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March 07, 1968 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1968-03-07

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, March 7, 1968

PageEigt TE MCHIGI'4DAIY Tursdy, arc 7,196

__. u . . _...__ .._.
I

Four Intramural Fields Added

The Techncal Student & The Draft
Thursday 4:00-Multi-Purpose Room-UGLI
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
SARGENT MUSE:
AnnArbor Air Force Recruiting Center
PROFESSOR DORR :
Ann Arbor Draft Board!
Sponsored by your Engineering Council
- - - - - - - - - - - - _ --- - -4- - - - - -

(Continued from Page 1)
on-site recreational facilties for
University housing. "Students
couldn't be told to go down to
Wines Field anymore, because of
the great distance involved."Mayer
explained. "The interest of North
Campus residents in an intramural
program that was already loaded
to capacity speeded development,"
he continued.
"There is a growing commitment
to the idea that when a housing
unit is constructed, a total com-
plement of the facilities that it
requires should be provided,"
Mayer added.
He cited Northwoods IV, a mar-
ried-student housing project under
construction on North Campus an
example. Several areas have al-
ready been designated for possible
recreational use. The situationis
analagous to the idea of planned
communities in suburbia, complete
with golf course, school, and shop-
ping center, he explained.
The third phase of the intra-
mural program, indoor facilities.
is not in the immediate offing.
Details of these projects, such as
location, size, cost, etc., are still
being studied at the present time.
Mayer envisions both Central
Campus and North Campus usage1
of the Fuller Road project. "It will
be excellent for both organizeda
intramural and club play, and for1
informal recreation by North
Campus residents."
"We're moving in the right di-
rection on North Campus," he1
said.
Bilboar
The Intramural Department isf
sponsoring a campus wide power-1
lift meet Friday night 'at 7:30 at
the IM Building. Thethree lifts
involved will be the bench press,E
and the squat and dead lift.{
Three trophies will be awarded.,

4

RUDY TOMJANOVICII

SENI
FIN'D
FOR.

ORS

YOR

Ci

THE FIRST OF four multi-
purpose recreation pads was in-
stalled on North Campus last
summer, adjacent to Baits
Housing. The purpose of the
padconcept is to provide on-
site facilities for student rec-
reation. Each unit can be used
for a variety of activities, in-
cluding basketball (two full
courts), tennis (two courts),
handball, paddleball, vdlleyball,
ant squash.
University Charter
Caledonian Airways
FLY TO
LONDON
from
DETROIT
$230 Roundtri p
May 20 to Aug. 19
Also, Wait Lists For:
May 9 to June 19
June 27 to Aug. 22
CALL: 761-2348
5-7 P.M.
Read and Use
Classified Ads !

SPORTS TIDBITS:
Suspension For Killy?
POUND RIDGE, N. Y. - Jean-Claude Killy, triple gold
medal winner in the recent Winter Olympics, has been given
until tomorrow to show cause why he should not be suspended
by the International Skiing Federation.
Killy denied Tuesday that he had received booty for
exclusive photos in a Paris magazine, an eventuality which
would jeopardize his amateur status.
The chairman of the FIS eligibility committee said
that if Killy can prove his claim he will be cleared of any
taint on his amateur record but if he was suspended, he would
lose all of his titles.
BOSTON - Jim Lonborg, the Boston Red Sox' Cy Young
Award winner injured in a skiing mishap just prior to the
Christmas holidays, received good news from the doctors
yesterday as the cast was removed from his right leg.
"It's okay, everything looks good," said Dr. John Mc-
Gillicuddy, the famed orthopedic surgeon who operated on
Lonborg's badly damaged knee last December. "There has
been talk that he might not be able to pitch until May 15,
but I wouldn't be surprised if he's pitching before that," Dr.
McGillicuddy added.
Lonborg plans to fly to the Bosox' spring headquarters
at Winter Haven, Florida on Friday.

Rudy Makes
All Big Ten
CHICAGO '(P) - Five school
shared berths on the 1968 All-Big
Ten basketball team named yes-
terday by The Associated Press,
reflecting thedtalent spread in the
conference's down-to-the-wire title
race.
Michigan sophomore Rudy Tom-
janovich was the lone Wolverine
named. Tomjanovich was one of
four sophomores to make the sec-
ond team.
Iowa and Ohio State, tabbed for
a one-two finish or championship
tie tomorrow, placed Sam Williams
and Bill Hosket respectively as the
only repeaters from last year's
AP honor team.
Also voted tothe top all-confer-
ence unit by AP sports experts
were sensational sophomore Rick
Mount of Purdue; Wisconsin's Joe
Franklin, only unanimous choice,
and Dave Scholz, star of defensive-
ly strong Illinois.
The slightly built, but deadly
accurate Mount, newly crowned
conference scoring champion,
missed one first team vote, as did
Hosket, rugged 6-7 Buckeye vet-
eran.
Barely relegated to the second
All-Big Ten team was Minnesota's
Tom Kondla, a first team choice
last season when he led conference
scoring.
Underscoring the unusually
strong sophomore surge this season
headed by Boilermaker Mount, all
four other second team spots went
to first year performers.
They included Dave Soreson of
Ohio State; Chad Calabria of Iowa
and Dale Kelley of Northwestern.

I

Big Ten Standings

'

all about the exceptional career opportunities
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See your Placement Director today and sign
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campus March 8.
Be sure to pick up a copy of "Success Story,"
The Travelers new career guide, from your
Placement Office.
The TRAVELERS INSURANCE Companies
An equal opportunity employer M & F

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L
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Pct.
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_ I

INTERNSHIPS IN
SOUTHERN EDUCATION
The Southern Education Foundation is seeking a small
group of young persons interested in educational plan-
ning. A one year non-credit program combining ad-
ministration, study and a broad look at educational
change is available to those between 23 and 33 with
at least two years post-baccalaureate experience re-
lated to education. The internship is designed to
identify young leadership for Southern education, con-
cerned with Negro educational opportunity, the end of
the dual school system, relationships between educa-
tion and urban problems, questions of compensatory
education and regional planning for problems of race

11

sandal bravura!
'I'lih oldI new sdat-heel sandals plate straps of

THE-BULKY LOOK IN ANEW LIGHT.

The look is rugged in Damon's cotton crochet-

0

11

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