TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2957 THE MCHIGAN DAILY PAGE AVVIM" TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE~V rnwWv AAXIV QrI T JOIN : Cage, Swim Squads Victorious Natators Top Michigan State, 58-47, As .Hanley, Hopkins Set More Marks Chemical Engineers Civil Engineers Industrial Engineers Mechanical Engineers Metallurgical Engineers Economists Business Administration Iti. CCU RSGT, ft r -Daily-John Hirtzel SPARKPLUG -- Jimmy Shearon, currently Michigan's hottest player, goes up to hit for two of his game total of 19 points in last night's exciting encounter with Indiana. Dees' Late Spurt Closes 18-Point 'M' Advantage By AL WINKELSTEIN Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Led by the fabulous record-breaking duo of Cy Hopkins and Dick Hanley, the Wolverine swimmers chalked up their biggest win of the dual meet season= last night, downing pow- erful Michigan State, 58-47. Hopkins and Hanley each won STATISTICS 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY -- 1. - Michigan State (Nichols, Reinke, Harmon, Fonell) 2 - MICHIGAN; 3:55.4. 220-YD. FREESTYLE - 1 - Han- ley (M); 2 - Clemens (MS); 3 -Fries (M); 2:07.9. (New dual meet record) 30-YD. FREESTYLE - 1 -- Gest (Ms); 2 - Ellis (MS); 3 - Mehl (M); 0:23.2. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1 1 Hopkins (M); 2 - Myers (M); 3 - Lobaugh (MS); 2:11.7 (new dual meet and pool record) DIVING - I - Kimball (M); 2- Narcy (M); 2 - Morey (MS) 274.7 200-YD. BUTTERFLY - 1 - Hop- kins (M); 2 -- Harmon (MS); 3 - Kwasny (M); 2:12.9 (new dual meet and pool record). 100-YD. FREESTYLE -- - Hanley (M); 2 - Patterson (MS); 3 - Par- rish (MS); 0:50.0 (new dual meet record) 100-YD. BACKSTROKE - 1 - Ni- chols (MS); 2 - Adamski (M); 3 - Reissing (M); 2:14.9. 444-YD. FREESTYLE - - Han- ley (M) 2 - Myers,(M); 3 Clemens (MS); 4:44.9 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE - 1 - Hopkins (M); 2- Reinke (MS); 3- Edington (MS); 2:21.1 (new dual meet and pool record) 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1 --Michigan State (Patterson, Lanker, Ellis, Parrish) 2-MICHIGAN; 3:31.0 three individual events. In win- ning their trio, Hanley smashed two dual-meet records, while Hopkins broke the pool and dual- meet marks each time he swam. However, the victory was more of a team triumph than an in- div dual performance. Michigan's victory came an the strength of four second-place finishes, two by Fritz Myers. Almost duplicating his Ameri- can record-tying performance of Saturday in the butterfly, Hop- kins caught up with Spartan Rog- er Harmon on the seventh lap and went on to win easily in 2:12.9, only four-tenths of a sec- ond slower than his performance against Indiiana. In the breaststroke, Hopkins was pitted against Paul Reinke, rated as the best breast-stroker inl the Big Ten. The young Wolver- ine sophomore continued his un- beaten string by outlasting Reinke to win in the record time of 2:21.1. Before he started facing the strength of the State squad, he entered and won the 200-yd. in- dividual medley in the extremely fast time of 2:11.7. Hanley faced the task that very few swimmers have ever success- fully matched, swimming in the 100-yd. freestyle, the 220-yd. free- style, and the 440-yd. freestyle. He gave an excellent reason why he was selected for the American Olympic team, by winning all three of these events, knocking off dual meet records in the first two events. I 4 Business Administration (Marketing Opportunities with Texaco F I n d 0 ou t g first hand, the broad range of opportunities in the fields of your study and interest made