PAGE S TH M~'I A nAT? ,.. pi~i r.Ej M TtVOYY YVI4 ti ® w wrr :.rr i .w....a ... . ...s .,.u. THV 1WtWiVTN, 1V l A NT .L WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1957 flU, ,O A o JN~T ' "'4- c #.ge Games 4 PERSONNEL TECHNICIAN ($4,802 to start) One to three positions to be filled in May or June in the office of the Michigan Civil Service Commission in Lan- sing. This office conducts a complete examining, job classification, recruitment, training and research pro- gram for 29,000 state employees. An intensive on-the-job development program, steady promotion, and a lifetime career. Must be under 35 and a college graduate by June 1957. Application must be submitted by Feb. 27 Write Michigan Civil Service, Lansing 13 AwvyGames I To WY yvolverine By DALE CANTOR The Michigan basketball team must really believe in the adage 'There's no place like home."I Throughout the entire 1956-571 season, the Maize and Blue have r succeeded in winning only one game away from the home hard- N woods-and that win washstill in K the state of Michigan when the Wolverines slid past the Spartans, 70-69, at East Lansing. JIM SHEARON Stop and Go Sincethe beginning of Confer- ... dependable stand-in ence play this year, the Michigan cagers have acted somewhat like an overworked Model-T Ford- they stop and go, and stop and go; you crank them up again and they sputter for awhile and then stop once again. The Wolverines no sooner put away an important victory than they turn around and drop their next game, only to fall lower into the doldrums of the second divis- ion of the Big Ten standings. Monday night's loss to Purdue I is a little harder to digest after y watching the same quintet workE wonders last Saturday n i g h t scoring r eordswi t thir 12-9 triumph. Prove Fatal Cage Squad Kramer, George Lee, M. C. Bur- ton and Jim Shearon. The same Jim Shearon, who stepped in for injured guard Jack Lewis, "did a very fine job at Purdue," said Perigo. Tied For Sixth Coach Perigo continued, "We missed clutch free throws down there, but otherwise we played pretty well." The Boilermakers also threw a real tight aggressive defense that the Wolverines could not cope with. Nine Teams Make Playoffs; Forfeits Mar Final Night ___ Ajjj" o t NEWT LOKEN ... heads determined squad r I'l A CL NCE S eakness in Tumbling Tandicaps Gym Squad KAEEYC:Ite c sl 70 Everything for the Skater and the Skier N. UNIVERSITY HRROLD S. TRICK 902 S. STATE Miss at Purdue The Illinois and Purdue con- tests were both close ones until the last minutes of play. However, the Wolverines did not miss the basket when they needed baskets most Saturday night-they did miss at Purdue. Coach Bill Perigo praised Ron Kramer highly for his good work in both tilts. Kramer went on a 20-point scoring surge in the sec-' ond half of Saturday night's game to engineer the road to victory and was the driving force in Monday night's battle with a total of 18 points. The Illinois game tells its own story-the Maize and Blue showed that they can win as four Wol- verines hit for double figures: a Iti 0 I5 I a u V, 9" f: 0 t, v a a a 0 N3 t+ Tumbling was the nemesis of the Michigan Gymnastic team over the weekend. Friday night against Iowa the Wolverines went into the last event, tumbling, trailing by one point. "Showman" Sam Bailie took first place and wee Len Stalte took third, good for eight of the pos- sible 16 points in the event and Michigan lost 5612-551/2. Lead Disappears Monday night against Michigan State the Wolverines went into the last event, tumbling, leading by one point. Don Leas and Jim Cook both of State took first and second res- pectively and Michigan lost 5812 5312 All of this points up one thing, kt the present time Michigan is weak in tumbling. Injury Damaging One of the reasons, of course, is the injury to Nick Wiese's ankle which has kept him out of the free exercise and tumbling. There is a possible good effect of the weekend losses. It was the first time in the last two years that Coach Newt Loken's Wolverines have lost two meets in a row. This does not make Coach Loken and his team very happy for they are proud of their winning rec- ord. As coach Loken says, "we feel we are as strong as either of the teams that beat us." The team began practicing Tues- day with a determination to prove themselves in the Big Ten Meet before the home audience March 7-8. They are concentrating on perfecting their stunts in order to pick up those few points here and there that could mean a possible title. "If perserverance and the will to work is any indication, we are going to make a very strong show- ing in the finals," said Coach Loken. N. Carolina Tops Furman By The Associated Press North Carolina, the nation's top- ranked team, made it 21 wins in a row last night by defeating North Carolina State 86-57 in an Atlantic Coast Conference basket- ball game. Grady Wallace's 27 points paced South Carolina to a 87-55 win over Furman. Wallace continues to lead the nation's collegiate scorers al- though his average dropped to 30.41 per game. Right on his heels is Columbia's Chet Forte with a 29.56 average. Other important contests were