PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY; MAY: -4,,16".64 PAESXrHEMCIA AIYTED1.MY518 n..,.. _ , ..___ _ .., .... :: i tx SIXTH CONFERENCE TEST: Netmen Face MSU at Home New Faces in Grid Future I I By JIM TINDALL Michigan's tennis team will play its first match in Ann Arbor since their season opened over a month ago against Michigan State on the varsity courts at 2:30 p.m. today. The Blue have a Big Ten rec- ord of 3-2 to date, and a season mark of 5-4. The Spartans were regarded by Coach Bill Murphy as early sea- son favorites, along with Indiana and Michigan, to give Northwest- ern a fight for the Big Ten cham- pionship. Michigan State will put a vet- eran unit on the courts, as they only lost captain Jack Damson through gradiuation. Number one man Tom Jamieson has won two varsity letters and fourth man Jon Wierman also has a pair. In addition Bill Bremer, Dave Click, Tony O'Donnell, Dwight Sheldon and Charles Wolff have won mon- ograms. The only sophomore in' the starting six is Laird Warner who hails from Dearborn. On their spring trip, the Spar- tans won six while losing two. They also brought home their sec- ond consecutive Cherry Blossom Festival championship. The Wolverines come into the match on the crest of a second quadrangular held in Evanston place finish in the Northwestern this past weekend. The Wolver- ines whitewashed both Purdue and Minnesota, 9-0, but fell in a close match at the hands of North- western's Wildcats, 6-3. Murphy will start the same lin- up that he used this past week- end-Harry Fauquier, Karl Hed- rick, Hal Lowe, Brian Flood, Bill Dixon, and Jim Swift in the sin- gles, and John Fraser-Hedrick, Fauquier-Lowe, and Dixon-Swift in the doubles. Michigan's next opponents will be Iowa and Illinois. The Blue will take on these two teams in a triangular to be held in East Lansing on Friday and Saturday. Last season the Hawkeyes won 10 of their 18 meets, and finished fifth in the Big Ten. The Fighting Illini only won 4 of their 12 dual meets last year and came in seventh place in the Big Ten tournament. By CHUCK VETZNER If you're one of those economy- minded football fans who saved last year's programs hoping to use them this year, you might as well forget the whole idea. It was a good plan, after all, Michigan does have 23 returning lettermen including nine starters.' The recently concluded springj practice, however, has uncovered names like Mack, Ward, and Vid- mer who should make previous player listings valuable as sou- venir items only. But the first game is still five months away so let's slow down and takeaa closer look at some of the unfamiliar names. Mack Back First there's Tom Mack, a 225 pound sophomore from the Cleve- land area. And if the name rings a bell it could be because his father, Ray, used to play second base for the Cleveland Indians. Mack is actually not new. He played end last season but got lost in the swarm of qualified re- ceivers and did not receive a letter. Nearly all the ends were return- ing again this spring but the sit- uation in the interior line was quite different. At tackle Tom Keating was gone and Bill Year- by was putting the shot. As a result, Mack found himself at tackle when spring drills began. 'Had Speed and Size' Line coach Tony Mason, ex- plaining the switch, said, "We thought he was a good player and we had a lot of ends but needed TOM MACK - - - - - - Voightlander Regular Price AUTOMATIC $104.90 with case AVoUghtATndCr 33mm Camera * Fully Automatic Electric Eye " Ultra Sharp F/2.8 Lens Range Finder " Made in West Germany interior linemen. We felt he had the speed and size to make the change." The results of the move: Mack played with the first and second unit in Yearby's spot and won the Meyer W. Morton Trophy, which is given annually to the most im- proved player in spring practice. Mason and head coach Bump Elliott had nothing but praise for him. Mason, who considers him- self to be a demanding individual, was pleased with Mack's blocking. 