100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 18, 1960 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-02-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1960

THE MICftI~iAN DAILY ThURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1980

__
. .

IPILE PERFECT RECORD:
Wrestlers Shine in Big Ten Meets

IN MIDDLE-DISTANCES:
Leps Leads Michigan Runners

~'1

4

.. :. ..

By DAVE LYON
Associate Sports Editor
ichigan's wrestlers would just
oon have the season end right
n the basis of dual meets so
this season between the vari-
teams in the Big Ten, Michi-
comes out a winner.
he Wolverines have defeated
r Conference teams in head-to-
,d dual meets: Ohio State (24-,
Purdue (23-3), Northwestern
-5), and Iowa (14-11). Michi-
's only loss is to Penn State.
lichigan State, considered the
of roadblock to a Maize and
e-colored Big Ten crown, was

felled Monday night by Pittsburgh,
15-11. The Wolverines hung up a
17-11 verdict over Pitt.
Iowa, a Michigan victim, bumped
off Minnesota earlier this season,
17-13. Both are considered to have
a chance at the Conference cham-
pionship.
That leaves three Big Ten
squads - Indiana, Illinois, and
Wisconsin. The Badgers have been
beaten by both and many others.
MSU and Iowa include Indiana
and Illinois among their victims.
Michigan Coach Cliff Keen is
apt to discount the above rational-
ization, and wait until the Con-
ference meet here March 4-5 to

find out who will be team cham-
pion. He knows from experience
that the team that wins the dual
meets doesn't necessarily win the
Conference title.
The relative strengths of two
given teams tend to be different
in dual meets than in a Big Ten
championship meet, where eight
other teams are involved. And a
rapidly - moving squad will be
stronger at Big Ten time than
during the dual-meet season.
More than once, a Keen-coached
team has compiled unimpressive
dual-meet record, only to show its
best form in the Big Ten cham-
pionships.
From what this year's Wolverine
edition has shown, there seems to
be little room for improvement.
Keen is most likely to have his

men concentrate on conditioning
and aggressiveness in the coming
weeks before the Conference af-
fair.
Dual meets at Illinois and Indi-
ana this weekend and at Michigan
State the weekend after offer the
Wolverines a chance at a 10-1
record, which would be the best
for a Keen team since the 1951
mark of 9-0-1.f
Records this season indicate that
Michigan should win solid tri-
umphs at Illinois tomorrow night
and at Indiana Saturday.
The Michigan State encounter
Feb. 27 promises to be a tough one
for the Wolverines, but a victory
at East Lansing will definitely
stamp Michigan "the team to
beat" in the Big Ten champion-
ships.

ELABORATE CLEAN-UP
TOPCOATS - CARCOATS
WINTER JACKETS

ues $40 to $65

Values $19.95 to $40 Values $11.95 to $27.50

$e 0$1t SAVINGS
Save 0 o r $10 o ALL:-

Here are the sizes:

I

a,

sizes 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 42 44 46
topcoats 3 6 14 16 18 8 12 15 14 8j
ALL SALES FINAL ALTERATIONS AT COST
sizes 34 36 38 40 42 44 46 48 50
carcots 2 8 7 6 8 10 8 6
GOOD SELECTIONS ALL STANDARD STOCK
sizes 36 38 40 42 44 46 48
jackets 10 12 18 14 8 10 4
Longs and shorts included
You can expect more value for your $ at
Robideau-Harris--and you will never be disappointed.

Campus Sale Today
on the Diag
9to4
THIS IS THE FIRST CAMPUS SALE
OF THE NEW SEMESTER.
Be sure and buy
your yearbook NOW
before the next price rise.
NOW ONLY
$fi50

ERGAS LEPS
... aims at 4:06
TidweUl
Leads 'M'
John Tidwell, Michigan's junior
forward, vaulted into the top five
in Big Ten scoring this week with
27- and 28-point performances
against Indiana and Northwestern.
Tidwell's conference average
swelled to 20.4 points per game as
he eased past Indiana's huge Walt
Bellamy in the scoring race.
Against the towering Hoosiers,
Tidwell tossed in one more than
the 6'11" center who is now sixth
on the Big Ten averaging 20.3
points per contest.
Big Ten sophomores Terry Disch-
inger of Purdue and Jerry Lucas
of the league-leading Ohio State
Buckeyes continue to pace Big
Ten cagers.
Dischinger is scoring at a 28.5
per game pace while Lucas has
been sinking 26.4 points per game.
Ron Johnson of Minnesota is
fourth.-
Overall, Michigan's unorthodox
sniper has a 20.5 average, just
one-tenth of a point above his
conference mark.

