Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 9, 1970 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Thursday, April 9, 1970 INDIA STUDENTS ASSOCIATION K PRESENTS MERE SANAM (Color)v ( ENGLISH SUB-TITLES)c Starring: ASHA PAREKH, BISWAJEET} ADMISSION METHODIST CHURCH (Corner of Huron & State) f Members -$1.25 Sunday, April 12 Non-Members-$1.50 6:30 P.M. {}<-}t=<-:-:C<--..<:........<-.<-:)<..-:->0m-o * etrCOLLOQUIUM (Jointly sponsored by the Department of Sociology and the { Center for Coordination of Ancient and Modern Studies) > Keith Hopkins. (Of the London School of Economics and The Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) "SUBSTRUCTURE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE IN A PRE-INDUSTRIAL EMPIRE" Thursday, April 9, 1970 Rm. 4051 LS&A Bldg. 3:00 P.M. . C..... .".r ::-.. h..: h--i4.x.. ................"::?::.".v? $. :r.". . . .. Stickmen trash Defiance By BILL ALTERMAN They may be defiant back in De-1 fiance, Ohio; but they showed none of it yesterday against the Michigan lacrosse team as o u r boys in blue (and yellow) whomp- ed Defiance College 16-1 in a rather boring game on F e r r y Field. From the first few minutes of pre-game warmup when Michigan clearly outshouted Defiance, to the closing moments of the game when the Wolverines threw in their 16th goal, there was little doubt as to who was the superior team. Michigan clearly dominated play as typified in their 60-7 shots on goal advantage and their picking up of 74 of 90 loose balls. The stickmen took all of 1:36 to score their first goal, and, finding that too dreary a pace, racked up number two 22 seconds later. Things slowed down a b i t then and the first quarter ended Michigan 3, Defiance 0. In the second period Michigan really poured it on with 6 goals. With a 9-0 half-time lead, Michi- gan used mostly second stringers in the second half. Even so De- fiance didn't get on the score- board until the opening minutes of the fourth quarter. By the time the debacle crawled to its inevit- able end, few, if any, of the 100 or so spectators remained. DESPITE THE final score, Coach Bob Kaman expressed h is belief that "It wasn't our b e s t game." Coach Skin Flanagan added "its easy to get sloppy in a game such as this. Nevertheless, we worked the ball well and hustled when we had to." Kaman plyced some of t h e credit for the victory to the fine play of first midfielders Ken White, Tim Rodgers and Don Lamble. Rodgers had two goals and White and Lamble had one apiece. TOM MIDDAUGH led the Mich- igan attack with 4 goals and 2 assists. Dick Dean had 3 goals and 1 assist. Other scorers in- cluded John Synhorst, one goal; Skip Flanagan, 4 assists; Steve Hart, 1 goal; Phil Powers, 1 goal, 1 assist and R. Lorenzo, 1 goal. Michigan goalie Jay Johnson had a relatively easy time of it as he and his fourth quarter sub- stitute had to make only thr ee saves. Today the "B" Team, composed mostly of rookie players, who mop- ped up in yesterday's second.half, will have a game all to themselves as they do battle against Lanse Creuse High School at 4 p.m. on Ferry Field. After yesterday's game, Kaman expressed pleasure at the way the second stringers played, claim- ing, "they looked good." Saturday the big boys return to action with a 2:00 game against Cincinnati. The game, to be play- ed on the Tartan turf, will be Michigan's first ever against Cin- cinnati. They are not expected however to give the Wolverines to much trouble. THE GAME that the stickmen are thinking of is their return match against Michigan State this coming Wednesday. Michigan won their first meeting 14-8 but no one is openly predicting an- other victory. After the game, the winning team will be awarded with a trophy acknowledging them as the state champions. The following Saturday the stickmen will takeonranother tough opponent in Ohio Univer- sity. The Halfway Inn East Quad's Coffeehouse & Snackbar Inexpensive Luncheons, Dinners, Snacks CONTINUOUSLY OPEN STAGE- ALL WELCOME TO PERFORM or Just Come In and Jam HOURS: Mon.-Thurs.-1 1:00 A.M.-2 A.M. Fri.-1 1 :00 A.M.-3 A.M. Sat.-7:30 P.M.-3 A.M. Sun.-3:00 P.M.