t Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 18, 1968 t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 18, 1968 .t:.. Elliott, Strack to coach kids in summer program Coaches will teach basics, direct drills in five sports * * * * * * * * * USC the 'team to beat in NCA A tourney (Continued from Page 1) Dave Strack, basketball coach, will include instructional films, conditioning drills, and supervised competitive team games in his program which will be held July 15-19. The gymnastic program will be conducted by Head Coach Newt Loken along with several of the varsity gymnasts. Participants will be able to use all of the team's equipment in the Intramural Building, during the week of July 22. The last program, football, will begin August 5. Bump Elliott will be aided by assistant coaches Frank Maloney, George Mans, Tony Mason and Bob Shaw in tiacning football techniques and showing instructional films., The Ann Arbor Recreation De- partment will provide workers at the clinic sites to register par- ticipants in the program. Youths will be expected to provide their own transportation. Donald Borut, assistant to Lar- cum, said he doesn't think- there will be any problem in. transport- ing the youths to the University's athletic campus. "If we find that kids who want to participate can't find a way of getting there, the city will pro- vide buses for them," he said. The free program is the most extensive of its kind in the state. of Michigan. Eastern Michigan University allows athletes from the surrounding community to use the athletic plant there but does not have free coaching clinics. BUMP ELLIOTT By PHIL'BROWN Sports Editor Special To The Daily ' SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Stan Smith and his playmates from Southern California are ready to make a shambles of the National Collegiate Tennis Championships here after one day's action. The Trojans, though tied for the team lead with four other schools, appear to have everything they need to walk away with the team title as well as plenty, of the individual hardware. USC entered the tournament with four team members seeded in the top 20 (each school is al- lowed only four entrants), in- cluding the first and second seeds, Smith and Bob Lutz. And if that weren't enough, Smith and Lutz are the top rated double duo in the meet. These two have been the number one dou- bles outfit for the United States Davis Cup team throughout the1 spring. Keeping this in mind, many participants here are intent on nailing down a high "also-ran spot." And Michigan seems to be in an excellent position to be among these. # The Wolverines had a good day yesterday, coming up with five team points, three less than USC. Pete Fishbach and Dick Dell es- caped unscathed after two rounds of single action, while both Brian daily sports, NIGHT EDITOR: FREDERICK LaBOUR It was pure frustration for Marcus in the second round, how- ever. His opponent, Karl Coombes of Oklahoma City (a former Aus- tralian national junior champ) played steadily to hold im off, 13-11, 6-4. Coombes displayed a strong. baseline game and a good variety of shots, including a wicked cross- court backhand in his win. Marcus and Coombes seemed well matched. Neither could break service in the first set before the 20th game, and Marcu ' frus- trated carelessness migt well have been the big reason for his the form that took him to a Big Ten singles crown. Fishbach dtew Leonhardt Sche- uerman of Tennessee in the sec- ond round, and rallied nicely in the second set on the way to a 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 victory. Having little success at the net in the first set, Fishbach fell off regularly to the baseline in \the late stages and beat Scheuerman with his deep game. Dell had very little trouble with his first opponent, Terry Snow of Oklahoma. The brother of Davis Cup team captain, Don Dell, whipped Snow handily, 6-1, 6=0. Today Dell meets Bobby Heald of South Carolina in third 'round action. Fishbach, the other sur- viving Wolverine, t a k e s on UCLA's Roy Barth, who is seeded' fourth in the tournament. In preliminary doubles a'ction yesterday Marcus and Fishbach won by default over Andre Cote and Mark Reznich of Murray State. The default moves them in- to today's second round of dou- ble's competition. They will meet Michael Howard and Eric Evett of Arizona, winners of a close match over San'Jose last night. IT'S BASEBALL: Minnesotacleans Wash. JON HAINLINE BRIAN MARCUS By The Associated Press ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS -- Frank Quilici, Minnesota's for- gotten man since he played second base on the 1965 American League pennant winners, doubled and tripled last night to lead the Twins to a 4-1 victory over Wash- ington. Quilici, playing because Rod Carew is on Marine reserve duty until next Sunday, tripled