100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 30, 1962 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-03-30

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

OSU Blocks NCAA Swim Path

..tudents"

I

-Daily-Bruce Taylor
REIGNING CHAMP--Dick Nelson, Wolverine breaststroker, won
the 100-yd. breaststroke title last year, but will be hard put to
repeat this year..

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the
second of two articles analyzing by .3 of a second in winning his
Michigan's chances in the NCAA preliminary heat in 2:17.0 at the
swimming championships which be-BiTemetwchsosha
gin this afternoon in Columbus. Big Ten meet which shows that
Today's article deals with the back- the Ohio Stater is not unbeatable.
stroke, breaststroke, butterfly,rin- Other top breaststrokers in the
vndual medley and medley relay cutyaePt oaayo
events.) country are Pete Fogarasy of
By BILL BULLARD North Carolina State (2:16.8),
Gardner , G r e e n of Princeton
While Michigan and Southern (2:17.1), Dick Nelson (2:18.0), Vir-
California are strong in the free- gil Luken of Minnesota (2:18.2),
style events, Ohio State's super- and Charles Griffin of Navy
iority in the specialty strokes will (2:18.6).
force a close contest for the NCAA Nelson Attempts Repeat
team championship. Nelson will attempt to repeat as
Buckeye swimmers could take champion in the 100-yd. breast-
individual victories in both back- stroke. His time of 1:01.8 at the
stroke events, the 200-yd. breast- 1961 NCAA meet was a meet rec-
stroke, the 200-yd. individual med- ord. This season he has done a
ley, and the medley relay. Michi- 1:01.3. Most of the best swim-
gan and Southern California will mers in the 200 havea chance
have to place enough swimmers in to place in the 100 finals as well
the specialty events to protect their as Nelson's teammate Geza Bod-
advantage gained over Ohio State olay (1:03.5).
in the freestyle events. Ohio State's Marty Mull has re-
Schaefer Favored corded a time of 2:03.6 in the 200-
Ohio State's L. B. Schaefer, Big yd. individual medley. Bill Wood
Ten 100-yd. backstroke record- of Michigan State has gone un-
holder, has to be the favorite in der 2:05.0 and John Pringle of
the 100. His best time of :53.4 is Harvard, Bud Peterson of Minne-
considerably faster than his two sota, Bill Milot'a of Minnesota,
closest rivals, Thompson Mann of and Alec Borden of Colgate have
North Carolina (:54.2) and Jed done well under 2:06.0.
Graef of Princeton (:54.3). Butterly to 'M'
In the 200 - yd. backstroke, It is in the butterfly events that
Schaefer and Graef have swum Michigan can outscore Ohio State.
close to 2:00.0; Thompson and Jeff Moore and Enn Mannard
Thomas Welch of Princeton are placed above Buckeyes Artie Wolf
Just below 2:02.0; and Michigan's and Alan Cartwright in the 200-
Mike Reissing around 2:03:5: yd. butterfly and Jeff Longstreth
Buckeye Tom Kovacs, with his placed above Cartwright in the
best time of 2:15.1, appears to be 100-yd. butterfly at the Big Ten
the favorite in the 200-yd. breast- meet. 'Carl Shaar of Michigan
stroke. But Jon Baker beat Kovacs State and Dick McDonough of
Villanova should lead the pack in
*lthe 200. The two Wolverines and
Vatican Calls the two Buckeyes should be close
Boxing Wrong
VATICAN CITY P) - In the
wake of the Benny (Kid) Paret-
Emile Griffith boxing tragedy,
Vatican Radio said last night that
professional boxing as it now exists
is "objectively immoral."
Vatican Radio views were part
of its normal daily presentation of
news and comment. It made no di-
rect mention of Paret, who has
been battling for his life in a New
York hospital after a severe beat-
ing during a championship bout
Saturday night.

behind with such swimmers as
Southern California's Dennis De-
vine and Dennis.Rounsavelle.
Spencer Tops
Edwin Spencer of North Caro-
lina State has been timed at :53.0
for 100 yards. McDonough, Wolf,
Devine, Southern Cal's Mike Mea-
liffe, and Southern Methodist's

Barnetson are within a second of
that. Longstreth's best time is
:54.2.
In the medley relay, Princeton,
Ohio State, and Yale are under
3:41.0. Michigan State (3:42.0)
and Michigan (3:42.7) are not far
behind.

