Friday, March «29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Friday, March 29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY --'IE- ve Hoosiers By DOUG HELLER Associate Sports Editor Special To The Daily HANOVER, N. H. - Before the NCAA Swimming Championships, r Michigan coach Gus Stager couldn't see how Indiana could lose. Of course, he said the same thing last year, and the Hoosiers finished third. Y e s t e r d a y, Indiana totally turned the tables on West Coast schools like Southern Cal and Stanford, and got off to an amaz- ingly fast start. In past years, it was the West Coast schools who took a big early lead, leaving the Hoosiers to try to make it up in diving. This time Indiana had a lead even be- fore the one-meter springboard event.. And then Indiana really took BRY over. Their divers took first fourth, fifth, sixth, and eighth places. Kinkead got As a result, the scoring after three points the first day showed Indiana with finish. i 129 points; USC with 77. Stan- In the 200 ford with 74, Yale with 73, and ley, Juan Be Michigan with 35. Hoosier Ch Disappointment Big Tens, For the Wolverines, it was a place here. day of some disappointment. But setting every this was coupled with the fact Indiana capt that they wound up in fifth, in- in with a se y stead of their predicted sixth po- ford's Pete sition. The very first event was a Michigan waning to the West Coast as 50-yard fre Hoosier Fred Southward grabbed iers popped third in the 500-yard freestyle Bryan Baten while Bob Windle took eleventh. a factor in t USC had the winner, Greg Charl- second nati A: ton, plus George Watson in fifth Zac Zorn. place, but Indiana wasn't buried As a resu as they had feared. events, Indi Meanwhile, sophomore Gary ahead wjth Lead NCAA Tank Meet, S. ,.-4i 'MI' Fifth Stanford and Yale were tied with 41. Then the stream became a tidal wave in the diving. Jim Henry was Indiana's big gun with 512.05 points. With 53 ooints in this one event, thanks to placing five men, the Hoosiers racked u- an all- time high. The big score was based on a combination of factors. First, In- diana qualified one more man than they did in the Big Ten meet: John Hahnfeldt, who hadn't doen a thing all year, came off the bench to take fifth place. Then too, the Hoosiers' other competitors had a bad time. Wol- verines Jay Meaden and Fred Brown, eighth and fifth list year, were only eleventh and twelfth. Wisconsin's Julian Krug, who finished thirduin the Big Ten's didn't even place. AN BATEMAN The last eventof the evening, the 800-yard freestyle relay, was t the Wolverines' first mere frosting on the Honsier cake s with a tenth-place as they came in fourth. Michigan, who just managed to make the Don Schollander swam the an- chor leg. The Olympic superstar, who has never won an NCAA cnampion- ship before due to illness, had a 1:39.8 for 200 yards. He came from way behind on Stanford's Dick Roth to win. The final time set every record in the book. Schollander's time wis -ignifi- cant, because he will swim the 200-yard freestyle against Michi- gan's Juan Bello. And Bello, who up to this time was best nation- ally in the event, saw his mark crushed by a second and a half.I * * * * * * Celtics Win; Even Series The Sterling they1 couldn't devaluale t By The Associated Press DETROIT - Player-Coach Bill Russell sparked a third-quarter rally which carried the Boston Celtics from a six-point deficit to a 135-110 National Basketball As- sociation playoff victory over the Detroit Pistons last night. The victory evens the best-of-7 PITCHING TROUBLES: '1I' Nine Fall Again Eastern Division semifinal play- off series at two games each, De- troit, urged on by 11,294 fans, largest crowd ever to see the Pis- tons play at Cobo Arena, hit 14 of their first 22 shots to take a 33-28 first-quarter lead. Boston rallied to knot the score but Dave Bing, with 13 first-half points, put Detroit back in front 60-55 at the half. A three-point play by Bing and a basket by Happy Hairston put Detroit ahead 77-71 with 6:10 to play in the third quarter, when Boston began its rally, Russell hit eight of his team's 19 points as Boston took a 95-86 lead by the end of thethird quar- ter and went on to increase the margin to 28 points with five min- utes left, -yard individual med- ello who was second to arley Hickox in the wound up in fourth While Hickcox was y record in the book, tain Bill Utley sneaked cond place and Stan- Siebert took third. Shutout was shut out in the estyle, but the Hoos- up again. This time man, who wasn't even he Big Ten meet, took onally behind UCLA's ult of the first three ana was unbelievably 56 points to USC's 53, finals, settled in sixth fo: 18 ofE its .35 points. Meanwhile, Stanford and Yale had a fantastic duel. Actually, it wasn't much of a race as Stan- ford held a big lead until Yale's Linksters Go Special To The Daily TUCSON - The Michigan; baseball team couldn't overcome, their pitching problems again yesterday and lost their second straight game to Arizona 8-4. The defeat was the Wolverines' seventh for the season against no wins. They continue their series with the Wildcats tonight with a in Sev single game and end the long and so-far abortive road trip with a doubleheader tomorrow. An Arizona attack which scored at least once in the first five inn- i Florida State Holds First The Salt Mind (Continued from Page 10) supply far exceeds the demand. Only the most talented and clever ever get a washroom key of their be induced to write for SI for the own. Listen to Jack Tibby, assistant managing editor for SI, as he U describes the virtual impossibili- ties