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April 27, 1962 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-04-27

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, APRIL-27,:

T~lE I.".GN.DAIY+FRIAY. ARIL 27.a~r

Salute to Michigras

Big Ten Strongmen
Take on Double Duty

RELAYS START TODAY:

Trackmen Defend Penn

Titles

BIKE SALE!

ROYC E
3 SPEEDS-
HANDBRAKES

3695

By BOB ZWINCK
It has been discovered recently
that there are 114 young men in
these parts who devote at least
double duty to their respective
alma maters.
The Big Ten Service Bureau has
found that seven Big Ten athletes
are competing in three sports this
year while exactly 100 more par-
ticipate in two sports.
Of these 107, Illinois leads with
19 (two in three sports), Iowa
(three in three sports) and Wis-
consin have 14 each, and Michigan
has six double-duty men-good
for a ninth place tie with North-
western in these Big Ten rank-
ings,
The seven "iron men" include
Matt Szykowny, Paul Krause and
Bob Sherman from Iowa, Doug

Mills and Neal Anderson of Illi-
nois, Julian Hook of Minnesota
and Pat Richter from Wisconsin.
Michigan's two-sport men con-'
sists of three seniors, two juniors
and one sophomore.
Bennie McRae is the most prom-
inent member with football and
track as his sports. Ed Hood com-
petes in football and baseball.
Guy Curtis is a football-wrestling
man. All three are seniors.
Bob Brown is a member of thej
football and basketball teams, and1
fellow junior Dave Raimey is a
football-track participant. Sopho-
more Harvey Chapman, football
and baseball man, rounds out the
list.
With only seven three-sport men
in the entire conference, it seems
that the days of the triple-threat
are gone forever.

campus. BIKE & TOY
1514 E William NO02-0035

PHILADELPHIA (P)-Michigan
defends its four-mile title and
Yale the distance medley crown in
the only major relay champion-
ships up for grabs today-the first
day of the Penn Relays.
In all, seven championships will
be decided on the opening day of
the 68th annual track and field ex-
travaganza. Champions will be
crowned in the two-mile run, 440-
yd. hurdles, hammer throw, broad
jump and discus. All other major
titles will be decided tomorrow.
The eight "Championship of
America" relay races field a select
list, taking only the teams which
have turned in the top times in
meets previous to the Penn Relays.
There. are no qualifying heats.
Michigan, which tomorrow de-
fends its two-mile championship,
again will depend on its star an-
chor man, Ergas Leps, the senior
from Canada whose come-from-
behind tactics have featured Wol-
verine performances here in recent
years. Stiff opposition is expected
from Oklahoma State and Western
Michigan.
Leps will team up with Jim Nea-
husan, David Hayes and Jay

Sampson in the two-mile.
Yale, which probably will pass
up a chance to defend its sprint'
medley championship tomorrow
because of a lack of a good half-
miler, figures to make a strong bid
for a second straight distance
medley championship tomorrow
noon. Coach Bob Giegengack's
team is built around Jay Luck and
Bobby Mack. Abilene Christian,
second last year, looms the one .to
beat, with a team including Elvis
Estre, John Lawler and Denis
Moore. Villanova and Michigan
also rate consideration off top per-
formances.
Aquino, Hayes, Leps and Carter
Reese will run for Michigan.
Abilene's Moore could be the
first runner to win back-to-back
individual two-mile titles since
North Carolina's Jim Beatty turn-
ed the trick in 1955-1956. Moore,
who won the recent Kansas relays
10,000-meter run in a record 30:
46.5, won the two-mile here last
year in 9:06.4.
In the opening event on the pro-
gram, Maryland State's Russ Rog-
ers, last year's only individual dou-

ble winner and the outstanding
college athlete of the 1961 relays,
defends his 440-yd. hurdles title.
Last year he won the event in
:52.2.
Michigan's only entrants in the
meet's individual events are broad-
jumper Dave Raimey, high hurdler
Ben McRae, high jumper Steve
Williams and pole vaulters Rod
Denhart and Steve Overton.
Officials here announced yester-
day that because-of the large num-
ber and high quality of teams en-
tered in the college mile relay
championship, the event will be
run in two sections with final
places decided on a time basis.
Michigan coach Don Canham
has scratched his one-mile team
because of an injury to quarter-
miler Ken Burnley,
Other championships to be de-
termined today are the broad jump
in which Maryland State's Charley
Mays is the favorite; the discus
with Penn's defending champ, Bob
Batdorf, around for another toss;
and the hammer throw, undefend-
ed by Harvard's Stan Doten and

A

considered a wide open competi-
tion.
The meet runs off 115 events for
high school and college athletes
over the two-day span.
Four of Michigan's Big Ten
championship team of last year
will be adding class to tomorrow's
Michigan Open meet, starting at 1
p.m. on the Ferry Field track.
John Gregg, Dick Cephas, Les
Bird and Tom Robinson will be
running as a team in the 440 and
880-yd. sprint relays.
Robinson, winner of eight con-
fererice sprint championships and
a 1960 Olympian from the Baha-
mas, is enough all by himself to
make his team favored, but the
others are no slouches, either.
Cephas is the Big Ten record-
holder in the 220-yd. low hurdles,
Bird a former Big Ten broad jump
champion and Gregg, a runner-up
to Robinson in the conference in-
door 60-yd. dash. Bird is also en-
tered in the broad jump.
So far nobody has been betting
against them.

