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March 31, 1962 - Image 6

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The Michigan Daily, 1962-03-31

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 162

ymnasts,

Swimmers

Compete

In

NCAA

Contests

ply Four Stars Compete
NCAA Swim Finals

Osterland Tied for First on Trampoline
With Steve Johnson of Michigan State.

:,.

By BILL BULLARD
Special To The Dady
aLUMBUS-Only two Michi-
swimmers and two Michigan
rs competed in the finals of
NCAA swimming champion-
s last night as all hopes of a
a championship for' the Wol-
ies disappeared.
he preliminaries yesterday aft-
on were fatal to many Wolver-
Dick Nelson, who placed sec-
and Jon Baker, who placedj
th in the 00-yd. breaststrokej
Is, were the only two Wolver-j
to fight their way out of the
rnoon preliminaries.
nior Ron Jaco was fourth in
one-meter diving and Pete Cox
seventh in the same event.
aio State led with 52 points
r yesterday's seven events.
ematch in

< ' -

(Continued from Page 1)

ast-West

sage Classic
KANSAS CITY (P)-Cincinnati's
ul Hogue, voted the most valu-
e player in the NCAA tourna-
nt last week, and Utah's Billy
Gill, the nation's leading scor-
joined in the final workouts
this afternoon's East-West
llege All-Star basketball game.
Another late arrival,. Jack Fol-
of Holy Cross, runner-up to Mc-
11 in the individual scoring
e, rounded out the 10-man
lads for the 11th edition of the
rine Classic.
:t will be televised nationally
v CBS) at 2 p.m. (EST).
Army's George Hunter, coach-
the Easterners, indicated
gue will be one of his starters.
there's almost certain to be
other encQunter between " the
icinnati giant and Jerry Lucas,
Ohio State All-America he
rshadowed in the NCAA chain-
nship game.
aucas worked out again yester-
Y, with an elaborate tape job
the leg he injured in the NCAA
yoffs; but he seemed to be go-
at a little less than full speed.
)thers in the East's tentative
rting unit named by Hunter are
et Walker of Bxadley, Terry
chinger of Purdue,-Bob Rascoe
Western Kentucky and Stewart
errard of Army.
Fred Taylor of Ohio State,
,chin gthe West, said he will se-
t his starters from among six
n-Lucas, John Havlicek and
INowell from his own Buckeye
lad, McGill, John Rudometkin
Southern Cal and Jerry Gard-
r of Kansas.

