Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 6, 1968 Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 6, 1968 v 07 I' ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING a h Says He Had to Sign safthis yea due tthe new four Westgate Shopping Center The forecast for Michiganj baseball this year has been first in the Big Ten and third in the i nation. Senior pitcher Geoff Zahn was to have played a major role in the title race. With a record- tying season of nine victories and one loss, he was considered the best in the Big Ten.; "In a leam sport I don't think any person mares that much difference. I think they'll -et along fine without me, they have many fine pitchers left." SPECIAL, for STUDENTS and FACULTY Members, each Thursday: Trousers, skirts, sweaters, blouses, and sport coats: 70c each I I Suits and Dresses: $1.40 each Overcoats and ~Topcoats: $1.50 each Last month Zahn signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers, and is no longer eligible for college base- ball. Zahn justifies his move, "I've been drafted four times within the last two years, but I've been content to stay in school until now. "Since the Baltimore Orioles or the Dodgers were the only two teams I wanted to play for I didn't want to pass up this oppor- tunity. "If I didn't sign now I'd be up for grabs again in June and some other team might choose me. My record has been almost perfect, and I think I'm ready to move up." "It's too bad the system works this way. I'd like to play another season at Michigan, as Coach to sign as soon as the season is Benedict is one of the best base- over, perhaps even deciding de- ball instructors in college ball. tails of a contract. As long as "But my chance came up before! they're here in school it seems a the season, and I couldn't risk waste not to get the practice. being thrown back in for the "I don't begrudge them sign- draft in June." ing now though. If the right op- Assistant baseball coach Dick portunity comes up it's silly to Honig agrees with Zahn. "I would pass it by." like to see the draft system As for the effect of losing Zahn, worked so that a draftee could Honig comments, "We will need sign a letter of intent, promising extra strength on the pitching game per weekend schedule. Now we have eight boys left and the four we'll rely on the most are all untested. Zahn feels the loss is not of great significance. "The team ran into the same thing last year. Bob Reed signed at the beginning of last season. We all felt we had to really work hard to make up for the loss. As a result we did better without him. "In a- team sport I don't think any one person makes that much difference. I think they'll get along fine without me, they have many fine pitchers left." Zahn will report to the Bakers- field, California Class A club three days after school lets out to begin working out. In the meantime he will practice with the Michigan team. MOBY BENEDICT (WESI GATE SHOPPING CENTER ONLY) b -- I TOP TEN POLL: Houston Ends Season First in Nation Engineering Career?. You can climb faster at ACCO .where the ACTION is Exciting opportunities are open now at Ameri- can Chain & Cable...a leading manufacturer of diversified products that are serving many of today's growth industries. Recent engineering graduates are working at ACCO now in such varied specialties as solid-state electronics ... aerospace component design ... metallurgy ... oceanography ... in- ertial guidance ... instrumentation for utilities and process industries ... data processing ... sophisticated material handling systems... Upper-rung positions can open up for you sooner... because of ACCO's unusual organi- zation into "groups." Over-all, ACCO is big. Financially, in geographic spread, in markets served, and in scientific contributions. Yet all operating units in every ACCO group are small enough to let you establish identity fast. Visit your placement office nowand arrange for an interview with the ACCO recruiter. He will be on campus... Wednesday, March 13 American Chain & Cable An Equal Opportunity Employer By Tne Associated Press It took Duke three overtimes to overcome North Carolina, but that was all the Blue Devils needed to shoot from 10th to sixth in The Associated Press' major college basketball poll. At the same time, the loss to Duke plus a defeat by South Caro- lina earlier last week, sent North Carolina tumbling from third to fifth in the next-to-last poll of the season. Houston, remained No. 1 as it finished its regular season sched- ule unbeaten in 27 games, and UCLA remained right on the Cou- gars' heels in the No. 2 slot. But St. Bonaventure, 21-0, climbed to third and Kentucky, 21-4, to fourth each moving up one notch. New Mexico, 23-3,2remained No. 7, but Columbia, 20-4, dropped from sixth to eighth after losing to Princeton 68-57. Louisville, 19-6, stayed No. 9. Davidson joined the Top Ten in the 10th spot on the basis of three victories' in the Southern Confer- ence tournament. The Wildcats whipped West Virginia, 87-70 in Saturday's final. Marquette, eighth last week, dropped from the rank- ings after losing two of three games last week. The Warriors lost to Xavier, Ohio, 88-83 and Western Michigan 73-66. Duke started out last week by defeating North Carolina State 71- 61 and then edged North Carolina 87-86 in its three-overtime game Saturday. That gave the Blue Devils a 20-4 record and made the. Tar Heels 22-3. North Carolina's loss to South Carolina also was by 87-86. Both teams will be shooting for a berth in the NCAA tournament in the Atlantic Coast Conference tourna- ment which runs from Thursday through Saturday. The top ten, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records through games of Saturday, March' 2, and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6- 5-4-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. Houston (24) 27-0 267 2. UCLA (3) 24-1 255 3. St. Bonaventure 21-0 212 4. Kentucky 21-4 176 5. North Carolina 22-3 151 6. Duke ' 20-4 113 7. New Mexico 