-t Page Eighteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY --- SESQUICENTENNIAL SUPPLEMENT Ti tacr4rn1 Meer.-4, - 1 1 Or-'7 Pag EghtenTH MIHIAN DAIY SEOUCETFN IA S IPI 4A I T- .. -u. -... aa~Jy, ivtuuri , QIk..... 1 iy-, F Tuesday, . March 7,' 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY- SESQUICENTENNIAL SUPPLEMENT Tuesday, March 7, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY - SESQUICENTENNIAL SUPPLEMENT From Basketball Except for two brief, bright per- cods of success, Michigan basket- ball has wallowed for the majority of its 60 years in the dismal depths of obscurity-in or near the base- ment of the Big Ten, and has been seldom blessed with performers of All-American calibre. The Wolverines won or shared four Big Ten titles during the "Roaring Twenties," and grabbed three straight crowns from 1964 to 1966. But, except for an ana- chronistic championship season in 1948, the intervening years com- posed the Dark Ages of Michigan cage history. The early years of the 'under- handed plop shot' and the 'mass defense,' witnessed a completely different version of basketball than the fast-moving, high-scor- ing style of today. Scores typically ranged in the teens, and a con- - siderably smaller court (70 feet long as compared to 94 now) pre- vented the development of any- thing resembling'the fast break. Bennie Oosterbaan was the Caz- zie of that epoch, and his gradu- ation in 1929 ushered in a nine- teen year "era of nothingness," as Wally Weber called it. Basketball failed to add any trophies to the Michigan show- case, nor did it draw any crowds to the then-waterproof Yost Field House. Even its players and coaches were primarily football heroes seeking a way to keep in shape during the off-season. Then, in 1948, Ozzie Cowles brought the zone press to Michi- gan, and the Wolverine cagers swept through their Big Ten sche- dule with a 10-2 mark and earn- ed a spot in the NCAA regionals. The success was short-lived, however, as the Wolverines had settled in the conference basement Pride by 1951, and remained there for all but two of the next dozen years. But the 1961 season saw the hiring of Dave Strack-a Michi- gan cage star of the mid-forties. And Strack brought with him the secret of success-the ability to recruit the likes of -Bill Buntin, Ollie Darden, Larry Tregoning, John Clawson, Jim Myers, and of course, Cazzie Russell. A new era had arrived. In 1964 the Wolverines returned to the NCAA tournament for the first time in 16 years, by virtue of tying Ohio State for the league title. Duke knocked them out of contention for the national crown, but the cry went up-"wait'll next year!" And what a year it was. Michigan raced through its 19- 65 Big Ten campaign undefeated until the final game against Ohio State, which Cazzie sat out with an ankle injury. Throughout the season it ranked as the top quin- tet in the nation. After destroying three consecu- tive opponents, the Wolverines met UCLA in the grand finale. But a full-court press and a skinny guard named Gail Goodrich end- ed everything. But one more season remained in Cazzie's career, and the Wolver- ines once more managed to cap- ture the league flag. Enroute to the title, Russell broke almost ev- ery record in the book, but con- sistently voiced hope that "the highlight" of his career-namely a national championship-was "still to come." Cazzie's wish never came true, of course, as the Wolverines folded before Kentucky's collapsing zone in the regionals. But Michigan does have a bas- ketball tradition-one that began with Cazzie Lee Russell and one that will continue next year in the "House That Cazzie Built." and Practice A Case for the MuIvI KEEPING TRADITION AT MICHIGAN CAZZIE LEE RUSSELL 'Baseball When Ray Fisher stepped off the train to assume the coaching duties for the Michigan baseball team, he didn't stay long. He had to hop another train go- ing south to catch up with his team. The Wolverines, coachless at the time, had headed south for their annual spring training trip. When Fisher finally did catch up with the team, *he began a coaching career that spanned the era from 1921 to 1958. The 37 years included 15 Big Ten titles and an NCAA championship in. 1953. The culmination of his honors was in that same national title year when Fisher was awarded college baseball's highest honor, being named "Coach of the Year." Fisher was originally the second choice for the Michigan head coaching job that became open in 1921. Branch Rickey, who coached Wolverine teams while going to law school, first recommended Del Pratt. But when Pratt accepted another chance at playing in the majors, Fisher got the nod to be- gin his long and distinguished ca- reer. Fisher himself was a major lea- guer of some renown, pitching 102 victories for the New York Yankees and the Cincinnati Reds. Known as the "Vermont School Teacher," he was a colleague of such greats as Ed Walsh and Christy Mathewson. But when the Reds refused to give him a three-year