'Progressed Daily' "He worked hard and progress- ed each day and that's the sign of someone interested in playing Voig htlander Automatic R 74 44C Including Case Only football at Michigan," said the line coach., Elliott added, "Mack made an exceptional adjustment and im- proved tremendously." The question now is how far this rags to riches story will go. Mack is best on offense and Year- by's specialty is defense. There is a good possibility that the two will be platooned next fall. Frosh Too As for the other new names, they are mostly freshmen who have been very impressive this spring. Halfback Carl Ward could turn out to be the swift breakaway back Michigan has been lacking. Although several of Michigan's top scatbacks did not participate in spring ball, Ward, a freshman, deserves notice for passing other more experiencednmen and play- ing on the first unit. New Quarterbacks Dick Vidmer, a first year quar- terback, distinguished himself in last Saturday's intrasquad game. Vidmer's running and field lead- ership helped spark the White team to victory. Another frosh signal caller, Rich Volk, has also played well. The coaching staff seems especial- ly pleased with his work as a de- fensive back. Elliott feels confident that all of these youngsters will see plenty of action next season if their per- formance in next fall's workouts is anything like the job they did this spring. The head coach is equally high on chunky fullback Dave Fisher and 210 pound halfback Jim Det- weiler. Elliott said there were some fine line prospects but noted, "As a group the line has not advanced as rapidly as the backs." Another Keating In this list of unknowns is an old name with a new twist. The surname is Keating but the first name isn't Tom. The grad- uating senior tackle will.depend on brother Bill to defend the family honor. Coach Elliott relies on the sophomore to help solve the problem at guard. Young Keating shouldn't have too much trouble with either as- signment. "Little Keating,"-as the 220 pounder is called, was the first team guard by the conclusion of spring drills. Elliott considers him to be one of the most im- proved linemen. A special chore this spring that had not been a previous concern was deciding whether Michigan could play platoon football next fall. The need for this decision was brought by the new NCAA ruling that allows much more substitution. Major League Standings S i ;l' f I, 'I TOM JAMIESONf HAZZARD TO LAKERS: NBA Decides on Draft Picks Petri 8 mm Electric Eye Power Zoom Battery Drive Movie Camera w) (case . 99.95 35mm SLR w/meter f/2.8 lens w/case . . . Petri Blue Scope w/case Beseler Topconette w/case . . Sekonic Flip-Over Movie w/grip Fujica 8mm EE w/grip . . Yashica OP 8mm movie w/grip . Brownie 8mm Movie Camera ff1.9 Brownie Auto 8 Movie Camera a a * a a 41.71. 34.44 88.88 99.95 59.95 A . . 107.71 U U a a 19.95 38.88 SOUND SPECIAL 7-Inch-1,200 Foot Magnetic RECORDING .9 TAPE9 cLIMIT Here's deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastest, neatest way to all. day, every day protection! It's the man's deodorant pre- ferred by men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly, speedily... dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant - most convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. STICK DEODORANT SM U t. NEW YORK (41)-All-Americas Walt Hazzard of UCLA and Cot- ton Nash of Kentucky were select- ed by the Los Angeles Lakers and Gary Bradds of Ohio State, an- other All-America, was tapped by the Baltimore Bullets in the Na- tional Basketball Association draft of college players yesterday. The New York Knickerbockers, because they had the poorest won- lost record in the nine-team cir- cuit, had the first choice and they went for Jim (Bad News) Barnes of Texas Western. Hazzard to Lakers Hazzard, who led UCLA to the national championship, and George Wilson of Cincinnati, se- lected by the Cincinnati Royals, were the only territorial choices. The rule giving teams territorial selection rights is to be discontin- ued after next year's draft. Nash was drafted by the Lakers on the second round. The Detroit Pistons, who had the second choice in the opening round, fingered Joe Caldwell, 6-5 from Arizona State. The Phila- MOSCOW N EWS Weekly from the Soviet Union In English or Spanish. All as- pects of Soviet life. Full state- ments of Soviet government. One year subscription-- $2.00 air-mail Imported Publications ,Prod. 1 Union Square, N.Y.C. 3 (M) delphia 76ers named Lucious Jackson, the 6-10 Little All-Amer- ica from Pan American. The St. Louis Hawks-picked Jeff Mullins of Duke as their first choice while the San Francisco Warriors chose Barry Kramer of NYU, a 1963 All-America. The champion Boston Celtics made seven-foot Mel Counts of Oregon State their first round selection. This prompted Red Senkowski Win inItaly ROME (QP) - Ray Senkowski, Michigan's first man for the past three seasons, stunned sixth- seeded Mike Sangster of England 4-6, 6-2, 9-7, 4-6, 6-2 Monday in the first round play in the Italian International T e n n i s Championships. Senkowski's upset was the shocker of the day, with the length of the match and