PAGE SM% THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY I PAQE SIX TUE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. MAY STOR E your TYPEWRITER at Morri I 's 31 -S State St 5-9141 AT OUR N EW A RBOR LAND STOR E S F h\W Michigan Coach Considers Swimming Break with AAU ByDV D"There are a lot of good guys CAPTAIN'S CORNER: Newcomb Ends Satisfying Year If they can do it quietly and without mud-slinging, the nation's college swimming coaches may join in the federation movement to wrest absolute control away from the AAU this summer. Michigan swimming coach Gus Stager, who predicted last Decem- ber that the break might take three years, now thinks that it could come much sooner. It all depends on how the track, basketball and gymnastics people fare in the next. few months. Set in July Michigan track coach - Don Canham says that the rebels join- ing the U.S. Track and Field Fed- eration are meeting in Kansas City this week "to finalize every- thing," pending only the July 5 approval meeting of the high schools. It is here that Stager feels the swimming coaches might fall in behind the backers of the track federation, although he empha- sizes that the AAU has not drawn the same heated fire from the swimmers as it has from the trackmen. on the AAU," explains Stager. "We don't want to make them have to choose which way they're going to go. We don't have any big beef with them. In fact, we want to keep a lot of them with us. But as it is now we don't have a thing to say about how things are run." Not Complete Break Stager was quick to point out that the swimming coaches have no intention of excluding the par- ent organization from the new body. They just want to make the power more equitable. "And we should have a better organization than they will in track if we wait," commented Sta- ger. "We can profit from their mistakes. "We've met several times, but we haven't really been doing too much. If everything goes right with the track federation, we might fall in line behind them if we can do it without stirring up a ruckus. "But I'm not saying it'll be1 summer," he added. this SUMMER JOBS FOR MALE STUDENTS Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major national corporation. Young men 18 years of age or over wanted to work in marketing, sales promotion and brand identification positions during summer. Will work with high level executive management- (EDITOR'S NOTE: Election to the captaincy of a Michigan athletic team is an honor few can ever re- ceive. To the qualities of leader- ship, sportsmanship, athletic abil- ity and intangibles that make a Michigan captain what he is, the Michigan Daily pays tribute. This is the ninth of a series.) By JIM BERGER Michigan golf captain Bill New- comb had one of the most satisfy- ing experiences of his golfing ca- reer last weekend at Chamuaign. It was not the satisfaction a M' Finishes Numiber One In Big Ten Michigan turned in the best all- round athletic performance in Big Ten competition during the 1961- 62 year, gaining a clear edge by winning four championships. By adding the team records in all 13 sports in which champion- ships are decided - awarding ten points for a first, nine for a sec- ond, and so on - Michigan walked away on top with 92 points. Its neighbor' to the north, Michigan State, kept the wins in the Michi- gan 'family', by matching the Wolverines with 92. Don't Mean Same One might be inclined to say that 92 and 92 mean the same, but they don't. Although both teams in one sense 'tied', in another, and more accurate sense, they didn't. The more accurate way of comparing performance might be called the "quality point system." In the quality point system, a perform- ance average is gained by dividing the number of sports in which a team participated into the total number of points accumulated. Averages of 8.36, Top team performances in only 11 sports gave Michigan its 92 points. Its quality point average then, would be 8.36. The Wolver- ines did not compete in fencing and had only individuals compet- ing in cross country. MSU on the other hand, made its 92 points in the full 13 sports of the conference for a quality point average of 7.07. Michigan's wins came in gym- nastics, hockey, outdoor track and tennis. Backing up the firsts were four seconds. Saturday golfer gets when he plays four solid rounds, because Newcomb didn't have four solid rounds. It wasn't the satisfaction that a golf- er gets when his team takes the conference championship because Michigan didn't take the title. It was something more than this. It was the satisfaction one gets when a team with virtually nothing going for it, does some- thing that it wasn't supposed to do. It's sometimes called an up- set, a moral victory, but for New- comb it was more than that. Hard To Describe "When I became captain last year all of a sudden golf meant more to me than ever before," said Newcomb. "It's hard to de- scribe it but you have a different attitude about the sport. "Before when I played for Mich- igan, I went out and played and tried to score the best I could, but I wasn't really playing for the team," continued the Wolverine captain, "I was playing more as an individual because golf basically is an individual sport. "As captain I felt I had a re- sponsibility to the team and I'd try to help some of the other boys," he went on, "and it's really hard to describe the feeling you get when a team that you always knew had the potential, finally does what you always knew it could." Obvious Attitude