PAGE SEX THE MICHIgAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1967 PabulousFemslmprovelllichiganAthletici mn age 4 Miss Kraker Sweeps; Long Hair Follows Miss King's Diving Makes Big Splashes By CHUCK VETZNER Sports Editor, 1966-1967 Then there's that old thing about a picture being worth a thousand words. So if you will stop reading for a second and take aj look at the photograph which has' been enclosed . . Sure it's an old trick, but when the image looks like that even Marshall McLuhan has to 'be imi- pressed.. Back on word 1,057 we return to the story. Actually the picture has all kinds of numerical signi- ficance. There are,, of course, the 36's, the 24's, and that sort of thing. But this is a sports story. The important digits are a) 1:22.4; b) 600 yards, and c) 1968. The female is named Francie Kraker and she hopes to be in "c" Olympics because she holds the women's track record in "b" with a time of "a". She also runs a pretty mean half mile (third in the AAU meet), mile (also third) and has been experimenting in crops country races. Reform Barbers But that picture. Ah yes. It makes you wonder why local bar- ber shops and drug stores adorn their windows with snapshots of blubbery football players. Anyway this particular photo is not only a scrumtious view of Francie in civies. It has actually helped her career. It was taken a year ago by a Louisville paper before a track meet. And since then it has been seen by sponsors of many other track meets. It seems that most people think aW girl track star looks like a Brahma bull with a cardboard placard around her necic: And since the times don't match their male counterparts women's track has been largely ignored. In other words only Russia could really dig Tamara Press. Needs Competition Anyway here's young Miss Kra- ker (rhymes with Betty the cake mix queen) lovely talented and anxious to improve. But the only way to improve is to compete against the best all over the coun- try and the only way to do that is get a special invitation or be the neice of Jack Kent Cook. Since Francie works in a loca~l restaurant to earn money as it is it was awfully important for var- ious track meets to request her presence.I For obvious reasons meet offi- cials decided that Francie was a worthy competitor after taking a look at the picture. Influenced by any physical charms? Of course not. People were intrigued' because she was reading Track and Field News. But even Francie admits that blonde hair might have helped get her to come of the meets before she was a name star. And Fran- cie's philosophy is "Girl athletes should not be poor male ones. We must stay feminine." Ironically her golden locks have also gotten her in a bit of trouble. Last summer she was on the U.S. Women's Track Team and the manager had a definite distaste for Francie's coiffure. "My hair was very long and I guess it flapped quite a bit when I ran" explains Francie. "But. I like it long and natural. I don't go for hair sprays and curlers." The patriotic manager, however, thought her unkepmt strands de- finitely failed to live up to the American image. Things got worse after a meet 'in Boston where a photographer took her picture just after an exhausting race. Still panting, her hair covered the front of her face instead of the back of her head. The picture was entit- led, "There's a girl under there." "Those photographers ought to give us time to get rearranged," she complained. But the manager, who wanted Francie to get a crew cut, forced a minimum compro- mise of a hair band. Nowadays of course, Francie is famous and such problems are in the past. She is invited to all the big meets, and her hair can wave without worry. Not quite. First comes the real shock. And then: "I'm nuts about pas- try, and I have a tough time stay- ing at my running weight. Some days I have to live on a hard boil- ed eggs and wheat germ." Everything then is not quite per- fect for the 20 year old sophomore. Wide World of Sports televised the meet when she broke the world's record in the 600 yard dash, but her event was not shown. But Francie is not the type to complain, and she doesn't have any reason to., She is a runner on- ly because she enjoys it. "I don't enjoy knocking myself out in practice, but I love the satisfac- tion." She claims she's working for a goal. What is it? "Well, it's not' just the Olympics. Er . . . ah ... well, I don't know. Every race is a goal." Whatever Francie does, she does for fun. And when she's not run- ning she's usually dancing. Jim Ryun might be the greatest mid- dle distance runner in the world, but to Francie he was a date who didn't have too many interests outside of track, and above all else "he wasn't a good dancer." The one thing wrong with track to Francie is the shoes-she has to wear them. Undoubtedly she would be the world record holder in every distance if the races were held barefoot. And although she is willing to put up with her new extra light weight shoes, she kicks them off whenever possible. Dur- ing winter she merrily tromps around the mezzanine level track in Waterman Gym while boys down below are distracted from their basketball games. But when the weather gets warm, off come the shoes and practice continues on the grass of the Michigan golf course. There's one other thing that Francie Kraker, champion run- ner, doesn't care for. "I just don't like to walk," she pouts, Francie Kraker Micki King_ BUT FACES DRAFT: SPJt:Rubberbanded Rebounder By LISSA