THE MICHIGAN DAILY ihigan Opens Spring Football Drills KINGERY LEADS BLUE: 4 .; ;.' s,, T ankers Place Four in AAU 4) C+7 By LLOYD GRAFF The sharp pop of shoulder pad hitting shoulder pad was mixed with grunts, whistles and words as eighty football players and eight coaches began the formal ritei of spring football practice yesterday. In crisp 40-degree weather Coach Bump Elliott and his crew started the bumping and belting routine which is said to make athletes into football players. In the spring, Elliott says he gets a chance to look over his new material and check over the vet- erans. He feels he has an op- portunity to do more individual coaching than in the fall because time pressure is not as great. New Line Coach Saturday's practice sessionlast- ed about two and a half hours and was devoted almost entirely to drills. The interior linemen had a chance to see how new coach TonyeMason from Niles, Ohio, operates. Mason, who carries a lot of starch on a 5'8" frame, kept up an almost continuous stream of words, as he gave his linemen a stiff workout. He chewed on a big wad of tobacco all the time. In the first lineups, Chuck Ruzicka and Greg Mader are listed as Blue team tackles with Charlie Kines and Tom Mack behind them on the White team. Blue and White are analogous to first and second team. Dave Butler and Rich Hahn are the Blue gua'rds while Bill Keating; younger brother of graduating Tom Keat- ing, and John Marcum are work- ing with the White team at that position. Stiff Competition At the center spot, where a tre- mendous battle might be shaping up, Elliott lists Brian Patchen who came on dramatically last season on the Blue team with Tom tecchini, who showed bril- liance before he was injured, on the Whites. Frank Nunley, a highly-touted sophomore, is on the Gold third team at center. Working on the first team at end were captain Jim Conley and Bill Laskey. John Henderson de- cided to go out for track as did other football candidates, Bill Yearby, John Rowser, Dick Wells, and Dorie Reed. Tall Steve Smith, the tallest man on the squad at 6'5", is on the second team at end, as is Craig Kirby who distinguish- ed himself as a pass receiver late last season. Backfield Men Jack Clancy is listed as first- string left'halfback with big Jim Detweiler, a 205 pound freshman, backing him up. Bob Quist is run- ning at right half for the Blues with Ton Brigstock and Richard Ott playing for the Whites. Carl Ward, a 5'9" speedball, is now listed on the third string gold team. Bob Timberlake, to nobody's sur-. prise, was the Blue quarterback with sophomore Pete Hollis play- ing for the White team. Dick Vid- mer, a freshman, is on the Gold team. Completing the backfield is Mel Anthony at fullback with Chuck Dehlin toiling for the White team. "The boys on the team are in good condition, but not great," Elliott said after the workout. He did, however, express satisfaction with the way practice went. Meanwhile, other Big Ten teams have been having the same weather trouble as Michigan. Heavy snows threw Northwest- ern's practice opening a week be- hind time, and Purdue, as Mich- igan, was two days late in begin- ning to work out. Soudek Breaks, Mark in Opepner By The Associated Press Michigan placed four swimmers in the finals of the Men's AAU Swimming and Diving Champion- ships, but their highest finish was a fourth place by freshman Russ Kingery in, the 100-yard back- stroke. Pan American Games gold medal winner Ed Bartsch was fifth, :00.2 behind Kingery. Bob Bennett of Southern California was first with a time of :53.7. Kingery's time was :54.5. Wolverine f r e s h m a n Paul Scheerer was fifth in the 100- yard breaststroke only :00.6 be- hind the winner. Scheerer placed sixth in the 200-yard breaststroke Friday. Richard Walls, double winner in the Big Ten Championships, was sixth in the 100-yard free- style. His time of :49.3 and sixth- place finish qualifies him for the Olympic trials to be held this sum- mer. High school senior Don Schol- lander set his second American record in two days in winning the 500-yard freestyle in 4:44.5. Roy Saari, the former record holder, was second, 13 yards behind. It was the second time during the AAU