PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1966 WAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 6,1966 .r vv NORTHERN INVITATIONAL: Golfers Return to Action 'M' Thinclads Clash with Wildcats, Illini The Wolverine golfers, after a long layoff from competition, re- turn to action today in the North- ern Intercollegiate Invitational Golf Tournament at Bloomington, Ind., The golfers have not faced any intercollegiate competition since the Miami Invitational in late March. In that tourney, the Wol- verines were in fourth place go- ing into the final 18 holes, but the whole team shot bogeys or worse on the first hole, and -the team ended up in sixth place in the 26-team field. Since that tourney the link- sters have been sharpening their games at the Michigan course and left early yesterday to get in a practice round at the Indiana course. The tourney consists of 72 holes of medal play over the Indiana course. 36 holes each will be play- ed today and tomorrow and the five lowest rounds of each 18 holes. will be scored for each team. Competing in the tourney with Michigan will be seven more Big Ten teams--all except Wisconsin and Northwestern. Notre Dame, Western Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, and Marshall are also entered in the meet. The favorite's role in the tour- nament will be played by Purdue. The Boilermakers won the con- ference championship tournament last year by 14 strokes and are consistently strong in golf. Ohio State, runner-up to Florida in the Miami Invitational earlier in the year, and Indiana should also be among the top finishers. Michigan also must be consider- ed a strong contender. In last year's conference meet the golfers finished second behind Purdue. Wolverine Captain Bill Newton was the medalist in the Big Ten' meet last year with a 72-hole total of 287 and rates as one of the favorites in the Northern Invi- tational. Other lettermen competing for Michigan in the meet are Bill Carclay and Jim Evashevski, both sons of former outstanding Mich- igan athletes. The remaining members of the team are senior Bob Bond and sophomores John Richart, John Schroeder, and Chip Groves. The sophomores have shown strong promise in earlier compe- tition. Schroeder paced the squad in the Miami tourney and Richart was formerly Western Junior By BUD WILKINSON Summer Sports Editor The Michigan track team travels to Champaign tomorrow to meet Big Ten opposition for the first time in this year's outdoor season when it faces Northwestern and Illinois in a triangular meet. The Wolverines will be favored in the meet on the basis of their fourth place finish in the confer- ence indoor championships. Illinois and Northwestern are expected to wage a close battle for second. Northwestern will present the strongest challenge to Michigan in the pole vault and the distance events, whereas Illinois' strength is primarily in the discus throw, sprints, and hurdles. Pole Vault Champ In the pole vault the Wildcats will have Jim Albrecht. Albrecht captured the conference indoor championship earlier this year with a vault of 15'. Albrecht will be pressed to top Wolverine Captain George Can- amare, however. Canamare won the Big Ten outdoor champion- ship last year with a record- breaking 15'9/2" leap and went over the bar at 15'5/2" just two weeks ago at the Ohio State Relays. Competing in the mile run for Northwestern will be Craig Boyd- ston, holder of the conference rec- ord in the event in 4:09.9. Top Two-Miler Another top Wildcat distance man is Lee Assenheimer, who will run in the two-mile. Assenheimer, is the Big Ten cross country champion and has the fastest out- door time in the two-mile so far this season. Challenging these two for Mich- igan will be miler Brian Kelley and two-miler Ted Benedict. Kelley placed fourth in the mile in the outdoor championships last year, and Benedict has run the dash, Illinois will have one of the two-mile in 9:10. best one-two combinations in the Another event in which North- conference this year. These two western is likely to pick up points should push Wolverine Dorie Reid, is the 660-yard run. Wildcat Steve Cullinan has the fastest outdoor clocking in the conference this year and his teammate Jim Harris was the Big Ten champion in the event last year. Varsity Record-Holder Michigan will counter in the 660 with Fred Grove. Grove fin- ished second in the conference meet behind Harris last year and holds the Michigan varsity record of 1:18.8. In the