PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY V, 1955 PAEI I HIMCIG ND ILIIIAIMA 7,15 tot Restaurant and Pizzeria PIZZA IS OUR SPECIALTY 1204 South University SAE Tops Lambda Chifor Softball Crown NU SIGS, NEWMAN TRIUMPH: Phi Delts, Gomberg Cop Season Titles Engel Yields Two Safeties; Corneliuson's Blast Decisive ders l Pi Lambda Phi Wins Third-Place Baitle; all Phi Tau Downs Alpha Sig, 8-1, for Fourth 4., 10:30 A.M. to 11 P.M. Closed Saturdays Open During the Summer Session WI /1 4, ir r rr II ,( Choice of Over 100 STUDENT CLASS TOURS $54 TRAVEL STUDY TOURS CONDUCTED TOURS Up University Travel Co., official bonded agents for all lines, has rendered efficient travel service on a business basis snce 1926 See your local travel agent for folders and details or write us. :r r Advertising Research Trainee Career opportunities in Advertising Research with leading New York Advertising Agency. Position is challenging and varied; deals with studies of products, con- sumer behavior, and advertising effectiveness. No specific background necessary; however, the following are impor- tant to success in this field: 1. Above overage scholastic record. 2. Facility with numbers and analytical ability. Math, statistics, or psychology helpful but not required. 3. Some indication of student or other group leadership. Necessary that Military Service is completed. Send application to: Compton Advertising, Inc. Attn. 261 Madison Avenue, New York 16, N.Y. Personnel Director Phi IlYta Theta, in one of the closest races in years, nipped Sig- ma Alpha Mu to win the social fraternity Al-Year Intramurals trophy by 20 points. Official figures released by the I-M Department last night showed that Phi Delt finished the season with a 1553-point total and the Sammies wouner up with 1512 points. Gomberg easily recaptured its residence halls title by annexing 1723 points, 232 more than run- ner-up Adams. Nu Sigma Nu edg- ed Phi Alpha Kappa by a slim 26- point margin to take professional fraternity all-year honors, while Newman Club triumphed in the in- dependent division. The Phi Delts clinched the title Wednesday by defeating ZBT for the tennis championship while SAM was bowing to Lambda Chi Alpha in the horseshoe finals. Phi Delt, which also won the all-year trophy last year, took only two in- dividual crowns - the swimming meet and tennis, but boasted strong teams in almost revery sport which it entered. Gomberg Wins Easily Gomberg had clinched its race weeks ago. The South Quad took honors in six individual sp over the past season to leave its opponents in the dust. Nu Sigma Nu, pro frater winners in six of the lastr years, was one of the four te in its league to compete in nity nine ams all % There will be a picnic for all members of the Michigan wres- tling team Sunday at 2 p.m. at 1133 Broadway. y -Mike Rodriguez scheduled sports. Phi Alpha Kap- pa had a great spring-winning three of four sports-to finish a very close second. Newman's four individual tro- phies helped it to ward off the Evans Scholars by 60 points in the independent race. By PETE LEVINSON Sigma Alpha Epsilon became the social fraternity softball cham- pion as it defeated Lambda Chi Alpha, 3-1, on Wines Field yes- terday. With the score deadlocked at 1-1 in the bottom of the fourth inning, Sigma Alpha Epsilon's big catcher, Tony Corneliuson, blast- ed a pitch from Dick Heusel, Lam- bdd Chi Alpha pitcher, over the right fielder's head for a home run and gave SAE a 2-1 advan- tage which they never relinquish- ed. Engel Hurls Two-Hitter Bud Engel, SAE pitcher, lim- ited the opposition to two hits and one run. The run came in ___. I Final I-M Standings I 1 -1 Vi Nt HE ARERT TEYTO HEBRIRY0CIGARETTES 10 ~CAM I . Rpicc CC\ 01D ton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5: 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Phi Delta Theta .... Sigma Alpha Mu ... Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon .. Lambda Chi Alpha . Sigma Chi ........., Delta Tau Delta Chi Psi ............ Beta Theta Pi ...... Alpha Tau Omega . . RESIDENCE HALL Gomberg........... Cooley............. Adams............ Lloyd.............. Reeves............ Taylor............. Allen-Rumsey.... Van Tyne......... Williams .......,... Wenley ............ 1532 1512 1481 1444 1403 1377 1344 1239 1230 1184 1723 1491 1473 1468 1447 1430' 1252 1222 1087 1059 SOCIAL FRATERNITY 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY Nu Sigma Nu...... Phi Alpha Kappa. Delta Sigma Delta .. Alpha Chi Sigma.". Alpha Kappa Psi ... Phi Chi......... Phi Alpha Delta .... Psi Omega ...,.... Law Club .......... Alpha Kappa Kappa INDEPENDENT Newman Club ..... Evans Scholars .... Simple Seven ...... 'Hawaiians".... AFROTC........ 