SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DlAILY lp - A rM nqmm" SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1957 WI A ~W ~mw' 1Ai~E ' .5. k 6 M' Qualifie s 8, Indiana 13 in Big Ten Track Meet . Pace, Flodin, Sloan Gain Finals; Robinson Injured Gym Team Faces OSU In Fourth-Place Contest (Continued from Page 1) Unfortunately, except in the 60- yd. dash when Jim Pace and John Magnuson both won their heats, the firsts Michigan took in the 440 and 300 will probably come to naught this afternoon. Laird Sloan finished a stride ahead of Ohio State's Ted Storer in his heat of the 440,' but his time The night's top individual hon- ors went, as figured, to two Olym- pic Gold Medalists, Ohio State's Glenn Davis and Indiana's Greg Bell. Four Events Davis competed in four events and took an unofficial total of 161/2 points for his night's work to lead' Bell, who only took part in three events, by three and one-half points. The only first Davis took was in the 70-yd. low hurdles with a med- iocre time of :08.1. However, Davis was running without effiort and was only try- ing to qualify. He supplemented his one first place with seconds in the 70-yd. high hurdlep and 60-yd. dash and a tie for second in the broad jump. First place in the broad jump went to Bell, who turned in the' second best indoor performance ever recorded, in his specialty, with a leap of 25'7" to smash his own Big Ten Indoor record. Bell also took .second place in his heats of the 300 and 600-yd. dashes. Next in Line <" By AL JONES Michigan and Ohio State will be battling for fourth-place po- sition in the Big Ten gymnastics picture at 4 p.m. at the I-M Sports Building. Both squads boast 5-3 dual-meet records thus far, and both have fallen to Illinois and Michigan State. Michigan was edged by Iowa while the Buckeyes didn't meet the Hawkeyes, and both teams downed all other Confer- ence foes. On paper the two teams shape up as about equal, and the battle today should be a close one. The victor will be in a position to chal- letige Iowa and Michigan State for a second-place finish in the Big Ten Meet here next weekend. Of course, anything can happen in the championships, but today's victor will be in the best position to help plague the favored Illini in the finals. Great Performers Ohio State's coach Joe Hewlett will be bringing some great per- formers to the I-M Building this afternoon. His top man is Harry Schollenbarger, a fine tumbler and free exercise man, plus being one of the best all-around performers in the Conference. Co-captain Don Harper, an Olympic diver, is a threat in both the trampoline and td'mbling, and Ron O'Brien is also a diver and BOOK SALE OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216S. University trampolinist. These two plus the Wolverines' Dick Kimball and Ed Cole will be competing in two var- sity meets this afternoon. The swimming meet will be at 2:30 p.m. and then the gym con- test will start at 4. Gym coach Newt Loken expects a large crowd from the overflow of the swim- ming meet. Extra bleachers will be put up to handle the expected turnout. Other top Buckeyes are Co-cap- tain Dave Caldwell andl Ron Sampsell, who are both good all- around performers, and will com- pete in many events. Michigan's great Ed Gagnier will battle Schollenbarger in five of the seven events, and will join Wolverine Nick Wiese in the fly- ing rings for his sixth attempt to gain points for the 'M' squad. Nary Leads Pack By One 'In Golf Open BATON ROUGE, La. () -- Bill Nary, playing his best in the pinches, scrambled into a one- stroke lead Friday in the second round of $15,000 Baton Rouge Open Golf Tournament. The 41-year-old Wayne, Mich., veteran was all over the course, but shot his way out of trouble brilliantly for a 5-under-par 67 and a 136 total after 36 holes. Nary edged another veteran, 45- year-old Jimmy Demaret of Kia- mesha Lake, N. Y., who also had a 67, but an opening day 70 boost- ed Demaret's two-day total to 137. One stroke behind Demaret were Lloyd Mangrum of Apple Valley, Calif., and Fred Hawkins of El Paso, Tex. ED COLE DICK KIMBALL ... double duty JIM PACE .. . qualified in 60-yd. dash of :50.2 was almost a full second off MSU's Dave, Lean's winning time of :49.3 in his heat. Another first place Wolverine finish, but in second best time, was scored by Dick Flodin in the 300- yd. dash. Flodin led the runners in his heat with an average :31.8 while in another semi-final heat, Ron Etherton of Purdue turned the dis- tance in :31.3. Behind these two track behe- moths in the race for the most individual points, came Michigan' State's Lean with a clocking of 1:11.8 to become the night's double winner. This was the first major meet to be held in the Buckeyes' new mul- ti-million dollar glass and steel French Field House. As was to be expected, field house %records were broken in al- most every event. In all, five field house marks fell and another was tied and most of these records should go again tomorrow. SPECIALTY SETS RECORD - Indiana's Olympic Gold Medal- ist Greg Bell made a leap of 25'7" in last night's competition at the Big Ten Track Meet at Columbus, O. Bell's leap is the second longest one ever recorded. ROTC