7EN ;+ THURSDAY, I APRIL 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEV o.T$$SAY 1$ APRIL$$ 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEl SE V 'E-N. Gymnasts By CHUCK VETZNER The group Michigan will be represented by seekin the best of a good lot at the to put NCAA gymnastic championships taking this weekend at Southern Illinois. The Wolverines will be taking Fred only five of the ten men who ton, lar qualified in the regionals. placem "The men who aren't going also be didn't have quite as good a chance s w e er to win," explains coach Newt strnge Loken. "Also they would rather U S., stayhere and work on new tricks for next year than spend all their Ins f time sharpening up their old rou- ines w tines." Hender The fivesome that will be ac- bles twx companying Loken to Carbondale The represents a total of three na- former tional championships, one second, gress and one third. phenon Vie f foremost member of the is Gary Erwin who will be g his third first place trophy along side his medals for the world title. ISanders and John Hamil- st year's second and third winners on the tramp, will e along to try for another p. "They comprise the est trampoline trio in the Loken adds proudly. Free Ex loor exercise, the Wolver- ill be represented by Mike rson who won all the mar-, No years ago. fifth man is still ring per- Rich Blanton. "Rich's pro- has been just short of menal," L o k e n marvels. NCC VAII lu itA >r NAA Blanton is the only one of the five who is not a senior and the only one who has not yet won any na- tional honors. Last year as ai sophomore, he was injured most of the season and has just started to return to his old form.- Loken feels that all are a def- inite threat to cop firsts and good bets to at least make the top six on Friday night and earn the, right to compete in the finals on Saturday. Team Title In the new system this year, the team title will be a two team affair decided on Saturday. The finalists are Penn State and Washington. If either team quali- fies men among the top six, their Saturday routines will count for individual crowns and team points: Loken, however, feels that both squads might decide not to enter their men in the Friday qualify- ing round so that they will be fresh for the team match. Top competition for the Wolver- ine boys on the trampoline will come f r o m Southern Illinois' Frank Schmitz who finished sec- ond in the world this year and Southern California's Danny Mill- T ltes:. LLOYD GRAFF man who won the world title last year. _ Both men will also be threats in floor exercise.h Fearless If he competes for indvidual S ayer honors, Kent State's Mike Jacob- son will be another top contender.DuagIu&i-c X " sA STANLEY CUP SEMIS: Red Wings To Host Hull-Less Chicago r By The Associated Press Loken feels Blanton's main com- petitors will be from the West! Coast where "they always have strong ringmen." The Michigan team was elim- inated from the team champion- ships by Southern Illinois a month ago. r l UUIU 1l ± I a U01IU UIlg U UThe Detroit Red Wings square off against the Chicago Black Predicting is the riskiest of sports, but one of the most satisfying. Hawks and the Montreal Cana- There is some godly urge in everybody to snatch at a hunch, call it diens against the Toronto Maple inspiration, point to the stars, and proclaim, "I can see the future." Leafs tonight in the opening It's impossible in one column to predict both leagues with any games of the National Hockey kind of thoroughness, so I'll take up the National League today and League Stanley Cup playoffs with leave the inferior league for later. two major questions to be answer- It is an axiom of the National League that no team ever wins ed. the pennant two straight years. It's kind of a tacit share-the- They are whether Bobby Hull's injured knees have mended well wealth arrangement. You win it one year, I'll win it the next, inur himee h egmen e r-l is the unofficial credo of the league. enough forhim to regain his ear- lier scoring form for Chicago and For this reason, I don't give the St. Louis Cardinals any chance whether Toronto's veterans, win- to win the flag again. They took it on a fluke last year when the ners of the cup for the past three Phillies crumbled like a stale cookie losing their last ten games. The years, can stage another come- Phils probably would have lost for years if the season hadn't merci- from-behind performance. fully ended. The pairings at the end of the r r rrr son but Coach Billy Reay of the Black Hawks still was uncertain Wednesday whether Hull would be able to play. Hull skated through practice sessions Tuesday and Wednesday, but said "I felt I wasn't going too well." The Chicago-Detroit series, in- cidentally, brings together the five top scorers in the NHL this year -Chicago's Stan Mikita, No. 1, and Hull, 4, and Detroit's Norm Ullman, Gordie Howe and Alex Delvecchio, 2, 3 and 5. The Toronto