Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 21 1970 PaeEih TEMCHGN1AL -f! ....,_ . -.3 . n . I Charter Flight to EUROPE COST: $215 per person LEAVES JUNE 6th: Windsor to London RETURNS JULY 6th: Amsterdam to Windsor Open to University Students, Faculty, and Employees $100 DEPOSIT PAYABLE TO CONLIN, TRAVEL BUREAU IS NECESSARY MAIL RESERVATIONS TO: DARYL L. BARTON (761-0838) 1316 GEDDES, NO. 1 ANN A~RBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 Ruggers, stickmen face weekend trials ROOKIE SPARKLES 0~ GM9 batsmen fall to Arizona, 6-5 By BILL ALTERMAN Besides music and dope, Oberlin College is known for one other thing-lacrosse. Last year the men from Ohio finished third in the Midwestern Conference and they are just as good this year. All of this may well become evident this after- noon when Michigan faces Ober- lin atOberlin. Also on the road this weekend is the Michigan Rugby club which travels across the border to play Windsor. Tomorrow the ruggers MM (5th AN N UAL) f DE BATE OF THE CENTURY ! start their home schedule with a 1:30 game against Penn State on Ferry Field. In the 2 o'clock lacrosse game at Oberlin, Michigan will be try- ing to break their two game los- ing streak incurred on their re- cent trip to Virginia. The two rugger losses on their eastern trip were dealt by VPI 4-2 and Roan- oke 14-7. Though disappointed with the results, coach Skip Flan- agan was pleased with the trip. Flanagan is also pleased by the play of mnidfielders Dan Lamble, Kim Rodgers and Ken White. One area where Michigan has b e e n getting into trouble however, is penalties. Roanoke was able to score half of their 14 goals while a man up. Another source of joy for the Michigan team should be provid- ed by the return of Tom Mid- daugh to the attack. Middaugh was unable to go on the Virginia trip because of a wedding cere- mony - his own. Flanagan also expects to get an improved game in the goal from Jay Johnson who, according to Flanagan, didn't play too well in "the Old Domin- ion." IN ITS FOURTH year of play, the Michigan lacrosse team should show a marked improvement. Though they have a tough sch- edule, a number of excellent play- ers are returnees with the exper- ience needed in forming a cohes- ive unit. In today's rugby matchup, Michigan's Gold (club) team is making the trip. Sunday it will be the Blue (representative) teams chance to s h o w their stuff. Special To The Daily TUSCON, Ariz. - There was no President to throw out the first ball but it is doubtful that even that momentous event would have helped the Wolverines who opened up their 1970 baseball season with a 6-5 loss to the Arizona Wildcats. For the Wolverines, the r u 1 e that allows freshmen to participate in varsity baseball must be very popular. It has provided them with the opportunity to have a young lad by the name of Tom Kettinger on the team. T h e freshman left fielder was respon- sible for all of Michigan's r u n s with two homers and a double. In the second inning, w I t h Arizona pitcher Jim Provenzano on the mound, Kettinger blasted a 385 foot shot over the left field wall to give the Wolverines their first tally. Two innings later, he doubled off the left field wall and was later driven in by Dan Fife, the newly chosen captain of the basketball team. Finally, in the eighth inning, Mark Carrow walked, Tom Lund- stedt reached base safely on an error and Kettinger came through again, this time with a 400 foot blast. This homer gave him four runs batted in for the day. His three hits in four times at b a t coupled with his four RBI's made his debut with the Wolverines quite impressive. Despite Kettinger's fine per- formance, the rest of the Wol- verine offense was virtually dor- mant. Only two other players hit safely, Fife and Lundstedt, how- ever this was Michigan's f i r s t game and little can be done when they faced a team which has been practicing all winter and is well "Blowing the lid right off the Scandal of the Environment!" "THE LATKE (yes ...?) THE H AMANTASHEN (yes . .. ) and the INNER ENVIRONMENT" (what. ) PRO'S IN THE MUDDLE CON'S DR. ROBERT GREEN MD MRS. PEG KAY Nutrition Expert PROF. CARL COHEN Philosopher PROF. BEVERLY POOLEY LLB, SJD