)EFEND TWO TITLES: Trackmen Depart For Penn Relays THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fitzgerald Joins Barden as Titlist hi By DAVE BLOCK Franklin Field in Philadelphia today and tomorrow will host the 68th annual running of the Penn Relays. Michigan, along with some 103 other colleges and 26 high schools, will be competing for 117 assorted individual and relay track titles. The Wolverines are defending' champions in the two and four mile relays; however, Coach Don Canham and the boys expect to encounter considerable opposition in their attempt to retain these crowns.,.,-. Wildcats Tough The Wildcats of Villanova ap- pear to be the most formidable obstacle to Michigan's retention of these titles. This powerful east- ern- team has already captured this year's indoor AAU and IC4A championships, and could very possibly grab up four relay crowns at stake in the Penn meet. This feat has not been accomplished since the Wolverines did it in 1945. ) Michigan is entering a good four mile relay team this year. It fea- tures Charlie Aquino, the Big Ten indoor 1000 yd. champion for two years running and the record holder in this event. G ~3 { 8-1 Net Win Special To The Daily KALAMAZOO - The Michigan tennis squad rolled over Western Michigan yesterday, 8-1. The match was highlighted by Ray Senkowski's 6-2, 6-3 win over the Bronco's Bob Gill in first singles. Senkowski, who was serving well, felt the best match was John Fra- ser's close victory over his Bronco opponent. Fraser was extended to three sets before beating the scrappy competitor. Other single's victories were scored by Brian Flood, Hale Lowe, and Ron Linclau; Bo Barker suf- fering the only loss. Michigan scored victories in all the doubles matches. Senkowski and Fraser's 6-4, 7-5 triumph was, over a pair which had extended the fine Northwestern doubles team to three sets earlier. The matches, played on "hard courts,'' were viewed by a sizable crowd. The netmens' next opponent will be Notre Dame, here on Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. Major League Standings The second member of this team is Des Ryan, a sophomore from Dublin who possesses great potential as a distance runner. The two returning competitors from last year's victorious team are veteran miler Jim Neahusan and Dave Hayes, who has already clipped off a mile in 4:12 in prac- tice this spring. Double on Two-Mile Hayes and Aquino also partici- pate on the two mile relay squad, as do Dorr Casto, a greatly im- proved half-miler, and Ted Kelly, a former Michigan state high school champion who ran an ex- ceptionally fast 1:53.1 indoor half mile this season. Kent Bernard, as the anchor man on the mile relay team, is possibly the greatest asset of the Michigan relay squads. His :47.0 In the last leg of the mile relay during the indoor Big Ten cham- pionships was the country's fast- est quarter mile run on a relay during the season, as the indi- vidual Big Ten 440-yd champion- ship was won with a time of :48.5. Joining Bernard on this team are Carter Reese, a senior who has twice placed in the Big Ten indoor 300-yd. dash during his Michigan career and is considered to be better than ever this year. The third man on the team is Dave Romain, a junior from the West Indies who has shown marked improvement this year as evidenced by his excellent time of :48.7 as leadoff man during the Big Ten mile relay. Hughes Runs :49.4 Rounding out the team is Dan Hughes, a promising sophomore from Columbus, Ohio, who placed fifth in the indoor 600-yd. run, and just last week he sprinted a time of :49.4 as a member of the Wolverine mile relay team in the Ohio Relays. At Philadelphia the Michigan sprint medley team will feature Bernard running the 440 and Reese and Romain running the 220. Romain will be running this distance for the first time since his days of high school competi- tion. Ryan will run the 880 as the anchor man in this event. In other events, Al Ammerman is participating in the high jump and George Puce is entered in both the shot put and the discus. Ernst Soudek is also entered in the discus and this giant from Vienna has already slipped the discus 177'4" this year, a distance which could be good enough to win the Penn meet. Indlans Pose Drake Th reat DES MOINES (')-Texas South- ern has dominated the Drake Re- lays for the past two years but Stanford will offer a strong chal- lenge for team honors in the track and field meet here today and to- morrow. The fleet Texas Southern run- ners won four races and set two records a year ago. They are fa- vored in at least four relays this year. Stanford Coach Payton Jordan also has his sights set on several ready have marks better than Drake titles, and tme Indians al- records in three Drake events. Harry McCalla, who has run an open mile in 4:01.5 this year, heads Stanford's four-mile and university distance medley relay teams. Jordan says his four-mile team of McCalla, Bob Miltz, Harlan Andrews, and Bill Pratt should be able to run the distance in 4:30, which would cut 20 seconds off the Drake standard. Stanford also is a leading con- tender in the mile and two-mile relays. LOOK YOUR BEST FOR SPRING!! Collegiate Styles to Please 4 Barbers Try the U of M BARBERS N. University near Kresge's By The Associated Press SAO PAULO, Brazil - Former Michigan football halfback and Big 'Ten wrestling champion Den- nis Fitzgerald helped the United States to a clean sweep of eight wrestling titles in the Pan Ameri- can Games here last night. Fitzgerald, at welterweight, and former Ann Arbor High wrestler Bill Riddle, at bantamweight, won two of five Yankee gold medals in the sport last night to add to the three brought home Thursday. Senior Jack Barden, Michigan's Big Ten and NCAA titlist, had won the top prize in the light heavyweight division late Thurs- day night by pinning his man. United States swimmers also won all four first places last night, bringing the day's total to' 14 gold medals and 33 through the whole competition. Of 15 gold medals decided yes- terday, the U.S. athletes took all but one. Only the women's tennis singles got away.