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March 05, 1960 - Image 5

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-03-05

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

ankers Lead at Halfway

Mark

CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

t!

M' Swimmers Take Four Events;
Lead Indiana 93-77 in Title Chase

- --

(Continued from Page 1)
ahead of the field and held that
margin to the wire.
His time of :22.0 ties the Big
Ten mark of Gary Morris of Iowa
and Fred Westphal of Wisconsin
and fell only one-tenth of a sec-
ond behind the NCAA and Ameri-
can record held by Westphal.
Woolley's fast finish carried him
to second place ahead of Wolver-
ne sophomore Jim Kerr.
Floden, second at the halfway
mark, faltered and was edged out
of fourth position by Indiana's
John Parks.
Swim Statistics
Events Completed:
200-Yard Butterfly--1. Troy, Ind.
2. GILLANDERS, Mich. 3. Barton,
Ind 4. Shaar, MSU 5. Wolfe, OSU 6.
Kitchell, OSU. Time: 1:59.4. (New
Big Ten record old mark 2:02.3 by
Gillanders in preliminaries.)
50-Yard Freestyle -- 1. LEGACKI,
Mich. 2. WOOLLEY, Mich. 3. KERR,
Mich. 4. Parks, Ind. 5. FLODEN,
Mich. 6. McDevitt, Wis. Time :22.0
(Ties Big Ten mark held by Morris,
Iowa and Westphal, Wis.)
200-Yard Backstroke - 1. Mc-
Kinney, Ind 2. GAXIOLA, Mich.
3. Beaver, Ind. 4. WOLF, Mich. 5.
SMITH, Mich. 6. Murray, OSU.
Time: 2:02.1.
220-Yard Freestyle - 1. Sintz,
Ind. 2. Verth, Ind. 3. DARNTON,
Mich. 4. MORROW, Mich. 5.
Rounds, Ind. 6. Brackett, MSU.
Time: 2:04.1.
100-Yard Breaststroke-1. CLARK
Mich. 2. MikI, Ind. 3. Ruppart,
MSU 4. Singleton, MSU 5. Modine,
MSU 6. Kovacs, OSU. Time: 1:04.5.
(Clark set Big Ten record of 1:03.6
in afternoon preliminaries, break-
ing old mark of 1:04.8 by Modine.)
One-Meter Diving-1. GERLACH,
Mich. 2. Hall, OSU 3. WEBSTER,
Mich. 4. MEISSNER, Tich. 5.
JACO, Mich. 6. Gompf, OSU. 51.25
points.
400-Yard Freestyle Relay -- 1.
MICHIGAN (Kerr, Morrow, Wool-
ley, Legacki), 2. Indiana 3. Ohio
State 4. MSU 5. Iowa 6. Minnesota.
Time: 3:20.5. (Ties Big Ten record
set by Michigan in 1959).
TEAM STANDINGS
1. MICHIGAN-93
2. Indiana-77
4. Michigan State-19
S. Ohio State-16
6. Iowa-S
7. Minnesota-4
X. Wisconsin-I
8. Ilnois-l
1A. Northwestern--4

In" the diving, Gerlach led Hall
throughout yesterday's seven dives
and held a two 2.3 margin over the
defending'champion at the end of
last night's first two dives.
Hall Comes Through
Then, however, Hall came
through with a 64.8 dive, highest
of the night, to take an eight-
point lead over Gerlach, with only
one dive remaining.
Hall, nearly flawless in his exe-
cution and practically assured of
a victory and another champion-
ship, surprisingly missed hisdtim-
ing on the difficult backward one
and one-half somersault with one
and one-half twists and was
awarded only 29.9 points by the
Judges.
Gerlach, performing the same
dive, needed only 38.55 to win.
Performing excellently before the
hushed crowd of 1500, Gerlach
received 54.6 points to win his first
conference title.
Webster's Position Stable
Michigan's Bob Webster, third
throughout . the event, neither
challenged the leaders nor was
seriously challenged by fourth-
place Ernie Meissner, a teammate.
The battle for fifth place and
an extra point in the team stand-
ings was, like the first place finish,
decided in favor of a Wolverine
over a Buckeye on the final dive.
Tom Gompf, Ohio State's num-
ber two diver, in seventh place at
the beginning of the evening,
overtook Ron Jaco with one dive
remaining, but the Michigan soph-
omore turned the table on Gompf,
finishing seventh-tenths of a point
ahead of him.
Clark Sets Record
Clark, king of the collegiate
breaststrokers, set a new Big Ten
record in the afternoon's prelimi-
naries and came back last night to
easily defeat Indiana's Gerry Miki
in the 100-yard breaststroke.
Trailing at the halfway point,
Clark turned on the speed to win
by nearly two yards.
The relay team, swimming in
the final event of the evening, took
the lead over Indiana on the sec-
ond leg and increased it to nearly
seven yards at the conclusion.

