THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDE ers UpsetTech; End Winless Skein WILCOX RETURNS: M' Matmen Crunch Badgers By BOB ZWINCK new look" Michigan hockey stormed past Michigan Tech ere last night. Huskies, outplayed for of the game, saw any hopes ving into first place in the A shattered. But they will be to set a few things straight it at 8 p.m. Leh Al Renfrew had high for his team. "They really d out there. No doubt about is was their best game." Gray Returns Gray, who returned to the or the first time since early ry, was severaly tested on 11 occasions. Once he made ctacular skate save and an- time 'he slid across the goal-mouth and took the puck on his pads after a well-executed Michigan Tech play. But the Huskies could only get the puck by him once. Michigan defensemen blocked many shots and the forwards did an excellent job of back-checking to thwart many a Tech rush. Bottling up the Huskies' offense was only a part of the story, though. The other part is told by the Wolverines' determined play and probably the best pass- ing exhibition put on this season. Fast First Senior Don Rodgers notched the only score of a very fast first period to put Michigan ahead 1-0. Dave Butts stole the puck from a Tech defenseman right at the center red line and skated in all alone on goalie Garry Bauman. Butts tried to fakce him into com- ing out of the net, but he would not budge., Bauman managed to block the shot as Butts skated past the goal. Then Rodgers swooped in on the puck, which had not been cleared, and knocked it home as the goalie sprawled on the ice. In a busy second period Bauman- turned back 16 shots--but he let a hard slap shot by Gary Butler past him into the far side of the Indiana Beats Tankers; NCAA Records Broken net at 11:35. Larry Babcock sent a good pass up to Gordon Wilkie, who then drew both Husky de- fensemen over in front of him before setting up Butler perfectly for a clear shot at the net. Michigan came out in the third period determined to widen its 2-0 lead. Pressure On But John Ivanitz teamed up with Roy Heino and Gene Rebel- lato to put the pressure on Their work paid off as Ivanitz took a nice pass in front of Gray and slapped it into the lower left- hand corner to make the score 2-1. Tom Pendlebury came back with a tally just two minutes later. It was a low screen shot that hit on the inside part of the goalpost and then behind Bau- man into the net. Jack Cole put on the finishing touch with a counter into the short side of the goal with just 1:20, remaining. Both Cole and Ron Coristine, according to Ren- frew, played the best games of their careers. By TOM ROWLAND Michigan's wrestlers rode rough- shod over Wisconsin yesterday. 29-2 and-no doubt about it- raised the mercury level of Wol- verine Big Ten title hopes more than a couple of degrees. Coach Cliff Keen's mat crew disposed of the Badgers while losing nary an event, picking up' Michigan's fifth win in as many Big Ten starts. The Wolverines will have just about enough time to catch their breaths before tak- ing on Indiana this afternoon. Meet time is 4:00 in Yost Field House following the basketball game with Ohio State. Two quick pins and a decision boosted the Blue grapplers out in front of the Badgers, 13-0, before the visitors could managge to crack the scoresheets. Carl Rhodes started off the Michigan point parade in the 123-lb. spot when he scored a "roll-over" pin on Badger Mike Ptacek. The five-pointer came with Rhodes leading 4-1 in the second period with 7:17 gone. Armelagos Scores Captain Nick Armelagos was next-and Michigan picked up three more digits as the 130- pounder grabbed an early 4-0 ad- vantage on ahtake-downand re- versal in the first period and held on for a 6-3 decision. Gary Wilcox wrestled his first match for Michigan this year after a semester's absence, and two seconds after he stepped on A Rout! 123-lbs.--Rhodes (M) pinned Pta- cek, 7:17. 130-lbs.-Armelagos (M) d. Pow- ell, 6-3. 137-lbs.--Wilcox (M) pinned Nat- ley, 5:38. 147-lbs.-Keen (M) and Sackerson drew, 1-1. 157-lbs.-Miller (M) d. Ironside, 3-2. 167-lbs.--Bay (M) d. Mergen, 5-3. i77-lbs.-Arcure (M) d. Roberts, 4-3. Hwt.