'{' Thursday, April 10, 1969 THE m(cH1GAN DAILY Thursday, April 10, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Braves scalp iants By The Associated Press ATLANTA-Milt Pappas retired 14 San Francisco batters W in order: last night but needed relief help from Cecil Ulpshaw as the Atlanta Braves trimmed the Giants 4-1 and swept their season-opening, three-game series,. thPappas was touched for three hits, a walk and a' run in 'tefirst inning before settling down. He didn't allow another baserunner until thle sixth when Bobby Bonds beat out an infield hit. The Braves scored twice against Bobby Bolin in the bottom of the first. Felix Millan, who reached on a force play, stole second and scored on Hank Aaron's double, the first of his three hits. Orlando Ce- peda singled Aaron across. a Clete Boyer's homer in the sixth , o- made it 3-1 and the Braves added their final run in the inning on F Sonny Jackson's double and .a S single by rookie catcher Bob Didier. NIGHT EDITOR Cus kl *BILL DINNER Cubs bill Ph illpies r for sweep Ageless Celtics crush Knicks 1 1 9.o7 0 to, t 1111a rirocuvl BOSTON (N) - The Boston Celtics, led by player-Coach Bill Russell, threw up a° tight early defense and shackled ice-cold New York in the first half en route to a 112-97 vic- tory over the Knicks and a 2-0 lead in their Eastern Division final series in the National Basketball Association play- offs., Boston--the defending NBA champions charged to a 26-14 first period lead and built the advant- age to 55-33 at halftime in sweep- ing to a convincing triumph. The third game in the best-of- 7 series will be played in New York tonight. Russell, who has led the Celtics to 10 championships in 12 years, was the dominating factor as he virtually intimidated the New York sharpshooters. The Knicks managed just three field goals in- 23 attempts in the opening period and had a shooting mark of just 19.2 percent as they hit on only nine of 47 shots in the opening half. Russell had 11 of his 14 points and 21 of his 29 rebounds in the first two periods. With the Cel- tics in front 95-69 and nearly 812 minutes remaining Russell went to the bench for a well-deserved rest as a capacity crowd of 14,933 gave him a standng ovation. Veteran Bailey Howell topped the Celtics with 27 points. John " Havlicek had 15, Sam Jones and Tom Sanders 13 each with Em- mette Bryant adding 11. Willis Reed, New York's big center led the Knicks' scoring with 28 points. LItr1.G I. WV 1,1.I1 LG LGlU,1 CHICAGO-The Chicago Cubs' banged seven doubles, including a record-tying four by Billy Wil- liams, to back Bill Hands' seven- hit pitching for an 11-3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies yes- terday. Williams, whose fourth doublel came in a wild seven-run 'Cub sev- enth, matched a major league record shared by 29 players and last tied in 1963 by Detroit's Billy Bruton. . Four doubles came as 11 batters faced relief rs Gary Wagner and Luis Peraza in the big Chicago M seventh. The Cubs broke a 2-2 tie with an unearned pair in the fourth on first baseman Richie Allen's high throw over second. * * ' Pirates hang Cardinals ST. LOUIS - Left-hander Bob Veale spaced six hits in pitching the 'Pittsburgh Pirates to a 6-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardi- nals last night, their second straight win against the defend- ing National League champions. Two errors by Julian Javier, the St. Louis second baseman, helped the Pirates to two unearn- ed runs. Pittsburgh scored twice in the fourth off starter Nelson Briles. After Javier fumbled Rich Heb- ner's grounder for a two-base error, Robert Clemente got an in- field hit and Willie Stragell dou- -Associated Press SAL BANDO of the Oakland Athletics tags out White Sox catcher Duane Josephson at third base in the second inning of yesterday's game. Reggie Jackson made the throw from right field as Ken Berry had singled for the Sox and Josephson was trying to advance from first to third. Chicago, however, did score three runs while blanking the A's. bled home the first run * * * ff ets bury Exe NEW YORK - Reli McGraw pitched out ofa inning jam, then stymi treal until the eighth needed help from Nolan the New York Mets def Expos 9-5 yesterday. It was the first loss, fo pansion Expps followi opening day victoryc Mets. n' New York exploded for four in bouncer and turned it into a dou- ton snapped a 1-1 tie and gave the first inning against Bill Stone- ble play. He then got Rusty Staub the Reds their first victory. pOS ham, two on Ed Kranepool's on a foul pop, ending the inning. Jim Maloney worked the first ever Tug bases-loaded single.