possible through TEXACO'S nation-wide and world-wide scope of operations. a' EXPLORATION PRODUCING REFINING MARKETING RESEARCH PIPELINE OPERATION FINANCE & ECONOMICS BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Spartans Tie for Top Spot LEARN HOW you can build a rewarding career for yourself with The Texas Company, a leader in the constantly expanding petroleum field. TEXACO'S representative will be interviewing on the campus soon. Sign up, nouw. SEE Texaco "Job Opportunities" and "Job Opportunity Descriptions" - and interview dates posted - in your placement office. (Continued from Page 1) also provided a solid, continuous spark for Michigan throughout the contest. When a rebound was needed, it was Burton who went up and got it, and when Ron Kramer came out of the game with four fouls, Burton took the job of trying to stop the Indiana big man, and actually threw Dees' timing off a little for a few precious minutes. Shearon Effective Jim, Shearon and his patented r jump shot were also definite con- tributors. The arching shot, fired from the leaping, sidewise-moving position, connected time after , time. Along with the shooting accu- racy, Shearon had blinding speed No Kidding INDIANA G F P T Neal, f 7 7-9 5 21 Obremskey, f 3 1-1 3 7 Thompson, f 1 0-0 0 2 Dees,, a 14 9-11 3 39 Hodson, g 4 0-0 2 8 Bryant, g 3 3-3 2 9 Flowers, g 0 0-0 0 0 Totals 33 20-24 15 86 MICHIGAN G F P T Burton, f 9 3-5 3 21 Tillotson, f-6 3 6-6 2 12 Tarrier, f 2 0-0 2 4 Kramer, c 7 2-5 5 16 Lee, g 6 3-3 3 15 Shearon, g 9 1-3 1 19 Totals 36 15-22 16 87 Indiana 41 45-86 MICHIGAN 50 37-87 while dribbling. On one driving fast break, Shearon faked Indi- ana's Charlie Hodson so beauti- fully that Hodson fell to the floor and Shearon went on in to score. Scoring Balanced All five Michigan starters hit double figures, and four of them -Burton, Shearon, Kramer and George Lee - were responsible for 15 or more apiece. From the floor, Michigan out- shot the Hoosiers, .42 9- .413, and plunked in three more field goals, 36-33. This was just enough to offset Indiana's superiority at the foul line. The Hoosiers had 24 attempts and made 20 of them for .833. Michigan could hit for only 15' out of 22 for a slightly below-par .682. On the boards, Michigan had a sight edge, utilizing this year's overall team size against Dees' 6'8". The Wolverines pulled down 42 rebounds to Indiana's 37. Big Ten Standings By The Associated Press MADISON, Wis. - Michigan State pulled away from a determ- ined Wisconsin team in the late minutes last night to win its ninth Big Ten basketball game in a row, 78-62, and tie Indiana for the Conference lead. OSU Loses COLUMBUS, Ohio-A fired-up Illinois team used terrific speed, desire and defense last night to prevent Ohio State from moving into a tie for the Big Ten basket- ball lead, knocking off the Buck- eyes, 79-72. Kline Hits 40 MINNEAPOLIS - Jump in g George Kline smashed the all- time Minnesota individual scor- ing record with 40 points last night as the Gophers blasted Iowa's young and struggling basketball team, 102-81, in a Big Ten game. THE TEXAS COMPANY + Use Daily Ciiassifieds + L U U. S. KOYLON U. S. KOYLON FOAM RUBBER fre 7ei'eed Clean -- Cool -- Resilient Allergy Free - Durable Cushions - Pillows -- Flat Stock Mattresses - Bolsters -- Etc. Pick-up & Delivery 1-Day Service PHONE NO 2-4706 Rendel's Upholstery FOAM-RUBBER SUPPLY DEPOT Sloppy down or sagging spring furniture cushions can be converted to Solid One- Piece FOAM-RUBBER NOW! All Standard Sizes We Fabricate Special Sizes or Shapes. W Indiana 9 Mich. St. 9 Ohio St. 8 Illinois 7 Minnesota 7 MICHIGAN 6 Purdue 