PAGE FO It
THE MCMGAN DAILY
SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 195!
PAGE FOTY~ THE flKIIIGAN IIAITY
Ttle
opes
Fade
for
'~zi
W restlers
--(81
Wardrop
Sets NCAA
Meet Mark
(Continued from Page 1)
Sons of Eli covered the distance
in 3:24.9. Jones lost some dis-
tance when he had to stop and
make a turn, and Harry Gideonese
crossed the finish line a half
length ahead of Michigan's Jack
Wardrop.
Yoshi Oyakawa, the Buckeye's
diminutive backstroker, captured
his fourth straight NCAA 200-yard
backstroke crown, as he breezed
across the finish line in 2:07.6.
Oyakawa, who is the first man in
the meet's history to win the event
four consecutive years, was never
threatened by Lincoln Hurring of
Iowa, or Larry Heim of Stanford,
who finished second and third re-
spectively.
Conspicuously missing from the
evening's competition was Al Wig-
gent, the Buckeye's famed sopho-
more star, who failed to qualify
for the backstroke event.
50-YARD FREESTYLE - ) Donovan
(Yale); 2) Aubrey (Yale); 3) Pen-
nington (Iowa); 4) Glover (Dart-
mouth); 5) Ord (Cornell); 6) Dyer
Harvard). Time: 0:22.8.'
200-YARD BACKSTROKE - 1) Oyak-
awa (Ohio State) 2) Hurring (Iowa);
3) Heim .(Stanford); 4) Brown (Den-
ver); 5) Krepp (North Carolina); 6)
Weiser (Stanford). Time: 2:07.6.
220-YARD FREESTYLE - 1) J. Ward-
rop (MICHIGAN); 2) Konno (Ohio
State); 3) Woolsey (Indiana); 4) Jor-
genson (Harvard); 5) Johnston (Oka-
honma); 6) Duncan (Oklahoma). Time:
2:04.2 (New NCAA meet record).
200-YARD BREASTROKE - 1) Mat-
teson (N. C. State); 2) Jones (MICH-
IGAN); 3) Stolz (Georgia); 4) Van
Hyde (Ohio State); 5) Kutyna
(Army); 6) Thurlow (MICHIGAN).
Time: 2:25.0 (New NCAA meet re-
cord).
ONE METER DIVING -- 1) Gliders
(Ohio State); 2) Harrison (Ohio
State); 3) Walters (MICHIGAN); 4)
Shapiro (Ohio State); 5) Fraunfelter
(Ohio State); 6) Bates (MICHIGAN).
Points: 535.05
400-YARD FREESTYLE RELAY -- 1)
Yale (Aldrich, Cornwell, Aubrey, Gid-
eonese); 2) MICHIGAN; 3) Iowa State;
4) Harvard; 5) Ohio State; 6) Stan-
ford. Time: 3:24.9.
Kaul, Rodriguez Gain Semifinal
Berths, Others Have Chance To Place
J---
Special to The Daily
JACK WARDROP
... another record
MIKE RODRIGUEZ
... enters semifinals
I
Hoosier Mile Relf
Nips Michigan at
Special to The Daily
CLEVELAND, Ohio-Michigan's The r
top-flight mile relay team ran lighted
brilliantly last night at the an- Kansan
nual Knights of Columbus meet new K.
here, but Indiana's record-holding of 4:4.6,
Big Ten champions proved to be indoorr
two-tenths of a second better as formerI
they sped to victory in the Uni- ond plac
versity Mile Relay event at Cleve- field wh
land Arena. Santee.
With a winning time of 3:19.2, I
the flashy Hoosier quartet of Mike Other
Cusick, John Howe, Don WardaO'her
and Len Robinson retained their freshmen
mastery over the Wolverine unit. DickHi]
Scruggs Shines good foi
Michigan's steady anchor man, mile et
Grant Scruggs, ran his lap in 48 third, w
seconds, the best quarter mile of place go
the evening, and although he Iowa, wI
gained four-tenths of a second on 9:14.4.
