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March 06, 1964 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-03-06

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

FRIDAY, MARCH 6,1964

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, MARH 6,1964 V1-}11 al %flitly

WAGE S

THE EXTRA POINT
by JIM BERGER

Indiana Tops Swim Meet

After The Election

'Tm glad Weinberg won, but it''s too bad Cazzie had to lose,"
somebody remarked Wednesday night at the Michigan Union. "It's
just too bad."
Russell's defeat was sort of a tragedy. It wasn't tragic because
the basketball hero, supposedly loved by all, went down to defeat.
The tragedy ,was that the athletic candidate had genuine interest.
Russell didn't accept the Managers' nomination as an honor
but as a challenge. He made a genuine effort to learn about the
board once nominated, and I'm confident he would have regarded
his position seriously imike many of his predecessors.
If you want to blame somebody for Cazzie's defeat, don't blame
Tom Weinberg. Don't blame The Michigan Daily. Don't blame the
students.
Blame the Michigan Athletic Department which fosters the
archaic nomination system. Blame the board itself for its unneces-
sary secrecy on many matters. Blame the Regents for neglecting to
change their by-laws.
Mandate for Change... -
Weinberg's victory was not a reaction against athletes, but a
mandate for change. His victory means a vote of confidence for
openness, and a defeat for secrecy.
Well, the election is over. It raised many questions. Did The
Michigan Daily play an overactive or even unfair role? Do the means
always justify the ends?
The Daily wasn't unfair. Various members of the staff felt
a principle they truly believed in. It was something they had
fought for for three years. Tom Weinberg carried on an exten-
sive and aggressive campaign for a principle he deeply believed in.
Weinberg did not run as a Michigan Daily puppet but as a
student representative. The Daily was his vehicle for gaining his
knowledge and his qualifications.
Don't look to Weinberg to be a Daily tool. That would defeat
his own purpose of running. Weinberg is your student representative.
Ask him questions. Write him letters. Demand results.
Although not elected to the board, Cazzie Russell can and
should continue as a campus leader. Just because he's not on the
board, he doesn't have to for- 0
get about college athletics. He's
in a position to play an im-
portant role In the Michigan
athletic system. i The SGC I
Political campaigns sometimes
get out of hand. People are swept
by their emotions and tend to is now available t
neglect reason. The Michigan
Daily has an almost unique sys- students lyiving in o
tern of editorial expression. Peo-
ple sometimes forget that an edi-
torial or sports column "expresses BE I N FC
the individual opinions of staff
writers or the editors." Other in- Join our free
dividuals onsthe staff have differ-
r ent opinions and it makes for
controversy.
I've spoken to Cazzie Russell Send your name and
twice during the past week. I'm
convinced .he's a thoughtful and
intelligent student as well as the SGC Pubilih
greatest basketball player in Mich-
igan history. Cazzie Russell didn't 1 546t
come to Michigan just to play
basketball. He got offers from 50-An Arbo
or 60 other schools "just to play Ann A r
basketball."
Both Russell and Weinberg Next issue scheduled
have earned the confidence of
well over 2,000 Michigan stu-
dents. Both have responsibility.

(Continued from Page 1)
the semifinals to a final third
place. Candler moved up from fifth
to fourth in the finals and Brown
slipped from fourth to sixth. In-
diana's Dick Morse dropped from
third to seventh in the finals after
hitting his head on the board dur-
ing his final dive.
Gilbert Leads
At the end of the semifinals Gil-
bert was up on Boothman by 25.65
points. Morse, Brown, and Cand-
ler were in the next three places,
less than two points apart.
Sophomore Geoff D'Atri took a1
fourth place in the 400-yard indi-
vidual medley. At the end of the
first 200 yards, he was even with
the leaders but faded on the
breaststroke and freestyle legs. -
Lanny Reppert placed seventh
in the preliminaries. His time of

