Eir. Doily 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. Sunday 8:00 AM. to 3:00 P.M. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cindermen, Grapplers Prepare To-Defend Conference Crowns F PAGE THREE SPECIAL ONE WEEK ONLY i Regular price 15.95 SALE PRICE 12"5 t Hawkeyes Loom as Chief Threat to Michigan Hopes . MARV'S AUTOMATIC (AR WASH 142 EAST HOOVER it 11 By JIM BENAGH Three star-ladened powers-Iowa Michigan State and Indiana-are expected to peril Michigan's bid for a second Big Ten Indoor Track title. All three foes have the depth and balance to challenge defending, champion and favored Michigan at Michigan State's Jenison Field- house this weekend. The Wolverines, returning seven of 15 point-makers from last sea- son, jolted the indoor title away from Illinois in the 1955 battle, after playing bridesmaid in four of five previous years of indoors competition. A poor seventh in the 1955 affair, the Iowa Hawkeyes show all the qualities needed to dethrone the Maize and Blue. Michigan Coach Don Canham passes the favorites role to them. Ted Wheeler looms as mile champ, as indicated by a fine 4:11.2 run he turned in this year. Stevens Tops Hurdlers High hurdler Les Stevens and low hurdler Jack Mathews have recorded better times than any other Western Conference speed- sters this season. Among 440-yard dashmen, Iowa's Tom Ecker and Caeser Smith rate one-two. Football star Earl Smith is a potential scorer in the broad jump. Indiana's spotlight was dimmed when Olympic star Milt Campbell was dropped from a promising Hoosier squad due to scholastic difficulties. But Greg Bell, a soph- omore, is due for a conference broad jump record, and Indiana Dons Still To Illini Cling to Coach Gordon Fisher isn't throw- ing in the towel yet. Bell leaped a fraction of an inch over 26 feet in the National AAU meet last year and has jumped 25'6" already this winter. Quarter-miler Don Ward is rated high, along with Cal Boyd, who shared first place with Michigan's Mark Booth in the 1955 high jump finals. Brealon Donaldson is re- ported by Coach Fisher to be a potential 14-footer in the pole vault. The individual star could well be Northwestern's Jim Golliday, who recently established a new world's record with a clocking of :06.0 in the 60-yard dash. LES STEVENS . . . hurdle favorite . . . hurdl e oit M'-Tech Hockey Series Recalls 1953 Ice Sweep By BRUCE BENNETT c" "1 As WIHL hockey races go, this year's stretch drive is quite differ- ent from those of the past, at least from Michigan's point of view. In the past two years in the WIHL and the two previous seasons in the Midwestern Hockey League, Michigan has had uphill battles facing them in the closing weeks to gain a playoff berth and league title. This year they are virtually as- sured of a playoff berth, needing just a split with Michigan Tech in four games to accomplish this feat. But for the league title it is a p Cage Poll* Second Spot By The Associated Press Led by the University of San Francisco, apparently heading for an unbeaten season, about a dozen of the teams listed in the first 20 in the weekly Associated Press poll of sports writers and broadcasters figure to wind up in either the National Collegiate or National Invitation basketball tournaments. Several others have outside chances to make the grade. j The top teams with first place votes and won-lost records in par- entheses: 1. San Francisco .... 66 2. Illinois;...........5 3. Dayton............6 4. Alabama..........18 5. N. Carolina St..... 1 6. Louisville ..........7 7. Vanderbilt......3 8. North Carolina ...- 1 9. S. Methodist ...... 2 10. Iowa........3 (21-0) (17-2) (22-2) (18-3) (21-3) (22-3) (19-3) (17-4) (21-2) (14-5) 1,018 746 684 659 582 559 306 277 267 235 different matter. This necessitates either-1) a clean sweep of the Tech series, or 2) three wins and a tie from the Huskies. It was just three years ago that a season ending series between these two schools had a vital ef- fect on the league race. Minnesota had already clinched a share of first place and Michigan needed to sweep the Tech series to tie them. New Line Aided Win A few weeks earlier, his team beset by injuries and eligibility problems, Coach Vic Heyliger was forced to reshuffle his line up. For one forward combination he came up with- the names George Chin, Doug Mullen and Pat Cooney. In the heat of thb torrid race,, this line rewarded its coach with a nine goal outburst against Tech, as Michigan skated to 8-3 and 10-2' wins. This year Michigan is also get- ting help from other teams in the league. Something it didn't get in the past. Minnesota virtually eliminated Colorado last week. In that 1953, season, Michigan State could have aided the Wolverines by beating Minnesota late in the year, but the unobliging Spartans dropped two games to the Gophers, setting the stage for Michigan's two wins over Tech. Tech Students Vie for Seats For Ice Battle HOUGHTON (R)-Gerald Saltz- 'gaber routed himself out of bed at four a.m. today, hoping to be in line for tickets for Michigan Tech's important hockey series with the University this weekend. But he was hours