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May 11, 1967 - Image 6

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1967-05-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Ix

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

.111V1 ULj^l j,}

tate's Linksmen
queeze by 'M'

I

Special To The Daily
EAST LANSING -- The Mich-I
igan golf team, playing here for
the first time on Michigan State
University's newly opened course,
lost a close match yesterday by
the score of 627-621.
Low score for the round was
tallied by the Spartans' Larry
Murphy who blazed in with a
37-36-73.,
Michigan Captain Bob Barclay
tied with teammate Rod Sumpter
at 77 storkes for low score among
the Wolverines.
MSU reversed roles on the vis-
itors in memory of a 28-point
st9mping on the Michigan course
on May 3. Harry Englehart was
low scorer in that match, but the
Spartan course proved too much
for the Wolverine sophomore as
he carded a 41-39-80 yesterday to
trail the rest of the pack.
"With an un-seen course like
this, there is bound to be a two-
three stroke difference per man
SCORE
John Schroeder 37-41-78
John-Richart 39-40--79
Frank Groves 38-40-78
Rod Sumpter 37-40-77
Bob Barclay 40-37-77
Harry Englehart 41-39-80
Dave Graff 41-39-80
Mark Christianson 39-39-78
.-Michigan-627
Sandy McAndrews 43-36-79
Steve Benson 39-38-77
Larry Murphy 37-36-73
Troy Campbell 36-38-74
George Buth 38-41-79
John Bailey 38-38-765
Al Theiss 43-40-83
Dick Hill 40-40-80
Michigan State-621

before leaving the clubhouse,"
said Michigan coach Bert Katzen-
meyer.
"I'm not too surprised at the1
close scores," he added. "But1
we've got a long way to go before
we're a great team."
Purdue will be the favorite
when the Big Ten golfers open at
the Michigan course May 19-20
for the Conference championships.
Both Ohio State University and
the host Wolverines figure to be
among the contenders.
Bandini Dies,
From Burns
MONTE CARLO {P) - Italian
Lorenzo Bandini died yesterday of
injuries received when his Fer-
rari crashed and burned in Sun-
day's Grand Prix of Monaco auto
race.
"The intoxication due to grave
burns was too great," said Dr.
Louis Orecchia, who treated the
driver at Princess Grace Hospital
here. "Burns covered about 70 per
cent of his body to the third
degree."
Bandini, 34, winner of the Day-
tona Beach 24-hour Continental
Road Race in February and the
1,000-mile Monza race in April,
was driving a Ferrari along the
twisting Monte Carlo course when
suddenly the car overturned and
caught fire.
He had not won any of the
annual international races until
this year although he finished
sixth in the world drivers cham-
pionship in 1965.3

IOC Moves
Against Pros
In Olympics
TEHRAN Iran (P)-The Inter-
national Olympic Committee plans
a crackdown in the 1968 Games at
Mexico City in an effort to pre-
vent any professionals from com-
peting.
Avery Brundage of Chicago,
president of the IOC, said Tuesday
that athletes will have to list their
occupations and the names of
their employers on a new Olympic
entry form.
In the past, he said, the amateur
status of the athletes had to be
confirmed by the signatures of
the president of their sports fed-
eration and Olympic committees,
but that professionals still man-
aged to compete.
"In the next Olympic Games
for the first time we are going, to
try to control the rule on ama-
teurism,"dBrundage said.
"We don't want people in thej
Olympic Games if they make their
livelihood from sport."
He added that proof that an
athlete was not a true amateur
would still be difficult to obtain
and asked newspapers to print any
evidence of professionals to help
the IOC crackdown.
Brundage also disclosed that all
members of a team in which any
athlete is convicted of using
stimulants will be ruled out of
the Games. He said this did not
mean that all the athletes from
the convicted country would be
disqualified, but only those com-
peting directly with him,
On the new entry form athletes
will have to agree to submit to
medical checks by Olympic doc-
tors looking for stimulant-users,
Brundage said,
At its recently concluded meet-
ing here Brundage said the IOC
turned down a proposal that
Olympic athletes turning profes-
sional within one year of the
Games would have withdrawn any
medal they might have won.
Brundage said he "observed
with pleasurebthata considerable
advance has been made in elimi-
nating racialism from sports in
South Africa" but that the IOC
would not make a decision on re-
admitting South Africa' to the
Olympics until after the report of
the IOC investigating committee.
Winter Games
'Snowed Under'
GRENOBLE, France !P)-With
only nine months to go before the
first competitors start arriving for
the 1968 Winter Olympic Games,
the organizing committee is snow-
ed under by, a blizzard of details,
figures and uncertainties.
The biggest uncertainty is how
many visitors will want to come
to Grenoble. Committee members
flatly say they don't know-and
wouldn't tell if they did.
No one wants to put out inflated
guesses about the size of crowds
for fear of discouraging potential
spectators. And no one wants to
plan too small, then not be able
to handle the crowds that arrive
for the Feb. 5-18 games.
The one thing everyone insists
is a certainty that all of the sports
installations will be completed well
ahead of time, with re-touches on
faults in installations during the
pre-Olympic competitions this
year.
The only big, unfinished sports
structure is the Ice Palace that
will seat 12,000 persons for figure

,skating and ice hockey. It is
scheduled for completion in the
fall, and test competitions will be
held in October. The Olympic vil-
lage and press center will be fin-
ished before the first snow falls.