Robinson, the deficit with which
he started the final lap was too O'Reil
great to be compensated for. The Michigan
Maize and Blue team of Bob in the h
Brown, Dick Flodin, Laird Sloan, while H
and Scruggs was clocked in a very 45-yard
creditable 3:19.4. the even
ty Squad
Cleveland
meet was perhaps high-
by the performance of
Wes Santee, who set a
of C. games mile record
one second over the world
mark. Joseph La Pierre,
Villanova miler, took sec-
ce, heading the rest of the
hich finished far back of
Landstrom Fourth
Michigan entrants were
eilly, Geert Keilstrop, and
m Eeles Landstrom, Brend-
1. Landstrom's 14 feet was
r fourth place. In the two
vent, Keilstrop finished
ith a time of 9:31, first
oing to Deacon Jones of
ho covered the distance in
ly tied Joe Savoldi of
n State for fourth place
high jump, clearing 6' 2",
ill was eliminated in the'
high hurdle semi-finals by
tual winner, Harrison Dil-
ho copped the event for
h straight year.
Wolverine contingent will
in the Chicago Daily
elays tonight.j
ITHACA, N. Y. - As the dust
settles after a hard-fought round
of preliminary bouts, Michigan's
chances of gaining the NCAA
wresting crown appear rather
slight.
Out of the six-man squad which
Coach Cliff Keen entered in the
tournament, only Captain Andy
Kaul and Mike Rodriguez manag-
ed to survive yesterday's elimina-
tion rounds and gain this after-
noon's semi-finals.
Of the 72 colleges entered, Pitts-
burgh, having placed four men
in the semi-final rounds, now ap-
pears to be the favorite to garner
the national laurels. Penn State,
Oklahoma and Colorado A & M
each placed three men while de-
fending champion Oklahoma A &
M, Big Ten powerhouse Iowa, and
several other colleges joined Mich-
igan with two survivors apiece.
Rodriguez Stars
Rodriguez put on one of the
most inspiring displays of the day
as he won his opening bout by
Final qualifying rounds for
the Big Ten - Union bowling
tournament will be held today
from 1 to 11 P.M. at the Union
alleys. All Union members are
invited to roll nine lines.
-Ron Malls
a 14 - 4 decision and then went
on to garner pins over his next
two opponents. A fast and flashy
grappler and Big Ten champion
at 157 pounds, he will meet Ed-
ward Rooney of Syracuse in the
semi-final match.
Girl Swimmer
Wins Twice
MEXICO CITY (MP)-Beth Whit-
tall, an 18-year-old Purdue Uni-
versity sophomore from Montreal,
smashed the hopes of the United
States' brightest swimming stars
Friday to score a sensational dou-
ble slam in the Pan-American
Games.
Winning both his early rounds,
Kaul earned the right to meet
Warren DePringer of Cornell Uni-
versity this afternoon. This places
him in a position similar to that
which he occupied last year when
he garnered fourth place.
Although, Michigan's other four
wrestlers failed to survive the pre-
liminary rounds three of them,
Max Pearson, Dan Deppe and Don
Haney, may yet get an opportuni-
ty to compete for third and fourth
places as the men to whom they
lost are still in the running. Under
the rules of the tournament all
men who are defeated by either of
the finalists are eligible for the
consolation rounds which deter-
mine the third and fourth place
winners.
Deppe Falls Victim
Lightweight Deppe had the mis-
fortune to meet Southern Confer-
Exhibition
Baseball
By The Associated Press
Yankees 5, Dodgers 1
At St. Petersburg, Fla.
Brooklyn .....000 001000-1 4 1
New York (A) 002 102 00x-5 13 1
White Sox 14, Tigers 5
At Lakeland, Fla.
Chicago (A) .001450 400-14 14 0
Detroit.......000 200 012-- 5 5 1
Giants 6, Cubs 2
At Phoenix, Ariz.
Chicago (N) ...000 101000-2 7 1
New York (N) .002 100 03x-6 8 1
Pirates 5, Red Sox 3
At Fort Myers, Fla.
Boston ........000 002 010-3 7 1
Pittsburgh .....401 000 00x-5 5 0
Phillies 7, Cards 6
At Clearwater, Fla.
St. Louis .....210 100 020-6 11 2
Philadelphia .. 000 003 004-7 8 1
Orioles 10-4, Athletics 3-7
At West Palm Beach, Fla.
First Game (called after 7 in-
nings):
Baltimore ......030 320 2-10 9 0
Kansas City ....210 000 0-- 3 4 0
Second Game:
Baltimore .....000 000 040-4 7 4
Kansas City ... 400 001 200'-7 6 1
ence champion Louis Guibi, chosen
the outstanding wrestler of the
Wilkes tournament. Guibi pinned
Deppe at 7:09.
