THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, 31AY 9, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1967 [inois Barred or Two Years CAA Prohibits Post-Season Play Of Football, Basketball Teams Netters Face MSU After WS Michigan's tennis team, washed out of a 3-0 lead against Western Michigan University yesterday, faces stiff opposition from an un- defeated Michigan. State team in East Lansing this afternoon. Coach William Murphy claims that today's matches will "proba- bly be the closest we have played all year," and that the team is going to have to play their best to uphold their unbeaten record. "State has a well balanced team and their scores with other schools have been similar to ours." The Wolverines, who boast three shutouts, will face an MSU lineup HICAGO AP-The University [llinois, still groggy from Big . penalties for a $21,000 athletic; h fund, was slugged Sunday h two years' probation by the ional Collegiate Athletic As- ation. uring the probation period, II-a is' football and basketball ms are prohibited from en- ing in posteseason competition . the football team cannot make imitments for television ap- ,rances. owever, two scheduled football ws this fall will not be affected le the commtments were made )r to Sunday's crackdown by NCAA. he NCAA action climaxed a month ordeal during which Il- )s coaches Pete Elliott'., foot- ; Harry Combes, basketball; i Howard Braun, basketball as- ant, were forced to resign and athletes were declared ineligi- five of them permanently. 'he NCAA's move will prevent nois from participating in the ketball playoffs and Rose Bowl nes until the school returns to 4d standing, which would be sooner than May 7, 1969. Walter Byers, executive direc- of the NCAA, said the penalty id have been stiffer had it not n for cooperation received from school, which exposed the d, and the action taken by the Ten, which forced the res- tion of the three coaches. }r. David D. Henry, University Illinois president, withheld nment yesterday on the NCAA ;ion. 3yers said the NCAA's policy- king council could not have ed the Big Ten from doing re than it did and that the con- ence followed policies made in recent meetings in Houston to penalize the head coaches in- volved rather than having an as- sistant shoulder the blame when, violations occur, The NCAA's council also voted Sunday to distribute a special re- port to its 670 members on the status of proceedings before the Sports Arbitration Board in the squabble with the Amateur Ath- letic Union. JWashout w hich has been accumulating im- pressively one-sided victories of its own in recent matches and Coach Murphy notes today's ac- tion could turn out either way. Michigan will go with its reg- ular lineup of Dick Dell, Brian aMrcus, Pete +Fishbach, Ron Tee- garten, Ed Waits and Bob Pritula against a strong MSU team. The Wolves hope to enter the -last week of the regular season with a 7-0 conference record. Next week, they play Purdue and a contending Illinois team in their last two dual meets. 0 WEEKEND WRAP-UP: Purdue Wins Invitational Golf As Floridan Captures Honors From seventh place to first in one year; that's what the Purdue golf team did over the weekend in the second renewal of the Northern Intercollegiate Invita- tional Golf Championships held on the Michigan course last week- end. Purdue's six-man team card 1,539 strokes among the five low- est team players over four rounds of stroke play. But the Universities of Florida and Miami, invited to a field largely made up of Big Ten teams gave formidable showings. The Florida team finished second by seven strokes and team leader Dave. Oakley took individual hon- ors with 78-77-74-71-300. Team- mate Richard Spears followed with 302. Michigan's John Schroeder, the leader after Friday's 36 holes, tied for third at 304 with Purdue's leader Steve Mayhew. The Michigan linksmen were one point behind after the first Baseball Rained-Out day, but carded a disastrous third round to end up out of the run- The Michigan baseball team was ning in fourth place with 1,562. rained out in successive double- Ohio State's Jeff Parry got a headers over the weekend but birdie on the fourth hole of the managed to keep alive their title final round. He followed that up hopes as league-leader Minnesota with a hole-in-one on the par- dropped a 4-2 game to Iowa. three 175 yard fifth hole. Friday's bout with Illinois was cancelled because of rain after the first inning of play. The Sat- Thinclads Beat Illini urday game at Purdue was post- poned until Sunday because of wet The Michigan track team stop- grounds. Even then the downpour ped the University of Illinois Sat- increased