contract. he talked to Rickey and was of- fered the job. Fisher's teams were often in the Big Ten title -icture. Among his teams' notable accomplishments was the two-year period in which they won 16 straight Big Ten games. None of his teams finished in the cellar. When Fisher retWed in 1958, he left behind him one of the longest traditions in Michigan sports. Baseball at Michigan began in 1866, when a group of students got together a club and played games where Waterman Gymnasium now stands. Interest increased, and in 1891 the sport want varsity. The Western Intercollegiate Associa- tion was formed ;n 1896 as the forerunner of the Big Ten and the sport was off and running. Perhaps the most dramatic Mi- chigan team of all was the 1962 edition. They were defending Big Ten champions who lost their first four games in a row ar d their title by a narrow margin. They made it to the NCAA tournanEnt only to be dumped into the losers' brack- et the first clay. Miraculously trey fought back, taking the title from Santa Clara, 5-4 in 15 innings in the final contest. They went ,n to win the wo:ld series of collegiate baseball, d fwn- ing Hosei tUniversity of Japan three games to two McFarland, Red Berenson and Al Renfrew adorn the walls. Many of these Michigan greats have gone on to distinguish themselves in hockey at a professional level. One of them, Al Renfrew, has been hockey coach at Michigan since 1956. In seventeen years of coaching he has produced seven national tournament contenders. "I've had two really great teams at Michigan," Renfrew comment- ed. "The 1961 national champions and the 1964 team -were really great. As for dedication and get- ting every inch out of a team, though, this year's squad has to be tops. There isn't one superstar and the boys have done a great job." Renfrew was quite a player himself. He was a standout dur- ing the four years he played for the Wolverines and played on Michigan's first NCAA winner in 1948. Along with Gordon McMil- lan and Willy Maxis he combined at left wing to form one of the highest scoring lines in Michigan history. Before a rule was passed pro- hibiting Big Ten teams from play- ing benefit games, there was a traditional one-period match be- tween the Michigan icers and the Detroit Red Wings. "One year that I played we even beat them," Renfrew mused. That was the year Gordie Howe led the Wings to the Stanley Cup. Swimming At its inception In 1921, Michi- gan's swimming team was not a national contender. In fact, it wasn't until 1924 that Michigan had a winning season. Since then, however, the Wol- verines have had only one losing season, a 1-4-1 mark in 1955. Even then Michigan outscored its op- ponents on the season, and man- aged to take second place in the conference meet. Figuring all the way back to the beginning, Michigan's natators have compiled a challenging rec- ord of 186 wins, 49 losses, and 5 ties for a formidable .792 percent- age. Michigan's championship tradi- tion began in 1926, when the un- defeated squad took the national and conference titles. Averaging only one loss per season since then, the Wolverines have col- lected an impressive total of 17 national championship teams and 19 conference championships. Mi- chigan coaches have produced 17 undefeated seasons. Head Coach Gus Stager, who took over for the great Matt Mann 13 years ago, has continued the Blue's winning tradition. In his 12 completed seasons as head coach, Stager has never guided a team to a finish lower than second in the Big Ten. Three of his teams have won conference champion- ships and four have taken NCAA titles. Stager's own coach, Matt Mann, is more than any other person re- sponsible for Michigan's greatness in swimming. Mann was the 1952 Olympic coach. In his 29 years as Michigan's head coach, Mann guided his teams to 16 Big Ten titles and 13 NCAA crowns. Track "Total performance" has a spe- cial meaning within the context of Michigan's athletic tradition which has emphasized excellence in all phases of intercollegiate competition, and the slogan is doubly applicable to the precision performances of the. Wolverine cindermen. From Big Ten Championships to Olympic victories, Michigan thinclads have made their pre- sence felt on the national and world track and field scenes since A. O. Austin set the first Wolver- ine pole vault standard of 9'6" in 1893. The vaulters soar higher and higher every season (George Can- amare cleared 15'9" in 1965 for the latest varsity standard) as com- petition improves, but despite the fact that collegiate track has be- come a cut-throat business, cur- rent head coach Don Canham has brought 11 Big Ten crowns to Ann Arbor in the last dozen years. Two trends in Michigan track are clearly discernable: the Olym- pic successes and world-wide re- cruiting of Canham. First to attain greatness consis- tent with present-day levels, De- Hart Hubbard garnered a gold medal in the 1924 Games for the long jump. A year later, his jump of 25'10" solidified