THE MICHIGAN DAILY TRUR SDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, BRIGITTE BARDOT SPECIALS Atlantic Monthly -- 8 mos. - $2.50 (reg. $7.50 yr.) Qi Reader's Digest .-- 15 mos. - $1.89 (reg. $3.00 yr.) LI I Time - $4 yr (reg. $7) Life-- $4 (reg. $6.75) Q Newsweek - $3 (reg. $6) Q Sports 111. -- $4 (reg. $7.50 Q U.S. News & WR - $3.67 - (39 wk.) Q (reg. $6.00 yr.) Q] Reporter - $4.50 (reg. $6 yr.) LI Sat. Eve. Post - $4.79 - 60 wk. QI(reg. $6 yr.) Ladies Home Jr. -- 22 mos. --$3.85 ($3.50 yr.) flQ NAME' ADDRESSI Available to anyone who believes that God created women! I enclose $ Please bill me LiQ STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY, Box 20006 or phone NO 2-3061 ------------------------------------ Daily Class ifiZeds Bring Quick Results Missing Men Two More'M' Gridders Selected in NFL Draft Will Hinder Track Tea Landstrom Ineligible for Semester Sloan, Owen End Michigan Caree 4 Two Wolverines were drafted in the National Football League's supplementary draft in Philadel- phia last week. Jim Van Pelt was drafted by the Washington Redskins on the fifth round -of the thirty-round grab- Except Saturdays WASH YOUR OWN CLOTHES or We Will Wash Them For You Cheap -Fast-Dependable Come in and get a load of all we have to offer you. You can throw your dirty clothes in a washer and wait, or you can let us take care of them. Besides this we offer you 48- hour shirt service, quality dry cleaning, bnd most of all our personal quarantee to satisfaction. WESTINGHOUSE LA UNDROMAT 510 East Williams NO 3-5540 Around corner from Student Publications bag of college football players, and Gordy Morrow, reserve end, was taken by the Los Angeles Rams on the twenty-eighth round. Other 'M' Men In the first four rounds, which were held in November, Jim Pacex was drafted by the San Francisco Forty-Niners. In last year's draft Jerry Goebel was selected by the New York Giants. A player is eligible for the draft when his original class graduates. If he misses a year due to injury or military service he can thus be drafted before he uses up his eligi- bility. Missed Year This was true in Goebel's case, as he missed his fourth year of eligibility in 1956 due to a broken leg. He was drafted in 1956, but returned to use that eligibility this year. The National Football League eliminated the bonus pick effective next year. As all twelve teams had received a bonus pick the owners and coaches felt that 'the pick could beeliminated without in- justice to any team. Not Signed Yet Pace has not signed a pro con- tract, but is interested in playing for the Forty-Niners. Goebel, Van Pelt and Morrow have said they will wait and see what develops before they make a decision. Other Big Ten players who were drafter included end Jim Gibbons of Iowa (Cleveland Browns), Dan- ny Lewis, Wisconsin back, (Detroit Lions) Bob Jewett, Michigan State end (Chicago Bears), and Frank Youso, Minnesota tackle (New York Giants). By JIM BENAGH Michigan trackmen got its track season underway in last Friday's action-packed Michigan AAU-but the team also took a setback as the semester came to an end. Eeles Landstrom, greatest pole vaulter in Michigan history, set a Yost Fieldhouse' and Michigan AAU record but also lost his eligi- bility for the coming semester. The careers of two other fine Wolverine thinclads came to an official end, as Dave Owen and Laird Sloan helped gain first place laurels. Two Stars Gone The loss of Landstrom followed an earlier report that Jim Pace will undoubtably forsake track to improve his studies and possibly sign a professional football con- tract. The absence of this pair leaves Michigan opening its season with- out a Big Ten champion on the squad. Landstrom had won the vault as a sophomore during the 1956 campaign, while Pace sprint- ed to the indoor 60-yd. dash title last season. Landstrom's 14'94", a record for Yost Field House and the AAU meet, climaxed his best indoor sea- son. He still has another year of- eligibility. Sloan ended his eligibility by aiding in Michigan's only relay win. He teamed with Jim Simpson, John Twomey and Robin Varian In the sprint-medley relay tri- umph. Owen completed his career by notching a 55'%" victory in the shot put despite little practice. But the Wolverine outlool not of complete gloom. Ca Brendan O'Reilly, Pete Sta and Freeman Watkins through in good fashion, with several fine freshmen c dates. O'Reilly gained a tie with Richardson of the Chicago Club by high jumping 6'53 Good Hurdler Stanger pushed Eastern M gan's sensational Hayes Jon tying meet and fieldhouse re in both hurdle events. Watkins, an unsung sopho dashman, turned in a :06.3 c ing in the 60-yd. dash prelimi Although he didn't place i: finals his time was fine com to Olympis star Ira Murcl- :06.2 winning time. EELES LANDSTROM ... declared ineligible IDAHO PLAYS KEY ROLE: PCC Victimized by Jealousy r/-% TT e" w s : -.. - - r By HAL APPLEBAUM 1 Jealously is a strange reason for an athletic conference to break: up, but it caused the collapse of the Pacific Coast Conference. In the last 16 years California,; UCLA and Southern California won' 13 football championships' and an equal number of Rose Bowl bids. Naturally, they grabbed off most