I SUNDAY, 28 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE S -ME1 SUNDAY, 28 MARCH 1965 THE MICIIIGAX DAILY PAC~I! ~EVVE a ""AW P Michigan Tankers Third in NCAA; Fehrs Loses,8-5 Trojans' Saari Sets Three New Marks; Robie Only 'M' Winner in National Meet Iowa State Wins NCAA by One Point; Wolverines Come in Fifth in Team Race Special To The Daily AMES, Iowa-Despite Indiana's one-two-three sweep in the three- meter diving, Southern California was able to come up with it's third straight NCAA Swimming and Diving Championship here yester- day.' Southern California was led by Olympian Roy Saari who finished first in three events, the 1650-, the 500- and the 200-yard free- styles. In all the Trojans racked up 285 points to edge out Indiana by 6% points. Michigan finished third with a total of 221. Yale finished a surprisingly weak fourth getting only 1131/2. Ohio State and Michigan State finished fifth and sixth with totals of 912 and 90 respectively. Cliff Hanger The outcome of the meet went down to the wire after the Hoosiers put on their diving display with Ken Sitzberger, Rick Gilbert and Rich Early copping the three top places. This brought Indiana with- in a half a point going into the last event, the 400-yard freestyle relay. Yale won the 400 with a record breaking 3:07.2. Southern Cal cane in third and the Hoosiers were only able to place sixth, dropping them 6/z points back. Michigan came in fourth with a time of 3:10.2. In all, eight American and nine FM-phasis by TOM WEINBERG Sports Editor Intercollegiate Athletics: Walking the Tightrope. Intercollegiate athletics treads a thin line. Sports must never move out of the perspective in the University, yet at the same time should be allowed to give the maximum benefit to the student body, the athletes themselves, and most significantly, the University. Walking this tightrope between big-time intercollegiate competition on a sound basis and on a professionalized one, is the primeiconsideration of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics in determining policy. No school in the nation has better teams or athletes than Mich- igan. But the measure of the intercollegiate program really shouldn't be and isn't determined by whether Michigan wins or loses but, trite- ly enough, how it plays the game of intercollegiate competition. There is a growing trend for college sports to become more pro- fessionalized. Look at the pressure involved in recruiting superior athletes, the growing latitude that many schools allow for grants- in-aid to athletes, the emphasis that many schools give to athletic funds in the general University budgets, and the funds that alumni often contribute to the operation of a school's athletic program. Fortunately, the University plays the game better than any school in the Big Ten, and far better than any school in the coun- try with anything close to its extensive intercollegiate program. The Athletic Board is responsible solely to the Regents, with its own separate budget and operations. No alumni money flows through the $2.5 million athletic budget and so less pressure from the alumni results. The Athletic Board is a self-sufficient entity that supports from intercollegiate receipts the physical education and recreation facili- ties on the campus. In spite of _________________ this, there is less support ($5 per semester) from the general Uni- versity budget for athletics than at any other Big Ten institution. CHRISTIAN MA 1 In addition, the full tuition for ' .Z .ITA A the athletes who are on grants- in-aid (athletic scholarships) is AT paid to the University. This amounts toover $300,000 a year, GABRIEL RIC doled out by the athletic board, taken from the athletic budget. It is a direct contrast to most other Big Ten schools and almost all MARCH 14th other universities where the re- payment for tuitions is reduced or eliminated by the administrators because of the contribution ath- letics makes to the schools. Su.i v. .