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February 29, 1964 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-02-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

six

TAE !MICHNIGAN D UA TWT

r a nnrresnrt a v r+tr *f a tswsn f wa t

i-. -L-. It ./ 1M V HFr L~ZNraNLA VI S jT.J

ELAX, FERUJIIARYX 729, 1964

M' Cindermen Set Four Meet Records)

OUT TO SPOIL:
Illinois Cagers Challenge Blue

4
I

By MICHAEL RUTKOWSKI

A fine showing in last night's
State of Michigan Federation
Championships gave Coach Don
Canham hope that the Wolverine
trackmen will be ready to give
Wisconsin a tough battle in next
weekend's Big Ten Championships'
at Ohio State.
In a meet which saw seven meet
records broken and two others
tied, the Michigan men of Can-
ham shone brightly. Both ties
were scored by Wolverines, as were
four of the broken records.
The finest performance of the
meet was turned in by Michigan's
Ted Kelly, who ran the second-
fastest half mile ever run in Yost
Field House in the excellent time
of 1:53.0. He was only two-tenths
of a second off the field house
record.
Leading all the way, Kelly did
the first quarter in :55.0 and kept
pulling away as he finished 25
yards in front of the second fin-
isher. Kelly's feat was all the more
remarkable because he ran a half
mile in the afternoon to qualify.

After Des Ryan and Jay Samp-
son started things off for the
Wolverines by going one-two in
the one mile run, Cliff Nuttall
started Michigan on their record-
smashing way with a record tying
:08.0 in the 65-yard high hurdles.
Nuttall was trailing slightly go-
ing into the final hurdle, but by
the time he was clear of it he was
out in front.
There was the usual blanket
,finish in the 60-yard dash, but
when the judges had made their
decisions and the timers had
checked their watches, Dorie Reid
was the winner in a record tying
:06.3. Reid had been leading as the
pack came to the wire, but it
looked as if he might be caught at
the tape when he turned his head
to look at the man in the next
lane. He was in front enough not
to need a last second lean.
Fabulous Kent Bernard set an-
other record as he lead all the way
to win the 600-yard run quite
handily in 1:11.7.
Wolverine captain Roger Schmitt
came through with another excel-

lent performance in the shot put
as he heaved the little round ball
55'10".
The final record of the meet was
in the mile relay, where Michigan
won handily over only token op-
position from Eastern Michigan
and Cincinnati, with a good 3:19.8.
Willie Brown led off with a split of
:51.5. He ,was followed by Cecil

Norde in :49.5, Dave Romain
:49.9 and finally Mac Hunter
:48.9.

in
in

Getting Faster
BROAD JUMP-1. Owes (unat.),
2. tie, Rowser (M) and Watkins (Det.
TC). Distance-23'61/2".
SHOT PUT-. Schmitt (M), 2.
Leuctman (unat.), 3. Soudek (M).

Distance-5510" (betters meet record
of 54'14" set in 1963 by George Puce
of Michigan).
HIGH JUMP-1. Oliphant (unat.),
2. Densham (M), 3. A. Littlejohn
(unat.). Helght--6'73/"1 (betters meet
record of 6'71x set by Dick Cephas of
Michigan in 1960).
POLE VAULT-1. Albrecht (NU),
2. Overton (AATC), 3. Wade (M).
Height-14'53/2" (betters meet record
of 14'0" set by Jim Robinson of the
Flint TC in 1963).
ONE MILE RUN-1. Ryan (M), 2.
Sampson (M), 3. Coates (unat.).
Time.-4 :13.2.
440-YARD DASH-1. Campbell
(unat.), 2. Romain (M), 3. Gerom-
etta (unat.). Time-:49.8.
65-YD HIGH HURDLES-1. Nuttall
(M), 2. Washington (unat.), 3. Jacob-
son (unat.). Time-:08.0 (ties meet
record set by Bennie McRae in 1961
and tied by Nuttall in 1963).
1000-YD. RUN-1. Casto (M), 2.
Boydston (NU), 3. Lewis (EMU). Time
-2:15.3.
60-YD. DASH-i. Reid (M), 2 Nel-
son (Cin.), 3. Townsend (NU). Times-
:06.3 (ties meet record set by Tom
Robinson of Michigan in 1961 and tied
by Abdul Amu in 1963).
600-YD. RUN-1. Bernard (M), 2.
Johnson (NU), 3. Canady (BGSU).
Time-1:11.7 (betters meet record of
1:12.1 set by Bill Crothers of Toronto
in 1960).
300-YD. DASH-1. Howell (Cin.), 2.
Campbell (unat.), 3. Thomas (NU).
Time-:31.8.
880-YD. RUN-1. Kelly (M), 2. Ben-
ko (BGSU), 3. Matson (Tol.). Time-
1:53.0 (betters meet record of 1:54.1
set by Charles Aquino of Michigan in
1963).
TWO MILE RUN-i. Assenheimer
(NU), 2. Benedict (M), 3. Hayes (M).
Timie-9 :24.0.
65-YD. LOW HURDLES-1.. Wash-
ington (unat.), 2. Steele (unat.), 3.
Jacobson (unat.). Time-0:07.5.
MILE RELAY-i. Michigan (Brown,
Norde, Romain, Hunter), 2. Eastern
Michigan, 3. Cincinnati. Time-3:19.8
(betters meet record of 3:23.7 set by
Michigan in 1963).

