WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1967 THE MICHIGAN UATIX -- 1118'! 1 a t' aa 'V(1a1. 1art a i. PAGE NINE Five By DOUG HELLER It is now spring vacation in East Lansing. Even the dorms are lock- ed. The Michigan State campus is deserted. And thrown into the vacuum is the NCAA swimming champion- ships, the big one. Needless to say, plenty of tickets are available for the finals, which will take place tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. Why the plug? Because it seems obvious that if anybody is going to fill the Spartan pool, it's going to be Michigan students. The alternative is ridiculous. Picture the likes of Don Schol- lander of Yale, Greg Buckingham of Stanford, Mike Burton of inSL UCLA, Ken Sitzberger of Indiana, and Carl Robie of Michigan per- forming in an extravaganza for the benefit of a scattering of news- paper reporters. And the possibility of seeing a meet of this prestige in this area again will be unlikely for a long time. Last Time In addition, this could be the last big effort for a number of 1964 Olympians. This is because this year's seniors, like Robie, Dilley, and Sitzberger, all Tokyo alumni, would risk an Uncle Sam sponsored trip to Vietnam if they take time off from graduate school or a job to train for Mexico iCty. A fact like this tends to curb in- centive. This will not affect those, like Schollander (a winner of four gold medals in 1964), who will still be undergraduates and in condition when 1968 rolls around. The meet itself looks like a murderously close one. Swimming World calls it a tossup among Indiana, S o u t h e r n, California, Stanford, Yale, and Michigan. Indiana Favorite Wolverine coach Gus Stager rates Indiana a 70 per cent chance to take all the marbles on the strength of its divers, mainly Sitz- berger and Win Young. According to Stager the Big Ten has about the six best diving coaches around, and none of those schools could top the Hoosier duo. He gives Michigan a 10 per cent chance of winning, because the Wolverines actually swam best att the Big Ten meets, and were only overcome by Indiana's diving. This leaves the defending champions from USC, the Stan- ford Indians (who tied the Tro- jans in a dual meet this year) and< Schollander's troupe from New Haven, Conn., a total 20 per centl chance to win.4 vim for NCAA Cro wn ""V,. A blindfold test From the West coast, Wolverine Captain Robie will face competi- tion that will make any challenge he had previously this year look like a nice day at the beach. Stan- ford's Buckingham, who upset Burton in their dual meet, sur- passed Robei's 4:43.08 NCAA 500 yard freestyle record set this year, with a 4:42.3 of his own. And then there is a chance that Schollan- der will swim the 500. Bunched Up In the 400 yard medley relay, Michigan's best time is only .9 of a second behind USC. But Indiana, Stanford, Princeton and UCLA all are in between. The 400 freestyle relay finds MSU on top with a 3:08.7, with Michigan 1.2 seconds behind and USC sandwiched in the middle. At this point, Robei's 200 yard butterfly, with a time of 1:53.6, alomst one and a half seconds ahead of the nearest competitor,1 and Paul Scheerer's 2:11.5 breast- stroke, are the events that seem most likely to hold up for Mich- igan. Scheerer is also trying to retain his 100 yard breaststroke! title. Stager's biggest problem in thisj meet, something that does not oc- cur in others, is that he is very unfamaliar with the competition. He admits this and says "we real- Billboard Student tickets are now avail- able for the basketball banquet honoring Michigan's 1966-67, cagers. The banquet will be held next Tuesday night in the An- derson Room of the Michigan Union at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are available to students for $5; Alumni tickets are $10. For in- formation, call Jim Podell at 764-8960. ly won't know anything until we get up there." He hopes that the events the Wolverines are weak in will be won by teams that are otherwise non-entities. Thus, State's Ken Walsh with the best time in the nation in the 100-yard freestyle and Pete Wather of North Caro- lina, who is best at the 50-yard freestyle, could help out Michigan by winning should their schools fall behind. But