THE MICUHAN D AILY CATTT7R.11AV 'M'd'RC#R ?t& 1tS&Q . . r.. S4Ssaa c A ''TTT jIT9 uim]UA3 I, J.vRi~b~l1 Ol p U, 1 a M' Gymnasts Lead in Nationals WOLVERINES IN THIRD PLACE: Bartsch Cops 200-yd. Backstroke Title By MIKE BLOCK Special To The Daily PITTSBURGH-paced by senior captain Gil Larose, Michigan's gymnasts took the lead in the NCAA championships here yester- day. With the all-around as the only completed event, Michigan had 21 points to 15 for leading challenger Southern Illinois. The other scor- ers were Penn State with seven, Southern California with five, Ne- braska with four, Iowa with three, and Washington with one. Larose was crowned new all- around champ with 559 points.. Fred Orlofsky of SIU was runner- up with 535. Two other Wolverines scored in the all-around, Arnold Lascari with 531.5, for third place, and Jim Hynds with 505.5 for ninth. The Wolverines qualified 16 men fo rthe finals today, more than any other squad. Southern Illinois was second with 13, and no other team had more than six. Michigan placed three men in each bar event and tumbling, two in the floor exercise and Tram- poline, and one in the longhorse and sidehorse. The only event in which they failed to place a man was the still rings, which was also the higest scoring event. In piling up his all-round vic- tory Larose placed in five events, coming in third in the parallel bars preliminary, second in floor ex and high bar, third in the longhorse, and fifth in the side- horse. On the P-bars, he upset teammate Lascari, 97.5-97. All of these scores, however, will be averaged with those in tonight's finals to get the final results. Besides Larose, Michigan had a leader going into the finals in the person of Trampolinist Gary Erwin. Erwin scored a 95.5, far ahead of teammate Fred Sanders and Ohio State's Iam Jarrett, who tied for second with 87. Lascari qualified in just two events, coming in with a second in parallel bars and a tie for third in the high bar. He just missed placing in the sidehorse and rings. Michigan showed surprising strength in the floor ex, by virtue of Larose's runnerup tie with SIU's Rusty Mitchell, and Mike Hender- son's fourth place showing just half a point behind. Gains Finals Besides his strong performance in the all-around, Hynds also gain- ed the finals with a sixth on the p-bars and an eighth on the high bar. Possibly Michigan's biggest surprise of the day was Johnny Hamilton's placing in the tumbling finals. Hamilton, who didn't place in his specialty, the Tramp, placed ahead of tumbling regulars Phil Bolton and Henderson. Their rankings were seventh, eighth, and tenth, respectively. The final standings for the al- around were: Larose with 559, Or- lofsky with 535, Lascari with 531.5, Tom Seward of Penn State with 531.25, Mitchell with 531, Terry Hale of USC with 513, Nebraska's BIG TEN CHAMPS: $ Netmen After Fifth Straight By TOM ROWLAND Michigan's netmen are gunning for their fifth straight Big Ten championship this spring and de- spite the loss of three key veterans from last year's 8-2 squad will still be talent-stocked for 1963. Since 1955 Coach Bill Murphy's charges have missed out on only one conference crown, that to Iowa back in 1958. Last year the Wolverines took the title in de- cisive fashion, edging by challeng- ing Northwestern by ten. points and crowning three singles cham- pions and two more doubles titlists. Two of those individual medal- ists-Gerry Dubie and Jim Ten- ney-plus Tom Beach, who team- ed up with soph Ron Linclau to cop the third doubles crown, will be missing via graduation this time around, and Murphy is go- ing to have to count heavily on newcomers to fill the vacancies at third, fourth, and fifth singles. Number One Ray Senkowski, the big name in Michigan tennis for the past two seasons, is on hand to re- sume play at the number one slot after a runner-up Big Ten finish last year. Senkowski walked off with the conference first singles title as a sophomore but was de- throned last spring in decisive 6-1, 6-4 fashion by Northwestern's Davis Cup star Marty Riessen. Riessen, who only dropped two sets during the entire 1962 dual meet schedule, went on to a second place finish in the NCAA tourna- ment, nosed out by Mexican Davis Cup star Rafael Osuna in the finals. The Wildcat star tops a Northwestern team that "appears headed for what could be one of its greatest seasons" according to reports from the NW campus. In fact, a quick pre-season sur- vey of the Big Ten season shows that this spring could well be a repeat of a year ago-a