Varsity Gymnast Team
Tramples Frosh, Alumni

c.
a

By LLOYD GRAFF

.>---

The varsity gymnastics team
humbled a crew of upstart fresh-
men and unhoned alumni last
night 126-60 in a tuneup for the
Big Ten championships coming
next weekend.
Junior Alex Frecska who has
had his troubles of late came
through with two first places, floor
exercise .nd high bar to pace the
varsity. Freshman Gary Vander
Voort notched one first and tied
for another for the challengers
winning the still rings and tying
in the parrallel bars. Rich Mont-
petit, a former Michigan captain,
took a first in the sidehorse and
tied in the p-bars for t the top
spot.
Bounces Back
Arno Lascari, shaking off the
effects of a chronic elbow injury,
took the vaulting event with a

score of 91
events.

and broke 90 in five

-Daily-Richard Cooper
BADGERS BEWARE-Wolverine eindermen Kent Bernard (left)
and Ted Kelly broke meet records yesterday in the 600-yard
and 880-yard events, respectively. Bernard's time was 1:11.7, while
Kelly ran the second fastest half-mile ever in old Yost with a
1:53 clocking.

By BILL BULLARD
Illinois could have a big part in
determining the Big Ten basket-
ball championship in the next
three days as the Illini oppose
Michigan today at 4:30 p.m. in
Yost Field House and Ohio State
at home Monday night.
Michigan and Ohio State are
still on top of the conference
standings with 9-2 records. Illinois,
rated a pre-season favorite for the
crown along with the two current
co-leaders, has lost six of its last
seven Big Ten games. The Illini's
conference record is now 4-6.
Illinois already has sprung one
big upset, knocking third-place
Minnesota out of contention for
the championship with the;Goph-
ers' fourth defeat. This victory
came just after the Minnesota
blitz which burried Michigan,
89-75.
Switch
In the Minnesota game, the
Illini unveiled a slight variation
in their offense. Center Skip
Thoren moved to a forward spot,
replacing forward Bogie Redmon
who switched to center. Thoren is
6'8%/2" and leads the Big Ten in
ALL ACADEMIC:
'M' Cagers
Get Honors'
Michigan leads the Big Ten with
a total of six nominees for the
first Western Conference All-
Academic team.
Wolverines nominated include
forwards Oliver Darden and Dan
Brown, center Doug Greenwold,
and guards John Clawson, John
Thompson, and Doug Herner. Dar-
den, Michigan's second leading re-
bounder, is the only starter to be
nominated.
In all, 34 players were nom-
mated. The list includes four of
the top ten scorers - Purdue's
Dave Schellhase, Dick and Tom
VanArsdale of Indiana, and North-
western guard Rich Falk.
To qualify for nomination a
player must have an academic
average of B or better. Final selec-
tion of the team, based solely on
athletic ability, will be made at
the close of the season by a panel
of Big Ten sports writers and
editors.
Members of the first team will
automatically qualify for consid-
eration for All-American Academic
honors. The program is sponsored
by conference sports information
directors, in cooperation with the
College Sports Information Di-
rectors of America.