Celtics Whip Warriors;
Take 2-1 Lead in Series,

BOSTON (IP)-Bill Russell stole
Wilt Chamberlain's thunder last
night as the Boston Celtics whip-
ped the Philadelphia Warriors
129-114 and took a two-to-one lead
in their best-of-seven Eastern Di-
vision championship playoffs.
The Celtics, gunning for- a
fourth straight National Basket-
ball Association title, wrapped up
game No. 3 with a 41-point second
period and a record-t'ing 76 point
first half. The teams meet again
in Philadelphia Saturday after-
noon.
Bill Tops Wilt
Russell outscored and outre-
bounded scoring king Chamber-
lain in the crucial first half after
being outplayed by Wilt in Phila-
delphia Tuesday night. Though the
7'2" Chamberlain wound up lead-
ing all scorers with 35 points, most
of them came too late for the
visitors.
Russell tallied 21 points to
Wilt's 13 in the opening half and
grabbed 14 rebounds to Chamber-

RENT BICYCLES at
UNIVERSITY BIKE SHO1
211 So. State Ph. 662-6986
Hr. 60c Day $3.00 Mo. $6.00
And we take care of all rental repairs.
WANT TO BUY USED BICYCLES
Trained Bicycle Mechanics Here 9 to 5 daily.
COMPLETE GUARANTEED SERVICE

lain's 11. The big Celt finished up
with 31 points
Early Splurge
Russell and Tom Heinsohn were
the sparkplugs in the early stages
of the game, combining for 10 of
Boston's first 11 points. Then, with
Sam Jones hitting from the left
corner and Boston's fancy pass-
ing mystifying the Warriors, the
Celtics moved to a 35-29 opening
period margin.
The76 points for Boston in the
first half tied a playoff mark shar-
ed by the Celtics and the Los An-
geles Lakers.
Heinsohn also had 31 points
while Meschery dropped in 27.
The Warriors were hampered
by the absence of Tom Gola, stil
suffering from a back injury, whO
did not play at all.
A sellout 13,909 Boston Garden
crowd saw the Celtics regulars
come back into the game near the
finish and stave off any Warrior
hopes of a rally.

U i . i

'

II

Delicious Hamburgers ..15c
Hot Tasty French Fries.. .10c
Triple Thick Shak B0c
2000 W. Stadium BlIvd.

I

fV

-Daily-Bruce Taylor
BACKSTROKE CHALLE1NGER-Mike Reissing is the varsity ree-
ord holder in the backstroke and Michigan will need all the points
he and Nelson can contribute if It is to retain its NCAA swim title.
BUILT EMPIRE:
Tennessee's Gen. Neyland
SuombIcco s to Long Illness

You may win

A SUMMER'
leading to a

JOB

NEW ORLEANS (P)-Gen. Rob-
ert R. Neyland, who built Ten-
nessee's mighty football empire
and trained some of the nation's
top coaches, died here yesterday.
after a long illness. He was 70.
Neyland, who had been hospi-
talized at Ochsner Foundation
Hospital here since Jan. 14, sue-
cumbed to the liver and kidney ail-
ment that had forced his retire-
ment from active coaching after'
the 1952 season., Since' then,' he
had continued in his lifetime post
as athletic director.
During 21 seasons in 27 years
starting in 1926, sNeyland's teams
won 171 games, lost 27 and tied
12. His 1951 undefeated and un-
tied team won the-national cham-
pionship.
Featuring fundamentals, espe-
cially the, crunching blocking that
became the trademark of the sin-
gle wing, Neyland never yielded to
the wide-open football that ac-
companied the rise of the. T-for-
mation in the 1940's.
Among the head coaches trained
by Neyland were the rivals in the
1962 Rose Bowl, Murray Warmath
of Minnesota and Bill Barnes of
UCLA, Bowden Wyatt, whe main-
tains the Neyland tradition at
Tennessee, and Bobby Dodd of
Georgia Tech,.
Before his coaching career, and
at several breaks in it, Neyland
achieved success in a second ca-
reer, as an Army engineer. He re-
tired in 1936 but was recalled to
active duty in 1941, winning the
Distinguished Service Medal before
his retirement in 1946 as a briga-;
dier general.,
China Tankers
in I-M Title
The Chinese students withstood
a challenge from the Turkish stu-
dents to win the I-M Independ-
ents swimming championships. _
The second-place Turkish stu-
dents were followed by the Indian
students and the Eli students. The
Chinese students had 34 points
and the Turks 24.
It was China all the way in the
100-yd. medley relay.. Herman
Pun, Allen Lee, Benjamin Fan, and
C. S. Tang were the competitors
for China in this event. Pun also
won the backstroke event.
The Turks gained a victory inj
the 100-yd, freestyle relay. Swim-
ming for the Turks in this event
were Omer Senturk, Kamil Ak-
sus, Eroogan Gurner, and Ozcan
Bozdag. Bozdag another two-event
winner, also won the 25-yd. free-
stvle