By BILL PHELPS
"If he has enough determination
and is willing to go all-out, Ergas
Leps could run a 4:06 mile just
about any time now."
Those were the words of Michi-
gan track coach Don Canham con-
cerning his sophomore middle-dis-
tance man after the latter's great
job in anchoring two very good
relay teams in the Los Angeles
Times meet last weekend.
Leps first came into prominence
by winning both the half-mile and
mile events in the Ontario High
School Track and Field Cham-
pionships in June, 1958.
Later in that same summer, the
Toronto runner gained interna-
tional attention after he ran a
4:13.6 mile-one of the fastest ever
recorded by a North American
schoolboy-in an open meet at
Hamilton, Ont. Because it was an
open meet, however, the time
wasn't counted as a high school
record.
In the second effort, he was
pushed by ex-Wolverine track cap-
tain Ron Wallingford, also of
Toronto. Luckily (for Michigan)
Wallingford didn't stop pushing
until he had pretty well persuaded
Leps to come to Ann Arbor.
Leps wasn't to be hurried south,
however, until he ran 1:55.6 to
set a new Canadian high school
half-mile record.
Kelsey First
In Pig Pong
Kelsey strengthened its hold on
first place in residence hall I-M
all-year standings last night by
edging Huber, 3-2, for the table-
tennis championship.
Bruce Martin of Kelsey broke a
2-2 tie by defeating Huber's Ron
Beckman, 21-19, 9-21, 21-19, in
the deciding match.
FRATERNITY BASKETBALL "A"
Delta Kappa Epsilon 42, Alpha Kap-
pa Lambda 23
Tau Epsilon Phi 2, Triagnie 0 (for-
feit)
FRATERNITY BASKETBALL "B"
Sigma Phi Epsilon 68, Delta Chi 18
Delta Tau Delta 67, Alpha Delta
Phi 10
Tau Delta Phi 24, Delta Chi 18
Phi Kappa Tau 23, P1 Lambda Phi
21
Chi Phi 34, Sigma Nu 26
Phi Epsilon P1 32, Psi Upsilon 25
Chi Psi 28, Sigma Chi 25
Sigma Alpha Mu 35, Lambda Chii
Alpha 21
Alpha Tau Omega 40, Alpha Epsi-
lon Pi 20

CG
W .
UJ
W
Ud
W'
W.

RUSHEES
OTI

After winning the Michigan
AAU cross-country meet as a
freshman. Leps concentrated more
on the 1,000 yards, half-mile, and
440 in an effort to increase his
speed.
Last fall he moved indoors and
in February ran a very creditable
1,000 yards in the Boston Knights
of Columbus meet.
During that winter he did a lot
of weight training, "because I feel
that if I build up my shoulders
and arms they will give me more
drive."
Whether it was a result of the
weight training program, or the
inspiration of a cute new fiancee
at home, Leps started off the in-
door season' very well this winter.
In the pre-Christmas inter-squad
meet, he took the baton for the
final leg of the mile relay, made
up a six yard deficit between him-
self and speedy Marsh Dickerson,
and brough his baton home first
in the excellent indoor time of
:49.3.
Between semesters he bettered
the varsity 1,000 yards record with

I FREE DELIVERY * FREE DELIVERY1

-RUSHERS
HERS

an unofficial 2:11 clocking in the
K. of C. meet at Boston.
His recent part in the double
victory at Los Angeles indicates
that he will be a potential threat
at all .distances from 440 yards
to 1,000 yards as well as the mile
in the Big Ten indoor meet.
Coach Canham admits that it
will be quite a chore trying to
fit Leps, Tony Seth, Earl Deardorff
and the tother fine middle-distance
men into the events in which they
will all have their best chances.
Leps seems to be at his best in
a race when he is just behind the
leader going into the final stretch.
Then, almost without fail, he is
outside of, even with, and then
ahead of the formers, pace-setter.
It Is probably his great facility to
be able to come from behind that
prompts Coach Canham to use
him as anchor man on the relay
teams.
In this Olympic year, Leps has
his sights set on a berth on the
Canadian track team.
"It will take lots of speed work
as wel las distance training," he
estimates, "but that trip to Rome

