FRIDAY; FEBRUARY 14, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE -' FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA1'4T~ a czA&L, oc, Matman Stowell Goes for Pins 'M' Swimmers Invade Dangerous Minnesota By MICHAEL RUTKOWSKI If you have ever felt that the only way to diplomatically deal with the Russians is to get out there and fight like a wrestler, then maybe you'll think that Michigan's Chris Stowell is just what the State Department needs. Stowell is a 20-year-old junior wrestler who every weekend takes on opponents at 177 pounds for coach Cliff Keen and the Michi- gankwrestling team. During the week, he studies toward becoming a diplomat for the State Depart- ment. Stowell was reared on a ranch near Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, where he used to keep in shape by running to .the barn and back. Al- though Oklahoma is regarded as one of the most productive states for wrestlers, Stowell decided to go to prep school in the East, at the Hill School in Pottstown, Pa. Others from Hill Hill School is the alma mater of about a dozen of Michigan's best wrestlers. In fact his wrestling coach there, Frank Bissell, was a former Michigan captain and na- tional champion. While at Hill, Stowell quarter- backed the football team and pole vaulted for the track team. His true prowess, however, was in wrestling where he was defeated only once in his junior year before going undefeated in his senior year. He was also the 157-pound champ of the Lehigh Interscholas- tic Tournament in his senior year. After going to an all-men's prep school, Stowell decided to go to a coeducational college, preferably one which was also a wrestling college. That's why he chose Michigan over-ePrinceton, where he had also been accepted. This, of course is in addition to the fact that both his football and wrestl- ing coaches at Hill were Michigan alumni. ROCK TO THE SOUNDS of THE BEA TLES, While wrestling for Michigan, Stowell has made "terrific ac- complishments" according to Keen in becoming a "colorful competi- tor" who is "dangerous all the time he is out there." Keen also calls his boy a "crowd pleaser" and "a pinner." Stowell also thinks of himself as a pinner. College wrestling is usually a sport in which you have to pace yourself in order to come out on top. In high school wrestl- ing, the idea is to go all out and try to get the pin. Stowell has re- tained this idea and perfected it to such an extent that a few weeks back he pinned his oppon- ent in just :33. Stowell has pinned most of the opponents he has beaten in his two-year college ca- reer. Psychological, Too Stowell regards wrestling as both a physical contest and a psychological contest. He says that he wrestles best when he is all tensed up. If he does not have much respect for an adversary, then he is not likely to wrestle as well as if he were scared of his man. Last Saturday's match with Ohio State is an excellent example of what can happen when Stowell, or anyone relaxes against an op- ponent. Stowell was winning handily after the first period of his match but he lost in the second period when the Buckeye's Glen McQuer- ry surprised him with a cradle and a pin. According to Keen this was "one of those things which probably happen once in every 1000 times."t Diplomatic CareerI As far as Stowell's post-colleget plans are concerned, he would2 like to study at a diplomatic school in Italy before entering into the field of diplomacy. He has been preparing himself for thisc end by taking courses in bothY English and Russian. If Stowell accomplishes as much in the diplomatic service as he has on the wrestling mat, there is little doubt that the Russians will have their hands full. By BILL BULLARD The Michigan and Minnesota swimming teams engage in a dual meet tonight in Minneapolis, the winner to be designated as the second-best in the Big Ten. Both teams have already lost to powerful Indiana but are other- wise undefeated. Barring an up- set, it seems certain that one of these two teams is in line for the runner-up spot at the Big Ten Championships. Michigan has oc- cupied this position the past three years with Minnesota in third place the last two seasons. Coach Gus Stager thinks that this meet will be indicative of how each team will place in the Big Tens, especially since the 12-place scoring system at the conference meet makes team depth import- ant. However, it must be remem- bered that