Although failing to finish first,
spectacular performances were
also put on by Michigan's Alex
Gaxiolq and Dave Gillanders.
Gaxiola, swimming third behind
the Indiana duo of Frank McKin-
ney and Dick Beaver, unleased a
furious drive in the last 50 yards
to nip Beaver at the finish and
give the Wolverines an unexpected
boost. His time of 2:05 was the
best ever turned in by a Michigan
swimmer.
Gillanders, meanwhile, fought a
valiant but losing battle against
Indiana's Mike Troy, holder of
every butterfly record in the books.
The Michigan junior pushed Troy
throughout the race and never
trailed by more than two feet.
Troy broke the two-minute mark
for the third time this season,
while Gillanders, swimming his
fastest race, was three-tenths of
a second short of becoming the
second man to break the two min-
ute barrier.

THE WiNNER-Michigan's Ron Clark looks at the timer to find
his time after winning the 100-yard breaststroke title in Big
Ten championships last night. The Wolverines currently lead
Indiana, 93-77.

Conference Chiefs Vote Out Rose Bowl,
Post-Season Competition also Dropped

(Continued from Page 1)
The Bowl is out for Conference'
teams for t'vo reasons. One is
that the contract which made it
mandatory for the Big Ten cham-
pion to represent the Western
Conference was not renewed. This

It appeared that officials didn't
know all of the aspects and pos-
sibilities of the proposal they voted
for.
Reed himself was stumped by
many of the questions raised by'
the press-major questions which
apparently weren't even brought
up in the meeting.
Michigan's representative, Prof.
Marcus Plant, took a wait-and-see
attitude.
"Whenever I'm in doubt as to a

measure proposed to the Confer-
ence," he said yesterday, "I vote
in such a way that the matter will
go back to the University of Michi-
gan so that it can be considered
there.
"I regard it as my duty to post-
pone final decision in the im-
portant matters until interested
people at Michigan have had full
opportunity to express their views.
I was guided by this principle in
my vote today."

meansi
dollar
tappedl
last 14
The{
proval1
as indi

an end to the five million
gold mine which was
by the Conference over the
years.
other reason is that ap-
to allow teams to compete
ividuals in the Rose Bowl

PERSONAL
ENSIAN GENERAL.STAFF. Now that
Greek Rush is over ours is just be-
ginning. The index is waiting. Sign
up now and avoid the wait. P135
M-stands for merriment
I-is for the great ideas
C-means choice of skill, show or food
H-is for the happiness of children
I-is for the industry of the groups
G.-nmean its really great
R-stands for "Reality" in design
A-is for the bet activity
S-means "See it yourself" 4F110
STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE-Today
is the last day to claim cash and un-
sold books. 828-o SAB; 1:0-300
F13
FIND HER? Like her? Tell your friends
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problems. My name 9s Tom Turner,
and I have a persecution complex as
I'm looking for a girl native to my
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CAMPUS OLOSEUPS
Do you know?1
Sue Sherman........... 5-7711
Tom Haydn .................3-0262
F1302
TISK
discovers the Development Council
operating through volunteer alumni
committees all over the country.
P132
WE'VE BEEN MOVEDI-Peacemakers'
Prance (Anti-Military Ball) will be
held in Hussey Room, Michigan
League. Still 9-12; Informal. $1.00 per
couple contribution to Peace work
of American Friends Service Commit-
tee. F
MODERN FOLK MASS ? ? ? Come to,
Douglas Chapel of Congregational
Church 12 noon Sunday, March 6. A
SERVICE OUT OF THE ORDINARY.
P122
NORTHERN ILLINOIS GAS COMPANY
will interview March 10, 1960, June
1960 graduates in C.E., Chem. Eng.,
M.E., E.E., and Industrial \Eng., Ac-
counting, and Industrial Relations.
Please see the Placement Office for
appointments. F25
BE A PEACEMONGER. Peacemaker's
Prance (Anti-Military Ball). Friday,
March 4, 9-12 P.M. Michigan Union.
Informal. F
BE A PLOWSHARE BEATER - Attend
the Peacemaker's Prance (Anti-Mili-
tary Ball). March 4, 9 to 12 P.M. Mich-
igan Union 3 K-L-M-N. Informal.
F
FLY TO FLORIDA
Spring Vacation
$99 round trip. NO 3-6974
F
STUDENT OPERA tickets are now in
at Grinnell's ... 323 S. Main. F93
COME ONE, come all to the Mass
Meeting of MICHIGRAS. Thursday.
7:30 at the Union. F118
HELP WANTED
MALE STUDENT needed to pick up
school children. My car, hours 2-4
Tues. and Thurs. P.M. $3 per day. NO
8-7076. 1H27
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST-Avalable
now; Senior laboratory positions with
guaranteed maximum salary of 500
or over. Requirements are B.S. and
registered A.S.C.P. Hospital location.
Greater metropolitan Detroit area. Write
to Post Office Box 128, Ann Arbor.
H24
KITCHEN supervisor and cook wanted
for 8 weeks residence summer camp.
Must plan menus. If interested, write
giving experience, references and sal-
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Dusen Drive, A.A. H21
SUMMER CAMP Counselors Wanted.
Men for northern 8 week boys sum-
mer camp. Waterfront, archery, rifl-
ery, craft counselors needed. If in-
terested call NO 2-9454 after 6 P.M.
H20
FOR SALE
LIFE
Student-faculty price
21 weeks ...................$1.91