23-3 94 8. Columbia 20-4 69 9. Louisville 19-6 67 10. Davidson (1) 2-4 45 Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Army, Chicago Loyola, Iowa, Kansas, Kansas State, La- Salle, Marquette, New Mexico State, North Carolina State, Ohio State, Princeton, Santa Clara, South Caro- lina, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Vil- lanova. * * * Hayes, Mount Picked First For East-West All-Stars INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. AP) - Houston's Elvin Hayes, the na- tion's No. 1 basketball player of the year, and Purdue's Rick Mount, one of the nation's top sophomores, were the first picks for the annual East-West College All-Star Game here March 30. Twenty more players will be selected for the afternoon game, sponsored by the National Asso- ciation of Basketball Coaches and the Indianapolis Star. Part of the proceeds will go to charity. The game will highlight week- National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation. The trials start March 25 with 33 players, some of whom will come here directly fron the NCAA tournament finals in Los Angeles March 22. The Olympic selection tourna- ment will be held the week after the All-Star Game at Albuquer- que, N.M. Mount and other underclassmen are eligible fur the All-Star Game because this is an Olympic year. Mount leads the Big Ten in scor- long Olympic 'trials here by the ing and ranks sixth in the nation. GEOFF ZAHN I - - Taking a Trip To Iowa City . PETITIONS for planing conznzittee WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE 1969 available Today through Friday, March 8 1528 S.A.B. - - - SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JOEL BLOCK -- _= i ill l ...- ...... - - 'II I!I I r - - - -- - - - --__ __._- --___I rickets for President Fleming's Inauguration Monday, March 11, 1968 A limited number of additional general admission tickets to President Fleming's inauguration are available for faculty members, students, and staff members who would like to attend this ceremony. The inauguration is scheduled at 3:00 p.m., Monday, March 11 in Hill Auditorium. Tickets will be available on a first come, first served basis upon presentation of an individual's identification card. Tickets will be limited to two per person and will be distributed from the first floor information desk of the Administration Building in keeping with the following schedule: You can go to Iowa City, Iowa, to cover the Big Ten Wrestling Meet and get a whole lot more than you bargain for. You can find out that that huge expense account (well, it sure looked big before you left) dwindles away in huge leaps and cash transactions. Half - fare - standing - by for nine hours is not fun, even if there is a girl going to Chicago who's been there almost as long as you have. And from the traveler's rule- book comes this interesting bit of advice: "... in the event of one's finding oneself short of cash, one of the easy ways to save funds is to cut back on eating - both the amount and the kind of food. If this is done correctly, one will . ." So it's three days of eating Greasy-Burgers and getting weird looks when you ask for a receipt. You would besabsolutely amazed at how easy it is to get space on a plane after the crowds have thinned. You might also be absolutely amazed at the hour at which this occurs. Try getting a ride by thumb- ing along one of the straight- est, flattest, loneliest highways that you can imagine. Now try it at 3:13 am. However, time is a nebulous concept to the occupants of a freshman dorm, and life there goes on with little regard for the socially accepted hours of semi-unconscious slumber. It is here that you reach the end of your travels, and after the informalities of introducing yourself and telling why you are here, your head hits a makeshift pillow of three odious tennis shoes wrapped in a towel, the whole mess in a clean pil- lowcase. But after the meet is over, and you've almost figured out the campus, it's back to the airport where you happen to be on the same plane as the Michigan State wrestling team. (Who incidentally won the team championship, in case you don't read Daily sports.) They beat you at euchre as bad as they beat your team on the mats, and everyone laughs and remembers and they chide you gently about writing down every word so there will be some juicy quotes for the new- est Slush - Fund'- Scandal - Expose. At Chicago, we charlged planes. They went to Flight 299, nonstop to Capital City Airport, and I went to Flight 474, jet Mainliner service di- rect to Metro Airport. And as I got back to Ann Ar- bor, I tried to remember what had happened, and how, and how very far away I had been and now I was home. -BILL McFALL * A -- I I I I' I I WHAT DOES ROBBEN FLEMING THINK ABOUT I I j Faculty, Wednesday, March 6-8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students, Wednesday, March 6-12 noon to 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday, March 7 and 8-8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Faculty, staff and students as long as the ticket supply lasts. I ____________ III _______________ II ________________________ I ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT for $1.00 EVERY WEDNESDAY I 4 lil ! F The Technical Student & The Draft Aunt Jemima'EITCZEH Junction U.S. 23 & 12 I 11111 the THI Thursday 4:00-Multi-Purpose Room.-UGLI III Il Speakers: JAMES CALLEY: Supervisor, Personnel Services, Allis-Chalmers On: Corporate Experiences with the Draft LENARD SCALIA: Student Peace Union Resistance Project DR. RICHARD POST: Ann Arbor Draft Counseling Service Blow Yourself UP TO Up POSTER SIZE' 2 ft. x 3 ft.-only $495 ppd. Get your own BLO-UP Photo Poster. Send any black and white or color photo from wallet size to 8" X 10" or any negative from 21x4"x24"to 4" x 5". We willsend you a 2 ft. by 3 ft. BLO-UP. 3' ft.. x 4 ft.-only $795 ppd. "... am inclined to think that thinking is a, legitimate activity for many voiierA in itc r nrnnpr n rsnertive" students, a I i I i