Rifle Team Defeats Wayne; Wins Fifth Match Sunduy Come to Church COLLEGE HOCKEY: Second-Place Position Up for Grabs in East The University of Michigan ROTC Rifle Team fired its way to victory here yesterday by defeating Wayne State Air Force ROTC Rifle Team 1887 to 1760. The match is the fifth in a series held here in which Michigan has won. They defeated Toledo Uni- versity and Eastern Michigan Col- lege in November of last year. In January of this year they scored 1881 to 1744 in a match with the University of Detroit's Army ROTC and 1862 to 1804 against U-D's Air Force ROTC. There are two matches to be held before the championship can be decided. Michigan State's Air Force team is scheduled for March and Michigan. Tech is slated for April. Each team is composed of ten men, with the top five scores from each team used to determine the scoring. The total scores of Michi- gan's top five riflemen to date are: William Woodruff, 1878; Richard Roemer, 1873; Robert White, 1853; Thomas Athanas, 1841; and John Blaha, 1812. The Michigan Rifle team is coached by M/Sgt. Guy D. Jones. Captain Dwight O. Henderson is the faculty adviser. Both are of the Army ROTC unit. I 11 11 for your eating pleasure... PIZZA at the Del Rio By SI COLEMAN Playoff time is nearing once again, and with it the question arises as to whom the probable representatives to these playoffs will be from eastern collegiate hockey. Strangely enough, the situation of the East parallels the race for playoft berths in the Western In- tercollegiate Hockey League. One team seems a "sure-shot" for first place, while a hot battle ensues for the runner-up spot. Clarkson College of Potsdam, N.Y., posts a very impressive rec- ord of 11-1 and remains a solid favorite for top honors. The sec- ond spot is a scramble among St. Lawrence, R.P.I. and Harvard. Same Squad Hockey fans here at Michigan might remember that it was this same St. Lawrence squad that bowed to the Wolverines in an overtime duel, 2-1, in the semi- Moore Plans To Quit Ring SAN DIEGO, Calif. (R) - Light heavyweight champion Archie Moore said Friday he planned to retire from the ring after one more defense of his title. He is scheduled to meet either Chuck Speiser or Tony Anthony June 7 in Detroit in a title match. "Regardless of whether I win or lose, I'm going to retire," said Moore. Speiser and Anthony are sched- uled to fight April 5 in Detroit for the right to meet Moore. finals of last year's tournament in Colorado. Two games could be all-import- ant in selecting the second tour- nament entry. These are St. Law- rence at R.P.I. tonight, and Clark- son at St. Lawrence on March 6. To date St. Lawrence has lost only two eastern games while R. P.I. and Harvard have lost three apiece. However, Harvard's sched- ule does suffer some in compari- son, because the Crimson do not meet Clarkson, St. Lawrence or R.P.I. this season. An interesting note concerns in- dividual scoring. Leading this con- test is Bob Clary of Harvard. In 19 games he has registered 59 points. High Scorers This compares with the 30 points scored by Jim Ridley, cen- ter for the North Dakota Hus- kies, who has played 15 games in the WIHL thus far and heads the league in scoring. While the race continues in the East, there is some action that is taking place right here in the WIHL this weekend. LATE WIHL SCORES Michigan State 4, Minnesota 2 Michigan Tech 4, Colorado 3 BOOK SALE OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 S. University BEER - WINE - also takeout 122 W. Washington Closed Tuesday i Engineers (PHYSICISTS * MATHEMATICIANS Graduate to a BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL & REFORMED CHURCH 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Postor 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 "We Believe in God the Father." 5:30 P.M. Student Guild. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 1917 Washtenaw Avenue Edward H. Redman, Minister 10 A.M. Unitarian Adult Group. Richard Wilkie leading discussion: "Should We Discipline Our Children?" 11 A.M. Services: Sermon by Rev. Edward H. Red- man on: "The Case for Religious Humanism." 12 M Coffee Hour. Unitarian Students meet at 3:00 P.M. at Lan- sing Universalist Church with groups from Wayne State and Michigan State. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, chaplain Rev. Paul V. Matheson, Asst. Sunday Masses: 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M. and 12:00 noon. Weekday Masses: 6:30, 7:00, 8:00 and 9:00 A.M. Novena Devotions: Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P.M. Rosary and Litany: Daily at 5:10 P.M. Classes Each Evening in Christian Doctrine, Apolo- getics, Church History, Scholastic Philosophy IN THE FATHER RICHARD CENTER LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL (National Lutheran Council) Hill St. & S. Forest Ave. Rev. Henry O. Yoder, Pastor SUNDAY 9:00 & 11:00 A.M.: Worship Services 10:00 A.M. Bible Study. 6:00 P.M. Supper 7:00 P.M. "Lutheran Missions in Japan" Miss Esther Barnhart, Speaker. Ash Wednesday, 7:15 P.M. Worship Service and Holy Communion. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State & Huron Streets. William C. Bennett, Pastor. Morning Sermon: "Facing the fact of Sin." Evening Sermon: "When Fear Overcomes." 