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September 10, 1971 - Image 10

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The Michigan Daily, 1971-09-10

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Page Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, September 10, 1971

GOODY
TWO
SHOES!
and other
Fabulous Shoes that
you've never seen
this side of the Atlantic

i
'
i
I

Sprinters Carlos, Smith
join CFL player ranks
MONTREAL (P) - Can a football training in Canada pri-
U. S. Olympic track star be or to his 17th birthday is also
classified as a non-import in ruled an import.
the Canadian Football League? O'Quinn said that by signingI
Yes, if he has the right nota- Carlos, the Als were not trying
rized documents. to circumvent CFL rules but
So, John Carlos, the U.S. only taking advantage of them
sprinter who won a bronze as they exist today.
medal for that country in the The Hamilton Tiger - Cats
200-meters at the 1968 Summer followed the Alouettes' lead and
Olympics in Mexico City, will signed another former Olympic
be suited up as a "Canadian" sprint ace, Tommy Smith.
for the Montreal Alouettes The 6-4, 103 pound speedster,
when they play the Ottawa who gained worldwide notoriety
Rough Riders here tomorrow with Carlos in the Mexico
night. Olympic Games by raising a
Carlos, 26, signed a contract clenched fist during the award
with the Als' Wednesday as a ceremonies, was recently cut by
non-import wide receiver, after the Cincinnati Bengals after
weeks of dickering about his two years on their taxi squad.
non-import status. But it is unlikely that Carlos
While he refused to discuss will get a starting assignment
terms of length of his contract, in Saturday's game.
it was learned that Carlos had "He won't be a starter on all
signed a one-year pact. of our formations this week,"
Carlos became a Canadian said Coach Sam Etcheverry. "I
when CFL Commissioner Jake imagine he'll be spotted here
Gaudaur approved the nota- and there."
rized documents supporting Carlos' only previous football
Montreal's claim that Carlos experience came at the Phila-
qualified as a non-import be- delphia Eagles' National Foot-
cause of a provision laid out in ball League tryout camp this
section 8 of league bylaws. year.
Gaudaur ruled that "the He came here almost a month
league was required to use after he was dropped by the
training, not nationality, as the Eagles. Carlos was not allowed
criterion for defining or limit- to work out with the Als while
trig the non-Canadian player," awaiting clarification of his
Red O'Quinn, general manager status.
of the Als, said. But, he did stick around and
Section 8, paragraph 10 says worked with Etcheverry on the

FOREST HILLS:

Ashe, Kodes gain semifinals

#i

FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (VP) -
America's confident Arthur Ashe
Jr., and a pair of flashy, light-
ning-quick Europeans, Tom Ok-
ker of The Netherlands and Jan
Kodes of Czechoslavakia, shot
their way into the men's semi-
finals yesterday in the U.S. Open
Tennis Championship.
The United States is assured
of another spot when second-
seeded Stan Smith of Pasadena,
Calif., and Marty Riessen, the
greatly improved contract pro
from Evanston, Ill., meet in a
delayed quarter-final today.
Both the men's and women's
finals are scheduled Sunday,
with $20,000 going to the male
winner and $6,600 to the lady
champion.
Ashe, his high-bounding ser-
vice and put-away volley in top
form, crushed Manuel Orantes
of Spain, 6-1, 6-2, 7-6.
Okker, seeded No. 4, runner-
up to Ashe in the inaugural
Open here in 1968, had to much
get-up-and-go for the sluggisn,
seventh-seeded Clark Graebner
of New York, winning 6-2,
6-3, 6-4.
Graebner's service, one of the
most potent in tennis, failed him.
He served two double-faults in
the sixth game and two more
in the eighth game of the first
set, losing both services and
double-faulted at game point in
the eighth game of the second,
losing his service of love.
"I just couldn't find the
range," Graebner said discon-
solately afterward. "It wasn't
my day."
He never has beaten Okker, a
27-year-old veteran of the pro
tour, in five meetings covering
a period of about five years.
Okker was too quickly, cover-
ing the court like a jack-rabbit
and putting away flicking volleys.
Graebner's big game was a
skeleton of that which carried
him through the Pennsylvania
and E a s t e r n Grass Courts
Championships in recent weeks.
Okker on Saturday will go
against the winner of the Smith-
Riessen match while Ashe takes
his bullet serves against Kodes,
the tournament giant-killer who
continued his surprising sweep
by stunning Frank Froehling III
of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 6-0,
7-6, 6-3.