-. The U.S. also ran its silver medal total to 12 and its bronze collection to 10. No other nation has won more than two gold medals. The U.S. maintained its monop- oly in swimming and set three records in the process. U.S.ath- letes now have won all eight swimming events, and nine of 10 in the water sport, with only men's diving eluding them. Three teen-agers set the swim- ming records. Carl Robie, 17, of Drexel Hill, Pa., won the 200- meter butterfly in 2:11.3. Alice Mary Driscoll of Louisville, also 17, took the 200-meter breast- stroke in 2:56.2 and Terri Stickles of Santa Clara, Calif., 17 next month, won the 100-meter free- style in 1:02.8. The U.S. women's 400-meter medley relay team also won, but failed to snap the record. American swimmers now have broken six records and tied a sev- enth. The other wrestling winners were Joe Israel James of Chicago, heavyweight; Greg Ruth of High- land Falls, N.Y., lightweight; and Andy Fitch, New York, flyweight. Two weighlifting medals were collected by Sid Henry of Dallas, heavyweight, and Bill March of York, Pa., middle heavyweight. The U.S. team captured the men's foil team competition with an undefeated record, with Argen- tina second and Venezuela third. Patricia Galvin of San Francis- co won the gold medal in eques- trian dressage. SFC Lawrence Mosely of Nor- folk, Va., and Capt. Cecil Wallis of Columbus, Ga., tied for first in the rapid fire pistol event, as- suring the U.S. of another gold medal there. The shoot-off will be today. Darlene Hard of Long Beach, Calif., and Carole Caldwell of Santa Monica, Calif., salvaged something from the tennis-where both the men and women Ameri- can entrants were eliminated in the singles-by taking the women's doubles title, 6-1, 7-5, over Maria Ester Bueno and Mary Schwartz of Brazil. Oddly, it was only the third gold medal the U.S. has won in tennis in four Pan American Games. The U.S. mixed doubles team of Miss Hard and Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla., was elim- inated by Miss Bueno and Thomas Koch of Brazil in the semifinals, 7-5, 7-5. About the only other setback for the U.S. yesterday was in women's volleyball, where Brazil whipped the American girls, 12-15, 15-5, 15-10, 15-9. U.S. yachtsmen scored victories JACK BARDEN ... best in West I This Weekend inSports TODAY TRACK-Michigan at Penn Relays, Philadelphia BASEBALL-Michigan at Illinois TOMORROW TRACK-Michigan at Penn Relays, Philadelphia BASEBALL-Michigan at Purdue (2) TENNIS-Michigan vs. Notre Dame, Ferry Field, 2 p.m. TRACK-Michigan Open Meet, Ferry Field, 1 p.m. r Regardless of your preference there is a suit, sportcoat, jacket, slack or Bermuda to your individual liking - in jarge variety and Celtics Take Fifth Straight; Cousy Retires LOS ANGELES UP) - After an outstanding basketball career, Bob Cousy quit a winner. The former Holy Cross star scored 18 points Wednesday night as. the Boston Celtics won their fifth consecutive National Basket- ball Association crown by defeat- ing the Los Angeles Lakers, 112- 109, in the sixth game of the play- offs. "That was the greatest game Cousy played in this series," said: Tom Heinsohn in the jubilant Celtic dressing room. Cousy, playing his final game, sprained his foot in the fourth quarter and was carried to the dressing room. The fans-capacity 15,521-gave him a standing ova- tion. He returned six minutes later, his foot heavily taped, to help stave off a frantic last-minute Laker surge. "How will the Celtics do next year without you?" reporters asked Cousy. "They'll do all right," he replied. "Nobody is indispens- able." The game pointed up the Cel- tics' major strength - their over- all balance. The Lakers guarded Sam Jones tightly and held the high-scoring forward to only five points. But rookie John Havlicek from Ohio State broke through to score 18 points - 11 in a row in the Celts' fast second period. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Baltimore 9 5 .643 Chicago 7 4 .636 Kansas City 9 6 .600 New York 6 5 .545 Boston 6 6 .500 Detroit 7 8 .467 Los Angeles 7 5 .467 Cleveland 5 6 .455 Minnesota 6 9 .400 Washington 4 9f .308 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 7, Detroit 6 Minnesota 3, Washington 0 Baltimore 3, Kansas City 2 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at Washington (n) Minnesota at Detroit (n) Los Angeles at Baltimore (n) Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W IL Pct, St. Louis 106 .625 San Francisco 10 6 .625 Pittsburgh 8 5 .615 s-Los Angeles 9 7 .563 Milwaukee 91 8 .529 Philadelphia 7 7 .504 Chicago 7 9 .437 =-Cincinnati 5 7 .417 New York 6 9 .404 Houston 3 12 .294 . GB 0 1% 2 2% 31 4 GB 1 2 r3 r3 3 3 11 3if U e1, Open Daily 9 to 5:30 Monday ti l 8:30 a-Playing night game on coast. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 3, Chicago 2 San Francisco 8, St. Louis 4 Houston 7, Milwaukee 5' Cincinnati at Los Angeles (inc.) 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It's a pat. ented idea, perfectly designed to keep your tie hanging neat, smooth all day. New colors and patterns that are the last word in luzurv, 1Mt,- f I IIl J " ;