6 Iowa 4 N'thw'st'n 2 Wisconsin 1 L 3 3 4 5 5 6 6 7 10 10 Pct. Pts. .750 971 .750 865 .667 897 .583 1029 .583 931 .500 885 .500 845 :364 790 .167 833 .091 667 OP 882 805 954 997 893 897 843 824 911 817 i4 WHOLESALE PURCHASERS INVITED 731 Lakeview Ann Arbor i I. MY FAIR OXFORD Scene: The London drawing room of Professor Moriarity Kitchener, philologist and elocu- tionist. As curtain rises, Kit- chener is singing and dancing. Kitchener: Why can't the Eng- lish learn how to speak? Hey? Why can't a woman be like a man? What? Why can't any- body grow accustomed to my face? So? Enter Gatsby Donothing, a chimney sweep. Donothing: P'arn me, Perfi- zer K, of w'd loik tao lorn 'ow do spike e'en batterwise thun oi spike naow. Kitchener: Ugh! (Aside) Yet, he's a challenge. (To Donoth- ing) All right, loathsome, in six weeks, you'll be speaking well enough to go to the Coro- nation Ball! Six weeks later. Donothing: Sao, Prayfooser K, can yez thank what me spikes gentmanly aynuf naow? Do we be gung to Coronation Ball towgedder? Kitchener: Oh, my Aunt Sally, the blighter hasn't learned a thing. I'm lost. But wait. I'll dress him in a Van Heusen Oxford cloth shirt. Then he'll pass as a gentleman for sure! All I have to do is be sure he keeps his big mouth shut. I'm saved, but good! (Curtain) Yes, friends, there's nothing like Van Heusen Oxford cloth shirts to make a gentleman of you. Whether you prefer but- ton-downs, other collars, white or colors, see Van Heusen first. And buy. $5. Phillips-Jones Corp., 417 Fifth Ave., New York 16, N. Y. .Ey:tay.PAND . .e:w"{'v'. -E U- t4 } £. . ofksU3 i n..wyi " ,M.,: sav~ x~PHYS1CtST " }: t "TR. ..7 BendxR*ha ":., :Ca . ; , t c+ -f.1 ,} ;. - '' .: i J : - ~ "Lj : t" Z "."s..,,v L ",q~ ..* . . " $ . ...; .: .' ~ U #on: " h ..F r:!:'", s '" sY:"-.n::.:;. " ;' .o'" . e Y ir :tc ; <; : ...%. * .ri ir+ .':::L : " .4a '. :i "e L ti r.: : ti}., t}"'Y. i.. . . ..} .f'...4":it'" .A AI6 "" " r, i ;, " 0M' " Vd:..;F:;".s .."!~:". :}":.! :r, ."/" r::y r: :' ....... a . . . :ur K.. { Expand the horizon of yo ur fo t rewith- ~i dio-a leader and pioneer irl the electronics field, beaN~ as'Teriowedg.strength and resources to stay out front during Te~~pt~v al~hed1 YocworkC will be of a pro- ject nature, and youw ill ae pgir%'.tshrgghrom design concept to manu- facturing. You'll re ives m~ i o :Me~jo °i trnin..Personal attention will be given to your work protgres~, s toitire your'being'given top responsi- bility for which ytt quty. M w~ant located'*i'n >beautiful suburban area. All errsploye eEft~rtutg oo:4 y'if'p insurance, paid vacations and hlfiysetc. FOR INTERVIEW _HERE FEBRUARY 26 & 27 4 4 * I « 4 f w f M 4' * -f ".*w w " *w." - a 4 0 *! IF'pKTM F4 COME TO WORK FOR US We want YOU! The kind of man who gets excited over his work. The kind of person who tackles every job with wholehearted enthusiasm, who is always looking for fresh, new approaches to problems. The creative thinker! What company offers the most to this "excitable" kind of person? We believe it is the Standard Oil Company of Ohio. So come and see us. Let us tell you about Standard Oil of Ohio-where the creative approach counts! Right now, we are interested in this type of man with any of the follow- ing degrees, BS5 or advanced--ChE, ME, CE, IE, EE, Petrol. E, Chem., Geophys., Math., Phys., Lib. Arts, Bus. Ad. alraw4rrsw+r arir.r.+iu pr r ri sawrrr.r rr..rrr r ras r a rsrt rsr . . es M STO RE HOURS DAILY 9 TO 5:301 1 I $ 4 I 1 t U - OF THE STANDAF OIL COMPANY (OHIO) AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES WILL BE ON CAMPUS rI I. L R 11 1,1,EK1 LlC r CKI CU I DmC II I t