PROF. LEONARD GREENBAUM Phoenix Project The Je ishCSchool of ANN ARBOR is looking for Sunday School teachers for kindgergarten through eighth grade. Strong Jewish background and teaching and/or program skills. ,. under way with its regular season. In the pitching department, Michigan's number one mound acb, Jim Burton, worked six in- nings and gave up five runs and eight hits. Added to this he struck out five and walked seven. Sopho- more Ed Bryson finished up the game, working the last two in- nings. He gave up no runs or hits in his stint. The star for the Wildcats was firstbaseman Rod O'Brien who reached base safely five consecu- tive times with two doubles, a single, a walk and an error. He drove in two runs and scored three times himself. MICHIGAN AB R HI Carrow~ (3b)' 3 1 0 Bowen>(f) 3 0 0 Lundstedt (c) 4 1 1 Kettinger (f) 4 3 3 IFife (rf) 4 0 1 Rafferty (ss) 2 0 0 Solomon (lb) 2 0 0 Bower (ph) 1 0 0 Makowski (b) 1 0 0 Ball (2b) 3 0 0 Roberts (ph) 1 0 0 Burton (p) 2 0 0 Brso ()1 0 0 Totals 31 5 5 Mermaids drop to sixth Special To The Daily NORMAL, Ill. - Despite fine performances and several new team records, Michigan's women's swimming team slipped from fourth to sixth place in a field of 60 at the close of the second day of the first National Intercollegiate Swimming and Diving Champion- ships for Women. Lannie Loken led her team- mates in the scoring, diving to a 343.31 point total and a second place finish. Johanna Cooke se- cured a ninth in the 200-yard in- dividual medley with a time of 2,29.45, while teammates Jan Pfleeger and Barbara Patterson set team records in the 50-yard backstroke and the 50-yard but- terfly. Pfleeger took eleventh with :31.49 in the back and Patterson placed eleventh in the fly at Coach Sandi Hittelman ex- pressed a somewhat optimistic outlook for today's final compe- tion. "We have a strong200-yard freestyle relay squad, and we're expecting some top performances from Cooke in the 100 yard breast- stroke and Loken in the three meter diving. We should finish near the top." Scores Exhibition Baseball Detroit 8, Minnesota 6 (11 innings) Cincinnati 10, Philadelphia 5 Baltimore 7, Los Angeles 2 Houston 3, Atlanta 1 New York (A) 4, Montreal 3 New York (N) 4, Kansas City 3 St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 4 Cleveland 6, Chicago (N) 1 California 2, San Diego 1 Boston 5, Chicago (A) 0 Oakland 11, Seattle 5 High School Basketball Pontiac Central 84, Garden City W. 79 Pershing 82, Midland 71 River Rouge 82, Bay City All Saints 61 Calton 88, Muskegon Heights 86 St. Ignace 76, Pontiac Catholic 72 Muskegon Christian 84, Stockbridge 59 Kingsley 69, Camden Frontier 63 Flint Holy Redeemer 74, Wakefield 64 NCAA Hockey Clarkston 4, Mich. Tech 3 NBA Milwaukee 136, Philadelphia 112 Seattle 123, Boston 119 Atlanta 110, New York 102 Baltimore 138, Chicago 131 I&e aeviAi Bill Cusumano COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Some smart reporter thought that New Mexico State could beat UCLA. I guess that puts me In the Joe Falls class as a forecaster. But I still think that the Aggies could have pulled it off, UCLA was ready to be taken Thursday night, particularly in the first half. Remember this, New Mexico State took more shots and had less turnovers, a combination that made the Bruins extremely vulnerable to defeat. The Aggies couldn't hit the shots even though many were easy follow attempts and after a while UCLA's pre- cision shooting took its toll. The difference finally proved to lie in the shooting percentages, the Bruins once again proving that they can be the most deadly gunners in the nation when they are on. One person that I have to second guess though, Is New Mexico State coach Lou Henson. Henson ran players in and out of the game like he was managing a little league team with a minimum playing requirement for each athlete. Never once was his team able to establish any continuity as the players never were in together long enough. Henson later explained that he wanted to wear UCLA down and then catch them in the last five minutes. It sounds like a weak plan for a team to use when it's ranked in the top five and it proved too useless. Any team, much less UCLA, with a 26-2 