PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY ;SUNDAY. JANUARY 29, 1967 RAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 19~1 iu r M' So phs The much-heralded sophomores of the Michigan track team show- ed their wares last night*in rec- ord-breaking style at the annual season opening Michigan relays. The two mile relay team with three sophomores, Ton. Kearney, John Reynolds, and Ron Kutchin- ski and junior Alex MacDonald broke the varsity record by almost a second with a clocking of 7:34.1, which was according to Head Coach Don Canham, the best ever done by a Big Ten quartet. All four ran their assigned sections in less than two minutes. The snowstorm kept away the fine Villinova relay team along with a great many other contes- tants and spectators, but the Michigan thinclads ran against the clock with exceptional early season form to set the mark. East- ern Michigan, Kentucky, Hillsdale, Ohio University, Toledo, Bowling Green, Western Michigan, Ann Arbor Track Club, Pontiac Track Club, and Oakland all sent rep- resentatives, but they were skele- ton crews. Sophomore George Hoey won the 60-yard dash and two sopho- p a rkie mores ran on the winning 200- yard shuttle hurdle relay team. These underclassmen, along with the record setting freshman med- ley relay team, portend a bright future for Michigan squads. Bill Tipton, a Pontiac Central high school student, won the 65- yard high hurdles in the Michigan relays Saturday night, beating out last year's NCAA indoor cham- pion. Tipton, running for the Pontiac Track Club, nipped Jerry Cerulla running this year for the Eastern Michigan Athletic Club, with a time of 8.1 seconds. Cerulla fin- ished in :8.2. Bill Barrett of Eastern Michigan, University set a meet record in the pole vault, and Carl Flowers of Michigan won the first two events, the long jump and the triple jump. Barrett vaulted 15 feet, % inch and broke the old record of 14-10 MIDWEST STILL BURIED: weather Paralyzes Sports i0 Relays set by Tromas Burnett of Baldwin-; Wallace in 1965. He also topped" the Yost Fieldhouse record of 15 feet even set last year by George Canamare of Michigan. Other record setters were East- ern Michigan's Bill Barrett in the pole vault with 15'4" and Dick Sharkey of Conference Contender Michigan State University who knocked off six seconds from the Yost record, in the two mile run. Sharkey and Bob Stelle led a small contingent, one car'oad, of MSU cindermen who took . five firsts. February third the team jour-! neys to Kalamazoo for the West- ern Michigan relays and in two weeks to the big Michigan State Relays with Kansas miler Jim' Ryun headlining the event. No team point totals were kept, but Michigan athletes won seven of the first 12 events. LONG JUMP-1. Flowers (MI), 2. Crawford (MSU), 3. Boswell XO). Distance-22'2"1. TRIPLE JUMP-1. Flowers (M), 2. Bosweli (O), 3. Bechard (M). Dis- tance-45'7 z". 200-YD. SHUTTLE RELAY - 1. Michigan (Midlam, Deyoung, Fox, Graham), 2. Eastern Michigan. Time- :25.5. SHOT PUT-1. Harvey (M), 2. Leuchtman (M), 3. Thomas (M). Distance-56'63 ". DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Michigan (Coffin, Gerometta, Hobe, Dolan), 2. Michigan Frosh, 3. East- ern Michigan. Time-10:13.5. HIGH JUMP-1. Hunt (M), 2. Lit- tlejohn ,'3. Knickerbocker (M). Teight-6'6"1. 1000-YD. RUN-1. Stevenson, 2. Morales (M), 3. Kincaid (T). Time -2:13.7. 60-YD. DASH-1. Hoey (M), 2. Cooper (M), 3. Polite (T). Time- .06.5 MILE RUN-1. Heller, 2. Tillman S )ebut MSU. All others disqualified. Time -3:29.6. 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES-i. Tip- ton, 2. Cerulla (EMU), 3. Lynn (EMU). Time-:08.1. POLE VAULT-1. Barrett (EMU), 2. Shortt, 3. Burnett. Height-15'4x" (new meet record). 600-YD. RUN-1. Wilson (MSU), 2. Williams, 3. Keith (K). Time - 1:12.8. TWO MILE RELAY-1. Michigan (Kearney, Reynolds, MacDonald, Kutchinski), 2. Ohio State, 3. East- ern Michigan. Time-7:34.1 (new meet and field house record). 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES -- 1. Steele (MSU), 2. Tipton, 3. Hatch- ett (EMU). Time-:07.6. TWO MILE RUN - 1. Sharkey (MSU). 2. Mifsud (EMU). 3. Bishop (M). Time-8:56.2. UNIVERSITY ONE MILE RELAY- 1. MSU, 2. Michigan, 3. Eastern Michigan. Time-3:19.7. Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL Louisville 81, Bradley 68 UCLA 82, Chicago Loyola 67 North Carolina 93, Virginia 76 Kentucky 102 Louisiana State 72 Tennessee 62, Mississippi 49 Wake Forest 88, Davidson 74 Georgia Tech 75, Florida State 68 Tulsa 68, Wichita 61 Detroit 94, Marquette 92 (ovt) West Virginia 61, Maryland 58 Syracuse 91, Holy Cross 1 Temple 72, St. Joseph's (Pa) 64 Texas Western 85, Brigham Young 76 Vanderbilt 79, Mississippi State 64 Nebraska 99, Missouri 82 Vanderbilt 79, Mississippi State 64 Dayton 71, Miami (Ohio) 55j Duke 99, North Carolina State 60 Memphis State 76, New Orleans Loy- ola 50 TCU 78, Arkansas 61 South Carolina 91, Furman 61 Providence 91, Seton Hall 87 (ovt) Oklahoma City 133, Hawaii 85 Iowa State 93, Oklahoma 87 NBA Cincinnati 113, St. Louis 112 Boston 114, New York 112 NHL Professionzl Careers in Cartography CIVILIAN EMPLOYMENT with the U.S. AIR FORCE CREATINGAEROSPACEtPRODUCTS Minimum 120 semester hours college credit including S hours college level math. The required math must include at least 2 of the following: college algebra, trigonometry, analytic geom- etry, differential calculus, integral calculus, or any course for which any of these is a prerequisite. Equivalent experience ac- ceptable. Training program. Openings for men and women. Application and further information forwarded on request. WRITE: College Relations (ACPCR) Hq Aeronautical Chart & Information Center, 8900 S. Broadway, St. Louis, Missouri 63125 An equal opportunity employer I 4 TODAY I eq Froin Wire Service Reports Even though there was very lit- tle snow yesterday, transportation was still partially paralyzed enough to cause postponements of athletic contests throughout the Midwest yesterday. Although two Big Ten basket- ball games were played yesterday afternoon, last night's contest be- tween league-leading Northwest- ern and Ohio State at Evanston was put off until Monday. Also cancelled was a swimming meet between Northwestern and Minne- sota, and a wrestling meet be- tween Michigan State and Purdue. A gymnastics meet scheduling Michigan State at Ohio State was postponed. In the National Basketball As- sociation a meeting between the Detroit Pistons and the Chicago Bulls at Detroit was put off until a later date because there was no way the Bulls, could leave their home city. Is the Quad Next? In Chicago, the 23-inch snow- storm which caused the Friday night doubleheader card - UCLA- Chicago and Brigham Young-Chi- Combine a snow storm and semester exams and you come up with one of the dullest winter sports weekends in many years. Even though the University is on the trimester, the less "progressive" institutions in the Big Ten are finishing up their first semester this weekend. As a result, athletic activity has been curtailed and the Wolverine basketball, hockey, and swimming teams found nobody the play with. So that left three-track, gymnastics, and wrestling. But the snow prevented the matmen from grabbing a plane, train, or car to Minneapolis for a match with Minnesota. Newt Loken's gymnasts figured they could beat the semester breaks by scheduling Illinois' Chicago branch-a non-confer- ence foe. It was a good move until the Windy City was paralyzed j by 23 inches of snow, locking everybody in. So that left a track meet in Yost Field house. And most of the teams who were supposed to attend couldn't show up there either. but people who didn't take that up must have been pretty bored. The Simon .and Garfunkel concert was cancelled, and the UGLI closes at 10 p.m. on Saturday. cago Loyola-to be delayed until nest' L. Wilkinson, president of Sunday afternoon, has caused an the Mormon school, to Arthur Morse, assistant athletic director unexpected difficulty. Brigham at Loyola. According to Wilkinson, Young's board of trustees met and "We will not play on Sunday. We a decision was related by Dr. Er- believe in athletics, but they do rot supersede the Ten Command- ments." The tripleheader last night with Brigham Young-Texas Western, Is Carry~n UCLA-Loyola of Chicago and Illi- nois-Notre Dame went on as scheduled. After the Brigham Young deci- Wayne Miller, world champion sion on a Sunday game, Morse trampolinist, improved on his per- tried to schedule a contest be- formances from the season meets tween Loyola and Texas Western, with a 9.35. Freshman Ron Rap- but it is doubtful that approval will per finished first on the parallel be granted by the NCAA. Texas Western has already allocated its bars with a 9.3. NCAA limit of 28 games.- GEORGE HOEY -4 F Z C WEATHER OR NOT: Gymnas What's badder than him? In place of the regularly-sched- uled meet with Illinois (Chicago branch), Michigan's gymnasts per- formed in an intra-squad exhibi- tion yesterday. Coach Newt Loken explained that over a hundred fans, who apparently hadn't been informed of the meet's cancellation showed up for the impromptu affair at the Sports Building. Art Baessler, a veteran senior on the side horse, turned in the highest score of the day with an impressive 9.5 showing. "It's too bad the meet didn't count. This was his best day ever," laughed Loken. Chris Vanden Broek, although not as sensational in his efforts, muscled to a 9.3 on the high bar 9nd a 9.1 on the side horse in the most consistent try of the afternoon. t i a SUNDAY, January 29th third in a series on "MEDICINE AND ETHICS: Human Control of Life and Death" "The Ethics of Transplantation" 7:00 P.M. Speakers: Dr. John Henderson, Prof. of Opthalmology The Rev. Richard Crusius-Pastor, Church of the Good Shepherd AT THE PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw-662-3580 50c Supper at 6:00-Reservations at 662-3580 Everyone is we come to supper and/or programj K4' v.,: . ........ '...i , r.;: ..n :i. 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