last season Minnesota pulled a 54-51 upset over the Wol- verines in Ann Arbor yet still finished behind the Wolverines at 'the Big Ten Meet. NCAA winning medley relay and was on the NCAA third-place freestyle relay team last season. However, all other members of these two relay teams will be fac- ing the Wolverines tonight. This means that the Wolverines start out the meet with the distinct pos- sibility of losing both relays. Stager figures this to be the closest contest for the Wolverines this season, as they attempt to make their season dual meet rec- ord 4-1. Minnesota has three "sure" winners in butterflyer Walt Richardson, breaststroker Virgil Luken, and freestyler Mike Stauf- fer. Richardson, a defending Big Ten champion, has only been beaten this season by Indiana's awesome one-two punch of Larry Schulhof and Fred Schmidt. Michigan captain Jeff Moore wiill be aiming for a needed second place while Wolverine Bill Spahn and Gopher Ray Ellis can fight it out for third. Luken, now a senior, was an N C A A 200-yard breaststroke champion as a sophomore. He and sophomore Joe Clack took the top two places against two highly re- garded Indiana swimmers last January 11. Luken's 2:18.5 time in that meet shows he'll be hard to beat tonight. Michigan's Geza Bodolay is un- defeated since the Indiana meet and is the leading hope for the Wolverines in this race. Sopho- more Steve Rabinovitch backs up Bodolay. -Daily-Dave Abineri FARLEY FLIPS A TURN-Michigan's sophomore sensation Bill Farley makes a flip turn above, similar to the many he will be making this weekend as the tankers travel to Minnesota today and then Wisconsin tomorrow. BIG TEN SCORING: ThrRussell TirBut Fourth to Bradds Wisconsin Tomorrow Michigan travels to Madison to- morrow morning for a meet with Wisconsin in the afternoon. Wis- consin is not a strong team, al- though boasting several outstand- ing individual swimmers. This meet, understandably enough, is expected to be rather anti-climac- tic after the tough competition tonight. Minnesota has lost Steve Jack- man, several-time NCAA sprint ^'~^'~~ rl^t^ n^ ^ n^r^ ^" ^- By STEVE ABRAMSON Michigan's powerful combina- tion of Cazzie Russell and Bill Buntin has maintained itself as the best one-two punch in the Big Ten scoring race with averages of 26.1 and 25.8 points, respectively. As a whole, the league-leading Wolverines have an accurate per- centage from the floor of .470, and have supplemented this with an Cage Tickets Student and faculty athletic card holders may pick up Indi- ana exchange basketball tickets today beginning at 8 a.m. at the Athletic Administration Building. Also, tickets for Sat- urday's Michigan State hockey game at the Coliseum can be purchased today at the Athletic Administration Building. Stu- dents purchasing hockey tickets must present I.D. cards. conference with 25.8 average. Last year's top rebounder, he has pull- ed in 94 rebounds this year for a close fourth. Bradds also leads the league in rebounds with 103 in eight games. Michigan is second only to Wis- consin in fewest personal fouls per game with 17.0, which is an im- proyement over last year when the Wolverines fouled more than any other team. The Wolverines thus far have averaged 86.0 points per game and have- had the second fewest points scored against them in the Big Ten, with 74.6. TOP 10 INDIVIDUAL SCORERS C cnamionu, ue toUUgrdutioniU. Jackman anchored the Gophers' J . { Y S rf CAGE ROUNDUP: Fourth-Ranked Davidson Hit by Furman Upset By The Associated Press CHRIS STOWELL ... diplomatic grappler That Sold Over 31000,000 Records in England Now, they are here! A new Cap- Itol album MEET THE BEATLES (S)T-2047 introduces these great, new singing sensations to the U.S.A. Be the first one in your group to own the first Amer- ican Beatles album. As a matter of fact, you probably will want to start a complete collection of every album by The Beatles. Come in today and ask to see the album that's sure-to make "19641 ...The Year of the Beatles." j Se CUS 1.Off. 5 Bea Be Beatle Booster Wanna be a Beatle? Or FG FT Per G. Pct. Pct. Ave. Rebs. SKI CAROUSEL MOUNTAIN HOLLAND, MICHIGAN I This Weekend Base ..............1 0" Powder..........Making artifical snow Conditions .........Good Chair Lifts, T-Bor, 4 Electric Rope Tows, Ski Shop, Rentals, Certified Ski School, Snow Ma- chine, Night Skiing, Lodging and Restaurant. Bradds, OSU Schellhase, Pur Russell, M Buntin, M Lopossa, NU Brody, Il D. V'dale,Ind. T. 