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February 26, 1963 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-02-26

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STHE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY.F

SOUND CENTER
309 SOUTH STATE ST.

Canham Reveals 'M' Lineup

BIG TEN WRESTLING:
Iowa Team To Beat'-Keen

STORE WIDE SALE

By DAVE GOOD
Don Canham is letting
body see his cards as time
near for the Big Ten

every-
draws
track

O % OFF
LIST
PRICE

3.98 list 4.98 Fist
2.39 2.99

5.98 list
3.59

coaches' big poker game- the
Western Conference Indoor Track.
Meet Friday and Saturday at
Madison.
Instead of keeping his "lineup"
secret until Friday's scratch meet-
ing, when the coaches announce
who will run in which races, Can-
ham has decided he might as well
let his choices be made known
ahead of time--the first time he's
ever done it.
"The conference is so tough this
year we have to throw our best
men in their best spots and not
worry about what the other teams
do," Canham explained. "I don't'
think I'll do any juggling this
year."
Badgers Favored
This, then, is how Canham
thinks Michigan will line up for

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665-0629

309 S. State St.

Open Daily 'Til 8:30 PM.
Saturday 'til 6 P.M.

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the meet, to be held on the track
of favored Wisconsin:
60-YD. DASH: Ken Burnley.
300-YD. DASH: Mac Hunter,
Carter Reese.
440-YD. DASH: Talt Malone,
Dave Romain.
600-YD. RUN: Kent Bernard,
Dan Hughes.
880-YD. RUN: Dorr Casto, Ted
Kelly.
1000-YD. RUN: Charlie Aquino,
Jim Neahusan.
MILE RUN: Dave Hayes, Des
Ryan.,
TWO-MILE RUN: Chris Mur-
ray.
70-YD. HIGH HURDLES: Cliff
Nuttall, Dick Thelwell.
70-YD. LOW HURDLES: -Joe
Mason, Nuttall.
SHOT PUT: George Puce, Roger
Schmitt, Ernst Soudek.
HIGH JUMP: Al Ammerman,
Dennis Jones.
POLE VAULT: Steve Overton,
George Wale.
BROAD JUMP: Doug Niles, Tom
Sweeney.
MILE RELAY: (undecided).
Only One With Chance
Michigan is the only team which
Canham thinks has a chance to
keep Wisconsin from taking its
second straight Big Ten indoor
crown. "Michigan State and Iowa
are the only other good ones," he
added.
The Spartans were edged, 80-79,
by Wisconsin in a triangular meet
over the weekend, but the Badgers
were minus the injured Larry
Howard,defending champion in
both hurdle races. Canham said
he thinks Howard will be running
in the conference meet, but not
at top speed.
Gene Dix and Elzie Higgin-
bottom also won their events, the
70-yd. high hurdles and the 440,
respectively, in the meet Saturday,
but both reportedly were slightly
injured.
Football Casualty
To top off the- Badger problems,
defending 60-yd. dash king Billy
Smith is still running with his
jaw wired. He broke it in the
Rose Bowl when USC's Hal Bed-
sole elbowed him in the face.
Michigan, on the other hand,
is nearly ready physically. Hunter
and Burnley have come through
this much of the season without
running into the pulled leg mus-
cles which troubled them last year.
Burnley didn't make an ap-
pearance'in 'Saturday's Michigan
Indoor Federation Championships
in the 60, but Hunter drew Can-
ham's praise for his second place
in the 300 behind Abdul umu, an
Olympic 400-meter finalist for
Nigeria in 1960 who won both
sprints Saturday.
Aquino Defends
If the Wolverines can overtake
the Badgers in the meet, Canham
thinks it will be team depth that
does it. Aquino, in the 1000, is the
lone defending individual titlist
on the team. "We're in pretty good
shape everywhere," Canham com-
mented. "Actually, our juniors

have saved up so far. If they'd
been performing like they did last
year, we'd be sunk now."
Canham said he was especially
pleased with the year's improve-
ment of six juniors who went
without scoring a point in either of
last year's Big Ten meets-Mur-
ray, Romain, Nuttall, Mason, Kelly
and Casto.

