Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 17, 1969 Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY )..R i 'M' net chances dampened at NCAA's I -------w 4 RADICAL CAUCUS & SGC By BILL DINNER Special To The Daily PRINCETON, N.J.-With the early morning dew still fresh on the ground, the NCAA Tennis Championships began yesterday at Prince- ton, New Jersey. With few exceptions, the matches went like clockwork. Only one of the top twenty seeded players went down to defeat in the first round. Southern Cal and UCLA, both with four seeded players, swept into first place along with Rice and Trinity with eight points, with Houston one point back. Michigan finished the day with a disappointing four points, only good enough for a nine way tie for thirteenth. Michigan's individual players did as well as could be expected, but the team's chances of a high finish continued to deteriorate. Originally, Dick Dell, Pete Fishbach, Brian Marcus and Mark Conti, Michigan's top four players, were scheduled to make the trip. With these four players along, the Wolverines could have finished as high as third. However, Dell decided to spend the summer on the European tour, and he was replaced by junior Jon Hainline. With Dell, Michi- gan's top player, gone, the team's chances of an extremely high finish suffered a serious blow. Yesterday the team suffered another crushing setback when Conti called coach Bill Murphy and told him that he had sprained his ankle and would be unable to compete. Because of this, it appeared' that Conti's singles and doubles matches would have to be defaulted. Fortunately, Murphy was able to contact Joe Ross, a freshman, who will fill in for Conti in the doubles. However, Conti's singles had to be defaulted as NCAA rules prohibit substitution in singles matches. Marcus was the first Wolverine on the court, his match starting at 8 a.m. He had some rough going early in the match with Stanford's' Chris Chapin, but he finally broke Chapin's serve in the twelfth game to win, 7-5. This seemed to wake Marcus up, and he won the next set in easy fashion, 6-1, to take the match. In his second match of the day, Marcus used a much stronger backhand and lively jumping. and diving volleys to down Mike Washaver of Harvard, 6-0, 6-1. Fishbach had an easy time as he drew a first round bye and then breezed to a 6-1, 6-2 triumph over Tom Malkemes of Army. One of the more colorful players in the tourney, Fishbach always seems to enjoy himself on the court. As one irate and most probably drunk spectator noted, "Why didn't he just finish him and let him go home." A good case in point was given by Fishbach in his match with Malkemes. He hit a drop shot, then followed with a lob, a drop, another lob, then a drop. At the end of this fiasco, Malkemes was about ready to drop, too. Afterwards, Fishbach said to his foe in all sincerity, "I'm sorrry, but that was the only place I could hit it.". Aside from Conti's default, Hainline was the only other Michigan, casualty of the day. USC's fourth seeded Jaquin Layo-Mayo beat Hainline 6-3, 6-2 in a sloppily played match mostly because he made fewer mistakes. , After the match, Hainline admitted that "I was psyched out before I started." Layo-Mayo, usually one of the quickest collegians on the court,' had trouble reaching shots throughbut the match, but Hainline was unable to take advantage of his foe's lapses. He did \not break the service once in the two sets. LEAGUE STANDING * * * * * * Kaline powers McLain to tenth, RADICAL EDUCATION By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Detroit's Dennyt McLain swept to his 100th major league victory Monday night and became the American League's! first 10-game winner this season, beating the New York Yankees 3-2 with a six-hitter. McLain, 10-5, committed a first' inning balk, setting up New York's first run, and worked out of af bases-loaded bind in the fourth, then pitched perfect ball until Roy! White's leadoff double in the1 ninth. Al Kaline gave McLain all the runs in the fourth and went ahead 1 7-6 in the seventh on Randy Hundley's two-run homer. his 11th. Roberto Clemente opened the Pittsburgh eighth with a triple against Phil Regan, who had worked four scoreless innings in relief, and Willie Stargell tied the game with a single. Rich Nye replaced Regan after Manny San- guillen sacrificed, and Oliver greeted him with his sixth homer of the season, a blast into the; upper right field stands. Cw'ew ties record ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS--Rod, Carew swiped home for a record- tying sixth time this season in the first inning Monday night and the, Minnesota Twins went on to bat-, He was supported by a pair of homers by Tony Gonzalez,- one with a man on. Gonzalez came to the Braves last week in a trade with with San Diego. Gonzalez' homer with Sonny Jackson on and consecutive singles by Feli± Millan, Rico Carty and Tommie Aaron pushed the Braves in front 3-2 in their half of the first and Nieko breezed in. Houston again struck first in the second game on Jimmy Wynn's 15th homer of the season with Sandy Valdespino aboard in! the first inning. But in the second, Atlanta jumped on Houston starter Jim Ray and reliever Jack Billingham for eight runs and six hits to make things easy for Pat