1004 978 972 863 749 713 673 668 654 646 1246 1186 615 537 525 '""°'' ODERN r AZE SIZE FACULTY (Final Faculty figures are not complete as of yet) the second inning without the benefit of a safety. Elliot Burd led off the inning with a base on balls. He was advanced to sec- ond on a sacrifice bunt by first baseman Eddie Ellison. The next batter, Dick Good, hit a routine grounder to the SAE shortstop, Dwight Galloway and he com- mitted a throwing error that per- mitted Burd to score from second base. SAE opened the scoring in the first inning when Mel Bernia walked, went to second on a pass- ed ball, stole third, and scored on an infield out. SAE added a final marker in the fifth inning, when Engel led off with a single to right. Galloway hit a ground ball to second baseman Don May- bee who tagged the runner and threw to first for a double play. Mel Bernia was safe as Heusel threw wide to first on a ground ball to the mound and scored on Bill Bernard's double to right- center. In other I-M softball games, P Lambda Phi trounced Trigon, 14-4. to clinch the third place slot. Leonard Velick, Pi Lambda Phi pitcher, helped to win his own game, as he belted a grand slam home run in the third inning. Ivan Goldberg also hit one for Pn Lambda Phi. Tom Maznec pitch- ed Phi Kappa Tau to an 8-1 vi- tory over Alpha Sigma Phi to clinch fourth place. Grid Tickets' TO Go on Sale On Wednesday Students are urged to take ad- vantage of the advance football ticket sale beginning Wednesday. June 1, at the athletic ticket of- fice. The office in the Athletic Ad- ministration Building will sell non- student tickets to all Michigan's games for the coming season, both home and away. Prices are $4.00 for home tilts and $3.60 for the away games at Minnesota and Ii. linois. The advance sale, directed by ticket manager Don Weir, is stag- ed annually so that students can procure good seats for their rela- tives and friends before the mass autumn rush for tickets. With many of the highly-rated Wolver ines' games expected to be sell- outs, this may be the only chance to buy extra tickets for somt en- counters. Extra Ducats For those presently undecided concerning the purchase of extra ducats, a handy form for mail or- ders can be picked up also after June first. Although students planning {. travel with the team on its two trips away from Ann Arbor will want to order these tickets before leaving school for the summer, the pre-season sale is not intended for student admissions to home games. These will be distributed during the fall orientation period. I .4 -i FILTER TIP TAR ON Charcoal-Filtered for Mildness PRODUCT OF C ZMree ? BOXES-PAPER-TWINE Available for wrapping Packages to send home. DO-iT YOURSELF at Ulrich's 549 East University Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results -- --------- -----------------------------------n F, - ANNUAL COLLEGE-END A Campus-to-Career Case History MEN'S AND J WOMEN'S S_ we must reduce by ONE HALF our heavy stock of MEN'S and WOM- Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE 1 w L Pet. GB New York ........26 Cleveland ........23 Chicago .........22 Detroit ..........21 Washington .....15 Boston..........16 Kansas City ......14 Baltimore ........13 YESTERDAY'S 12 .684 14 .622 14 .611 16 .568 21 .417 24 .400 23 .378 26 .333 SCORES 2% 3 41/ 10 11 11 13 I Chicago 3-9, Cleveland 1-10 New York 8-7, Washington 4-3 Baltimore 2, Boston 0 Detroit at Kansas City, postponed- wet grounds NATIONAL LEAGUE iAlway s something ne w"' W L Pet. Brooklyn .........29 9 .757 Chicago .........23 16 .590 New York ........21 18 .538 Milwaukee .......18 20 .474 Cincinnati .......17 19 .472 St. Louis .........16 19 .457 Philadelphia..14 23 .378 Pittsburgh .......12 25 .324 YESTERDAY'S SCORES GB 6 8 10 10 11 14 14 I "Different types of work appeal to different men," says Donald O'Brian (A.B., Indiana, '50), in the Traffic Department with Indiana Bell Tele- phone Company. "For me, I'll take a job that keeps me hopping. And that's just the kind of job I have. "You'd think that after two years I'd have all the variables pinned down. But it doesn't work that way. When you supervise telephone service for thousands of different customers whose needs are always changing, there's always something new coming up. "I started with Indiana Bell in 1952, after two years in the Army. My train- ing program exposed me to many dif- ferent kinds of telephone work-cus- tomer contact, personnel, accounting, operations. I saw a lot of jobs which looked as interesting as mine. As much as I like the kind of work I'm doing now, I bet I'll like my next spot even better." Philadelphia 3, New York 2 (11 in- nings) Chicago 3, St. Louis 0 Brooklyn 6, Pittsburgh 2 Cincinnati 5, Milwaukee 4 (first game of double-header =_ second game rained out) LAYOUT DRAFTSMAN DETAILER 11 for Summer Employment 4 I i i IS. [11 me, v