THE MICHIGAN DAINY 'en Rejects Round-Robin Clause AT EAST LANSING: Leps, McRae Anchor 'M' Chance in our minds is what we think is best for athletics in the Big Ten," Reed explained. The NCAA meetings next week will formalize track and gymnast- ics federations in opposition to the AAU's control of amateur athlet- ics. A basketball federation has al- ready been established but with no official charter and constitution. Although the, track federation has tentatively scheduled a sum- mer meet in conflict with the AAU championships, the NCAA federations have invited the AAU groups to join them but the AAU has thus far refused. Suspend Rule The Big Ten also voted to sus- pend until Sept. 1, 1962, its reg- ulation prohibiting home visita- tions by coaches to prospective athletes. "This was done because of the need to explain to parents our new financial aid program," Reed said. Directors will consider a re- port on the effects of this sus- pension in September and may extend it if no "untoward inci- dents" occur, he explained. The new regulations require a 1.7 grade point predictability on the basis of national tests and high school standing for freshmen participation and a progressively higher standard for higher classes. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of two articles analyzing Michigan's chances in the Big Ten track championships which begin today at East Lansing. Today's ar- ticle deals with the performers from Michigan.) By GEORgE WANSTALL Combining team power in the middle distance runs, the pole vault and the hurdles with super- for team depth, the Wolverines will try to retain their Big Ten Indoor Track championship for the sixth time in the last eight years. Featured performers for Mich- igan are Ergas Leps and Bennie McRae, double winners and con- tributors of 20 of, the 69 points Michigan collected last season. Leps who will run the mile and the 880-yd run has met no real competition since he has run here' in the Big Ten. Featuring a last place spot until the stretch, Leps has the steam in the last 220-yds to reach the tape first. McRae, who captured honors from Minnesota's highly touted Dave Odegard in last year's meet,' will meet perhaps even stiffer competition this season from MSU's Herman Johnson and Wis- consin's Larry Howard. Both Johnson and Howard have beaten McRae this season. Tremendous Power Rod Denhart, Steve Overton and George Wade provide the Wolver- ines with tremendous power in the pole vault to augment the points which McRae and Leps will pick up. Denhart has leaped over 14'0" twice-14'4" in the Purdue meet two weeks ago and 14'2%/ry" against Wisconsin. Overton also pumped 14' himself, while in Wade's efforts last week, he hit 14' only to have his pole strike the bar. There ire only three other vaulters in the conference whose leaps have sur- passed 13'10". Other events where the Wolver- ines stand to pick up some points are the broad jump, the high jump, the 1,000-yd run, and pos- sibly the 600-yd run. Bested the Field Dave Raimey, whose leap of 24'5/" bested the field in Madison last weekend will pit his talent against several good Jumpers, but unless his leap last week was a freak, he can be counted on for points. Steve Williams and Al Ammer- man carry Michigan's hopes in the high jump. Ammerman has consistantly jumped around 6'2" or better, while Williams has done 6'4". Returning to the track, Charlie Aquino will try to match his rec- COACH'S GREATEST MOMENTS: Championships: A Stager Tradition (EDITOR'S NOTE: When Gus Stager succeeded Matt Mann as swimming coach for Michigan in 1954, it had only been four years { since he finished out his competitive career as a distance freestyler for the Wolverines. In the interlude stager had coached Dearborn Ford- son High School to three state Class A championships in four years. Since then, in his seven-yearyten- ure as head coach at Michigan, 4he 38-year-old'Stager has led his teams to four NCAA and three Big Ten titles.uOne of the youngest men ever to be named an Olympic coach, Stager saw his U.S. swimmers domi- nate their events in the 1960 Rome Games.) By GUS STAGER As Told to Dave Good Most of the winning I've done as a coach has all been blended in with other things, so I really can't say one thing has been more important than any other. You have to remember that everything has its own importance and its own relation to other things. I don't remember very many things, and as I said, they all seem to blend in, but here goes. The second year I was coaching at Fordson we won the state class A high school championship. We were a darkhorse. We had a good team but we had been beaten in the regular season and were rated about third or fourth. Nobody had really been consid- ering us for the title, but all of a sudden the team developed into a state, champion. So there was a tremendous thrill there because, after all, it was only my second year. Lots of Good Ones Some of my best