MATROSS Associate Magazine Editor It was one of the nicer lunch. eons. Princess Grace and Prince Rai-I nier were charming, and then, Monoco is so divine in summer. After lunch there was swimming and diving in the royal pool. After watching a particularly nice dive, one of the party, a natty Englishman. complimented the di- ver, crying, "That was simply mar- velous! Can you repeat it?" The Englishman was 'David Ni- ven and the diver was Micki King, one of the top three female divers in the United States. The shdrt stay in Monoco was part of ai USAAU-sponsored tour of Europe for 36 United States swimmers and divers.I Former Wolverine Micki, who graduated from Mi- chigan in 1966 with a B.S. in phy- sical education, competed for the Ann Arbor Swim Club in AAU meets for three years during col- lege. Her titles are awesome. Modest- ly, Micki rattles off that she was 1965 Indoor 10-meter national champion, 1965 Outdoor 3-meter national champion, woman's in- tercollegiate, 1 - meter national champ three times in a row, and several times AAU state champ. And two-time All-American di- ver and two times All-American water-polo goalie. And two-time Canadian Nation- al one and 3-meter champion. And . . . The list is cut short when Micki looks up suddenly to tell Lani Loken (daughter of gym- nastics coach Newt Loken) to "jump the ankles" on her next dive off the 10-meter tower. Explanation After a short dash around the pool to answer Gus Stager's tele- phone, Lt. King (Micki is a com- missioned second lieutenant in the Air Force, assigned to the Uni- versity AFROTC) explains her dives. "They're unusually hard dives- probably no other girl it attempt- ing them. I do a reverse 11/2 som- ersault with 21/2 twists off the 3- meter and a 31/2 somersault tuck off the 10-meter." , If it takes practice just to use the right names for the dives, it takes 5 to 6 hours a day to per- fect them, The dives aren't easy. Neither is being a female diver. "There's a definite lack of op- portunity for women to train and compete," says Micki. "It's hard to compete with those in the West who can coppete more frequent- ly. "People just don't have the time to work with girls." He Knows How The exception is Dick Kimball, Michigan diving coach. As Micki's coach, Kimball knows "how to get the most work out of her. "Dick knows when I'm depressed and how to get me out of it. And he's the most versatile diver any- where and unsurpassed as a coach."' ("Hey, L4ni, that was a good one, but let it fall next time.") Micki's been diving since she was ten. "My first meet was in Pontiac, Michigan. I won and since then I've been at it constant- ly. Micki is twenty-two, "ancient for a diver. "Many retire at sev- enteen," she says, "but it hasn't become a chore or a job for me yet." Traveler The European tour of 1965 was definitely not a "chore" and it inspired Micki to make further trips-"I know of no more enjoy- able way to travel than through athletics," she says: Yet, many people don't under- stand women with athletic ambi- tions. With mock self-pity Micki asserts that women athletes "get the same sense of accomplishment and rewards as men athletes do." And women make the same sa- crifices-=missing social events and losing study time. The difference is that male divers don't run around moaning about stringy wet hair. At those infrequent dry-haired times, Micki works either at the AFROTC office or the Air Force recruiting office. She also works with "Tiger Talk", the AFROTC newspaper. Or to keep in shape she runs or plays paddle ball or tennis. Or works out' on the trampoline or tumbles . The next time Davil Niven asks Micki to repeat a dive she could refuse him. She probably outranks him By YVONNE COLVARD He wears rubberbands on his1 wrists, drinks coke with milk at every meal, sings to himself walk- ing down the street and can't boil rice .without burning the pot. And now the U.S. Army is try- ing to draft shy guy Jim Pitts, 6'3" Michigan guard. As the only junior on this year's team, Pitts was a natural for next year's basketball captaincy until he received his draft notice four weeks ago. "It's bold. My cousin got drafted the other day and he's been ship- ped out already. I never expected anything like this." Pitts had already engineered an appeal to counter-act the notice. Bolder "I don't understand it. They tell you to go to school, go to school, go to school! It is supposed to be to the Negro's advantage. Then they take you out of school, for a chance to terminate your life. It's really bold!" However, Pitts isn't adamant enough to pull a Muhammad. "I guess I'll go, if I have to," he ad- mits. Pitts' half-serious attitude ex- tends into his playing attire but not into his playing. As the most improved player on the team, he developed ability along with idiosyncracies. As good luck insurance, he wears thick rubberbands on his wrists. "I used to wear them in high school to hold up by socks," he says. "Then one day I had an extra one and put it on my wrist." In addition, Pitts finds singing to himself as he walks down the street "relaxing." He doesn't sing anything special-no 'song in par- ticular-usually the last "jam" he heard on the radio that morning. To a Crisp At times he becomes so "re- laxed" that he burns the rice for dinner. "Hell," he says, "I always do that. Oh well, I've always got milk." "Milk is like food to me, so I always have a coke for my bever- age." ?tro s!e~V.M POMl5 ftl-4 JIM PITTS WOLVERINE GUARD JIM PITTS goes high in