TIE MICHIGAN DAILY AT r. i. ..y'.-... ACK IN THE BASEMENT: Icer's Winmng Streak Halted M' Gymnasts Tumble Gophers Annual Report to Regents Released by Athletic Board _._ , By STAN KUKLA Special To Tlke Daily EAST LANSING - If someone tells you that Michigan played a hockey game with Michigan State last night and lost 6-2 to the Spartans, don't believe him. Michigan. and Michigan State actually COULDN'T have played this hockey game because only two penalties were handed out- one to each team. But, sad to say Spartans and Wolverines did meet on a field of ice to fight out their differences and the Wolverines DID lose 6-2, thanks mainly to the offensive skills of the Lackey brothers-Tom and Carl-from Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. Tom picked up two goals and brother Carl had four assists, helping out on both of his broth- er's goals. Pat Baldwin, Art Thomas, Mel Orme, and Mark Williams got the other tallies for the Spartans, who led 4-0 at one time. The Wolverines just didn't have it last night, being out-played, out-shot, out-scored, out-checked, ad infinitum. The Spartans were determined' to turn the game into a rout. Thomas made the score 4-0 at 0:32 of the next frame. Don Rod- gers put Michigan in the scoring column near the end of the period when he skated through two Spartans and then beat John Chandik on a close in shot. Tom Pendlebury received the period's only penalty. With about five minutes gone in the second period, Gray removed his mask. A little later defenseman Dave Newton who has been ill all week, complained of dizziness and was removed from the game. The remainder of the game was played without Newton. With the defensive corps limit- ed to two, Michigan coach Al Ren- frew had to dig into his already weak bench to come up with some more defensemen. As a result, Pendlebury, Gary Butler, Gordie Wilkie, and captain Larry Bab- cock took extra turns on the ice. Ron Coristine gave the few Michigan hockey diehards some- thing to cheer about when he scored with almost ten minutes gone in the third period. The goal turned the game into an exciting fast-moving game. For 50 minutes, the game was dull and, lackluster with neither team giv- ing reason why.they should be in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association or even why they should be calledehockey teams, except for the fact that they had the equipment on. Coristine's goal showed the Wol- verines that it was still possible to beat the Spartans and, for a few minutes, the Wolverines play- ed like they could. Then Tom Lackey scored his second goal of the evening and everything else became anti-climactic, including Williams' goal, which deflected off skates and trickled past Gray, and the penalty (only the game's sec- ond) to Doug Roberts after the last goal. Reversal Reversed MICHIGAN MICH. STATE Gray G Chandik Rodgers D Musat Kartusch D Williams Wilkie C Johnstone Babcock W Thomas Butler W Lackey First Period Scoring: MSU-Bald- win (Orme, C. Lackey) 8:36; MSU- T. Lackey (C. Lackey) 10:07; MSU- Orme (Elliot, C. Lcakey) 18:37. Pen- alties: -None. Second Period Scoring: MSU - Thomas (Johnstone, Musat) 0:32; M-Rodgers (unassisted) 17:24. Pen- alties: M-Pendlebury (illegal body check) 4:16. Third Period Scoring: M-Coris- tine (McGonigal) 7:27; MSU - T. Lackey (Thomas, C. Lackey) 13:58; MSU-Williams (Doyle) 15:01. Pen- alties: MSU - Roberts (tripping) 16:20. MICHIGAN 0 1 1-2 MSU 3 1 2-6 Saves: Gray (M) 14 9 8-31 Chandik (MSU) 9 3 7--19 By MIKE BLOCK Michigan's gymnastics team fin- ished the Big Ten dual meet sea- son in grand style last night, whip- ping Minnesota 70-39 at the Intra- mural Building. The victory enabled the Wolver- ines to finish the campaign with a 6-0 record. It was their second consecutive win over a previously unbeaten team, having eased over Michigan State Wednesday by an identical 70-39 count. Minnesota's record is now 4-1 in the confer- ence and 6-2 overall. Today the Gophers travel to East Lansing for a second-place show- down with the Spartans. Swan Song The contest was the last Ann Arbor appearance for Michigan seniors Captain Gil Larose, Jim Hynds and Barry Spicer, and they. didn't disappoint the home folks. Larose was his usual spectacular self, walking off with two first places, tying for another, and add- ing two thirds. The dependable Hynds tied for first