FRIDAY, MARCH 15,1957 THE MICHIGN iU AII tr..rw s IF MI i. 'a aaa V Ia i It V PAG.E BSEVEN 'M' Icers To Face Harvard Tonight; NCAA States J. Rendall Ineligible' F, I JERRY KARPINKA (right) gets set to take over Wally Maxwell's (left) position on the first line after Maxwell was ruled ineligible by the NCAA. Athietie Heads Surprised By Ineligibility Suspension Colorado College Nips Clarkson, 5-3, In First Round of Hockey Playoffs By BRUCE BENNETT By BUCE BENNETTy master juggling in tonight's game. If Michigan is going to repeat Special to The Daily As it now stands Jerry Karpinka wt nte itr COLORADO SPRINGS-Michi- w sad ry with another victory over coach COLORDO SPINGS-ichi-will skate in Maxwell's right wingvecoh gan begins defense of its NCAA position with Tom Rendall and Ralph "Cooney" Weiland's six to- hockey title here at the Broad- IGary Starr. Neil McDonald's line night, it will have to be at its moor Ice Palace tonight at 10:15 remains intact, with the older best. (EST) when it clashes with Har- Rendall and McDonald alternat- The Crimson are led by Bob vard's Ivy League champs-but it ing at center on a third line with Cleary, their great center, who will have to do so minus the ser- Don Gourley and John Hutton. made a runaway of the Eastern vices ofranother player, sopho- Tonight's game is only the third scoring race this year. Cleary, a more forward John Rendall. metnoniettenMcga brother of Bill Cleary; ex-Harvard Rendall has been sidelined by meeting on ice between Michiganbrhr fBlCeay e-rad Rend 11 hasbeeny sidlind an by Harvard.hachteam has one star and member of last year's the NCAA for allegedly signing a andyEach team, crd7 Toronto Maple Leaf option last victory in the previous games.Oypctam crd7 points year. Unless coach Vic Heyliger Their most recent meeting was in 23 games. can clear his status through the here at Broadmoor just two years Other Harvard stars with whom professional hockey league offices ago. In that game the Wolver- the Wolverines must contend are in Montreal, Quebec, by tonight, ines defeated the Crimson, 7-3, Bob McVey, Dan Ullyot, John Rendall will not play. and went all the way to win the Copeland, and goalie Jim Bailie, Rendall is the third Wolverine NCAA title. the only senior on the squad. sidelined by NCAA officials in the last three days. Tuesday Wally Maxwell and Mike Buchanan were suspended. Meanwhile, the tenth annual NCAA hockey classic got under- way here last night, as Colorado StoC We sh s are now forbidden College battled its way into to- morrow night's finals by whipping Clarkson, 5-3. Colorado College carried the at- Tesport1sbngb nd tack to Clarkson thoughout the entire contest, outshooting its Eastern foe, 60-21. After battling to a 1-1 tie in dBiker g wilconr id e r o the first period, the Tigers brokeri ngwlco t ue n on top with goals by Bunt Hubchik and Bob McCusker in the second'! riod. After this they were never And ourservicewi Xand McCusker was Colorado College's hero, scoring three goals. The score would have been much high- er had it not been for the bril- liant play of Ed McDonald in the Clarkson nets. He stopped 55 shots. The loss of John Rendall means S U E T ' E 2S "1 that Heyliger will have to do some 1319 South University Phone NO 8-6927 i FLORSHEIM Monitor - low, light and sleek; it's the perfect style for the man who wants the newest in fine shoes. ,9:Crafted by Florsheim in black glove soft walnut calf CAMPUS BOOTERY .. . 304 S.. Stat. -- I By JOHN HILLYER Mystery and turbulence still surrounds the suspension of eli- gibility on Tuesday of Michigan hockey players Wally Maxwell and Mike Buchanan for the current NCAA playoffs. This powder-keg was added to by the suspension yesterday of Broadcast Wolverine fans will be able to tune in the semifinal NCAA hockey game tonight. The broadcast of the Michi- gan-Harvard game will be car- ried in the Ann Arbor area by WHRV, 1600 on the dial. It will begin at 10:00 p.m. E.S.T. If the Wolverines win the game, the Saturday evening championship game will be r carried by WHRV. John Rendall, sophomore center, on the eve of the tournament. According to Prof. Marcus Plant, University law professor and ath- letic faculty representative, Bu- chanan and Maxwell were derailed when the NCAA eligibility com- mittee ruled Tuesday night that t they violated the NC AA constitu- St. Louis Tops Fort Wayne ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis Hawks, scoring 45 points in a rousing second quarter, defeated the Fort Wayne Pistons 115-103 yesterday in the first playoff game to decide first place in the west- ern division of the National Bas- ketball Assn. The Hawks will meet the Min- neapolis Lakers in the division championship game here Satur- day afternoon. ' tional .provision relating to ama- teur status of athletes. The ruling came as a complete surprise to everyone in the Michi- gan camp who has been available for comment., but this may not in- clude athletic director H. 0. "Fritz" Crisler, who was said to have been en route to Ann Arbor from Atlantic City, N.J., yester- day. The surprise results from the fact that the pair had already served a year of ineligibility un- der the edict banded down last year by the Big Ten when it was discovered that they had both received expense money to try out with professional squads. Tuesday night's decision on Bu- chanan, who is injured and could not have participated anyway, and Maxwell was announced by the eligibility