''Y; i36 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 7. 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RAGE 'rack Battle Stalemated) A LONG SEASON: Michigan in Cellar in WCHA .4 By The Associated Press NEW YORK - The Amateur Athletic Union and the rival U.S. Irack and Field Federation con- tinued to swap sharp words yes- terday in their battlesover meet sanctions, but neither side appar- ently was willing to penalize the athletes. No one seemed ready to incur the wrath of Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, who, in arbitrating the AAU-NCAA peace three weeks ago, stipulated firmly that the athletes should not be permitted to suffer as a result of the con- was a directive from Presi- ohn F. Kennedy himself, thur told t h e warring Davis, the former Army back- field football star of the 1940's, declined to say whether he was accepting ,both USTFF and AAU sanction, the crux of the big bat-, tle between the sports governing bodies. William Russell, president of the USTFF, acknowledged that he' had asked the Los Angeles spon- sors to approve USTFF as well as AAU sanctions. Col. Donald Hull, executive di- rector of the AAU, warned that if the sponsors did; the AAU sanc- tion would be withdrawn, thus jeopardizing t h e international amateur standing of every athlete competing. Superfluous "The action of the USTFF in announcing its approval of the already sanctioned AAU open meets is entirely unnecessary," Hull said in a formal statement from New York. "This move ap- parently is another smoke screen, but I believe the sports public knows clearly that the AAU is the governing body of track and field in the United States and has been for 75 years." From his home in Inglewood, Calif., Russell said his request for joint, sponsorship in this and other meets is in accordance with the MacArthur agreement. Two to Tango "Under the plan, two agencies were recognized to administer track and field," Russell said, "the federation for student athletes and the AAU for non-student athletes. "Wetfeel it is our prerogative to sanction meets to which stu- dents are invited. It also, of course, is the AAU's right to sanc- tion the participation of non-stu- dent athletes." Not Equal The AAU says it is all right for the USTFF to approve the par- ticipation of its athletes but it cannot get equal sanctioning rights with the AAU. The Inter- national Athletic Amateur Federa- tion, the AAU says, recognizes only one sanctioning agent - in this case, the AAU. The Big Six, formally known as the Athletic Association of Western Universities, had barred its athletes from meets not hav- ing USTFF sanction. However, Tom Hamilton, director of the conference, Tuesday gave member universities the green light. By STAN KUKLA "It's going to be a very long season," sighed a glum hockey Coach Al Renfrew, looking back on a long string of defeats, dating back to a 5-4 win over Denver on Dec. 14. Since that win, the Wolverines have dropped' three to Denver, two to Michigan Tech and Colo- rado College, and one to Minne- sota. They also lost their first two games to Michigan State and tied Minnesota. Michigan is now 1-10-1 in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. This past weekend Michigan lost a Friday-Saturday series to Den- ver 6-3 and 8-3, and then drop- ped a Monday-Tuesday series to Colorado College by 8-4 and 4-2 scores. The Wolverines meet the Gophers of Minnesota this week- end in their next to last home series of the season. "We're shooting the puck all right," said Renfrew, urging him- self to bring up memories that he would rather forget, "but we just can't put the puck in the net. 5 For 55 "Against Colorado on Monday we had 55 shots on net, to their Given OK Despite a dispute over dual sanctions in the Los Angeles Times indoor meet Saturday, col- lege athletes of the Pacific Coast's Big Six Conference have been given an okay to compete. "I have a complete understand- ing with both parties," said the meet director, Glenn Davis in Los Angeles. "Everyone is in agree- ment and there's no problem. The one thing each side is trying to do is allow athletes to participate and this is what's being done." 38. Yet they scored eight and we only scored five." In their league games, the Wol- verines have 371 shots on goal but have only dented the crease 37 times-or one goal for every ten shots on net. In contrast, North Dakota, who is leading the league with a 6-1-1 record, has scored 'once in every seven shots. One bright note on the other- wise dull road trip was the fact that Michigan captain Larry Bab- cock finally scored a goal. In fact, he scored two of them in the 8-5 defeat against Colorado College. This was a direct result of a line change made by Renfrew and the law of averages catching up with Babcock. Line Change Renfrew moved Babcock to the first line, where he was center between Gordon Wilkie and Gary Butler. Ron Coristine was moved down to the second line with Tom Pendlebury and Jack Cole. Play- ing the third line is George For- rest, Dave Butts and John Mc- Gonigal, the only real star for Michigan this season. Adding to Renfrew's woes was the loss of a promising sopho- more, Roger Galipeau, through eligibility. This reduced the rear- guard corps to four-seniorrDon Rodgers, juniors Wayne Kartusch and" Ross Morrison, and inexper- ienced sophomore Dave Newton. The WCHA standings are: North Dakota 6 1 1 Denver 8 4 0 Michigan Tech 6 4 2 Minnesota 6 4 2 Colorado College 5 5 0 Michigan State 3 '7 0 Michigan 1 10 1 Pet. .813 .667 .583 .583 .500 .300 .125 assists. George Hill, Michigan Tech sophomore sensation, and Al McLean of North Dakota are tied for second with 17 points apiece. Hill has nine goals and eight assists while McLean has six goals and 11 helpers. SWARTHMORE INTERCOLLEGIATE CONFERENCE ON DEMOCRACY AND DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA -- FEBRUARY 15, 16, 17, 1963 Swarthmore