THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG Track Team Runs atChicago Tonight By TOM WITECRI Y With its second consecutive Big Ten indoor title safely tucked away, Michigan's track team will do what Coach Don Canham called some "running for fun" this weekend., Eight men from the Wolverine squad that won the Conference crown just a week ago will com- pete in the Chicago Daily News Relays tonight. From there they will fly to Milwaukee and compete in the Milwaukee Journal Games tomorrow night. Here they will be joined by three more Wolverines who will fly up tomorrow morning. Featuring the Chicago 'board' meet will be a rematch of three of the country's finest mile relay, teams - Illinois, Michigan, and Michigan State. These quartets finished one, two, three in last weekend's Big Ten meet. Illini Set Record The Illini's winning time of, 3:16.3 set a new Big Ten indoor record. Michigan was just a tenth of a second behind, while the Spartans finished with a 3:18.4. MacDonald, Captain; White MIT Dale MacDonald was elected captain for next year and Bob White voted this season's most valuable player, Hockey Coach Al Renfrew announced yesterday. MacDonald, a 21-year-old jun- ior from Saskatchewan, will suc- ceed All-American Bobbie Watt as leader of the icers. The captain-elect, who led the Wolverines in goals scored a year ago with 19, slipped in point pro- duction this season, but was one of the squad's hard-skating main- stays. He played both forward po- sitions. Playing on a line with Bob White and Steve Bochen, Mac- Donald fired two crucial goals in the final series with North Da- kota. White, who will be awarded the Hal Downes Memorial Trophy for his efforts this season, led the team in scoring as center of Ren- frew's starting line. "He's one of the finest boys I've ever coached," said the Michigan mentor. "His spirit and desire did a lot toward carrying us as far as we went this year." White, one of the most popu- lar skaters to perform in the Coli- seum, became a crowd favorite for his aggressive skating style and spectacular rushes. He is one of four regulars departing via' graduation. Anchoring their respective teams will be three of the finest collegi- ate runners in the country: George Kerr of Illinois, Tony Seth of Michigan, and Willie Atterberry of Michigan State. If Michigan hopes to revenge last week's defeat, it will have to give Seth a 10-yard lead when he takes the baton for the final quar- ter mile. Last week he had about a six-yard lead and was barely nipped at the wire by Kerr, who ran a "fanstastic" 46.5 to catch him. Other members of the Michigan mile quartet will be Bryan Gibson, Dick Cephas and Ergas Leps in that order. Same Winning Team In the two-mile relay Michigan will enter the same foursome that won the Los Angeles Times event earlier this winter. Making up the team will be, in order, Dave Mar- tin, captain Earl Deardorff, Leps and Seth. Competing in the individual events will be two Michigan Big Ten champions: sprinter Tom Robinson in the 60 and sophomore Bennie McRae in the hurdle events. Joining the team at Milwaukee will be high jumper Steve Wil- liams, sprinter John Gregg, and Fred Montour, who will take Mar- tin's place on the two-mile relay team. Martin will be running In the College Mile event. UNKNOWN STAR: Versatile Bryan Gibson Bolsters Relay Quartet BRYAN GIBSON ... relay leadoff manr Fitzgerald Succeeds Hoyles As 'M' Wrestling Captain By DAVE LYON Associate sports Editor Dennis Fitzgerald, 'TlEd., was chosen captain of Michigan's 1960- 61 wrestling squad yesterday by teammates. He succeeds Mike Hoyles, '60E, who captained the team that last weekend brought Michigan its first Conference wrestling champion- ship in four years. Selection as captain climaxes an eminently successful season for Fitzgerald, a native of Ann Arbor who never wrestled in high school. Shook Off Injury He shook off a pre-season injury to post a 9-0-0 record, all at 167 pounds, in dual meets. Then he swept past three more opponents' in the Big Ten meet to join four other Wolverines as winners of individual titles. Fitzgerald's athletic successes this year have not been confined to wrestling. Last fall he starred as a second-line fullback on Coach Bump Elliott's football team, and on the gridiron displayed the same qualities of spirited, aggressive play that he showed on the mat. I YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE Because of Fitzgerald's relent- less determination, wrestling alumni viewing the Big Ten meet' here last weekend compared. him to Mike Rodriguez, a three-time winner (1954-55-57) of Confer- ence 157-pound titles for the Wol- verines. Fitz' Romps In last Saturday's 167-pound championship bout, Fitzgerald roared to a 12-3 victory over Iowa's Joe Mullins and all but pinned his man. He shut out his two other opponents in the meet. During the dual-meet season he scored 70 points and allowed only 14. Last year Fitzgerald, who got his only previous mat experience in all-Marine and AAU meets, also went undefeated (4-0-2) in dual meets. His only loss came in the Conference 167-pound title bout. "I'd like to win a national title," he said yesterday. He'll get his chance in the NCAA meet at College Park, Md. March 24-26 against such respected opposition as Oklahoma's Sid Terry