two-team battle for all the marbles. And Wolverine tennis fans will get a glimpse of the dress rehearsal for the Big Ten meet when Michigan entertains Northwestern in Ann Arbor for a dual meet on May 11. Wolverine captain Harry Fau- quier, a scrappy little hustler who won the conference second singles last season as a sophomore, will Exhibition Baseball Detroit 8, New York (N) 5 Cleveland 2, Los Angeles (A) 1 Washington 3, Minnesota 2 Chicago (A) 2-7, Milwaukee 4-5 Boston 10, San Francisco 7 St. Louis 3, New York (A) 2 Los Angeles (N) 12, Kansas City 1 Philadelphia 8, Cincinnati 5 Baltimore 5, Pittsburgh 2 NBA PLAYOFFS Boston 125, Cincinnati 102 and Brian Flood, have promise for the vacated positions. Winning Coach It's the beginning of Murphy's fifteenth year as tennis coach at Michigan, and in that time his teams have picked up seven Big Ten and one NCAA crown along with a 132-23 dual meetrecord. In last year's action the Wol- verines lost two early non-confer- ence meets to Miami and followed with eight straight victories-the closest any team came to the de- fending champs was Michigan's 6-4 win over Purdue. The Wolverines are off for a rugged week at Coral Gables, Fla., during spring vacation, where they'll face Miami twice followed by a meethwith North Carolina. The first home meet is April 15 against Wisconsin at the varsity courts. Meet time will be 1:30 p.m. The Badger meet is one of only four home contests this spring, the other being Purdue (April 22), Notre Dame (April 27), and North- western. The Big Ten meet will be held on the Wildcat courts in Evanston on May 16, 17 and 18. Frosh Golfers There will be a meeting this Monday afternoon at 4:30 in the basement of the athletic building for all those interested in freshman golf. Dennis Albers with 512.5, Glenn Galis of Iowa with 510.5,Hynds with 505.5, and Kiell Hansen of Washington with 502.25. The remaining leaders going in- to the final rounds were Jack Lehner of Pitt in the longhorse, Seward in the floor ex, Russ Mills of Yale in the sidehorse, Gary Buckner of Southern Cal in the high bar, Illinois' Hal Holmes in tumbling, and Michigan State's Dale Cooper on the rings. Holmes and Cooper had the highest scores of the night, each turning in a 98. Arrest Puts Roland Out COLUMBIA, Mo. (JP) - The football career of Johnny Roland, star sophomore halfback at the University of Missouri, was inter- rupted yesterday with a suspension from classes until next January. The action came as the climax of his arrest after the theft of two tires and wheels, one set of which was on Roland's car at the time. He was charged with ma- licious mischief, to which he pleaded guilty and was fined $50 in Municipal Court. Roland, the 19-year-old Negro from Corpus Christi who made the all-Big Eight Conference team last fall after leading the league in scoring, did not show up when the Tigers began spring practice last week. Then Thursday he appeared before the committee on student conduct, a body composed of fac- ulty members: The committee does not make public its decisions, but Roland was informed yesterday of his suspension. TV To Show NCAA Tapes Michigan wrestling fans will have their last opportunity to see this year's Big Ten champions in action today when ABC's Wide World of Sports will show video tapes of last weekend's NCAA wrestling championships f r o m Kent, Ohio. The program can be seen locally on channel 7 starting at 5 p.m. Michigan finished third in the meet behind Oklahoma and Okla- homa State, picking up 36 points to the leaders' 48 and 45. Wolver- ine veteran Jack Barden picked up Michigan's only individual medal with a victory over Wayne Baughman in the finals of the 191-lb. division. Special To The Daily RALEIGH, N.C. - Ed Bartsch became only the third swimmer in history to break the 1:58.0 barrier in the 200-yd, backstroke in win- ning the NCAA championship for that event here last night as Mich- igan moved into third place in the team standings. Bartsch passed Princeton's Jed Graef on the last turn and won the race going away by .6 seconds. T h e Philadelphia sophomore's splits for the two 100 yards were 58.0 and 59.8. Graef started out with a 56 second first hundred yards but began to fade near the end. At the end of the second day of events, with only seven events to finish today, Michigan is in third place with 27 points. Yale with 52 points and Southern California with 47 points are way ahead of the field. Right behind the Wol- verines are Ohio State (24 points), Minnesota (23 points), and Stan- ford (17 points). Two other outstanding perform- ances by Wolverine swimmers made it possible for Michigan to climb into third place. Jeff Moore took a third place in the 200-yd. butterfly and Geza Bodolay also Third Place 200-YD.hBUTTERFLY - 1, Dick McDonolgh, Villanova, 1:57.3. 