Southern California was in second
place with 30 points, 'Minnesota
was third with 27, Michigan State
was fourth with 17; Michigan was
fifth with 15, and Yale was sixth
with 13.
The first five finalists in the
breaststroke event had times rang-
ing from 2:18.0 to 2:18.6 in the
preliminaries. Virgil Luken of
Minnesota took first place in 2:16.-
8. Nelson touched the wall .4 of a
second later for second place. Bak-
er was fourth with a time of
2:18.1.
Jaco dropped from second to
fourth and Cox went from fifth to
seventh after the four dives in the
final period. One of the best dives
of the evening was Jaco's first in
the finals. After that, however,
Ohio State's Lou Vitucci made
three dives of 56 points or above
and won the diving by 25 points.
Buckeye Juan Botella jumped
from fourth to second in the fin-
als. He went ahead of John Vogel
of Purdue and Jaco on his last
dive. Vogel finished third and Jaco
fourth.
Michigan swimmers in every
event except the 200-yd. breast-
stroke missed an opportunity to
make the finals and earn needed
points yesterday afternoon in the
preliminaries.
The first race of the afternoon
was the 200-yd. butterfly in which
Jeff Moore missed the .finals by .7
of a second. Moore's time of 2:03.3
tied him for seventh place. A
2:04.1 clocking by Enn Mannard
was fast enough for twelfth place.
Jim Kerr and Dennis Floden
won their heats of the 50-yd. free-
style but their times were just a
fraction of a second too slow to
qualify for the finals.
Hopes Sunk
200-YD. BUTTERFLY - 1. Artie
Wolfe, OSU, 1:58. 2. Vic McDonough,
Villanova, 1:59.9. 3. Alan Cartwright,
OSU, 2:01.2. 4. Brian Foss, South-
ern California, 2:01.5. 5. Nate Clark,
OSU, 2:02.9. 6. DennisDevine, South-
ern California, 2:03.4.
50-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Steve
Jackman, Minn., :21.1. 2. Mike Aus-
tin, Yale, :21.4. 3. Jim Norman, Cin-
cinnati, :22.2. 4. Bob Kaufmann,
Harvard, :22.3. 5. Gary Laprise, Bowl-
ing Green, :22.4. 6. John Bernard,
Oklahoma, :22.6. (Jackman's time of
:21.1 is a new. NCAA record.)
200-YD. BACKSTRKE-i. L. B.
Schaefer, OSU, 1:58.8. 2. Jed Graef,
Princeton, 1:58.7. 3. Thompson Mann,
'North Carolina, 2:01.6. 4. Vernon
Schimel, SMU, 2:04. 5. Bob Boni,
Yale, 2:05.0. 6. Dave Peterson, Minn.,,
2:05.3.
220-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Jim
Spreitzer, Ill., 2:00.9. 2. Dennis
Rounsavelle, Southern California,
2:01.7.s1Mike Wood, MSU, 2:02.9. 4.
John Plain, OSU, 2:03.2. 5. Charles
Schuette, Oklahoma, 2:04.3. 6. Paul
Thompson, Florida State, 2:05.6.
200-YD. BREASTSTROKE-1. Vir-
gil Luken, Minn., 2:16.8. 2. Dick
Nelson, Mich., 2:17.2. 3. Gardiner
' Green, Princeton, 2:17.8. 4. Jon
Baker, Mich., 2:18.1. 5.Too Kovacs,
OSU, 2:18.3. 6. Larry Zechiel, Utah,
2:18.8.

in the Trampoline behind
leading qualifier, Osterland.

-Daily--Bruce Taylor
PRACTICE PAYS OFF-Arno Lascari, shown here on sidehorse, was weak on the event at the start
of the season. His concerted drive to master the sidehorse event paid off yesterday as he qualified
seventh in the NCAA for the finals of the event being held this afternoon in Aubuquerque. His 8.6
total was relatively stronger than his fine fifth place finish in the Big Ten meet.

Finish Fourth
Behind Lynn and Orlofsky in
the all-around was the Big Ten
champion Ray Hadley of Illinois.
Lascari did well by qualifying
fourth while Larose in sixth and
Hynds in 10th placed the complete
Michigan trio among the leaders.
The team standings could not be
officially determined because an
average score will be figured in
each event on the basis of the
showing in both the finals and
preliminaries.
There are over 65 competitors in
the meet representing the cream
of the nation's collegiate gym-
nastics crop.
The competition according to
the Michigan coach is of the
highest quality. "Some really fine
routines are being accomplished
which really puts the pressure on
Mother of
Paret Comes
To Got ham
NEW YORK (t)-Benny (Kid)
Paret's mother arrived in New
York last night to be at the bed-
side of the former world welter-
weight boxing champion and
pledged, "I will stay here until my
son will be getting well."
Paret's mother, 56-year old Mrs.
Maxima Crespo, flew into Idlewild
Airport from Miami on the last
leg of anrall day trip from Cuba.
"I never wanted him to fight. I
will stay here until my son will be
getting 'el."
BULLETIN
Archie Moore knocked out
Alejandro Lavorante last night.
Exhibition Baseball
Baltimore 12, New York (A) 6
Cincinnati 8, Detroit 1
New York (N) 2, Philadelphia 1
Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 4
Chicago (N) 10, Boston 8
Chicago '(A)6, Minnesota 5
Washington 3, Kansas City 0
Los Angeles (A) 4, Cleveland 3
We are now
Delivering
PIZZA and SUBS
DOMINICK'$
NO 2-5414
YE OLD FAVORITES
RON BELL'S QUARTET
appearing
Sat' night, March 31
at the
ANCHOR INN
11980 Macgregor Rd.
Portage Lake
Phone HA 6-8183