record is obviously in good enough shape to go a full 40 minutes. Henson also inexplicably pulled 6-10 Sam Lacey out of the game for eight minutes in the first half when the Aggies were still within two to. seven points of the lead. Lacey had pulled down seven rebounds in nine minutes and was to finish the contest with 16, tops on the court. When he left, Sidney Wickes and Curtis Rowe had a definite advantage on the glass. Lacey also scored the first two times he had the ball; then the Aggies stopped feeding him. Wickes, Rowe, and Steve Pat- terson all had three fouls in the game and Lacey could have drawn a few more. Instead the New Mexico State guards Jimmy Collins and Charlie Criss played Earl Monroe style and gunned. It all added up to an easy Bruin win because UCLA has the kind of team and style that takes advantage of such disargar ization. The Bruins are easily the most disciplined team in college basketball, the group that comes closer than any I've ever seen to perfection of execution. They just run pattern after pattern until someone is cut loose for the open shot. And you can bet that the shot will drop about 70 per cent of the time. On the other end of the court UCLA's combination of size and extreme quickness make it one of the toughest man to mah defensive squads in the country. John Vallely and Henry Bibby go chest to chest with their opponents and every shot is earned. Up front the forwards are fine defenders aid shot blockers, Wickes being a particular terror. This is a fine team, a team that could, and did, easily de- molish a New Mexico State squad that made a strategic mistake in its attack plan. It is such a strong team in execution that an error costs an opponent four points, two that its lost and two that the Bruins gain. For them to make more turnovers than New Mexico State was a miracle, because they possess amazing basketball sense. One can safely wager that the same statistic will not occur against Jacksonville in today's cham- pionship game. The road comes to an end for the Cinderella Dolphins today. They're a lot of laughs but UCLA is all business and won't even smile until it's all over. Then the Bruins should howl. Another year of chasing UCLA lies ahead for the rest of college basketball. Jacksonville has come as far as it can this year and might as well start preparing for the next chase. They should have incentive though because Wooden and his Bruins have not seemed to be too happy with Jacksonville's antics and the comparison of Gilmore and Lew Alcindor. They want to kill to prove their superiority and just might destroy Jacksonville without mercy. But that's the story of UCLA, overkill. Even their cheer- leaders are superior to the rest (oh, you better believe they're superior). The team is in the same category as the girls, they've got perfect bodies and movement to go with it. Look for UCLA to ring up at least 100 points while roaring to at least a 15 point win. Let's see if that will redeem my Falls image. on-SUNDAY, MARCH 22' (PURIM NITE)--8 P.M. with-HAMANTASHEN FOR ALL! op at -THE HOUSE 1429 HILL STREET FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 662-4049-663-7485-665-8576 Y ®.® SAVI NGS F 2 M ~1 STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL 4 U ON RECORDS Students International an noun ces the opening of the S.I. General Store with this speciCt offer ALL $4.98 ALBUMS ON SALE NOW' FOR JUST. ONTRAVEL 1970 Summer Jet Flight Schedule DETROIT METRO DEPARTURES A To London 2 London 3 London 4 London 5 London 6 Japan London 10 London 11 Depart May 4 May 5 May 15 June 21 June 26 July 16 July 5 July 12 Weeks Return 5 June 9 7 June 25 12 Aug. 20 10 Sept. 2 8 Aug. 26 6 Aug. 31 8 Aug. 30 3 July 31 Cost $189 199 219 229 229 419 239 259 NEW YORK DEPARTURES El SGC London 8 London 9 May 17 June 14 13 A ug . 14 6 July 22 199 189 LECT ( NS G' g g K r Rar 1 f:" y';: ". ; ';.' ', " } ^.',. r,. cc4 x .:. s ?°fM1 f' .S a 'tse Open to U. of M. students, faculty, staff, and their immediate families For snore information please stop in or phone : :, ::«:::> Tuesday .& Wednesday, March 24-25 - President-Vice-President - 5 Council Seats Watch our ads for special student savings on many items. I