SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACWT'a" V.V SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAIly PAI~W 'rrmu'w' jrxx iirr M' Icers Edge Is U, 54; Gym Team Triumphs Early Lead Threatened By Spartans (Continued from Page 1)p For the remainder of the period, Michigan held off the onrushing Michigan State team. Several times the Spartans broke loosef on a breakaway only to be stopped by the acrobatic net-minding of Childs. The third period was opened with both teams determined to win. Tom Rendall deflected the puck past Selinger at 9:48 to give Michigan a temporary two goal advantage. TASU came roaring back on a 40 foot goal by Ed Pollesel at 10:21, but the tired Wolverines held on to gain the victory. Only eight penalties were called during the game; however they were timely. State scored twice when Michigan was a man short. 32 Straight FIRST PERIOD: Scoring - 1 -- Michigan, Dunnigan (McDonald, Switzer) 3:02; 2 - Michigan, Starr (unassisted) 7:51; 3-Michigan, Max- well (Schiller and Starr) 11:34; 4- Michigan, Maxwell (Starr, T. Ren- dall) 17:21; 1 - Michigan State, Mac- Kenzie (E. Pollesel), 19:27. Penalties - Michigan, Switzer (roughing) 9:18; Michigan State, De- Vuono (roughing) 9:18; Michigan, Hayton (cross checking) 10:21; Mich- igan State, Polano (tripping) 10:37. SECOND PERIOD: Scoring - 2 -- Michigan State, MacDonald (Mac- Kenzie) 15:36; 3 ' Michigan State, Jasson (MacKenzie) 16:22. Penalties - Michigan, Hutton (hooking) 10:22; Michigan, J. Ren- dali (slashing) 15:47. THIRD PERIOD: Scoring - 5 - Michigan, T. Rendall (Maxwell, Starr); 4 - Michigan State, E. Pol- lesel (Parke, Polano) 10:21. Penalties - Michigan, Karpinka (slashing) 4:04; Michigan State, Mac- Donald (charging) 4:04. Gymnasts To p Navy Pier; Gagnier Wins Four Events Special to The Daily The big surprise of the evening CHICAGO -- The Michigan was Jim Hayslett's first place in gymnastics team took a giant the parallel bars over Big Ten step up the victory ladder by champion Ed Gagnier, who came soundly defeating the Illinois in right behind him. Luken ex- Navy Pier squad last night, 73-38. pressed how "pleased and de The Wolverines virtually swept lighted" he was with Hayslett' their opponents off their feet by "extremely good performance." copping first place in every event, Ed Gagnier, however, was the Coach Newt Loken's squad will outstanding performer and high battle the Northwestern Wildcats point man for Michigan as he this afternoon at 3 p.m. EST. captured four firsts, in the free The Wolverines put on a show exercise, side horse, high bar and of terrific power and depth as tumbling, and two seconds in par- they racked up their first win allel bars and flying rings. after dropping their last two Michigan's trampoline group meets. ic h-na tam n e rou S1 -E -h MacKay in USLTA Indoor Championship Semi-finals NEW YORK (R) - Giant-killer Barry MacKay of Dayton, Ohio and Denmark's Kurt Nielsen used exploding services today to gain the semifinals of the National In- door Tennis Championships. MacKay, 21, a University of Michigan Senior who upset de- fending champion Ulf Schmidt of Sweden Thursday night, continued an impressive display of power in eliminating Grant Golden of Wil- mette, Ill., 6-3, 8-6. Nielsen, twice runner-up at Wimbledon failed to work up a sweat in eliminating Paul Cranis, a left-handed army private from Fort Dix, N. J., 6-2, 6-4. He won the first set in 12 minutes, the second in 17. MacKay's semifinal opponent will be the winner of the match be- tween. third-seeded Herbie Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., and Eddie Moylan of Trenton, N.J., who won the recent Invitation Indoor at Buffalo, N. Y. Both MacKay and Nielsen won on the blinding speed of their ser- vices which sent shots off the slick boards of the armory like cannon shots. Nielsen never lost his ser- vice. MacKay had a lapse and dropped a service in the 12th game of the long second set after break- ing Golden. -Daily-Charles Curtiss WINNING GOAL -- Michigan's Ton Rendall (12) scores the winning goal midway through