~n....2A 7 NCAA records were broken in the three-day meet. Saari came up with three new marks. Three for Saari Yesterday's first event was the 1650. Carl Robie kept abreast of Saari for 1400 yards when the Olympian put forth a final burst in the last 250 yards to finish in a sizzling 16:39.9. Robie finished 15 yards back in a time of 16:49.7. In the 100-yard backstroke, Michigan State's Gary Dilley set a new American record with a time of :52.6. Michigan came up with a fifth, sixth, and seventh by Rees Orland, Russ Kingery and Ed Bartsch. The 100-yard breaststroke came out a photo finish between USC's Bill Craig, UCLA's Russ Webb, and. Michigan's Paul Scheerer. The three swimmers finished within :00.2 seconds of each other. Judges' Choice Craig came in with a 1:00.3, which was :00.1 slower than Webb but was awarded first by the judges. Scheerer finished with a 1:0.0.4. Indiana's Fred Schmidt won the 100-yard butterfly with a time of :51.0. Michigan was able to place only one diver in the three-meter event, Bruce Brown, who came in sixth. Fifth in the event was taken by Arizona State's Wrighton as last year's champion, Randy Larson of OSU, was only able to come in with a fifth. SCORES EXHIBITION BASEBALL Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 5 Houston 2, Philadelphia 0 Los Angeles, N, 11, New York, N, 8 Detroit 3, St. Louis 2 Chicago, A, 2, New York, A, 0 Minnesota 3, Kansas City 0 Chicago, N, 7, San Francisco 3 Baltimore 10, Washington 3 Boston 11, Cleveland 9 (10 innings) Los Angeles, A, 4, Cleveland 0 Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles, N, "B" 2 NIIL Detroit 4, Toronto 1 Boston 6, Montreal 2 NBA Baltimore 131, St. Louis 99, Balti- more leads best of 5 series , 1- RRIAGE SERIES THE HARD CENTER -Daily-Kanalakar Rao MICHIGAN'S ONLY ENTRY in the NCAA finals, sophomore Bob Fehrs shows his pinning form against Wisconsin in one of this season's earlier matches. Fehrs went through the season winning the Midland Title and the Big Ten championship at 123 pounds. LOSE FOURTH SPOT: !' Gol fers Sixth' Special To The Daily LARAMIE, Wyo. - Michigan's Bob Fehrs lost his 123 pound NCAA final match here last night, but his second place effort helped the Wolverines to a respectable fifth place finish in the national championships. Iowa State, using an unexpected 177 pound victory, upset powerful Oklahoma State 87 to 86 for the title. Lehigh Third Lehigh was third with 44 points, followed by Oklahoma with 43 and Michigan with 39. Fehrs, Michigan's only finalist, lost a hardfought 8-5 decision to Mike Caruso of Lehigh, while other Wolverines gained one third, one fifth and three sixth places. Bob Spaly wrestled to third place in the 191 pound class with two tight consolation victories last night. Spaly decisioned Len Han- sen of Utah State, 4-3, to gain a berth in the consolation finals, and then whipped Alan Keller of Colorado State, 3-1, in overtime. At 130 pounds, Bill Johannsen lost to Allan Siegel in a tight match by a score of 6-4, and also dropped his match with Don Beam of Michigan State in a squeaker, 3-2. The two losses in the con- solation matches put Johannsen in sixth place. Lee Deitrick, wrestling at 147 pounds, lost to Buz Hayes of Arizona State, but came back to beat Jim Crider of Colorado State 6-4 for the fifth place crown. Wolverine Chris Stowell lost both his matches and had to settie for sixth place. He dropped matches to Charlie Tribble, a member of the Olympic team, by a 9-4 measure, and Jerry Swope by a score of 4-1. Mike Koehler also dropped both his matches and settled for a sixth spot. He lost 3-1 to Bob Brough- ton of Utah State, and by a 5-2 margin to Ted Turnison of NCAA champion Iowa State. Other final round results: 115 lbs.-Taddaaka Haata, Ok- i lahotna State, dec. Glen McNimm Arizona State. 130 lbs.-Yojiro Uetake, Okla- homa State, dec. Joe Peritore, Le- high, 6-1. 147 lbs. - Veryl Long, Iowa State, dec. Joe Bavaro, GettysburfI (ref. dec., ovt.). 177 lbs. - Tom Peckam, Iowa State, dec. Bill Harlow, Oklahoma State, 5-3. 