'dale,Ind. Hudson, Minn. Falk, NU Thoren, IIl. G 8 8 8 s 6 7 8 s .595 .510 .477 .541 .503 .491 .465 .382 .453 .400 .396 .879 .729 .897 .814 .699 .684 .836 .672 .700 .744 .711 39.0 103 28.1 79 26.1 61 25.8 94 24.9 99 23.0 25 22.4 75 20.7 87 20.6 81 19.1 29 18.0 80 JUST 2% HOURS FROM ANN ARBOR Take 1-96 to Grand Rapids, then M-21 to Holland astounding .784 percentage in foul shooting to lead the conference. Sophomore Cazzie Russell, who is seventh in the country, leads the Big Ten with his .897 foul shooting percentage. Russell's 26.1 is good for third in the conference scor- ing race behind Gary Bradds of Ohio State and Purdue's sopho- more wonder, Dave Schellhase. Bill Buntin is nestled right un- der Russell, as he is fourth in the I- Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL Bradley 73, Tulsa 64 (ovt) Furman 70, Davidson 55 Drake 53, North Texas State 50 Houston 93, Miami 83 Providence 86, Rhode Island 72 Wyoming 77, Denver 68 NHL Detroit 4, Boston 1 GREENVILLE, S.C.-An inspir- ed Furman basketball team that had lost 13 of 21 previous games, rose up to smash Davidson, the nation's No. 4 team 70-55 last night. The loss was the second in 21 starts for Davidson, which went into the game needing a victory to clinch the Southern Conference regular season honors, but instead lost its second game in 10 league tests. With former Furman great Frank Selvy, now of the profes- sional Los Angeles Lakers, looking on as a guest at a night celebrat- ing his record 100-point game C against Newberry 10 years ago, Furman avenged a 26-point loss suffered at Davidson two months ago. Selvy's brother, David, scored 17 points and Don Frye 18 to lead the underdogs as a capacity crowd of 5600 roared its approval. * * * TULSA, Okla.-Bradley stormed back from a deficit that reached 11 points at times and ran away in an overtime period to hand Tulsa a 73-64 Missouri Valley Con- ference basketball defeat last night. Bradley didn't get rolling until 4:14 left when it took a one- point margin on a field goal by Ernie Thompson, who scored all of his 12 points in the second half. The Braves stretched the lead to three points, but Tulsa tied it Joe Strawder missed to end the regulation game 58-58. ! s s YE U~ r- maybe just a1 er? Or maybe Beatle Boost- just a Beatle fan with an autographed picture. If you wanna be a Beatle, you can get an official, reasonably authentic Beatle Wig for $2.00. Or you can get a "Be a Beatle Booster" button for only 50 cents. Or the whole works-a 1. I just made a very smart buy. Would you like to hear about it? You can see I'm all ears. -d 3. It guarantees security for the family I expect to have shortly. Interesting. 5. It can pay off the mortgage { if I die. Or make money available for emergencies or opportunities. Or provide a lifetime income when I retire. 2. It's an item that will stand me in good stead throughout my life. You don't say. 4. It car provide money for my children's education. Is that so? 6. Precisely. And over 11 million people do. Because I was telling you about Living Insurance from Equitable. Tell me more. STUDENTS! 'EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY TO RENT, YOUR APT. THIS SUMMER ~ I If Al [IiR 9 We are planning to run a special APARTMENT SUP- PLEMENT in the on two field goals by Bill Kusleika. A last second shot by Bradley's Tulsa went ahead in the over- time, but fell behind when Levern Tart gave Bradley a 63-60 lead on a field goal and free throw. Strawder led Bradley scoring with 31 points. Larry Berke and Kusleika had 17 each for Tulsa. Bradley's season record is 14-4 and its league mark is 5-4. Tulsa is 2-6 in the conference and 10-10 overall. * *.* DENTON, Texas-Drake Uni- versity stayed on top of the Mis- souri Valley Conference basketball race by whipping North Texas State 53-50 last night. The Eagles went. ahead 41-40 with 10 minutes left and were out in front 48-47 when they decided to stall out the last four minutes. The strategy backfired when two bad passes gave Drake the chance to set up a shot by Billy Foster and go ahead to stay with 1:30 -1- SPORTLIGHT Ohio State is coming to town to- morrow to challenge the Univer- sity to a handball meet at the I-M Building. Six men from each school vwill take part in six singles matches at 10:30 in the morning followed by three doubles matches at 1:30 in the afternoon. Representing the University will be Mike Mc- Culloch, Harry