'PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1965 PAGE EIGHT THE MIChIGAN DAIlY FRTIIAV SFPTPMRFR 1EL 1!~xi A'AVA" Aiy l'!L'/i .ii;AkVJL"/J JIB 1V, 1JVa7 u LLOYD GRAFF Renaissance Man In Baseball Suit Bert Campaneris, I salute you. Who's Bert Campaneris, you ask. Is he the doctor who woke up a cat's brain after it was technically dead for 203 days? No, of course not. Is he the policeman who ticketed the mayor's car for parking in a space designated "No Parking 2 A.M. to 5 A.M. Tues., Thurs. and Sat." Shucks, no. Is he the only guy in the world who picked the Pittsburgh Pirates to win the pennant in May? Nah. Well, who the hell is he, then, funny boy? Bert Campaneris is Renaissance Man in a baseball suit. Speak English, man, if you don't mind. Bert (Campy) Campaneris played all nine positions in one game Wednesday night for the Kansas City Athletics as they lost to the California Angels. To top it off, Campy, playing catcher in the ninth got whacked in the head by a baserunner and had to go to the hospital for precautionary X-rays.E So what. Who cares if some nutty ballplayer plays every position in the park. All it got him was a conk on the bean, anyway,. But don't you see the symbolism. The game was a modern al- legory, a microcosm of life. Look out now, the philosopher in him is leaking out. OK Bertrand, baby, let's hear the jazz. I know it's coming. Gradschoolitis, Etc. Campy Campaneris defied the trend of our century. "Special- ize, maJor, do one thing well, and chuck the rest," is the big line of the. times. Gradschoolitus. Seventh-century Turkish andiron makers, that's what I'll do my doctoral thesis on. Original research. Campy Campaneris is the generalist. Sure, he spreads himself a bit thin. He's not as good a pitcher as he is a second baseman, but he goes at everything with the same zest and excitement. There's the same zing whether he's picking up a bunt or throwing a curve. And Campeneris got smashed in the ninth. What could have been more poetic. The eccentric, the unusual, the wild, caught it between the eyes from a clumsy rookie baserunner. California, the establishment, the IBMs, the specialized mass conglomeration ganged up on him and knocked him out. But Campy will be back. Right field, shortstop, first base, catcher, and pitcher will all be his again. The generalist keeps bobbing up to take charge if you just give him a chance. Jack of all trades, but master of none? Maybe. But I'll take it over the platoons any day. Give me the wide man. You take the engineer who can barely scrawl his name, much less compose a sentence. Bert Campaneris, I salute you. STAR MAY QUIT: .Ralston Loses to Australian; Ashe Pitted A ainst Emercrna g i~UUU'. EI.E&Y7g Juday By HOWARD KOHN First of the Big Ten opponents for the defending champion Mich- igan gridders this season will be perennial across-state rival, the Michigan State Spartans. The Maize and Blue will tangle with the Green and White of State on Oct. 9. Last year, the Spartans dropped a 17-10 contest to the Wolverines en route to posting a 3-3 won-lost mark and a sixth-place finish in the con- ference. MSU of 1965, a team which head mentor Duffy Daugherty anxious- ly says, "cannot afford any injur- ies because of a definite lack in depth," will be spearheaded by a pair of All-America prospects quarterback Steve Juday and end Gene Washington. Juday,' called "one of the most underrated quarterbacks in the country"by his coach,. will be one of 26 returning lettermen on the Spartan squad. The six-foot, 178- pound senior completed 79 passes in 148 tries for nine touchdowns and a net total of 894 yards in the air as a front-line player last year. The Spartan signal-caller cur- rently holds several team passing records for a single game and is expected to add to his collection with the help of his favorite re- ceiver, Washington. A speedster on the MSU track team, Washington snagged 35 aerials for 542 yards and five TD's as a sophomore in '64. He stands 6-2 and tips the scales at 209 pounds. Three of the top ground-gain- ing stalwarts for Michigan State are Eddie Cotton, Clinton Jones and Bob Aspisa. State's ground game appears less than spectacu- lar from advance indications, but could be sufficient to supplement the Juday-Washington combo. Key to Spartan Hopes Dick Gordon, who last year indi- vidually gained almost as many yards as the rest of the backs combined. His partner in the backfield running slot will likely be the 188 pound Jones, a track star and a junior, who will be back for his second year as a starter. . Bolstering the rushing charge will be sophomore sensation BobE Aspisa, a Hawaiian recrut who has been tearing up the turf in prac- tice drills. Holding down the place-kick and punting job for the green- and-white crew is Dick Kenney, another