Seven Thursdtay,'February 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Thursay; Fbruar 27,1969.HE.MIH.GAN.AIL Page Seven r Indiana By MORT NOVECK - Unless something very strange happens, like the water in the University of Wisconsin pool mys- teriously turning into lime Jello, Indiana will swim away with an unprecedented ninth straight Big Ten title in this weekend's con- ference championship meet. The three-day, 18-event meet; opens today with the Hoosiers all but certain to take the title, breaking Ohio State's record of' eight straight conference cham- pionships. sible e Michigan, expected to finish can c second, is the only squad' that depth. has any chance to upset the The Hoosiers, but as coach Gus Stager will re admits, "Having lost twice to In- with t diana this season we're not count- Hickco ing on an upset. They have more the d power.'' 100-ya INDIANA'S POWER will come the 2( from its depth. Though other and we teams have swimmers capable of 400-ya winning races, none, with the pos- Bron AT BIG TEN MEET tankers seek annual title Tom janovicb receives mention in AP balloting daily iports NIGHT EDITOR: PAT ATKINS xception of the Wolverine ome close to matching it Hoosier line-up for the mee ead like an Olympic roste riple gold medalist Charli x at its head. Hickcoxi efending champion in th rd backstroke, the 200 bac 00-yard individual medle as a member of the winnin rd medley relay team. nze medalists Jim Henry an Win Young will compete for In- diana in the diving events. They finished first and second in the 1-meter event last year and sec- ond and third in the 3-meter. It is expected that they will do at least as well this year. CANADIAN OLYMPIAN Ron Jacks could prove to be a strong threat in the butterfly events this year. He was a member of the winning 400-medley relaynteam last year and wil swim in this event again. 's Indiana will also dominate the s long freestyle races. Fred South- ward, the .defending champion in t both the 500-yard freestyle and r the 1650 freestyle is expected to e repeat his victories. is Michigan, however, should take e its share of firsts in the meet. k, Juan Bello, defending champion y in both the 200-yard freestyle and g the 100-yard butterfly, could re- peat in both if he enters them. d If Bello is entered, the Wol- verines should do well in the but- terfly. In last year's meet Lee Bisbee took second in both the 100 and 200-yard races while Tom Arusoo took third in the 200. RELAYS ARE another strong Michigan event. The Wolverines took both the 400 and 800-yard freestyle relays last year. Their chances of repeating this year are dependant on who is entered in them. Individuals cannot compete in more than five events, so if some of Michigan's stronger swim- mers are needed elsewhere the relay teams could be hurt. Competition for Indiana's South- ward in the long races could come from Wolverines Gary Kinkead and Mike O'Connor. Kinkead is also the defending champion in the 400 individual medley. Michigan State is expected to repeat in the third spot this year. State has a strong freestyler in Don Rauch, who finished second to Juan Bello in the 200. Mike Kalmbach should also gain points for the Spartans in the freestyle as will Van Pelt Rockefeller in the butterfly. WISCONSIN IS picked to fin- ish fourth again. The Badgers have a strong freestyler in Fred Hogan, who finished second in the 50 and 100 last year. Hogan can n also swim the 200 and according - to Stager is capable of beating g. Bello in this event. Backstroker' Dan Schwerin should also swim t well for Wisconsin. ' Ohio State should repeat in s fifth. The strongest Buckeye per- d formances will come from back- stroker John Hulme and freestyler - Lonnie Harrison. g Illinois and Purdue are not ex- pected to do well as teams, but each has a good swimmer. Illinois' Kip Pope won both the 100 and us 200-yard breaststroke races last year and should retain his titles. y Purdue's Dan Milne also won two events, the 50 and 100 yard free- e styles, and like Pope, should re- m peat. Though Stager doesn't expect d Michigan to win this weekend, he ie does expect the Wolverines to do well. "Every man we enter will score points and, with one pos- n sible exception, we will score points in all the events." 