on the high bar, and a second on the parallel bars, while Spicer came in third in his specialty, the floor exercise. Larose began the floor ex with his patented one-handed hand- stand and didn't let up until his final twist-out from the still rings. He took first place outright in both of these events, and tied Hynds on the high bar. His thirds, on the sidehorse and parallel bars, didn't count in the actual meet score, as Michigan's larger num- ber of participants led them to list some as NTC (not to count). Lascari Shines Sharing the spotlight with La- rose was junior Arno Lascari, who took first on the p-bars, second on the horse and rings, and third on the high bar, to add heavily to his team's total. The remaining two first places taken by the Wol- verines were both draw contests, Fred Sanders and Gary Erwin ty- ing on the trampoline, and Phil Bolton and Mike Henderson turn- ing the trick in tumbling. The remaining first went to Minnesota's Tom Arneson on the sidehorse. The win preserved Ar- neson's undefeated record this year on the horse, but he barely edged Lascari, 94-93.5, to keep his streak alive. Gopher Coach Pat Bird is very high on the Minne- apolis junior, and looks forward to him copping the Big Ten title in his favorite event. Endurance Plus The most remarkable Minnesota performer, however, was all- around performer Larry Gleason. Gleason was all-around in every sense of the word, as he participat- ed in all seven events. Although he turned in some subpar exhibi- tions, he did come up with a third and three fourths. His double fly- away from the high bar culminat- ed his best routine of the evening. After the meet, Bird had words of praise, both for Michigan's gym- nasts and his own. "I like to call our team the 'five-man wonder'," he remarked. "We've been hurt by' ineligibility losses, but we've com- piled a fine record for such a small squad." He cited Michigan's great depth as the principal reason for its success. "There's no doubt in my mind that Michigan will take the Big Ten championship," he said, "and I'd even give them an edge over Southern Illinois in the NCAA's." Fall to SIU Bird knows whereof he speaks, since his team succumbed to Southern Illinois earlier in the year. Southern finished second in the nationals last year, just ahead, of the Wolverines. Wolverine sophomore all- arounder Alex Frecska came up with a sore wrist this week and couldn't participate in the meet. However, he is expected to be at full strength in time for the Big Ten Meet in two weeks. During the meet, the more than 2,000 fans were entertained by a floor exercise and balance team exhibition staged by the girl gym- nasts of Flint Community College. Fiery Finale FLOOR EXERCISE-, Larose (M) 94. 2, Henderson (M) 91. 3, Spicer (M) 90. 4, Gleason (Minn) 86. 5, Ol- sen (Minn) 83.5. TRAMPOLINE - 1, Sanders (M) and Erwin _(M) 92.5 (tie). 3, Ham- ilton (89). 4, Gleason (Minn) 85. 5, Eibrink (Minn) 55. SIDEHORSE-1, Arneson (Minn) 94. 2, Lascarl (M) 93.5. 3, Larose (M) 91 (NTC). 4, Levy (M) 89. 5, Fritze (Minn) 88.5. 6, Gleason (Minn) 61.5. HIGH BAR-1, Hynds (M) and La- rose (M) 95 (tie). 3, Lascari (M) 92.5 (NTC). 4, Eibrink (Minn) 91. 5, Gleason (Minn) 90.5. PARALLEL BARS--1, Lascari (M) 95.5. 2, Hynds (M) 93.5 (NTC). 3, Larose (M) 88. 4, Gleason (Minn) 87. 5, Eibrink (Minn) 86.5. 6, Arneson (Minn) 85.5. STILL RINGS-1, Larose (M) 95. 2, Lascari (M) 92.5. 3, Eibrink (Minn) 90. 4, Arneson (Minn) 88.5. 5, Hynds (M) 86.5. 6, Gleason (Minn) 40. TUMBLING-1, Bolton (M) and Henderson (M) 91.5 (tie).-3, Gleason #(Minn) 85.5. 4, Olsen (Minn) 67.5. (Continued from Page 1) stantially increase receipts or de- crease expenditures. Acting in re- sponse to a report by the board, the Regents instructed Vice-Presi- dent for Business and Finance Wil- bur Pierpont to make a study. This study's purpose was to in- vestigate "the maintenance cost of the athletic plant and of the prob- lems that might be entailed in transferring the maintenance costs of intramural and physical edu- cation facilities from the athletic budget to the general fund budg- et." The board also said it was con- sidering ways of "adjusting the student athletic fees to a level more consistent with the modern costs and services provided the students." As a first step in this direction, the Board reviewed its action of making students pay $1 each for an administrative charge for student coupon books of foot- ball tickets. For a long period of time, stu- dent fees for athletics have been considerably lower than those of other conference schools, the board continued. The Regents have ad- vised the board that it has the au- thority to sell student athletic coupon books and such a policy may be started in future years, the board said. Net Income Increased Net operating income or the dif- ference of receipts over disburse- ments for fiscal 1962 was $153,- 338.32. This is compared to the fiscal 1961 figure of $60,461.59. Total disbursements increased by over $47,000 from fiscal 1961 to 1962 but this was more than off- set by an increase of $162,000 in total receipts. The bulk of the increased re- ceipts was made up of a $96,480.48 increase in football receipts. This was mainly due to an increase of 50 cents in the ticket price and a 1961 home schedule that included a sellout of the Michigan State game and 80,000 fans at the Ohio State game. In an effort to stabilize at- tendance, starting in 1968 one of these games will be at home and the other away each year. This was accomplished when Michigan State agreed to play both its 1967 and 1968 games in Ann Arbor. Thus Michigan will be guaran- teed an almost sure sell-out each season. There won't be two sell- outs in one season and then none the next year as has occurred in past seasons. Field House Mile .Record Faces Assault Over 450 contestants from col- leges, high schools and track clubs will flood Yost Field House today in the Michigan Indoor Track Federation Championships. It will be an 18-event program beginning at 1 p.m., with the finals slated to start at 7 p.m., and should feature an assault at the Field House mile record. Howie Deardorff of Penn State, who last week set the record of 4:08.5, will try to break his own mark. He faces stiff competition from two Michigan milers, Dave Hayes and Jim Neahausen. Michigan State will boast a strong entry in the person of freshman Jim Garrett who is scheduled to compete in the 60- yard dash, the broad jump and the 300-yard run, and has excel- lent marks in all of them, includ- ing a 23110" winning broad jump in the Michigan Relays. There are 11 high school relay teams set to compete, along with 39 entries in the high school mile, headed by Dick Reamer of Uni- versity of Detroit High who won the Relays crown in 4:39.7. - -- I OSU Tankers Pose Stiff Challenge Wrestlers Host MSU By BILL BULLARD 4 Michigan matmen place their perfect Big Ten record on the line this afternoon as they play host to Michigan State, also undefeated in Big Ten competition, zt 4 p.m. in Yost Field House. The Spartans have already de- feated defending Big Ten cham- pion Iowa in a 14-11 decision in compiling their 5-0 season record. Swimming coaches Gus Stager of Michigan and Mike Pepe of Ohio State can't agree on the question of which team is going to win the dual meet this after- noon. Stager says Ohio State will take the meet while Pepe claims Mich- igan is going to win. Both coaches have good reasons to back up their positions. They both agree, however, that the meet at the Matt Mann Pool at 3:00 will be close. This is Michigan's last home meet of the season. Pepe commented. "I think HOPE TO BOUNCE BACK: Cagers Take to Road; Oppose Boilermakers Michigan has the better team. They have more depth and are more balanced than we are." Stager is worried about some of his swimmers that have been ill' recently besides the toughness of the meet itself. Comparative Scores The closeness of the meet is demonstrated by the fact that both teams have been beaten by Minnesota. Michigan lost by three points and Ohio State fell by seven. This means that if the Buckeyes had won one more sec- ond place instead of a third, they would have scored the same num- ber of points against the Go- phers that Michigan did. Since the Minnesota loss Pepe says, "We've been gradually trying to develop throughout the season. The Michigan meet is the most important dual meet for us. "We're going to have trouble with Michigan. We always have close meets like last year's meet," he predicted. In the meet at Columbus last season, the Buck- eyes won 58-47. The meet was even closer than the score in- dicates with several races ending in touchouts. Came Back Michigan came back last sea- son to edge the Buckeyes for sec- 1 1 i i 7 ond place at the Big Ten Meet. butterfly, sophomores Ben Donald- But Ohio State pulled another son and Nate Clark should give reverse in winning the NCAA Jeff Moore and Longstreth a tough Meet while Michigan fell to battle. fourth. Bruce Norvell is within strik- On paper, this season's OSU ing distance of Dick Nelson and team looks stronger than ever. But Geza Bodolay in the 200-yd. Buckeye teams have a tradition of breaststroke. In the distance free- starting sl'owly and finishing style, Michigan has Captain John strong. However, with the Big Ten Dumont, Roy Burry, Warren Uh- Meet only two weeks away, the ler, and Tom Dudley to counter Buckeyes should be near their Orrin Nordstrom, Dave Kondracke, peak for the meet this afternoon, and Augie Shima. Pepe has two NCAA champions Against Michigan divers Pete in backstroker L. B. Schaefer and Cox and Ed Boothman, Pepe can individual medleyist Marty Mull. Neither has approached their best throw double NCAA champion Lou performances of last season but Vitucci and Juan Botella who took like the rest of the Buckeyes a second and a third place at the probably are due for this ason's NCAA Meet.! By TOM ROWLAND Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE-Hopes for a high berth in the Big Ten cage race dimnied by two straight confer- ence losses, Michigan will try to regain a little forward motion against cellar - dwelling Purdue here this afternoon at 2 p.m. The Wolverines are in a dead- lock with Wisconsin for the sixthi slot with a 4-5 record after de- feats at the hands of Ohio State and Northwestern last week. The Boilermakers (1-10) have managed to pull out only one win from the Big Ten grab bag, that a 103-1 rout of Michigan State. Won't Lay Off In light of Big Ten basketball action this winter it's needless to say that the Wolverines aren't expecting any lay-off from the cage pressure just because Purdue occupies the bottom spot on the conference totem pole. The turn of the second semester has seen the Boilermakers put on some pretty fancy basketmaking exhibitions. Ever since sophomore center Bill Jones (6'8") joined the team after a semester of ineligibility, Purdue hasn't been outscored on field goals. Losing to Indiana, 74- 73, the Boilermakers led the bas- ket-making, 33-26. Against Ohio State, too, Purdue held a 40-36 field goal advantage. Second Wind The main reason for all this second-semester second wind is a dandy .509 shooting percentage-- plus one outcourt bomber in vet- eran Mel Garland, who hit 30 points last Monday against 11- linois to boost his average to 23.6 digits a game. That's fifth in the Big Ten. Garland's guard accomplice is Ron Hughes (6'1"), now netting the points at just under 16 a game. The loss of All-American center Terry Dischinger was a big defi- cit for coach Ray Eddy to make up. Jones' height may be the an- swer. He's definitely boosted Boil- ermaker rebound potential (Jones picks off 16 a contest), and the Purdue star also boasts a healthy 15.3 point average in the bargain. Up front Eddy will go with sophomore Bob Purkhiser, who missed a basket against Minne- sota to break a string of 18 won- secutive field goals, and play- maker Phil Dawkins. Dawkins is only 6'3" but makes up for it in jumping talent under the boards. With the advent of Jones at center, the Boilermakers sport just over 6'4'' a man along the forward compared to Michigan's 6'6". Bill Buntin, Wolverine 6'7" star, will be at center to counter the taller (by an inch) Jones in a battle of the sophomoreapivot men. Buntin's 22.6 point average just trails Garland in the con- ference statistics but he leads the conference in rebounds with 140 in nine games. Tom Cole and John Harris hold down the rest of the forward line, and Bob Cantrell and Doug Her- ner will be outcourt. SCORES NBA St. Louis 115, Chicago 98 Detroit 126, Syracuse 117 New York 106, San Francisco 93 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Yale 83, Columbia 7K Princeton 89, Dartmouth 59 Penn 61, Harvard 58 St. Bonaventure 87, Niagara 63 Cornell 68, Brown 50 Syracuse 55, Boston College 54 Michigan Tech 85, Moorhead 80 WRESTLING Iowa 27, Indiana 3 SWIMMING Minnesota 58, Southern Illinois 37 Petitioning Now Open For UNION SENIOR OFFICES DUE: MARCH 8 Petitions va liable at the Michigan Union Student Offices top snowing. To oppose these two, Stager has Ed Bartsch and Mike Reissing in the backstroke and Lanny Reppert and Jeff Long- streth in the mnedley. Times Bettered Both Bartsch and Reppert have bettered the times of their Buck- eye opponents this season. But the two Wolverines have not been faster than the two Buckeyes were at their best last season. John Plain and Mull are top- flight sprinters who will chal- lenge Steve Thrasher, Frank Berry and Jim Riutta. In the 200-yd. ATTENTION: GROUP CHAIRMEN EUROPE BY AIR Detroit Detroit Detroit Detroit Detroit Detroit Detroit GROUP DISCOUNTS (25 or more persons) Sample round trip jet fares from Detroit to London..........