2, Mike Mealiffe, Southern California, 1:59.0. 3, Jeff Moore, Michigan, 2:00.2. 4, Nate Clark, Ohio State, 2:00.6. 5, George Spear, Texas, 2:00.8. 6, Gerald Livingston, Florida, 2:02.0. meet record. Old record of 1:57.8 set by Mike Troy, Indiana, 1961. Ties NCAA and American records, 1:57.3, set by Troy, Feb. 17, 1961. 200-YD. BACKSTROKE -- 1, Ed Bartsch, Michigan, 1:57.8. 2, Jed Graef, Princeton, 1:58.4. 3, Bob Ben- net, Southern California, 1:58.8. 4, Roger Goettsche, Yale, 2:00.2. 5, Louis Schaefer, Ohio State, 2:00.5. 6, Vernon Schimmel, Southern Methodist, 2:03.0. 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE - 1, Martin Hull; Stanford, 2:17.0. 2, John Pringle, Harvard, .2:17.8. 3, Geza Bodolay, Michigan, 2:18.1. 4, Jack Schitz, Southern Illinois, 2:18.3. 5, Virgil Luken, Minnesota, 2:18.7. 6, John Rowe, Southern Methodist, 2:19.1. 200-YD. FREESTYLE- 1, Steve Clark, Yale, 1:46.3. 2, David Lyons, Yale, 1:46.5. 3, Ed Townsend, Yale, 1:46.8. 4, Tie between Jon Kon- rads,Southern California, and Per Ola Lindberg, Southern California, 1:47.0. 6, Charles Mussman, Yale, 1:46.4. Meet and NCAA record. Old record of 1:46.6 setnby Clark in qualifying. New event. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY- 1, Marty Mull, Ohio State, 2:01.6. 2, Ed Townsend, Yale, 2:01.9. 3, John Pringle, Harvard, 2:02.6. 4, Steve Schultz, Utah, 2:04.5. 5, John House, Southern California, 3:04.8. 6, Alls- dair Barnetson, Southern Metho- dist, 2:07.5. Meet and NCAA record. Old record of 2:02.3 set by Mull in 1962. took a third in the 200-yd. breast- stroke. Good Time Moore's time was 2:00.2 in the finals, only .2 of a second off his best time of his career. American record-holder Walt Richardson of Minnesota was disqualified in the preliminaries when he took an illegal stroke. Richardson forgot how many laps he had swum at the 150-yard mark and rolled over on his right side to see if the other swimmers Swi*M --Club Draws Blank InNAAU's Special To The Daily CLEVELAND-The Ann Arbor Swim Club made a disappointing showing here last night as none of the team members placed in the top six finishers. Diver Micki King was sixth in the preliminaries of the one-meter diving but dropped out of. the top six in the finals. Her point total in the preliminaries was only six points from fourth place. The best previous showing by the AASC was Thursday after- noon when the 400-yd. freestyle relay team of Cynthia Osgood, Pam Swart, Peggi Wirth and Suzy Thrasher, placed eighth in the preliminaries. Their time of 3:54.7 was six seconds under the Mich- igan record and was only 1.6 sec- onds from qualifying for the finals. Ann Arbor's medley relay team was 16th in the preliminaries on Thursday. Donna De Varona of the Santa Clara Swim Club set a new na- tional record in the 400-yd. in- dividual medley by upsetting 'form- er last season's champion, Sharon Finnermanfl Her time of 4:47.3 was five seconds under Miss Fin- nerman's previous record. EXPERT and FAST REPAIRS on HI-F 1 PHONOGRAPHS (pick-up and delivery) HI-FI STUDIO 1327 S. Univ. Ph. NO 8-7942 were continuing or if he had reached the 200 end of the race. After seeing that this was not the end of the race, he took a free- style stroke in getting back into position and was disqualified. Bodolay came from behind in the last 50 yards to nip three swimmers in fourth, fifth and sixth place by one second. Among the breaststrokers he beat was de- fending NCAA champion Virgil Luken of Minnesota who finished fifth. Finishing sixth was John Rowe of Southern Methodist who swam a race five seconds slower than his season best. Yale scored a 1-2-3-6 smash in the 200-yd. freestyle and pulled past Southern California in what has become their two-way battle to the championship. Records Smashed Two meet records were better- ed, a listed American mark broken and another NCAA and American record tied in yesterday's five events. Ohio State's sarty Mull won the 200-yd. individual medley in 2:1.6; breaking his own meet and NCAA record of 2:02.3 set last year. The time also bettered the listed American mark of 2:01.7 recorded by Indiana's Ted Stickles in 1961. The other meet record went to Villanova's Dick McDonough in the 200-yd. butterfly.