1 IBT 0T NEW YORK (41 - Michigan's high-scoring center Rudy Tom- janovich received honorable men- tion on the All-American team announced yesterday by the As- sociated Press. Named to the first team were towering Lew Alcindor of UCLA, Pete Maravich of Louisiana State, Spencer Haywood of Detroit, Rick Mount of Purdue and Calvin Mur- phy of Niagara. These five com- pletely dominated the voting by 339 sports writers and broadcast- ers throughout the nation. Charlie Scott of North Carolina headed the AP's second team. Jo-Jo White of Kansas. M i k e Maloy of Davidson. Bob Lanier of St. Bonaventure and Dan Issel of Kentucky rounded out the second five. Neal Walk of Florida, Bobby Smith of Tulsa, Howard Porter of Villanova, Dave Scholz of Illinois and Dave Sorenson of Ohio State were chosen for the third five. Also receiving honorable men- tion were Butch Beard of Louis- ville, Jim McMillan of Columbia, Bud Ogden of Santa Clara, Bill Justus of Tennessee, John Roche of South Carolina and Bob Arn- aen of Notre Dame. In making the All-American team for the third straight year, Alcindor, the 7-foot-1 senior star of the country's No. 1 col- lege team, missed by only 19 points of achieving a perfect score of 1,695. Big Lew collected 324 firsts and three seconds in the voting. He was omitted on just two ballots. On the basis of five points for a first and three for a second, his total was 1,676. Jack Vermeire of the Stillwater, Okla. News-Press and Robert E. Johnson of the Iola, Kan. Register were the two who skipped Alcin- dor. Vermeire commented, "Alcin- dor was not named because of snubbing the Olympics. A no-no for a player of his stature." Maravich, a 6-foot-5 junior famed as Pistol Pete for his shoot- ing that made him the nation's top scorer, was another repeater from the 1967 All-American team. He garnered 303 firsts and 22 se- conds for 1,559 points. Haywood, a 6-812 sophomore who led the United States team to a gold medal in the Mexico City Olympics last October, was third highest in the voting with 1,288. He had 222 firsts and 89 seconds. Mount, a 6-4 junior, beat out Murphy, a 5-10 junior, by one point in the voting. Mount had 1,132 points on 182 firsts and 111 seconds. Murphy had 1,131 on 159 firsts and 168 seconds. Scott, a 6-5 junior who starred with Haywood on the U.S. Olym- pic team, topped the second team with 913 points on 151 firsts and 79 seconds. White, whose eligibil- ity ended on Feb. 1, was the only Pete Maravich INDIANA OLYMPIAN Charlie Hickcox relaxes after a hard work- out in preparation for the upcoming Big Ten Championships at the University of Wisconsin. Hickcox, who won four Olympic medals, will be instrumental in Indiana's bid for a ninth con- secutive victory. other player to tally more than 500 points. He had 64 firsts and 91 seconds for 502. Maloy polled a total of 368 points, including 48 firsts. Lanier had 340 points, including 30 firsts, and Issel 337, including 43 firsts. Walk headed the third team with 259 points, including 21 firsts. Thereafter the voting fell off sharply. Smith had a total of 123 points, Porter 117, Scholz 109 and Sorenson 108. Each player on the first t h r e e teams will receive a certificate from The Associated Press as a member of the All-American squad. 