meet that the NCAA triple- winner finished -behind Schollan- der. Another high school sensation, Dick Roth, a Santa Clara team- mate of Schollander, set his sec- ond American record in tne 200- yard individual medley with a time of 1:58.2. Chet Jastremski, former Indiana star, held the old record of 1:58.5. Jastremski did not com- pete in this meet. In the 100-yard freestyle, Steve Clark, a former member of the Santa Clara team, and presently swimming for Yale University, beat defending champion Steve Jack- man. Clark's time was :47.1. The closest race of the evening was the 100-yard breaststroke which was won by NCAA cham- pion Bill Craig of Southern Cali- fornia with a time of 1:00.1. Only, :00.6 separated the winner and fifth place winner, Scheerer. Ja- Carr BreaKs Mark; Long Sets Another By The Associated Press Henry Carr, Arizona State's flash of lightning, bettered his own world record for the 220-yard dash around a curve last night with a time of :20.2. This time knocks :00.1 off his listed record. The tall junior from Detroit set the record in a dual meet betweeAi the Sun Devils and the Southern California Striders. Second and third spots went to Striders Adolph Plummer and Don Webster in times of .:20.8 and :20.9, respectively. Plummer is a world record holder in the 440-yard dash. Another world's record was broken in a meet between Occi- dental College and the Pasadena Athletic Association when Dallas Long of Southern Cal heaved the shot put 65'111/2" to erase his old mark by one inch. Long's series of six throws meas- ured between 63'11/2" to the new mark he established on his fifth put, pan's Kenjiro Matsumoto, win- ner of the 200-yard breaststroke Friday was timed just behind Craig, but placed third behind Ken Merten on a judge's decision. American record holder Wally Richardson set a meet mark of :50.8 in the 100-yard butterfly. World record holder Luis Nicolao of Argentina, was second by a yard. In the NCAA meet last week- end, Richardson was timied in :50.2. Ken Sitzberger, Indiana Uni- versity freshman, scored 66.15 points on each of his last two diver to become the first college freshman ever to win an indoor AAU three-meter diving title. He finished 20.75 ahead of defending Rick Gilbert of Indiana, whom he also unseated for the one- meter title. BUMP ELLIOTT ELD HOUSE: To Pattern New Arena After UCLA Structure r 1 (Continued from Page 1) it rock solid enough to support ie building. Slush and Sand. Other sites, like the Wines Field cation, had as much as 60 feet slush and sand on top of the ck base. The only interference which the iosen site will have with current cilities is that it will uproot the olf practice field, where golf asses have been held. Other areas under consideration ould have required far more dis- cation of facilities, according to purr. Each of the four other sites, though all closer to the campus Ian the one decided upon, would ave required some major dis- cation of present 'facilities, or ould have interfered with the ng-range expansion plans of te athletic board. To Build Walkways Dean Spurr says that the com- ittee took into account the dis- ,nce which the site is from the tinpus, but explains that walk- ays will be built out to the loca- on, and that the distance is less an a mile from the Union. "We are considering bus service om the more distant parts of the mpus, -Spurr says. The new building will cost about .5 million and will be financed ztirely out of athletic department inds. The athletic board will >at a bond issue which will be iaranteed by the Office of Busi- ss and Finance. The building itself will be pat- reed after the UCLA Sports Building, a $3.5 million arena seating 13,500, which is currently under construction. in Los Angeles. Dan Dworsky, a former Michigan All-American, is one of the archi- tects for the UCLA project. Dworsky along with Kenneth Black and Associates of Lansing, is in charge of the plans for the Michigan building. "Dan has access to all the plans for the UCLA building, and we hope he'll be able to' profit from their mistakes," Dean Spurr says. Special To The Dailyv LEXINGTON, Ky. - Michigan's Ernie Soudek set a varsity record' in the discus with a heave of 