THE MICHIGAN DAIL.Y -Y FALL THROUGH THE AIR .... Newest S By PETE DILORENZI n 1863, John M. Hinchman and Tory L. Grant, '66, introduced eball to the Michigan campus; 1872, William S. Sheeran, "73, lowed suit by formally intro- cing football. 'he innovations continued. In .7, when such grid greats as dic Smith and Ernie Allmen- ger were strolling the campus, )fessor Elmer D. Mitchell, later become Chairman of the De- rtment of Physical Athletics,, ablished Michigan's first per- ,nent basketball team; four, irs later, Hevery L. Thorne be- ne the school's first wrestling ich. New Innovation And now, in 1962, Al Beach, a t-time Engineering student, is png to introduce another 'sport' the Ann Arbor area-a sport re thrilling than baseball, more ise than football, more exacting 3,n basketball, and as complex Slow Starting Cole Finishes Strong port, Skydiving, Scary but Fun And the answer will inevitably be, skydiving. Your next question will be, "What is skydiving . . Now, I don't want to appear uninformed, but ..." And the answer you receive will probably go something like this. "Skydiving is the sport of jump- ing out of a moving airplane, with a parachute, and landing, safely, on, or near a predesignated spot on the ground." Two Subdivisions And if that's not enough, there are two subdivisions-free-fall, which consists of body control and maneuvers during 30 seconds of falling, without the parachute opened, from a plane at 7,500-ft. altitude; and canopy work, the controlling and directing of one's direction during the period follow- ing the opening of the parachute. Basic equipment needed for sky- jumping consists of backpack which costs upwards of $75, re- serve chute, $35, an instrument panel, consisting of an altimeter and a stopwatch, $25, and a hel- met, boots, and a pair of cover- alls, $25 in all. These are mini- mum prices, and the equipment depreciates. A back pack has a life span of about 100 jumps. A student of skydiving is first taught to pack a chute and to exit an aircraft with full body control. Learning to pack the chute is of prime. importance. For obvious reasons, skydivers, even veterans seem to have far greater confi- dence in self-packed chutes than in those packed by others. Procedures Learned Next Next, the student learns the proper rip-cord pulling procedures and later to control the chute after opening with the intent of landing as close to a predetermin- ed spot as possible-and of missing trees, upturned pitchforks, etc. A student makes, five static-line pumps--jumps with the chute opened from the start-before the first free-fall jump. After the basic training, the as- piring skydiver is ready for the real thing. He jumps from the moving plane, and looks at'a covered panel on the ground. The cover on the panel is removed, its color is re- vealed for five seconds, and then, the panel re-covered The skydiver must now base his free-fall routine on the color of the panel (the routine-color re- lations having been pre-determin- ed). He is judged on his speed, control and loops performed. Baton Pass is Ultimate! The ultimate maneuver is sky- diving is the baton pass. This is don by two skydivers, one who has jumped first and' the other who has followed him two seconds later. The first tries to slow him- self; the second tries to speed himself up. They aim at each other. No, they don't play chicken, they pass a baton. However, that sort of thing is for the virtuosi. The poor begin- ner, meanwhile, is amazed by the noise of the operation. "A moving airplaneswith one of its doors wide open, can be very, very noisy," say Beach. After the jump, however, there is, absolute silence;. that is, until the skydiver picks up speed. Then he hears the wind flapping his clothes. On a still night, it is pos- sible to hear a man falling. It sounds just like a vague rustle of leaves. Little Speed Feeling There is little sensation of speed in the early part of skydiving. Speed is relative and it is hard to make any comparisons with the tiny houses and trees below. One of the greatest experiences of skydiving, according to Beach, who has made 43 jumps himself, is falling through a cloud, mainly because when the skydiver leaves the plane above a cloud, he has very little idea indeed of where he is going to land. Beach emphasizes the safety of skydiving. There has never been a