swimmers there were Kenny Guest, Bill Black, Jim Krothers and Jim Kwasney. They all won their events, I remember, but there were a lot of others that were good too. You have to win the second year in a row too, you know, to prove it wasn't a fluke the first time. That's even more of a challenge. So when we did win it, it thrilled me in a different way.. Then when I got here at Michi- gan, winning the first national championship was fun, and there was the same feeling with the second and third ones too. One of my biggest thrills hap- pened after the Wardrops, Jack and Bob, had been dismissed from the team in 1956 for, shall we say, incompatibility. The year before, I coached Jack and he set a pair of world records. So this year, we went into Big Ten competition without these two great stars. Everybody Beat Us And it was a ridiculously poor season. It seemed like we lost all 0,.~ ri 4! -141 z: 'Xtt GUS STAGER ... four NCAA Championships 'I I ets by two or three points. coaches, like Cliff Keen and Matt nber we won one big and Mann, who helped to make Michi- e, but Ohio State really gan the school it is. 3 us. They had a great Have To Like It Michigan sort of grows on you. prognosticators had gone There was a young man, the late e list of comparative times Bruce Harlan, who was gung-ho .he Big Ten meet, we would OSU, but after four years here ated fifth or sixth. But as diving coach, he wouldn't see re got there, our swimmers anything else but Michigan. kan to swim. We've left out one complete were tremendous, excel- thrill-the Olympics. When I was perb. They actually swam nominated Olympic coach it was ring races because they a tremendous thrill-I was such led better than they ever a young punk to be chosen. But it > to that point. So we was such a hard job and lasted i second to Ohio State in such a long time that you can't md year of coaching here. really call the whole thing a thrill. it was a tremendous thrill, You only have a feeling of in- even though we were sec- dividual achievement. I coached year before too, it wasn't with a vehemence-a vengeance. ay team-Matt Mann had There were a lot of little things, for me. though. For Bill Mulliken to have Tradition Counts achieved what he did-he upset if you asked some of the everybody in the breaststroke-was i the team why they'per- a great effort and a tremendous so well, they couldn't an- thrill for both his coach at Miami Why, coach," they'd say, and myself. an is never worse than Win Without Winning or third." In my career as a swimmer there alk about tradition. were some Big Ten and National maybe it means nothing, Collegiate meets that were big e's a case where it really thrills. At one NCAA meet, in 1948, a great believer in Michi- we didn't take a single first place. here have been very few We won it on seconds, thirds and n teams that don't per- fourths. So you can' see it's not spectably-or even better the first that are important. It's spectably-when the chips the contributions that each swim- n. mer makes toward the team effort. ims you can always count I realized a few days afterward guys. If there's any kind that I was the guy who scored the ice at all, Michigan will most points for our team in the win. And I think it reflects meet by placing in the 220, 440 pole school, not just the and 1500. I don't evenremember program. , where I placed-that's how im- a time we young coaches portant it is. (He was third in all ew up as undergrads at three races.) n, like Bump Elliott and Winning isn't important. It's will get the ability to re- the feeling of doing something to- he spirit of the older gether with the rest of the team. That's th thing that's most im. portant to me-that each does his own share and each does his job in his own way. For The BEST in BOOKS buy at State St. at N. University FOR BES CORV MON 4r on all CHEVR including CHE con I~u~hL $ .* v C.y ! ffi ERGAS LEPS ... sure winner ord time of 2:11.9 in the 1,000 while Mac Hunter will carry Mich- igan's hopes in the 600. Actually the key to a possible Michigan victory will ,lie in the team's depth, as it did last year, when 19 men gained places in the 15 events. Needs Help , Coach Don Canham needs help from Roger Schmitt in the shot, Doug Niles in the broad jump, and Ammerman and Wade in the other field events. In the races, help will be sought from men like Jay Sampson, Ted Kelly and Dave Hayes in the 600 through the mile; John Davis in the 440-yd dash; Dick Thelwell and Cliff Nutall in the hurdles; Len Johnson, Ken Burnley and Carter Reese in the dashes and Chris Murray and Jim Neahusan in the longer distance runs. The one mile relay team is not definitely set yet, but Canham will probably go with Davis, Burnley, Bill Hornbeck and Len Johnson, the team that ran in the Purdue meet. C I S S },,: MONDAY and. TUESDAY in the fishbowl T DEALS n ETTES IZAS id U) These shirts sold for 2.98 ... 3.25. Millions bouaht them and rebouaht them. In all our 60