1Iyear.................$4.00
(Reg. price ........$5.95 for 1 year)
Student Periodical Agency
NO 2-3061
2 STUDENTS nurse unifornis. Size 14-
good condition, including cap. Call
NO 5-8495 after 6 P.M. B22

ROOM AND BOARD,
ROOM AND/OR BOARD for men stu-
dents. Meals $16 per week with re-
bates. Room $7 per week. Linen fur-
nlshed. 1319 Hill, corner., of .Forest.
Call manager, NO 2-6422. E9
WANTED TO BUY
COPY APRIL, 1959 Encounter Magazine.
NO 5-8335. Between 5:00 and 7:00.
K9
HI-Fl, TURNTABLE or CHANGER. Am-
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after 5 p.m. K8
MOTOR SCOOTER: Lambretta or Ves-
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BUSINESS SERVICES
REWEAVING--Burns, tears, moth holes
rewoven. Let us save your clothes.
Weave-Bao Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade.
NO 2-4647..J1
TYPING, Theses, term papers, reason-
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ill
Reconditioned Vacuum Cleaners
$15.00 and up
J. LEABI SALES AND SERVICE
322 E. Liberty NO 3-3604
)J59
Are you a true Gourmet?
Do You Live to Eat?
Or are you a member ,of the un-
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something to please your pallet at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 2-3175
ONE-DAY SERVICE
AT SANFORDS .
Shoe Repairingj
Hat Cleaning
Tailoring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
Open 'Til 8 P.M. -
Also Sundays & Holidays
(Opposite court house since 1927)
NO 8-6966
J72
Special Offers
March 1960
Atlantic-8 moe. ................$3.00
Sat. Eve. Post-37 wks...........$2.97
Esquire-8 mos. ...................$2.00
Holiday-15 mos. .................$3.75
New Republic-9 mos...........$3.00
New Yorker-8 rmos ... ......... .$3.00
Time, Life, Sports Illus., and News-I
week less than $.09 per copy.
STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY
Call NO 2-3061
J31
TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason-
able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590.
Jil
RECORD SALE
This week only. Save up to 40%
on LP and Stereo records.
Music Center

was also defeated.
Faint Hope Remains
One faint hope for the Rose
Bowl is still flickering, but Con-
ference schools had solid deci-
sions when they arrived in Co-
lubus. The hope is the stipulation
of the White Resolution which
allows the 60 day period for ob-
jections. But objections seem un-
likely.
Instead of Bowl revival, the
athletic directors and representa-
tives have shown the surprising
interest in curbing other post-
season competition - a unique
,suggestion in American college
sports.
Already, however, a concern has
been raised about the Big Ten's
future. If the legislation holds, the
Big Ten will have the strictest
athletic program of any major
college league in the country - in-
cluding the Ivy League.
Suggests Consultation