Meanwhile, today Chris Evert,
the $50,000 bonus baby of the
U.S. Open Tennis Championships,
will be making her fifth con-
secutive center court appear-
ance, more than any other play-
er in the history of the classic.
She can't accept a penny for
her victories because she's an
amateur. But she's lured thou-
sands of dollars-estimated by
officials as at least $50,000-
through the Open gates as hard-
core fans and those who have
never seen a match crowd the
stadium to watch her play.
"We had no choice but to put
her on center court," said Bill
Talbert, tournament director.
"If we put her outside the fans
would knock the fences down."
The petite 16-year-old player
who stepped to stardom in
sneakers, stole the stadium show
in each of her four previous per-
formances. She's expected to do
so -again today in her semifinal
match against top-seeded Billie
Jean King.
"I know the crowd will be
with her," said the 27-year-old
Mrs. King who won the title
here in 1967. "She's sweet and
cute and everybody likes her.

"I've been booed before but I
don't care just as long as the
crowd gets involved in some
way.
"She's sure helped women's
tennis. She's on the crest of a
wave and I just hope she's en-
joying it. It's the best time of
her life, whether she knows it or
not."
Chris, who will be going for
her 47th straight match victory,
has done more for women's
tennis in one week than the
women pros have in the year
since they formed their own
circuit.
She also has helped to make
the Open a success.
"I have no way of knowing
how many people came out here
just to see her," said Talbert,
"but I'm sure there are a lot.
"This sounds corny, of course,
but a star has been born," he
added. "Just look at the TV
people that were out here yes-
terday. We've never had s3 nany
before."
"I pity her, really. She hasn't
had a free moment. Chris Evert
doesn't belong to Chris Evert
anymore. She belongs to the
public."

THE ICHGAN AIL FriaySeptmbe 101197

U.S. tank men cop early lead
in meet with British, Russians

S ANS

Souc

that a player who has received
training in football outside of
Canada by having participated
as a player in a football game
outside of Canada prior to his
17th birthday is an import.
Also, any player who has re-
ceived training in football out-
side of Canada after his 17th
birthday, but has not received
ANNUAL
LPHA-OMEGA
I FELLOWSHIP
STUDENT
RECEPTION

side.
Carlos, a 6-foot-2, 187-pound
native of Willingboro, N.J.,
feels he will do all right in the
heavy going.
"I had body contact at Phil-
ly." he said. "If I got up every
day for seven days and prac-
ticed running into a wall, my
body would adjust.
"Football should be the
same. I like the idea of the
wide field here-it gives the
runner more room to work."
"He has good sneed and good
hands." said O'Quinn. "We
feel he will be a valuable asset
to the club, but we don't want
people to expect too much too
soon from John."
Daily Classifieds

MINSK, U.S.S.R. ()-Ameri-
can swimmers almost complete-
ly dominated the first day of a
U.S.-Russian-British meet yes-
terday, winning nine of 10 events
and cracking the world record
in the women's 400-meter free-
style relay.
The relay team capped the
day's competition in the final
event by flashing across in
4:00.7, bettering by one-tenth of
a second the record held by East
Germany.
The U.S. team was composed
by Linda Johnson of Lakewood,
Calif., Deena Dearduff of Cin-
cinnati, Shirley Babashoff of the
Phillips' 66 team and Kim Pey-
ton of Portland, Ore.
Miss Johnson also led a 1-2
U.S. finish in the 100-meter free-
style, winning in 59.6 seconds to
59.7 for Miss Peyton.
It was just the first of five 1-2
finishes for the Americans in ,

I

522 E. William
open 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

5 p.m., Sun., Sept.

