THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, Y 21, SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATION SCHEDULE COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS HORACE H. RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Michigan Takes Tennis, Track Titles Robinson, Leps Score Double ins As Cindermen Take 22nd Title Easily I (Continued from Page 1) Netters Outpoint MSU; Sekosk Win Sige I SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SCHOOL OF NURSING SCHOOL OF MUSIC June 2 to June 13, 1961 For courses having both lectures and recitations, the "Time of Clash' is the time of the first lecture period of the week. For courses having reci- tation only, the "Time of Giass" is the time of the first recitation period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. Classes beginning on the half hour will be scheduled at the preceding hour. Degree:candidates having a scheduled examination on June 10, 12, 13 will be given an examination at an earlier date. The following schedule designates an evening time for each such examination. The instructor may arrange with the student for an alternate time, with notice to the sched- uling committee. Evening Schedule for Degree Candidates Regular Exam Time Special Period Regular Exam Time Special Period Mon., June 12 9-12 AM Fri., June 2 7-10 PM Tues., June 13 2-5 PM Tues., June 6 7-10 PM Mon., June 12 2-5 PM Sat., June 3 7-10 PM Sat., June 10 9-12 AM Wed., June 7 7-10 PM Tues., June 13 9-12 AM Mon., June 5 7-10 PM Sat., June 10 9-12 AM Thurs., June 8 7-10 PM just a question of having every- thing (condition-wise) right so that they could prove it." McRae's time broke the Con- ference record of :14.0, but was disallowed because of an eight mile-per-hour following wind. "McRae lost the record because of a mistake," complained Can- ham. "They don't have an average wind guage here. They just mea- sure it for the gusts and not for the whole afternoon." Canham didn't think he could do anything to rectify it, but is giving McRae credit for the Michi- gan Varsity record. The old one .was :14.0 set by Bob Osgood, who also shares the Conference record with Willie May of Indiana and Illinois' Williard Thompson. Cephas' winning time in the lows was allowed because the wind was light enough when he ran. The clocking for his first Big Ten win broke the :23.5 mark by two good ones, Jack Keller and Glenn Davis of Ohio State. In the 100, Miles was quick off the blocks but Robinson dug hard, caught him at the half-way point, and won by a yard and a half. Ce- phas ws fifth but John Gceeg finished out of the money in the eight man final. Each student should receive notification from his instructor as to the time and place of his examination. REGULAR SCHEDULE Time of Class MONDAY at at at at at at at at at 8 9' 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 Exam Code A B C D Q E F> G R Fri., Sat. Mon., Tues., Sat. Wed.,, Thur.,, Thur. ''Mon., June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June 2 3 5 6 10 7 8 8 12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 at at at. at TUESDAY at; at. at at at *Classes beginning on the halfI hour 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 hour H I J K S M N P T will Time of Examination Fri., Fri., Sat., Mon., Sat., Tues., Wed., Fri., Mon., 9 2 3 5 10 9-12 2-5 2- 5 2- 5 S 2- 5 3 2- 5 ' 2- 5 3 2- 5 Z 2-5 preceding TOM ROBINSON **'100, 220 champ .in in 660-1. Graham, (Ind), 2. Best, (NW), 3. Hammond, (111), 4. Crea- gan, (Wis), 5. Maloney, (OSU). T- 1:19.2 (new record; first time event run). MILE-1. LEPS, (M), 2. Tucker (Ia), 3. MARTIN, (M), 4. Young (MSU), 5. Davis, (OSU). T-4:11.1. 440-1. Fischer, (Minn), 2. Gilbert, (NW), 3. Golem, (NW), 4. Laconi, (Ind), 5. Kerr, Ia). T-:47.4. 100-1. ROBINSON, (M), 2. Miles, (Ind), 3. Jackson, (Ind), 4. Ford, (MSU), 5. CEPHAS, (M). T-:09.5. SHOT PUT-1. Brown, (I11); 55'- U 2. LOCKE, (M), 5317". 3. Self- ert, (Ind), 53Y'4". 4. Ezerins, (Wis), 50'9". 5. Steffenhagen, (Minn), 49'- 11". 120-HIGH HURDLES-1. McRAE, (M), 2. Odegard, (Minn), 3. Spivey, (Ind), 4. LeCrone, (111), 5. Medcalf, (NW). T-:13.7 (betters record of 14 but not allowed because of eight mile per hour favoring wind). HIGH JUMP-1. Sheppard, (Ind), 6'6". 2. LeCrone, (Ill), 6-5. 3. (tie) CEPHAS, (M), and Paige, (OSU), I" a Breeze 6'2". 4. (tie) Frohwein (Ia), and GERICH, (M), 6'. 880-i. LEPS, (M), 2. Fischer (1a), 3. MARTIN, (M), 4. AQUINO, (M), 5. Trimble (Ia). T-1:54.7. 