it seems that almost all the contending schools are ahead of Michigan in the 200-yard individ- ual medley and 200-yard freestyle. The scoring system will also affect strategy. A winning relay team will receive 32 points com- pared with eight in a dual meet, and the winner of an individual event will get 16 points instead of five as in a dual meet. Thus, the relays will be more important than they ordinarily are, and teams -von't be able to spread themselves thin in them. The NCAA had a choice of about 500 schools to stage the champion- ship in. The question is, why did they have to pick an empty one? -- _ _._ for beer. If anybody ever says you can't pick Budweiser with your eyes shut, you can call his bluff. First, stick your nose close to the foam of each glass of beer and take a sniff. Notice a difference? The one with the clean, fresh aroma is Budweiser. Now taste. This gets a bit tricky. But the one beer that tastes like beer without any one flavor jumping out at you (like hops, or an extra sweetness, or some- times a sour or sharp taste) is Budweiser. That's because Budweiser is blended- by our Beechwood Ageing. We want you to taste the beer, not the recipe. If anybody pulls a beer-tasting test on you, now you know how to win. Just follow your nose. Budweiser. KING OF BEERS . ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. " ST. LOUIS NEWARK . LOS ANGELES + TAMPA . HOUSTON SORRY! The Michigan Dail also wishes to thank the following people whose names were erroneously left out of our Spring Fashion Supplement: WILD'S--for supplying men's clothes for the pictures MODELS: Jim Benton John Gray Marty Schlesinger DON SCHOLLANDER And this assumes UCLA, Prince- ton, and North Carolina are just' coming along for the ride. Dilley Beware And yet the team championships might not be as exciting as cer- tain individual matchups. First from the Big Ten, Russ Kingery, the Michigan backstroker who has had about as much success at catching State's Gary Dilley as Snoopy did the Red Baron the first six months he was at it, makes the big attempt at the climax of his career. Kingery, who was ill during the Big Ten meet and had to settle for second place once again, has said he could take Dilley and this may be his last chance. I i Panhelleni*c-IFC Endorse For Student Government Council KEN SITZBERGER NBA PLAYOFFS: -I PRESIDENT and VICE PRESIDENT: Red Hot By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - The Cin- cinnati Royals, with Oscar Rob- ertson scoring 33 points and Con- 4. nie Dierking 29, upset the Phila- delphia 76ers 120-116 last night in the first game of a best-of- five Eastern Division semifinal playoff in the National Basketball Association. The 76ers who won the NBA Eastern title in easy fashion dur- ing the regular season, didn't come ' to life until the final quarter after they, were down 11 points at 96- 85. Then, Wilt Chamberlain collect- ed 15 of his 41 points and 12 of his 22 rebounds. Philadelphia closed to within two points, on three occasions, the last at 116-114. But Robertson hit for a 20-footer with 29 seconds left and then collected the last two of his 11 free throws with five seconds on the clock to put it out of reach. Royals Throughout At the end of the first quarter, the Royals led by two, at 33-31, and built a small but steady lead through the second period to hold a 63-57 advantage at intermission. Philadelphia came back to tie it at 66 with less than three min- utes gone in the third period, but Dierking sank two quick goals to give Cincinnati a lead it never lost. Adrian Smith added 20 points for the winners, who had beaten Philadelphia only once in nine! Y f Royals Edge '76ers games during the regular season. Finally reserves Rod Thorn Behind Chamberlain, the Phila- Silas and Joe Caldwell paced delphia offense was propelled by Louis spurt which gave the1 Hal Greer, with 23 points, and a comfortable 106-90 lead Chet Walker with 16. way through the fourth qt * * * Sidn.c ,.