Sangster's ad- mitted lack of conditioning the key factors. It was a match of strong services and long baseline rallies. Bath players tended to stay in the backcourt, seldom charging the net. Senkowski, unranked in this first of the major European tourn- aments of the season, is only 30th in the U.S. rankings. His surpris- ing triumph was one of three registered by American men in opening day play. Auerbach, the Celts' coach, to point out, "Counts can run like heck for a big guy. We would have liked to have Caldwell, but I'm very satisfied." Counts may be used to back up Bill Russell, Boston's star center. Clyde Lovellette, the substitute for Russell last season, is report- edly considering retirement. The Knickerbockers, seeking a big man for rebound duties, grab- bed 6-10 Willis Reed of Grambl- ing, La., another member of the Little All-America, on the second round. He was second among the small-college players in rebounds last season with a 21.3 average. Reed at Center "We thought Reed would 'be grabbed by someone else on the first round," said Eddie Donovan, the Knicks' coach. "He could be our center although Barnes also can play there." Barnes is a member of the U.S. Olympic team and will not be available to the Knicks until well after the NBA season has started. "But," added Donovan, "I think he'll fit. in with us nicely after that." In addition to Jackson and Reed, two other members of the AP's Little All-America were chosen. They were Tom Black of South Dakota State by Baltimore and Jim Boutin of Lewis and Clark by New York. Knicks Take Komives The Knickerbockers, who have finished in the Eastern Division cellar the past five years, also drafted Howard (Butch) Komives of Bowling Green, the top major college scorer last season with a 36.7 point average for 23 games. Other leading players drafted were Ira Harge of New Mexico by Philadelphia; Ron Bonham, Cin- cinnati, by Boston; Wally Jones, Villanova and Les Hunter, Chi- cago Loyola by Detroit. I AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. Cleveland 9 4 .592 Chicago 8 5 .513. Detroit 8 7 .533 Baltimore 8 7 .533 Minnesota 9 9 .50 New York 6 6' .500 Kansas City 7 8 .466 Washington 8 11 .421 Los Angeles 7 10 .412 Boston 6 9 .400 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 11, Washington 4 Cleveland 7, Boston 5 Kansas City 7, Los Angeles 4 Chicago 10, Minnesota 5 only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Boston Los Angeles at Kansas City (n) Washington at Baltimore (it) Detroit at New York (n) Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 1 % 2 2% 3 .4 4 4 , 1y Kodak Zoom Reflex II18mm Movie Kodak Supermatic Remote Control Slide Projector . . . . Realist 400 Man. slide projector . . . 133.33 Sawyer's ER remote control Slide Projector . . Brownie 108mm projector . Baia Reviewer . . . . Tripods-3-section aluminum with elevator . . . . s s a : s 68.88 14.95 48.88 54.80 I . . . . . ._._.. s 19.88 . 9.88 59.50 1iI generation THE CAMPUS INTER-ARTS MAGAZINE Featuring: 7-page Robert Frost Portfolio by Ed Langs San Francisco Philadelphia Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati x-Chicago Houston x-Los Angeles New York 11 .1 W L 11 4 10 5 11 6 10 7 10 8 9 9 6 8 8 12 7 12 3 14 Pet. .733 .666 .647 .588 .555 .500 .429 .400 .368 .176 GB 1 1 2 32 4Y2 6 9 I . . HONDA OF ANN ARBOR 1906 PACKARD RD. 665-9281 x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 3, Houston 2 (12 inn) St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 2 Milwaukee 2, New York 2 P'itts burgh 4, Cincinnati 2 Chicago at Los Angeles(ine) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Milwaukee Houston at San Francisco (n) Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (n) Philadelphia at St. Louis (n) Only games scheduled Aiwa TP 701 Portable tape recorder Aiwa AR 111 AM-FM Radio . . . 33.33 122.22 11 .rev I! Mirandette port. tape recorder, latest Selections from 15 Years ROLLIE SLASHED PRICES L S ROLLIE T-W/Case............188.00 ROLLIE 3.5 E3-W/Case ..........233.00 ROLLIE 3.5F-W/Case ............259.00 Lighted Slide Sorter 99C Sale ENDS 8:30 P.M. Saturday, May 9 of Generation Poetry Including Works of X. J. Kennedy Anne Stevenson James Camp Short Stories by: Joel Greenberg Martha MacNeal COME TO THE FAIR! THE TOURIST IS WELCOME! WE SERVE YOU! Hundreds of families have registered their extra rooms with us. These people are the gracious New Yorkers with private homes who want to say "Welcome to New York." There are rooms available for every purse- ..s.. . m m U -w Stay a week, a month or plan "your lmmw ,7 _ , ® M 1 7 11