$357.40 to Paris ...........$386.40 i to Rome...........$449.40S to Copenhagen ., ... $409.40 Savings to Tel Aviv ......... $634.40 from $1$8 to Frankfurt ....... $409.40 to $280 to warsaw ..........$479.40 I - -- I I i i LoesofDo-eGinow"et. 0 - Olt C"U itghu '~(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many TRAVEL INC. 400 Maynard St. Ann Arbor I persou NO 5-3733 NO-5373 I. - . j - ~ I ~E I I I I THE CURSE OF THE CAMPUS: NO. 1 Hate me if you will, but I must speak. We college types are far too complacent. Sure, we've got plenty to be proud of. We've got atom smashers, we've got graduate schools, we've got new peaks in scholarship, new highs in academic honors. And yet, in the midst of these triumphs, we have failed dismally to make any progress in solving the oldest and most horrendous of all campus problems: we've still got roommates. To be sure, all roommates are not bad. There is the well- documented case of Hilquit Glebe; a student at the Manhattan College of Agriculture, majoring in curds and whey, who ad- mitted publicly that he actually liked his roommate-an odd admission when you consider that this roommate, Mervis Trunz by name, was frankly not 'oo winsome a fellow. He practiced his tympani in his room, he kept an alligator, and he collected airplane tires. But, on the other hand, Mervis bought two packs of Marlboro Cigarettes every day and gave one of them to Hilquit and-I ask you-who can stay mad at a man who gives you Marlboro Cigarettes? Who, upon tasting that flavorful blend of Marlboro tobaccos, upon drawing through that pure white Marlboro filter, upon exulting in this best of all possible cigarettes, Marlboro- who, I say, can harden his heart against his neighbor? Certainly not Hilquit. Certainly not I. Certainly not you, as you will find when you scurry to your nearest tobacconist and buy a supply. Marlboros come in soft pack or Flip-Top Box. Tobacconists come in small, medium, and large. But I digress. Roommates, I say; are still with us and I fear they always will be, so we better learn how to get along with them. It can be done, you know. Take, for instance,:the classic case of Dolly Pitcher and Molly Madison. Dolly and Molly, roommates at a prominent Midwestern girls' school (Vassar) had a problem that seemed insoluble. Dolly conld only study late at night, and Molly could not stay awake past nine o'clock. If Dolly kept the lights on, the room was too bright for Molly to sleep. If Molly turned the lights off, the room was too dark for Dolly to study. What to do? Well sir, those two intelligent American kids found an an- swer. They got a miner's cap for Dolly! Thus, she had enough light to study by, and still the room was dark enough for Molly to sleep. It must be adniitted, however, that this solution, ingenious as it was, had some unexpected sequelae. Dolly got so en- chanted with her miner's cap that she switched her major from 18th'Century poetry to mining and metallurgy. Shortly after graduation she had what appeared to be a great stroke of luck: while out prospecting, she discovered what is without question the world's largest feldspar mine. This might have made Dolly very rich except that nobody, alas, has yet discovered a use for feldspar. Today Dolly, a broken woman, squeezes out a meagre living making echoes for tourists in Mammoth Cave. Nor has Molly fared conspicuously better. Once Dolly got the miner's hat, Molly was able to catch up on her long-lost sleep. She woke after eight days, refreshed and vigorous-more vigorous, alas, than she realized. It was the afternoon of the annual Dean's tea. Molly stood in line with her classmates, -I fi 1M .ITITEMill fIII I MIN HillIII I'll' fill V (III f< ,*11 IIRD II