-.,,A ih i t.A n, Paul d a St. Hawks mid- uarter. Celtics Top Knichs BOSTON-Sharpshooting Sain Jones and John Havlicek combin- ed for 70 points in leading the Boston Celtics to a 140-110 rout of the hapless New York Knick- erbockers last night in a Nation- al Basketball Eastern Division playoff opener. Jones hit for 38 points and Hay- licek for 32 as the Celtics launch- ed a bid for a ninth straight NBA title before a small crowd of 8,- 362 at Boston Garden. The fast-breaking Celtics led from the opening tip-off in defeat- ing their cousins from New York for the 20th straight times ince. March 17, 1965, in the initial game of the best-of-five playoffs. Jones hit for 13 points and Howell for nine as the Celtics rac- ed to a 34-28 first period lead. Boston then pulled away to a 71- 51 halftime advantage as Havli- cek sparked a second period surge with 12 points. Willis Reed led New York scor- ers with 23 points while Cazzie Russell contributed 18 and Fred Crawford and Neil Johnson 16 each. Hawks Whip Bulls ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis Hawks pulled away in the fourth quarter and took a 114-100 deci- sion from the pesky Chicago Bulls in the first game of the Western Division semifinal playoffs of the National Basketball Association. The Hawks managed to lead throughout most of the game but each time they threatened to pull away from the Bulls Jerry Sloan, Guy Rodgers or Don Kojis would keep Chicago in the contest with clutch points. ouas scores eignL points anda Thorn six in the Hawks' closing rally. Lou Hudson topped the Hawks with 26 points while Len Wilkens, who had 16 free throws, added 20 points. Kojis and Bob Boozer each had 18 to lead the Bulls. Lord New Captain Junior defenseman Bill Lord was elected captain of Michigan's hockey team for the 1967-68 sea- son. His teammates elected him to succeed out-going captain Mike Marttila last night at their annual banquet. McGrath FLYING SCHOOL -LEARN TO FLY "Saunter in the Wild Blue Yonder" Government approved Instructors Bob Runyon, Chief Pilot and Instructor " Hangar Space " Tie Downs " Gas and Oil " Re-Licensing 0 Plane Rides " A.&E. Mechanic " Airplanes Bought and Sold " See Our Acrobatic-Experimental & Old Time Planes Fly in and Visit Us Gordon N. Lambie, Mgr. Chas. McGrath, Operations Mgr. McEnnan Airport 5830 Stony Creek Rd. Ypsilanti, Michigan 482-4560 JUDY GREENBERG RICHARD HEIDEMAN E. O. KNOWLES MIKE McDERMOTT JANIS SORKIN KAY STANSBURY I BRUCE KAHN and RUTH BAUMAN COUNCIL SEATS: BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS: I RICHARD METZGER LAURA SUTTA I Join in the I _ Catskills WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME? Grossinger's, Concord and other Catskill Mt. resorts are now hiring students for summer jobs. Openings for waiters, waitresses, chambermaids, life guards, counselors, etc. Exper- ience helpful but not essential. Write for up-to-date catalog of resort hotel jobs including where to write to, jobs available and salary. Send $1.00 to cover printing, postage and handling to Resorts International, 1362 Bramble Rd., N.E., Atlanta, Georgia. Greene's way makes goig home SCORES a cinch! EXHIBITION BASEBALL Washington 9, Atlanta 8 (10 inn) Cincinnati 9, Houston 4 Minnesota 7, Loa Angeles 4 New Yprk (N) 2, Baltimore 0 Philadelphia 10, Boston 5 Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 4 Chicago (A) 5, Kansas City 4 (10 inn) New York (A) 5, Detroit 4 San Francisco 8, Chicago (N) 4 California 10, Cleveland 4 r- Read and Use Daily Classifieds I- - i* UM STUDENTS JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes you won't wear until fall-Clothes you would ordi- narily pack up, take home, have cleaned, pack up again and bring back in the fall. NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper over to Greene's. They clean the lot at regular cleaning prices and store it in a refrigerated moth- proof vault. When you return in the fall, call Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers and packed in neat polyethylene bags, ready for your clothes closet. PRICE? $4.95 plus regular cleaning and pressing prices-includes $250.00 insurance. Call Normandy 2323.1 or Stop at any Greene's Plant for Information Score: 150 0 4 P.S. BY THE WAY, we notice that some of the other shops around town are offering the Greene's Handi-Hamper idea. But they can't offer the on- the-premise refrigerated storage vault of Greene's exclusive Microclean process. It's a plus to you at the same price. NO MORE!! a II I I rE