PAGE EIG'H'T THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1967 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1967 Fans React to Ticket Hike Hughes announces new openings on the TECHNICAL STAFF. By HOWARD KOHN Fritz) Crisler blamed Lie hike on sional when they become a money- "rising costs in operating the de- making business." Students are already paying partment plus added costs in An angry philosophy teaching too damn much money for sports. funding and servicing the Univer- fellow, Allan Casebier. fumed, This is a clear case for student sity Events Building." "Cost of tickets has reached the power. Personally I'm ready to But many people are unsatisfied saturation point. The fact that the march." with this explanation. 'I believe rest of the Big Ten is paying That part-serious part tongue- much less refutes the argument in-check reaction to last Friday's the athletic department should re- that increasing costs necessitate, ticket increase was not totally re- lease a complete report on exactly the raise." moved from the feelings of many what the money is going to be But some students like a law other University students. spent for," said Martin Basch, '67. school freshman were unmoved The increase-the third in four "If I have to pay more I want to claiming, "I went to an undergrad years-pushed student football know whether it's going to be used chool where football wa played tickt picesfro $1 to 14.Be-on a small time basis, I'm just ticket prices from $12 to $14. Be- for the new building, for salary in- grateful to see Big Ten football. sides the jump in student coupons, creases or whatever. Students are Dave Diskin, another law school staff and students' spouse coupons becoming more and more the vic- student, added, "I'd rather pay $42' went from $15 to $18; grandstand tims of an administrative bureau- (the total cost for all home games single game admissions rose from cracy." in all sports) than have no ath-1 $5 to $6; boxseat tickets went Another junior added, "I'm defi- letic program." from $6.50 to $7.50, and high nitely against it. Besides the fact Daily sports editor Chuck Vetz- school student ticket prices doub- that it hurts the students, it also ner felt that the ticket jump led from $1 to $2. hurts the University. Collegiate would be followed by more in- Michigan athletic director H. 0. sports are becoming too profes- creases, possibly as soon as next Hoosiers in Tankers' Future; 11' Rests after Dunking Badgers year when the new University Events Building opens. In a Feb- ruary 4 column. Vetzner called for students to fight this continuing trend and to select one game and boycott it as a protest. But ticket manager Don Weir doubted whether attendance would be influenced. Natural Increase Assistant football coach Tony Mason viewed the increase as nat- ural. "Prices for everything have gone up while sports entertain- ment hasn't. I think the increase is justified because it is needed for sports to compete with other sour- ces of entertainment." Swimming coach Gus Stager added, "It's fine if they can get away with it. Besides it's the alumni who get hit the worst." Ed Conlin, president of the Ann Arbor Alumni Club supported this view, explaining, "It's pretty darn expensive. I feel that it may be- come too expensive for some peo- ple. In my family, for instance, an afternoon at a game with my wife and two children now costs $16 compared to $12. The very en- thusiastic fans will still go, but it will hurt attendance." Some Support Hike Several Michigan athletes sup- ported the increase explaining that they could use better travel ar- rangements. But one student who seemed ready to talk about the increase until the next one argued against it. "People say that we have to pay more because we have a different set-up with an independent ath- letic department. This might be nice, but part of student tuition still goes to the athletic depart- ment. I don't know of any other college in the country where stu- dents are expected to finance the athletic department by paying competitive ticket prices. If this is the only way our athletic depart- men can keep functioning, it might be time to change the ath- letic department." Assignments exist for Engineers graduating in 1967 with B.S., M.S. and Ph.D degrees in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING. At HUGHES-FULLERTON, newly awarded contracts have created as- signments ranging from research to hardware developmerrt and opera- tional support of products and sys- tems in the field. Our current activities involve the advanced technologies of phased-array frequency-scanning radar systems, real-time general purpose computers, displays, data processing, satellite and surface com- munications systems, surface-to-air missile systems, and tactical air weap- ons command/control systems. For additional information on the opportunities offered at HUGHES- FULLERTON in Southern California-- and to arrange for a personal inter- view with our Staff representatives, please, contact your College Place- ment Office or write: Mr. J. E. Tenney, Member of the Technical Staff, HUGHES-FULLERTON, P. O. Box 3310, Fullerton, California 99634. By DOUG HELLER The Wolverine swimmers zap-' ped Wisconsin Saturday, but the word is INDIANA now. Yes, and Indiana smothered Michigan State Saturday, 78-45. Michigan lost to State two weeks before, 63-60. Ahem. Someody has a job cut out for himself. And coach Gus Stager knows it. "Our sprinters are at least one second slower than Indiana's. If they beat us, that's how they will do it. Also, Bill Utley is back for them now with good times and he was ineffective with a broken jaw in our last meet. And wherever he swims he will hurt us." dove well at Purdue too. As it stands now, it probably will be Walmsley and Jay Meaden at three meters, and Fred Brown and Meaden at one meter." Kimball also added that Mich- igan would have to split Indiana's divers (prevent a one-two sweep with a second place finish in both events) to have any kind of a chance at winning the meet. 'First place would look almost impossible with NCAA one meter champ Ken Sitzberger diving for Indiana. As Planned The Wisconsin meet went about as expected otherwise with more than one swimmer in an unfa- miliar event. Russ Kingery won Stager, in looking at Indiana's depth, says he was considering let- ting Mike O'Connor swim without Robie in the 1000 yard freestyle, and let Robie take on NCAA champ Bill Utley in the 200 yard individual medley. Kimball doesn't exude optimism about the meet though. He says that in addition to splitting up Indiana's divers, the swimmers would almost have to perform "over their heads." He concludes by saying it will be a good meet, certainly closer than the Indiana-Michigan State contest, but on paper it doesn't look like the Wolverines are going{ to win it, since the Hoosiers are the better team. Still, a Michigan victory is by no means impossible. A On-campus interviews February 13 & 14 r..-..-.-------___.___, HUGHES HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY An' esqat opporkity employer - M & F / U.S. cibzenhhip 16required Indiana won the Jan. 13 meett at Bloomington 69-54. Not All That Bad Still, things aren't as bad as they might seem. The Michigan- I MSU meet was at East Lansing. The Indiana-MSU meet was at Indiana. This one will be at Matt Mann Pool. Coach Stager also ' points out that the comparative point advantage for Indiana isn't as great as it might look because! it doesn't take into account how close the individual races were. There was also some improve- ment displayed by Michigan in the 80-43 thrashing of'Wisconsin. "We finally figured out the problem with John Robertson (number two breaststroker). Apparently he's been having some trouble with his breathing. He swam a fine 150 yards Saturday before his oxygen debt caught up with him." However, further improvement is needed since Robertson's time was over 2:20 which probably won't even get him third place against Indiana. Perhaps the best news of the week was Bob Walmsley's 307.4 points to take the three meter diving. Diving coach Dick Kim-: ball remarked, "Yes, Walmsley is for real. Even before the Wiscon- sin meet I was going to use him against Indiana. Don't forget, he SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LEVIS the 200 I-M in addition to his usual backstroke. Butterflyer Tom O'Malley anchored the winning freestyle relay team, and butter- flyer Lee Bisbee took third in the 500 yard freestyle. In contrast, Carl Robie went back to the 200 yard butterfly, where he is defending NCAA champion, and only missed the NCAA record by about a second, finishing in 1:54.62. PRINCETON NOW FOURTH: UCLA Still Leads Poll By The Associated Press Nothing, it appears, not even stalling tactics can prevent Prince- ton from reaching a higher posi- tion and UCLA from maintaining its undisputed lead in the Asso- ciated Press' major college bas- ketball poll.I Southern California stalled for 44 minutes against the Bruins Sat- urday night and lost 40-35 in overtime. Dartmouth played ball control for almost 34 minutes against the Tigers Friday night and was beaten 30-16. While unbeaten UCLA was the unanimous choice as the No. 1 team for the fourth straight week, Princeton was one of five, teams to gain ground in the latest bal- loting by a national panel of 35, sports writers and broadcasters. Holding Strong The Bruins are followed by North Carolina and Louisville, each holding its position. Prince- ton, 17-1, advanced one place to fourth, Houston is fifth, followed by Western Kentucky, Kansas, Texas Western, Providence and Boston College. North Carolina accumulated 284 CARL ROBIE 4 points, only six more than Louis- ville. Points were awarded on a basis of 10 for a first place vote, 9 for second etc. The Tar Heels beat Maryland 85-77 last week while the Cardinals downed St. Louis and Cincinnati. Houston climbed one notch to fifth a f t e r defeating Nevada Southern, 103-83. Western Ken- tucky zoomed from eighth to sixth after lifting its record to 16-1 with victories over Austin Peay and Middle Tennessee. Texas Western slipped from fourth to eighth. The Miners 'suf- fered their third loss of the sea- son, 68-55 to New Mexico State. Providence, a 92-66 victor over Gannon, Pa., moved up one place to ninth. Boston College, 12-1, made its first appearance among the Top Ten. The Eagles replaced Vanderbilt, whiph beat Louisiana State and lost to Florida after holding the No. 9 spot last week. The Top Ten, with first place votes in parentheses, season rec- ords through games of Saturday, Feb. 4, and points on a 10-9- 8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. UCLA (35) 17-0 350 2. North Carolina 14-1 284 3. Louisville 18-2 278 4. Princeton 17-1 214 5. Houston 15-2 195 6. Western Kentucky 16-1 133 7. Kansas 13-3 131 8. Texas Western 15-3 123 9. Providence 13-3 63 10. Boston College 12-1 47 Others receiving votes, listed alphabetically: California, Cin- cinnati, Colorado State, Con- necticut, Cornell, Fairfield, Flo- rida, Nebraska, New Mexico, St. John's, N.Y., South Caro- lina, Syracuse, Tennessee, To- ledo, Tulsa, University of Paci- fic, Utah State, Vanderbilt. KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR * NO WAITING 0 7 BARBERS 0 OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Near the Michigan Theatre I I iii DELTA PHI EPSILON Foreign Service Fraternity OPEN RUSH Speaker-Prof. Gray of Law School, on "Communist Legal Systems" Tuesday, Feb. 7, Union Rm. 3-B-7:30 'I , : ; __ __-_ I1 WHAT IS A WOMAN? A modern woman is soft and ten- der, but completely emancipated, sexually and intellectually. That's why she reads KOZMOPOLITAN, the magazine for today's switched-on- supper-hippy swinger. Because she wants to keep up to date on today's most important problems she follows monthly col- umns like "Ask the Gynecologist" and "So You're Going to Have an Abortion." Because she wants to know how to please a man, she reads informa- tive articles like "When to Wear