thei

all the performers to do their
best," Loken added.
Hynds Disappointing
A big disappointment for Mich-
igan was Jim Hynd's failure to
qualify in the all-around after a
good showing in the Big Ten
Meet. Arno Lascari, ;unbeaten on
parallel bars going into the meet,
completed a steady and expert
routine to go into the finals of
his specialty in second place.
Little Gil Larose was the main-
stay of the team, qualifying in

four events. "Our only real disap-
pointment was the high bar where
we qualified only one man, but
we'll still have a good chance for
top honors with a fine showing
tomorrow," concluded Coach Lo-
ken.
Caught in the wake of the fine
showings by Lynn and Orlofsky
was last year's NCAA all-around
champion Greg Weiss of Penn
State. He managed to garner a
mere 23.3 points to Lynn's 27.45
and Orlofsky's 27.15.

i

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'I

University of Michigan
GILBERT & SULLIVAN

I

is presenting
Pa tien Ice,
or
BUNTHORNE'S BRIDE
April 3, 4, 5, 6
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
8:30 P.M.
Tickets Available at SAB
March 26-30
And at the Box Office April 2-6
Tues., $1.25; Wed., Thurs., $1.50; Fri., $1.75

.4

I

r

-Daily-James Keson
TRAILING BEHIND-These three Wolverine swimmers stir up the waters in preparation for the
NCAA meet-in Columbus. The Wolverines had tough luck, however, qualifying only four men in the
first day's final events and trailed leading Ohio State by a big margin.
Coaches Ask More Control

B
A

COLUMBUS, O. (P)-The Col-
lege Swimming Coaches Associa-
tion of America moved yesterday
to take firmer control of the aqua-
tic, sport and to lessen AAU in-
fluence.
By a 54-0 vote, the swimming
mentors adopted a resolution fav-
oring formation of a federation
to handle swimming alone, thus
following the pattern previously
set by track, basketball and gym-
nastic organizations dissatisfied
with Olympic representation.

The; resolution read:
"We recommend that this group
go on record as favoring the for-
mation of a so-called U.S. Swim-
ming Federation and that our
executive committee be asked to
appoint a committee to study thej
mechanics of setting up and oper-
ating such a federation in con-
junction with all other appropri-
ate swimming groups within this
country."

Mike Peppe, veteran Ohio State
mentor, said the federation plans
would include college, Y.M.C.A.,
high school, recreation depart-
ments, private club age groups,
women's division and the AAU
among others, all with equal rep-
resentation.
"We feel we can operate more
smoothly and efficiently as a
swimming federation than we can
under AAU control which super-
vises 20 different sports," Peppe
said.,

.9.9

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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Equipment for Both
SOFTBALL
and
SLOW-PITCH
SPECIAL TEAM PRICES AVAILABLE
HAROLD S. TRICK