177'6" yesterday as the Big Ten indoor track champion Wolverines opened their outdoor season in the Kentucky Relays. Soudek, a 6'6" senior from Vienna, Austria, was second in the Big Ten as a sophomore, but failed to place last year when he fouled on all his attempts. He broke his own record by two inches with a hurl that assist- ant track coach Dave Martin call- ed "one of the best throws in the country this year." No Predictions Soudek's best throw last year also came in the opening meet of the year. After that meet, the 230- pound former hammer thrower predicted throws upwards of 180', but this year he says that he won't make any predictions. Soudek, who will probably rep- resent his native Austria in the Olympics, was the only winner for the Wolverines as only part of the team made the trip. Other placers included Big Ten champion shot putter Roger Sch- mitt, who placed second with a throw of 53'1%". Kelly Anchors The two-mile relay team of Dave Hayes, Jay Sampson, Cecil Norde and Ted Kelly was third. Kelly ran an anchor leg in the event in a time of 1:52.8. Cliff Nuttall, last year's high hurdles champion in the Big Ten, placed fourth in the 120-yard ver- sion of his event, but was clocked in :14.2, :00.1 better than his winning performance in Minne- 9polis last spring in the Big Ten outdoor meet. Chris Murray was fourth in the two-mile with 9:22 and was fifth in the mile. Ammerman Third In the high jump, Michigan's surprise indoor champion, Al Am- merman, took a-third with a leap of 6'6", two inches below his win- ning jump last month in the Big Ten meet. In the closest race of the day, Kentucky's John Cox and Mel Blenheim and Randall Weddle of Indiana were all timed in :21.5 in the 220-yard dash. Bob Schul of Miami (Ohio) coasted to victory in the two-mile run, breaking the tape in 8:47.3. Chicago's Willie May captured the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.3. The track team returns to Ann Arbor and is idle until the Ohio State Relays, a week from Satur- day, April 18. SPORT in the USSR Monthly from the Soviet Union. In English. Richly illustrated. About all 'sports in Soviet Un- ion, including system of train- ing. One year subscription-- 40 Cents Imported Publications & Prod. 1 Union Euare, N.Y.C. 3 (M) IU WHAT'S ON THE ERNIE SOUDEK CAZZIE SCORELESS: AAU Stars Triumph In Final Cage Tryouts Scores PRO HOCKEY Stanley Cup Playoffs Montreal 4, Toronto 2 COLLEGE BASEBALL Iowa 10-23, Luther 0-0 Indiana 2-9, DePauw 0-3 Arizona State 4-13, Utah State 2-2 TENNNS Ohio State 7, Cincinnati 2 Miami 9, Cornell 0 Indiana 8, Washington (St. Louis) 0 OLYMPIC BASKETBALL TRIALS NCAA Blues 75, AAU Stripes 67 AAU stars 78, NCAA Reds 73 NAIA All-Stars 84, NCAA Whites 77 Armed Forces Jets 95, Armed Forces Missiles 90 I _f e. . III. $ 4. .... I1, By The Associated Press NEW YORK - The Olympic basketball trials are over and all that remains is today's announce- ment of selections of the 12-man team and six alternates by the se- lections committee. In last night's action, the AAU Stars won the winner-take-nothing tournament by downing the NCAA Red 'team, 78-U~. In the third place game, the NAIA All-Stars beat the NCAA Whites, 84-77. Cazzie Russell, playing for the Whites was held scoreless, but saw enough action to commit two per- sonal fouls. UCLA's Blues In action yesterday afternoon, the NCAA Blues, composed mostly ichigan Ends Winter Sports SOverall Conference Leader of UCLA's national champions, walked past the AAU Stripes 75- 67 for fifth place and the Armed Forces Jets downed the Armed Forces Missiles, 95-90 for seventh. The AAU Stars, led by Jerry, Shipp and little Larry Brown up- set the favored NCAA team. Shipp led the AAU scoring with 16 points, many on soft hooks from the cor- ner, while Brown clinched the vic- tory with his free throw shooting in the closing minutes. Skurcenski Stars Lanky Lou Skurcenski led the NAIA All-Stars with 22 points. The 6'6" senior from Westminster, Pa., received major support from All-American Lucius Jackson of Pan American College. Jackson, a 6'9" giant, scored 14 points but led the team in re- bounds with 14. Outstanding for the Whites was Joe Caldwell of Arizona State who dumped in 18 and