Alternately plagued and aided
by referee's decisions throughout
his tournament career, Michigan's
Haney once again fell victim to
that necessary evil. Tieing George
Mulligan of Rutgers, 3-3, in the
opening match he failed to win the
favor of the judges.
Pearson added valuable points
to the Maize and Blue cause by
winning his first twomatches be-
fore losing out to Colorado's Linn
Long, 9-4. The Wolverines' other
entry, John McMahon was elim-
inated in the first round and as his
conqueror, James Sanders of Au-
burn, lost his next match, McMa-
hon is ineligible for further com-
petition.
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Main and Huron Streets
State Street at Nickels Arcade
1108 South University
Packard at Brockman
WHITmoRE LAK.E, MICHIGAN
t
I
t'
Come to Church
Next Sunday
lard, wl
the tint
Murphy Has High Hopes
For Wolverine Netmen
The V
compete
News RE
I 4
By DICK CRAMER
"This is one of our strongest
squads in recent years," comment-
ed Coach Bill Murphy on his Wol-
verine tennis team in an inter-
view yesterday afternoon.
"The best indication of this,"
continued Murphy, "is the fact
that newcomers are beating out
last year's stars for the top posi-
tions on this year's team."
Murphy was speaking princi-
pally in reference to the two soph-
omores, Barry MacKay and Mark
Jaffe, who presently are rated
one-two on the Michigan squad,
ahead of veterans Al Mann, Pete'
Paulus, Bob Paley, Captain Bob
Nederlander, and Bob Mitchell.
MacKay Ohio Singles Champ
MacKay, who was ranked first
in the Western Tennis Association
Junior Singles division in 1953 and
was last year's men's singles
champion in the state of Ohio,
is undefeated thus far in indoor
intra-squad practice matches.
Jaffe, whose only practice loss
has been to MacKay, possesses a
distinguished record in regional
and national circles. Together,
the two sophomores offer great
promise that the first two matches
of any dual meet will result in
Michigan triumphs this season.
A third new net man, Dick
Potter of Detroit, also stands a
good chance of breaking into the
starting lineup when the Wol-
verines begin inter-squad competi-
tion during spring vacation at
North Carolina.
. Potter has been battling on even
terms with last year's first and
third men on the team, Mann and
Paley, for the fifth and sixth sin-
gles positions. It seems that all
three will make the trip South
with MacKay, Jaffe, and the pre-
sent middle men of the squad, Ne-
derlander and Paulus. The last
two were fourth and second in
last year's singles hierarchy.
Coach Murphy's current choices
for the doubles combinations in-
clude the same seven men. Mac-
Kay and Nederlander are expect-
ed to rate the number one spot
in doubles with Jaffe and Paley
second. The last duo will have
either Paulus, Mann or Potter.
For the Best in
BOOKS and
SURPLIES
Try
WAH R'S
PURCHASE YOUR
1955
A ,
l t
A V
at the
Student Publications Building
Monday through Friday, 8 - 5
Price $7.00
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
and WESLEY FOUNDATION
120 South State Street
Merrill R. Abbey, Erland J. Wongdahl,
Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers
9:00 and 10:45 A.M.-Worship Service. "Living
With Our Successes." Dr. Abbey preaching.
9:30 A.M.-Student Seminar. Topic: "Paradoxes
of the Christian Faith."
5:30 P.M.--Fellowship supper
6:45 P.M.-Worship and Program-Rev.Joseph
Perl speaking on, "Does Eternal Life Depend
on Christ's Resurrection?"
Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily.
ST. NICHOLAS GREEK ORTHODOX
CHURCH
414 North Main
Rev. Father Eusebius A. Stephanou
9:30 A.M.-Matins Service
10:30 A.M.--Divine Liturgy
Alternate Thursdays, 7:30 P.M.-Orthodox Stu-
dent Guild.
Lenten devotions Fridays 7:30 P.M.
Wednesday Communions 9:30 A.M.
BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND
REFORMED
423 South Fourth Ave.
Walter S. Press, Pastor
Warren Winkler, Director of Student Work
10:45 A.M..-Worship Service, Presentation of
Confirmation Class
7:00 P.M.-Student Guild
Wednesday 7:30-Midweek Lenten Service
MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Disciples of Christ)
Hill and Tappan Streets
Rev. George Barger, Minister
10:45-Morning Worship. Sermon: "The Edu-
cated Conscience"
9:45 A.M.-Church School
CONGREGATIONAL-DISCIPLES STUDENT GUILD
7:00 P.M., Congregational Church. Speaker: Mr.