squad ispretty much the same one that came from third place to win the Stan- ley Cup last spring. One notable addition is Dickie Moore, a for- mer Canadien. Montreal has a couple of new- comers untested in cup play. But Coach Toe Blake is counting on defensemen Ted Harris and Niel Picard to help reverse the result of last year, when the Leafs beat Montreal 4-3 then went on to whip Detroit in the cup final. During the regular season Chi- cago held an 8-5-1 record against Detroit while Montreal topped To- ronto 7-4-3. The most telling fac- tor was the Canadiens' ability to win four times on Toronto ice. Friends Of S MEETIN( CIVIL RIGHTS-WHAT' Fund Raising, Ann A SNCC Summer P Fall Activi iuU LAI Du: rbor Activity rograms, ty Hf, 7:30 P.M. TODAY Union--3K Li INSTANT SILENCE For information write: Academic Aids, Box 969 Berkeley, California 94701 11 PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT The following University of Michigan law students, who are friends and former students of PROFESSOR JOSEPH KALLENBACH of the Department of Political Science, heartily support his candidacy FOR CITY COUNCILMAN for the Third Ward of Ann Arbor: Christopher Cohen Steven Thal Joan Arrowsmith John Auld Charles Barr Lawrence Berkowitz John Briggs William Buhl Harley Daniels Robert Gilbert Natalie Gingell Jeffery Jeuer Michael D. Levin Michael J. Levin Stanley Lubin Robert McKenzie, Jr. Lawrence Ross David Shaw James Smith John Sparks DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. NEW CAR QEALER Triumph-Volvo- Fiat-Checker We lease cars $4.50 per 24 hr. day HERB ESTES AUTOMART I RICH BLANTON - I.. . BUG ON DOWN TO TODD'S for some real cool FARAH STA-PREST SLACKS and swing Todd's 1209 S. University VOTE * KALLENBACH * MON., APRIL 5 319 W. Huron 665-3688 E Full Time & Evening Employment 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week end occasionally on Saturday, you can maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an average weekly income of $67. If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Jones at 761- 1488 from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Monday-Friday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. The Cards have the best infield I've ever seen, but their pitchingI is slim, outfield is mediocre, and manager (Red Schoendienst) is3 untested. The Phillies are again going to be a fascinating team to watchI with Richie Allen and Dick Stuart in the same infield. Allen made more errors than any other third baseman in the league as a rookie,I and Stuart, well, Dick fields first with all the grace and gusto of at sleepy rhinocerous. But both men are mighty sluggers. John Callison and Speedy Gonzales make the Phils first rate in the pastures.j Pitching is stingy on paper with Chris Short, the best lefty in the majors except for Sandy Koufax, Jim Bunning, who should taper off to 15 wins, and Art Mahaffey, the greatest balk artist in baseball1 history. Jack Baldschun is the most consistent relief man in thet league.i Cincinnati has marvelous material, but seemingly lacks thef drive to be a pennant winner. Frank Robinson and Vada Pinson4 have terrific natural ability but are far from inspirational players. Jim Maloney has the best fastball in the majors and that in- cludes Koufax. He should win between 21 and 4 games. The infield is below par with a weakness at first base, a lackadaisical Leo Cardenas at short, and a nonentity at third, probably Mich- igan alum, Steve Bors. Pete Rose is solid at second but the toss from second to first is considered to be a major heave for him. San Francisco has Willie Mays which is enough to make it a contender. Willie is the greatest ballplayer in the world, but if he plays center field he can't pitch. This profound statement explains why the Giants-can't win the pennant. Juan Marichal, whose mechanical flinging motion closely re- sembles that of a pitching machine, should win over 20, but Frisco needs more arms. Ron Herbel and Bob Hendley are .500 pitchers and Jack Sanford had a nine hour arm operation over the winter, so don't expect many no-hitters from him. Orlando Cepeda, Willie McCovey, and Jim Hart are enough to make any pitcher decide to become a first baseman, but pitching wins pennants. Milwaukee has titanic hitting, but its hurling is even weaker than San Francisco's. Henry Aaron is a magnificent wrist hitter, Joe Torre is the best catcher in the league, Rico Carty is .300 at the plate, and Dennis Menke is the second best shortstop in the league. At last count the Braves had sold 23 season tickets so it is possible that there will be more vendors than fans at the game, and vendors don't root. The Dodgers have pitching but Walt Alston will need a shutuot every other day if he expects to win a penannt. The Dodgers will probably hit less than a hundred homers and Don Drysdale might lead the team-in the long ball. The infield is holey with Maury