220-1. ROBINSON, (M), 2. Ford, (MSU), 3.Gilbert, (NW), 4. GREGG, (M), 5. Hyde, (Ia). T-:21.2. 220 LOW HURDLES-1. CEPHAS, (M), 2. Odegard, (Minn), 3. Spivey, (Ind), 4. Gardner, (Ia), 5. LeCrone, (Ill). T-:23.4 (new record; old rec- ord :23.5, Jack Keller, Ohio State, 1933; Glenn Davis, Ohio State, 1956). TWO MILE-1. Harvey (Pur), 2. WARD, (M), 3. Tucker, (Ia), 4. Pe- terson, (111), 5. WYMAN, (M). T- 9:02.6 (new record; old record 9:03.2, Leonard Edelen, Minnesota, 1958). MILE RELAY - 1. Northwestern (Hofer, Gilbert, Golem, West), 2. Indiana,' 3. Iowa, 4.Ohio State, 5. MICHIGAN. T-3:12.8. POLE VAULT-1. Johnson (Pur), 14'4", 2. DENHART, .(M), 14', 3. (tie) Ruch, (Pur), Nelson (NW), Rudolph, (111), OVERTON, (M), Nelson, (Wis). H-13'8". Robinson got a good start in the 220 and streaked around the turn way ahead after picking up ground from the staggered start. He won by a big three yards over Zack Ford of MSU. Gregg ran on the outside lane and came in fourth, but Miles didn't even place. In the Mile Iowa's Jim Tucker led the mile field going int othe last lap. Leps was second and teammate Dave Martin, who set .a Varsity record of 4:06.9 last week, was third. The half 'mile field, running only 40 minutes later, went into the second lap closely bunched. Leps stayed back until the final turn when he took to the outside and sprinted out ahead of the pack to win by five yards. Martin had to settle for third in this race too, failing by about a half yard to catch Jerry Fischer. Charlie Aquino came in right be- hind Martin to take fourth. McRae hit his fourth hurdle after a fine start, but led all the way and finished in stellar fash- ion, two yards ahead of Minne- sota's Dave Odegard, the defend- ing champ. Ray Locke finished second in the shot put behind fllinois' Bill Brown, who won with a toss of 55' 7". Locke. the early leader, had to be satisfied with 53' 7", nearly a foot ahead of Indiana's Tom Sei- fert. Rod Denhart gave indoor champ Mike Johnson of Purdue a real battle in the pole vault, finally finishing second at 14' 0" when Johnson made 14' 4" on his second try. Wolverine Steve Overtn fin- ished in a five way tie for third with a 13' 8" vault, equalling his best ever. Cephas hit only 6' 2" in the high jump, but still tied for third be- hind Indiana's Reggie Sheppard who won at 6' 6" and Illinois' Armand LeCrone who cleared 6' 5'. Jerry Gerich placed in his first Big Ten meet for Michigan by ty- ing for fifth at 6' 0". Purdue's George Harvey was in a class by himself in the two mile run, winning by some 40 yards over Michigan State's Morgan Ward in the new Big Ten record time of 9:02.6. Michigan's Jim Wyman was fifth in 9:14.0 some seven seconds under his previous best. Marsh Dickerson, Bill Hornbeck, Don Chalfant and Carter Reese came in fifth in the mile relay as Reese anchored the unit with a :48.3 clocking. Six Schools Form League SALT LAKE CIT Y(P)-A new athletic conference that includes four teams from the Skyline Con- ference and two from the Border was formed here yesterday, after a two-day secret meeting. The new league consists of Utah, Wyoming, Brigham Young and New Mexico of the Skyline Conference and Arizona and Ari- zona State of the Border Confer- ence. Although nothing was said about expansion, the door was left open. ERGAS LEPS ... 880, mile champ Davies Sets Vault Mark BOULDER, Colo. (P)-Sopho- more George Davies of Oklahoma State sailed over the bar at 15' 10%" yesterday beating the world record pole vault in the Big Eight Track and Field Championships. Davies, of Phoenix, touched the bar on his third try but it held steady after bobbing momentar- ily. He broke the record of 15'94" set by Don Bragg last year. Davies went after the world mark after clearing 15'4%" to crack the Big Eight standard held by defending champion J. D. Mar- tin of Oklahoma. Martin cleared 14'6' and failed at 15' in yester- day's competition. (Continued from Page 1) To illustrate the caliber of Sen- kowski's play, consider t h a t Thorne decisively whipped Brian Eisner of Michigan State 6-0, 6-3 on Friday. Eisner was last year's runnerup to Denny Konicki of Northwestern. Crowd-Pleasing In a slam bang, crowd-pleasing affair, Peacock beat Roger Plag- enhoef of Michigan State 6-4, 6-2 for the number three title. The colorful Plagenhoef, who is par- tially balding and always wears a baseball cap at a cockeyed angle, tries to hit almost every