Georgia Tech 87, Tennessee 85 and Virginia 90, Duke 81. Delta Upsilon showed the way as nine social fraternity 'A' teams won their division titles and gained IM first place playoff births. Last night's action was marked not only by the crowning of champions, but was also marred by the usual final night of for- feits, four in all. SAM Falls DUI led by Jim Meyers with 15 points, John Grettenberger with 10 points, and Art Wible also with 10 points, defeated Sigma Alpha Mu 49-29. Sigma Nu obtained balanced scoring from two of its players, John Larson and Richard Norris, as it entered the first place championship ring with a 60-24 victory over Theta Delta Chi. Larson was the big gun with 16 points. Phi Kappa Sigma won their di- visional title with a defeat of Lambda Chi Alpha, 57-9. Bill Lyons was top scorer with 18 points. Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Delta Tarheels Lead AP Cage Poll By The Associated Press Collecting 62 per cent of the first-place votes, North Carolina's unbeaten Tar Heels remained the top club in the Associated Press weekly college basketball poll Tuesday with the Kansas Jay- hawks a close second. Winners of 20 games in a row, the Tar Heels picked up 55 firsts and 806 points on the usual basis of 10 for first place, 9 for second etc. The nation's sportswriters and sportscasters gave Kansas 17 firsts and 756 points. The top 10 teams follow W~ith first place votes and won-lost rec- ords through Saturday in paren- theses: 1. N. Carolina 55 (20-0) 806 2. Kansas ....17 (16-1) 756 3. Kentucky .. 2 (18-4) 474 4. Seattle .... 4 (19-2) 401 5. Bradley .... 5 (17-3) 387 6. S. Methdist (17-3) 341 7. Louisville .. 2 (17-4) 289 8. UCLA ..... (18-2) 238 9. Iowa State (15-5) 130 10. Vanderbilt . (15-4) 99 Theta, and Beta Theta Pi all won their division crowns in hard fought games, while Alpha Epsilon Pi was knocked from the unbeaten ranks by Kappa Alpha Psi, 43-23. ATO took a 21-15 half-time lead and then coasted to a 44-21 win over Phi Epsilon Pi. Phi Delta Theta and Delta Tau Delta both started their game with perfect records. Phi Delta Theta swept to a 18-4 lead at the half and went on to win, 32-21. Many Forfeits Beta Theta Pi came out of their game with Tau Delta Phi with a perfect record on the strength of a 31-23 win. Sigma Chi, Zeta Beta Tau, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon all ended perfect seasons by virtue of for- feits. The victories gave them di- vision titles. Other scores: Alpha Delta Pi 36, Kappa Sig- ma 19; Delta Sigma Phi 29, Tri- gon 15; Phi Sigma Delta 43, Zeta Psi 30; Theta Chi 60, Triangle 7; Chi Phi 60, Acacia 16; Chi Psi 25, Phi Kappa Tau 18; Sigma Phi over Alpha Sigma Phi (forfeit)-- R. D. WIHL Race At A GlanceI W L T Pts PL Col. College 12 3 0 16 3 N. Dakota 11 4 0 11 4 Mich. Tech 7 5 2 91/261/ MICHIGAN 7 4 1 82 71/ Last Night's Game Col. College 6, North Dakota 4 Games left: Col. College 3, North Dakota 7, Michigan Tech 6, MICHIGAN 6. All teams play for total of 24 points. NIGHT EDITOR BOB BOLTON 711? sea wYY C I I ENGINEERING 4 AND f New "high-road" to in Florida SCIENCE GRADUATES Canadair Limited, in Montreal, has attractive openings for graduates in the following categories: AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING PHYSICS CIVIL ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS & PHYSICS CHEMICAL ENGINEERING METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING NUCLEAR PHYSICS Heralding important things to come, work was begun in late summer, 1956, on a wide access road in a remote section of Palm Beach County, Florida. At the end of that road, situated northwest of West Palm Beach, a 500,000-square-foot plant destined to be the newest addition to Pratt & Whit- ney Aircraft engineering facilities is already well under construction. Here, engineers and scientists will soon be hard at work dealing with new and in- creasingly complex problems relating to ad- vanced jet aircraft engines. Working in close coordination with men at other P & W A establishments - particularly the com- nDnv's multi-million-dollar Andrew Will- this newest section of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft team will face a challenging.assign- ment. They, too, will be concerned with design, testing and development of highly advanced, extremely powerful jet engines which will join a family already including J-57 and J-75 turbojets, currently playing important roles in the growing military and commercial air power of the United States. The engineering graduate who begins his career at this Florida facility will have the rare opportunity of keeping pace with its anticipated growth. In an organization re- nowned for development engineering su- periority, he will gain invaluable experience workingo n viti l-tIn-ranga n'ortc fha+ These openings are for design, research and develop- ment of advanced aircraft and guided missiles, as well as commercial applications of nuclear energy. An interesting training program is offered to selected applicants. Al x OUR REPRESENTATIVE WILL-BE HERE F RIDAY, MARCH 8th PLEASE CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT I