TIDE MIHIGA N DAILY PAGE NINE T H E I C H I A N D00, A G E iN E. LLOYD GRAFF Kid, Quit with ther Questions and Swing He had a splotchy, obese body, pinker than a livid mollusk with gouges out of his legs and overgrowths of white skin filling the wells. You'd have to say that he was just this side of deformity with those sloppy skin graphs around his ears. Jay's wavy mahogany hair, his only attractive feature, pulsated on the backswing, and managed to undulate on the follow through. His hair was graceful, unkinked, coordinated. It laughed at him when he cudgeled that cotton ball on the practice tee. The course was made for him, baked boney fairways, emaciated grass, blotchy greens, a wild mean rough, and pins with their flags stolen. Ball poachers ruled the water hazards, and sold whitewashed driving range rejects to naive kids by soliciting them with snarls on the eighth, twelfth, and fourteenth holes. Jay knew all this-not by experience. He'd never played Breezy Knolls Municipal Golf Course, or "The Dust Bowl" as the regulars called it, but' he caddied when the other caddies were taken or had skiddadled over to the ball diamond. No golfer ever willingly picked Jay for his caddie, but some- times a swarthy stud with a kangaroo bag, no cart, fourteen clubs including four woods with their own, numbered socks, a golf umbrella, and brown and white suede golf shoes that couldn't have been worn more than three times and obviously had been stored over the winter in a plastic bag, with shoe trees inside them, figured that a golf game ain't no golf game unless you gbt a servile kid to be your mule. In such cases Jay got hired, earned his fifty cents if he was slavish enough, and borrowed permanently a k-28 golf ball from mister pretty shoes who always swore like a sonofabitch about the greens if he turned his wrist on a two foot putt. Jay never swore on the greens, because he never played them. "Jake, when do you think I'll be ready for the Dust Bowl, a month maybe?" "Sonny, don't rush things. You've got a full life in front of you. Not like me. You gotta prepare and prevent failure. I know. Now, let's see a tiny wiggle at the top of the backswing, then lock your head, left arm stiff, then whip those wrists. Come on, Sonnly." Jay followed the directions earnestly. The kid had no gusto, but a surplus of earnestness. His timing matched his appearance-just this side of hideous, firmly entrenched in the ugly sector. "Not bad," interjected Jake, "get some zip into the hip movement." The putrid odor of a cheap Tampa stogie malevolently trans- forming itself into ash wafted into Jay's nostrils. Jake was a shrunken man of 73, with mild bursitus in the arms. His source of energy seemed to be an unoiled, unwound crank, stuck into his back that not only made him lazy but crotchety too. "How's that, Jake?" You'd almost think he smiled, unless you knew better. If a llama could hold a golf club, he could have probably swung it smoother than Jay-but certainly without his earnestness. "Kid,' you're getting it. But you still got a long way to go. Keep those feet anchored, and try to make it natural." Except for maybe a backward somersault and a stepover toehold there is no more unnatural human motion than a golf swing. What caveman would ever think of swinging a long shafted club, head locked in place, left arm erect, and feet anchored to the earth with spiked shoes. "I'll try Jake, but how do you make something that just doesn't seem right, be right. I mean when you're clumsy how do you make not being clumsy feel natural?" "Kid, stop with the questions and swing. You'll never be ready unless you swing, damn it." It was. a Jakish retort. He spat It out like he spat a cigar tip. Jay winced a little, kind of like a kid does when a decelerating rubber band hits him on the cheek-more from embarrassment than physical discomfort. He swung, he swung, he swung, he swung. He hit the cotton-pickin cotton practice ball four out of five times, close to his record of six straight. Usually you don't think on the tee-you act. But when the back- swing, pivot, follow through become so monotonous, so tedious an errant notion can pop into the psyche right at the moment of impact. "Do your ears affect your coordination, Jake," he asked while stopping his swing immediately before impact. "Nah, kid. Don't worry about your ears, worry about your pivot. You think you got problems? Hah. You ain't got bursitis. I worked forty-five years to retire and play golf, and what do I get, bursitis. The last time I played golf was two years ago. Shot an 88, 42 coming in. You'll never ..." The kid dropped his battered wood, picked up his cotton ball, walked off the practice tee, strutted into the clubhouse john like he hadn't ever strutted before. Jay stared in the mirror at the ears that were mutilated at age two by a deranged daddy. Then he plucked his shiny steel pocket comb out of a back pocket, carefully parted his pliant mahogany hair, and strutted out. He went directly to the practice tee, took his six buck canvas bag with the five unmatched golf sticks, ignored Jake who was shaking cigar ash into the burnt grass, and marched to the first tee. "Hey kid, you can't do that. You ain't paid yet," yelled a golf bureaucrat with a park district jacket and a green hat that some hot shot golfer had obviously lost and he had obviously found. "Money," and then Jay threw his only coin at him, a Kennedy half dollar. He ran to the vacant tee, placed one of his borrowed k-28 balls on a wooden tee as if it was a daisy petal. No warmups. Swimme By The Associated Press AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -Michigan and Indiana forged ahead of defending champion Southern California in the first round of finals in the NCAA Swim- ming and Diving championships here last night after five events. Michigan's 400-yard medley re- lay team won the final event of the day and the Wolverines mov- ed solidly into second place, just 10 points in back of Indiana. Russ Kingery, Paul Scheerer, Tom O'- Malley, and Ken Wiebeck com- bined their talents in the four strokes to turn in a 3:33.36 per- formance to pick up 32 first place points. MSU and UCLA tied for sec- ond, and Indiana managed only! a fifth place finish, while the Tro- jans of USC were in seventh. After the first five events, In- rs Trail Indiana Coaches Request 18 Game Schedule "Sat ) trrscl ues f row this wicked -eneraiton" Acts 2:40 CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium diana leads with 94 points with Michigan closing in with 84. Southern Cal fell into third place with 60 points. Southern Cal's Roy Saari just barely managed to touch out Mich- igan's Bill Farley in the 500-yard freestyle race which opened the meet. Farley led all the way until the last 25 yards when Saari, who had been as far back as fifth place, put on a strong finishing kick to pass him. Saari's winning time of 4:50.59 was seven seconds off his NCAA record, but his clocking was only :00.05 ahead of Farley. Carl Robie won the consolation 500 to add seventh place points for the Wolverines. Times in this event were indicative of what was to come. Because of the altitude, swimmers' times are slower, and no records were set the first night. Hoosier Bill Utley won the next race, the 200-yard individual med- ley in a time of 1:58.55, followed by Bob Hopper of Ohio State. The best the Blue managed was a twelfth place by Rees Orland, who turned in a respectable 2:02.94. Wesleyan's Jim Van Kennen won the 50-yard freestyle with a time of :21.39, but in the con- solation of that race Bob Graham of Texas Tech was clocked in .21.37. Individual finals are di- vided into championship sections of the six best qualifiers and con- solation sections to decide places seven through 12. Bill Groft took sixth place for Michigan while teammate Ken Wiebeck added a ninth place. Ken Sitzberger repeated his championship in the one-meter diving for Indiana, while three of his teammates also placed in the top 12 to give the Hoosiers the lead. Michigan divers Bruce Brown and Fred Brown placed fourth and seventh to keep the Wolver- ines high in contention. Other team totals at the end of the first day were Michigan State 41, Stanford 38, Ohio State 37, UCLA 34, North Carolina State 26, Southern Methodist 24, and Wes- leyan 16. Big Ten basketball coaches vot- ed Wednesday to recommend that the loop adopt an 18-game round robin conference schedule begin- ning with the 1968-69 season. The coaches also voted to ask the conference to boost the maxi- mum total of all basketball games within a single season to 26. The Big Ten currently has a season limit of 24 games of which 14 are conference games. In the 1952-53 season the Big Ten tested an 18-game conference schedule but reverted back to the 14 contest slate the next year. Michigan basketball Coach Dave Strack explained the reasoning be- hind the proposed changes. "It was the consensus that in this day and age a nine game home schedule would be quite feasible. This of course will allow the home fans to see more basketball." Presently each team plays seven home games. Strack also pointed to the fact that some teams play twice while others meet only once on the pres- ent system. "It would be more equitable if everybody played two games with each opponent, though I feel that the present set-up is also adequate." i :.. .,,,,,,,,., r., r yN TV RENTALS LOWEST RATES STUDENT SPECIALS HI F1 STUDIO PORTER, FEHRS WIN: Matmen Advance in NCAA's 1319 S. Univ. 121 W. Wash. NO 8-7942 Special To The Daily AMES, Ia.