'PLAY BALL': Diamond camps start in earnest Juan Bello Gary Kinkead Packer execs seek Lombardi successor By The Associated Press * GREEN BAY-Dominic Ojejniczak, president of the Greer Bay Packer Football Corp., has called an executive committee meet ing Saturday to begin the task of picking a successor to departing General Manager Vince Lombardi. Lombardi, who coached the Packers to many of their greates triumphs before.moving into the front office, was released from hi contract recently to become head coach, executive vice president an( a part-owner of the Washington Redskins. Head Coach Phil Bengtson and Tom Miller, who served as assist ant general manager under Lombardi, are regarded as the leading candidates for the job. 4 * . * * 0 WEST PALM BEACH-Legendary LeRoy "Satchel" Paige ha finally qualified for a baseball pension. The ancient pitcher, who allegedly was born in 1906, is alread3 eligible to start drawing benefits at the age of 63. Paige became eligible for the pension now because of a chang in requirements that cut minimum length of big league service from A five to four years. The Atlanta Braves hired Paige as a pitcher last summer ant then made him a coach so he could qualify for a pension. Under th former five-year minimum, he would have become eligible next Aug. 1 The Braves now list Paige-first Negro pitcher in the America] League-as an assistant trainer. By The Associated Press Baseball's spring training camps were expected to begin resembling major league installations today in the wake of the settlement of I the nagging pension dispute be- tween the owners and players As- sociation. Veteran players who had re-I fused to sign contarcts or reportE to camp while the pension issue was being negotiated, had the green light to play ball from Mar- vin Miller, executive director ofr the Players Association.# The Boston Red Sox signed their big man - outfielder C a r 1 Yastrzemski - yesterday to a two- year contract for what they be- lieve to be the highest salary inI the American League. But General Manager Jira Camp- bell of the world champion Detroit Tigers had the busiest day. He signed nine veterans. Only six Detroit Tigers remain- ed unsigned yesterday as base- ball's defending world champions got down to the business of shap- ing up for the coming session. Meanwhile, 10 veterans ap- peared in spring training for the first time following settlement of the owner-player dispute two days ago. Still unsigned and, therefore, not permitted to work out with the team at Merchant Stadium, rwere oufielders Willie Horton and Al Kaline; catcher Jim Price; first baseman Norm Cash, and pitchers Elroy Face and Don McMahon. New arrivals turning out for the workout were pitchers Joe Spar- ma. John Hiller, John Wyatt, Earl Wilson and Fred Lasher; infield- ers Dick McAuliffe, Dick Tracew- ski and Don Wert; catcher B i ll Freehan, and outfielder M i c k e y Stanley. Pitchers Pat Dobson and Denny- McLain, infielder Tom Matchick and outfielder Gates Brown have agreed to terms but have not re- ported. Officials of the National League' champion St. Louis Cardinals were not as successful. Vada Pin- son was the second regular player signed yesterday by the Cardinals. Catcher Tim McCarver was the first regular to sign. The Cards announced 16 of 38 roster players had not signed. Meanwhile, in Miami forty-one members of an expected spring squad of 49 Baltimore Orioles were present as outfielders and infield- ers joined pitchers and catchers for a three-hour workout. The team in the most trouble so far as satisfied players is concern- d seemed to be the Minnesota Twins. President Calvin Griffith admitted that he had signed only 23 of the 42-man squad. The New York Yankees a n d New York Mets each signed their two leading pitchers. The Yanks brought right-hander Mel Stottle- myra and southpaw Fritz Peterson into the fold.