Neyland is survived by his wid-
ow, the former Ada Fitch of Grand
Rapids, Mich., and two sons.
"Neyland was loved by every-
one that played under him," said
Murray Warmath, one of the late
general's pupils at Tennessee and
now head coach at Minnesota.
"His friendship and counsel have
meant everything to me."
Dave Nelson, head coach of Del-
aware, said he would be eternally
grateful for the break that en-
abled him to serve with Neyland
on the College Football Rules
Committee. Neyland was president
and Nelson secretary of the com-
mittee.
Spartan ine
Shut Out by
Ft. Lee, 4-0
FT. LEE, Va. (.)-Jeff Merrell
and Dave Wilson teamed up to
pitch a six-hitter yesterday as Ft.
Lee's Travellers posted a 4-0 vic-
tory over Michigan State's touring
baseball team.
Merrell allowed just two hits
over the first five innings, and
Wilson keptrthe shutout intact as
he surrendered four more hits.
Michigan State loaded the bases
in 'the eighth and ninth innings
but couldn't score.
Steve Jensen gave the Travellers
their first run with a home run
jn the third inning. It was his sec-
ond roundtripper in two days.,
Dave Wright's double sent home
two Ft. Lee runs in the sixth.
Exhibition Baseball
Cincinnati 4, Detroit 2 (10 inn.)
New York (N) 4, Los Angeles (N) 3
Philadelphia 12, Milwaukee 11
Minnesota 7, Pittsburgh 6
New York (A) 4, St. Louis 1
Cleveland 9, Chicago (N) 6
Houston 6, Boston 0
Baltimore 15, Washington 7
SUMMIER JOBS
How to get yours!
Campus Integration
Military Deferments .. .
Burnett . . . Ribicoff .. .
Brubeck . . . Saroyan.
Maw -RplusRrh'l

Win your letters in style!
Sharpen up in
a cool H I"S
SPORT COAT
This featherweight sport jacket
givesyou lotsof authority,makes
you feel like big. And plenty cool
'cause it's light as a leaf on your
shoulders. In washable Du Pont
Dacron*polyester blends; also
Batiks, Chambrays, Checks,
Plaids, Cords, etc. Get yours at
stores that know the score...
$16.95 to $35.

LIFETIME CAREER
in the field, of, your choice

4.

Enter Viceroy's Career Opportunity Contest now!

Jobs in: law . a

:dvertising .

TV-radio .

banking * architecture

marketing
sport-export

Jobs in: aviation . heavy industry . electronics . engi
Jobs in: petroleum . tobacco . publishing * insurance -

neering . im

1. Who should enter:
If you're a student of this college, full time
or part time, you should enter Viceroy's
Career Opportunity Contest.
2. Why you should enter:
It's all too easy to fritter your summer away
idly or in an indifferent job which offers
income only. Now here's your chance to
land a position in the career field of your
choice ... and to make this summer a long-
range investment in your future.
8. What happens if you win:
Personal appointments will be made for you
with executives in the career field of your
choice. These executives and their compa-
nies have been carefully screened for their
stature in the business community and for
their interest in hiring acollege people for

summer jobs. You also get $100 in travel/
expense noney.
4. What happens if you don't win:
Even if you don't win, but if you are one of
the nine other finalists in the contest, efforts
will be made to place you in a suitable sum-
mer position as well.
5. How you enter:
Entries must be submitted on Official
Viceroy Career Opportunity entry blanks
with the bottom flaps from 10 Viceroy pack-
ages. Get yours at one of the several conven-
ient locations on or near your campus. Just
name your chosen career, and state why you
feel you can succeed in this field.
6. What if you're undecided:
If you're undecided on your future career

the field of your choice
you may fill out more than one entry blank
each specifying a different career field.
7. Why Viceroy sponsors this contest:
Frankly, Viceroy is promoting this contest in
order to persuade more college students to
smoke Viceroys. We're convinced that once
you've smoked several packs you'll decide
that Viceroy is the cigarette for you.

8. What to send with your entry:

Just enclose the bottom flaps from ten (10)
empty packs or crush-proof boxes of Viceroy
Cigarettes with each entry you submit.

9. Who supervises the contest:

Contest is administered by experienced col-
lege placement specialists and by a leading
mnanagement consultant firm.

READ THE SIMPLE DETAILS BELOW-THEN

EARN WHILE YOU

'his
.f'. eby -il'...wear lbs.f
.OUPONT TRADE MARC
HIS Sportswear

LEARN WH ILE YOU
01962, BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP.

INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE THIS SUMMER

Any student of this college, part or full time,
may enter this contest on an Official Entry Blank
available at several convenient locations on your
campus. The rules are simple to follow. If for any
reason you cannot readily locate an Entry Blank,
consult your College Newspaper Office. Full rules
and regulations are imprinted on Official Entry

ment with an executive in the career field of the
winning candidate's choice. $100 in travel or
expense money will be provided. If the winner
is unsuccessful in landing the job, efforts will be
made to secure another interview (at the win-
ner's expense) in the career of his choice. If all
efforts fail, the winner will receive an additonnil

i
}1"
. ,
1' CCRtrI
:': ' sue...
", t}:2
ti}{r'
', ,'J
: :'":
: ,t .r.N.

Not too stro rg..
Not too1 lght...

r

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan