'DAY, MARCH 1, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAYaua MACH1,93 W1 MCua N i at IIV INDOOR TRACK CHAMPIONSHIPS: UnderdogBlueConfront Badgers The Next M ~a 4_________________4_ If ever a Michigan athletic team had a chance for a national rAQE SEVIY mp s? By CHARLIE TOWLE Special To The Daily MADISON - "We're the best team here--only nobody knows it yet." So quoth Michigan's track coach on the eve of the Big Ten Indoor Championships, and by tomorrow afternoon everyone will know just how well Canham qualifies for the swami act. Canham already has quite a few track experts who disagree with him on the eventual winner of this two day meet. Besides the obvious ones like Fran Dittrich of Michi- gan State, who also has come out with an early championship claim for his team, there are some track buffs quite .close to home who don't look for Michigan to be in the winner's circle when the laur- els are being handed out. Foremost among them is Phil Diamond of Ann Arbor, long time Wolverine follower and forecaster. "They could lose by as many as 20 points to Wisconsin," bemoaned Diamond after conypleting his an- nual charting of Big Ten teams. "Iowa is the team I'm most afraid R nenfrew 's Top Scorer Misses Trip By STAN KUKLA Michigan meets North Dakota tonight and tomorrow night in its final two games in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and the Wolverines' chances for vic- tory 'become slimmer by the min- ute. Gary Butler, second leading scorer in the WCHA with 25 points, will not, be making the .western trip. His mother is ill and he returned home to Regina, Sas- katchewan. Dave Newton, who was injured last Friday in the game with Mich- igan State, is expected to return to action, though he will not be at full strength. This again raises Michigan defensive corps to three members Newton, Wayne Kartusch and Don Rodgers. The Wolverines, who now are 3- 13-2 in the WCHA and are 7-13-2 overall, are hard on the trail of their worst season since Al Ren- frew took over as coach in the 1957-58 season. That year the Maize and Blue won only eight games while losing 13. The next year Renfrew's charges ended up with a 8-13-1 record. Sioux, Too? If the Wolverines drop the se- ries to the Sioux, they will end up with a 7-15-2 record, the worst record a Michigan hockey team has had since 1939. That year's hockey team won only five of 20. North Dakota will not slacken its pace this weekend, even though they are already assured of a play-off berth. At stake in the se- ries is first place in the WCHA. The Sioux are only 11 percent- age points behind league-leading Denver and a double win will give North Dakota the number one spot, ahead of the Pioneers, who play a non-league series. Last ' weekend North Dakota came up with a pain of victories over third place Minnesota. Coach Barry Thorndycraft was full of praise for the ailing Sioux. "I am real proud-make that extremely proud-of all the men on our team," he exulted. "Hard work got the job done for us." North Dakota boasts the second best goalie in, the league, Joe Lech. Lech has given up 2.64 goals per game. Dudley Otto, the Sioux al- ternate netminder, has given up 4.7 goals a game. Al McLean is tied for third in the WCHA scor- ing race with 23 points on nine goals and 14 assists. I. .r of because they're strong in the same events we are and could take away points from us," he added. Wisconsin Tops He could be right about Iowa, but Wisconsin, last year's winner, is the team most of the Big Ten coaches are looking out for. The hurdles are Wisconsin's' strongest event. Besides Larry Howard, last year's winner in both hurdle events, the Badgers boast' Gene Dix, who won the highs last week in a triangular meet withI Michigan State and Indiana; Steve! Muller, who has recorded the best time in the highs of any Wisconsin hurdler, :08.6; and Bill Smith, who has done :07.9 in the lows. Michigan will clash most direct- ly with Wisconsin in the shot put, an event which Canham has lab- eled a must if the Wolverines are to have any kind of a shot at Wis- consin. Don Hendrickson showed that he was ready for his Michigan challengers last week at East Lans- ing when he got off a heave of 55'x". His running mate, Elmars Ezerins, has the best toss by a Wisconsin man forthis year, 55' 8%/$" against Minnesota. Minneso- ta, incidentally, is the team most likely to break up a Michigan- Wisconsin slam in the shot, and the man who would do it is Wayne Steffenhagen. Puce Better Michigan's best man in the shot is George Puce. Puce has gotten off a toss of 56'7" this year, far- ther than either of the Wisconsin weight men. Aiding Puce in the shot are Roger Schmitt and Ernst. Soudek. Both men have been in the 53-foot range in recent meets. Canham would probably be quite content with a one-four-five fin- ish in this event. Michigan's captain is the only defending indoor champion on the BOB MORELAND ... after record squad, and the only man who could honestly be called a favorite for his event, the thousand yard run. It is in the other middle dis- tance events that Diamond's warn- ing about Iowa's hurting. Michigan chances come to full meaning. The Hawkeye roster includes one of the nation's prime middle-dis- tance runners in Bill Frazier who last year as a sophomore ran a 1:48.1 half mile and placed sec- ond in the NCAA championships. Canham feels that "Frazier could win any event he entered running on one leg." The other big Iowa man is Gary Fischer who is expected to walk off with the mile run. Besides these two, there is Hawkeye cap- tain Roger Kerr who placed sec- ond in the 1962 Big Ten 660-yard run. Dash Tossup The most tightly contested event on the schedule will be, judging by the entrants times, the 60 yard dash. Favored in this event is Bob Moreland of Michigan State. More- land gets off the starting blocks in a big hurry and seems to ac- celerate for the whole 60 yard dis- tance. He already has run :06.1 this year and if he can repeat this performance tomorrow he will place his name right besides the great Big Ten sprinters of the past: Jesse Owens, of Ohio State and Sam Stoller and Tom Robin- son of Michigan. Right behind Moreland with :06.2 clockings this year are Louis Holland of Wisconsin, Nate Adams of Purdue, and Trenton Jackson of Purdue. Michigan's Ken Burn- ley has also been caught in :06.2 but this was only in a preliminary heat. The two mile is the last event where Michigan has anything more than a long shot for a first place finish. Chris Murray of the Wol- verine squad has the best time run in the Big Ten so far this year, 9:15.3. The men he will have to be watching out for are Allen Carius of Illinois and Don Loker of Wis- consin. Carius has a 9:19.2 and Lo- ker a 9:19.2. Picking the eventual winner of the Indoor Championships can be an upsetting thing. Last year Michigan looked like a shoo in only to be tripped up by Wisconsin 61 to 46V. ,This year, the Wolverines have been gaining momentum as they neared the indoor championships. Meanwhile, Wisconsin has been hurt by injuries to key men: How- ard has a pulled thigh muscle and Smith has been running with a wired up jaw. So.... GIRL SHOE SHINER First in Ann Arbor M-DEN BARBERS "The Best from Head to Toe" Basement of Michigan Pharmacy This Weekend in Sports FRIDAY TRACK-Western Conference Meet at Madison, Wis. HOCKEY-Michigan at North Dakota SATURDAY TRACK-Western Conference Meet at Madison, Wis. HOCKEY-Michigan at North Dakota BASKETBALL-Michigan vs. Illinois, Yost Field House, 2 p.m. SWIMMING-Michigan at Michigan State WRESTLING-Michigan at Iowa Y'.VY ....{..... .."."{{."..w...:. .{ .A.. . o................................:".:.;r::."7..*... ....... ... :r'" : :'.:A................ ..........f:. ., }." . ..fl ":.. .:.": ':f:. :t:':... .. . . . . . . . . ..h.. :: :" V::. : .V.W.V.V.W. ..h. .:h .A. .r.. ... ..*.'M.. A. .*"r.h. ": *.* :t1',"."if ..h.h ¢ Relax in Lax BY MANSFIELD =' .,r, R\'Vs :9ti ~1: i : J. 1} 1 S iYl ".L * nti f i Y :":1 1.th : : !:!1 1 :L : ti }TT'i .'Ji } ."i';: .} ; :": } k:;: ,v, : {: % %:r ;'" :":;: :i Slip into a pair of these cushion-soled wispy-weight wonders .. notice the "lift" the lightness gives you . . . notice how they hug your feet comfort. Great for' all around with a sure-footed feeling of 'loafun' ! Come try a. pair CAMPUS BOOTERY 304 South State Street OPEN MON. EVE. TILL 8:30 .f'f::. ,. ..... ......,*............ f Scores " , : ~ f,: . ' ,' ;-.id, 9 ;ytRN 3 t NHL Boston 5, Detroit 3 New York 6, Chicago 1 NBA Syracuse 132, New York 124 Detroit 112, Chicago 104 COLLEGE CAGE No. Carolina 93, So. Carolina 76 Bradley 52, Drake 51 Duke 89, Virginia 70 Furman 57, George Washington 54 Wake Forest 80, Maryland 41 West Virginia 75, Richmond 46 Central Michigan 107, Hilsdale 36 North Carolina State 79, Clemson 78 ADVERTISEMENT JOBS IN EUROPE Grand Duchy of Luxembourg Mar. 1, 1963-Would you like to work at a Swiss resort, a Norwe- gian farm, a German factory, a construction site in Spain, or a summer camp in France? Thou- sands of paying summer jobs (some offering $190 monthly) are available in Europe to U. S. Atu- dents. $1050 Sale on all on g-sleevec Sportshirts or dress shirts-your choice Any three shirts in stock for only '1 .~' ''ROW 0 dd* .fxs"':+4.,'' ' " :, £ i. .:s'":% 0$. fy " .fit / .f; I Al I ....... .. .