shot as hard as possible. So does Peacock, who plays without the benefit of socks and with the benefit of bleached hair. Yesterday Peacock was the sharp- er of the two, hitting more siz- zling overhead drives in the final set. Vogt's well placed drives were too much for Ron Henry of Mich- igan State in the number five fin- als. Vogt won the first set eas- ily, 6-2, but had to scramble to end the last set and the match, 7-5. Close Match In one of the day's closest matches, Maentz outlasted Bob Ewald of Indiana 7-5, 6-4 for the number six title. Maentz came back from a 4-3 deficit in the first set, and then held on in the sec- ond. MacDonald, who had been rated one of the surest favorites before the tournament, just got up on the wrong side of bed. The stocky senior plays 'pr the big point and this strategy won him the number six title last year and brought him to the number four finals yesterday. Doubles Wins But against Damson, who re- trieved like a machine, these tac- ©tics were fatal for MacDonald. Damson hit everything back nice and easy from the baseline and the impatient MacDonald rushed the net , and blasted everything back. Soon he was forcing his own errors, either hitting too long or into the net. Michigan's two doubles victories both went three sets againgt Michigan State opponents. Sen- kowski and Peacock took Eisner and Hall, 5-7, 6-3, 6-2. Michigan scored well on Peacock's over- heads and Senkowski's pinpoint drives. MacDonald came back strong from his singles loss to. team with Vogt as the two beat Henry and Bill Lau, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1. Kohl and Erickson, both sopho- mores, salvaged a title for disap- pointing Northwestern by down- ing Maentz and Tenney in a squeaker, 6-4, 8-6 in the number two doubles. I I BILL MURPHY . six titles in seven years be scheduled at the SPECIAL PERIODS SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION TENNIS NOTES: M PrphyedWith inWm Acctg. 100, 101, 200, 201 Acctg. 100, 101, 200, 201 Business Ad. 150 Business Ad. 150 Business Ad. 181 Business Ad. 181. Finance 101 Finance 101 Industr. Relations 100 Industr. Relations 100 Indust. Relations 150 Industr. Relations 150 Mktg. 100, 101 Mktg. 100, 101 Stat. 100 Stat. 100 A P N R M H N V P Q G T E S F R Fri., Fri., Wed., Mon., Tues., Wed., Tues., Fri., Sat., Thurs., Mon., Wed., Sat., Thurs. Mon., June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June 2 9 7 12 6 9 7 13 9 10 8 12 7 10 8 12 5 13 5 12 3 10 8 10 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING E.E.5 E. E. 5 Graphics 1 Graphics 1 Graphics 2, 4 Graphics 2, 4 E. M. 2' E. M. 2 C Mon., U Tues. C Mon., T Mon., J Sat., S Sat., F Thurs., Q Sat., June June June June June June June June 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 o- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 "Do You Have Writer's Cramp?" RENT A TYPEWRITER "Neat Papers Lead to Good Grades" REGULAR SEMESTER RATES at MORRI LL'S 314 S. State NO 5-9141 (Giving Morrill Support for 50 Years) 1I By FRED STEINHARDT Special To The Daily EAST LANSING- Modest Michigan Coach Bill Murphy was justifiably proud of his team's performance. "I thought the guys played very well and came through when it counted," said Murphy. "We didn't expect to get any- where near 72 points. I thought it would be real close between us, State, Northwestern, and Indiana with the winner getting around 55 points. But Northwestern and In- diana collapsed and made i eas- ier for both us and State." After Friday morning when it became apparent that his team was out of the running, contro- versial Northwestern coach, Clare Reissen had more than a few things to say about the tourna- ment pairing procedure. Lutheran West Wins in Class A Lutheran West rolled to the Michigan State High School Class B track title at Ferry Field yes- terday edging Ecorse and Cran- brook. The top time of the afternoon was turned in byMorey Gordon of Clio whose 4:25.5 clocking in the mile broke the old state record. "The top four and not the top two should be seeded in every di- vision," said Reissen. "Contending players in the same bracket can knock each other out early while a player of comparable skill can draw a weak bracket and get to the finals without breaking into a sweat." Reissen may have had ample reason for his gripe although even he cannot deny that his players did not perform up to expecta- tions. Northwestern players met Indiana or