12

the eight individual events as
they ran up a point score of 119
to 73 for the Soviet Union and
48 for Great Britain. Russia had
the only other winner in Galina
Stepanova in the 100 - meter
breaststroke.
She was timed in 1:15.3 to
1:15.8 for Claudia Clevenger of
Cupertono, Calif. Diane Mick-
loff, also of the U.S. was third.
In the other women's events,
Susie Atwood of Lakewood,
Calif., finished first in the 200-
meter backstroke in 2:24.0 and
second in the 400-meter indi-
vidual medley behind Jenny
Bartz of Santa Clara, Calif., who
won in 5:09.7. Karen Moe of the
U.S. was second in 200.
Mark Spitz of Sacramento,
Calif., led a 1-2 U.S. finish in
the 200-meter men's butterfly,
winning in 2:04.1 with Ross
Wales of Phillips 66 second.
Gary Hall of Phillips 66 did
the same for the U.S. in the
200-meter individual medley with
a time of 2:09.8. Rick Colella of
Seattle was second.
Jerry Heidenreich of Dallas
won the 100-meter freestyle in
52.8 with Don Tremblay of the
U.S. third and Charles Camp-
bell of Arcadia, Calif., won the
200-meter backstroke in 2:07.8
with Mel Nash of Monroeville,
Pa., third.
The men's 400-meter freestyle
team also won, in 3:31.9. The
team was made up of Heiden-
reich, Hall, Tremblay and Tom
McBreen of San Mateo, Calif.
READ AND USE THE
DAILY CLASSIFIEDS

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dJuut se.
"I lose my respect for the man who can
make the mystery of sex the subject of
a coarse jest, yet when you speak earn-
estly and seriously on the subject, is
silent." Henry David Thoreau
Masters and Johnson, the emi-
nent researchers in the physiology
and psychology of sexual behav-
ior, estimate that at least half the
marriages in this country are con-
tending with some form of sexual
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This is one of the reasons why
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A serious magaz ne do eto a e° n ,.aaro. s.x.
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Duration of
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Debate: Abortion
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Single girlsa
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Sex Ouiz f
How to improve
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Gambling and sex f
Poverty and sex
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Answers to
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}

Institute for Sex Research Rabbi Roland B.
Gittelsohn, D.D., Sc.D. Temple Israel, Boston,
Mass. Alan F. Guttmacher, M.D. President,
Planned Parenthood Federation of America,
Inc. Joan G. Hampson, M.D. Clinical As-
sistant Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry, Univ.
of Washington, School of Medicine Seward
Hiltner, Ph.D., D.D. Professor of Theology
and Personality, Theological Seminary,
Princeton, N.J., and Edward Gallahue Con-
sultant on Religion and Psychiatry to the
Menninger Foundation S. Leon Israel, M.D.
Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Gerald R. Leslie, Ph.D. President, National
Council on Family Relations; Prof. of Soci-
ology, Univ. of Florida Harold I. Lief, M.D.
Professoi of Psychiatry and Director of the
Division of Family Study, Univ. of Pennsyl-
vania School of Medicine; Dir. of the Center
for the Study of Sex Education in Medicine
Eleanore Braun Luckey, Ph.D. Professor and
Head of the Department of Child Develop-
ment and Family Relations, University of
Connecticut J. Lawrence Manuell, M.D.
President-Elect, American College-Health As-
sociation; Director, University Health Serv-
ices, New York University James L. Mathis,
M.D. Professor and Chairman, Department
of Psychiatry, Virginia Medical College Roy
W. Menninger, M.D. President, The Men-
ninger Foundation ThIomas C. McGinnis,
Ed.D. President, American Association of
Marriage and Family Counselors; Associate
Professor in the Graduate School of Health
Education, New York University School of
Education Emily H. Mudd, Ph.D. Professor
Emeritus of.Family Study in Psychiatry, Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Patricia Schiller, J.D. Executive Director,
American Association of Sex Educators and
Counselors John L. Schimel, M.D. Associate
Director, William Alanson White Institute
of Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis and Psychology,
N.Y.C.
Some of the subjects
that will be covered:
Alcohol and sex - Blackmail and sex
Cross-dressing . Child molesting . Coital
frequency . Psychological castration
Depression and sex . Duration of intercourse
Sudden death during sex . Effeminacy in boys
Fantasies during intercourse . Flirting
Frigidity . Foreplay and female orgasm
Hostility and sex . Headache and sex
Inability to reach orgasm in men . Incest
Impotence . Jealousy Lesbians
Marriages without sex . Masturbation
Multiple orgasms
Menstrual cycle and sexual desire
Men who are uninterested in sex
Misconceptions about genital dimensions
Nymphomania- Painful coitus
Pretended climax . Prolonging intercourse
Premature ejaculation . The "call girl"
Promiscuity . Petting . Rape . Ritualized sex
Sex in old age . Sadism - Sexual jokes
Sexual causes of divorce . Sexual myths
Sex-related problems in business
Sex without passion . Simultaneous climax
Teenagers and the pill . Violence and sex

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#9

"With the increasing emancipation of science
from the shibboleths and taboos which have
fettered knowledge of human sexuality, more
and more important material is evolving. It is
important that this scientific material be trans-
lated and transmitted to the lay public by qual-
ified scientists."
ALAN F. GUTTMACHER, M.D.
Pres., Planned Parenthood-World Population
"It is high time that the nonsensical and titil-
lating sex material on the newsstands made
room for valid, honest, scientific and helpful
material about sex. There has long been a
need for forthright, intelligent discussion of
sexual' matters, and SEXUAL BEH AVIOR
.will go a long way.to fill this need."
HAROLD I. LIEF, M.D.
Prof. of Psychiatry, Director Division of Fam-
ily Study, U. of Penna. School of Medicine
"I welcome very much the kind of treatment
of sex promised by this magazine. The dis-
tinguished Board of Editors guarantees both
scientific accuracy and honest, socially con-
scious treatment of the subject."
SEWARD HILTNER, PH.D., D.D.
Professor of Theology and Personality, Theo-
logical Seminary, Princeton, N.J., and Edward
Gailahue Consultant on Religion and Psychi-
atry to The Menninger Foundation
"SEXUAL BEHAVIOR promises to fill a
v'acuurn in the knowledge of the general pub-
lic. Sex is the one area that affects our lives so
strongly, yet about which so little is known.
Certainly, sexual misconceptions are a primary
cause of personal and marital difficulties,nand
SEXUAL BEHAVIOR promises to be an ex-

The distinguished
Editorial Board:
Richard D. Amelar, M.D. Pres., Society for
the Scientific Study of Sex; Clinical Professor
of Urology, and'Director, Male Infertility
Clinic, N.Y.U. Medical Center Robert L.
Arnstein, M.D. Chief Psychiatrist, Depart-
ment of University Health, Yale University
Alan P. Bell, Ph.D. Senior Psychologist, In-
stitute for Sex Research Jessie Bernard, Ph.D.
Ilonorary Research Scholar and former Prof.
of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University
Carlfred B. Broderick, Ph.D. Professor of
Family Relationships at the College of
Human Development, Pennsylvania State
University Catherine S. Chilman, Ph.D. Dean
of Faculty, Hood College for Women Harold
T. Christensen, Ph.D. Professor of Sociology,
Purdue University John F. Cuber, Ph.D. Pro-
fessor of Sociology, Ohio State University
Eleanor B. Easley, M.D. Clinical Associate
Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Duke University Medical School Alex L.
Finkle, M.D. Associate Clinical Professor of
Urology, University of California School of
Medicine Warren J. Gadpaille, M.D. Psy-
chiatrist, Denver, Colorado; Member, Com-
mittee on Adolescence, Group for the
Advancement of Psychiatry; Consultant in
Family Living, Jefferson County School Dis-
trict, Colo. Paul H. Gebhard, Ph.D. Director,

*

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