discus Illinois will pre- sent tough competition for the Wolverines with Fritz Foretzke and Terry Miller, both of whom are capable of topping the 160 mark. Michigan's longest toss of the year was one of 166'4%" by Bob Donnelly in the Ohio Relays. With Cyril Pinder and Doug Harford running in the 100-yard, Champion. -B.W. last year's outdoor champion in the 100. Illini Strong Another strong event for Illinois should be the 440-yard intermed- iate hurdles. John Wright is one of the best in the conference in this event and has good backing in Jim Enck and Will Watson. Michigan's Nelson Graham will contend with Wright for the hur- dles title. Graham has one of the fastest times in the conference in the 330-yard intermediates and placed fifth in the Ohio State Re- lays in the 440-yard event. The events in which Michigan should be particularly strong are the shot put, high jump, 440- and 880-yard runs and the mile relay. Jack Harvey has the confer- ence's best mark in the shot put at 58'10" and is backed solidly by Steve Leuchtman. 'M' Trio in 440 In the 440-yard run Michigan has three strong contenders in Bob Gerometta and sophomores Elmo Morales and Alex McDon- ald. Morales may also back up Cecil Norde in the 880. In the high jump Michigan will throw Bob Densham and soph Rick Hunt against the Wildcats and Illini. Densham has jumped 6'10" indoors and Hunt has top- ped 6'6". Michigan's mile relay team, consisting of McDonald, Norde, Marion Hoey, and Gerometta, ran the mile in the Ohio Relays in a combined time of 3:12.5, the sec- ond fastest in Michigan history. KEEPS STANLEY CUP: Montreal Wmins in Overtime, 3-2 By The Associated Press DETROIT - Henri Richard's goal in sudden-death overtime gave the Montreal Canadiens their second straight Stanley Cup cham- pionship last night, with a 3-2 overtime victory over the Detroit Red Wings, Richard pushed in the clinch- ing goal at 2 minutes, 20 seconds of the overtime period, crashing into goalie Roger Crozier as he scored. That clinched the best-of-7 Na- tional Hockey League playoff fin- als four games to two. It also was Montreal's 12th Stanley Cup and seventh in the In-f 11 that the Stanley Cup has been de- cided on an overtime score. Richard's goal came on Mon- treal's second shot of the overtime period. Richard and teammates Dave Balon and Jean Guy Talbot led the charge at the Detroit net. and Richard steered the puck past Crozier. Floyd Smith sent the game into the overtime when he deflected Gary Bergmans shot from the point at 10:30 of the third per- iod. The Red Wings, who had out- shot the Canadiens 29-19 in the first three periods, spotted them aI two-goal lead, Crozier kicked out a shot by Rich- ard. But Montreal came right back and Richard got the puck over to Rochefort, who beat Crozier from 15 feet out. Ullman's goal came on a de- flection of a shot from the left point by Alex Delvecchio. It was the first power play goal for the Red Wings since the sec- ond game of the finals, and only their second of the series in 18 tries with a man advantage. CECIL NORDE BILL NEWTON Wolverine Batsmen Lead n0. mT TT"-....cryl YOU CAN EARN UP TO 14 HOURS OF COLLEGE CREDIT WHILE STUDYING THIS SUMMER IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL AT THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY A program designed to make the unparalleled resources of Washington, D.C. available to students in other colleges and universities. JUNE 13-JULY 20 JULY 21-AUGUST 26 e Special 3-week workshops in Education begin June 13, July 5, and July 25 ! Airconditioned classrooms, library and residence hall * Urban campus just four blocks from the White House write for catalogue: Dean of the Summer Sessions The George Washington , Universitya Washington, D.C. - 20006; II i 1 I; 1 t i .ag, the Canadiens be- Jean Beliveau opened the scor- Tiig I en 11 it came only the second team. in the ing at the 9:08 mark of the first Bn 40-year modern history of the cup period when he knocked in Gilles to initaftr osng hefistTremblay 's rebound from a sharp The Michigan baseball 'team two games of the final series, angle and Leon Rochefort beat leads the conference in several It was the first time since 1954 Crozier midway through the sec- team and individual departments ond period. in the statistics released yesterday " WT' Norm Ullman scored on a pow- from the Big Ten office in Chi- Crozier W ins er play less than two minutes cago. after Rochefort's score, and that's The Michigan team is