College - Swartmore, Pennsylvania PETITIONS AVAILABLE FOR FINANCIAL BACKING at the S.G.C. OFFICE Petitions due NOON, FRIDAY, FEB. 8th Cole Hits Stride; Hopes To Down Illini , . g INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 1510 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN RUSH MEMO SIGN-UP UNION AND DIAG 2-5 P.M. WEEK DAYS thru next Monday {OPENHOUSES By TOM ROWLAND Michigan basketball c a p t a I Tom Cole sat out practice Tues- day with blisters picked up the night before when the Wolver- ines dropped an 81-18 game to Wisconsin, philosophizing thusly: "What's really tough is getting. outrebounded like that (55-46). Beaten by nine' under those boards -that really hurts. And we took 94 shots. Any team that shoots that often should win it." As for Michigan in the Big Ten: "About all we can do now is pray. You've got to be realistic. This league is just too tough to get beaten three games and still come out one top. "It looks like it's going to be Illinois-down there they don't play for second place. It'll take a miracle to beat them three times." Cole grinned and added: "We'll do it once." (Michigan only plays Illinois once.) "I really think we're going to beat them." Well, if experience is any pre- requisite for crystal ball gazing, he may be right. Cole is the old veteran in the Wolverine camp this season, his third as a Mich- igan starter. The 6'7" captain started off as a center in his sophI debut and averaged 12.1 points a game while leading the Wolverines in rebounds with 223 in 24 games. Again! He moved over to forward to make way for John Harris last season-and again picked off 223 rebounds in 24 games. Add on to that also a team-leading 15 digits a game and Michigan's hottest man from the charity line. Big Tom got off to a shaky start this winter when he sank a total of seven points in the first two games (shooting at 23 per cent),. but if you forget the Evansville game (Cole's probably trying to) it was a rapid return to the old point-making form. Against Evansville, Cole layed a goose egg at both the foul line and from the court-but against Butler he swished 21, and up in East Lansing the Blue head man tossed: in 23. The Michigan captain hasn't an explanation for the cold start. "It was just a strange thing," quoth he, grinning. "After the beginning of the season I did shoot a little more." Winner Against Northwestern it was Cole who picked up a loose ball beneath the basket and scored the bucket that squeaked Michigan past the Wildcats. Fouled in the process, he then stepped to the free throw line and put the Wol- verines out of range. It wasn't the first time that Cole has had the game riding on his shoulders. Last year his free throw with one second remaining beat Iowa, 56-55. Says Tom: "I'd rather shoot under pressure- I can concentrate better that way." Looking back over his cage ca- reer at Michigan, Cole picks last Saturday's Michigan State game' as the most exciting to play in. "Of course, it's fresh on my mind, but, golly, we were so far behind. Behind by three with 16 seconds to play-you don't win many like that." Miles, Tom? Cole picked up a bad MSU pass and shot the ball to Doug Herner for the winning two points. "It all happened so fast - but I'll never forget: when I picked up that ball it seemed like Doug was miles away. I was worried that I might not be able to throw it that far. Then the next thing I knew I was under the boards with (Bill) Buntin waiting for the rebound." Talking a b o u t the excess roughness in that game: "It was rough-but you get used to it. Actually, I think that the Wis- consin game was rougher." Cole will be back on the court with repaired blisters to face In- diana Saturday.,afternoon, a vital cog in that "terrific rebounding combination" that bothered MSU coach Forddy Anderson last week and that Michigan is counting on -to beat Illinois. Before meeting the Illini, Cole will be able to sharpen his shoot- ing against Ohio State on-.Feb. 16. Then he will travel to Northwest- ern and Purdue before returning home to play Iowa. Then comes the big game with Illinois. Bill Staub, a is leading the points on ten Denver forward, WCHA with 18 goals and eight Buntin Leads Blue Scoring In field goal percentage Doug Herner leads the team with a .484 mark, followed by Tom Cole at .427, Bill Buntin at .423, and John Oosterbaan at .420. George Pomey at .415, Bob Cantrell at .388, John Harris at .373, and Larry Tregon- ing at .336 bring up the rear. .G FrG FT RB Ave. Cole, f 16 67-157 48-63 123 11.3 Harris, f-c 16 60-161 35-51 142 9.7 untin, e 16130-307 73-107 253 20.8 Cantrel 15 79-199 23-46 54 12.1 Herner, g 16 44-91 34-44 31 7.6 Pomey, g 16 22-53 10-23 37 3.4 Oosterbaan, f 14 34-81 10-18 46 5.6 Tregoning, f 16 42-125 7-18 90 5.7 Greenwold, c 5 1-3 0-0 1 0.4 Jackson, g 5 1-2 1-3 1 0.6 Ludwig, g 5 1-7 0-0 3 0.4 Adams, g 3 0-2 0-0 0 0.0 H1ldreth, g 1 1-3 1-2 2 3.0 Petrick, g 1 0-1 0-0 1 0.0 Michigan 16 482-1192 242-365 873 75.4 Opponents 16 446-1085 223-341695 69.7 I z 2-5 PM. 7-10 P.M. SUN. 7-10 P.M. MON; TUES. -I ! RUSH CONTINUES THRU THURSDAY; FEB. 21 Don't wait until the last day -Daily-Bruce Taylor ANOTHER SHOT-Michigan's Tom Cole (31) Just eludes the attempted block of Wisconsin's Ken Seibel to send another shot winging toward the basket in last Monday's 81-78 loss to the Badgers. Cole, who scored 13 points in the game, feels that he is Just now entering his stride. ~1r two hA;sr. . T };: h.'vh .. 1;?\ k":", r:+\ \ ::' } } ". h f.: " . }l . ..ti:::'}:{.. }x.S.,. . ::}: .\ rt . : l.: } ; *.*:: *... h}:.S'..-.....-.'....}.. . . . .:., . .,i: }: " \.. . .}'- BEYOND THE PLANE OF THE ECLIPTIC... Whether in the forefront of space exploration or In bionics research, Lockheed Missiles & Space Company's almost limitless fields of endeavor offer a challenging choice to graduate engineers and scientists. 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