--Barden (M) pinned Pillath, 4:56. .end of a Famine ,g MICHIGAN nan G Gray nte D Rodgers D .Kartusch C Wilkie'. raper W Butler son W Babcock st' Period Scoring: M-Rodgers ts) 15:05. Penalties: T-Wim- (tripping) 2:32; M--Butts (in- rence) 8:51. cond Period Scoring: M--Butler kide, Babcock) 11:35. Penalties: Cole (holding) 1:32; M-Rodgers 'ping) 6:53; T-4vanitz (hook- ing) 9:11; M-Pendlebury (hooking) 9:11; M-Newton (hooking) 15:42. Third Period Scoring: T-Ivanitz (Rebellato, Heino) 12:34; M--Pendle- bury (Butler, Wilkie) 14:44; M-Cole (Kartusch, Butler) 18:40. Penalties: 8-Pallante (tripping) 8:30; T - Wimmer (tripping) 12:42; M-Kar- tusch (hooking) 18:48. MICHIGAN MICHIGAN TECH 1 1 2-4 00 1-1 Saves T Gray (M) '-\Bauman (T) 13 8 7-28 13 16 8-37 RDCOURT RIVALRY: WoVverine Cagers Host )hio State in Rematch Special To The Daily BLOOMINGTON---Four NCAAr records were shattered last nightf by the almost unbeatable Indiana Dunked 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY-1. In- diana (Stock, Nakasone, Schmidt, Schulhof); 2. Michigan. Time-3:36.9 (new NCAA record).' 200-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Townsend (I); 2. Verhoven (I); 3. Berry (M). Time-1:50.5.3 50-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Jastremskit (I); 2. Hayden (I); 3. Burns (M). Time-2:24.4. 400-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY- 1. Stickles (I); 2. Tremuwan (I); 3. Longstreth (M). Time.-4:18.6 (newJ NCAA record). DIVING-1. Gilbert (I); 2. Cox (M); 3. Densley (I). Points-309.05. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY-i1. Schmidt (1); 2. Schulhof (I); 3. Moore (M). Time-1:55.8 (new NCAA record). 100-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Berry I (M); 2. Thrasher (M); 3. O'Neill (I).1 Time--:49.8. 260-YD. BACKSTROKE-1. Stock (I); 2. Bartcht (M); 3. Stickles (I). Time-1:57.7.I 500-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Sommers (I); 2. Berry (M); 3. Townsend (I). Time.-5:04.5. 200-YD. BREASTSTROE-1. Jas- tremski (I); 2. Nakasone (I); 3. Bo- dolay (M). Time--2:12.7. 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Indiana (Newman, Schuhof, O'Neill, SchmIdt); 2. Michigan. Time--3:20.8. 1000-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Sommers (I); 2. Berry (M); . Dudley (M).1 Times-iD:30.1. DIVING-5 METERS-1. Chandler (M); 2. Boothman (M); 3. GilbertI (I)" BeatySets t (1)-1 Mile Mark, NEW YORK P)-Jim BeattyI let loose with a relentless killingI drive in the final half lap and( smashed his own indoor mile rec-t ord with a time of 3:58.6,, in the Baxter Mile at the New Yorkx Athletic Club Games last night. 1 swimming team as they sank Michigan by a total score of 81-42. Michigan's tankers managed just two first places, one by Frank Berry in the 100-yd. freestyle and the other in diving by John Candler. The Hoosiers' marks were set in the 400-yd. medley relay, 400- yd. individual medley, 100-yd. but- terfly, and 1,000-yd. freestyle. Resurgent Track men Trounce Penn State By TOM WEINBERG k shot at the Big Ten cham- nship is at stake this after- n when Bill Buntin squares against Ohio State's Gary adds at 2 p.m. in Yost Field use. ['he largest home crowd in many irs is expected to turn out to ness the return match between second and fourth place teams s the second clash between the Sold Out All reserved seats for this fternoon's basketball game ith Ohio State have been sold ut, according, to ticket mana- er Don Weir. Game time is 2 p.m. in Yost leld House. The freshman eam will be taking on the aw Club beginning about 2:15. gue's leading scorer, 6'. Bradds h a 31.0 point average in Big n competition and the leading ounder, 6"1" Buntin who hauls wn an average of 16.1 per game. Bucks on Top The first meeting between the : teams was last month at' lumbus, when the Bucks trailed )st of the game but still man- ed to come out on top, 68-66., keep trim ARCADE BARBERS NICKELS ARCADE In that one, Buntin fouled out with 15 points and 13 rebounds, while Bradds led Ohio with 33' points and 15 rebounds. Today, with John Harris back in the line- up and Buntin anxious to avenge last month's two-point decision, (just one of three Buckeye two- point margins in Big Ten com- petition) the Wolverines, backed by home court support will seek an almost do-or-die victory. Ohio State stands in a tie for second place with Minnesota, just one game behind pacesetting Il- linois which has its hands full with hot-shooting Indiana in a late afternoon television game. A victory for Ohio and an upset by Indiana would throw the race into a two-way tie. The Wolverines are squarely on the spot in this afternoon's tilt since another defeat would give them an even-up, 4-4, record and would all but eliminate them from any title shot and could possibly drop. them to a tie for seventh place in the standings. More Than Bradds The Buckeyes' potency isn't limited to Bradds. A pair of for- wards, Jim Doughty and Doug McDonald, are good on offense and excellent on defense, which shows why few teams have been able to score very many