-Five of Michigan's matmen advanced into today's round of the NCAA Wrestling Championships on the strength of victories here last night. Bob Fehrs led the parade of Maize and Blue grapplers with two impressive victories. In the after- noon round of preliminaries Fehrs completely outwrestled Nebraska's Bill Langdon and walked offf the mat with a 14-2 decision. In the evening set of matches Fehrs pinned Art Sanchez at 8:07. Porter Extends String Heavyweight Dave Porter ex- tended his string of pins to four by putting away Western State's Tom Beeson with only 2:48 gone in the match. Porter is seeded sec- ond in the tournament and has been given a good shot at the title in many amateur wrestling circles. Others advancing included Jim Kamman, who scored two excel- lent victories. Kamman first side- lined Joe Gurst with a 7-2 deci- sion. He then came back in the night's action to eliminate North Carolina State's Greg H i c k s by 10-2. Team Captain Bill Johannesen also advanced into today's action. "Billy Jo" came up with another of his tremendous efforts to oust California's Rick Siegel, 9-3. Sie- gel defeated Johannesen last year 6-4 in the battle for sixth place. Lambros Advances Tino Lambros advanced into today's action by virtue of a draw. Lambros' opponent is scheduled to be Ron Gillam, a former teammate of Lambros and a former Mich- igan state champion. In other action concerning Michigan wrestlers, Cal Jenkins, Fred Stehman, and Bill Waterman failed to advance and dropped out of competition for championships. The three dropped into the con- solation round and ,remained in competition for third places in their respective weight classes. Jenkins was bested by Rick Stuyvesant of Moorhead State 3-1 in a tight overtime match. Stehman dropped an 11-5 deci- sion to Cy Lucas. Waterman was unlucky enough to be pinned by Don Fisher of Colorado State in 5:30. Michigan rested in seventh place after the first day with a total of eight points. Big Eight Dominates Big Eight powers dominated the team standings with three of them in the top ten. Oklahoma led with 19 points. Oklahoma State trailed the Sooners with 13 points, fol- lowed closely by Iowa State ; and Lehigh with 12. SIGN UP for BUS to and from DETROIT for March 26 Days of Protest leave Union --2:30 P.M. Sat. Round-Trip Ticket -$2.00 in Fishbowl or Call 2-4449 or'2-4440 . BILL FARLEY Billbo ard The Michigan state Senate has adopted a resolution con- gratulating the Wolverine bas- ketball team and the seven graduating seniors "each who in his own Way has contributed so much to the glorious history of athletics at the University of Michigan." ROY SAARI ~Xat to go 50/50 on, a TWA jet? "Hell, you can't lose your nerve, now." And he feet steady, arm erect, wiggle, pivot. A clean miss. "So what." e swung from the heels again. Topped it. forty feet on a 400 yard hole. Jake spat a cigar tip. swung, head stiff, If you're under 22, ~ WA 5/0Club' { ~and fly for half fare. You can get 50 % off the regular Jet Coach fare when you fly TWA in the U. S. If you're between 12 and 22, fill out the form below and take it with proof of age to any TWA office. Buy your membership card for $3-and the sky's the limit. You fly on a stand-by basis- except for the few days listed below. Note: if you have an ID card from another airline, we'll honor that, too. And remember, even though you're going for half fare, you always get full service-meals and all. Questions? Call your nearest TWA office. We're your kind of airline. Present this application to any TWA office. Or mail to:i* ?WA CLUB A. 0. Box 700. Times Square Station, New York, N.Y. 10036 , " Mr. Mrs. i2. Dateof Birth < 0 " 4. School or Occupation Class o * * 5. PROOF OF AGE Check type of proof submitted with this application. Send photostat, not originat, with mailed 0 The ball rolled i BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU A mobile that is time- ly, tantalizing, topical. Hang it in your den, office, living room. $2.00 postpaid T. Beaubien Healy 234 Tenth St. Toledo 2, Ohio TECH I RAMA APRIL 2 & 3 I i I. I SO IT'S THE RAINY SEASON