the air for one of the 186 rebounds he pulled down last season. He finished second NON-NATIVE SPEAKERS OF ENGLISH EARN $3.00 by taking an experimental English test SAT., April 1, 1967-10-12 A.M. Room 3003, N. Univ. Bldg. For Information, Call English Language Institute, 764-2416 in team rebounding and his 362 Ten scoring race. On the hardwood, Pitts burned up the Big Ten at the tune of 16 points per game, ranking him fourteenth in the conference. "He's worked hard and has im- proved his shooting under physi- cal pressure," praises head coach Dave .Strack. Strack toyed with the idea of moving Pitts to forward, the posi- tion he played at Detroit North- western, and did, in fact, play him there when Ken Baxey teamed up with Dennis Bankey in the back- court. Why Not Center? "When I first came to Michigan, I thonght I'd be able to play for- ward. But when you really want just a chance to play, you'll play anywhere," admits Pitts. In a flash of self-analysis, Pitts agrees that he needs to concen- points put him 14th in the Big trate more on his shooting and speed next year. He already has the size and aggressiveness needed for a powerful Big Ten guard. In high school, Pitts didn't join the basketball team until after he'd failed at football in his junior year. "I decided the game was too rough when some guy tackled me lard in a pre-season scrimmage. So I quit." Pitts preferred to switch rather than fight and has yet to regret his basketball choice. He hadn't played much on the hardcourt up to then, since his favorite neigh- borhood sport was baseball. Yet in his senior year at Northwestern he came into his own ftnd lead the Colts to the city championship. Where To? Then the recruiting attempts began. Offers came from Michi- gan, Michigan'State and Iowa. The field narrowed when Hawk- eye coach Milton Scheureman ac- cepted teanmate Ben McGilmer in favor of Pitts. "However, McGil- mer's in the Army now," chuckles Pitts. Michigan State also lost interest and Pitts finaly faced a choice between Michigan and Big Eight football power Nebraska. A talk with his high school coach, Frank Snowden, convinced him that Michigan offered him the most op- portunities and ms . although I really wanted to go to Michigan State, I'm not. sorry I came here. "Michigan isn't really good for Negroes-not only Negro athletes =Negroes in general. It needs to do something about the ratio." Big-Time Pitts anticipates playing pro ball after graduation .. . but he's not looking that far into the future. He's had enough problems as a Michigan cager. Strack suspend- ed him for the Purdue game and didn't start him in the Wisconsin game. Pitts explains that his suspen- sion resulted from skipping prac- tice and from breaking a gentle- man's agreement with Strack. "It was a personal agreement between the coach and I which I broke. It was entirely my fault," he admits. For the Wisconsin game, played in Cobo Hall over spring vacation, Northwestern High showed in full force to welcome Pitts, while Pitts . -uh- overslept and er-uh- missed the bus." Capt. Uncle Sam? As the only junior on the team; Pitts is the only eligible candidate for next year's captaincy. How- ever, because of his unsettled draft situation, his official election won't take place until next fall. Unless, of course, he is in- ducted. But even if they "do send him to a place where he'll have to learn to boil rice because it'll be what everyone's eating, he'll still prob- ably wear rubberbands on his wrists, drink as much milk as he can commedeer and sing the latest "jam" to himself and to anyone who will listen. And if he doesn't? 'IT'S WAR': Crossemen' Open Season ak r. ii AVAILABLE! APRIL 3rd YOUR '66-'67 MZICHIGANENSIAN "FAST AND ROUGH," LACROSSE is trying to make its mark in Intercollegiate athletics. Michigan Crossemen will tackle the Chicago Lacrosse Club today and Michigan State tomorrow. Both games will start at 1:30 p.m. at Wines Field, By MARK HALPERT "From 800-1000 players partici- pated for each side. The games were betweendifferent tribes, and often lasted for several days; broken legs and arms were com- mon, and some of the players were killed. The players went through vigorous training for these match- es, and the games were consider- ed tests of a players virility." This was American writer George Catlin's comment on the Indian game of baggataway, bet- ter known to the contemporary followers as lacrosse. Six nations of the Iroquois In- dians played this game in upper New York State even before Co- lumnbus landed, in 1492. They adcpted the game as a training measure for war. The American version of the east, and 10,000 is a common crowd for a game. Recently the game was started in the M'Iidwest and it has grown quickly. Twenty-three Ohio col- leges have varsity teams. Two years ago several graduate students began a lacrosse club at Michigan. Now in its third season the club is well established, and its members are very confident as the season opens. The Lacrosse Club will open their season this afternoon against the Chicago Lacrosse Club. To- morrow the team tangles with Michigan State University. Both games will be played at Wines Field and starting time will be 1:30 p.m. for each game. Co-coachs Bob Fleischmen, a foi mer All-American Lacrosse star from Rutgers, and Bob DiGiovan- 1"D LAUG, TOOw If I had the chance to do what Jeff Brown I ' _ _ _ SUNDAY, APRIL 2 7:00 The Rev. Jesse Christman reports the work of the r EarnI IP i~v v1~E A v rraan uteornb .- rDAlG