skydiving death in Michigan, and statistics have shown that skydiving is safer than skiing in proportional number of injuries. IBeach hopes to be able to or- ganize a Michigan Skydiving team which would have no direct con- nection with the University There are already teams at Harvard, Yale and Indiana. He points out that "skydiving doesn't really begin until mid- April. Then, people will begin dropping out of the skies like..' It is a known fact that April is the month of rain, The skydivers just help nature out. sport? Skydiving. living, you ask. By JERRY KALISH In his first four games this sea- son Tom Cole scored a total of 43 points; in his last four games, Tom Cole scored 95 points. Last season, as a sophomore, he did not start until the eighth game, but still wound up as second: leading scorer with a 12.1 average; this season he is averaging 14.8 overall, but the 6'7" junior has a 17.2 average in the Big Ten. Tom Cole, then, is what is known as a "slow starter." He is also known as a pressure ballplayer. In his first conference game last year against Indiana after a dis- mal pre-conference campaign, he pulled down 11 rebounds, con- nected for 12 points, and did a fine job defensively blocking three of big Walt Bellamy's shots-not a bad Big Ten debut. From then on he got progressively better. Scores 21, 16 and 29 In a loss to Purdue he tallied 21 points for his finest effort of that season. In the next two games he was slightly less than great, with 17 rebounds and 16 points against Ohio State, leading the Wolverines to their first Big Ten victory against Michigan State, tossing in 29 points, 19 in the first half. He was instrumental in the second and final conference victory that the Wolverines saw last season when he hit 13 of his 19 points in the first half to upset Illinois. What these statistics are trying to portray is that Cole is the kind of athlete that is best when the chips are down. He is the kind of athlete that typifies the oft-used adage, "When the going gets tough, the tough get going.' Year Begins Slowly And so Coach Dave Strack natu- rally expected Cole to pick up where he left off in his junior year. But it didn't start out the way he expected. True, he scored a creditable 15 points and led all rebounders with 16 in the opener with Ball State. He slumped badly in the next three, scoring nine against Penn, 8 against Butler, and 11 against Denver. This led Strack to comment at this time on Cole's offensively weak showing when the Michigan men- or said, "I don't think that Tom Cole has been playing as well as he can. He was playing better ball at the end of the season last year than he has this year." Strack Changes Opinion But a few days ago in a striking reversal Strack looked over the current Big Ten season rapidly drawing to a close and praised Cole by saying, "Cole is a good and dependable ballplayer. He has the knack of coming through for us when we need it." What is the reason for this change? It's simply that he's just shoot- ing better. From a 36 per cent field goal average in pre-conference tilts, he climbed to 41 per cent in the Big Ten. Besides being the tenth leading scorer and ninth in rebounding in the conference, Cole recently took over as Wolver- ine-high scorer for the season. Add these statistics to his third place standing in free throw percentage, 82.8, behind Jimmy Rayl of In- diana and Eric Magdanz of Min- nesota and you have something. In his recent scoring splurge, Cole had a string of three con- secutive 20-plus scoring perform- ances, 29 against Iowa, 26 against Indiana, and 24 against North- western. Pressure Player Tom Cole is also effective under pressure. Bringing a chain of seven straight losses into an early con- ference game against a Don Nel- son-powered Iowa, the Wolverines achieved their first Big Ten vic- tory, 56-55, when Cole's last-sec- ond free throw provided the win- ning margin. He said afterwards, "I tried not to think about it." Cole, himself, is stymied when he tries to get to the core of the problem of why he doesn't start off well, but finishes strong at the end of the season. He had this in mind when he remarked, "I can't attribute it to anything. Perhaps I'm shooting better and looking more for the better shot when I get the ball. I used to play baseball in the sum- mer, and now I won't do that. I'll