**. six innings for i at llow- a second- But the Expos rallied in the Rd h o six innings for .Cincinnati, allow- ~ eod u h xo ale hte Reds whip .IDOdgers ing one run and three hits. But ed Mon- second inning and had two runs 'he Re ace as fored t Beav when he in, the bases loaded and none out CINCINNATI -Bobby Tolan, the game when he pulled a ham- Ryan as when McGraw relieved starter who hit only five home rurs allhd eated the Jim McAndrews. last year. cracked his second in as string muscle running out a McGraw walked Maury Wills many games last night, carryingj r the ex- on a 3-2 pitch, forcing in the third the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-1 vic- ng their run of the inning, but then the tory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. over the '24-year-old left-hande'r leaped Tolan's two-run shot in the Major Leag high for G a r y Sutherland's seventh inning against Don Sut- 'iAerican League East Division -Associated Press HUSTLING CELTIC JOHN HAVLICEK battles for a rebound amidst three New York Knicks including former Piston, Dave DeBusschere. The Boston squad proved as unbeatable as ever at home as they continued their playoff success 112-97. New York was hurt badly .s "You have to look at the games, Dave DeBusschere ran into foul he said. "Some they could havf trouble and sat out much of the won. It was no indication of thi game. DeBusschere failed to closeness of the series." score. "It was one of our real gooc "Bill Russell is.a .great defensive games," Russell said, "but yot basketball player - he is the have to admit they missed somi greatest defensive center who ever easy shots. We can't take credi lived." for that. We played good defense That was iWew York Coach Red but not that good." Holzman's first comment in the t not that good. quiet Knicks' dressing room last night after Russell and the Bos- ton Celtics had won the "no con'- MEN test" game. F try.-e.4t a new hairstyle Russell said his club wasn't designed to your doing anything different than personlity. . during the regular season when OPEN 3 NIGHTS .nMon.-Thurs.-Fri. 10 4 9 it lost six of seven decisions to Tues.-Wed.-Sat. 9 to 6 the same Knicks. "I can't account DASCOLA BARBERS , for it," he said. J fLA~K5K Holzman, however, said the reg- ular season record was misleading, at Mople Village-Campus U. ue Standings IM SITE AND FEES AT ISSUE: IVI ProPosa s meet strong opposion 1 !l 1 7 i i i1 D~etroi t Boston Washington New York Baltimore Cleveland Kansas 1Ci t Seattle Oakland Chicago Slinnesota Califoria W 1, pett.. 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 I 1 .500 1 1 .500 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 GB 1 1 I. Chicago Pittsburgh New York Montreal St. Louis Philadelphia National League East Division W L 2 0 2 0 1 1 1 I 0 2 . 0 2 West Division Pct. 1.000 1.000 .500 .500 .000 .000 t GB 1 1 2 2 I14 1Y 2 3 West Division By LEE KIRK The Advisory Committee on In- tramurals, Recreation and Club Sports had its last scheduled meet- ing on the two proposed IM build- ings yesterday afternoon in the Anderson Room of the Union. Several students voiced vehement objections to the proposed North Campus site on Fuller Road and the use of student fees to finance the building. University President Robben Fleming opened the meeting with a few brief remarks, but he had to leave in order to fill out his1 income tax form. ' Allan Smith, Vice-President for Academic Affairs, then t o o k a charge of the meeting and intro- duced four members of the com- SCORES NBA Playoffs Eastern Division Finals Boston 112, New York 97, Boston leads best-of-7 series, 2-0. ABA Eastern Division " Semifinals Minnesota 106, Miami 99, best-of-7 series tied, 1-1. Indiana 129, Kentucky 115, best-of-7 series tied, 1-1. College Baseball Belmont Abbey 4, Florida 2 Arizona State 1, Wisconsin 0 St. Francis, N.Y. 9, St. Peter's, N.J. 2 mittee who spoke on various as- pects of the, proposed buildings. Bob McFarland, a grad student in the Law School, spoke on the history of Intramurals at Michi- gan. He noted that since the Hoover Street IM and Woman's Athletic Building were built, Mich- igan has had no new construction and has long ceased to be' a leader in intramural facilities. COMMITTEE v i c e-chairman Rod Grambeau, head of Intra- murals, discussed the two most controversial areas of the proposal, the use of student fees and the location of the North Campus site. Robin Wright, another student member of the committee, spoke briefly on the advantages that the buildings would give the total University community. She em- phasized the importance of unit- ing recreational and educational pursuits. Bill Steude, Director of S t u d e n t-Community Relations, added a few closing remarks. FOUR STUDENTS had request- ed time to speak on the proposal. ,Two residents of Northwood Ter- race spoke in opposition to the Fuller Road site, citing several factors that would make an un- suitable site.. They contended that it would; "be totally useless to North Cam- pus residents" because it would be at least one mile from current+ housing. They also contended that "it would be unsafe to cross Fuller Road" because it will soon+ be a high-speed, high-volume+ road. They suggested that the Murfin Road site would be a superior one1 because it would be a more cen- trally located. They also suggest-1 ed that no fees be assessed until! construction