THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 8,1957 By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Vardley & Co., Ltd., London THIS AFTER SHAVE LOTION CONDITIONS YOUR FACE, TOO Invigorates and softens the skin; soothes razor burn after any shave, electric or lather....'$1.10, plus tax. 'A/', i g n Tech Play Here Tonight Wrestlers in Big Ten iveet Tonight Contests To Determine WIHL's Second Place By HANK ROSENBAUM Tonight should tell the story as I to the Michigan wrestling team's chances of taking its third straight Big Ten championship. In last year's champions, Capt. Mike Rodriguez and Jack Mar- chello, and 1954 titleholder Max Pearson, the Wolverines have probable finalists in three of the eight weight divisions. Balance Necessary The big question is how strong will team balance be. Capturing a Conference crown is a team effort, as shown by Michigan's exciting victory last year and a few stand- outs cannot carry the load them- selves. Thus the outcome, as far as Mi- chigan is concerned, should rest on the performances of Dan Deppe, 123, Larry Murray, 137, Lloyd Hamady, 147, Carl Lutomski, 177, and heavyweight Steve Zervas. - By the end of tonight's prelimin,- aries, the picture should be com- plete as to which men have made the finals and which are in the running for third and fourth places. Coach Cliff Keen gives Minne-. sota, Michigan State, and Iowa the best chances of dethroning his Wolverines, but said that six teams are In the running with Michigan, Illinois, and North- western all having outside chances. First Appearances Four squad members will be making their first appearances in1 a Conference tournament. Ham- ady, a senior, Zervas, a junior and Murray and Lutomski, both sopho- mores, will make their debut in the preliminary matches this after- noon. Marchello, who will be def end- ing his 167 pound title has a sea- son's record of eight victories, no defeats and one draw, plus a first place finish in the Wilkes Holiday tournament, should be the pre- tournament favorite in his divi- sion-. At 157 pounds, Rodriguez, who was ineligible the first semester, has racked up two falls and two decisions in four matches and should also be favored to win the title for a third straight year. Deppe at 123, rounds out the list of veterans. In the last tyro years he has walked off with a fourth and third place conference finish. "Purchase From Purchase" , S AV $ 5 By JIM BAAD Nowre thatethe hockey team has NCAA tournament In Colorado, the biggest immediate problem is to withdraw the faraway gaze from the playoffs and concentrate on the two upcoming games with Michigan Tech. Since these last two home con- tests, tonight and tomorrow night, have no bearing on the Colorado trip, enthusiasm for the Tech se- ries may be hard to come by. However, Coach Vie Heyliger does have a few factors with which to build up the team's 'spir- it'. Second Place In Doubt Something to start with would be the fact that Michigan needs to win or tie at least one of the games to hold onto undisputed possession of second place In the WIHL. If Michigan loses both games, Tech will share second place (vith the Wolverines. Next, Heyliger could strike a personal note. Goalie Ross Childs the Wolverines give him all the necessary help in these last two games, Childs could easily win the Bill Borovsky Memorial Hockey Award, donated by North Dakota, this year. This may be a major task, since Tech has seven players with bet- ter than twenty points. Pacing the Huskies in the scorng5 column Is 20 assists for 45 pints.gasa Six Seniors Bow Out Also on the personal side - this is the last series on home ice for six seniors. Defensemen Capt. Bob Pitts, Bob Schiller, and Bernie Hanna, and forwards Tom Ren- dali, Jerry Karpinka, and Dick Dunnigan will no doubt want to win these last two, .just for tie record. Lastly, if it's needed, is the Wol- verines seven game winning streak, which began up at Mlin- nesota, could be stretched to nine if things are right. A factor in the Wolverine's fa- vor is that they will no doubt be relaxed when facing Tech in as much as the pressure Is off. Dem- onstration of their play when re- laxed came against Montreal, whom they beat twice handily. The only personnel change Heyliger plans to make since play- ing North1 Dakota is a switch of paing Joh Hutton. Tickets for the series are on sale from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. to- day and tomorrow at the Athletic Administration Building. Each customer is limited to eight tick- ets and students must show either I.D. or Athletic Cards to make a purchase. JACK MeMANUS . .. leading Tech marksmen CCROWN GRAPHICS YARDLEY OF LONDON, INC. 