Newcomb's attitude at Cham- paign was obvious. On the first day of the meet when he wasn't playing his usual game, when an- other golfer would want to give up the game, Newcomb would come in after nine or 18 holes with one question after he putted out. "How are the other fellows doing?" The second day of the meet was a better one for Newcomb. He scored a 77-72. When he finished the meet and turned in his card, he said to Coach Bert Katzen- meyer, "I hope this can help us a little bit." * * Newcomb came back to Michi- gan at the beginning of the year fresh from a summer of good golf. He won his first major tourna- ment, the Indiana Open, and he had visions of a Big Ten Cham- pionship. "It's a different feeling in the summer time when you go to bed and think about how you played golf, instead of worrying about that drawing that's due next Sat- urday so you can play in the next meet." he said. The season is over now, but Newcomb has hopes for the imme- diate future. "I'm really hoping that the Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics lets us go to the NCAA's," said Newcomb. "I Didn't Help "Certainly the pressures school didn't help my game from any " really think the team deserves to go, and I'd really be disappointed if we don't." For the coming summer New- comb will be found on the links. "I plan to enter various tourna- ments like the Western Open and the Western Amateur and maybe qualify for the National Amateur." Newcomb doesn't graduate in June because Architecture is a five-year course. You might find him at the University course next spring on some Saturdays around the scoreboard. It takes a while for a person who has the attitude of Newcomb to forget. SCHOLARSHIPS: SALARY: SEE BRITAIN: 16-1,0 00 Scholarships 16-$500 Scholarships Can earn in excess of $150 per week Guaranteed $98 per week Win an all.expense paid holiday in England for entire week. Those students who qualify may continue their association next semester on a part time basis. For interview call College Director DETROIT - WO 5-0561 GRAND RAPIDS - GL 6-7451 LANSING - IV 2-5806 SOUTH BEND - CE 2-1353 U Went to Florida He played often in the fall, and during the semester break he went to Florida and played two more weeks of golf. "I played pretty well down there and I was look- ing forward to a real good spring,"' he said. Newcomb never found that good spring. "I guess I'm not a good spring golfer," he said. "I don't1 really hit my stride until the sum- mer." There is a better reason why Newcomb isn't a good spring golf- er, but he doesn't like to talk about it. He is in his fourth year ini Architecture School. He has five classes a week from 1-5 In the; p.m. During the spring Newcomb didn't make many of these classes.j LINKSTER CAPTAIN-Michigan golf captain Bill Newcomb has played varsity golf for the past three years for the Wolverines. This year the Wolverines finished third in the Conference, the highest in Newcomb's career. FINAL STATISTICS: Illinois' FletcherSets Big Ten ERA Record CHICAGO (A) - The finest team pitching performance in years, the best fielding in the league and hitting earned Illinois th1e Big Ten baseball champion- ship this year. With the season's campaign completed for all but two second division teams, statistics released yesterday showed that the Illini pitching staff - Tom Fletcher, Doug Mills, Ron Johnson and Jer- ry Rozmus - compiled a 1.188 11 Armstrong OFFERS CHALLENGING CAREERS " SALES r ADVERTISING 0 PRODUCTION PLANNING * ACCOUNTING " TRANSPORTATION " PURCHASING * CREDIT for further information, write to C. F. FLEMING Armstrong Cork Company LANCASTER, PA. for summer . . . comfortable earned run average in 1362 in- nings of work. They allowed 18 earned runs, 80 hits, while walking 64, struck out 88 and turned in 13 complete games in the 15-game schedule. Smashes Record Fletcher, 19-year-old sophomore from Oakwood, Ill., broke Paul Giel's 10-year era mark with a record of 0.396. Giel had a 0.42 mark. The southpaw won five games, going the route five times, and was touched for an earned run twice - one each by Wisconsin and Iowa. Mills posted a 1.60 ERA, John- son 1.78 and Rozmus 3.00. Eighth-place Iowa completes the season's schedule with a three- game series with last-place Min- nesota in Minneapolis this week- end. Indiana second baseman Eddie LaDuke has virtually clinched the batting crown with a .431 average. Minnesota catcher Steve Wally, with a .371 average, is the only man who could catch him. Top Men Other departmental leaders in- clude: Runs scored-Joe Jones, Michi- gan, 18; Hits-Bob Klein, Ohio State, 26; Total bases-Pat Rich- ter, Wisconsin, 39; doubles-Rich- ter and John Machado, Ohio State, 6; triples-Dick Honig, Michigan, 3; home runs-Joe Porrevecchio, Michigan State, 5; sacrifices - Dave Mason, Ohio State, 5; sto- len bases-Tony Eichelberger, Il- linois, 8, and RBIs-Porrevecchio, 18. Fight Liston In Chicago -Patterson Heavyweight Champion Floyd Patterson said today his title fight against Sonny Liston will be held in Chicago in mid-September "un- less something comes up." He said he was confident that all arrangements would be made without a hitch, to put the fight in Chicago. Then, Patterson added with a smile on his face: "If it falls through I'll go to Lis- ton's camp or he'll come to mine and we'll fight it out.", Patterson said that up until last night the fight seemed set for De- troit. dacrn-cotton .shirtwaists in 8 colors and they're . . 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