off loser Barry Moore, 1-4, in the third inning and scored on Jim Kaat's single. Quilici doubled in the fifth to score Jerry Zimmerman, who had walked and moved to second on Jack Hernandez' sacrifice. The two hits gave Quilici seven in 152 times at bat since he start- ed playing regularly. He has had two doubles and two triples. Bob Allison hit his sixth homer in the eighth with a man on for insurance runs, Kaat, 4-3, blanked the Sena- tors for six innings. Washington then scored on successive singles by Mike Epstein and Paul Cas- anova, a fielder' choice, a walk and Cap Peterson's sacrifice fly to center. Kaat finished with an eight-hitter. * * ATLANTA - Felipe Alou scored from second base with two out in the ninth inning when third base- man Tony Perez booted a slow, grounder and the Atlanta Braves tripped the Cincinnati Reds 3-21 last xnight. Alou had doubled with two out off loser Ted Abernathy, 1-1, and Felix Millan bounced a grounder to Perez's left ,and it went off his glove and caromed behind second' base. The unearned run gave the vic- tory to Pat Jarvis, 7-4, who gave the Reds six hits. Cincinnati took a 2-1 lead in the fifth inning when starter Jim Maloney slugged his first homer of the season into the right field stands. But the Braves got it back in their half of the inning on singles by Marty Martinez, Felipe Alou !and Felix Millan. Hank Aaron of the Braves hit his 12th homer of the season in the fourth. It was the 493rd of his career, tying, him with Lou Gehrig in eighth place on the all- time list. MILWAUKEE - Pinch hitter Bill Voss' two-run triple in theI seventh inning carried the Chi- cago White Sox to a 2-1 victory over Cleveland last night, extend- ing the Indians' losing streak to seven games. Winning pitcher Jack Fisher blanked the Indians on five hits until the ninth, when he needed help from Bob Locker after Wil- lie Smith's pinch double delivered an unearned run. Voss, a rookie batting only .140,M slammed a triple to left center in the seventh to break open a score- less duel between Fisher and the! Indians' Steve Hargan. The decisive hit followed a walk' and Wayne Causey's single off Hargan's leg. The victory was the first for the White Sox in three regular season appearances at Milwaukee. * * * PITTSBURGH - Willie Star- gell's tie-breaking home run in' the fifth inning gave the streaking Pittsburgh Pirates a 4-3 victory over Houston last night. Stargell smacked Daye Giusti's first pitch in the fifth into the1 right field stands for his 11th homer, sending the Pirates to their sixth successive victory and pin- ning the Astros with their sixth straight loss. Right-hander Al M c B e a n pitched out of serious seventh innnig trouble but needed relief help from Elroy Face in the ninth in bringing his record to 6-5. Gi- usti has lost eight of 12 decisions. Marcus and Jon Hainline suc- cumbed in 'the second round. Fishbach, Dell and Hainline all drew byes in the first round, re- ceiving automatic passes to the second period. Marcus met Glen Grisillo of Mississippi State in his first round match, and took an impres- sive 6-3, 6-4 victory. Marcus' agility and strong net play, com- bined with a newly strengthened serve, were all he needed to down the Southerner. line's opener was undoubtedly among the shortest. The Michigan sophomore faced 16th seeded Toni Karp of UCLA, and could man- age to win only a singl; game. Hainline, who had not plracticed for a number of days before yes- terday, was very definitely far off loss. And while probably the t s~ Marcus' match was day's longest; Hain- DAVESTRACK I POOH POOH PA LMER: Son, of Latrobe greenskeeper" washed U'p? "Roar!" said the motorcycle ROCHESTER, N.Y.(MP)-"There's, nothing wrong with Arnold Palm- er that a lithe privacy wouldn't cure," said South Africa's Gary Player. "This man is constantly badgered on all sides. "Everybody needs a chance to be quiet and concentrate," Player, a paid-up member of golf's big thrje which also includes Palmer and ° Jack Nicklaus, rep- resents the sentiment of most of the touring golfers who scoff at suggestions that the great Arnie may be through as a factor in the game which he, more than any other. person, helped build into a monstrous and mushrooming suc- cess. The 1968 National Open cham- pionship, whch ended last week- end over the Oak Hill course, was a frustrating and humiliatirig ex- perience for the greenskeeper's son from Latrobe, Pa., who be- came golf's all-time leading money winner. Rounds of 73-74--79 placed him last among professionals in the field and on the final day he was; assigned the last threesome with a pair of amateurs - a degrading spot for the, highest scorers. It was proper according to the U. S. Golf Association formula but it was demeaning nevertheless. He Tigers demote Cain: Mudhen. DETROIT OP) - The Detroit Tigers yesterday optioned rookie left-hander