,H 1965 PAGE- SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY; MARC PAGESIXTHEMICHEAN114KV TESDY. MAR ~H196 ... ..x.,. ...... ,., .. _... _...,.. I A,.' Tankers Aim To Dethrone Hoosiers 1. Counting your riches? That's a laugh. .I thought you were loaded. I have exactly a dollar thirty-two and three pages of green stamps. 5. Didn't you tell him tusks were in? He told me I'd have to demonstrate a more sensible attitude toward money before he'd shell out anything above the subsistence level. 2. How so? The way I figure it,I can hardly afford to wake up tomorrow morning. 4. Call your dad. He always conmes through. Not since he found out about that pair of elephant tusks I bought for $198.50 A1 6. That's no problem. Next time you get some dough, get yourself a Living Insurance policy from Equitable. It's one of the most sensible things you can do with your money. It guarantees secu- rity for your family, builds cash values/you can always use, and by getting it now, when you're young, you pav less. By JIM LaSOVAGE at the 55th annual meet, to be lays-the held in Madison on March 4-6. 800-yard 400-yarder and a new version. In these races. will be battling almost going to regain the crown they lost According to swimming coach i to the Hoosiers in 1961. they will Gus Stager, Indiana will have a have some dethroning to do, be- definite advantage because their' cause Indiana isn't ready to adbi- strong points are in the events cate. in which Michigan is lacking in T e.depth. As an added disadvantage, To recapture sthe Big Tenetitle the Spartans are strong in the challenge of defending champion same events as Michigan, the free- Indiana, and Michigan State willstlraewih ilmket Indianahandto crgant a ltle even tougher for the Wolverines to be on hand to create a little grab points. more trouble.g Seven Freestyle These three squads should pre- Of the 18 events scheduled, sent the bulk of the competition seven are freestyle. Two are re-s g rrninmininmmmmminininuininmminin inininmininin minin I FREE DELIVERY: U I I I TTHOMPSON'S RESTAURANT: Phone 761-0001 I on large1 one item pizza Coupon Good Monday thru Thursday | SMARCH 1-MARCH 4 , I .r rr~rrrr rrr r~r rrrr rrr r~r.- r rrr rrrr rrr r 1 Michigan exclusively with State for the top spots. Northwestern's Rich Abra- hams, defending 50-yard cnamp. is the only challenger for first in any of the freestyle events who is not a member of one of the top three teams. He and Michigan's Bill Groft have turned in the fastest times in dual meet competition this sea- son in the Big Ten. But MSU has three contenders in Gary Dilley, Darryle Kifer. and Jim MacMillan, all of whom are within :00.6 sec- ond of the leaders. No Variety In the 100-. 200-. and 500-yard variations and the relays the same names appear two and three times. Michigan is relying on Bob Hoag, Groft, Bill Farley, and Rich Walls, with Carl Robie standing by in case of emergency. The Spartans will go with Kifer, Dilley, Mac- Millan, Ken Walsh, and Ed Glick.1 Farley is almost a sure bet to repeat his win in 1500-yard event for Michigan, and Stager feels that with the depth he canchoose from, the Wolverines can take the 800-yard relay. However, the Spartans, having topped t h e American record for the 400 yards, are virtually unchallenged for at least that first place. that-Larson's specialty. ley leading the pack, after bet- seconds ahead of the nearest chal- Besides Larson, the Michigan tering the American record for lenger, the Hoosiers. trio will have to contend with 100 yards last weekend. Ed Records To Fall Olympic' champion Ken Sitzberger Bartsch, the veteran Wolverine Records are expected to fall in of Indiana and his NCAA chain- ace, and Hoosier Pete Hammer, almost every event. In the dual pion teammate, Rick Gilbert. offer his strongest opposition. meet season, five conference marks Hoosiers Have Depth Bartsch is backed up by Russ Kin- were surpassed, three by Michigan. In the rest of the events, butter- gery, whose times are not far be- Scheerer eclipsed the old 200-yard fly, backstroke, breaststroke, and hind the leaders. breaststroke mark, Farley erased the medley races, Indiana seems to Only Hope the 500-freestyle record, and a have more depth than any one Paul Scheerer is Michigan's only 400-yard medley relay team com- else, but Michigan has "an ace in hope in the breaststroke races, and posed of Kingery, Tom O'Malley, every event" as Stager puts it. Stager thinks he'll have to break Scheerer, and Walls knocked off Robie, a butterfly specialist, is the existing NCAA record to win. the third Big Ten record. the ace in this stroke His main Indiana's third Olympian, Tom MSU claims the other two threat is his Olympic teammate Tretheway, is the big threat, with marks. Walsh exceeded the 200- f r o m Indiana, Fred Schmidt. teammate Art Smith. The Hoos- yard freestyle time, and the free- Schmidt touched out Robie when iers' depth is at its best in this style relay team of Dilley, Walsh, the two met in a dual meet in Ann event with Dick Schaible and Pete Kifer and MacMillan chopped over Arbor. but the championship races Anderson also going for top spots. five seconds off the old confer- are still up for grabs. Only Wisconsin's Bob Blanchard ence mark. Robie, in addition to the but- can hope to take a few points Stager and Kimball will take a terfly, has recorded the swiftest from the Hoosiers. squad of three divers and 13-or time of the season in the 200-yard Michigan's 400-yard medley re- 14 swimmers. Under Big Ten rules, individual medley, a full :01.4 sec- lay team winds up the schedule as the combined members of the onds faster than his nearest com- another