{ Theets landed right-hander Tom Seaver and lefty Jerry Koos- man for substantial raises. Players who signed for the Chi- cago White Sox included pitchers Gary Peters, Joe Horlen, Bob Locker and newcomer S a m m y Ellis from the California Angels, and outfielder Walt Williams. The Pale Hose have 28 of their rostered 38 players under contract. Professional Standings NBA Eastern Division W L Pct. GB Baltimore 49 17 .742 - Philadelphia 46 21 .687 311 New York 46 24 .657 5 Boston 40 27 .597 91/2 Cincinnati 34 33 .507 15%/ Detroit 26 42 .382 24 Milwaukee 22 45 .328 27x/ Western Division Los Angeles 44 24 .647 - Atlanta 42 28 .600 3 San Francisco 33 36 .471 11z San Diego 28 39 .4I8 151/ Chicago 27 41 .397 17 Seattle 26 44 .362 19%/ Phoenix 14 55 .203 30Y2 Yesterday's Results New York 92, Boston 88 Philadelphia 104, Phoenix 97 Chicago at Seattle, inc. Only games scheduled Today's Games Detroit vs. Philadelphia at Syracuse Baltimore at Milwaukee Cincinnati at San Diego NHIL Eastern Division W L T Pts. GFGA Montreal 38 16 8 84 221 164 Boston 33 13 12 78 219 163 New York 32 23 6 70 175 152 DETROIT 30 24 9 69 200 173t Toronto 27 21 11 65 183 165 Chicago 29 27 6 64 228 198 Western Division St. Louis 33 18 12 78 176 125 Oakland 23 29, 9 55 165 194 Los Angeles 21 32 7 49 147 197 Minnesota 16 34 10 42 151 207 Philadelphia 13 33 15 41 127 190 Pittsburgh 13 38 9 35 141 203 Yesterday's Results New York 5, Chicago 3 Toronto 3, St. Louis 2 Montreal 7, Detroit 2 Boston at Los Angeles, Inc. Minnesota at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Toronto at Philadelphia Chicago at Pittsburgh Boston at Oakland I FEESHMEN Mid Term Slump? The DAILY needsYO We offer you experience in advertising, circulation, finance, and administrative Canadiens swamp Iied W ings; Rangers smash Black Hawks By The Associated Press Coupled with New York's 5-3 MONTREAL - The Montreal victory over Chicago, the setback Canadiens riddled Detroit Goalie dropped Detroit behind the Rang- Roy Edwards for five goals in the ers into fourth place in the NHL's first period, including three within East Division. It was the ninth 40 seconds, and blasted the R e d , victory in 11 games for the first-' goalie Denis DeJordy shots. with 54 Wings 7-2 in a National Hockey League game last night. Henri Richard scored his 12th and 13th goals of the season and assisted on another while J e a n Beliveau had three assists. Gump Worsley lost his shutout bid on Dean Prentice's goal with 7:10 left. Pete Stemkowski also scored #Al for the Wings, [ SCORES place Canadiens.I Montreal's three quickies were scored by Richard, Dick Duff and, Yvan Cournoyer after John Fer- guson had given the Canadiens a 1-0 lead with his 22nd goal. Richard, assisted by Bobby Rousseau and J._C. Tremblay, started the barrage at 12:10. Twenty seconds later Dick Duff's 16th goal made it 3-0 on feeds from Cournoyer and Beliveau. Twenty seconds after that Cour- noyer netted his 36th, set up by Beliveau. NEW YORK - Defenseman Arnie Brown scored twice and the New York Rangers extended their National Hockey League home ice unbeaten string to 12 games last night, defeating t h e Chicago Black Hawks 5-3. , (Rookie center Walt Tkaczuk as- sisted on four of the Ranger goals as New York blistered Chicago Both of Brown's goals and ano- ther by defenseman Jim Neilson came on blue line slap shots as DeJordy froze in the nets. Ano- ther Ranger goal by Dave Balon was a tip-in of a Neilson 60-foot slap shot. Bobby Hulls' 43rd goal of the season on a first-period power clay gave the Hawks the early lead, but Brown tied it before the period was over. TORONTO - Ron Ellis' 18thl goal of the season with 1:29 left to play gave Toronto a 3-2 triumph over St. Louis last nightj and moved the Maple Leafs back into fifth place in the National Hockey League's East Division. Ellis, assisted by Murray Oliver and Norm Ullman, beat St. Louis goalie Glenn Hall and snapped a 2-2 detadlock that had stood since Larry Keenan tied it for the Blues with one second remaining in the second period. -Associated Press EARL WILSON (right), Detroit Tiger pitcher, and catcher Bill Freehan discuss the terws of their 1969 contract with general manager Jim Campbell. As a result of the strike settlement, most of the defending champion Tigers are reporting to the Lakeland camp. - ------- --- Charter Flights to EUROPE $220 l.A. T.A. 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