V"

By JIM BERGER
Michigan wrestling coach Cliff
Keen still points to Iowa as the
team to beat, despite his team's
impressive 19-8 win over Michigan
State Saturday.
What made Michigan's win all
the more impressive was that

MAC HUNTER
... second to Abdul

DAVE DOZEMAN
... improving soph

Michigan State defeated Iowa,
14-11, earlier this season in a dual
meet. "Iowa has three potential
Big Ten Champions," said Keen,
"and if you can take three out
of eight weights in the Confer-
ence Meet I'd say your're looking
pretty good."
No Stars
Keen rates his team as one with
a lot of good boys but few great
ones. "We have no stars on our
team," said Keen. "We're a young
team that has come a long way."
Keen has no plan of action as
of yet for the Conference Meet.
"We're experimenting," he said.
"We've got a lot, of boys and we're
moving them around to see where'
they'll score the most points for
us."
Keen was delighted with Mich-
igan's win over. Michigan State.
He also was pleased with the
crowd which was one of the big-
gest ever to attend a Michigan
wrestling meet.
The Wolverines throughly beat
the Spartans. After losing 'the
opening match, Michigan took the
next six to have a commanding
17-3 lead with two matches to go.
Chris Stowell icedthe meet with
his third pin of the year.
Improving Soph
Michigan scored their most im-
pressive victories in the 130', and
137-lb. classes. Dave Dozeman,
one of Keen's improving sopho-
mores, did everything but pin his
opponent, Okla Johnson. Doze-
man reversed Johnson twice and
scored a three-point predicament
from 10-2 romp.
Wilcox did almost the same with
a 11-6 romp. Wilcox has now won
all three of his matches withhis
other victories being a pin and
an 8-2 rout. Keen is still not con-
vinced. "He's looked really good,
but he still hasn't wrestled any-
body really tough yet."
At 147-lbs.Jim Keen won a 2-1
decision and at 157-lbs., Rick Bay
came through with a 3-2 verdict.
Stowell then put it away for Mich-
igan by pinning Bob Archer at
6:15.
An Oddity
Stowell's pin was one of those
oddities in wrestling. Archer was
on top to_ start the third period.
Stowell in trying to escape man-
euvered him in such a way that
while still having a hold, on the
Michigan g ra p p 1 e r, Archer's
shoulders were pinned to the mat.
In shaking up the line-up, Keen
put Wayne Miller, Michigan's reg-
ular 157-pounder at 177-lbs. His

opponent was one of the Spartan's
best, Alex Valcanoff, who placed
third in the Big Ten last year.
Miller in a great defensive match,
wrestled the Spartan evenly but
lost on referee Bert Waterman's
stalling decision.
Anti-Climax
The heavyweight match, usual-
ly a meet's most exciting, was an
anti-climax Saturday. Michigan's
Jack Barden was confronted with
the Spartan's Homer McClure
who was too heavy to handle.
Barden couldn't get close to the
Spartan beast, let alone pin him.
They both had to settle for a 1-1
tie. Each scored their- points on
escapes.
The large crowd was partly due
to Michigan's annual homecom-
ing. Many of Keen's former
wrestlers returned to campus to
watch the Wolverine grapplers in
action.
With a 7-0 record in Big Ten
competition, the Wolverines head
for Iowa this weekend to wind up
the regular season. Michigan has
now compiled an 8-1 record. The
Wolverines' only loss came from
Penn State, 14-12, in the first
meet of the season.

BIG TEN ROUNDUP:
Hoosier Hopes Dashed
By Wisconsin Shooting

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.1

By The Associated Press
MADISON - Wisconsin stopped
Indiana's bid for a Big Ten basket-
ball title last night by dumping
the Hoosiers, 102-96.
Jack Brens, Wisconsin's 6'8"
junior center, scored 35 points.
Teammate Ken Siebel added 29
and Tom Gwyn 27.
Wisconsin, now 3-6 in the con-
ference, jumped out to a 10-9 lead
after three minutes of play and
was never headed. The Badgers
held a 56-44 lead at the inter-
mission.
Indiana, which had won four
straight conference games, now
has a 7-4 record and occupies
third place behind pace-setting
Illinois and Ohio State.
Wisconsin's victory was due pri-
marily to control of the boards.
The Badgers also showed more
speed in their fast break.
Bradds Again
EVANSTON - Gary Bradds,
Ohio State's All-America candi-
date, scored 13 of his team's last
16 points last night and lifted the
fifth-ranked Buckeyes to a 50-45
victory over Northwestern in one
of the Big Ten's lowest scoring
games of the season.2The 6'8"
senior finished with 25 points,
half his team's total.
Ohio State led 22-17 after a
cold first half for both teams.
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Northwestern, however, kept plug-
ging away and battled its way to
a lead at 36-34. Bradds tied it
with a pair of free throws but the
Wildcats again scooted out ahead
40-36 on two baskets by Rick Lo-
possa.
Bradds cut the margin with a
basket, and Reasbeck finally tied
it at 41-41 with a basket. Bradds
then scored five straight points,
pulling Ohio State well in front.
* * *
Big Step
MINNEAPOLIS-Illinois took a
big step toward at least a tie for
the Big Ten basketball champion-
ship last night, shaking off
Minnesota in the final minute and
a half for an 81-70 victory before
11,226.
The victory kept the sixth-
ranked Illini tied with Ohio State
for the Big Ten lead, both with
9-2 records.
Minnesota dropped to 7-5 going
into games with Indiana Saturday
and the Buckeyes here Monday
night. Ohio State defeated North-
western 50-45.
The final score ,was far from
indicative of the closeness of this
one, Illinois leading only 72-68
with one minute and 27 seconds
left.
The Illini got three cheap
baskets out of a frantic Minnesota
pressing defense in the waning
seconds and padded the margin.
BIG TEN STANDINGS

CHRIS STOWELL
... third pin

Cincinnati Again on Top
Of Weekly AP Cage Poll

097

i11

By The Associated Press
The Cincinnati Bearcats stayed
on top for the 14th straight week
yesterday in The Associated Press
college basketball ratings, which
were almost undisturbed by a sud-
den return to form.
The six leading teams in the
top t4.,i-Cincinnati, Duke, Loyola
of Chicago, Arizona State, Ohio
State and Illinois-remained in
the exact positions they held a
week ago.
Then followed Mississippi State,
Wichita, New York University and
Georgia Tech.
Lone Newcomer
Georgia Tech is the lone new-
comer, moving into- the select

group on a 20-4 record after Au-
burn, ninth last week, bowed to
Kentucky 76-59. The Engineers
scored over Tennessee and Geor-
gia and went into 10th place.
Cincinnati, which had its 37-
game winning streak snapped by
Wichita ten days ago, is not mak-
ing a runaway of the poll as it
threatened to do midway of the
campaign.
The Bearcats, who beat North
Texas State 91-61 and eked out a
decision over Tulsa 55-54. drew
only 30 of the 42 first place votes
cast by a special panel of sports
writers and broadcasters. Ten went
to Duke and the other two to Loy-
ola of Chicago.

50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW:
First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with
a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a
"Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to
rnake loot. Study the examples below; then do your own.
Send them, with your name, address, college and class,
to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning
entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub-
mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a
$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now!

(Based on the hilarious book "The Question Man.")
RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of
humor (up to ). clarity and freshness (up to /). and appropriateness (up
to %), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded
in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and
must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards
every month, October through April. Entries received during each month
will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April
30, 1963. will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American
Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em-
ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and
Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be
notified by mail. contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations.

Ohio State
Illinois
Indiana
Minnesota
MICHIGAN
Iowa
Wisconsin
Northwestern
Michigan state
Purdue

W
9
9
7
7
6
5
5
4
3'
1:

L'
2
2
4
5
s
6
11

Pct.
.818
.818
.636
.583
.545
.455
'455
.364
.273
.083

- _ I

One of the
seven golden keys
to brewing
Budweiser

1. Cincinnati (30) 21
2. Duke (10) 21
3. Loyola (Chi) (2) 23
4. Arizona State 22
5. Ohio State 17
6. Illinois 16
7. Mississippi State 19
8. Wichita 16
9. New York U. 15
10. Georgia Tech 10
Others receiving votes
phabetically: Auburn,

L Pts.
1 396
2 378
.1 307
2 227
3 186
4 168
5 102
7 89
2 68
4 66
listed al-
Bowling

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Green, Bradley, Canishui,"Coora-
do, Colorado State, Davidson,
Kansas State, Kentucky, Memphis
State, Miami, Fla., North Caro-
lina, Providence, St. Joseph's, Pa.,
Seattle, Stanford, Texas Western,
West Virginia.

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