Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 26, 1969 Honest to God CHILI Carroll Shelby's Original BRAND PREPARATION Ole Shel' serves up the niixin's. You put'em together tame orhot. Either way, you get real ornery Texas Red like you can't find this side of the Big Bend. Makes1% qts. "Any man Send One Buck that eats chili (well spent) can't be Plus 250 Ptage9all bad." or 6 packages P. Garrett, tfor $5.98 .. >. Stinking Postage Paid Spring, N.M., Original Texas ' Dec. 21, 1880 Chili Co. ;....... P.O. Box 747A Dearborn, Mich, 48121 Abe Saperstein's Famous ISM m HARLEM GLOBE TLERTTERS M ICKETS OFC ~ ~-e GLOBETROTTERS WASHINGTON Students-$2 U-M TICKET OFFICE By BILL DINNER Two years ago the Wolverine tennis team entered the Big Ten meet with an 8-1 dual meet record and were favored to sweep the Big Ten Title. But after the dust had settled, Michigan State had grab- bed the top spot and the Wol- verines settled for second. Veterans lead net squad The cause? Most observers felt Although Conti's game was se- it was overconfidence. verely hampered as a freshman due to an injured knee, a mid- Last year, determined to prove winter operation seems to havei their second place finish was a been successful and he quickly is fapproa g p ho li llm ziu e, te ewolverines ronea over everyone in sight, finishing with an unprecedented 112-5 match record and their tenth Big Tan crown in 14 years. Of the five matches lost, only two were suffered in Big T e n competitign, the other three com- ing during a 6-3 victory over powerful Miami. Gone from this year's team, due to graduation, are Bob Pritula and Ron Teegnarden, but the h o I e s appear to have been more than adequate filled by sophomores Mark Conti and Roman Almonte, together with junior transfer Dan McLaughlin. Tennis coach Bill Murphy sum- med up the team's strength, not- approaching top form. Almonte hails from Puerto Rico and should have a good chance at grabbing one of the singles posi- tions. In 1967 he was ranked tenth nationally among 18 year olds and teamed with Stan Passarell to win the Latin American Converse Cup for Puerto Rico. In contrast to Conti, who has a strong serve and solid net game, Almonte is more of a control play- er with a good backcourt game. The competition for the t o p singles position should be keen. J In 1967 Dick Dell grabbed the top spot, with this year's team cap- tain, Brian Marcus second and Pete Fishbeck third. Last season Marcus beat Dell, but fell to Fish- back, and thus again took second spot. Dell also lost to Fishback, who took first. Dell finished third while sophomore Jon Hainline was fourth. With the addtion of this year's sophomores, the battle should be a free for all, and even Coach Bill Murphy could not commit himself on the outcome. Murphy only said that he would have to wait for the playoff matches, I which will be held next week at the IM courts, weather permit- ing. "We are even stronger than last year." The biggest help from the new- comers could come from Conti. A native Detroiter, Conti was num- ber one in the State for three consevutive years as a junior (18 and under age bracket) and was rated eighth nationally. f t i i t !I a i ; . team headed by Brian Cheney. rated 25th in the country (men's division). and by Bud Guy, who was runnerup in the Junior Na- tional. Dell thought that the team play- ed well against Arizona, which has had a whole winter of outdoor practice, but the Wolverines fell. 7-2 one day and 6-3 the other. Murphy, however, was not con- cerned with the loss: "Actually I was very pleased ivith the team. We were tired and the conditions were lousy, but they performed well for this early in the season." 4 -Daily-Peter Dreyfuss Dick Dell 1 CT A QfIAT [Il')ATTID. I1 Michigan golfers migrate south for Miami pre-season tourney MI'arakConti 9 . 1 i By ERIC SIEGEL While Ann Arbor's spring squalls' dampen the University's fairways and student duffers sharpen their putting game with an empty glass on a patch of carpet, Michigan's golf team opens its 1969 season at the Miami Invitational Tourna- ment in sunny Miami, Fla. The Wolverine linksmen, who won three major tournaments last year and finished fifith in the tra- ditional season opener in the na- tion's vacationland, hope to im- prove on last year's third place finish in the Big Ten tourney. AIRPORT LIMOUSINES- for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day Assistant Coach Bill Newton was cautious in his optimism about the team's prospects for this season. "We should do well," he commented. "We've had pretty' good weather here (in Ann Arbor)-' and we've been outside for more than two weeks. This has given us more time to work on our game than we've ever had before." The main problem in the Wol- verines' drive for their first con- ference championship since 1952 should not be the weather, how- ever, but rather the loss of John Schroeder, who was first-team All-American choice s a senior' last year. But Randy Erskine, who finished third in the Big Ten Tournament as a sophomore last May and won honorable mention honors on the All-American team, is back and is expected to form the cornerstone of the Wolverines' team. In addition to Erskine, the Wol- verines have five other returning lettermen, led by seniors Mark Christenson, the captain, and Ron Sumpter, both of whom are "strong, steady players," according to Newton. Sumpter is expected to play in the number two posi- 1 l 1 t 1 1 1 l Three junior letterman-Keith Mohan, Gene Denk, and Rocky Pozzo-will be battling for the number four and five spots on the, team. In tournament play, a team usually enters five players, with the top four scores counting in the team tabulation. Two sophomores, John Jaku- biak, from Detroit, and John Ros- ka, who hails from