the third period of last night's game at Michigan State. Easily Done FREE EXERCISE: Gagnier, M, (259); 2. Hayslett, M, (244); 3. Horn, UIC, (226). TRAMPOLINE: 1. Cole, M, (267); 2. Newman, M, (242); 3. Clarkson, MW, (220). SIDE HORSE: 1. Gagnier, M, (257); 2. Porps, UIC, (234); 3. Arm- strong, M, (219). HIGH BAR: 1. Gagnier, M, (253); 2. Horn, UIC, (251); 3. Koepke, UIC, (237). PARALLEL BARS: 1. Hayslett, 1W, (273): 2. Gagnier, M, (267); 3. War- ren, M, (250). FLYING RINGS: 1. Wiese, 'M, (242); 2. Gagnier, M, (240); 3. Iorn, UIC, (230). / TUMBLING: 1. Gagnier, M, (241); 2. Hayslett, M, (234); 3. Horn, UIC, (199). s was as strong as ever, taing all three places despite the absence of Dick Kimball. Kimball will take part in the swimming meet at Indiana today. Ed Cole took first-place honors on the tramp, with Frank New- man sand Chuck Clarkson taking second and third, respectively. Horn Paces Oppoa uts The Navy Pier s5zuad was paced by Sandy Horn, who took a third in free exercise, a second on the high bar, and thirds in the fly- inm rings and tumbaing. Aside from Horn's contribu- tions, Navy Pier could only garner a third by Barry Koepke in the high bar and second in the side orse event by Ernie Porps. Michigan's Nick Wiese won his specialty, the flyinT r1- Fort Dix, N. J., 6-2, 6-4. He won ing Golden. BARRY MacKAY ... still advancing Come to Church Sport Shorts Sunday 'I No More Olympics NEW YORK (P)-Milton Camp- bell, 1956 Olympic decathlon champion, said Friday he would not compete in the next Olympic games. He said he has been "thinking about" an offer to play profession- al football with the Cleveland Browns. AAU Track NEW YORK (P)-The National AAU Track and Field Champion- ships-the biggest whirligig of the indoor season-will take over Mad- ison Square Garden for almost 12 hours today. I But most of the interest will be on three runners-Ronnie De- lany of Villanova, Fred Dwyer, formerly of the New York Ath- letic Club, and Laszlo ',Tabori of Hungary. They'll race in the mile, and it will mark the first meeting of all three during the winter campaign. Delany has beaten each indi- vidually. Basilio KO's Saxton CLEVELAND ()-Carmen Ba- silio, a savage grim-faced warrior, made short work of Johnny Sax- ton last night, bombing the ex- champ with a chilling; left hook to retain 'his world welterweight title on a knockout in 2:42 of the second round. LATE WIHL SCORES Minnesota 3, Michigan Tech North Dakota 5, Denver 2 3 RUSSIA HAS SLIGHT EDGE: Gagnier Views U.S., Soviet Gymnastics By AL JONES (Last in a series of three ar- tices expressing the views of Michigan gymnast Ed Gagner on gymnastics as an American and a world sport.) "In general, the Russian gym- nasts are not much superior to the Americans.", Ed Gagnier, Michigan's top gym- nast, makes this statement with no reserve, although he was on hand at Melbourne, Aust., last De- cember to witness the Russian sweep of Olympic gymnastic com- petition. Gagnier goes on to point out that the Russians are only slightly better in an overall sense, and that the Americans basically need more practice and considerable time to even up the present Soviet ad- vantage. Noticeably Stronger "The Russians are noticeably stronger on the high bar, parallel bars, and long horse," Gagnier notes. "Nevertheless, it is not these apparatus that make the differ- ence, but the fact that the Rus- sians have an overall polish that Americans have been unable to equal thus far." "I don't think that the Ameri- cans will place in the 1960 Olym- pics either. The main reason is that the United States doesn't enter enough international com- petition." Gagnier points out the the practice of judging in the United States has hurt the sport con- siderably. "When there are 70 or 80 men working on each piece of equipment," he explains, "the judge must figure out beforehand who he expects to win, so that he can set up a suitable point scale. U.S. Scale "In the United States, this scale usually runs between 85 and 100, but I have often seen a man scored as low as 60. Also, it is not at all