play basketball." Noting the fact that the Cole of last year and the Cole of this year' resembled each other, Strack said, "We don't like to thinly of it as a pattern. We'd like to see him get off to a good start next Bea- son." 4, THIS THURSDAY MUG- TGIT featuring THE ROAD RUNNERS AND -Daily-Ed Langs COLE DRIVES FOR BUCKET--Michigan's 6'7" junior forward Tom Cole has been a late starter in both years as a Wolverine. Here he is shown driving past Iowa's Don Nelson. I-M ACTION: ST THE H IGH LIGHTERS FREE COFFEE Scores Marquette 93, Detroit 92 Louisville 88, W. Kentucky 71 Wayne State 84, Alleghany 66 Kansas State 84, Nebraska 60 J By GEORGE WHITE There appears to be a correla- tion between the warm weather on campus and the action in "A" Fraternity basketball last night- several teams "got hot" in the second half of their playoff games to emerge winners. Over 200 avid spectators'shoved and pushed-covered the edges of Court One--until they literally "flowed" with action in the hotly- contested Sigma Alpha Epsilon- Theta Xi court duel. SAE's Short In most sports, especially bask- etball, size seems to be the de- termining factor in an even match. Such was not the case as Dick Honig, captain and floorleader of SAE, put it after upsetting Theta Xi,. 30-28. "Desire is 90 per cent of any game; we knew they were bigger, but we wanted it (victory) more." Although the SAE quintet was undersized, underweighed, and came court-side with only six men, they more than made up for their BIG PHOTO SALE TODAY! Don't Miss I t House Representatives TURN IN YOUR MONEY and RECEIPTS, for the 1962' MICH IlGANENSIA4N deficit with determination and speed. SAE trailed 14-17 at the half, due to the George Mans, Larry Pierce, Bob Murlowe trio under the boards for Theta Xi. Theta Xi hit well from the outside and was led by Dave McCory with long jump shots that seemed to find their way to the hoop through SAE hands. Lead Changes Hands The lead was traded back and forth in the opening minutes of the second half as Theta X got cold from the outside and SAE closed the gap on fouls by too- eager Theta cagers. The score wav- ered back and forth until Theta Xi men began to find the range and ran the score to 24-18 with eight minutes on the clck. The game seemed lost for SAE when their ace board-sweeper, Dave Campbell, fouled out with four minutes to go. SAE with three men on the court under 5'9", turned to a desperation full-court press and made it stick. The slowed-down play cramped Theta Xi's style. SAE intercepted passes and tied up men to tie the score 28-28 with less than a minute to go. Theta Xi missed two important foul shots and diminutive guard, Dennis Spalla, raced downcourt with the rebound and arched his second bucket of the evening through a host of Theta Xi arms to put the game on ice. After leading at the half, 23- 21, Kappa Sigma fell to a late surge by Alpha Epsilon Pi, 36-44. Both squads traded baskets in a tight scoring contest until John Einbund for AEP broke the game open with six straight buckets from the corners. Tom Barnett aided the AEP cause with 11 points, Bill Fogg and Dick Arnold chipped in '12 and 10 points, re- spectively for the losers. Strong Alpha Tau Omega ston- ed Psi Upsilon 44-28, under the 24-point output of ATO floorleada. er, Dave Molhoek. ATO dominat- ed the game with fast-break com- binations and control of the boards. Phi Gamma Delta downed Phi Kappa Psi 32-21. after lead- ing 17-3' at the half. Dick Lyons lead both teams with 19 points. I-M Scores SOCIAL FRATERNITY 'A' Sigma Alpha Epsilon 30, Theta Xi 28 Alpha Epsilon P1 44, Kappa Sigma 36 Alpha Tau Omega 44, Psi Upsilon 28 Phi Gamma Delta 32, Phi Kappa Psi 21 Theta Delta Phi 36, Theta Delta Chi 25 Zeta Beta Tap 37, Phi Sigma Kappa 23 Pi Lambda Phi 2, Theta Chi 0 Delta Tau Delta 46, Delta Kappa Epsilon 38 Alpha Sigma Phi 2, Sigma Phi 0 Alpha Kappa Lambda 2, Phi Sigma Delta 0 LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB? Guys gals, wethe you want money, adventure or fun from your summer work, SUMMER JOBS 1962 wil tel you how ad where to look. This comprehensivreport s names and addresses of employ- ers who actualy seek colege students for summer work. Re- port lists jobs in all parts of the country and includes details .n how to apply, how to sell your- self, etc. Saves you weeks at trial-anderror effort