4:37.5 was only half a second from
qualifying for the finals. Captain
Jeff Moore was tenth in the event.
Defending champion Ted
Stickles of Indiana had to come
from behind to edge teammate
Ralph Kendrick by two-tenths
seconds. His. time of 4:20.3 wasl
almost nine seconds faster than
MSU's Dick Gretzinger's third-!
place clocking. Stickles' time was
a Cooke Hall Pool record but fell
short of his Big Ten and nationalI
collegiate mark of 4:17.6.
Walls'Slides In
In the fifty-yard sprint, sopho-
more Rich Walls touched out In-
diana's Tom Hayden for fourth
place. Both swimmers had times
of :22.3. Sophomore Rees Orland
swam into a three-way tie for
eighth place in the preliminaries.
Northwestern's Rich Abrahams
won the race in :22.1 although
Minnesota's Mike Stauffer record-
ed a time of :22.0. The judges
awarded the victory to Abrahams.
Michigan's 400-yard medley re-
lay team placed a distant third to
ndiana and Minnesota but was
almost five seconds ahead of
fourth place Ohio State. Ed
Bartsch, Steve Rabinovitch, Long-
streth, and Orland swam to a

3:41.5 time in their third place ef-
fort.
Indiana's quartet of sophomores
Pete Hammer and Tom Trethe-
way, senior Larry Schulhof, and
junior Chuck Ogilby set a new
Big Ten and national collegiate
record of 3:34.7. This was :00.1
second below the mark set by Min-
nesota lastt season, It is also a
Cooke Hall Pool record. Minne-
sota's second place time was 3:36.0.

SCORES
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Duke 75,North Carolina State 44
NYU 74, Fordhant 69
Wake Forest 79, Virginia 60
Seton Hall 102, Upsala 77
Bowling Green 89, DePaul 80
New Mexico 84, Brigham Young 80
Clemson 81, Maryland 67
Wyoming 92, Utah 77
Rice 97, Southern Methodist 90
Arkansas 108, Texas Christian 77
Texas A & M 65, Texas 63
North Carolina 80, South Carolina
Texas Tech 96, Baylor 82
Pan American 86, McMurry 81
NBA
Cincinnati 111, Boston 101
Detroit 125, Baltimore 120
NHL
Detroit 7, Montreal 5
Boston 4, Chicago 4 (tie)

ti

1

Within Reach

ONE-METER DIVING--1. Gilbert
(Ind); 2. Boothman (M); 3. Flynn
(OSU); 4. Candler (M); 5. Larson
(OSU); 6. Brown (M). Points --
400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY-1. In-
diana (Hammer, Tretheway, Schul-
hof, Ogilby); 2. Minnesota; 3. Mich-
igan; 4. Ohio State; 5. Michigan
State; 6. Wisconsin. Time - 3:34.7
(Big Ten, national collegiate, Cooke
Hall Pool record.)
500-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Farley
(M); 2. Verhoeven (Ind); 3. Daniel-
son (OSU); 4. Allen (Ind); 5. Town-
send, (Ind); 6. Wickens (Pur). Time
--4:57.6 (Big Ten, Cooke Hall Pool
record).
400-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY --
' 1. Stickles (Ind); 2. Kendrick (Ind);
Gretzinger (MSU); 4. D'Atri (M);
5. Shima (OSU); 6. Bergman (Minn).
Time-4 :20.3 (Cooke Hall Pool rec-
ord.)
50-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Abrahams
(NU); 2. Stauffer (Minn); 3. Mac-
Millan (MSU); 4. Walls (M); 5. Hay-
den.(Ind); 6. Mull (OSU). Time-
:22.1. ,

ELLA, FITZGERALD.

BILL FARLEY
... Big Ten champ

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Newsletter
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S.A.B.

rMichigan

Cette Semaine Uniquenment!
Tous les disques "CAPITOL" de
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. 1

I

The students voted .for repre-
sentation. Make sure you get it.
r Work to change an old-fashioned
system.
Let an athlete who wants to
represent the students seek and
petition for his nomination him-
self. Let women vote in the elec-
tion. They have to pay the same
$12 for athletic coupons that men
do. Although there are many per-
sonal matters discussed by the
board that can't be revealed, let
the campus know about the work-
ings of interoollegiate athletics.
After all, they're supporting it.
One' of the biggest fallacies in
4 democracy is that the voters
think It's all over once they
mark the ballot. This is only the
beginning.
Remember, YOU elected Tom
Weinberg. If you don't know why,
find out.
I-M Resultsg
Allen-Rumsey, Gomberg, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, and Phil Gamma
Delta came up with victories last
night, splashing into I-M water
polo finals next Wednesday.

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