unusual for the event to be won by a score in the low 90's. I re- member an event in the NOAA Meet won by a 92. "To a European this would be horrible. They set their scale from 95-100, and hardly ever score a man lower than that. They at- tempt to make the scores as high as possible, mostly for the sake of propaganda. They want the gym- nasts to get the highest score pos- sible so that he will appear good to those who weren't at the meet. More Critical "I will admit that the Ameri- cans are more critical in their judging, and this probably helps the men to improve. Nevertheless, when a European hears that an NCAA event was won by a 92, he thinks that the competition must be very poor. "I feel that the United States isn't recognizing its own athletes as good, and in an international light ,is putting them behind the eight-ball. They are taking the wrong attitude, and the Americans at the Games suffered from the poor publicity that the scoring had created." There Is A Place In This Picture For You! I 1 1OPPORTUNITIES.1 for Students with Bachelor Degrees in * CHEMICAL ENGINEERING t * CHEMISTRY * MECHANICAL ENGINEERING This is a chance to get a head start in your professional career with General Chemical Division, Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation. Company representatives will be on the campus for interviews February 25, 26 Contact Placement Office Today For an interview, Appointment and Descriptive Literature GENERALCHEMICA L DIVISION. ALLIED CHEMICAL & DYE CORPORATION I 40 Rector Street, New York b, N. Y. L .... n i rW 1 6 =d- w a. m BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL & REFORMED CHURCH 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press,tPastor Arthur D. Zillgitt, Student Assistant Pastor Paul R. Eberts, Minister to Students SUNDAY PROGRAM 10:15 A.M. Student Guild Coffee Hour. 10:45 A.M. Worship Service: Sermon topic "Re- sponsibility of Hearing." 7:00 P.M. Student Guild. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 1917 Washtenaw Avenue Edward H. Redman, Minister 10 A.M. Unitarian Adult Group. Dr. Donald Pelz on "Qualitative Aspects of Employment in Ann'"Arbor." 11 A.M. Services -- Rev. Edward H. Redman preaching on: "Introducing Martin Buber." 1 2 P.M. Coffee Hour 7 P.M. Unitarian Students hear Dr. Laslo Kov- acsi, newly arrived from Hungary, speak on: 'Democracy in Action." ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, chaplain Masses Daily at 6:30 A.M., 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M., 9:00 A.M. Rosary daily at 5:10 P.M. Sundays at 8:00 A.M., 9:30 A.M., 11:00 A.M., ....12 Noon. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings - 7:30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in the Father Richard Cen- ter. LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL (National Lutheran Council) Hill St, & S. Forest Ave. Rev. Henry O. Yoder, Pastor SUNDAY 9:00 & 1 1:00 A.M. Worship Services. 10:00 A.M. Bible Study. 6:00 P.M. Supper. 7:00 P.M. Martin Luther Film MONDAY 8:00 P.M. Dr. George Mendenhall - Study of the Old Testament. THURSDAY 9:30 P.M. Vespers THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium Sundays 10:00 A.M. - 11:00 A.M. - 7:30 P.M. Wednesdays 7:30 P.M. Bible Study. Ministers, Charles Burns. Hear "The Hearld of Truth" WXYZ ABC Net- work Sundays 5:00 to 5:30 P.M. For transportation to Service-Dial NO 3-5134. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH and STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave., NO 2-3580 Henry Kuizenga, Minister Wi. S. Baker, Campus Minister Patricia Pickett, Assistant SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. Study of the Student Movement Mer- ger, Co-op Lounge. 11 :30 A.M. Grad Coffee Hour, Lewis Room. 5:30 P.M. W.S.F. Supper, Social Hall. 7:00 P.M. Vesper Service, Sanctuary. 8:00 P.M. "Must We Say God is Three-In-One?" Seminar-discuss. 9:00 P.M. Fellowship Hour. MONDAY 8:00 P.M. "A New Approach to the Old Testa- ment," Seminar-lead by Prof. George Men- denhall. Lutheran Student Center. TUESDAY 4:30 P.M. Question Box Discussion, Pat Pickett's apartment, 217 S. Observatory (above Clark's Son the "H ill"). 