10:00 Sunday School. 11:00 Morning Worship. 6:00 Student Guild. 7:00 Evening Service. Wednesday-8:00 Prayer Meeting. WE WELCOME YOU! FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron Dr. C. H. Loucks, Minister Student Advisor, Mrs. C. Mahone 9:45 A.M. Bible Class, study of. "Book of Ec- clesiastes". 11:00 A.M. Worship Service. "The Fellowship of a Christian." 6:00 P.M. Guild Supper at Guild House. CAREER with Step from school into the satisfying kind of lifework that only an expanding, nationwide organization like Sperry can offer. You'll be able to choose from a variety of fascinating fields. You'll share the excite- ment of contributing to the long list of Sperry en- gineering "firsts" -a list which has been growing steadily since 1910. You'll work side by side with noted engineers and scientists. And, with new divisions of Sperry located throughout the country, you will enjoy the unique advantage of "getting in on the ground floor" of a solid, 47-year-old organization! Openings Available at These Locations: SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA-Sunnyvale Development Center SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - Sperry Utah.Enginepring Laboratory POINT MUGU, CALIFORNIA- Test & Evaluation Center GREAT NECK, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.-Sperry Gyroscope Co. GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA -Sperry Electronic Tube Division CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA -Sperry Piedmont Co. These are modern, air-conditioned plants with up-to- the-minute equipment and facilities. Near-by are grad- uate schools at which you may continue your studies under Sperry's full tuition refund program. Consider Sperry on every count: choice of specializa- tion, salary, advancement, stability, company bene- fits, location. Then take the first step toward the career of your life by talking to the SPERRY ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT HEADS WHO WILL BE AT YOUR SCHOOL ON 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 ServiceDial NO 3-5134. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH and STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave., NO 2-3580 Henry Kuizenga, Minister Wm. S. Baker, Campus Minister Patricia Pickett, Assistant SUNDAY:' 11 :30 A.M. Grad Coffee Hour, Lewis Room 5:30 P.M. Supper, Social Hall 7:00 P.M. Evening Worship, Sanctuary 8:00 P.M. "God-All-Powerful or All-Loving?" Discussion. 9:00 P.M. Fellowship Hour TUESDAY: 4:30 P.M. Question Box Discussion, Pat Pick- ett's apartment, 217 S. Observatory (on the "Hill"). 9:30-10:30 P.M. Coffee Break, Pat Pickett's apartment. THURSDAY: 4:15 P.M. Bible Study, Revelations, League 4-6 P.M. Coffee Break, Pat Pickett's apartment, FRIDAY: 6:30 P.M. Grad Supper and Discussion "Mod- ern Rivals of the Christian Faith" FIRST CHUIZCH 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 roormn 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, March 6-"Evolution of Man." 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. Ransorp, ministers. 9:00 and 10:45 A.M. Dr. John B. Thompson;will speak on "Conscience and Power." 5:30 P.M. Fellowship Supper. 7:00 P.M. Worship and Program. Social Hall. Dr. John B. Thompson will speak on "Character Profile of the American Student." 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, "The Blind Alley of Religious Illiteracy." (Communion in 10:45 service) Sunday at 6:00 P.M.: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club, Supper and Program. Talk and dis- cussion, "Symbols of the Cross." Wednesday at 7:30 P.M.: Ash Wednesday Lenten Vesper Service, with Holy Communion. Sermon by the pastor, "With Christ in the Upper Room." SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGINEERING, PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS The Douglas Aircraft Company invites you to ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MARCH 6, 7, 8 Find out about the interesting positions, assistance in furthering your education and outstanding promo- tion opportunities with the world's largest manufac- turer of aircraft and missiles. Get facts on living conditions. research facilities and onortunities to MARCH 5, 1957 FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Minister, Rev. Leonard A. Parr , Church School and Nursery at 10:45 A.M. Public Worship at 10:45 A.M. Sermon by the Rev. Leonard A. Parr on "Modern Prescription For Happiness." Student Guild meeting at 7:00 P.M. at the Me- morial Christian Church. Dr. Donald Pelz will speak on "The Community Self Survey." 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- MEMORIAL ,CHRISTIAN (Disciples of Christ) Hill-and Tappan Streets Rev. Russell Fuller, Minister CHURCH A FEW OF SPERRY'S ENGINEERING FIRSTS PICTURED ABOVE Make an appointment at your placement office today Write for free illustrated booklet "Your Engineering Horizon With Sperry" q- IArT WT' h.. 10:45 Morning Worship. Sermon: "Where are you living?" 9:45 Church School. The CONGREGATIONAL and DISCIPLES STU- DENT GUILD 7:00 P.M. at Memorial Christian Church. r Dnrl Pals Ctw. Na nr of a i ::. 11 r