too late. When he arrived at the ticket office, he found seven other Michigan Tech students snoozing soundly in their sleeping bags, holding their positions in line while waiting for sales to start at 8 a.m. The temperature at the time was a cool six below zero. Games here Friday and Saturday and at Ann Arbor the following weekend will determine the cham- pion of the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League. Only 95 seats were available today out of 1,300 in all. An addi- tional 1,700 standees are expected to pack the rink both nights. Matmen Hit Peak Form For Finale, By HANK ROSENBAUM Readying themselves for the Big Ten Championships this Friday and Saturday, the Michigan wrest- lers 'went through a rugged work- out yesterday under the watchful eye of Coach Cliff Keen. Even this far through the season there is still competition among the men to decide who will make the trip to Evanston, Illinois. Three men, Charlie Anderson, Dan Deppe, and Jack Porter are fighting for the 123 or 130 pound berth and one of them must be eliminated. In the heavyweight division it is still a toss-up whether Rupert O'Brien or Tom Krause will represent the Wolverines, Successful Comeback The team seems to have finally hit its stride, winning its last six dual meets after dropping the first three. "I think these guys have done a tremendous job" said Coach Keen. "If our spirit had not beet high we could never have overcome our slow start." With the return of Don Haney, Dan Deppe and Tom Krause, the team has racked up successive vic- tories over Purdue, Michigan State, Iowa, Northwestern, Toledo, and Ohio State. Mike Rodriguez looks exception- ally good as he has made a clean Track Tickets A limited supply of tickets for Saturday's Big Ten track-finals at East Lansing are available at $1.50 each. They may be ob- tained this afternoon between 4 and 5 from Elmer Swanson at Yost Field House. sweep of his last eight matches after dropping a close 4-3 decision in his first outing. John McMahon is also in top shape after completing the dual meet, season undefeated, having beaten two defending Big Ten champs along the way. At this moment Don Haney's ankle injury is still an important question mark. Haney is the de- fending confeience champion at 147 pounds. 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Eng. 2 Psychology "A" 3, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 0 Phi Alpha Kappa 3, Museum 0 Psychology "B" 3, Gomberg 2 Phi Gamma Delta 3, East En- gineering 1 r-------------- ------- ----- ------------ -------7---- ----- ------ - A Campus-to-Career Case History WILL CONDUCT PERSOD ON C AMP MARCH 1 or CO//PA Y NAL INTERVIEWS UnS nid 2 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.r Fields of activity include Design, Research and Production. Your choice of location: Seattle, Washington or Wichita, Kansas. Personal interviews will cover the details of openings, the nature of assignments, Company projects currently in work, and miscellaneous infor- mation about the Company. Come and learn about the excellent opportunities with an outstanding Engineering organization-designers and builders of the B-47 and B-52 Multi-Jet Bombers; America's first Jet Transport, the 707; and the Bomarc IM-99 Pilotless Aircraft. For personal interview appointments-consult your I4 f4 DURING OUR REMODELING SALE I4 TV TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES4 ON ALL GENERAL ELECTRIC, ZENITH, SPAR TON, SYLVANIA AND EMERSON TV RECEIVERS Some are brand new. Some are slightly marred or scratched. All styles. All makes. All models. All must go. Your old television set is worth more than you think. "Projects you can sink your teeth into" Cliff Downer (right), A.B. in Mathematics, '49, M.S. in Civil Engineering, '"' Harvard, on the site of a building construction project. Clifford J. Downer started his tele- phone career in the building engineering department of The Southern New Eng- land Telephone Company. At present he is working with the Bell System's manu- facturing unit, Western Electric, helping to build facilities for housing a Conti- nental Air Defense project. His assign- ment: a key liaison job in supervising a subcontractor's work on a several million dollar construction operation. "One of the most interesting features of my present job," says Cliff, "is making decisions on the spot. For example, draw- ings showed where bedrock for footings would be reached. Excavations revealed down do we go? A hundred workers and tons of equipment are waiting for the decision. "There's a lot of future for a civil en- gineer in the telephone business. New and smaller types of telephone equipment will probably change our ideas about how telephone buildings should be built. It's fascinating work, all right. And broaden- ing, too, because it's leading me to other engineering fields. "It looks to me as if there are real challenges ahead - projects you can sink your teeth into. Besides, I'm convinced the telephone business recognizes and regards personal industriousness and 1 1 t t 1 i i i 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I