OLIVER DARDEN, former Michigan basketball All-America, recently finished his first year as a
freshman in the Law School. Darden's career in the shadow of Michigan greats Cazzie Russell and
Bill Buntin has been replaced by a new challenge.
Tigers SOX, Keep Up Pace;
Pira tes, Dodgers 'in Comeback

By ROB SALTZSTEIN
Oliver Darden is going home.
He is leaving Ann Arbor for the
virmmer and will be married on
Friday. The two-time Michigan
All-America basketball star was
one of 360 freshman law students
to complete final exams yester-
day.
Law Quad yesterday was a home
for liberated souls. Exams had
broken around five and an air of
newfound liberty gushed through-
out the halls. From Ollie's room,
number 012, shouts and Beatle
music could be heard where only
three hours before it had been,
very silent.
Darden's room, like most others
in the quad, was a vague mess
with- boks piled in high stacks and
already-packed suitcases waiting
to be picked up. There were no
trophies on the wall.
Darden himself is not typical,
although one gets the impression
from talking to him that he would
like to be considered so.
But no person who did for Mich-
igan basketball what Ollie did can
live in Ann Arbor and be con-I
sidered typical.
Least Needed
Darden, ironically, played bas-
ketball for Michigan at a time
when Michigan needed him least.
Michigan would have been a hot-
shot team without Darden-with
Darden, Michigan was a great
team.
The boards, the scores, the na-
tional rankings and the press clip-
pings all belonged to the team.
But this was all in the past. 01-
lie no longer shoots baskets for
real. He could have played with
the Detroit Pistons but he chose
Michigan Law School instead.
No type of description can con-
vey what a freshman law student
at this University feels like, when
his final exams are over; Ollie
tried to tell The Daily.
"You study and study and study
some more," said Darden. "The
pressure builds up and then there's
its release. It feels great.
Continue Tradition
'"Law School means many
things," said Darden. "It's a con-
tinuation of the tradition I felt
as an undergraduate, but even
more so. The caliber of the stu-
dent is extremely high here and
the compttition is keen.
"You live, eat, and study with
some really bright-almost fan-
tastically so-people. The students
here are all top notch or they
wouldn't be here in the.first place.

Darden Views Law
As New Challenge

"I think it's this type of setting.
coupled with an outstanding fac-
ulty, that makes Michigan Law
into a truly outsanding school,"
"Well," he said, "If you are
talking about the basketball as-
pect, it's a different kind of
arena. You could lose a basketball
game and there would always be
another chance.
"This is a new kind of challenge
with a different set of values. You
put everything on the line to be-
gin with and there is no turning
back.
"The rewards can be immense
and I do want to see tangible re-
sults-or I wouldn't have come
here in the first palce. But you
only have one shot at it and it's
sort of always in your mind," he
said.
My mind flipped back to an
English lecture I had had earlier
in the week.
The professor was speaking
about Hemingway and had tried
to illustrate how Hemingway be-
lieved in the importance of the
individual putting himself in a
position to lose, for only out of
such situations can real value or
a sense of achievement be derived.
To me, Ollie seems to typify this
belief.
Darden talks smoothly, he talks
intelligently, he talks freely. An-
drew Hain, his roornmate, says
Ollie's outstanding characteristic
is his "outgoing and lively person-
ality."
Don Shoemaker, another fellow
law student is more definitive. Ol-
lie is simply "one of the pleasant-
est, post natural human beings
I've met in my life."
Don, incidentally, iever knew
Ollie was an. All-American until
I told him. That's the type of guy
Ollie is; he just doesn't brag. Jim
Ake, another fellow law student,
said, "The only way you find out
about Ollie is toask him; he never
volunteers the information by
himself."
From a blighted area of Detroit
to law school at Michigan is no
mean achievement. Ollie knows it
and he also knows that there are
many people from more advan-
tageous backgrounds, even the
Ivy League, who would give much
of what they have to have a place
in room 012.
As he puts it, "There are no
basketball nets in th'e classroom
here. The past is out the window
and you have to prove yourself
again. You're very much on your
own."