Detweiler, But Al- berts, Dan Goodnow, Howard Dworkin, and Doug Meriller. The best handball player on campus, however, may not be playing for Michigan. Steve Aug- ust is taking part ,in the state handball tournament and probab- ly won't be able to play against the Buckeyes. There is no formal schedule of intercollegiate competition in minor sports at Michigan. Con- tests are arranged between col- leges on a spasmodic basis. In fact, - this is the first handball match ever between Michigan and Ohio State. Fraternity basketball is draw- ing to a close with the single elimination play-offs starting next week. In the A-leaguee, nine of the 11 teams in the first place playoffs have already been de- cided. -Michael Rutkowski Stauffer is Minnesota's replace ment for Steve Jackman. He has not lost a race this season in his specialties, the 50- and 100-yard freestyle events. He was especially impressive in beating the Michi- gan State sophomore freestyle corps in these two events. Rich Walls and Bob Tanner are Michigan hopefuls in the sprints. Walls has gone under 49 seconds at 100 yards and thinks he can beat Stauffer if he can go out the first 50 as fast as he plans. Michigan's strength is with Bill Parley in the distance freestyle, Ed Bartsch in the backstroke, and Ed Boothman, Bruce Brown, and John Candler in the diving. Parley, although ill recently, is a good bet for firsts at 200 and 500 yards. He holds varsity and pool records at both distances. His 1:46.49 time in the 200 is almost equal to the old NCAA record. He will be challenged by senior Ralph Allen who holds the Minne- sota varsity record of 1:48.6. Walls or Frank Berry will back Parley up in this event. At 500 yards Minnesota is weak and either Jeff Longstreth or Tom Dudley can help Farley smash this event. Bartsch, whose best time has been around 2:00 this season, should take a first over Gopher Bud Ericksen who hasn't done un- der 2:04. Sophomore Geoff O'Atri could beat out Ed Oberg for a third place. Sophomore Hubert White is the only diver the Gophers have. He will likely be shut out of the first two places by either Boothman, Brown or Candler. Probably the closest event of the meet will be the 200-yard in- dividual medley. Michigan's D'Atri and Lanny Reppert have usually been neck-and-neck at the finish this season, and Gopher John Bergman has turned in compar- able times. Wisconsin has two sophomores from Michigan who have shown good potential so far. Mark Marsh, sprinter from Grosse Pointe, Is the best the Badgers have at these distances. Bob Blanchard, breaststroker, from Dearborn has done a 2:20 time which is good enough to challenge Bodolay and Rabinovitch. Another fine sprint- er is Graham McMillan who has done 22.2 for the 50-yard free- style. A week from tomorrow the Wol- verines again travel to a foreig pool for a meet. This time the op- ponents will be the Ohio State Buckeyes. I O'Hara Sets, Indoor Mark With 3:56.6 NEW YORK UP) - Little Tom O'Hara of Chicago Loyola raced to a record indoor mile of 3:56.6 last night in the New York A. C. Games in Madison Square Garden. O'Hara, who runs with a wierd, arm-flapping gait, his arms flail- ing and his hands occasionally nervously plucking at his running togs as if he were trying to keep his pants from falling down, bene- fitted from a brilliant bit of pac- ing by John Camlen of Kansas State. O'Hara's time wiped out the in- door record of 3:58.6 set by Jim Beatty of the Los Angeles Track Club Feb. 15, 1963, a race in which O'Hara pushed the California run- ner to the triumph. Last night, O'Hara, who says he trains "on Mom's Irish cook- ing," blasted to the record with a fantastic :55.0 final quarter, while the Garden crowd of 13,677 howled "Go, go, go." O'Hara, whose best previous in- door effort this season was 4:00.6, said: "I think I can beat Snell's world record of 3:54.4. in another outstanding per- formance, big, bulky Bob Hayes of Florida A & M got off to a good start and equalled the world rec- ord of six seconds fiat in the 60- yard dash. Hayes, ,vho has recorded a 9.1 outdoor 100-yard dash, equalled the indoor 60 mark for the fourth time this season, the first ever in the Garden. He had about 1Y yards to spare over defending champion Gerald Ashworth of the Boston A. A. Sunday, March 1 issue of The Daily. This supplement will also be distributed throughout the campus area March 2.. 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