rebounding with 14 grabs per
game. Redmon is 6'52" and is the
third leading rebounder on the
team.
The Illini used this technique in
defeating the Gophers, 86-78. But
last Monday night at West Lafa-
yette, Illinois was beaten by Pur-
due, 85-74.
Neither Coach Dave Strack nor
assistant coach Jim Skala thought
that this change was too signifi-
cant. Skala, who saw the Illinois-
Purdue tangle, said, "Both Thoren
and Redmon were centers in high
school and that's their best posi-
tion. It's just a question of who
can play better outside. Thoren
still scores from inside. In the
last 12 or 13 minutes of the game
they reverted to their old offense
with Thoren at the pivot."
Not Worried
Strack commented, "I don't feel
that this change is real signifi-
cant. Since they used both players
at center in the Purdue game I
think we'll see them do the same
thing against us."
Michigan won the first contest
between these two teams, 95-82,
on Feb. 8 at Champaign. Strack'

I

said, "I saw Illinois out on the
West coast in the Los Angeles
Classic where they had some very
fine games. They were in a slump
after we beat them, but I think
they're coming back now. Their
win over Minnesota shows this.
"Illinois is a tough team. They've
got talent and speed and will giv
us a good battle."
Four Illini are averaging in
double figures. Thoren leads the
team at 19.8 points a game. Red-
mon averages 10.1. Guard Tal
Brody is hitting at a 16.5 clip, and
sophomore forward Don Freeman
averages 13.1.
Since starting guard Bill Mc-
Keown has been out of the lineup
as a result of a broken wrist suf-
fered in the first Michigan-Illinois
game, Bill Edwards has been at
the fifth position. Strack pointed
out that the Illini also have a
fine "sixth man" in Jim Vopicka.
Strack conducted a regular day-
before-the-game practice yester-
day at Yost Field House as the
Michigan Federation Track cham-
pionships were going on. Michigan
is now 18-3 for the season while
Illinois is 11-9.

4

Scores

I

Gary Erwin showed his best'
form of the season as he recorded
his highest point score, 98. in
taking the trampoline with Fred
Sanders right behind at 97. Ed
Cole, an alumnus, came up with a
91 for fourth behind John Ham-
ilton who scored 93.5.
Montpetit Excellent
Montpetit dazzled the crowd
with a 96 on the sidehorse as he
barely beat Arno Lascari's 95. In
the high bar sophomore John
Cashman followed Frecska's 96.5
with a 94, the best score he has
ever made.
Vander Voort showed the form
which made him Illinois high
school all-around champion last
year as he ran through exquisite
routine on his specialty, the p-
bars. He tied with Montpetit and
Lascari with a 95.5 score. Vander
Voort then went on to win the
rings with a 92.5.
Experience
VAULT-i. Lascari (M) 91; 2.
Montpetit (F-A); 3. Bolton (M); 4.
Frecska (M); 5. Henderson (M).
FLOOR EXERCISE -- 1. Frecska
(M) 94.5; 2. Lascari (M); 3. Filip
(M); 4. Vanden Brock (F-A); 5.
P. Fuller (F-A).
TRAMPOLINE--I. Erwin (M) 98;
2. Sanders (M); 3. Hamilton (M);
4. Cole (F-A).
SIDEHORSE-1. Montpetit (F-A)
96; 2. Lascari (M); 3. Levy (M); 4.
Baesser (F-A); 5. VanDen Brock
(F-A).
HIGH BAR-I. Frecska (M) 96.5;
2. Cashman(M); 3. Lascari (M); 4.
Duke (M); S. Vanden Brock (F-A);
6. Vander Voort (F-A).
PARALLEL BARS--1. Vander Voort
(F-A) 95.5; 2. Montpetit (F-A); 3.
Lascari (M); 4. Frccska (M); 5.
Mousseau (F-A).
RINGS -- 1. Vander Voort (F-A)
95.5; 2. Romain (F-A); 3. Duke (M);
4. Lascari (M); 5. Eagle (M).
TUMBLING-1. Henderson (M) 94.-
5; 2. Bodton (M); 3. Hamitlon (M);
4. Brod (F-A).