Les Cain to their To- ledo farm club in the Internation- al League. Cain, 20, appeared in eight games with the Tigers this year, cbmpiling a 1-0 record in 24 in- nings with a 3.00 earned run average. The move cut Detroit's roster to ,24 players, one below the major league minimum, but General Manager Jim Campbell made no immediate move for a replace- ment. finished with 75-301, 26 strokes back of the winner, Lee Trevino. "I think this is just a tempo"- ary slump," Player said. V IUe will snap out of it. But he must have a chance to relaxl and think. He has too much responsibility. Peo- ple are after him all the time." "Arnie is too nuch of % com- petitor to let this throw him," said former PGA champion Dave Mar. "He is young yet, 38, and you can bet he'll be back. i Marr played the first rounds with Palmer and Sikes, another tour veteran. two Dan "It's Palmer's putting," said Sikes. "His putting troubles have saturated his whole game. When you're not. putting - and Arnie isn't - it wrecks your whole game. But I think it's just temporary." After ,skyrocketing to a '79 Sat- urday, Palmer told interviewers that he had become a perfection- ist, that he was inclined to burn inside when he missed a shot and lose his concentration. M Ma jor League Standings 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Detroit 41 22 .651 - xBaltimore 32 28 .535 7' Cleveland 33 31 .516 81 Minnesota 32 31 .508 9 Boston 29 29 .500 91' xOakland 30 31 .492 10 xNew York 29 32 .475 11 xCalifornia 28 33 .459 12 Chicago 27 32 .458 12 Washington 24 36 .400 151/ x-Late game not included Yesterday's Results Minnesota 4, Washington 1 Chicago 2, Cleveland 1 Baltimore at Oakland, Inc. New York at California, Inc. Only games scheduled Today's Games Baltimore at Oakland, night New York at California, night Washington at Minnesota, night Cleveland at Chicago, night Boston at Detroit, night NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis AtJanta San Francisco Los Angeles Philadelphia Chicago New York Cincinnati Pittsburgh Houston W 38 33 34 34 28 30 29 29 28 23 L 25 29 30 31 28 31 31 32 31 38 Pet. GB .603 - .532 4 .531 42 .523 5 .50 6% .492 7 .483 71 .475 8 .475 8 .377.14 - L Yesterday's Results Atlanta 3, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 4, Houston 3 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, rain Only games schieduled Today's Games Houston at New York, 2, twi-night Cincinnati at Atlanta, night Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, night San Francisco at Philadelphia, 2, twi-night Chicago at St. Louis, night -Daily--Thomas R. Copi The happy fellow on the motorcycle was one of the many who took part in the motorcycle trials held Sunday on North Campus and sponsored by the Ann Arbor Motorcycle Association. Besides getting to ride through water, the cyclists endured up and downhill contests, a gully contest, a sand contest, and an accuracy contest. Rank amateurs were not allowed in all the races. F 3CAREER OPPORTUNITY, OOR CLIENT IS AN INTERNATIONALLY-KNOWN MANUFACTURER WHOSE CORPORATE OFFICE FOR THE POSITION WE SEEK IS LOCATED IN ENGLAND EMPLOYEE SPECIFICATIONS We are seeking two M.B.A. candidates in marketing to assume corporate position's in the United States following training here and abroad. They will have to assume corporate responsibilty for marketing trends of our I client's product. 1 ; Welome Become. i nformed on all the pressing campus issues. r SUBSCRIBE TO, for. the summer at your home. $3.00 for the rest of the summer Send this coupon to Michigan Daily Circulation Dept., 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 THIS SUMMER EAT OR LIVE IN A CO-OP Room and Board $20.00 per week Board Only $13.00 per week Immediately, they should have knowledge, but not necessarily experience, in forward product planning techniques, critical path analysis, inventory control, and preferably, have a strong mathematical background, ideally, being proficient in algebra. They should have an understanding of market- ing procedures and techniques, and eventually be able to assume direction of a national sales force dealing in heavy mechanical products. This does not infer that mechanical aptitude is mandatory. However, applicants should have a desire toward working in the field of machinery. SALARY BENEFITS, AND OPPORTUNITIES The salary for this position will be commensurate to the qualifications of the applicant towards the specifications set forth above. For any outstand- ing applicant, there is no limit on salary. The benefits, including profit sharing, retirement, etc., are equal to and better than those offered by any major United States firm. This is a corporate level position. plus a few hours work, since we own and run our own houses WOMEN Lester, 900 Oakland Mark VIll, 917 S. Forest MEN ' Michigan, 315 N. State Nakamura, 807 S. State i 1111 !