little Manny Newsome of Western Michigan who collected 12. Leslie Hunter of Loyola pumped in 10 for the los- ers. Mullins Nets 16 In the championship game, Jeff Mullins of Duke spearheaded a last-ditch rally by the NCAA Reds, but his team couldn't catch up. Mullins topped all scorers with 16. Mel Counts, Oregon State's giant center threw in 14 and Jim (Bad News) Barnes had 13. Pete McCaf- frey had 15 for the AAU squad. Barry Kramer led the NCAA Blue team with 19 in its conquest over the Armed Forces Jets. Eh t B bn-hl- During the fall and wintery ports seasons, Michigan's var- ty teams established the greatest cord in Wolverine history by inning or sharing in five of ven Big Ten titles. To top this off, the hockey team aptured the NCAA crown, and her teams accounted for two iirds, a fourth, and a sixth in ational championship competi- on. The Maize and Blue basket- all and gymnastics teams each nished third in NCAA finals, hile the tankers wound up fourth and the matmen were sixth. Both the hockey and basketball teams compiled the best records in Michigan's history, finishing with 24-4-1 and 23-5, respectively. This marks the fourth consecu- tive season in which Michigan has led the Big Ten in titles won dur- ing this period. Below are the places in which the Big Ten teams finished in each sport. The average is taken from the finish of each school in each sport: Wolverine Frosh Gymnasts Sparkle in Association Meet Ij Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-In the Mich- igan Gymnastics Association Meet yesterday, Michigan coach Newt Loken said t h a t Michigan's "freshmen performed well. All competitors in the meet were freshmen, performing unattached. Loken pointed out that there were upwards of 20 men in each event, "pretty good competition." A trio of Michigan freshmen swept the first three places in the parallel bars. Gary VanderVoort won, with Ken Williams and Kim Mousseau right behind. Twins In floor exercise, a pair of twins, Charles and Phil Fuller, placed third and fourth. Follow- ing them in fifth position was Chris VanDenBroek. Michigan frosh placed fourth, fifth and sixth on the side horse. Finishing in these places were Walt Knelde, Cliff Chilver and Art Baessler. On the high bar, VanderVoort racked up his second first, while VanDenBroek tooka second. Chil- ver finished fourth in the event. Still Rings VanderVoort grabbed a second on the still rings, with Clarence Eagle finishing behind him. Chil- ver took a fourth in this event also. The only other event in which a Michigan freshman placed was vaulting where Phil Fuller fin- ished third. VanDenBroek, VanderVoort and Chilver placed second, third and fourth in all-around competition. Their respective scores were 469, 464, and 444, compared to a win- ning total of 477 for Flint Junior College's Bob F'riend. WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! -5 Barbers to serve you- at U-M Barbers N. Univ. near Kresge's and --7 Barbers to serve you- at The' Dascola Barbers near Mich. Theater 7 Champions of the West 1. MICHIGAN 2. Michigan State' 3. Minnesota 4. Ohio State 5. Wisconsin 6. llinois 7. indiana 8. Iowa 9. Purdue L. Northwestern 5 2t 9 2t' 5t 1 10l 8 4 k, c x4 !!: 0 asq p 1 3 5 7 2 6 ,8 10 4 9 3 2 * * * * * * 1 3 6 8 4 5 7 2 * * 1 10 51' 9 5f' 7 3 2 8 4 1it 4t 3 1it 10 6t 8 9 40' of' 2 5 4 3 6 10 1 8 9 7 * 1 3 6 2 5 4 7 8 * 21' * 4 6 1 5 2t * * 9 8 8 g 8 8 8 6 5 I Cincinnati 7, Los Angeles (N) 6 Pittsburgh 14, Detroit 6 New York (A) 9, Chicago (A) 8 Philadelphia 9, Houston 6 St. Louis 10, New York (N) 1 Minnesota 7, Kansas City 4 Washington 3, Milwaukee 2 11 1.7 3.7 4.6 5.0 5.0 5.0 5.8 6.0 6.1 6.0 f-Indicates tied for place. *-means did not compete. Camp To-Ho-Ne for Boys, use itrro? (Teyd probably left *30so fbef heads), But then, wouldn't any man? If he suddenly found all those starry-eyed gals looking at him? So, if you think you can handle it, go ahead. use SHORT CUT! It'll tame the T GREAT BARRINGTON, MASS. OPENINGS FOR COUNSELORS: General, some key per- sonnel, tennis, archery, photography. Aquatics, men includ- ing: WSI's, smallcraft, waterskiing. Wood-metal shop. Cer- ...,,....... 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