his pre- sence in the Maize and Blue rec- ord books. Hubbard carved his niche, but Eddie Tolan, better known to Wol- verine track buffs as the "mid- night express," built his palace in Michigan track history. Winning two gold medals at the 1932 Los Angeles version of the Olympics, he earned the title of the world's fastest human, and was co-holder of the record for the 200-meter dash until the 1960 Olympic Games. Canham, Who took an NCAA championship in the high jump during his stint for the Wolverine. solved the problem by going abroad. He imported such stand- outs as Tom Robinson of the Ba- hamas, Kent Bernard of Trinidad, Cliff Nuttall, Ergas Leps, Laird Sloan, Jack Carroll and John Ross of Canada, and Ernst Soudek of Austria, who all represented their home countries in the Olympics. Don McEwen, who led a record- breaking track squad in 1952, re- presents another segment of Can- ham's reign: the relays. McEwen's foursome set a world record in the distance medley re- lay outdoors, and have been fol- lowed by another outstanding unit in 1967. The current heirs of a long track tradition, the two mile and distance medley relay squads, made up of Tom Kearney, John Reynolds, Bob Gerometta, Alex McDonald ,and Ron Kutschinski, are adding another punctuation mark behind the phrase "total performance." By ROGER RAPOPORT stand, however, is. that the de- fects in the multiversity are not No one ever has a good word the inevitable product of such for the multiversity. a sprawling, unwidely educational To adults the multiversity is a endeavor. Rather they usually are huge mob of insolent bearded the result of adjustment to the kids, protesting often and study- realities of multiversity life. ing seldom. For example, Michigan legislat- The state legislature sees it as ors often complain about the slop- a shield for students acidheads to py attire -- blue jeans and an old hold orgies and watch dirty mov- shirt -- worn by students. What ies. they overlook is that these clothes And students view the multiver- are often a necessity. sity as an overgrown IBM com- - One girl from a posh suburban puter where teachers don't teach home owns a lavish wardrobe and and free speech is met with a still wears ragged blue jeans to punch in the mouth. class. She does so for practical Amidst this horde of fault-find- reasons - she has to sit on the ing fanatics eagerly awaiting a floor in two of her overerowed chance to exhibit the latest blun- lectures. If the legislators could der and spotlight today's trauma find money to finance needed I want to advance the radical no- classroom space, perhaps her tion that there is a case for the dress would change. multiversity. The Endless Protest For anxious parents and vigil- But what about those endless ant state legislators fail to un- Brt mheand vhs that derstand that despite occassional protests, marches, and vigils that excesses the multiversity envir-se the adult generation. "This Week" onment is a sound one for edu- Magazine, for example, recently cation. And amidst their often suggested to its millions of Sun- self-righteous and pent-up pro- .day supplement readers t h a t tests students often ignore the "America" may be "seeing the fact that the multiversity can be start of a phenomenon common a great place for learning. to other parts omenorld-mher The Changing Character the universities are run by stu- Much of the criticism leveled dents, many of them professional against the multiversity comes agitators paid by Communists, and from alumni who fail to recogn- the faculty, the administrators ize that the University they once and even the government itself knew is dead. For as enrollment must bow to their will,, has more than tripled to 36,000 mTh bowatolelir will." over the past 20 years, the char- covered student activism closely acter of the University has here for three years and have yet changed dramatically. to reyCmrstndehale As one English professor ex- to me ahCommunist let alon pais i "he ld nierstyofanyone who is storing. arms to Michigan that most of us went start a revolution like the stud- to doesn't really exist any more, most radicanezuela. In fact, the except maybe on Saturdaymafter- s st ampsto dnt e e know is noons in the fall. In its place is selling stamps to provide medical a vibrant and exciting school that aid to Vietnamese civilians in- resembles most a sprawling city, lured in the war. -in that its problems are the urban Often the multiversity campus ischrceie asabedn problems - transportation, hous- ground for subversive causes Ye ing, discrimination, mixed popu- a student can hardly be conside lations with vastly different val- ed unpatriotic simply because he es, even birth control is a prob- is protesting for peace. As histor- involvement in the social and po-prasHenry Students hmmanger itical values of the society atpsesrit:tudegts avemtn large." same right to agitate and demon- The pulse of university life has strate against what they think