nears completion. Representatives from IHA' andl South and West Quads spoke against the proposal. They argued that since the University was suf- fering financially, the money gained from an increase in fees could be put to better use. Since not everyone would use these facil- ities, they argued, it would be un- fair to assess everyone equally! for their construction. SEVERAL OTHER s t u d e n t s spoke against the proposal, with" almdst all the criticism directed either at the fees or the Fuller Road site. Only one student seem-j ed to be in complete agreement with the committee. Steude said afterwards that they committee had not set the date of their next meeting, but that it' should be soon. Canham said he was "especially disappointed by the small turnout of students." He said he could not predict what the committee's next step would be. But if they want the student approval mentioned in their pro- posal, today's meeting made it apparent that they will have toj wait. 1 1 1 4I t3 I 1 1.000- 1.000 .500 .500 .000 .000 Atlanta 3 0 1.000 xSan Diego 1 0 1.000 Los Angeles 1 1 .500 Cincinnati 1 1 .500 xHouston 0 1 .000 San Francisco 0 3 .000 x-Late game not included. Yesterday's Results New York 9, Montreal 5 Chicago 11, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 1, night. Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 1, night. Atlanta 4, San Francisco 1, night. Yesterday's Results Chicago 3, Oakland 0' Washington 6, New York 4 Minnesota at Kansas City, inc. Seattle at California; inc. UNIVERSITY CHARTER FLIGHTS TO LONDON July 8--August 17. ... . $214 'May 7-June 24.................$199 May 15-August 20 ....... ..... $204 June 27-August 25..$229 Phone 665-8489 1-5 P.M..-725N. Univ. Sponsored by University of Michiban Graduate Assembly SOCIOLOGY COLLOQUIUM MAURICE ZEITLIN Department of Sociology at University of :Wisconsin "SOCIAL REVOLUTION: THE CUBAN CASE" I I COUNSELORS For top athletic Westchester day camp. Men from Westchester, Fairfield, and Rockland counties. Men and women from Manhattan. To instruct in a variety of activities. Experience preferred. A real love for kids is essential. Phone collect: Area Code 914- WH 9-2635, at night 914-WH 9-6852 or write Mohawk Day Camps, Old Tarrytown Road, White Plains, N.Y. 10603. VINS' de FRANCE ANNUAL GROUP FLIGHT DETROIT-PARIS and return PAN-AM JET JUNE 16-JULY 14 $320-adults For information call 761-4146 after 7, 663-3969 MONDAY, APR. 14-4 P.M. Aud. B, Angell Hall Belt Midrash t Ann Arbor Sponsored by the College of Jewish Stodies in Detroit in Cooperation with the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation at the University of Michigan PRE-REGISTRATION-Spring, Summer, Fall 1969 Name ...... Address on June 1 Phone....... Address on August 28...... Phone..... University of Michigan year ... Major........... Will be at Ann Arbor: spring OllA:.... summer (IIIB..... fall .. . Please 'check those courses you would like to take and return this form to: 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor. Courses are described in the Bent-Mid- rash Catalogue. More information will be made available upon pre-registration. Spring-Summer semester 1. Hebrew for Beginners (intensive, 2-3 meetings a week) 2. Intermediate or Advanced Hebrew 3. A Survey for Judaism II (for those taking No. 2 Can be taken independently immediately) i I -iI 1 i i SENIORS! GET YOUR Graduation Announcements FOLLETT'S State St. at North Univ. I! . I- F 1 IIII ! , ' ' G OLF SALE! The Society of Automn'otive Engineers wishes to thank all those people who worked on the Road Rallye and all the sponsors: B. F. Goodrich Howard Cooper Volkswagen Montgomery Ward Village Inn Pizza Parlor Standard Oil Checkered Flag STUDY IN CUERNAVACA Learn to speak SPANISH *Intensive courses, with drills, supervised labs, and theory taught by experienced Mexican teachers. *'$135 per -month. j Study in the INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES. * Examine themes such as "Protest and its Creative Expression in Latin America" and "The Role of Education in Social Change" in 10 to 30 new courses each month. NOW Save up to OFF Clubs-Carts-Bags- Balls-Shoes-etc. over 300 sets of Clubs over 400 Golf Bags over 75 Golf Carts over 250 pairs of GOLF SHOES I I -- - Fall semester, 1969 - __ LL 4, Basic Judaism-Jewish Ethics 5. A Comparative Study of Biblical Literature 6. A History of Zionism in America 7. Introduction to Jewish-Arab Relations 1936-1969 8. An Advanced Seminar in Social Studies of Jewish Communities in Europe and America 9. Introduction to Modern Literary Yiddish (beginners) l f1. Intermediate Modern Literary Yiddish 11. Personal Worth and Collective Identity 12. Introduction to Jewish Musicology 13. Hebrew Language and Composition (beginners) .14. Hebrew Language and Composition (intermediate) . 15. Readings in Programmatic Thought in Hebrew (Ahad Ha-Am, Haim Arlozoroff, Ben-Gurion and Uri Avneri) Please indicate here any other courses you would like to take- or your comments: I