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UNIVERSITY NO 8-6972 320 Sni YO UR HE A DQUA R TE RS FO R PH OTO G RAP H IC N EE DS$ "What's it like to be A MANUFACTURING ENGINEER ATr IBM?" Four years ago, Yale senior Lee Baker asked himself this question. Today, as a Product Control Engineer in IBM Manufacturing Engineering; Lee reviews his experience and gives some pointers that may be helpful to you in taking the first, most important step in your engineering career. I 6tn,1,6x.u l e e tauraht 1015 East Ann -Near Women's Dormitories "It's tough," Lee sympathizes, "for a college senior to feel confident about choosing a job. For four years he's been trained to be critical and delib- erate about making decisions. Now, faced with the biggest decision of all, he has only a few months in which to attend job interviews, separate the facts from the propaganda, and select a company-not to mention passing exams and graduating at the same time." Lee, with a B.S. in Industrial Ad- ministration, came to IBM in 1953. Starting as a Technical Engineer in Production Control, he was immedi- ately assigned to the General Manu- facturing Education program-a How to select an employer To the college senior faced with a job decision, Lee has this to say: "Pick your employer by this simple test: 'Is the company expanding fast enough to provide adequate scope for your talents and ambitions? Is it interested in your long-range man- agement development? Will it treat What's "life" like at IBM? At IBM, Poughkeepsie, Lee lives a "full life." He belongs to a local sports car group, drives an Austin Healy. He skis at Bromley. He is a member of the IBM Footlighters and a local drama workshop. At present, he shares an apartment with two other engineers and a "medium-fl" set, but plans to marry "the girl next door" (in hometown Hamburg, Conn.), in the very near future. In this connection, Lee advises seniors to pay special attention to company benefits. "They may seem like a yawning matter when you're single, but they mean a lot when you as- sume responsibilities. IBM's are the best I know." James B. Walker received his 11.5. in mechani- cal engineering from North Carolina :State bu College in June, 1954, and was working to- go ward his M.S. in the same field when he was 1. ~ called for military service. Jim Walker asks: "Seling" the system you as an individual and match your abilities with the most challenging assignments?'" For his part, Lee feels IBM has met this test. Since 1953, he has seen new plants open, dozens of new prod- ucts evolve, hundreds of new man- agement'positions created. Greater authority, responsibility and reward have come his way. And he knows they will continue, for IBM sales Designing a paperwork system 10-month course with rotating as- signments in all phases of the work -manufacturing, purchasing, pro- duction). In addition to four weeks of formal classroom study, he also spent two in the Boston Sales Office, calling on accounts with the IBM salesmen. Lee's career ywas temporarily inter- rupted by a two-year hitch with the Air Force in Korea. Back at IBM moted5t Production Control Engi- Le *es ful lf IBM hopes that this message will help to work in MoanufacturigwEngineering t IBM. There are equal opportunities for E.E.'s, M.E.'s, physicists, mathemati- many advisions-Research, oProduct De velopment, Sales and Technical Services. yur Placemnent DirectorsHe cansuppl "Pick" Pickering answersiE You might call that a leading question, Jim, but the answer leads right into my biiwick. Icame to DuPont in 1940, after taking a combined mechanical and electrical engineering course. So I had what you might call a double reason for wondering about my future with a chemical firm. ~ I soon learned that the success of a large-scale chemical process hinges importantly on mechanical equipment. And the success of this equipment--especially for a new process -depends on (1) Research, (2) Development, (3) Plant Engineering, and (4) Close Supervision. The net result is that a mechanical engineer at Du Pont can progress along any one of these four broad highways to a top-level position. My own Du Pont experience includes mechanical engineering work in ftalcl n variPA ns atomic energv. fabriCS and finishes, and nylon manufacture. BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ... THROUGH CHEMISTRY WATCH "Dli PONT THEATER" ON TELE~iSION maamammeem na me-s