import from Hawaii. Kenney is a unique kick specialist in that he does his work bare- lineup again for State, along with footed. tackles Buddy Owens and Don Up front on the offense will be Bierwicz, and linebackers Ron four lettermen - guards Gary Groovert and Charlie Thornhill. Rugg and Jerry West. center Boris Dimitroff and tackle John The seventh returnee is middle Karpinski A pair of first-year guard Harold Lucas who packs men, Joe Przybycki and Norman 257 pounds onto his 6-2 frame. Jenkins have been picked to fur- Weak point in the Spartan de- nish more sound poundage. fense is the secondary, which is On defense, State will have as yet unproven in collegiate seven regulars back giving a big competition. Don Japinga is the boost to Daugherty's plans of in- only returning letterman in the provement. defensive backfield, and the re- Veteran ends Charlie Smith and maining positions will be filled by Ed Macuga will be in the starting reserves from last season's squad. -f FRATERNITY GRAND OPENING I _ 4 THIS WEEK ONLY TEPs ARE TOPS FREE BAG OF POPCORN WITH ANY 1Oc OR MORE PURCHASE OF * HOMEMADE CARMEL CORN * ROASTED PEANUTS * CANDY APPLES * SOFT ICE CREAM * SHAKES AND SUNDAES * SOFT DRINKS I 'V 'l Cotton, a returning regular,- is tabbed as the best bet to take over the heavy-duty running chores at fullback from departed ICE CREAM CARMEL CORN CASTLE 410 E. Liberty (corner Thompson) block west of Michigan Theatre Open every day except Tuesday, 1 :30 p.m. to 1 1 p.m. 4 6vvt~ a O Ar FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (A") - South African Cliff Drysdale knocked America's top player, Dennis Ralston, into possible re- tirement with a stirring five-set quarter final victory yesterday and left Arthur Ashe as the lone U.S. hope in the National Tennis Championships. In a touch and go battle that lasted 2% hours and that saw each player blow match points, Drys- dale upset the fuming, third-seed- ed Ralston_2-6, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3, 8-Q. Drysdale's most potent weapon against the third seeded Ralston was a backhand which he swings like baseball's Mickey Mantle hit- ting left handed and which is just as devastating. Time and again he sent thea shot like a siege gun at Ralston's feet and the Californian had no defense. Shortly a f t e r w a r d, another! American hopeful, giant killer Charlie Pasarell of Puerto Rico, went down before the tricky, change-of-pace shots of Mexico's Rafael Osuna 1-6, 6-3, 6-3, 7-5. Osuna broke Pasarell at love in the 12th game of the fourth set after the Puerto Rican had staved off two match points in the ninth. WELCOME STUDENTS Hours open MON.-SAT. from 8:30-5:30 U-N Barbers near Kresge's ---and Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. The 24-year-old Drysdale, seed- ed eighth, and Osuna, No. 6, meet in one of Saturday's semi-finals with the other bracket to be de-1 cided today. In these matches, Roy Emerson of Australia, top-seeded and rated the world's best amateur, plays, Ashe, 22-year-old Davis Cupper from Los Angeles, and Manuel Santana of Spain takes on An- tonio Palafox, Osuna's partner on Mexico's Davis Cup team. BEER-PIZZA-BANJOS BIMBO'S STEAK AND SHAKE 13 13 South University CHAR BROILED SIRLOIN STRIP STEAK .. . .1.40 SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE.............1.10 ai Collaqe 6'nn 512 E. William I Stop in and enjoy a delicious pizza or wonderfully prepared Italian dish, or call in and order. i NO 3-5902 or NO 3-3379 FREE DELIVERY 5 p.m.-2 a.m. 7 days a week OPEN: Mon., Wed. and Thurs. 4 P.M. to 2 A.M. OPEN: Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tuesday) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 DETROIT ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. CARRY-OUT ORDERS ONLY-PHONE 665-2266 FREE DELIVERY FRI.-SUN. BARBECUE CHICKEN AND RIBS FRIED CHICKEN SHRIMP AND FISH OldHeidelberg 211-213 N. Main St. 668-9753 Specializing in GERMAN FOOD, FINE BEER, WINE, LIQUOR PARKING ON ASHLEY ST. Hours: Daily 1 1 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays FRONTIER BEEF BUFFET Cafeteria Open 7 Days Sun.-Thurs. 11:30A.M.-8:00 P.M. Friday and Saturday until 8:30 P.M. I I 4 DOUGOUT CAFETERIA dREVAIRINIUIN RESTAURANT Fried Chicken Seafood, Steaks and Chops Open Mon. thru Sat. 7 a.m.-8 Cafeteria Style 7 a.m.-5 Will Serve 5 p.m.-8 p.m. p.m. p.m. Broiled Special ST RIP STE. New York S1l.I [IT [I Served with onion ring, garnish, french fried potatoes, tossed garden salad, roll and butter, hot coffee .............. AK $175 2333 E. STADIUM 663-9165 I GOOD PRICE 1121 S. University "Roast Beef at its Finest" 7 A.M.-8 P.M. Daily Closed Tuesdays r 'ji i1.j . . . . . . r - .f * ~ ~ .. -. . " 4WRed Wine ! T1 REGISTRATION BEGINS SEPT. 7. DIAG "r"iLu ADf"u I . lf Vli + ' r L I . Ad& 1