;I

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The Daily Official Bulletin is an
ifficial publication of The Univer-
ity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editorial
esponsibility. Notices should be
ent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
toom 3564 Administration Building
efore 2 p.m., two days preceding
ublication.
SATURDAY, MARCH 31
General Notices
egree Recital: Gary Glaze, tenor, will
sent a recital on Sun., April 1, 8:30
n., in Lane Hall Aud., in lieu of a
sis for the degree Master of Music
erature. Accompanying him will be
'rie Pierce, harpsichord and piano,
I assisting will be two ensembles,
vid Austin, percussion, William Het-
:k, tenor viol and crumhorn, Arthur
nkins, bass viol, Walker Wyatt, re-'
ders, and Trudy Bratly, oboe, Con-
nce Cpwan, flute, Carol Jewell, vio-
l Carolyn Tolson, cello. He will be
forming the compositions of Monte-
di, DeMachaut, Bach, Gounod, Faure,
If, Schubert, and Ives. Open to the
lic.
ontemporary Music Festival: The
tival's third program will be the
iversity of Michigan Symphony Band,
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
ongr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Rev.
E. E2dwards, "The Second Exodus,"
0 a.m.;' Pacifism Panel, 7:30 p.m.;
mn: "Walk in My Shoes," 9:30 p.m.;
ril 1, 802 Monroe.
* * *
hrad. Outing Club, Kite Flying, April
2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St.
trance.
lewman Club, Grad. Spaghetti Din-
, 6 p.m., Mar. 31; Cana Conference-
married students urged to come, 1-
p.m., April 1; 331 Thompson.

William D. Revelli, conductor, on Sun.,
April 1, 3:00 p.m., in Hill Aud. They
will play the compositions of Schuller,
Schuman, Persichetti, Chavez, Thom-
son, and Hindemith. Open to the pub-
lic without charge.
Engineering Mechanics, Aeronautical
ahd Astronautical Engineering, Insti-
tute of Science and Technology Sem-
inar: Mon., April 2 at 4 p.m. in 229
West Engrg. Bldg. Dr. T. Brooke Ben-
jamin, Cambridge University, will speak
on "The Vortex-Breakdown Phenome-
non." Coffee at 3:30 p.m. in the Fac-
ulty Lounge.
Placement
Teaching Interviews for the week of
Mon., Apr. 2-5.
WED., APRIL 4-
Bellevue, Mich.-Band, Home Ec., SS/
Engl., Jr. HS Math, Shop/Sci.
Allen Park, Mich.-K-6, Sp. Ed., Ment.
Handi., Visit. Teach., HS Engl., Math,
Set., NO SS.
Clio, Mich.-Elem.; Jr. HS Math/Set.;
HS Gen. Bus. & Type., Alg. & Gen.
Math, Geom., Geog./Asst. Track, Engl.,
Engl/Type., Guid.
Bay City, Mich.-Engl., Girl's PE.
Port Huron, Mich.-Elem., Acad. Tal-
ent. (Gr. 5); HS Engl., Geom/Gen. Math,
Gen. Sci., Comm/Type., Span.; Jr. HS5
Engl., Home Ec., Voc. Mus., Math, Gen.
Set., Span., Core.; Spec. Educ., Ment.
Ret., Psych/Diag.
Saginaw, Mich.-Elem.; Spec. Educ.,
Jr. 11S & HS5Engl., Math, Girl's PB,
German, French, Span., Type A; 115
Phys., Math (Dept. Head), Head Couns.
Afternoon only.
Warren, Mich.--Elem., Libr., Girl's PE,
Art, Vocal, Jr. HS Libr., Home Ec., PE;
HS Chem., Bus. Ed., Engl.; Visit. Teach.,
Ment. Retard. Deaf.
Wallingford, Conn.-Elem. & Sec.-NO
SS. Afternoon only.
Manchester, Conn.-Elem. & Sec.
THURS., APRIL 5-
Grand Haven, Mich.-Elem., Type A,
Jr. HS Girl's PE, Art, Math, Libr., HS
Libr.