^McDonough, leading all the way, swam the distance in 1:57.3, breaking the meet record of 1:57.8 formerly held by Indiana's Mike Troy, and equaling Troy's approved NCAA and American records. Jumps Mark J o h n Henderson, promising football end, won the high jump at the Fraternity intra-mural track meet Thursday night with an amazing leap of 6' 33 4. This Jump would have placed Henderson in the top five in both the indoor and outdoor Big Ten meets last season. Other spectacu- lar performances were turned in by Steve Smith, freshman football and basketball standout, in the shot put (46') and by Art Schueler (22'6") and Bill Laskey (22'5", football end, in the broad jump. Lambda Chi Alpha was first with 201/ points. Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Epsilon tied for second with 18 points. Delta Tau Delta was fourth with 151/2 points. U- -- - .5740C CINEMA GUILD pejenL Tonight and Tomorrow at and 9 EISENSTEIN'S THE RUSSIAN SILENT CLASSIC, "EXUBERANTLY YOUTHFUL AND ENORMOUSLY CREATIVE," -Arthur Knight, Liveliest Art Prize Winner, Paris, 1925 A Must for Its Cinematic Technique and Stirring Story! ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 Cents RAY SENKOWSKI ... number one probably team with Senkowski in the number one doubles while de- fending his singles title. Unde- feated in the number two singles slot, Fauquier played with Senk- owski to a runners-up medal in the Big Ten meet a year ago- nipped out by Riessen and Jim Ericson in a 4-6, 15-13, 11-9 thriller. Linclau, the remaining veteran returnee, started slowly as a soph- omore in 1962, gathered speed as the season progressed and finished with a healthy 5-3 mark. But it was at the Big Ten meet at Min- neapolis that the lanky blond real- ly hit stride-fighting his way to the finals in sixth singles where he fell to Ken Paulson, 9-7, 7-5. Looking toward the key to Wol- verine title hopes this year, soph- omores Hal Lowe of Decatur, Ill., and Bo Barker of Dayton, Ohio, along with Canadians John Fraser LAST CHANCE for a night of fun and entertainment IS. A. Monte Carlo B'all c TONIGHT 9-1:30 in the League Ballroom Tickets $2.75 at the International Center Gambling, International Entertainment &oe e o-o~~~c=o o . =~o c One of the seven golden keys to brewing Budweiser 36 DAYS THAT CHANGED THE PERFORMANCE PICTURE IN AMERICA BUSHED? STAY AWAKE TAKE "\ ' F f ice, . :; «<~ " ,3' / i ^ e rte / / %// /jJ MMMwr^'^ \ : 1 I IH I ..Rim . ,._ In 36 days, starting with the Monte Carlo in January of this year, our products have p series of competition wins that have made p ance history. Here's what has happened: Three V-8 Falcon Sprints were entered Monte Carlo Rallye. This is not a race. It is of a car's total capabilities. We did it (nervou the experience and with practically no sense of tation, because we had not entered an event 1 before. One Sprint ended the experiment in a bank. But the others finished 1-2 in their cla such authority that they moved the good, gre don Times to say: "The Falcons are part of a and performance plan that will shake up mot every country in the world." That was Numb Number Two was a double win in the P Performance Trials. Fords captured Class 1 an 2 (for high performance and large V-8's). B these trials were for over-all points rolled economy, acceleration and braking tests. Then, at Riverside in California, in America 1nnrrrmi0nnn a s nj .n-ax a+ +nn+ s .r " n Rallye entered ... a truly remarkable record considering osted a that over 50% of all cars entered failed to finish. erform- Why do we keep such an interested eye on compe- titions such as these? Is speed important to us? in the Frankly, no. The speed capabilities of the leading a trial American cars are now grouped so closely together sly) for that the differences have no real meaning. To us, who expee- are building cars, success in this kind of competition ike this means just one thing: the car is strong. This kind of a snow- performance capability means that the car is so well ss with built that it can stand up to normal driving-the ey Lon- kind of day-in, day-out demands you put your own power car through-for thousands of miles longer than less oring in capable cars. er One. In tests like the Daytona 500 and Riverside, we ure Oil find out in an afternoon what might take us 100,000 d Class test-track miles to discover. We learn how to build oth of superior strength into suspension systems, steering up in systems, drive train, body, tires. Anyone can build a fast car. What we're interested in is the concept of 's nly "total" performance. a ,.An wp pli;p in +his kind nf tntal nerformance