Michigan State oppo- nents in preliminary or quarter- final ,rounds in no less than one doubles and five singles divisions. The Wildcats lost all of these matches except the prelims of number four singles where Jim Erickson beat Dick Martin of In- diana. Erickson was promptly erased in the quarterfinals by the eventual winner, Jack Damson of Michigan State. * * * Reissen reputedly has three top- flight freshmen ready to step in- to the first three slots next year. The best is his son Marty who was Senkowski's teammate on the American Junior Davis cup team a few years back. I Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE, LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS Bot.1,2 Bot. 1, 2 Chem. 4, 6, 182, 183 Chem. 4, 6, 182, 183 Econ. 51, 52, 53, 54 Econ. 51, 52, 53, 54 Econ. 71, 72 Econ. 71, 72 English 23, 24 English 23, 24 Fr. 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 21, 22, 32, 61, 62 Fr. 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 21, 22, 32, 61;62 Geog. 1 Geog. 1 German-1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 35, 36 German 1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 35, 36 C V B T N V A P R I J Mon., Tues., Sat., Mon., Wed., Tues., Fri.,. Fri., Mon., Fri., Sat., June June June June June June June June June June June 5 13 3 1a 7 13 2 9 12 2 3 Detroit Cleveland Minnesota New York Baltimore Kansas City Washington Boston Chicago Los Angeles W 23 18 is 16 17 13 i5 13 13 11 L ii 14 14 14 16 15 19 17 18 19 Pct. .676 .563 '.563 .533 .515 .464 .441 .433, .419 .367 GB 4 4 5 7 8 8i/ 10 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB San Francisco 20 11 .645 - Los Angeles 21 14 .600 1 Cincinnati 18 13 .581 2 Pittsburgh 17 12 .586, 2 Milwaukee 14 14 .500 41 St. Louis 11 17 .393 7%z Chicago 12 19 .387 3 Philadelphia 9 22 .290 1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 1, Chicago 0 Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati S Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 3 Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia 3 TODAY'S GAMnES Los Angeles at San. Francisco St. Louis at Chicago (2) Milwaukee at Cincinnati (2) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (inc.) is I YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 4, Detroit 3 Baltimore 4, Washington 3 Cleveland 4, New York 3 Minnesota 2, Kansas City 0 (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Kansas City (2) Chicago at Boston (2) Cleveland at Minnesota (2) Baltimore at New' York (2) Washington at Los Angeles (2) 4 U Tues., June 13 E Q K Wed., Sat., Mon., June June. June 7 10 5 II' 8 Sat., June 10 'I Latin 22 D Tues., June 6 9-12 Latin 22 S Sat., June 10 2- 5 Physics 54 D Tues., June 6 9-12 Physics 54 R Mon., June 12 9-12 Russian 1, 2, 31, 32 M Tues. June 6 2- 5 Russian 1, 2, 31, 32 U Tues., June 13 9-12 Sociology 60 G Thurs., June 8 2- 5 Sociology 60 V Tues., June 13 2- 5 Spanish 1, 2, 3, 21, 22, 31, 3x M Tues., June 6 2- 5 Spanish 1, 2, 3, 21, 22, 31, 32 Q Sat., June 10 9-12 Each course requiring a special examination is assigned two examina- tion code letters. If one is preferred by the department, it is in boldface; students may elect the other only if a conflict occurs and special permis- sion was secured from the departmental representative at registration time in the gymnasium. If neither is underlined, either is available for selection by each student without regard to the section of the course in which he is enrolled. r SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the University Final Examination Scheduling Committee. Questions concern- ing the schedule should be directed to Edward G. Groesbeck, 1513 Ad- ministration Building. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Individual examinations will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit of the University. For time and place of examinations, see bulletin board of the School of Music. COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN _ef1TnnraT f! W 1 flVVATlflflQ0A"fl n.T'4,.,n- Anra. A I Enter the 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic "Flip Talk" contest. Win a 7-day cruise through the Bahamas on a fabulous yacht plus two glorious days in Nassau-all expenses paid for you and five of your friends. Hundreds of other "water-fun" prizes, too. Entry blanks wherever 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic is sold. { 6rct 0 c Nai . tM I Ct W trblri I I I