Wills the only adequate fielder. The outfield has the Davis Boys and an unnamed compatriot. Nothing to leave your feet about. Claude Osteen could win 15, Koufax 30, Drysdale 18 and LA could still finish sixth. The Cubs are my team. I've loved them since the Hank Sauer era and I'm a much more rabid fan than Phil Wrigley. But cruel objectivity tells me that the Cubs stink. Sure they have Billy Williams, Ron Santo, Ernie Banks, and Larry Jackson, but you don't go anywhere with a double play combination that even the Mets laugh at. Bozo could be a better catcher than Dick Bertell, and the Michigan Varsity probably has a better bench than the Cubbies. I want to cry, but let us continue. Pittsburgh has two players from the Caribbean that any team would love to trade for-Roberto Clemente and Alvin McBean Clemente, now sacked in with malaria, is the worst looking great hitter in baseball. He does everything awkwardly at the plate and bats .350. McBean is a splendid pitcher with fearsome sidearm stuff who could win 20 if he starts. But the Pirates are mediocre at most positions. The Houston Astros are going to be playing under a dome in a well lit stadium, thus they will be giving up the advantage they had in their old park. In the past three years teams would play in the park by candlelight. The archlights were so bad that only the Colts, who were used to the dark, were able to hit. When the Astros see the light their future will be gloomy. The Mets are my adopted team. Any team which could boast of such players as Hawk Taylor, Al Moran, and Cho Choo Coleman wins your heart. And this year the WMets have rookies like Danny Napoleon and Dick Selma. With names like Napolean and Selma you know the Mets aren't going to ruin their image and become winners. But Warren Spahn should give Casey and the Mets enough class to beat out the Astros. S Well,here are the final predictions. I'm sure you're on the edge of your chair. Philadelphia, St. Louis, Cincinnati, San Fran- cisco, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Chicago, Pittsburgh, New York, and Houston. fI Professor of Philosophy at Center for Advanced Studies at WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY Middletown, Connecticut ,Thursday-4:15-6:00 1025 Angell Hall Paper on: "PROPOSITIONED OBJECTS" . I long season are the same as last year's but they came from an en- tirely different NHL finish. The Red Wings, who won the title this season for the first time since 1957, were fourth asyear ago. The Canadiens, NHL champions six of the past seven years previously, wound up second, with Chicago third and Toronto fourth. Hull, one of hockey's superstars, was hampered by injuries to both knees during the latter part of the season. He scored 38 goals in 48 games before he was hurt and only one afterward. He rested during the last week of the sea- WILLARD V. QUINE Off-beat, wildly satirical proof that science and scientists can be fun WORLD'S FAIR NEW YORK $8600 -Round trip transportation -Five nights at Hotel- New Yorker -Two tickets to World's Fair -Dinner and Tour of Greenwich Village -Broadway Show MAY 3-8, 1965 (Ask about other dates) Travel arrangements are being handled by Travel, Inc. 400 Maynard House. For reservations and/or information phone: 662-961 or 665-3735 I FILECCIA BROS. I _- wmwwmmwmm l owom rps* I Expert Shoe .Repairing Quick Service available on request 1117 SOUTH UNIVERSITY pa i i with only the best from THE WORM RUNNER'S DIGEST Edited by James V. McConnell, University of Michigan A Compulsory Introduction by :~< ~'ARTHUR KOESTLER fl.. - -TODAY- 3 3 . i I Discover what happens to a Tsetse Fly's love life after prefrontal lobotomy... how the marital status of secretary affects the productivity of a research lab. a a This collection of zany scientific spoofs will be welcomed by the thousands who enjoyed A STRESS ANALYSIS OF A STRAPLESS EVENING GOWN. $3.95 at all bookstores or Dept. 305 PRENTICE-HALL, INC. Englewood Cliffs,.N. J. BUY THE WORM RE-TURNS At FOLLETTS State St. at North U. Last Day to Hear DR. KENNETH CRAGG, D.Phi., M.A. on "THE 'MYSTERY' OF THE QURAN' (KORAN)": ITS CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE 4:10 P.M.-UGLI-Multipurpose Room Dr. Cragg is a leading student of Islam, an author of four books, a Former Editor of The Muslim World Quarterly, Professor of Philosophy at the American University of Beirut, and Professor of Arabic and Islamics, and is presently Warden of St. Augustine's College, Canterbury, Kent, Eng- lnd. PARTICIPATE I If You Want To Become Part Of A Dynamic Attempt To Revitalize And Expand SGC PETITION FOR SGC COMMITTEES Petitioning Closes Wed., April 7-5:00 Please Call Or Stop In Sponsored by The University of Michigan, Office of Religious Affairs I if 1546 SAB 663-0533 THE WORM RE-TURNS by James V. McConnell I A FEW SEATS REMAIN on the Is Available at; PAN AM JET to EUROPE SLATERS I call Jim Podell 761-1635 II I 5