Mequon, Wis- consin, give the Wolverine golfers some depth In addition to the new sopho- more prospects, the Wolverine golf team also has new personnel at the coaching level. Newton, who won the Big Ten Individual Championship in 1965 and cap- tained the Wolverine golfers in' '66, is Michigan's first assistant golf coach. Bill Newcomb, a former Wolver- ine golfer and one of the top amateur players in the state, as- sumes the position of head coach. Newcombe replaces Bert Katzen- meyer, who left Michigan to be- come the athletic director at Wichita State. The new'Wolverine golf mentors have been stressing fundamentals in the team's pre-season practice sessions, and they hope that the instruction will pay off this week in Miami and throughout the season. "You can work on the basics of the game and go out and hit a lot of practice balls, but you still need to play courses in good shape under tournament conditions to get your whole game under con- trol," commented Newton in ref- erence to the value of the Miami tournament. "The Miami tournament is usually a psychological aid to the players," Newton continued. "Most of the teams down there are southern teams who have been outside all year. The tournament gives the players a chance to get a good start on their game, and if we do well it ususally gives the team a psychological boost." tion, while Christenson should hold down the number three slot. ting. Although Murphy was happy with the team's performance on their spring tour, the team w a s disappointed in one respect. The Wolverines went out West hop- ing for some outdoor practice along with those golden rays of California sun, but they were greeted with rain. After two opening days of rain they moved outdoors a n d whipped California, 5-2, and then proceeded to knock off a strong Stanford squad, 5-2. -The next day found the team in Arizona with more rain, b u t they still managed to slaughter. Arizona State twice, 9-0 on con- secutive days. They then moved across t h e state to battle a tough Arizona v 'Billboard E There will be a meeting for anyone interested in becoming a Varsity Football Manager on Thursday, March 27, at 4 p.m. in the basement of the Athletic Office Building. If you have any questions or are unable to make the meeting, please call Rik Kohn at 761-5861. Michifish, the University's synchronized swim club, will present its annual swim pageant on Thursday, Friday, and Sat- urday, March 27, 28, and 29 at Margaret Bell Pool. Show time will be 8:15 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at the foor prior to each performance or from any club member for $1.25. Expo charges prejudice; refused service in two bars RICHARD BARNET While the United Nations may already offer an appropriate structure for shifting the responsibility . for security and development from the hands of a single nation into community hands the structures cannot function unless the United States makes the? fundamental decision to renounce its claim to 'organ- t rye the peace'." Intervention and Revolution SPEAKING ON "America's War on Revolution"71 4:00 Lane Hall Auditorium. Sponsored by Office of Religious Affairs 8:00 First Methodist Church Sponsored by Interfaith Council for Peace Ecumenical Campus Center WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26 E "{{ngrygn"y.. :..'Si'°N:$ 'vv'F..-.."n:': .":} .'J r..: -h^ :?hv " :. YN WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. OP)- Veteran pitcher Jim "Mudcat" Grant struck out at what he called racial discrimination in this city yesterday after Montreal Expos teammate Maury Wills said he had been discriminated against for the first time in his big league career. Grant, a native of LaCoochee, Fla., said he, planned to write a letter to Florida Gov. Claude. Kirk protesting the incidents, which Wills said "bite at me inside."" Both Grant and Wills are Negroes. Grant said that his letter "will express my disappointment that stuff like this is still going on. Wills is an outstanding citizen of this country. He should be ac- cepted as a citizen, not as a black man, who has to be told that he can't do this or that." Wills, who holds the major league record of 104 stolen bases and was named the National League's Most Valuable Player while with the Los Angeles Dodgers, in 1962, said he had been asked to leave two bars last Friday "because they said they didn't serve colored people." Wills 'explained that he had entered the bars with a news- paperman and a photographer, both, white. "We decided to go there because it was suggested that it would be a different at- mosphere in which to discuss a story rather than in the ball park. Things like this bite at me inside but in no way cause me to lose my dignity or act in the same manner as the people in charge of the establishments." "We have been running into situations like this for years and years," Grant said. "I was be- coming relieved that these things were finally coming to an end. The fact that Maury and I are allowed to stay at the same hotel as the white players is an en- couraging sign of the type of progress made in recent years. But there are still a few public places which prefer to practice discrimi- nation." "Pm sorry about your parade, s. I guess I. splashed on too much after shave,:'OT. j II I3v I-->. I I BALLYISTS The Society of Automotive Engineers is sponsoring a road rallye on Sunday, March 30. Registration is between 11:00 and 12:00 on Sunday at the Auto Lab on N. Campus. Entry fee is $6.00 per car which includes a large pizza at the Village Inn after the rallye. Prizes are tires, oil, trophies and more. 0 Ravi Shankar .:**',' MARCH 26 Tickets on Sale I HILL AUD. Now, SAB $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 Also at the Door lb u aasm ' e LE A ag E a U A U I HI A