Hastings, Mich.-Jr. HS Engl/Hist.,
Engl.; HS Engl., Typ/Math, Chem./
Phys. Sci., B11., Sp. Engl.
Kalamazoo, Mich-Elem., HS Engl./
Drama; Sp. Corr., Ment. Handi., Jr. HS
Engl., & others.
Lake Fenton, Mich.-Elem., Sal., Sec.
Bus. Ed., Art, Voc. Guid., Souns., Engl.,
Gen. Sc., Math, Gen. Shop, Span., Home
Ec., Libr.
Saginaw, Mich. (Twsp. Sch.) - HS
Engl., Math, Chem/Biol., SS, Home Ec.,
For. Lang.
Wallingford, Conn.-See Wed., April
4. Morning only.
Manchester, Conn.-See Wed., April 4.
* * *
For additional information and ap-
pointments contact the Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext.
3547.
ANNOUNCEMENT:
U.S. Dept. of State, Foreign Service-
Men & Women to become Career For-
eign Service Officers. Competitive Exam
on Sept. 8, 1962. Must apply by: July 1.
Must have been U.S. citizen for 9 yrs.
& bet. ages of 21 & 31.
POSITION OPENINGS:
Optical Co., Local Area-Secretary for
general office work, dictation, & quite
a bit of typing. BS in Nat. Sci. pre-
ferred. 3-5 yrs. exper.
Lovell Mfg. Co., Erie, Pa.-Manager-
Industrial Sals. Engrg. or Techdegree
plus MBA in Marketing. 5 or more yrs.
sales exper. Excellent oppor.
First National Bank of St. Paul, Minn.
-Recent grads & seniors: Mgmt. Trng.
Prog. toward development of bank of-
ficers & Jr. mgmt. personnel. Students
from St. Paul area with interest in
banking as career.
Philips, Rosen & Appel, N.Y., N.Y.-
Firm is member of N.Y. Stock Exchange.
Students with bkgd. in Finance, Econ.,
& other related fields who wish career
with investment firm.
Air Control Products, Inc., Coopers-
ville, Mich.-Recent or June grads in
Indust. or Mech. Engrg. for trainee po-
sitions in Indust. Engrg. Dept. Excellent
growth possibilities.,

Carling Brewing Co., Cleveland, O.-J
Mech Engnr. to act as Ass't. to Dir. of
Engrg. Operations. Either recent grad
or man with considerable exper. Some
travel involved.
U.S. Public Health Service Hospital,
Detroit, Mich.-Registered Medical Rec-
ord Librarian with at least 6 months to
1 yr. exper. which involved responsibil-
ity for medical records of a small hos-
pital. This is'Civil Service Appointment.
* * *
For further information, please call
General Div., Bureau of Appointments,
3200 SAB, Ext. 3544.
PFart-Time
Employment
The following part-time jobs are
available. Applications for these jobs
can be made in the Part-time Place-
ment Office, 2200 Student Activities
Building, during the following hours:
Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon
and 1:30 til 5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students,

for part-time or full-time temporary
work, should call Bob Hodges at NO
3-1511, ext. 3553.
Students desiring miscellaneous odd
jobs should consult the bulletin board
in Room 2200, daily.'
MALE
1-With programming ability plus fast,
accurate keypunch skills.
2-Full-time, experienced keypunch
operators.
2-Couple-personable woman to han-
dle rentals, etc. Husband may have
other job or be semi-retired for
simple maintenance work. Must be
handy. No children. Title of job:
Resident Manager.
FEMALE
1-With programming ability plus fast,
accurate keypunch skills.
2-Couple-personable woman to han-
dle rentals, etc. Husband may have
other job or be semi-retired for
simple maintenance work. Must be
handy. No children. Title of Job:
Resident Manager.
1-Clinical Assistant for Dentist. No
previous training needed but would
prefer someone with a science back-
ground. One full day a week.

711 N. University

902 S. State

it

I

A

THE MICHIGAN UNION

innual

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aCUt

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2aV

4

JAMAICAN HOTEL
Directly on the ocean
205 N. Atlantic Blvd. - Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
$6 per person per day
STUDENTS WELCOME - MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW
Write hotel directly or phone local agent
GR 4-6730, Farmington, Michigan
STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
COUNCIL
announces
DCIT11T"fIk I i..,

The Michigan UniQn cordially invites

all faculty members and their families to
a relaxing and enjoyable afternoon

spend

TlrODAY at

2 P.M.

in the Union Ballroom

I

THIS WEEK SPECIAL

0 Entertainment for Children and Adults

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1117711

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