Special To The Daily

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Penn 73, Cornell 62
VMI 82, Davidson 81
George Washington 88, W. Va. 80
Brigham Young 106, Arizona St. 90
Utah 86, Arizona 73
Texas A&M 75, S. Methodist 70
South Carolina 96, Virginia 82
LaSalle 90, Utah State 85
Princeton 78, Columbia 59
Harvard 73, Brown 59
Boston College 105, Seton Hall 93
Tulane 80, LSU 68
Clemson 83, Maryland 68
Yale 75, Dartmouth 58
New Mexico 64, Wyoming 63
COLLEGE WRESTLING
Minnesota 15, MSU 9
COLLEGE GYMNASTICS
Southern Illinois 65, MSU 47
COLLEGE HOCKEY
Colorado College 5, MSU 4
Minnesota 4, North Dakota 2
NBA
Detroit 112, New York 110
Boston 107, San Francisco 92
Los Angeles 115, Baltimore 112
Cincinnati 134, Philadelphia 132

HOUGHTON, Michigan-Mich-
igan Tech dumped the high-flying
Wolverine hockey squad last night,
3-1, but the loss did not take
Michigan out of first place in the
WCHA.
Although the Wolverines left-the
ice at the end of the first period
with a 1-0 lead, the Huskies fired
in two quick goals at the begin-
Tickets
Ticket manager Don Weir
announced yesterday that all
but 500 exchange tickets have
been handed out for today's
Michigan - Illinois basketball
game, starting at 4:30 p.m.
The first 500 persons to
show I. D. cards at Door One
after 3:30 p.m. will be admitted
to the game. Yost Field House
will be open at noon for those
persons with exchange tickets
who want to watch the Michi-
gan-Minnesota wrestling meet
at 1 p.m. and then the basket-
ball game.
ning of the second period and
went on to score once more in the
third period.
"We skated well, but didn't take
advantage of scoring chances,"
Coach Al Renfrew said.
Renfrew singled out Tech goalie

Gary Bauman;
the loss.
Miss

as a big factor in down trying1
Draper fromi
Chance net.

Early in the first period, Michi-
gan passed up a good chance to
score when they had a man ad-
vantage after two Huskies and
Gordie Wilkie left the ice for
fighting.
But they failed to score with the
extra man, and it wasn't until
the three players returned to the
ice that Wilf Martin took a pass
from Barry MacDonald and poked
it into the high right corner of
Tech's net.
The Huskies' first goal came
when Wilkie was sitting out a
roughing penalty. Tech star
George Hill skated in on Bob
Gray's right wing and scored when
Gray went down to cover the
puck.
Scores
Less than a minute later, Tech
tallied when Gray's vision was
hampered by a pileup in front of
the net.
The remainder of the period was
a real battle, and fights broke out
four times, but a tight Tech de-
fense kept Michigan's large shoot-
ing forwards away from the Husky
net.
Michigan came on strong at the
beginning of the final period, get-
ting three shots on Bauman in
the first minute and a half.
Substitute goalie Bill Bieber re-
placed Gray because "I wanted to'
give Gray a rest," Renfrew said.
At 7:28 of the final period, Dave
Draper of the Huskies slid the
puck past Bieber when he fell;

The win strengthened Tech's
hold on fourth place in the confer-
ence, but the Huskies still face a
tough road series with Denver.
Tech's WCHA record is 6-5, and
10-9 overall.
Crucial Loss
FIRST PERIOD SCORING-(M)
Martin (unassisted) 11:25. PENALTIES
-(T) Leiman and Ryan (roughing)
and (M) Wilkie (high sticking) 9:16,
(M) Wilkie (roughing) 19:56.
SECOND PERIOD SCORING-(T)
Hill (unassisted) 1:34, (T) Yee (Mac-
Lellan) 2:15. PENALTIES-none.
THIRD PERIOD SCORING-(T)
Draper (Watson, Hill) 7:28. PENAL-
TIES-(M) Polonic (elbowing) 1:32,
(T) Watson and (M) MacDonald
(high sticking) 17:43.

Russell
Buntin
Darden
Pomey
Tregoning
Myers
Pomey
Cantrell
Herner
Thompson
Clawson
Ludwig
Greenwold
Adams
Tillotson
Brown
Yearby*
MICHIGAN TOTALS
Opponents Totals
*-No longer on team.

21
20
21
20
20
20
20
20
19
14
15
13
10
3
1
5
11
21
21

385
342
184
75
195
144
75
122
45
21
23
10
8
3
0
4
3
1564
1500

200
180
91
37
90
57
37
58
17
6
9
3
2
2
0
0
1
753
610

.519
.526
.495
.493
.462
.397
.493
.475
.378
.286
.395
.300
.250
.667
.000
.000
.333
.481
.466

132
144
56
31
34
16
31
23
19
10
11
7
3
1
0
0
0
487
507

ill
109
30
20
20
6
20
15
14
7
5
6
1
0
0
0
0
347
347

.841 191 37
.757 257 56
.536 199 63
.645 44 30
.588 152 48
.375 77 44
.645 44 30
.652 41 59
.737 16 29
.700 8 3
.455 12 5
.857 3 4
.444 10 6
.000 1 1
.000 1 1
.000 6 4
.000 3 2
.713 1113 395
.643 859 391

511
469
212
94
200
120
94-
131
48
19
23
12
5
4
0
0
2
1850
1567

24.3
23A
10.1
4.7
10.0
6.0
4.7
6.5
2.5
1.3
1.5
.9
.5
1.3
0.0
0.0
2.0
88.0
74.6

AT HOUGHTON:
Tech Upsets 'Ieers, 31.

Russell, Buntin Challenge
Scoring, Rebounding Marks
Today might well be the day which sees a Michigan varsity
basketball season scoring record set in squalid Yost Field House.
Cazzie Russell, who has been named to the second team of the
Sporting News', NBA coaches', and UPI's All American picks, needs
only 24 points to tie teammate Bill Buntin's single season scoring
record of 535 points set last season.
Buntin himself needs only 66 points to tie his old record, and
if he does, it will be in one less game than he played in last year.
Russell and Buntin rank third and fourth in Big Ten competi-
tion with 25.8 and 25.4 averages, respectively. Nationally, Russell is
27th with an average of 24.3, and Buntin is 35th with a 23.4 average.
Buntin is currently third in rebounding in the Big Ten with a
13.1 average below his conference leading 15.3 average of last year.
Ohio State's Gary Bradds leads with Skip }Thoren of Illinois close
behind, but Thoren has played one game less than the other two.
The difference between first and third is less than one rebound.
Games FGA FG Pct. FTA FT Pet. RB PF Pts. Ave.

<" I

to cover the pass to
the other side of the

Tankers Take on Iowa State
In Warmups, for Big Ten Meet

I

The Michigan swimming team,
in the height of preparation for
the Big Ten Championships com-
ing up next weekend, will face
Iowa State in their last dual meet
of the season, this afternoon.
Plunge time will be 3 p.m. at
the Matt Mann Pool.
The Wolverines, fresh from
Thursday's drubbing at the legs
and arms of conference champ
Indiana, should experience no
problems with the Cyclones, who
are strong contenders for a sec-

ond-place in the Big Eight meet.
The Western Conference Cham-
pionships will be held March 5-7
in Minneapolis.
Part II of the Michigan Col-
leges Swimming and Diving Meet,
which was scheduled for March 13
at Michigan State, has been can-
celled by MSU officials. Coach
Gus Stager is considering sched-
uling another meet for his squad
before the NCAA's to be held in
New Haven,. Conn., March 26-28.

SPECIAL
Shirts laundered ......... ..........25 ea.
Trousers ..........................59
Plain skirts dry cleaned .59
WITH THIS AD
This offer expires Sat., March 7
THRIFTY DRY CLEAN & WEAR
301 E. Liberty-Corner 5th Ave.