leading M VP Award the way things stood until Smith's in both batting and slugging and dramatic tally. is second in team fielding. Claude Provost started the play The Wolverines have a team By The associated Prsswhich led to the first Montreal batting average of .314 in four DETROIT-In some what of a goal. He took the puck at center conference games, 20 percentage surprise, Detroit goalie Roger Cro- ice and passed it to Gilles Trem- points higher than second-place zier was named the Most Valu- blay, streaking past the Detroit Minnesota. able Player in the Stanley Cup blue line. At the other end of the stand- playoffs. ings is Purdue, Michigan's oppo- Crozier won the Conn Smythe Tremblay faked a couple o nent in a doubleheader tomorrow, Trophy after Montreal defeated times before shooting but Crozier with a .164 average. the Red Wings 3-2 on Henri Rich- stayed with him and kicked out Best Sluggers ard's overtime goal, giving the Ca- the puck. It bounced over to Beli-Bs Sugr veau, who fired from a sharp an- In slugging too, the Wolverines nadiens their second straight gle at Crozier's left and beat him} have a big statistical edge over Stanley Cup last night, four games from about 10 feet. their nearest rival Minnesota. to two. Michigan has 63 total bases in 140 Besides the trophy, Crozier re- A little more than a minute be- times at bat for a .450 slugging ceived $1000 and a 1966 automo- fore the Beliveau goal, Provost masculine ...that's the kind of aroma she likes be- ing close to. The aroma of Old Spice. Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice ... unmistakably the after shave lotion for the untamed male. Try it soon ... she's waiting. 1.25 & 2.00 ...that's the way it is with Old Spice S H U LTO N t rRt tNtvf G4 r it bile. The award was given after beat Crozier on a short shot from balloting by the National Hockey in front of the net. But the play League's board of governors. Mon- was ruled offside by linesman John treal's Jean Beliveau won the first D'Amico. award last year. Just before Rochefort's goal. 4 The authentic, traditional, classic, conservative button down. Very acceptable. WANTED: 25 CAMPUS LEADERS FOR NEW TECHNICAL MARKETING PROGRAM Requirements: All disciplines considered (includ- ing math, business, economics, Industrial Manage- ment or English), top third of class. Demonstrated leadership qualities, business oriented, strong de- sire for marketing management after completion of our one-year Merchandise Marketing Program, dis- trict sales assignments and 7-10 years management orientation. Potential Salary: $18,000 and up. Interested? Act Now. Send resume to Mr. M. W. Hopfe, Merchandise Marketing Program, General Electric Co., Building 2, Room 704, Schnectady, New York. Only 25 men will be selected. Candi- dates who successfully pass initial screening will be invited for interviews immediately. GENERAL *T ELECTRIC AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Minnesota's percentage is .402. In individual batting, Michigan Captain Bob Gilhooley is second with a .471 average. First place Mike Holloway of Indiana is hit- ting at a heady .583 pace after three games. Gilhooley is also tops in runs batted in with nine. His nearest competitor has only four. Right fielder Al Bara is fifth in the batting standings with a .400 average. Other Wolverine hitters in the top twenty are Les Tanona, 11th; Chan Simonds, 13th; Rick Sygar, 14th; and Keith Spicer, 18th. Second in Fielding In fielding Michigan ranks sec- ond behind Ohio State with a .962 percentage. The Wolverines have made six errors. The Buck- eyes have committed only one error for a .987 percentage but have played only two conference gamnes. ThesWolverines rank only sixth in team pitching with a team I trng, luggng earned run average of 2.38. OSU is in first in this department also with an 0.00 ERA. Although the 'M' nine is not on top in team pitching, right-hander Bob Reed leads in several cate- gories in the individual pitching statistics. In ratings of pitchers who have at least one decision, Reed has pitched in the most games and has the most victories, both totals standing at four. Reed also leads in strikeouts with 21 in 232/3 innings. Although his earned run average is 0.76, the Wolverine hurler is tenth in this department. Seven pitchers are tied for first with ERA's of 0.00 including Bob Pogue and Bill Murray of Illinois, the Wolverines' opponent this after- noon at 3:30. With three weekends left on the Big Ten