9:30 - 10:30 Coffee Hour, Pat Pickett's apart- ment. WEDNESDAY 7:00 P.M. "Brass Tacks," Bible study and dis- cussion, League. THURSDAY 4:15 P.M. Bible Study "Revelations," League. 4 - 6:00 P.M. Coffee Break, Pat Pickett's apart- ment. FRIDAY 6:30 P.M. Grad Dinner, Lewis Room. 7:00 P.M. "Modern Rivals, to Christianity", Grad discussion. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M. Sunday School. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Morning Service. 8:00 P.M Wednesday, Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street. Reading room hours are: Mon- day 11:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Tuesday - Sat- urday 11:00 A.M to 5 P.M. Sunday 2:30 to 4:30 P.M. THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN ANN ARBOR New Quarters: 106 East Liberty, 2ND FLOOR Wednesday, Feb. 27 - "Evolution of Life." Listen to Radio Theosophy: Sundays 12:15 P.M. WPAG (1050 kc.) FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION 120 S. State St. Merrill P. Abbey, Erland J. Wangdahl, William B. Hutchison, Eugene A. Ransom, ministers. 9:00 and 10:45 A.M. Dr. Merrill P. Abbey will speak on "What is Vital in Religion?" 5:30 P.M. Fellowship Supper. 6:45 P.M. Worship and Program. Social Hall. Play, "Aria do Capo," Edna St. Vincent Mil- lay. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL and CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor SUNDAY at 9:15 and at 10:45: Worship Services, with sermon by the pastor on "Jesus and First-Rate Minds." SUNDAY at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club, Supper and Program. Business meet- ing and ceremony welcoming new members of Gamma Delta. WEDNESDAY at 9:15 P.M.: Hour of Fellowship. THURSDAY at 8:00: Church Membership Class. FRIDAY at 7:30: Gamma Delta meets for an eve- ning of sports activities at IM Building. r I E/ecro,7a? Waving is Here! ------- - -- - - - - don't jump too soon "00t Get the full story from Olin Mathieson This ONE Lotion Waves ALL Hair-Textures Ends all guesswork... gives loveliest <.> permanent, hair by hair kYour hair, like your finger prints, is different from all others. No two heads are alike. No one head of hair is uniform throughout. There are differences 1 \rC even in each hair! PTGK-UP b- PERMANENT $ 4.35 s New CHEMTRONIC LIFE permanent handles all these variables automatically, thanks to the new miracle of Chemtronics in waving. Ends all guesswork in selection of lotion, texture and waving-time. Easiest--simplest ... a true custom permanent, hair by hair. CHEMTRO NIC ' ' z PERMANENT - 11 GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State & Huron Streets. William C. Bennett, Pastor. Morning Sermon: "When the Hearti God." Evening Sermon: "Faith on Trial." 1 0:00 Sunday School. 1 1:00 Morning Worship. 6:00 Student Guild. 7:00 Evening Service. Wednesday-8:00 Prayer Meeting. WE WELCOME YOU! is Right With FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron Dr. C. H. Loucks, Minister Student Advisor, Mrs. C. Mahone 9:45 A.M. Bible class studies, "Proverbs." 11:00 A.M. Worship -- "The Activities of a Christian," by Dr. Loucks. 6:00 P.M. Cabinet Meeting. 6:45 P.M. Mrs. Ivy Reed will speak on music in the church. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Minister, Rev. Leonard A. Parr Public Worship at 10:45 A.M. The Rev. Leonard A. Parr will preach on "THE GREAT CEN- TRALITIES OF RELIGION." The Student Guild will meet at the Memorial Christian Church at 7:00 P.M. Bob Rikkers, the new Associate Director, will speak on the subject, "QUEST FOR FAITH." ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Street 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon fol- lowed by a Student Breakfast at the Canter- bury House. 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon. 5-6 P.M. Graduate Canterbury. 6:00 P.M. Buffet Supper. t MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. Russell Fuller, Minister About to take the plunge into the business and pro- 11