*

Chicago P1
} t ,
NHL AlS
MONTREAL (A)-Stan Mikita,
the scoring champion, and three
other members of the Chicago
Black Hawks were named today
to the National Hockey League's
'first All-Star team for the 1966-
67 season.
Mikita a -.center, was the only
unanimous c h o i c e. Defenseman
Pierre Pilote, left winger Bobby
Hull and right winger Ken Whar-
ram of Chicago also were selected
along with goalie Ed Giabomin
and defenseman Harry Howell of
the New York Rangers.
Right winger Gordie Howe and
center Norm Ullman of Detroit,
goalie Glenn Hall of Chicago, de-
fenseman Tim Horton of Toronto
and rookie Bobby Orr of Boston
and left winger Ron Marshall of
the Rangers were picked for the
second team.
Mikita accumulated the maxi-
mum 180 points in the unique
system of voting by hockey writ-
ers and broadcasters. One vote
was taken after the first half of
the season and another after the
second half and the players with
the most total points for both
halves were named to the first
team.
Hull collected 174 points fol-
lowed by Pilote 156, Giacomin
149, Howell 147 and Wharram
117. The latter beat out Howe by
21 points while Rod Gilbert, of
New York, the leader in the first
half, dropped to third.
Giacomin, Pilote, Orr, Mikita,
Hull and Howe led the voting in
the second half. The runners-up
were Howell, Horton, Ullman,
Wharram plus goalie Denis De-
Jordy and left winger Doug Mohns
of theHawks.
Each of the first team All-Stars
will receive $1,000 from the league
while the second team members
and leaders in the second half vot-
ing get $500 apiece. Runners-up
in the second half balloting will
collect $250.
It was the first time in 24 years
that the Montreal Canadiens did
not have a player on either the
first or second All-Star team.

aces 4on
Iar Team
Pilote, Mikita and Hull were the
repeaters from last year's first
teach.
The last time the Rangers had
two men on the first team All-
Stars was in 1961-62. They were
defenseman Doug Harvey and
right winger Andy Bathgate.
Mikita, 26-year-old native of
Czechoslovakia, r e c e n t 1 y was
named the circuit's Most Valuable
Player. He scored 97 points in
regular season, tying the league
record set by Hull in 1965-66.
BOX SCORE

By The Associated Press
Willie Horton belted a two-run
homer as the Detroit Tigers de-
feated the Cleveland Indians 4-2
last night.
Horton's blast in the sixth in-
ning followed a walk to Al Kaline
and gave Detroit a 4-1 lead,
Mickey Lolich struck out nine
but needed ninth inning help
from Fred Gladding to nail down
his fourth victory in five deci-
sions.
The Chicago White Sox smash-
ed four home runs and Tommy
John pitched a six-hitter, de-
feating the Baltimore Orioles 3-1.
The victory was the sixth
straight for the streaking White
Sox and marked the Orioles' sixth
straight loss and the ninth set-
back in the last 10 games for the
defending world champions.
Tom McCraw whacked a two-
run homer in the fourth and Pete
Ward connnected with the bases
empty in the sixth for the White
Sox, who had scored five runs on
six singles, three walks and John's
sacrifice to fly in the third.
Willie Stargell's two-run homer
and Bob Veale's five-hit pitching
through 8% innings led Pitts-
burgh to a 4-1 victory over St.
Louis.
Veale struck out nine before{
walking two men with two out in
the ninth when he was replacedI
by Elroy Face who got Roger
Maris to line out to Bill Mazer-
oski at second, ending the game.
Veale won his fifth game of the
season, becoming the winningestr
pitcher in the majors.

Soccer Highlights Variety
nX 0 r U ni r

Willie Davis' two-out single
ignited a four-run Los Angeles
rally in the 10th inning and lifted
the Dodgers past Houston 5-1.
The victory prevented the de-
fending National League cham-
pions from dropping into the cel-
lar behind the Astros.
Two home runs by Joe Torre
powered Atlanta to a 7-2 victory
over Philadelphia in the second

game of a twi-night doubleheader.
Torre also homered in the first
game, won by the Phillies 4-3.
Hank Aaron and Mack Jones
hit two-run homers in the second
game to give Wade Blasingame his
first decision of the season al-
though the lefthander needed help
in the sixth from Phil Niekro.
Aaron also got an inside-the-
park homer in the eighth in-
ning of the opener.