until it was obvious that urday afternoon as the Wolver- the field would be in worse shape ines' Jamie Dennis ran the 3000 for Sunday's games. meter steeplechase in a Ferry Field Today at Kalamazoo, the Wolves record time of 9:17.4. will take on Western Michigan's Michigan took all the distance Broncos, seeking revenge for an1 races above 440 yards and all field 8-0 drubbing last week. events except the long jump and Western is riding a 13-game triple jump, both captured by winning streak. Saturday the Illinois' John Sandeen. Broncos' unbeaten Jim Johnson In adidtion to Dennis perform- pitched an 8-1 victory over Notre ance, Ron Kutchinski cracked the Dame. 880-yard run Ferry Field record with a 1:50.1 mark. Jack Harvey T boomed out a new shot put mark SPORTS' WEEK of 57 feet 6 inches, besting hisf own effort of 56 feet 11 inches. TUESDAY, MAY 9 * * * 0 REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD USE KWIK 'N KLEEN-ANN ARBOR'S COMPLETE CLOTHING CARE CENTER 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Deluxe Drycleaning and Finishing 24 Hour Shirt Service (Faster on Request) Complete Laundry Service 7. "Coin" Operated Laundry 8. Skilled Alterations and Repairs 9. Drive-in Windows and Night Drop-off Box outh Africa Faces Olympic rivestigation on Racial Bias Household Cleaning Year Around Storag "Coin" Operated Dr rEHRANj Iran (R)-Facilities Mexico City for the 1968 Olym- s are 80 per cent complete but ith Africa isn't nearly that se to having its entry sanction- by the International Olympic nmittee. t'he IOC, meeting here Sunday, Lrrest Clay; lond Set iQUSTON (R)-A quiet and dued Cassious Clay answered ot guilty" when asked by U.S. t. Judge Ben C. Connally yes- -day how the boxing champion d to a federal grand Jury in- tment of a charge of refusing be drafted into the armed ces. the indictment, charging vio- ion of the Selective Service Act, i been returned earlier in the Bond of $5,000 was set with $500 be deposited in cash. "onviction could bring a fine 10,000 and a jail sentence of to five years, but Clay's at-, neys say they are confident it he eventually will win his ht for exemption from the draft ause of being a Black Muslim rister. * * * SEW YORK (P')-A match be- een Germany's Karl Milden-' 'ger, and contender Thad Spen- in Germany in September is ected to kick off an ambitious ht-man elimination tournament determine a successor to heavy- ight champion Cassius Clay. directed a three-man mission tof visit South Africa in August andt report to President -Avery Brund-s age by the end of September onc that country's racial situation. South Africa has a nationalY policy on racial segregation but at report recently submitted byc Frank Brauh, the country's Olym- pic chairman, indicated a relax- ation of discrimination in the na- tion's Olympic team. Fourteen African nations al- ready have denounced the changes in policy as insufficient and threatened to boycott the Olym- pics if South Africa is allowed to compete. Meanwhile, Pedro Ramierz re- ported preparations 80 per cent complete and said that two sepa- rate high speed routes have been constructed between housing and competition sites. In other business at the IOC meeting, the Soviet Union pro- posed that the international com- mittee be enlarged, presumably to include more members from Com- munist or third world nations. IOC members from 41 countries agreed in principle for enlarging the membership, a conference spokesman said, but no moves will be made before the next meeting at Grenoble, France, in 1968. Athletes competing in the 1968 and future Olympics will have to sign an oath that they will not use dope to improve their per- formances, and must agree to sub- mit to medical checks on drugs, the committee ruled yesterday. An Olympic medical center will be set up at the games where of- ficial doctors and specialists can check for the use of dope or stimulants, the IOC announced. Netters Blank OSU The Wolverine tennis team con- tinued in high form on their quest for the Big Ten title, blanketting Ohio State 9-0 for their seventh straight dual meet victory (6-0 in conference play). Sophomore ace Dick Dell upped his league mark to 5-0 as the en- tire net squad sent their Buckeye opponents down in straight sets. Tennis-Michigan at Western Michigan Baseball-Michigan at Western .Michigan WEDNESDAY, MAY 10 Golf-Michigan at Michigan State University FRIDAY, MAY 12 Baseball-Iowa at Michigan, 1 p-m. Tennis-Michigan at Purdue Golf-Spartan Invitational, East Lansing g V10. Member: National Institute of Drycleaning and ;e Service Drycleaning and Laundry Institute of Detroit HOURS: 7:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. Mon-Fri., 