committee of the NCAA to Otis Barnes, Colorado College faculty representative and head of the tournament committee. Bar res then informed Plant of the decision. Colorado College is one of the participants in the tournament as well as its host school. Information circulatedat Colo- rado Springs has strongly hinted that it was Barnes who brought the question of the status of the two Wolverines to the attention of the eligibility committee in the, first place. It is rumored that Michigan coach Vic Heyliger has been dis- satisfied with the officiating at Colorado Springs in past games there, and his reported ire over this latest development could have some tangible repercussions. There has been speculation over the. possibility of forming a new hockey league and of Michigan's withcrawal from the WIHL. Most of the Michigan dissatis- faction has arisen from the tim- ing of the announcement-on the eve of the playoffs. out of town guests? make their visit a real treat with accommodations at.. College Final 0 Held Tonight EVANSVILLE, Ind. (P)-Lead- ing all the way,- Wheaton College last night eased by Los Angeles State, 71-53, and into the finals of the NCAA Small College Bas- ketball Tournament against Ken- tucky Wesleyan. Wesleyan, ramming in 28 points in a nine-minute stretch starting the second half, trimmed Mount St. Mary's of Emmitsburg, Md., 99-81, in the first semifinal con- test to advance to tonight's cham- pionship showdown at 10 p.m. EST. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Cleveland 9, Chicago (N) 8 Phil. 7, Kansas City 6 Baltimore 7, New York (N) 6 New York (A) 3, Detroit 2 Chicago (A) 12, Washington 2 .Milwaukee 12, Brooklyn 9 Boston 4, St. Louis 0I Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 4 EUROPE 20 Countries, 70 Days, $1305 Summer '57-shorter trip optional EUROPE FOR COLLEGIANS 255 Sequoia-Pasadena-Calif. n'i INERTIAL NAVIGATION-amissile guidance system requiring no terrestrial source of energy, no earthbound direction-involves advanced, creative thinking of the highest order for: :ti :v: "^ 4' " Electrical Engineers - Mechanical Engineers * Physicists Let ARMA talk with you about YOUR future in this dynamic and challenging field. Learn about ARMA's pioneering role in Inertial Navigation when our representative visits your campus shortly. Ask your Placement Officer for details. CAMPUS INTERVEWS MARCH 18 Or you may send inquiries to; Mr. Charles S. Fernow Administrator of Technical Education I 6 00, .0- Division American Bosch Arma Corp. Roosevelt Field, Garden City, L. I., N. Y. I t YOUR OPPORTUNITY in research and development of missile systems at California Institute of Technology JET PROPULSION LABORATORY Pasadena, California Active participation in the quest for scientific truths . Definite job security " Opportunity to expand your own knowledge . Full utilization of your capacities . Association with top men in your particular field - Openings now in these fields APPLIED PHYSICS - MATHEMATICS - CHEMISTRY AERONAUTICAL, MECHANICAL, ELECTRONIC, AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Telemetering * Reactor Physics * Instrumentation . Fluid Mechanics . Heat Transfer - Computer Equipment " Inertial r:ItInr .I Iim nlet nirn r ~~. .. GENERA! MOTORS - A Campus-to-Career Case History ! tx t 1 Ledrffa eporto f nWlim edsata fr- th hmLb h sicigadwv serhaddvtpetsecait t fle eatens1n oko rnms ffmn el e pa heLb oe- I 94Oenwspooe ospr Shg 9 . t an s t tI Lgader of n exploripon cOmenilamos edsepan tam ofr- phe erv Lab the wichngan wyves tehe e and omae yeriolstr atn fiterdepartn so a or n anymen Bell Telephone Laboratories. His is one sionl systems and coaxial cables.. of many teams set up at the Labs to ex- In 1954 Owen was promoted to super- i { { ~plore the frontiers of electronics and com- visor. He works with two electrical en-. rcmunications. In the picture above, Owen gineers, both systems analysts, and four (right) discusses modulation problems technical assistants. Their current job is in electron tubes with Robert Leopold, exploratory development of submarine I f M.S., Electrical Engineering, University cable systems, looking towards great new t of Michigan, 1949. transoceanic communications links. # Owen himself is thirty-one, and a Owen is one of many enigineers and f B.E.E. from Rensselaer Polytechnic In- scientists in the Bell System whose prin- { stitute, class of '49. He joined the Labs cipal responsibilities include those of upon graduation, and was assigned to leadership. The work of improving tele- f communications development training - phone service in the Bell System is { the equivalent of a two-year postgraduate guided, and decisions are made, by men course in communications. Mixed with who understand the problems involved" 1 his classes were various assignments in at first hand. I Coning On Campus FRIDAY, MARCH 15 Delco Radio Division of General Motors announces campus interviews for men and women with degrees (BS, MS, and PhD) in Electrical Engineering Me- chanical Engineering, Metallurgy, Physical Chemistry, Physics and Production Engineering. Delco Radio for years has been the world's leader in automobile radios and now produces the highest power transistors available' today. Delco Radio is an electronics engineering, research, and manufacturing organization where in permanent jobs you will work with outstanding scientists and engineers. Arrange an interview through your Placement Office. 1111 i I III 111 I I I