favorite, having bettered team can enter up to 40 events, petitior. Michigan also has Tom the present Big Ten record in the and an individual is allowed to Williams and John Vry in the IM. dual meet aginast Indiana. The swim three individual races and The backstroke finds MSU's Dil- Wolverines' effort is fully :05.5 one relay, or two of each. WAKA BAYSHI LEADS WCHA: Erratik'M' lers End Season Vr i I. ' ' I ; 1 r C i Extra Points By P. C. DEAN Those two points over the week- kota swept the first series 7-3 Coach Dick Kimball's divers end gave Mel his margin of vic- and 4-2. The Wolverines quickly could also add valuable points for What's five feet six inches tall, tory as North Dakota wing Dennis rebounded and, in turn, swept the the Maize and Blue. He figures weighs 150 pounds, and is a league Hextall scored seven points in the M-D series, 6-5 in another sudden that Ed Boothman, an NCAA run- leading scorer? last week of the season to finish death overtime fingernail-chewer, nerup, and Bruce Brown can do The "Bill Buntin" of a midget with 28. and 4-2. no worse than fifth, and he has basketball team you say. No, it's As Michigan hockey coach Al Inspiration high hopes of higher finishes. Greg Mel Wakabayashi, leading scorer Renfrew analysed it, "He deserved Inspired by this sweep Michigan Shuff will make the trip as the in the Western Collegiate Hockey it, because he didn't play on as traveled to Colorado College to third. Wolverine diver. And the Association. strong a team as some of the resume league play. "We played high hones are not unfounded. Michigan's "Mighty Mite" pick- other ones. We moved his wings our finest hockey against Colo- Brown defeated NCAA champ ed up two assists in last weekend's around and it didn't seem to rado College," said coach Renfrew, Randy Larson of Ohio State in series with Michigan Tech to give bother him. That proved his abil- "We had good momentum and we a dual meet two weeks ago. He him 13 goals and 17 assists in ity." came back strong both nights." won on the three-meter board, at conference play for the season. Not as Well The Blue swept their second Unfortunately the rest of the s Wolverines did not fare as well The win streak claimed its fifth 1NN ARBOR' S NEWEST BOOKSTORE as Mel. Coach Al Renfrew reflect- straight victim when on January -- - -ed. "They were inexperienced to 27 the Wolverines smashed MSU begin with, but on any given night at East Lansing, 6-3. they could play well enough to Michigan regained fourth, and t r rbeat any team in the league. How- evened their season's record with ever, more often than not they State in the February 17th re- made mistakes which got them match. In that 7-2 win, Mel Waka- behind and they didn't have the bayashi scored four assists in what scoring unch to come back. V. coach Renfrew considered one. of I'l! do it! But don't tell dad about my new stuffed alligator. For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your PlAcement Officer, or write to Edward D. McDougal. Manager, Manpower Development Division The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States HMam Use& 1285 Ave o the &mencas. New York. N Y. IOUl * 6qutabW lilS Are t:al Oppvrtunty Employer Read and Use Daily Classifieds CHEMICAL ENGINEERS Pictured above is Bristol Laboratories' pilot plant and laboratories for the recovery of fermentation products. 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December saw them return home to the Coliseum where, they split two WCHA series with Minnesota and Denver. The first Denver game was a real thriller as the Blue rallied in sudden death over- time to beat the Pioneers 3-2. Best in the East During Christmas vacation the team traveled to Boston for the Boston Tournament and came out champions. The mighty Wolverines showed the Eastern boys how the game is played winning three straight and beating a strong Bos- ton University team in the cham- pionship game 3-2. The Blue swamped Cornell 7-1 before returning to Ann Arbor in early January for a two gamej series with WCHA champion North Dakota and non-conference op- ponent Minnesota-Duluth. Despite controlling action in a considerable portion of both games, North Da- _i MEL WAKABAYASHI I WCHA Standings V { North Michig Minne Michig MICHI Denver Coora+ FINAL STANDINGS W L T Dakota 13 3 0 gan Tech 12 5 a 1 esota 10 8 0 gan State 7 7 0 IGAN 7 11 0 r 4e7g1 tdo College 2 14 0 Avg. .813 .694 .556 .500 .389 .375 .125 the outstanding individual per- formances of the season. The Blue held fourth despite a 5-3, 5-4 sweep at the hands of Minnesota only to fall to fifth again with two more losses in their last series of the year against Michigan Tech. Last Appearance Five men wore Maize and Blue for the last time Saturday night; yesterday coach Renfrew com- mented briefly on each of them: Pierre Dechaine, "Pierre was a hard skater. He wasn't a prolific scorer, but he got his share of goals"; Captain Wilfred Martin, "He had a slump at the end of the year, but he played very well for us for the past two seasons"; "Alex Hood, "Alex is a steady- playing wing. He gets his share of goals and keeps his man from scoring"; Marty Read, "He got more goals this year than ever be- fore. We moved him around quite a bit but he was always in"; Dave Newton, "Although he didn't play very much, it was tremendous to have him on the team." -f r ri * CRIMSON Series Grand Tour * Continental Tour Favorite Tour * Fiesta Tour Comprehensive Tour Israel Adventure Tour m Holiday Tour * Panorama Tour BY STEAMER OR AIR $770* 35 TO 75 DAYS from ie * DISCOVERY Series Discovery Tour * Explorer Tour Prep & High School Swiss Camp 42 TO 68 DAYS from Almomm I */ar I I I