M. A. Thomas, Travancore, India: "The Christ-
ian Mission in a World of Revolution"
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Avenue
Edward H. Redman, Minister
10:00 A.M.-Unitarian Church School and Adult
Group
11:00 A.M.-Services of Worship. Rev. Edward
H. Redman preaching on: "My Five Hundredth
Ann Arbor Sermon."
2:00 P.M.-Student Group Outing starting from
Lane Hall
5:00 P.M.-High School Orientation Group
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Minister-Rev. Leonard A. Parr
Public worship at 10:45 A.M. Dr. Parr will preach
on "Here I Stand!" (Martin Luther) the 5th
sermon of the series "Words Men Live By."
A brass sextette: Donald McComas, Wesley
Measel, James Baty, Joseph Moore, James
Harrington, and James Heier will present spec-
ial musical numbers. Miss Yynn Stevens, alto
soloist will sing the aria of Handel's "He Was
Despised." The choir will sing "Teach me,
O. Lord" (Attwood).
Student Guild 7:00 P.M. The Rev. M. A. Thomas
of the Mar Thoma Syrian Church of South
India is the guest speaker.
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
530 West Stadium
(Formerly at Y.M.C.A.)
Sundays-10:15 A.M. - 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.
ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the
EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION
306 North Division St.
The Right Reverend Richard S. Emrich, Bishop of
Michigan, will discuss "A Christian Faces
Death," at the Canterbury Campus Series, Fri-
day, March 25, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House.
Sunday services at 8, 9, 11 A.M. and 8 P.M.
"Faith of the Church" lecture at 4:30 P.M.
Supper Club at 5:45 P.M.
Evensong at 8 P.M. followed by coffee hour.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL
(National Lutheran Council)
Hill Street and Forest Avenue
Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor
Sunday-
10:00 A.M.-Bible Study
11:00 A.M.-Worship Service
6:00 P.M.-Supper followed by Dessert and Dis-
cussion Hour in Faculty Homes - "What
Makes a Home Christian?"
Tuesday-
7:15P.M.-Study of Great Church Leaders
Wednesday-
7:30 P.M. Lenten Service-Holy Communion
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
AND STUDENT CENTER
1511 Washtenow Avenue
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Saturday, 9:00-12:00 A.M.-Gammo Delta North-
eastern Region Convention Business Meeting.
Saturday at 1:30: Regional Convention Workshops.
Saturday at 7:00: Gamma Delta Convention Ban-
quet at Union
Sunday at 9:30 and at 10:45: Worship Services,
with sermon by the pastor, "The Mount of
Cherished Memories" (Mt. Olivet)
Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student
Club, supper and program. Religious movie,
"Journey Into Faith."
Wednesday at 7:30 and at 9:15: Midweek Len-
ten Vespers, with Holy Communion in both
services. Sermon by the pastor, "Jesus--
Bruised Burdenbearer."
CAMPUS CHAPEL
(Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches
of Michigan)
Washtenaw at Forest
Rev. Leonard Verduin, Director
Res. Ph. NO 5-4205; Office Ph. NO 8-7421
10:00 A.M.-Morning Service
7:00 P.M.-Evening Service
ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL
William and Thompson Sts.
Sunday Masses-
8:00 - 9:30 - 11:00 - 12:00
Daily-7:00 - 8:00 - 9:00
Novena Devotions-Wednesday evenings-7 :30
P.M.
f'
7.
OUR ANNUAL SPRING
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Saturday and Monday
Only
PURCHASE
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1116 South U. NO 8-6972
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Carry
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122 West Washington
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standards for technical personnel IS true.
To some, these standards may seem exacting.
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Among ECA's projects are automatic controls
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GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
William C. Bennett, Pastor
10:00-Sunday School
11:00-Sermon "Things Christians Know for Sure"
6:00 P.M.-Student Guild
7:30 P.M.-"Christ of Barabbas"
Wednesday 7:30-Prayer meeting
We na n n rin invitnt ; i-nnt;o-;f +- ,-
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
502 East Huron, Phone NO 8-7332
Rev. C. H. Loucks, Minister
Beth Mahone, Student Advisor
Sunday, March 27--
9:45-Student class studies John and 1st John
11:00-Rev. M. A. Thomas of Travancore, India
will be the nuest sneaker.
Top Off Your Evenings
," 44 . -
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11
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