$

t Pla Form
, By The Associated Press
Soccer buffs worldwide are cur-
rently embroiled in a controversy
about the latest patterns and
styles of play.
Not too many years ago it was
evident that each team would
field a goalkeeper, two fullbacks,
three halfbacks and five forwards.
But like baseball and football,
soccer strategy has become in-
creasingly complex.
Fans nowadays talk about the
advantages or disadvantages of
"strikers," "sweepers," "stoppers,"
and "wingers."
Forty years ago the center half
was the key man in most teams
as the offense and defense re-
volved around him. He simply
played the "stopper" role by by
plugging the middle defense.
Now players interchange and
cover territory everywhere on the

lation Styles
field with their deployment de-
termining a team's style.
Much of soccer's tremendous
appeal stems from its internation-
al potential of different styles of
play. And Commissioner Ken
Macker's 10-team National Profes-
sional Soccer League combines the
talents of players representing 36
countries,
The Brazilians popularized the
4-2-4 tactical play in time to win
the 1958 World Cup. It was simply
a matter of one of the two wing
halfbacks dropping back to make
a four man defense. One of the
inside forwards dropped back as
a midfield linkman joining the
remaining halfback.
Italy developed a 1-4-2-3 line-
up with a free back sweeper pla-
cing himself in the rear of the
four-man fullback wall. As a
sweeper he moves across the field
retrieving any loose passes that
get through the defensive unit.
Goals come at premium and it
isn't attractive for the offensive
minded spectator.
Nowadays the most common
system developed by England in
winning the World Cup last year
is the 4-3-3 which relies on pulling
another forward back and using
him as a midfield linking man.
It allows for a six-man attack or a
seven-man defense.

} ,
'

t-.__ -- --'-'-- ii

MICHIGAN
Redmon 3b
Sygar 2b
Tanona lb
Spicer rf
Hosler if
Nelson e
Fisher of
Forsythe ss
Zahn p
Zepp
Guidi p
Totals
WESTERN
Redmon if
Merchant 2b
Locanto cf
Koselke lb
Trudeau 3b
Schlukebir rf
Roberts ss
Brown e
Hall p
Benoit ph
Pasierb p
Mayer p
Johnson ph
Totals
MICHIGAN
WESTERN

AB R H
4 1 2
5 0 1
5 0 2
5 0 0
4 1 0
2 1 2
1 0, 0
2 0 0
42 7 13
AB R HR
3 1 2
' 4 0 0
4 0 1
40 0
4 0 0
3 0 2
4 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 0 0
31 2 5
101 202 001-7
000 020 000-2

.I

c
i

Major League Standmings

1.

,!
1
F
4
Z
1
1 ,
r
r
r
a
6

YOU R
MORN ING
C:tie r 6405
: . . . . . . .S '.
"" with
Coll 764-0558

4

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit
Chicago
x-New York
Washington
x-California
Boston
Minnesota
Kansas City
Baltimore
Cleveland
x-Late game

W L Pet. GB
15 7 .682 -
14 7 .667
11 10 .524 3 ,
12 11 .522 3x2
12 13 .480 41/
11 12 .478 4V
10 12 .455 5
10 13 .435 54
9 14 .391 6/
8 13 .381 6U4
not included.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
WV L Pct.
Cincinnati 18 9 .667
Pittsburgh 13 8 ,619
St. Louis 14 10 .583
Chicago 12 10 .545
Atlanta 13 11 .542
Philadelphia 12 11 .522
San Francisco 10 14 .417
New York 9 14 .391
Los Angeles 9 14 .391
Houston 8 17 .320

GB
2
3% 2
4
6V2
7
7
9

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Kansas City 7, Boston 4
Detroit 4, Cleveland 2
Chicago 13, Baltimore 1
Kansas City at Minnesota (n)
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
New York at California (ic)
Cleveland at Washington (n)
Chicago at Baltimore (n)
Only games scheduled

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 5, San Francisco 4
Cincinnati 7, New York 4
Philadelphia 4-2, Atlanta 3-7
Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 1
Los Angeles 5, Houston 1 (10 inn)
TODAY'S GAMES
Cincinnati at New York
Atlanta at Pittsburgh (n)
Only games scheduled

U -. - --_______

& 4dRON .T
Mo6N ogRAMs

E-Spicer, Merchant, Roberts 2.,
Brown. RBI--G. Redmon, Sygar 3,
Spicer 2, Forsythe, Merchant, Locan-
to. LOB-Michigan 11, Western S. 2B
-Tanona 2, Spicer, J. Redmon,
Sklukebir. SH-G. Redmon. DP -
Western. SB-Sygar, Nelson.
PITCHING SUMMARY
IP H RERBBSO
Zahn (W, 7-1) 4 3 0 0 1 5
Zepp 3 2 2 2 3 2
Guidi 2 0 0 0 1 0
Hal (L, 2-1) 3 5 2 201
Pasierb 2V, 6 4 4 1 2
Mayer 3% 2 0 0 2 0
WP-Pasierb. HBP-Merchant (by
Zahn), Brown (by Zahn). U -
George Grimesnand Glenn Scheicher.
T--2:44. A-250,

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