L1NES
2

ONE-DAY
.80
.96
'1.12

SPECIAL
e TEN-DAY
RATE
.39
.47

I

Figure 5 average words to c line.
Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 24786

I1

,,

Athletic Directors Fail
ITo Receive Bigger Voice

PHOTO SUPPLIES
CONTAFLEX II, F2.8, 45 mm. lens Com-
pur MXV shutter, Pre-set peratives,
W. A. Tele. Lens, Wantle Lens, Filters,
flash, and etc. Call CR 9-3702 toll free.
FOR RENT
SINGLE ROOM for men, one block to
Michigan Union. 509 S. -Division, 'or
call 8-6757 before 8 P.M. C71
COUPLE OR STUDENT: Furnished,
Large livingroom , bedroom, kitchen
and basement. Near campus. All util-
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dents. Call NO 2-8372 or HI 9-5903.
072
2 ROOM SUITE for rent. Share kitch-
en, *on Walnut Street. Call NO 3-
6612 or GE 7-7523. C70
SINGLE ROOM for male, near campus.
711 S. Division. NO 3-5333. C64
CAMPUS ATTRACTIVELY furnished
single, with private bath, $40. Also
basement room, $25. 614 Monroe. NO
3-5224. C62
SUBLET above average 1. bedroom apt.
1st floor. Lovely brick apartment bldg.
Furnishings reasonable. NO 3-5010 af-
ter 5:30. C63
PARKING SPACE for rent near State
Theatre. Call NO 2-7274. C61
BOYS' ROOM for rent: On campus, 1346
Geddes just off Forest, newly decor-
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See Mr. Yeinger in basement apt.
evenings or call NO 2-3982 anytime.
C57
ACTUALLY on campus, clean 5 rooms
furnished. NO 3-5947. C20
CAMPUS ROOMS for men, reasonable.
Linens furnished. NO 3-4747. 017
ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS-Modern
apartment, 514 S. Forest. Also room.
NO 2-1443. 025
LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week. HU
2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road,. 035
FOR RENT: Quiet, pretty, furnished
apt. for 2, 1 bedroom, good heat, near
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DO YOU HAVE boarders moving out-
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Do you want a cheap, 'convenient,
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formation??????????? then - try the
MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED
NO 2-4788
C42
TRANSPORTATION
'MONKEY DRIVING with two students
to Philadelphia area Spring Vaca-
tion desires female companions. Call
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if you need a ride home, to Florida,
Oregon, Tennessee, or even New York'
-just let people know through the
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us help you. G30
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to Philadelphia or Washington for
spring vacation. Call Larry, NO 2-
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WANTED: Ride to Whitmore Lake at
5:00 P.M. weekdays. Call NO 5-5137.
028

By TOM WITECKI
special to The Daily
COLUMBUS - Big Ten faculty
representatives yesterday voted
down a proposal which would have
given athletic directors a bigger
voice in Conference affairs.
Meeting in the Downtown Ath-
letic Club, the ten faculty repre-
sentatives turned down a resolu-
tion which would have enabled
athletic directors to vote on pro-
posals which come under the
White resolutions.
Present Set-Up
Under the present setup, ath-
letic directors join the faculty
representatives in voting just on

Big Ten Commissioner Kenneth minor affairs, while faculty rep-
"Tug" Wilson said he hopes the resentatives alone are allowed to
schools would consult with their vote on more crucial issues, i.e.,
respective coaches before approv- the Rose Bowl and the present
ing the legislation. post-season games question.
Big -ten Coaches Comment,
On Proposed Rule Charge

Earlier, the faculty representa-
tives had approved the same plan
at their November meeting, but
the vote was objected to under the
terms of the White Resolutions.
This meant another vote at a later
date. That vote was yesterday, and
the proposal was defeated with
no reason given for the apparent
reversal,
Approve Plan
The faculty representatives also
approved a plan which allows jun-
ior college graduates transferring
to a Big Ten school to become
eligible Immediately. Under the
present setup, transfer students
are forced to sit out a year. This
plan went into effect as of yester-
day. Michigan faculty representa-
tive Marcus L. Plant said that he
did not know any particular Mich-
igan athlete who would immedi-
ately benefit from this plan. ~.
Meeting in a separate session,
the athletic directors passed a
change in the football scouting
procedure.
The new ruling calls for on-the-
spot scouting of Just one game,
and film exchange of all games.
Meetings End
The Big Ten officials conclude
their meetings today in a morning
session which includes several peti-
tions asking for extra terms of
eligibility.
Football player Paul Poulos is
the only Michigan athlete seeking
an extra year of eligibility at this
meeting. Nothing was mentioned
about Wolverine halfback Brad
Myers, whose case could fall under
the special eligibility rulings which
might permit him another year of
play.