SEASON'S LAST DUAL MEET:
(7u4 Grapplers Host Gophers

By SCOTT BLECH
Michigan's defending and un-
defeated Big Ten champions will
face the "unpredictable" Minne-
sota Gophers in the last dual
meet of the season for both teams
this afternoon at 1 p.m. in out-
moded Yost Field House.
The Wolverines will be aiming
for their 21st consecutive dual
meet victory.
Earlier this season Minnesota
upset Oklahoma's wrestling pow-
erhouse and last Saturday were
defeated by a fast improving Il-
linois team in one of three dual'
meets which they fought at Cham-
paign, Illinois.
In last Saturday's action the
Gopher's found little difficulty in
overcoming the grapplers from
Indiana and Missouri, despite the
fact that their Big Ten Champion,
Lewis Kennedy, wrestled with a
sprained ankle against Indiana. It
is probable that Kennedy, the 137-
pound Minnesota captain, will be
available against the Wolverines
today.
Don Henry who has been alter-
nating with Larry Lloyd at 123-
pounds will probably face Michi-
gan's undefeated Big Ten sopho-
more Bill Johannesen.
One Lineup Change
Johannesen brings an impres-
sive 11-3 season record with him
as he follows sophomore Tino
Lambros, who starts the meet for
Michigan at 123-pounds. Lambros,
who is the only change from Mich-
igan's victorious lineup against
Michigan State last week, is ex-
pected to face Minnesota sopho-
more Lloyd.
Cal Ts.mmTyw havin r .oered

In the 157-pound weight class,
Michigan captain Wayne Miller
meets either sophomore John
Klein or Leland Gross. Coach
Wally Johnson considers Klein the
most improved member of alst
year's freshman squad. Michigan's
Big Ten champion, Rick Bay,
brings his 14-0 record against
Minnesota's 167-pound senior,j
John Patten.
Unpredictable
Coach Cliff Keen expects Min-
nesota to give his Wolverines a
battle but adds that they are "un-
predictable with Kennedy's injury
and with their juggling of line-
ups." Coach Keen is not certain if
Kennedy's performance will be
affected by last Saturday's injury.
He is also referring to the fact

that the Minnesota matmen have
appeared at various weights dur-
ing the season and their numerous
sophomores add to their being
"unpredictable." This can be seen
in the 177-pound weight class
where the Gophers will send eith-
er Myron Rognlie or Jerry
Schwartz against Chris Stowell.
Rognlie has also appeared this
season as a heavyweight, alternat-
ing with sophomore Jon Staeb-
ler, who faces Bob Spaly in the
heavyweight event.
Schwartz, who now must weigh
177 pounds was listed at the be-
ginning of the season as a 157-
pound wrestler. All in all, the
Gophers could or could not prove
to be a formidable opponent for
Michigan.

Security First °
National Bank
serving
Southern California°
will have a representative on Campus
° March 6°
to discuss:
" Accelerated Management Training
" Immediate Responsibility
n Outstanding Promotional Possibilities n

This. cyclotron was built and operating by the fall of 1930 and reported
at the Washington April Meeting (Phys. Rev. 37, 1707, 1931). The
diameter of the chamber was about 5 inches. Placed between the 4-inch
diameter poles of a magnet with afield of 12,700 gauss and 2,000 volts
on its single dee, it produced 80,000 volt hydrogen molecule ions trapped
ar.d measured in a Faraday cage to which a measured and adequate de-
cderating voltage could be applied.
The do-it-yourself-with-sealing-wax days are gone
from cyclotron technology forever. The tiny in-
strument invented by Dr. Ernest 0. Lawrence at
Berkeley in 1930 has been superseded many times
by increasingly larger and more powerful instruef
ments of nuclear research.
Today the business of discovery is carried on by
3200 people at the Berkeley site of Lawrence Ra-
diation Laboratory, overlooking the University
of California campus and San Francisco Bay.
And the challenge of innovation remains for en-
gineers--in advanced accelerator design and in a
dynamic unclassified research program.
EE's: Major electronics development programs at LRL deal
with nuclear instrumentation, automated data handling and
acquisition, radio frequency and high voltage power supply
systems, fast-counting techniques and semiconductor device
development.
ME's: Our Mechanical Engineering work concentrates on de-
sign of accelerators and the instrumentation associated with
them, on magnet development, high vacuum systems, shielding
problems and mechanical engineering applied to biomedical
research.
Engineering graduates at all levels who want to learn more
about LRL should contact the Placement Office for appoint-
ments. Campus interviews will be held on

4

I

*

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