cc
a
'U
{i1
CIS

TODAY ONLY!!
12" PIZZA
with PEPPERONI
ONLY

r
-

0

=

RABIDEAU2IIHARR
"Where the Good Clothes Come From"
119 S. Main St. Anna

I

S

I

MICHIGAN SCORING
G FG FT-FTA
Tidwell 19 150 91-119
Miller 19 117 51-64
Farris 19 83 73-106
Hall 3 14 2-9
Maentz 12 41 12-23
Clark 11 24 12-25
Meyer 7 9 19-28
Robins 3 6 3-4
Higgs 5 5 4-5
Sangster 5 6 2-3
Brown 5 5 1-8
Donley 1s 6 12-2s
Lyons 6 1 0-2
Zimmerman 4 0 2-3
Schoenherr 14 2 0-0
TOTALS 19 469 284-424

t_.. ----
i r

= _

Avg.
20.5
15.0
12.2
10.0
7.8
5.5
5.2
5.0
2.8
2.8
2.5
1.6
0.3
0.5
0.2
64.3

y"
J'
li
W'
99
ME6

PIZZA (inn THE PROP
For free Delivery
Call NO 5-5705
FREE DELIVERY " FREE DELIVERY

+1'

Arbor

Store Hours:

Mon. 9 to 8:30

Tues. Thru. Sot. 'til 5:30

I

Use Daily Classifieds!

r

-..

11:

<i

i I

i

IBM WILL INTERVIEW

SCORES
NHL.
Chicago 5, New York 1
Toronto 3, Boston 1
College Basketball
Geo. Washington 97, W. Virginia 93
DePaul 70, Dayton 66
Pennsylvania 66, Lasalle 62
Navy 79, Georgetown 68
St. Bonaventure 72, Villanova 70
Wake Forest 106, Virginia 66
St. Joseph's (Pa.) 99, Delaware 66

I

ANNOUNCING:
TAU EPSILON PHI
OPEN RUSHING
at on
FOUNDATION Feb. 21: 2-5 P.M.
129 Hill St. Feb. 21, 22, 23: 7-9 P.M.

4

MAR. 3 & 4

HILLEL
14

IBM invites candidates for Bachelor's or Master's Degrees to discuss

NBA
St. Louis 131, Minneapolis 127
Philadelphia 123, Syracuse 116 ______

opportunities in Applied Science, Business Administration,

Manufac-

---

I

I

turing, Marketing, Product Development, Programming and Research
... positions throughout the United States.
Laboratories and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott, Kings-
ton, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vt.; San Jose,
Calif.; Lexington, Ky.; and Rochester, Minn. Corporate headquarters is
located in New York, with 192 branch offices in cities throughout the
United States. The IBM representative will be glad to discuss with you
the type of career of particular interest to you. IBM offers:
" Leadership in the development of information-handling systems.
* New applications for data processing and advances in computer
technology.
* Favorable climate for continued career growth.
Opportunities for a wide range of academic backgrounds
and talents.
Contact your College Placement Officer to arrange an appointment for
a personal interview with the IBM representative.,

Fraternities and sororities are workshops in understanding and cooperation.
They are anvils on which the characters of individuals may be fashioned for

service beyond self."

Dr. Milton Eisenhower
President
Johns Hopkins University

.- ....m m .m m m. m m m mm.. m m mm..m m.m mm..r... .., ......_.'.... ... .. . - - - - - - - - - --... . ., _..,._. :.._._

RUSH REGISTRATION
TODAY 9-12 A.M. and 1-5 P.M.
FRIDAY 9-12 A.M. and 1-5 P.M.

SATURDAY 9-12 A.M.

Registration Desk, First Floor of the Michigan Union.
F ----------s---s---- y-- ---- s-----------n
For the answers to your rushing questions,

111 you cannot attend the interview, call or write:
Mr. H. J. Gibson, Jr., Branch Manager
IBM Corporation, Dept. 868
22720 Michigan Ave.
Dearborn, Mich.
Ci. 8-9000

11

see

IBMYE
r humJt a iua iuruEt CGi~A ildhM

an IFC Rushing Advisor.
February 18-19 . . . 2-5 P.M.
February 22-260... 2-5 P.M.

I

II

I

A A

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan