Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 12, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 12, 1972 Hillel and Midrasha College of Jewish Studies present Prof. Isaac E. Barzilay COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Speaking On "The Roots of Zionism in the 19th Century" 8:30 P.M.-THURSDAY, April 13 at HILLEL-1429 Hill U-M BARBERS & HAIRSTYLISTS "ONE CUT ABOVE THE REST." MICHIGAN UNION ACCOUNTING MAJORS Our SuccessfW Students Represent 1 /5 of CPA's in USA Becker CPA Review Course 151 W. Jefferson DETROIT. MICHIGAN Tel: (313) 961-1400 SULLIVAN SLUGS: Ba tmen Ry MARC FELDMAN scalp Chippewas Read and Use Daily Classifieds COME HEAR U. S. REP. MARVIN ESCH speak about National Population Legislation April 13 (Thursday), 8 P.M. Modern Languages Building, Aud. 3 Corner of Thayer and E. Washington Corner of Thayer and E. Washington (behind Hill Aud.) QUESTIONSEAND IDEAS WELCOME Sponsored by Zero Population Growth, Inc. AA Chapter Combining strong pitching and clutch hitting, the Michigan base- ball team opened its regular sea- son with a double win over the Chippewas of Central Michigan by the scores of1-0 and 8-6. In the first game, Mickey El- wood and freshman Tom Joyce parlayed for a strong one-hitter as Michigan eked out a 1-0 victory with a run in the bottom of the seventh and final inning. CMU could muster only three baserunners in the contest as El- wood stymied them on no hits for three innings and Joyce pleasant- ly surprised the fans at Fisher Field with five strike-outs, while ____ giving up Central's lone hit in his four innings of work. Meanwhile, the Wolverines weren't exactly plastering the ball against CMU's star righthander. Ralph Darin. Darin, who earned a place on last year's College Di- vision All-American team as he won twelve games for the Chippe- was, had stopped the Wolverines on three hits through six and two- thirds innings. Just as hopes for victory in reg- ulation time were about to be lost, a last ditch rally seized victory from the jaws of boredom. -1 0 -Daily--Sara Krulwich MICHIGAN PITCHER TOM JOYCE swings and pops one up to the third baseman for the second out in the bottom of the last inning with the score tied 0-0 against CMU yesterday. Luckily, the next two batters got hits and Michigai n squeaked by, 1-0. Jim Kocoloski jumped on a Dar- and De Cou stuck out his bat and in fastball and sent it soaring to- punched the ball into left for the ward the 375 sign in left-center for only run of the game. a double. Darin ran the count on Michigan began to get some hit- Wolverine rightfielder Mike De ting in the second game as they Cou to 3-0 so CMU catcher WallyI pounded out seven hits, five of Williams decided to walk De Cou them doubles, to defeat Central and pitch to right hand batter Michigan 8-6. Leon Roberts. The Wolverines led all the way Unfortunately for CMU, Darin's but had to withstand a four run- pitch out was too close to the plate on-one hit rally by the Chippewas in the final inning to preserve the doubleheader sweep. Michigan and pitcher Pete Helt held a seemingly secure 8-2 lead going into the seventh inning but a double, six walks and an error nearly resulted in disaster. Jim Lasley opened the inning with a walk and after Wally Williams pinch hit a double, Coach Moby Benedict decided that Helt had had enough. Bill Srock ran in from the bull- pen but the freshman hurler didn't have it yesterday as he turned a minor jai into a mess. In walk-' ing five of the seven batters he faced, he forced in two runs with bases on balls, one scored on a fielder's choice, and another on Mark Crane's error at shortstop. When the tying run reached sec- ond base, Benedict went to his day, doubled to left center. After these tainted runs. After CMU narrowed the Mich- igan advantage to 5-2 in the fifth inning, the Wolverines came back with what turned out to be the de- cisive runs in the three-run sixth. Pitcher Helt opened the inning in Ron Hunt fashion by getting hit on the elbow with a pitch. He was sacrificed to second by Greg Buss and driven in by Balaze's double. A walk to Leon Roberts set the stage for the eventual game winning blow, Pat Sullivan's second double and second and third RBIs of the game. Illini A.*D. Chips knocked off FIRST GAME CENTRAL MICHIGAN ab Senchuck rf 3 Machemer f 3 Cooper ss 2 Darin p 3 Haynes If 3 Sovern lb 2 Cassady 2b 2 Williams c 2 Schepeler 3b 2 Totals 22 MICHI GAN r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. 0 0 h 0 1 0 0 o. 0 0 0 0 1 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Jones, L.D. c b Pohlman p Iloag p Stevens ph von Reichbauer pr Kocisky p Cole p Lasley ph Darin ph Totals MICHIGAN 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 27 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 9 5 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0' 0 5 Take in the Mona Lisa at the Louvre and the night life on the Left Bank. But, why stay in Paris? There's a France beyond Paris just waiting for you to come visit. Villages and towns steeped in art and history. Vineyards, castles, Alpine spas and beaches made famous by bikinis. And the best way to get there is by train. Where in France will the French trains take you? Almost anywhere. Only four hours separate Paris from. Strasbourg. But be careful. Once you've walked its medieval streets, lined by timbered houses, you may never want to return to the glass and concrete of the modern city. Just two and one-half hours from Paris is Dijon. One of the renowned gastronomic capitals of the world. Buy an extra bottle of white wine there with the money you've saved eating cafeteria-style on the train. French trains are known throughout the world for their comfort, speed and punctuality. They're also known as a great place to get to know the people. It's easy to start a conversation in the relaxed atmosphere of a train. Even if you've barely passed second-year French, or German or Spanish. For trains are really the Continental way of travel. You can eat on a French train. Read on a French train. Sleep on a French train. Dream on a French train. And you'll find French trains surprisingly economical, too. Particularly when you take advantage of the new 2nd Class Student-Railpass. Whether you buy your tickets as you go, or a 1st Class Eurailpass or new 2nd Class Student-Railpass before you go, you'll save more by seeing your travel agent. Or nearest French National Railroad ticket office. For reservations: French National Railroads, 610 Fifth Avenue, New York 10020; 11 East Adams Street, Chicago 60603; 9465 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills 90212; 323 Geary St., San Francisco 94102. 74 Please send me your literature describing places to see in France other than Paris. Name Address City StateZ Dept. 74 Box 80, Lindenhurst, N.Y. 11757 French National Railroads Kocoloski 2b 4 1 2 0 De Cou rf 3 01 1 Roberts of 3 0 0 0 Sullivan lb 2 0 0 0 Kettinger if 3 0 0 0 Lonchar c 1 0 1 0 Hornyak 3b 2 0 0 0 Crane ss 3 0 1 0 Elwood p 1 0 0 0 Joyce p 2 0 0 0 Totals 24 1 5 1 r h e Central Michigan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 1 1 Michigan 0 0 0 0 0 1-1 5 2 E - Schepeler, Crane, Joyce. DP - CMU-1. PO-A, CMU 20-9, Michigan 21-8. LOB - CMU 2, Michigan 8. 2B - Koco- loski. SB - Sovern. Buss rf-lf 3 0 0 0 Balaze 2b 4 1 1 2 Roberts cf 2 2 0 0 Sullivan lb 3 0 2 3 Lonchar c 4 1 2 1 Kettingerrif 1 0 0 1 De Cou rf 2 0 0 0 Hornyak 3b 3 1 1 0 Burak 3b 0 0 0 0 Crane ss 2 1 1 1 Helt p 0 00 0 Srock p 0 0 0 0 Forhan p 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 8 7 8 r h e Central Michigan 0 0 0 0 2 0 4-6 5 5 Michigan 0 21 20 3x-87 2 E - L.D. Jones, Lake, Haynes, Hoag, Sovern, Balaze, Crane. PO-A, CMU 18-7, Michigan 21-9. LOB - CMU 9, Michi- gan 7. 2B - Williams, Lonchar, Horn- yak, Sullivan (2), Balaze. SB - Ma- chemer. S - Helt, Buss. SF - Kettin- ger. ip h r er w so Poblman (L) 2'j 4 3 2 3 3 Hoag 17; 1 2 0 1 2 Kocisky 1V 2 3 3 0 1 Cole % 0 0 0 0 0 Helt (W,2-2) 6 5 4 2 3 3 Srock 0j 2 1 5 1 Forhan (Save) 1 0 0 0 0 1 Helt faced two batters in the seventh PB - L.D. Jones. HBP - Lake (by Helt), Helt (by Kocisky) T - 2:46. A- 254. ip bullpen again and Craig Franp m k se i put out the fire by fanning RalpR i e Xi Darin to end the game. h1 r Darin (L) 6 5 1 Elwood 3 0 0 Joyce (W,1-1) 4 1 0 WP-Darin, Time-1 :47. SECOND GAME CENTRAL MICHIGAN } er w 1 5 0 0 0 0 = Arbogast rf Williams ph Machemer cf Cooper ss Sovern lb Haynes If Lake 3b Cassady 2b Senchuck pr ab r 3 0 1 1 21 290 4 0 4 1 2 1 3 1 0 0 h1 0 1 a 1 0 0 0 2 a so 5 3 5 bi 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 lichigan broke a scoreless deadlock with two runs in the second for an early lead. John Lonchar, who had three hits in five at bats and two walks on the a passed ball, Tom Kettinger de- livered the run with a sacrifice fly. John Hornyak got the ball rolling again with a double and Mark Crane singled to center for the run. Fielding lapses by the Chippe- was paved the way to a single run in the third and another pair in the fourth. Pat Sullivan, Brian Balaze, and Lonchar drove In Subscribe to The Michigan Daily CHAM 'ATGN (A)-Gene Vance, one-time basketball Whiz Kid at the University of Illinois, an- nolncd his resignation as Illini athletic ehrector yesterday after a presn--filed five year regime. VANCE. 48, hired in 1967 when Illini athletic fortunes were at low ebb after the school's so-called slUsh fund scandal of 1966, said he was stepping out July 1 for "my own best interests and for the fu- ture of the athletic program at the University of Illinois." Through a statement released by the University. Vance also, said his doctor recommended he leave the post for health reasons. The status of Vance, a member of the Illini Whiz Kids. team which won two consecutive Big Ten cage titles in the early 1940's, was re- earded shaky after dismissal of his hand-picked football coach, Jim Valek, following the 1970season. Valek, compiling a four-season record of 8-32, was' replaced by Bob Blackman, heralded Ivy League coach at Dartmouth, who last fall directed the Illini to a third-place Big Ten tie after los- ing his first six games and finish- ing 5-6 over-all. Vance took over from resigned athletic director Doug Mills after Tllinois was forced by the Big Ten to oust football coach Pete Elliott and basketball coach Harry Combes following the school's own disclosure of illegal financial aid to athletes. BESIDES VALEK, Vance also hired another former Illini athlet- ic star, Harv Schmidt, as basket- ball coach and then was confront- ed with trying to help both over- come acute recruiting problems in wake of the scandal. Ironically, speculation on a suc- cessor to Vance included the pos- sible candidacy of Elliott, who last fall became an assistant athletic director at the University of Mi- ami Florida. 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