7:30 A.M. to rycleaning6:00 PM. Sat. for professional work. 7:30 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. Everyday for Coin-Op. DRYCLEANERS LAUNDRY - COIN-OP " 740 PACKARD ' F 4 __ _ ____. . I 7 _ __ j _ E Join The Michigan Daily 4 *41 r I know that Follett's gets a new supply of textbooks c almost every day, but why do you guys keep coming ) r ni . r a r rr " back day after day when you graduated 30 years ago? We've grown accustomed to the thrill is r -,. Pre -vacation *4 offer. All the travelers checks you want-up to $5,000 worth- for a fee of just $2-. At banks everywhere, during May only. I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE ngton SYork w 13 12 12 101 10 11 9 9 8 8 7 7 10 9 10 12 12 12 11 12 Pet. .650 .632 .545 .526 .500 .478 .429 .429 .421 .400 GB 1A 2 2 3 3% 4% 4 4j4 5 -Late game not included. SUNDAY'S RESULTS troit 1, Baltimore 0 nsas City 4-3, New York 1-8 ston 9, Minnesota 6 Acago at Cleveland (rain) liornia 5, Washington 0 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS .shington 7, Minnesota 4 w York 3, California 1 (7th) ly games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES w York at California (n) ston at Kansas City (2, t-n) ishington at Minnesota (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. G Cincinnati 17 8 .680 Pittsburgh 12 7 .632 2 St. Louis 13 9 .591 21 Atlanta 12 9 .571 3 Philadelphia 10 10 .500 41 Chicago 10 10 .500 4; San Francisco 10 12 .455 51 New York 8 13 .381. 7 Los Angeles 8 13 .381 7 Houston 7 16 .304 9 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 5, St. Louis 4 Atlanta 5, Cincinnati 3 San Francisco at Pittsburgh (rain) Los Angeles at Philadelphia (rain) Houston at New York (2, rain) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Atlanta at Philadelphia (rain) Los Angeles 4, Houston 2 San Francisco 9, Chicago 2 St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 5 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at New York (n) Atlanta at Philadelphia (n) St. Louis at Pittsburgh (n) San Francisco at Chicago Los Angeles at Houston (n) B Sw ,IBC too Folletts receives new shipments of new & used books daily I It's easy getting addicted to Follett's FBD* s(fresh Books Daily) I It happens every year-classes are over- enrolled; new courses unexpectedly open up; students put off buying books til the last minute -then you can't find the books you need. Well, you need books so what can you do about it? The first thing you should do is stop down to Follett's. Because of our national buying and selling power, we can get out of stock books on campus faster than anyone else. FOLLETT'S gets shipments daily during the rush-sometimes even hourly. Daily we phone in rush orders to our home office or directly to the publishers.. . we make soecial shipoing arrangements to get them You can save real money by buying First National City Travelers Checks now for your summer vacation trip. Read how. Normally travelers checks carry a fee of a penny a dollar. It costs $1 for $100 worth of checks, $2 for $200, $10 for $1,000, and so forth. Now, during May only, you can buy any amount you need - up to $5,000 worth - for only $2, plus the face value of the checks. You could save up to $48. (For less than $200 worth, of course, the fee is less than $2.) If you're planning a trip to Europe, what you save from this offer could pay for an extra day on world - airlines, car rental agen- cies, steamship lines, hotels, mo- tels, restaurants, stores, etc. You can spend them as easily at Le Drugstore as at the drugstore. And they're just as convenient on a weekend trip as on a world tour. Fast refund in case of loss The greatest advantage of First National City Travelers Checks is that you get your money back .promptly if they're lost or stolen. We've built a security network of 25,000 banking offices around the world where you can get lost checks refunded fast. On the spot. How do you fnd the nearest re- fund offices? In the Continental U.S., call Western Union Operator 7;A ,rn l w've sunnhed el1Pl ~verv Offer good only in U.S. and Puerto Rico, May 1.31, 1967 Never before has such complete protection for your cash been so inexpensive. So act fast. Get your summer supply of First National City Travelers Checks now. They can be bought at most banks and savings institutions. If your vacation money is in your local bank and you won't be home until after May 31, you can still take advantage of this offer. Just mail this ad to your parents and ask them to send your money to you. Note to all banks and savings institutions During the month of May, we're making this unusual introductory A I I I L ' i I