and Penn State's Ron Pifer. Make Good Captain Regardless of his success in the NCAA, "he'll make a good captain," Coach Cliff Keen said. As the 36th captain wrestling under Keen, Fitzgerald will step into a role steeped in tradition. Last week Hoyles did his part in upholding it. In the Michigan State dual meet Feb. 27, Hoyles received a painful rib injury while grappling with State's George Hobbs. But Hoyles, with Keen's con- sent, participated in the Big Teni meet and finished a respectable third. His only loss in the tourna- ment came from Ohio State's Dave Camaione, winner of the "out- standing wrestler" award. Scores I-M SCORES Independents Buckeyes 64, Phi Delta "B" 21 Cooley 40. Morays 24 Professional Fraternities Alpha Chi Sigma 59, Gamma Alpha 25 Phi Delta Phi "A" 48, Alpha Kappa Psi 28 Falcons 53, Phi Epsilon Kappa 41 Nu Sigma Nu 37, Psi Omega 330 Law Club 41, Phi Alpha Kappa 26 NBA M~nneapolis 133, New York 108 N'"L Boston 3, New York 3 (tie) College Basketball NCAA Small College KSemifinals Evansville 76, Kentucky Wesleyan 64 Chapman 79, Cornell 64 EUROPE We'll see the usual PLUS. "You're not herded around. A college tour that's different EUROPE SUMMER TOURS 225 Sequoia, Box 2 Pasadena, Calif. By TOM WITECKI Bursting off the starting blocks at tonight's Chicago Relays will be Wolverine Bryan Gibson, who has held the leadoff slot on Coach Don' Canham's mile relay quartet for the past two years. Before coming to Michigan, Gib- son, who hails from Whitby, On- tario, had never run a quarter mile. In high school, he competed in the sprints, hop, step and jump, broad jump and even the shot put. A versatile athlete, he also won letters in football, basketball, hockey and lacrosse. Fast Sprinter However, it was his clockings in the sprint events-a :10.1 in the 100 and a :22.8 in the 220-that caught Coach Canham's eye and eventually brought him a Michi- gan athletic tender. Once at Michigan, however, Gibson ran into such fine sprint- ers as Tom Robinson, John Gregg and Dick Cephas, who were also members of the freshmen track team. Thus, he moved to a little longer event-the 440. By switching to the quarter mile, Gibson also became a prime candidate for the Wolverine mile relay team. Canham tried Gibson in the leadoff spot early last winter and was so satisfied with the re- sults that he has kept him there ever since. Gets Fast Start Canham said, "As a former sprinter, Bryan always gets off to a fast start. He gets out front and stays there, that's why I've kept him in the number one slot." And the results have been sat- isfying. ,pibson, off with a fast start, almost always has a lead at the end of the first quarter mile. Last winter he led off the mile H.S. Swim Meet Michigan's Class A high school swimming champion- ships open tonight at 6:00 with the first of 11 events in Varsity Pool. A field of 450 en- tries from almost 50 schools will compete in the two day affair, with the finals set for tomorrow at 8 p.m. relay team made up of Don Chal- fant, Marsh Dickerson, Tony Seth and himself that holds the Michi- gan varsity indoor record, with a time of 3:16.1. Gibson too seems happy with the leadoff position. "An early burst of speed will usually give me the lead and that's where I like to run," he said. Good Quarter Miles In addition to his standard posi- tion as the relay leadoff man, Gib- son has turned in some fine in- dividual quarter miles. Last week, he ran the finest indoor quarter of his life, a :49.3, to finish third in the Big Ten indoor meet. Last year, he also finished third in the Conference indoor meet with a :50.3 clocking. The Cana- dian quarter-miler then put In a fine outdoor season that included a fine :48.5 clocking. Unfortun- ately, he pulled a leg muscle while running in a dual meet and was Johnson Dies;, Maxwell Signs By The Associated Prs WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Arnold Johnson, who turned a white elephant ball park into a financial success by moving the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City, died yesterday. Death came to the 53-year-old Johnson a few hours after he was stricken by a cerebral hemor- rhage as he drove to his Palm Beach home from an intra-squad game at the A's training camp. LAK E LAND, Fla. - Charlie Maxwell signed a $26,000 contract last night with the Detoit Tigers. ending a 10-day holdout. Maxwell, most serious of De- troit's two holdouts, led the team in home runs with,31 and runs batted in with 95 last year, His 31 home runs are a club record: for left handed hitters. WASH and WEAR SLACKS Wear them without a care. These are the slacks you will enjoy living in . as Advertised in Esquire Rabideau- Harris 119 South Main St. Ann Arbor Store Hours Mon. 9 to 8:30 P.M. Tues. thru Sot. 9 to 5:30 P.M. forced to sit out the Conference outdoor meet. This spring, Gibson has his eyes set on an outdoor quarter mile mark of :47.6. This is the time he will need to make the Canadian Olympic team. 95 up + Use Da~ly. Classifieds + SIGN UP NOW for See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show in color Sundays, NBC-TV-The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TV an interview with the COOPER - BESSEMER t CORP. representative who will be on campus TUESDAY, MARCH 15. 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