quickened, academic isolation has unsound policies - even military ended. Ann Arbor is a boom town ;policies - as have businessmen to with big money flowing in to build agitate against the TVA or doc- have the right to show controver- sial and even bad movies. After four students were arrested on obscenity charges for showing "Flaming Creatures" President Hatcher said he thought the uni- versity should permit the showing of experimental movies because "if there can't be positive molding of creativity here, then there is no place for the University. For the University then becomes merely a factory whery you come to get your bucket filled." As for LSD, Eugene Stauden- feler, chief of the Ann Arbor po- lice detective bureau says "There is not as much LSD used as some people think. A lot of people are afraid to take it because they don't know what's been put in the capsule." the capsule." to suit any generalist, yet special- As for sex, it's difficult to ob- tain, reliable ngures. But the best guess might be that the situation is not radically different today than it was in the past. While the students often 'bear the brunt of the criticism leveled against the multiversity, they are often just as hard on their school as outsiders. The Mythical Wall Though much of what they have to say about impersonalization has some basis in fact, much of it is baseless. For the student willingi to work a bit, the mythical wall of impersonalization can give way to a rich variety of human con- tact. Size lets the institution offer curricular choices broad enough to suit any generalist, yet special- It e a fi d 5l w i 5i 28 story apartment buildings. Eight parking ramps barely halt a campus parking crisis. Like the rest of the American power struc- ture the University is basically for "rich white students" according to a Defense Department Equal Op- portunity study. For the fact is that there are more Asian stu- dents enrolled here then Negroes. The Whipping Boy When you add 36,000 students and 3,000 teachers into this en- vironment with 200,000 alumni and several million taxpayers looking on anxiously from the sidelines, it's not difficult to un- derstand why the multiversity has become everyone's favorite whip- ping boy. What the critics fail tof under- tors against Medicare. Business- 4 men and doctors and lawyers, to be sure, funnel their protests through respectable organizations like Chambers of Commerce or resort to well-paid lobbyists to express their iscontent. Students have no such effective organizat- ions, nor can they support lobby- ing. The rich and respectable have had their ways of making their discontent heard; the poor and organized must resort to pro- tests and marches and demon- strations." The Dirty Movies But what about those campus film societies showing filthy pic- tures? And isn't everyone on LSD an nh~ifisr rAiipf TT+ anu coL among"+ rresiaent fiat cher explains why students should What's 1± second Mc important no on the chec you write YorbnNATIONAL BANK OF I Member Federal Deposit insurane Corporation Big Ten Titles Blue and maize striped ties create an aura of Sesquicentennial activity. In the spirit of tradi- tion this unique tie is embroidered with 1817-- U of M--1967. Price $2.50 In keeping with the old University tradition of "Senior Cane Week" Tice's offers wooden canes with silver bands reading 1817-M-1967. This handsome Sesquicentennial item costs $3.95. TI CE'S MEN'S SHOP 1109 South University--in Campus Village O Football Basketball Baseball Out Track In Track Swiming C. Country 4 2 4 _ T 3 3 1 15 s 10 to 13 O q 0 6 5 5. 19 5 22 16 3 2 1t 4. is 21 4 5 136 24 a 7 3 4 4 4 6 8 1 3 1 4 1 42 11 a 1 3 3 11 4 1 2 1 1 1< 1 17 10 c 3 '12 4 4 15 7 24 21 1 19 2 10 12 13 3 3 1 139 28 41 U, a vs . 2 I' 1 1 1 z 1 1 13 2 -i 1 25 2 a a S4- 7 3 7 1 3 3 1 3 10 4 3 1 43 17 .- 4' .- a x x 4 1 1 x. 1 9 1 4 -- , 2 8s a 0 0 1 2A 8 3 6 1 x; 2 3 1 12 1 1 5 3 1 1 52 9 w 3.' s 1. .. 4. - 6- ~ 10 s 3 6 Z 4 1 4 4 1 14 1 3 49 13 MICHIGAN SOUtVENIRS Walnut Bookends with Michigan Seal .. ... 5.65 Bronze Bookends with Michigan Seal . 14.50 to 16.50 Ceramic Ash Trays with Bronze Seal ... 4.95 to 9.95 -28 different styles of Sweatshirts............2.98 Children's Sweatshirts ...............1.75 and 2.15 Children's T-shirts, sizes 1-16 ..............1.25 Michigan Baby Booties.....................1.50 Michigan Playing Cards ..........2.20 double deck Michigan Baby Bibs .................95c to 1.25 Michigan Pennants and Banners...........1.30 up Stuffed Animals....................... 2.00 up Michigan Mugs, all sizes...........1.00 to 11.95 ----Mail Orders Accepted---- ULRICH'S-Ann Arbor's Friendly Bookstore 549 East University I Hockey Golf A walk through the ancient Gmnsi halls of Michigan hockey auditor- Tennis iuM is equivilent to a trip through the hockey hall of fame. 89cker Pictures of Such Past greats as Championships ; Keith Hoffman, John Shirk, Bill co-championship f " Store H1ours:. 9:00 to 5:30; Mon. & Fri. till 8:30 -r *-