of the Bowl money while the other schools were getting peanuts. Football had become a big busi- ness, UCLA and USC were playing' in a stadium seating over 100,000. This meant money. Playing the smaller conference schools like. Washington State, Oregon and. Idaho their attendance dwindled. As a result the'Californian schools petitioned to have the round robin league schedule eliminated. For example, in 1954, UCLA, the nation's leading team, played at Oregon and drew only 18,000 fans and lost money. Against intersec- tional opponents UCLA averaged 70,000 and they felt they should be able to play more non-confer- ence games. They were voted down by a northern majority, 5-4. ldahiSPau er.. . but had full voting power and received a cut of the Rose Bowl receipts. Idaho's presence in the league accounted for the northern 5-4 majority. In the last three years every policy legislation vote by the conference except one was a 5-4 decision in favor of the, north. Idaho owed their presence in the league to the northern bloc and therefore voted with them, regardless of the issue at hand. After the illegal aid to _football players in California was discov- ered in 1954 the northern schools had the upper hand. They de- prived the guilty players of eligi- bility andbarred the schools from playing in the Rose Bowl and sharing in the receipts. This move considerably weak- ened the guilty schools, Southern California, UCLA, California and Washington. They tumbled from grid powers to only average squads. Oregon and Oregon State became league champions for the first time.C UCLA lost $78,000, USC, Cali- fornia, and Washington lost $52,- 000 in Rose Bowl money. This money was shared by the five other league members. ATTENTION STUDENTS & FACULTY the players. It was voted down 5-4. Similar legislation was again voted down. It appeared the cen- sured schools wanted to heal the breach, but the north had the upper hand and refused to relent. It had picked up Stanford as its fifth voting member tb replace the now disowned Washington. On December 4 the three south- ern schools submitted a five-point plan, which included elimination of the round robin and a new recruiting plan. It was turned down 5-4. A week latef California, South- ern California and UCLA with- drew officially. Today the Pacific Coast Con- ference is a shattered body of five schools. The future of football on the Pacific Coast is bleak. The breakup of the conference raises a series of questions con- cerning the future of the nine schools making up the league. Within the next year and a half Washington, UCLA, Southern Cal-' ifornia and California will be in- dependent schools. Oregon, Ore- gon State, Stanford, Washington State and Idaho will remain as conference members. Nothing definite about the fu- ture of these last four has been issued, but there are a number of possibilities open. Possible Moves --- It's been suggested the repre- sentatives of each institution meet to unite the conference. This seems hardly possible. The parties involved tried for two years to remedy their problems and were unsuccessful. The southern schools who bolted and the northern bloc, who remained, appear to have drifted too far apart to ever be reconciled. One rumor has the northern schools operating the conference with five teams or possibly added independent schools. It goes on t say that UCLA, USC, California and Washington will either fori their own league or more probabl remain independent. Rumors that these schools wi join with Army, Navy, Air Forc Academy, Notre Dame, Oklahom and Pittsburgh seem quite unlike ly, although possible. What's Next . The breakup will possibly effec other conferences, and particu larly the Big Ten. Since 1946 th Big Ten and the Pacific Coas Conference have been allied in th Rose Bowl pact. It now appear that the pact will be broken an a new one written up. The Ros Bowl committee has expressed desire to eliminate conference from long-term pacts. They woul prefer to have the best team fror east of the Mississippi play th best team in the west. A Big Te team would not necessarily b one of the teams. As a result th Big Ten ,would lose the $300,00 it makes annually on the game. It has been rumored that th Big Ten would not be intereste in the Rose Bowl unless they coul be guaranteed a yearly pact. How ever, the committee has not offici ally announced a new policy an appeals to be waiting until t1 future of West Coast football finally settled. Intersectional games betwee the Big Ten and Coast schools wi be played with one possible chang As independents the coast schoo may schedule more. games wit the Big Ten. They have found i the past that Western Conferenc opponents boost their attendanc The situation on the Pacif Coast was a bad one for footbal but it has done much to sho other conferences the ills of co lege athletics today. The rest the universities may profit froi the example. The southern schools also felt Schools Slapped that Idaho should be eliminated from the conference. They only A ,petition was introduced to played three league games a year, lessen the penalties imposed on .~ w .": v:::1 ::v. rv.' 'r '"+ti r e' t+..'f.':''" }} i%::":"""}::%C:"' S":::}l'$}:i::}:':i'':<::'{::}:}rv}i