points against OSU. You Just can't get very close to the basket against them. Guard Dick Reasbeck is, with the exception of Jimmy Rayl, about the hottest-shooting back- court man in the Big Ten, and is sure to give Wolverine fans fits if he's on. The other guard,sDick Ricketts is a. good shooter and a fine playmaker, and serves to round out a team which makes plenty of trouble for everyone .in its way. By CHARLIE TOWLE Michigan ran past, through, but mainly in front of Penn State handing the Nittany Lions a 102- 38 shellacking. By the end of the night seven meet records, two fieldhouse rec- ords and one varsity record had been posted. Captain Charlie Aquino, repeat- ing his performance of last year, ran the 1000 yard distance in 1:11.3. This time broke the pre- vious Yost and Varsity record of 1:11.9, which was set by Aquino last year against Penn State. It was much the same story in every event ran. Even track Coach Don Canham found the perform- ance of his charges hard to figure after last week. "I've never had a team that was so bad one week (at the MSU Relays) and so good the next," said the obviously de- lighted Canham. Initial Lift Michigan was given the initial lift which set the stage for the rest of the night when the shot putters slammed -their event and George Puce put the 16 pound sphere out 56'712". The first running event of the meet was the lone Penn State bright spot. Living up to his ad- vance billing, Hpwie Deardorff rans away with the mile in a time ofr 3:08.5. This was one minute fasterc than the old Yost Field Housec record held by John Moule of Michigan. The diminutive distance man, however, was not impressedt by his showing. Crossing the finisht lined Deardorff exclaimed, "noth-c ing to it." Kent Bernard who runs with as stride that would put a gazelle to Penn Runs Dry POLE VAULT: 1. Overton (M); 2.,f Wade (M), Risoldi (PS) tie; 3. Hink- son (M). Height-14'.T HIGH JUMP: 1. Ammerman (M); C 2. Casey (PS); 3. Jones (M). Heightl SHOT PUT: 1. Puce (M); 2.1 Schmitt (M); 3 .Soudek (M). Dis- tance-56'7Y'/". BROAD JUMP: 1. Grantham (PS); 2. Sweeney (M); 3. Niles (M). Dis- MILE RUN: 1. Deardorff (PS); 2. Hayes (M); 3. hyan (M). Time---t 4:08.5 (Yost Field House record). 440-YD. DASH: 1. Bernard (M);3 2. Bedick (PS); 3. Malone (M). Time -:49.4. 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES: 1. Nut- J tall (M); 2. Grantham (PS); 3. Barn- hill (PS). Time-:08.3. 1000-YD. RUN: 1. Aquino (M); 2.f Lampman (PS); 3. Casto (M). Time 2:11:3 (Yost Field House and Var- I sity record).J 60-YD. DASH: 1. Burnley (M); 2. Mason (M); 3. La Due (PS). Time X -:06.4. 600-YD. RUN: 1. Hughes (M); 2.t R4main (M); 3. Hibschman (PS).1 Time-1:12.4. 300-YD. DASH: 1. Hunter (M); 2. Reese (M); 3. Gregg (PS). Time- :32.3. 880-YD. RUN: 1. Kelly (M); 2. Hayes (M); 3. Tuft (PS). Time- 1:54.7. TWO-MILE RUN: 1. Murray (M); 2. Bassett (PS); 3. Neahusan (M). Time-9 :16. 65-YD. LOW HURDLES: 1. Mason (M); 2. Nuttall (M); 3. Grantham (PS). Time-:07.6. ONE-MILE RELAY: 1. Michigan (Romain, Reese, Aquino, Bernard); 2. Penn State. Time-3:20.8. the mat to meet Dick Nalley at 137-lbs. it looked like the effort might not have been worth it. Nalley quick-as-a-flash picked up two points on a take-down and went for the pin. But Wilcox re- versed him, and just five minutes and 38 seconds later the Michigan ace scored a fall to set the Wol- verines on top of a 13-0 bulge. Wisconsin picked up its only two points on a draw in the 147- lb. bout. The Badgers' John Sack- erson and Jim Keen each scored one point on escapes at the be- ginning of the third and second periods, respectively. Wayne Miller's one point of rid- ing time edged Wisconsin 157- pounder Larry Ironside, 3-2, after Ironside knotted the score on a reversal in the third period. And RiciC Bay, who, due to a taped nose, looked more like the Phan- tom of the Opera than Michigan's man at 167-lbs., followed with the 5-3 measure of Paul Mergen. Go-Go Joe Keen used the meet to give sophomore Joe Arcure his first taste of varsity competition, and Big Joe didn't let anybody down. Trailing 3-2 with about 20 seconds to wrestle in the 1771b. match, Arcure nailed Harry Roberts with a two-point take-down to give Michigan an unassailable 24-2 lead. It only remained for Jack Bar- den to pin the Big Ten's 1962 heavyweight champion to make the afternoon complete. It was a cinch that Wisconsin champ Roger Iillath wasn't giving any weight away to the lighter Bar- den, but old Jack the Giant Killer took just 4:56 to keep intact his undefeated conference season with the Wolverines' final five points. Indiana's record stands at 1-3. But coach Charles McDaniel has an undefeated wrestler in 177-1b. Dick Isel. His record is 7-0. Other top Hoosiers are Dave Cousino (137-lbs), who is 7-1, and Don Bennett (157) who is 6-1 for the season. shame turned in two convincing performances. Running in the open 440, Bernard turned the cir- cuit in :49.4. Anchor Man Then running the anchor leg of the mile relay, which Michigan took in a time of 3:20.8, he was clocked in :49.2. Said Don Can- ham, after the meet, of his young sophomore, "he may be the best in Michigan history and maybe even in the history of the Big Ten by his senior year." Also high on the list for plaudits from Canham was senior two- miler Chris Murray. Completely outclassing the rest of the field Murray ran a classic man-against- clock race to turn in the best time in his Michigan career, 9:16. This is the fourth best time ever run by a Michigan two miler and the best time ran in the Big Ten so far this season. Surprisingly strong showings in the hurdle, the 65 yard highs go- ing to Cliff Nuttall and the 65 yard lows to Dennis Mason also added to the general feeling of joyousness. Newcomer Dennis Jones, competing in his first track meet for the cinder- men, placed third in the high jump with a leap of 6'2". Canham was very impressed by the initial performance of his new acquisi- tion and is looking for even better heights when he becomes accus- TONIGHT'S FEATURE 5:00-7:00 p.m. VEAL CUTLET a I* Holstein CENTER ROOM Michigan Union Cafeteria tomed to the pressure of college track competition. The high jump was won by the Wolverines' Al Ammerman with a jump of 6'4". In the other height event, the pole vault, Steve Over- ton missed his three attempts at 14'4", falling on top of the bar on his last try, and had to settle for 14', good enough for a new meet record. In the middle distances, other than Aquino's thousand, both Ted Kelly and Dan Hughes turned in good times. Kelly ran all by himself in posting a 1:54.7 in the half-mile. Hughes in a dual with Dave, Romain passed his team- mate on the final turn and crossed the finish line in 1:12.4, one sec- ond off the fieldhouse record. (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gllis", etc.) I .1 Undefeated. Gymnasts Plot Revenge, Against Illini, Holmes, By MIKE BLOCK Michigan gymnastics fans are finally getting their chance to see what all the hollering's been about, this afternoon at 3:30. in the Intramural Building gym. The gymnasts, now 3-0 on the conference season, greet once- mighty Illinois, in the their first" home meet of the campaign. The Illini, who edged the Wolverines 60-52 last year, come into town with an 0-5 mark. In their most recent outing, the Illini were swamped by Michigan State, 79-21. Eight Gone The main reason for the down- fall of the men of Coach Charles Pond is the loss of eight letter- men due to graduation. Most not- able among these was all-around man Ray Hadley, who was Il- linois' most valuable man last year. This is all quite a comedown for Pond, whose gymnasts took the Big Ten crown for 11 straight years, from 1950 to 1960, finish- ing second in 1961 and third last year. In both of the last two Big Ten meets, the Wolverines have copped the title. "This is the year before the year we rebuild," Pond says. "We'll take our beatings in dual meets, but we should be among the top three in the Big Ten Champion- ships." Considering the 78-18 drubbing his charges took against an Iowa team which Michigan handled 70-41, that remains very much to be seen. The Threat Nevertheless, the Illini won't be, completely blanked, due to the presence of one Hal Holmes. All Holmes has 'done in the last few years is win the national AAU tumbling title four times, the Big Ten crown twice, and the 1959 Pan-American Games champion- ship. Wolverine Coach Newt Lo- ken, while hoping that his men, Phil Bolton and Mike Henderson, can overtake Holmes, can't stop praising the Urbana senior. About the lone bright spot be- sides Holmes is Captain Warren Wakerlin, who competes in every event but the Trampoline and tumbling. He was number two man for the Illini on the high bar, par- allel bars, and still rings last year, and placed fifth on the p-bars in the Big Ten meet. CALPURNIA, HERFI COME Now, as the college year approaches its mid-point, one fact emerges clearly: you are all going to flunk everything. There are two things you can do about it. First, you can marry money. (I don't mean you marry the money itself; I mean you marry a person'who has money. Weddings between people and currency have not been legal anywhere in the United States since the Smoot-Hawley Act. Marlboro Cigarettes, on the other hand, are legal everywhere and are, indeed, smoked with great pleasure and enthusiasm in all fifty states of the Union. I bring up Marlboro Cigarettes because this column is sponsored by the makers of Marlboro, and they are inclined to brood if I omit to mention their product.) But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of course, you will not because you are a high-minded, clean- living, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore, to keep from flunking, you must try the second method: you ;oust learn how to take lecture notes. According to a recent survey, 123.6% of American under- graduates do not know the proper way to take lecture notes. To illustrate this shocking statistic, let us suppose you are taking a course in history. Let us further suppose the lecturer is lec- turing on the ruling houses of England. You listen intently. You write diligently in your notebook, making a topic outline as you have been taught. Like this: I. House of Plantagenet. II. House of Lancaster. III. House of York. Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back a tear, for you cannot go on. Oh, yes, you know very well that the next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trouble is, you don't know the Roman numeral that comes after III. r 'I O - - C3iimigmn FILE IT AWAY... in your Memory that THE FINEST OFFICE EQUIPMENT is found at MORRI LL.'S GRADUATE ENGINEERS Don't get lost in the crowd. Investigate the EATON RESEARCH CENTER of EATON MANUFACTUR- ING CO. where you can personally influence the development of new products for a growing corporation. If you are better than the average, you can carve a rewarding future for yourself at this ultra - modern engineering center near Detroit. They professional staff of thirty and the supporting staff of sixty assures rapid development of your capabilities and a sympathetic ear for your solutions to problems. Make your interview appointment at the engineering placement bureau now. THE EATON RESEARCH CENTER representative will be on campus Tuesday, February 19. s 514 S. State NO 5-9141 I Scores' 1 Engineers & Scientists COLLEGE BASKETBALL Penn 65, Dartmouth 63 (ovt) Princeton 74, Harvard 45 No. Carolina 78, So. Carolina 74 Arizona St. 83, Utah 78 NBA St. Louis 99, Cincinnati 96 Boston 123, Syracuse 114 New York 135, Chicago 131 (2 ovt) (An Equal Opportunity Employer) | 11 .E1 D scuss Current Openings with RAYTH EON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FEB. 28, 1963 and MAR. 1, 1963 See your placement director now to arrange an interview with the Raytheon representative. Raytheon offers challenging assignments for BS and MS candidates in EE, ME, Mathematics and Physics. Openings are in the areas of: RADAR, INFRARED, MISSILE & SPACE SYSTEMS, COMMUNICATIONS & DATA PROCESSING, SOLID STATE, SONAR, ELECTRON TUBE & COMPONENTS TECHNOLOGY, ° r~w.w wr..ttn.....U't .t *IVY WOm V S 30 pairs of WHITE LEVI'S have already been given away ! TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO WIN a pair at the basketball throw giveaway at To ' o . "f.y 1 . It may, incidentally, be of some historical interest to point out that Americans are not the only people who don't know Roman numerals. The Romans didn't know them themselves. I suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like that, but when it came to real cuties like"LXI or MMC, they just flang away their styluses and went downtown to have a bath and take in a circus and maybe stab Caesar a few times. (You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system. Well sir, the fact is that the Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy to buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman the Magnificent, but Suleiman wouldn't do business-not even when Vespasian raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered to throw in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Charlton Heston. (So Rome stuck with Roman numerals-to its sorrow, as it turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got to arguing about how much is CDL times MVIX. Well sir, pretty soon everyone in town came around to join the hassle. In all the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the north gate and -wham!-before you could say pecca fortiter, in rushed the Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers!) Well sir, that's the way the empire crumbles, and I digress. Let's get back to lecture notes. Let's also say a word about Mrlhrn fliarettps The makers would be so nleased ! And is I 11 ann1 |