of getting a job there these days: "I would say that in the last couple of years we've had about, oh let me see, about 70 writers seeking positions with us. And I think we have given a job to about two of them. We do like you to have a couple of years of profes- sional experience and most of the writers we hire have worked for us in a summer internship program. It's tough, I know." After slinking out of Tibby's of- fice the next person I talked to in the SI establishment was Honor Fitzpatrick, chief (you can check it out on the masthead if you want to) of the writer-reporter division, There are an awful lot of women stalking around the place and it's sort of surprising to think of 4 women writing for a magazine such as Sports Illustrated. But as Miss Fitzpatrick explained, "They are good writers-very good. It's just that we never know when they are suddenly going to terminate their careers in favor of marriage, babies, and things like that.", Miss Fitzpatrick's room, though, shows no trace of female weak- ness. A full length color portrait of Jimmy Brown hangs on one wall, Muhammad Ali dances on another, and black and white pic- tures from recent issues of the magazine hang on the third par- tition. Behind Miss Fitzpatrick a pic- ture window glowers over the city and peeks into the framework of the 1Empire State Building. It's easy enough to look into the win- dow. A good pair of binoculars, from the above mentioned tall building, will do it. Ah, but the trick is to look outside from the" inside and that's not so easy. How' do you do it, how do you really d it? "Keep the faith, baby, keep the faith." - This is the best answer I can give you. Miss Fitzpatrick was certainly different from the type of person I had come to the Time-Life build- ing expecting to meet. For some reason I was sure that behind the SI desk I would meet the famous Madison Avenue type manipulator - you know, the suave guy in an imported Italian suit, dark glasses, a long cigar, and a white cat on a leash. The image I had conjured up in my mind, of course, was the titan and aristocrat of American busi- ness. He was to be the producer, the director, and the star all at once. Between smoke rings that spiral wheeled out of his mouth, and raw meat balls that were tossed to live Piranhas in a tank when- ever the mood struck, thousands of decisions were made hourly that twisted and directed the; psychosis of American sport. I found no such person. In fact, I found more of a touch of humanism than anything else. Any place in New York that sells 45c cigarettes can't be all that bad. Special To The DailyI MIAMI - The Michigan golf team recorded a fine 296 total for its top four golfers to move up to seventh place on the second day of the Miami Invitational Golf tournament. This total combined with Wednesday's sum of 306 gives Michiganka score of 602 to rank 27 strokes behind tournament leading Florida State, which played a fantastic round of golf; its top four scorers averaging 67. Although Michigan is practic- ally out of contention for the, tournament championship, its seventh place position is tops among all the Northern teams in 'BIlboard The Michigan Rugby Club will travel to Ohio this weekend to engage the Cleveland Rugby Club in a pair of matches. Both A and B teams for each club will be involved in the week- end's action. Come to my ELECTION VICTORY BALL Saturday eve., March 30 OLD HEIDELBURG 211 N. Main Dancing Entertainment No admission charge MAX S H A IHN DEMOCRAT City Council Vote April 1 the tournament who have had little time to practice thus far in the season. Michigan's contingent was led by sophomore Randy Erskine who posted a fine round of 35-36 71 to give him a total of 149 for the two days of play. Captain John Schroeder, recovering from, an eye injury, scored a 39-37-76 154, Frank Groves 38-37-75 149, Rod Sumpter 36-38-74 150, Rocky Pozza 40-39-79 157, and Mark Christianson 37-40-77 155. Phi Alpha Kappa Graduate- Professional Fraternity RUSH SMOKER. Monday, April 1 ings quickly put the game out of boun f ort Cltis and John sight of the pitching-plagued nd Havlicek contributed J5 points. Wolverines. Bing led Detroit with 26. Michigan scored its first run ongi. d__.____it _._ a single by pitcher Jack Hurley -==-=- - - and an error by Arizona outfield- er Jerry Stitt on Elliott Maddox's fly ball. i c In the seventh, Stitt lost an- other ball in the sun, a line drive NORTH CAMP by Hurly. The ball rolled to the N 500 foot mark in centerfield and with t& it went for a two-run homer. Later in the inning Wolverine B URSLEY Jim Hosler batted for Andy Fish- er and singled to center. Wildcat pres reliever, freshman Bryan Shields, then threw two wild pitches and Academy Aw pinch-runner John Arvai racedI home with the Wolverines' fourth and final run.e Leading hitters for Michigan were second baseman Buddy For- sythe and captain outfielder Doug! Nelson, both with two for four. followed by Michigan 001 000 300-4 8 3 "THE FED Arizona 121 110 30x-8 14 3 Friday, Ma 7:30 p.m. Bursle Adi: li/c I US COMMITTEE 5e aid of COUNCIL sents iard Winning a dance with ERATION" BILL RUSSELL BRITISH STERLING So fine a gift, it's even sold in jewelry stores. After shave from $3.50. Cologne from $5.00. Fltsson a * "e3Imported from Great Britallt. Compounded In U.S.A. rch 29, 1968 ey Dining Room n -- Free i X.X mL asio Read and Use Daily Classifieds I I _ --- 8 P.M. Petitioning for JOINT JUDICIARY COUNCIL 5 seats available Pick up petitions in SGC offices. Sign up for interview. Petitions due in SGC offices 5:00 P.M. 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