WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1967 TILE MICHIGAN DAll.V in a J-4 vft 1VY tYs W2EPNESDAY, MARCH aa1967 TIsR MJC tt'Ar1 litUV- Wa1 raaaJ PAGE NINE 9 Gymnasts, Tankei 'MAmbition: Seven i'67' By JON SISKIN the Wolverines boast the number "This will be the closest and one tramp team in the Big Ten best Big Ten gymnastics meet and the nation. ever, with four teams having a Miller, last year's Big Ten and shot at the .title." NCAA tramp champion, has had Iowa's gymnastics coach Sam injury trouble this year and has Bailie made this statement when had difficulty attaining his last contacted yesterday. Still, Bailie, year's form. Loken says, however, whose squad fell from the unbeat- that he should be much better en ranks last Saturday to Mich- Friday. Jacobs has received the igan before an unproarious, rec- highest scores of any trampolinist ord 'M' crowd, by a mere one- in the nation this year and is a forftieth of a point, feels his team strong favorite for the Big Ten has the best shot come Friday and championship. Saturday in Iowa City. Phip Fuller, the number two "This time we'll have the ad- floor exercise performer in the vantage of familiarity with our nation behind Michigan State's home apparatus plus a highly-par- Toby Towson, is the bulwark of tisan and noisy crowd. Competing an outstanding floor ex team. Chip at home in gymnastics is almost Fuller and Dave Jacobs also turn comparable to the home court ad- in consistently fine routines. vantage in basketball." On rings, Cliff Chilvers and Besides Michigan and Iowa, Rich Kenney have consistently Michigan State and Illinois still scored above 9.0, and along with have an excellent chance of fin- captain Gary Vander Voort rate! ishing in at least a tie for league with Iowa and Michigan State as 1onors. one of the league's best squads. Need First Hawkeye Forte In order to capture the league Iowa should rack up high point title outright, the Wolverines must totals on the side horse, rings and finish first in the league meet. A high bar. Their horse team of second place finish behind the Ken Gordon, Marc Slotten and Hawkeyes would give Iowa the Keith McCanless is the tops in the title, while a runner-up finish be- nation, with each man capable of hind Michigan State or Illinois scoring 9.4 or better. ' would tie the Wolverines for the On rings they have two stand- championship. outs in Terry Siorek and Don Michigan coach Newt Loken fjg- Hatch, both who will very likely ures that if his squad can turn in receive All-American recognition steady, solid performances in all at the end of the season. Hatch events they should be in a posi- turned in a dazzling 9.4 effort tion to win their seventh consecu- against Michigan last Saturday tive Big Ten championship. "In and barely missed pulling out the meet for the Hawks. made sme mistakes and we'll ae Neil Schmitt is a threat for Big to eliminate these at Iowa City." Ten honors on high bar, and along Michigan ought to make its with Bob Dickson form possibly strongest showing on trampoline, the toughest high bar contingent floor exercise and rings. With Dave in the league behind Illinois. Jacobs and Wayne Miller backed MSU's forte comes in floor ex- up by Vic Conant and Mike Zadel, ercise, parallel bars and rings. Twsn aresently is the m to f l E I . s Vie Swimmers Face Rough Uphill Battle By DOUG HELLER for Crowns h.is a kick ives tradition rft~the pants There's trouble in East Lansing. And it isn't only because Mich- igan State is there because the Indiana tankers are the biggest threat in the Big Ten Swimming Championships this weekend in the Spartan pool. < Michigan swimming coach Gus Stager, one of those who must face the Hoosier onslaught in their >r own version of seven in '67 at- tempt, does believe they can be WAYNE MILLER beaten. However, he says, "it might take a tremendous break to: ing Illini gymnast is Hal Shaw, a do it. The key to the meet is div- veteran who excels in vaulting and ing where they have two top free exercise. men." The coaches of all the Big Ten The two divers, NCAA one me- schools agree that this year's com- ter champ Ken Sitzberger, and petition is on a level never reached Howie Young, who beat Sitzberger before. State's George Szypula at three meters in the last In-, commented that "at Iowa City diana-Michigan meet, are rated four of the top five teams in the as best in the nation. nation will be in head-to-head Hope for Surprises competition. Outside of Southern Illinois, you couldn't find better But Michigan is hoping to sur- yymscln'tfianywhere." prise with Jay Meaden, "who has, gymnastic talent er the best potential on the team" Toughest Ever "I'm looking for the toughest according to Stager and Fred competition in history," Szypula Brown, "a great compeitior. He effused. "Iowa will have the back- always manages to be up for the ipr of tei n+Tbig meets." meet and there could be advant- ages for Michigan posed by indi- vidual outside challenges. For in- stance, Indiana's sprint superiority over Michigan could have no sig- nificant total point effect if Pur- due's Dan Milne comes through. And maybe Ohio State's diver Chuck Knorr could neutralize Sitzberger. Maybe. This is also the time for cer- tain specialty swimmers to show off. Take Michigan butterflyer Tom O'Malley, who shines at 100 yards, enough so that he was sec- ond in the nation last year. Un-' fortunately, there is no 100 yard butterfly in dual meets, and O'Malley has not been prominent yet this year. It must be a world's record not to have mentioned Carl Robie in a Michigan swimming story up to now. The indomitable Wolverine captain is set to go in the 200 yard butterfly and the 500 yard free- style, according to Stager, but the third event he will participate in is a secret, so nobody can stack their lineup against him. It's just possible Indiana isn't that much of a shoe-in. *.,,K 1*' 4 ~Il GARY DILLEY medalist backstroker Gary Dilley, by Wolverine senior Russ Kin-t gery. Stager says this may be "the story of the meet." And Kingery thinks he can beat1 him. Even though there are only I three teams in the league worthy of top mention, this is a Big Tenj Ar ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS h, Norden Ing of eir nome crowd, but i don't think it should have a sig- nificant affect on the judging. Each event will be so close that fractions of a point may spell the difference." Iowa's Bailie claims that "we've got to be considered the favorites. Our scores have been the highest of anybody's this season; we're solid on every piece of apparatus." Michigan's performance t h i s weekend could go a long way to- ward changing Mr. Bailie's atti- tude come Saturday night. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR BILL LEVIS However, if it looks as though Indiana can take it all, at least on paper, the biggest attempt to break the traditional Indiana- Michigan swimming monopoly will come from the Spartans. A serious challenge to Michigan's annual runner-up position suddenly be- came a reality when State bumped off the Wolverines, 63-60, on Jan. 21. According to Stager, this may be the real dog fight of the meet. Only if Indiana stumbles, can it turn into a legitimate three-way fight. Close Fight Symbolizing the closeness of the second-place fight will be a chal- lenge to State's Olympic silver- will be on campus Mar. 8, 1967 (Wednesday) Graduating Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers and Physicists are invited to discuss career opportunities in research, design, development and manufacturing in areas such as: Airborne Radar Systems / Video Display Systems t Solid State Device Development / Precision Components I Advanced Computer Techniques I Advanced Electro- mechanical Design Techniques Norden's location in Norwalk, Connecticut is easily ac- cessible to the entire New York metropolitan area. For convenient appointment, please make arrangements in advance through your Placement Office. An Equal Opportunity Employer (M&F) , Cvt - IL C/ NBA Los Angeles 119, Detroit 117 New York 127, San Francisco 123 Philadelphia 127, Cincinnati 107 NHL No games scheduled COLLEGE BASKETBALL Houston 106, New Orleans Loyola 64 SMU 85, Texas A & M 71 Providence 68, DePaul 67 Nebraska 80, Missouri 73 Duke 113, Wake Forest 71 Boston College 80, Canisius 76 ill Evans is beat in floor exercise, while Dave Thor, State's great all-around man, does exceptionally well on parallel bars. Thor is the odds-on favorite to capture his second straight all-around crown. Power-Packed The Spartans are power-packed on the rings, where muscular Ed Gunny, last year's NCAA rings titlist and Dave Croft, defending Big Ten rings winner, will per- form. The Illini, too, aren't to be taken lightly. . Coach Charlie Pond's squad has the finest high bar team in the country in the persons of Randy Brown, Bill Silhan and Chuck Weber.i 'I. liois is right behind Michigan on the tramp, where Cookie Rollo and Gary Holveck are the main- stays. Probably the most outstand- 'with bold Glen Plaids featuring Dacron' Get the best of two worlds. Authentic comfort of Post-Grad styling. Unin- hibited look of a big plaid. 65% Dacronfpolyester and 35% Avrilorayon. $8 at uninhibited stores. Press-Free Post-Grad Slacks by h.i.s '1% v __ ____ j r ~i- 19-YEAR-OLD STUDENTS use ECONO-CARI for Transportation 438 W. Huron Specials 663-2033 U,-_____________ I 'L' z , Y ' - I How big is American-Standard big? one of the very tiny group of real poets we have: a sensitive, intuitive and imaginative genius in his medium." Jazz Magazine "The delicate probing fingers are like tendrils of sound that curl around the melodies with a wispy ethereal quality..Such music wears well. 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