Jarvis, 6-4. fall sports; NIGHT EDITOR' LEE KIRK support he needed with a two- run homer off Fritz Peterson, 8-7, in the fourth. Don Wert singled in the fifth and scored from first when center fielder Jim Lyttle missed a shoestring catch on Mc- Lain's fly ball single. Peterson set down the Tigers in order in the first three innings, striking out five. But Mickey Stanley opened the fourth with a booming, ground rule double that bounced into the left center bleachers. One out later, Kaline sliced his ninth homer into the lower stands in right.j After Horace Clarke pokedta leadoff single off McLain in 'the first, Jerry Kenney bunted into a force play, took, second on Mc- Lain's balk and scored on a two- out single by White. Gene Michael singled in White for the Yankees' other run in the ninth. * * * PROGRAMa TUESDAY EVENINGS-8:00 P.M.-3529 S.A.B. 1. BLACK LIBERATION-June 17 2. WOMEN'S LIBERATION-July 1 3. THIRD-WORLD LIBERATION & IMPERIALISM-July 15 4. FASCISM-July 29 5. REFORM OR REVOLUTION?-August 12 6. SOCIALISM OR ANARCHISM?-August 26 7. REVOLUTIONARY DEMOCRACY?-SEPTEMBER 9 8. FRANCE: MAY '68-September 23 9. STUDENT-WORKER ALLIANCE IN THE U.S.-October 7 10. PERSPECTIVES OF THE STUDENT MOVEMENT-October 21 Each Discussion Organized With Leader READING LISTS AVAILABLE-2522 S.A.B. Changes Advertised In Daily ALL WELCOME! 1 ter the California Angels 8-2. . Carew, six-for-six in his theftsTib tunbs of home, tied the American League record set in 1915 by Ty CLEVELAND - Reggie Smith Cobb of Letroit and tied in 1917 slammed two homers and Carl by Bob Roth of Cleveland. The Yastrezemski lashed a two-run performance is one shy of the shot to power the Boston Red Sox major league record set by Pete to a 8-5 victory over Cleveland Reiser of Brooklyn in 1946. Monday night. Carew reached first on an error Smith's three-run homer in the and took second on Tony Oliva's seventh gave the Red Sox a 7-5 n -scoring single. The slender lead, after the Indians had moved second baseman stole third, Then, before Angel pitcher Tom Murphy, in front with a four-run uprising 4-4, could throw. Carew was more in the sixth. He had a solo blast, than halfway home. his 12th, in the ninth. Braves sweep Astros I- ATLiANTA PhilT Nik bkrn WOW! I I *4 i' G t ti ijtiv -r l ie~ woecamei the major leagues' first 11-game winner in the opener and the At- lanta Bravesexploded for eight! runs in the second inning of the nightcap in sweeping a do4tie- header from Houston 6-2 and 8-4 Monday night. In the first game. Niekro, a?- lowed two runs and two hits in the first inning, then shut out the Astros on five hits the rest of the way'. A three-piece Treasure Chest chicken dinrner, plus french fries," for only 79! Larger take-home orders also. Try a box soon!! (MILING PEFOY @ERV.CE West of Arborland I _'_ Subscribe t The Michigan Dail ~ ~ *0 Pirates clip Cubs PITTSBURGH-Rookie Al Oli- ver's two-run homerr apped a! three-run Pittsburgh rally in the eighth inning that carried the Pirates to 'a 9-8 victory over the Chicago Cubs Monday night. The runs were, the first for the Pirates since the first, when they scored six times and tooks a 6-2 lead. The Cubs had tallied three WELCOME STUDENTS! A DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men - and Women - r 8 Hairstylists THE DASCOLA BARBERS at Maple Village-Campus 0iscount recordsi we I 4. i AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE I 300 S. State 1235 S University Baltimore Boston Detroit Washington New York Cleveland Oakland Minnesota Seattle Chicago Kansas City California East 44 37 32 31 30 20 West 31 26 24 24 19 L 17 22 23 32 33, 36 25 26 32 43 35 37 Pet. .721 .627 .528 .492 .476 .357 .554 .552 .448 .429 .407 .339 GB 6 9 14 .15 21% 6 7 8% 2 Chicago New York Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal IAtlanta Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Houston San 'Diego, East 40 30 31 29 23 15 West 36 33 33 30 29 25 L 20 26 30 31 32 42 24 25 26 25 35 38 Pet. .667 .536 .508 .483 .418 .263 .600 .569 .559 .545 .453 .397 GB a 3 2 9 12%4 i 1 ColumbiaPs Best ALL SPECIALLY PRICED .. . Yesterday's Results Boston 8, Cleveland 5' Detroit 3, New York 2 Minnesota 8, California 2 Oakland 7, Kansas City 5 (1st game) 13 innings, second game, inc. Chicago 8, Seattle 3 Other clubs not scheduled. Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 9, Chicago 8 St. Louis 3, Montreal 0 Cincinnati 8, S. Francisco 6 Atlanta 6, Houston 2, 1st game Atlanta 8, Houston 4, 2*d game San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. Other clubs not scheduled. *1 1# STEAK and SHAKE CHARBROILED HALF A RIB AND EGGS CHICKEN Potatoes Potatoes, Salad, Toast Bread and Butter $1.60 $1.50 1313 S.'UNIVERSITY CvS93 CS 9792 3 19 3 19 319 I COMPUTER DATING IS FUN Anything YopUr Little Black Book Can Do COMPUTA-DATE CAN DO BETTER FOR INFORMATION & APPLICATION CALL 662-4401 or Write COMPUTA-DATE BOX 2102, ANN ARBOR, MICH. 48106 NAME.AGE. ADDRESS .. . . . CITY & STATE ....... .............ZIP....... ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS invites you to spend 30 minutes with the PALESTINIAN IEVOLUTION "A British Broadcasting Corporation Release" on Wednesday, 18 June at 8:30 p.m. in the Undergraduate Library, Multipurpose Rm. 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