191 lbs. - Jack Brisco, Okla. homa State, pinned Dan Pernat Wisconsin. Hvwt. --- Jim Nance, Syracuse, dec. Russ Weiner, Oklahoma State, 4-3. Special To The Daily MIAMI-The final nine holes of the Miami Invitational golf tourn- ament proved disastrous for the Michigan Wolverines here yester- day as they soared to 310 and had to settle for a disappointing sixth place finish. Florida's Gators, the leaders throughout the 72-hole contest, took the title as expected with a 1157 total. Their rivals from Florida State finished second with 1183, followed by Rollins with 1205. Ohio State-firing rounds of from 69 to 75-surprised everyone by moving past both Miami and Michigan for fourth place and a 1215 total. Miami was only two strokes back of the Buckeyes with 1217, and the Wolverines only two behind Miami with 1219. "It hurts terribly - especially with OSU up there" said a dis- heartened Bert Katzenmeyer after the tournament. "But they played superbly, and we just couldn't have been worse on that back nine. We kicked away a possible third place finish." Friday the Wolverines had put together four strong rounds, card- ing an impressive 295 and after nine holes here yesterday, such a total was still not inconceivable. But the four linksmen averaged over forty strokes a piece over the final nine holes of the Coral Gabels course Bill Newton continued to lead the linksmen with 74, giving him the low Michigan total for the tournament, 298. Two strokes be- hind Newton for both the round and the tournament was senior Frosty Evashevski, who had 76. Mark Yahn and Bob Barclay carded 78 and 82 respectively, for tournament totals of 308 and 310. COMPLETE RENTAL SERVICE FORMAL WEAR TICE'S MEN'S SHOP. 1607 South University-across from the AA Bank 9:00-5:30 Mon. & Fri. till 8:30 I Petitionsf GARGOYLE junior and Senior Staff / (Theyd probably, left it o iro ieir heads) But then, wouldn't any man? If he suddenly found all those starry-eyed gals looking at him? So, if you think you can handle it, go ahead, use SHORT CUT! It'll tame the wildest crew cut, brush cut, any cut; give it more body, more life. Keep it under control. And make you look * great! Try it (if you dare!) ... Old Spice SHORT CUT Hair Groom byShulton ... tube or jar, only .50 plus tax. s * may be picked up in the GARG office in the Stud. Pub, hto APRIL 4th :30 p.m. oun ay, Mal irc Ao, r Unique as the Michigan pro- gram is, it's not enough to say "'we're cleaner and better than any school to justify our huge ath- letic program." It doesn't justify anything and Athletic Director H. 0. (Fritz) Crisler is the last one to dispute it. Athletics must, and I think do, make a contribution to this University that can't come from any other source. As one ad- ministrator said recently, "The two things that unite such a diverse groups as the University are war and athletics." The Athletic Board, Regents and Legislature use this as the justifi- cation for intercollegiate compe- tition. The Athletic Board carries out the mission, keeping Michigan athletes on a par with the student body academically, maintaining sports in its proper place in the total University picture, and ad- ministrating with a constant awareness of the improper direc- tion that intercollegiate competi- tion has followed in many institu- tions. "The Psychological Adjustments in Marriage" Paul Hickey, M.S.W., A.C.S.W. Wednesday, March 31, 8:00 p.m. "The Successful Ecumenical Marriage" Msgr. John F. Bradley, Ph.D. Sunday, April 4, 7:30 p.m. "The Formation of a Christian Home" Mr. and Mrs. John Baum Mr. annd Mrs. John Feldkamp 1. Now that graduation s getting close, have you given any thought to the kind of work you'd like to do? I want to work for The Good ofrMankind. 5 3. Is it required? It helps. And I'll certainly need a pair of sandals. 0 5. I'll be doing much the same thing. I've also lined up a job that affects society in a positive way. And if I do good, I'll move up, and my decisions will be even more important in the scheme of thing The Marriage series is open to everyone, but a special invitation invitation is extended to all seniors and those couples contem- plating marriage within the next six months. 2, I might have suspected. I'll probably grow a beard. MICRO-CLEANING _ ' i s # 4. What do you expect to earn? All I ask is the satis- faction of knowing I'm helping to Build a Better WXoild. 6. You don't need them in Equitable's development program. All you need is an appetite for challenge and responsibility, and the desire to do the best .possible job. 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