-1 2 A.M. Informal Atmosphere, Good Food -Daily-aim Diehi Steve Hart (7) tallies for stickmen AT LAST: GE YOU MAN W SMA Batsmen, spring get ai . .i Cabaret ADMISSION 50c 'What Are You Wearing to the Revolution' .: Written and Directed by MARI LYN S. MILLER Music-Written, Arranged and Conducted -by CHAS AVERBOOK Choreographed by )IAL tWENDY SHANKIN Props, Costumes & Make-up by JOYCE KELLER and KELLY MAC DOWELL CAST By BOB ANDREWS After the Wolverines returned from their annual series with the Wildcats of Arizona in warm and sunny Tuscon, they came home only to be greeted by the last remnants of winter. Their home contests against the University of Detroit last Saturday and with Eastern Michigan this Thursday had to be cancelled because of cold and wet weather. However, the Wolverines fin- ally kick off their local schedule with a game against the Univer- sity of Detroit today. Originally, the site for the game was to be the Titan's home field. However, their field was reported to be in worse shape than was Ferry Field. As a result the game might end up being played in Ann Arbor. Today's game, in effect, is part of the team's preparation for the Big Ten season which is w h a t really counts for the Wolverines. The last game with Arizona was played on March 27, and coach Moby Benedict will want to g e t another good look at the players on his ball club. The pitching staff should receive' a good workout in the next three days as the Wolverines will play the Titans t o d a y, Eastern Michigan University as a make-up for last Tuesday's rainout to- morrow, and Central Michigan University on Saturday in a dou- bleheader which as the contest with EMU, will be played at Ferry Field. Jim Burton, Ed Bryson, Mick- ey Elwood and Pete Held should form the pitching rotation t h a t Benedict will rely on to do a good deal of the pitching for the Wolverines this year. In Arizona, Bryson, Helt, a n d Burton saw plenty of action. Bry- son, who pitched 13 and 3 inn- ings, lost his only decision but he struck out ten in that game while walking just three. Burton pitch- ed more innings than any of the Wolverine pitchers and won one of his two decisions. The win was a 12-4 walloping of Arizona in which he went the entire distance. In 'that stint, the team captain struck out ten men and yielded just three earned runs. Helt pitched nearly 13 innings for the Wolverines and had a 1-1 record. However, he did suffer some wild- ness problems, walking nine while striking out eight. The Michigan outfield showed in their Arizona trip that they will give any opposingi pitchers a tough time. Tom Kettinger, the freshman hitting sensation, will start at left together field today and bat either third or clean-up. Dan Fife, batted only .233 this spring but his fielding record (he made 22 put outs in 24 chances for a 1.000 fielding average) pro- bably earned him the right to start in center. In right, Benedict will consider two players who had great records on the field and at the plate. John Hornyak, who batted .429 and Michael Bowen, right behind with a .417 average, both had perfect fielding records. It might end up that Benedict will platoon t h e two. Bowen is a left-handed hit- ter while Hornyak bats from the right side. At the other positions; Junior Tom Lundstedt, who batted .333 in Arizona has the backstop posi- tion pretty well sewn up. The only other position where the starter is not in doubt is at third, where Mike Carrow will get the call. Positions that are still up for4 grabs are first where Bob Mako- ski and Bob Bower are prime con- tenders; at second, where Reggie Ball appears to have a slight edge over Brian Balaze; and at s h o r t stop where Michael Rafferty a n d Jim Kocoloski are battling it out. After the games on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the Wolver- ines will play Notre Dame at home before kicking off their Big T e n schedule with a doubleheader against the University of Iowa at Iowa City. By then, Benedict should be ready to field the best team possible against their B Itg . Ten opponents. why cart all those clothes home? 9 Call Greene's Cleaners today! 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