Career Cues

"ure for job boredom:
I made my faVorite
pastIme my career!
Richard Bertram, President
Bertram Yacht Co., Division of Nautec Corp.
"When you stop to think what percent of our total waking
hours is spent bread-winning, you realize how tragic it is
for any man to work at an occupation he doesn't enjoy.
Besides frittering away life, it reduces chances of success
to just about zero. I know... because it almost happened
to me!
After college, I did what I thought was expected of me
and joined a solid, Manhattan-based insurance firm. I
soon found office routine wasn't for me. I lived only for

lunch hour when I could walk to the Battery and mentally
sail with the ships that stood out in the Narrows.. . and
for the summer weekends when I could go sailing. Fortu-
nately, the company I worked for is one of the leading
insurers of yachts and after two years I was transferred
to their Yacht Underwriting Department. Enjoyment and
interest in my work improved immediately 100%.
After World War II, I started my own yacht brokerage
firm and yacht insurance agency in Miami, combining my
marine insurance background with an even closer rela-
tionship with boats.
My only problem ever since has been a feeling of guilt
that my work was too easy. I love boats and boating
people. That affection has paid me rewards way beyond
the financial security it has also provided.
The moral's obvious. You have an odds-on chance for
success and happiness working at what you enjoy most -
what comes naturally! And if it's not just frivolous, your
life's work could well be what you now consider just a
pastime. It's 'certainly worth thinking about, anyway!"

1
I

U U

ConferenceMarks Knotted
As Baseball Chase Begins

BERMUDAS
ALL sizes-28-38

DACRON
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RAYON
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Available
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CHICAGO ( - Although the
Big Ten baseball pennant race
has barely started, one conference
record has been set and three
matched.
Bill Hess of Ohio State set a
single game mark 'against North-
western last week by scoring six
runs. The old record was five by
Jack Gannon, also of OSU, against
Wisconsin in 1952.
Second baseman Ken Peters
went to bat seven times against
Northwestern to tie a record.
Other marks equalled were by
Wisconsin's Pat Richter and OSU's
John Machado, each with a pair
of doubles in a single game, and
Michigan's Dick Honig with -a
pair of triples. Both records have
been matched by numerous play-
ers.
Among regulars,;Luke Lamboley,
Wisconsin shortstop, took the

CALYPSO PANTS with
Matching Sports Coats
______TRIUMPH OVER TRADITION-
OPEN TILL 8:30 P.M. MONDAYS

batting lead with a .700 mark. He
got seven hits in 10 trips during
three games.
Illinois, fourth place finisher
last season, broke on top of the
title chase by sweeping its first
three games. The Illini host Ohio
State (2-1) in a single game to-
morrow while Indiana (2-1) is at
Purdue (0-3), Michigan (2-1) at
Iowa (0-0), Michigan State (1-2)
at Minnesota (0-0) and North-
western (1-2) at Wisconsin (1-2).
The doubleheader schedule Sa-
turday has Indiana at Illinois,
Michigan at Minnesota, MSU at,
Iowa, Northwestern at Wisconsin
and OSU at Purdue.
DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued from Page 5)
to interview candidates for the 1962-
1963 school year.
MON., APRIL 30
Concord, Mich. - Elem., SS, Band-
vocal, Girl's PE.
Ferndale, Mich. -- Elem.; Gen. Set.
(9th grade), Chgm., Math. (SMSG), SS-
Eng., BioE, Deaf.
Grand Haven, Mich. - Sp. Corr.
Grass Lake, Mich.-Jr. HS Eng., Asst.
In Coaching; 118Phys.-Chem.-Math-
Asst. Coach. I
Milford, Mich. -- Jr. HS8 Eng., Girl's
PE; H$ Eng., Span.,, Auto Mach.; Jr.
HS Math.
TUES., MAY 1
Almont, Mich. - Fields not yet listed.
Brooklyn, Mich. - 1st grade, 5-6th
grade; 7th Sci.-Math, 7th Eng., HS
Eng.
Capac, Mich. - Elem. (K-6); Jr. HS8
Eng-SS; 1H6Home Ec.
Imlay City, Mich, - 3rd grade:;118
Art-Eng. or SS, Sp. Corr., Bus. Ed. Eng.-
SS or SS-Eng.; Elem. and HS vocal.
Lorain, 0. - Elem.; Math, Eng., Aft..
Libr., Girl's PE and all Secondary.
Middleville, Mich. (Thornapple Kel-
logg Sch.) - Elem.; 7-8th gr. Eng.;
8th Sci.-Math; 8-9th Eng., 9th gr.
Math-Boy's PE.
For additional information and ap-
pointments contact the Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3547.

I

4

"I.'M. .EAUUSOF MARIV
-SAYS DICK STUART
Pitt burgh's star slugger hit 35
homers last year. But he feels he
could have gotten a lot more-if! In
this week's Post, you'll meet the
cocky young Pirate. Learn how he got
his reputation for bonehead plays.
And why he blames Forbes Field for
spoiling his home-run record, (Look
for the special baseball cover.)
The Saturddy Evening
ON SALE

4

HaveEa real cigaretteCamOel A .-
THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE- . By d oac o, iso-ae.N

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When Important People come to town
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your every wish. Tuesday through Saturday, 11:30 to 2:00
and 5:30 to 7:30. Sunday: Dinner, 12:00 to 3:00.
May we suggest that you
telephone for reservations?
PVhe Corner Nowse
S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor
A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 8-6056
0== >
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or
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CANTONESE
FOOD
ft Take-Out Orders Anytime /

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9apu'u4 f 9ihe 9004
offers you a taste treat
of a traditional Italian dish
jPIZZAj
will be served daily from
12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.
m wr ,U , . 1

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skillfully broiled to per-
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136

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All
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