300 s. Thayer

NO 2-2500
J30

When the Big Ten swimming
coaches, gathered here for the
Conference swimming meet, heard
of the decision to keep the West-
ern Conference teams from par-
ticipating in NCAA meets, they
received the news more or less
unfavorably.
Typical of the comments were
these:
Mike Peppe (Ohio State): "My
God, it would ruin swimming.
Over the years we have always
primed for the NCAA champion-
ships. This would virtually kill
Big Ten swimming."
Hobie Billingsly (Indiana div-
ing coach): "It could conceivably
break up the Big Ten. They are
trying to ruin coaching as well
as competition."
Jim Counsilman (Indiana
swimming coach): "It would not

BIKES and SCOOTERS
MOVE IN
FAST CI RCLES?
Get a wheel !

WANTED: Ride to Boulder, Colorado
for spring vacation. NO 2-4591, Jack
Stewart,' 228 Hayden, E.Q. r 27

only kill swimming, but all sports
except football in the Big Ten.
Recruiting would be dead. We
couldn't get anybody to come to
school if this were effective.
"Everybody aims for the NCAA
championships. We would have
nothing left."
Michigan's coach Gus Stager
had nothing in mind but the job
at hand as he said, "What's the
use of talking about it now? I've
got a championship to worry
about winning now."

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605 Church NO 5-6607
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
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and you get it!"
1220 S. University at Forest
NO 8-9168
81
WHITES AUTO SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State 4O 2-3350
5[i 2

WANTED TO RENT
AWAY NEXT YEAR? Faculty couple
will sublet your 4 or 5 room apart-
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pus area only. Local references. NO 2-
4988. L7
BARGAIN CORNER
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks
39c; shorts 69c;, military supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 . Washington. W1
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS

FOURTH PLACE FINISHER - Ernie Meissner of Michigan
prepares to,-enter the water in the finals of the one-meter diving
in last night's Big Ten championships. Meissner finished behind
teammate Joe Gerlach, OSU's Sam Hall and Bob Webster, also
of Michigan.

AT IOWA CITY:
Cagers Close with Iowa
By DAVE ANDREWS
Michigan's oft-beaten basket-
ball team puts the lid on a dis-
appointing season tonight as it
travels to Iowa City to face Iowa's
Hawkeyes in a nothing game for
the Wolverines.
Coach Bill Perigo's cagers, with
but one win in 13 tries in con-
ference competition are hopeless-
ly mired in the Big Ten cellar.
More Meaning
For Iowa, the game has a little
more meaning. While the Hawks
can't possibly get out of the sec-
ond division, they could jump into
a sixth place tie with Purdue, if
the Boilermakers lose to ninth <
place Wisconsin, and Indiana-
captures its 11th consecutive Big
Ten win at Michigan State. {
Howeve'r, the Wolverines would
like to finish the season on a win-
ning note. Terry Miller, who has LOVELL FARRIS

STUDENTS-I will give you a 25% dis-
count on a name brand portable type-
writer, backed by Ann Arbor's most
reputable office supply company. For
demonstration, call Ralph Frederick,
3-3839. 5-9 evenings. B44
ALTERATIONS
DRESS MAKING, Ladies' Tailoring, Al-
terations. Call NO 2-3481, day or eve-
ning. P1
BUSINESS PERSONAL
BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at
the official Michigan ring. Burr Patter-
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sity, NO 8-8887. FF99
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC it's Johnny
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THE BUD-MOR AGENCY. NO 2-6362.
FF100
EUROPEAN TOURS, '60. 45 days, 9
countries including Oberammergau
Passion Play & Olympics, If desired.,
All mor $705. For details write West-
ropa, Box 2053, Ann Arbor. FF1

Used tape recorders
$59.95andup
HI FI STUDIO
13195. University

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83

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BEST DEALS ANYWHERE
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Come in, investigate Magnavox
March Clearance Sale
Bargains in Stereo and TV
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X36
PIANOS--ORGANS NEW & USED
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