloyd just as Gomberg's anchor man, Erle Kauffman, threatened to take away the lead, won by about three yards with a time of 1:44. Gunn Nips Barr The finals of the fraternity di- vision were run between Sigma Chi, Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Gam- ma Delta and Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon. In the opening lap, John Pal- lin of ATO took a short lead, but Ron Malis of SAE tied it up in the second lap. At the end of the third, Danny Cline of Sigma Chi, Dick Van Schoick of ATO, and Don Browne of SAE were in practically a dead heat, but the fourth and final lap went to Chuck Gunn of ATO as he nipped Sigma Chi's Terry Barr at the tape. I-M SCORES BASKETBALL Fraternity 'A' Beta Theta Pi 64, Phi Kappa Psi 52 (first place) Phi Delta Theta 65, Alpha Delta Phi 27 (first place) Phi Kappa Sigma 51, sigma 46 (first place) Lambda Chi Alpha 64, P Lambda Phi 50 (first place) Delta Tau Delta 42, Chi Psi 33 (sec ond place) Phi Gamma Delta 34, Tau Delta Phi 31 (second place) Alpha Epsilon P 35, Sigma Phi Ep- silon 27 (second place) Phi Kappa Tau 42, Kappa Sigma 28 (second place) Delta sigma Phi 22, Trigon 18 (third place) Sigma Nu 44, Phi Sigma Kappa 33 (third place) Delta Chi 39, Chi Phi 36 (third place) Phi Sigma Delta 31, Triangle 29 (fourth place) Sigma Alpha Epsilon 38, Zeta Beta Tau 19 (SAE enters first-place play- {r I, MICHIGAN DAILY Phone NO 23-24-1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .66 1,47 2.15 3 .77 1.95 3.23 4 .99 2.46 4.311 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 1:00 A.M. Saturday LOST AND FOUND LOST-Man's silver ring, band with rope design. Reward. Ph. NO 5-1183. )73A FOR SALE ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c; shorts, 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )26B 1951 FORD VICTORIA. Two-tone green. Radio and heater. Overdrive. 30,000 miles. The big lot across from down- town carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )235B 1949 JEEP Station Wagon. Six cylinder with overdrive. Radio and heater. The big lot across from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )239B 1948 DODGE two-door green, radio, heater, new tires. The big lot across from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )245B FOR THE FINEST hi-fidelity music, hear the new Telefunken; Opus AM, FM radio. Truly the Cadillac of radios. Ann Arbor Radio and TV, 1217 S. University, Ph. NO 8-7942, 1?2 blocks east of East Eng. 243B 1950 CHEVROLET two-door olue. Radio and heater. New tires, new battery. Completely reconditioned. $495 this week. The big lot across from down- town carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )248B 1950 FORD, two-door V-8. Radio and heater. Runs perfect. The big lot across from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )24911 FOR SALE-Radio, Halacrafter SX62 AM-FM, short wave. Phone NO 5-4720 after 4 P.M. )253B Purchase from Purchase Brownie 8mm. movie camera, f 2.7 lens. Like new, $25. Purchase Camera Shop 1116 S. University NO 8-6972 )259B 1953 DODGE-six-cylinder. Automatic transmission. Radio and heater. Clean S$850 Cash. Ph. NO 3-2888. )263B FULLY EQUIPPED, light weight bicy- cle, $39.95. Service on all makes of bicycles. Kiddie Korner, Corner of Main and Madison. )264B 1947 BUICK SEDAN, radio and heater, $95. 1948 WASH, $95. Fitzgerald-Jar- lan, Inc., 607 Detroit St. NO 8-8141. )267B WEBCOR 3 speed Phono. Excellent condition. Best offer. NO 3-3921. )266B MICHIGAN GEOLOGICAL SURVEY: (1859-1917). Nearly complete set; about 50" volumes, Harry Wight, Grand Ledge, Mich. )265B FOR RENT CAMPUS AREA. Two men to share finished basement with grad. student, Light cooking. $6. 1001 S. Forest. NO State). NO 3-8454. Student rooms. )23D DOUBLE ROOM, modern furnishings near campus. 1111 White, NO 2-9625. )39D ONE DOUBLE ROOM, large closet kit- chen privileges optional. No drinkers or smokers. For quiet gentlemen. Near State and Packard--Phone NO 8-8345. )50D RENT FREE to couple in exchange for care of 8 year old child by widower. Call NO 2-9665 for further informa- tion. ) 56D WANTED-Male student to share mod- ern two-room apartment. Two blocks from campus. Call NO 8_6021. )55D ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD at Owen Co-op. $13.38 one week. Two vacancies. Ap- ply to Paul Dunn, NO 8-7211. )15E PERSONAL STUDENTS-begin or continue your piano playing while at college. Artist teachers-practice facilities. Robert Dumm Piano Studios, call NO 2-3541. )54F SPECIALS AVAILABLE for every one for one more week on Ladies Home Journal, Holiday, Glamour, House and Garden. Phone Student Periodi- cal. NO 2-3061. )62F WOULD the person who borrowed the Raleigh bicycle from South Quad please tell owner how to get it back. Call NO 3-0521, Ext. 210. TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Rider to Washington, D.C. for weekend of 25th. Driver preferred. Call NO 3-3787. )44G WANTED-Ride to Grand Rapids on weekends. Call NO 2-4591, 216 Tyler House. )45G HELP WANTED WE HAVE a few openings