schedule, Reed has a good chance for smashing a long-stand- ing conference record for the most victories in a season-six. Davis Cuppers Win in Italy By The Associated Press ROME-Dennis Ralston and Marty Riessen, members of the' U.S. Davis Cup squad, joined an unbroken march of seeded favor- ites yesterday into the fourth round of the Italian International Tennis Tournament. Julie Heldman of New York be- came the lone American survivor in the women's- division, rallying for a 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Silvana Lazzarino of Italy in the third round. Eliminated were Clark Graebner of Beachwood, Ohio, another U.S Davis Cup team member; Bob Greene of Los Angeles, Bill Tym of Montville, N.J., and 19-year-old Kathleen Harter of Seal Beach. Calif. Greene was the victim of Ral- ston, America's No. 1 player and fourth seeded entry from Bakers- field, Calif., 6-4, 6-1, 6-0. Ralston raced through the first four games, lapsed to lose , the next four in a row and then ran out the match easily. The tempestuous Riessen had a tougher time with Thomas Lejus of the Soviet Union, finally win- ning 6-2, 6-0, 3-6, 7-5 after de- manding replacement of one of the linesmen. "He that rejecteth me and re- ceiveth not my word, the sane shall judge him in the last day." -John 12:48 CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium Russell Voted Top Athlete By Letter men Cazzie Russell, the nation's greatest college basketball player, is slated to receive another award in his long string of honors as his fellow Michigan letterwinners have voted him the top senior athlete of the year. President Harlan Hatcher will present the annual award to three- time All-American Russell as a part of Cazzie Russell day in Ann Arbor on May 17. The day has been named to honor the greatest basketball play- er in Michiganhhistory and the only player to have his ni mbe.r retired-the big 33 familiar to all Wolverine sports fans. The award will be presented in connection with the annual outing of the Ann Arbor Quarterback Club at the Barton Hills Country Club. The Quarterback Club is the sponsor of the award. In addition to the award pres- entation, Coach Dave Strack will discuss the great era in which Russell played and football coach B u m p Elliott and gymnastics coach Newt Loken will also speak. Toastmaster for the dinner will be Don Lund, who coached Mich- igan's n a t i o n a l championship baseball team in 1962. Tickets for the event may be purchased at Wikel Drug or at the country club on the day of the presentation. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cleveland 14 4 .933 - Baltimore 12 3 .800 2 Chicago 10 6 .625 41/ California 11 7 .611 42 Detroit 11 8 .579 5 Minnesota 7 7 .500 6 Washington 6 10 .375 S!{ Boston 5 12 .294 10 New York 4 15 .211 12 Kansas City 3 14 .176 12 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS California 1, Kansas City 0 Cleveland 4, New Yrk 0 only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES New York at California (n) Washington atKansas City (n) Boston'at Minnesota (n) Detroit at Chicago (n) cleveland at Baltimore (n) 4-;} The long points on this Arrow Decton Oxford are just right. Anything less would ride up. Anything more would give you too much roll. Other noticeable details: Back collar button, box pleat and hanger loop. Tapered to a T. "Sanforized-Plus", in a wash and wear that goes past midnight without a wrinkle. 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This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual ma- terial as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your re- quired reading, and in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READ- ING method. Thus the reader avoids developing ANY dependence upon external equipment in reading. The new reading skill is permanently retained. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adjacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on MAY 24. This is our Sixth semester of classes in Ann Arbor. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 9, L. Angeles 8 (10 inn) Atlanta 4, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 10, Pittsburgh 6 Houston 4, Chicago 3 (13 inn) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at New York (n) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (n) San Francisco at St. Louis (n) Atlanta at Houston (n) Los Angeles at Cincinnati (n) Read and Use Daily Classifieds 1 I v OL-SO j SALE ail ., .V, ,I Au hl IcbI I I '