for women 21 to 45 who would like to earn extra dollars evenings. Earnings are un- limited, work is pleasant. Write Mrs. Dean, 702 E. Ganson, Jackson, Mich- igan. )32H S. State, upstairs. Phone NO 2-5962. )l0I TYPING-Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates, prompt service, 830 South Main, NO 8_7590. )251 ALTERATIONS RE-WEAVI NG Burns, tears, moth holes, rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade. )5N REAL ESTATE CALL WARD REALTY NO 2-7787 i c for 2-3 bedroom homes--priced for students. Evenings call: Mr. Hadcock NO 2-5863 Mr. Rice 3YP 2740-M Mr. Garner NO 3-2761 Mr. Martin NO 8-8608 Mr. Schoot NO 3-2763 )20 f ROOMS FOR RENT BUSINESS SERVICES EI*Ey Read and Use Daily.Classi fieds The Theosophical Society in Ann Arbor presents A PUBLIC LECTURE "PERFECTION OF MAN" The public is cordially invited. No admission charge. TONIGHT at 8 P.M. "HELD OVER" Meeting Place: 736 South State (N.W. corner State and Hill) BY DAY-WEEK-MONTH - Campus R. A. MADDY-VIOLIN MAKER. Fine Tourist Home, 518 E. William (near instruments, Accessories, Repairs, 310 BROTH ERHOOD SEMINAR Today 4:15 P.M. Lane Hall Library "CAMPUS REALISM ON BROTHERHOOD" Santa Claus Forgets Karpinka, Dentist Furnishes Front Teeth Give 'an enduring gift of JEWELRY Enamel Earrings -Cuff-links Bracelets - Pins -Necklaces I1 By DAVE RORABACHER IF Having been passed up by Kris Kringle on that Saint's rounds for the past several Christmases, Michigan puckster Jerry Karpinka has given up hope and has secured his two front teeth from the den- tist. Karpinka lost his first as the result of a hockey accident at the age of fourteen. At that time his good friend and present team- mate, Dick Dunnigan, fell down and kicked the tooth out with his skate. The other incisor's loss is a much sadder tale. A dentist pulled it. Aside from this loss, Karpinka has suffered only the usual hockey ailments. These include a mere "7 broken shoulder and * slight con- cussion. Karpinka's friendship with Dun- nigan began when he was about seven years old. At that time they lived only three doors apart and often played hockey together. Now they have come all the way from Edmonton, Alberta to play togeth- er for Coach Vic Heyliger. Although clever with his stick and possessing a pretty fair shot, Karpinka tends not to shoot often enough. He played his best games at Minnesota last weekend as he garnered three points. No longer faced with a tooth problem, Karpinka looks forward to happier, higher scoring Christ- mases on the Wolverine puck squad. L. 'I offs) 2-7639. ) 14E OPENING NIGHT FRIDAY, FEB. 25th FRY'S "A PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT" and "THE BOOR" by Anton Chekhov STUDENT RATE 99c-General Admission $1.65 also Saturday and Sunday 8:15 P.M. Please -make reservations early DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER NO 2-5915 327 South Fourfh tO- Ja! fir die prefecte M OLD-FASHIONEDQ German Dinner Q Steaks - Chicken-in-the-Rough SChops- and Our Specialties CARRY OUT ORDERS InIported beer and wine GERMAN D ltetj4 RESTAURANT 203 E. Washington Open 4 P.M. 'til .lidnight except Sunday SAVE TIME!*I Let Us Handle Your Laundry Problem For You r ASH WEDNESDAY Service Feb. 23, 8:00 P.M. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ii49ca 4.I.hop IOpen Evenings till 9 Across from the Arcade - 330 Maynard Street I- ATTENTION Engineering Graduates and Sr. Engineering Students Majoring in electrical, mechanical and aeronautical engineering and in physics and math. Start your career with Sperry, leading engineering company enjoying an enviable record of stable, consistent growth through the development of new and better products since 1910 Following are some of the engineering fields Sperry is engaged in: Electronics - Microwave - Radar - Servo-Mechanisms Computers - Aircraft Navigation - Electronic tube development including Klystrons - Fractional H.P. motors and transformers - Communication equipment Loran - Sonar - Fire control equipment - Controls for Guided Missiles - Technical writing - Standards engi- neering work, digital computers, solid state devices, etc. * 9 graduate schools available in vicinity of laboratory for further studies through company paid tuition re- fund program. 0 Modern lab facilities and equipment available to you for the further development of your technical educa- tion. ! Association with top men in the field 9 Top Rates * Full employee benefits f Modern plant, in suburban area, 45 minutes from the heart of New York City . I L Everyone Welcome 11 EY HERET TREYTON Mr\Tn CM 0171: ; . " JUST BRING IT IN- We do the rest NEW DROP-OFF' PICK-UP SERVICE WASHED, DRYED AND FOLDED Minimum l c Bundle 80c lbc 1. Convenient transportation Recreation facilities and congenial friendly associates Adequate attractive housing available A satisfying, well paid career awaits you at Sperry SUMMERTIME POSITIONS OPEN FOR STUDENTS IN JUNIOR YEAR WITH GOOD ACADEMIC RECORDS Our enaineerina department heads will be available Feb. 24 I I I