Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 24, 1971 of Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 24, 1971 11 Does Sweden Offer Answers To U.S. Problems ? Find out at SUMMER INSTITUTE, DALARO COLLEGE (seaside resort 1 hr. fr. Stockholm) for students, teachers and profes- sionals. Credit courses (in Engl.) incl.: Social & Political Prob- lems, Swedish Arts, Spoken Swedish. Relevant non-credit Study Circles. Participants from Canada, U.S., Sweden. OUTSTANDING FACULTY, Guest Lecturers. JULY 22-AUGUST 18. Fee $450. Covers: tuition, room and board, course-related field trips, soc. and cult. events. For info. and free counseling write to: INTERNATIONAL SUM- MER INSTITUTES, 3110 Octavia St., San Francisco, Ca. 94123. SPECIAL SALE 20% OFF on Ramsey and Sleeper ARCHITECTURAL GRAPHIC STANDARDS 6th EDITION at S BS now wolverine gymnasts Buckeyes vault over Eastern top Goph ers MSU bo frosh, 9 11 ' F i MW University Activities Center proudly announce the addition of 3 new flights to the Summer 1971 U-M Travel Program: AT 094 CP 071 AT 095 Det-Frankfurt-Det Det-Amsterdam-Lon-Det NY-Frankfurt-NY May 4-June 23 May 15-June 6 June 11-Aug. 10 $179 $189 $199 YOUR ATTENTION IS ALSO CALLED TO; By KEN COHN The Michigan gymnasts opened their home season in a grand style, yesterday, hitting their peak so far this season in a near-complete sweep over Eastern Michigan. 163.7 to 150.4. The struggling Hurons were outmanned in a very literal sense, not even having enough team, members to fill their allotment of five performers for each of the six events. But the lack of com- petition did nothing to detract from the Wolverines'nshowing in their last non-Big Ten meet. The heftiest contribution to the Wolverine victory was made by all-arounder Rick McCurdy, who finished among the top three in all events but one, and garnered the highest all-around individual total, 53.90. A model of consist- ency, McCurdy' picked up three 9.1 scores, and did not score below 8.8 in any event. Michigan's two other bulwarks of versatility, Ray Gura and Ter Marti, turned in five top-three finishes between them, and rolled up 52.75 and 52.70 marks respec- tively. The Wolverine all-arounders were backed up by a .practically unbeaten corps of specialists; ex- cept for a second-place perform- ance in the parallel bars by Huron captain Lanny Mills, Michigan gymnasts captured the first three places in every event. In the floor exercises, Ward Black and Gura tied for first with 9.1. Gura again placed second in the side horse tc Dick Kaziny, whose finely honed routine earned him a 9.2. McCurdy swung to his one first- place finish in the rings, after whichRusty Pierce put a month of rigorous practice to good use. A twisting vault which he had been trying to perfect for several previous meets was executed flaw- lessly on his first try yesterday. and gained a 9.35 from the judges. Murray Plotkin swept to a win- ning 9.1 score in the parallel bars. and even this performance wa. overshadowed by Bob Johnson' 9.2 routine which was not counted in the team standings. Finally, in the high bar, Marti and Jim Scully turned in excellent! 9.2 and 9.0 scores, either one good enough to win in less competitive circumstances. But the audience. which had already been treated to a sterling team performance, had not yet seen Ed Howard.Cap- ping his routine with a breath- taking over-the-bar, half-twist dismount, Howard won the event and ended the meet with a spec- tacular 9.4. "This 163.7 performance speaks for a lot of hustle and hard work," commented a jubilant Coach Newt Loken after yester- day's triumph. "There's still a few places where we still need work, but we'll be ready for next week's meet." That meet next week will be a tri-team contest, with Iowa and Indiana State providing the op- position. Their competition will al- most certainly be stiffer than Eastern Michigan's. Humping the Hurons FREE EXERCISE - 1. Black (M) and Gura (M), tie, 9.1; 3. McCurdy (M), 9.0. SIDE HORSE - 1. Gura (M), 9.15; 2. McCurdy (M), 9.1; 3. Marti (M), 8.8. RINGS - 1. McCurdy (M), 9.1; 2. Fal (N M),9.05; 3. Marti (M), 9.0. LONG HORSE - 1. Pierce (M), 2. Gura (M), 9.2; 3. McCurdy PARALLEL BARS - 1. Plotkin (M), 9.1; 2. Mills (E), 8.9; 3. Mc- Curdy (M) 8.8. HIGH BAR - 1. Howard (M), 9.4; 2. Martin (M), 9.2; 3. Scully (M), 9.0. ALL-AROUND - 1. McCurdy (M), 53.90; 2. Gura (M), 52.75; 3. Marti TEAM POINTS - Michigan 163.7, Eastern Michigan 150.4. WO 064 in Big Ten tilt{ Det-Venezuela-Det May 5-May 30 2nd floor Union 763-2147 or, Sign up at UAC Travel: $169 769-5790 Administrative and Travel Services by Students International f E MINNEAPOLIS () - Luke' Witte tipped in a basket with five seconds to play yesterday to bring the Ohio Buckeyes a 68-66 Big, Ten basketball victory after they had trailed by as much as 14, points. Minnesota held a 56-42 lead with nine minutes to play and went into a slow-down game that Ohio State quickly shattered be- hind the ball handling of Jim Cleomans, who scored 14 points on 7 of 8 field goal attempts. And it was Cleamons who swiped the ball and sank the layup that gave the Buckeyes a 62-62 tie with 3:18 left to play. The regionally televised game was tied twice more before Witte who scored 22 points, won it. The Buckeyes ran their Big Ten record to 3-0 and season mark to 9-4 while the Gophers sank to 0-4 and 6-8. D uquesne rips IBonnies By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH - Jarrett Dur- ham led a second-half Duquesne assault on 10th-ranked St. Bon- aventure with 16 points as the Dukes ripped the Bonnies 89-68 yesterday. For the unranked Dukes, it was their second victory over one of the top 10 teams in the country' within a week. They defeated Notre Dame in overtime last Monday. Durham scored 25 points forthe Dukes, but 10 of them came dur- ing a 16-point spurt midway in the second half. T h e Dukes, paced by Mickey Davis' 13 points, led 39-30 at half- time. Panthers prowl PITTSBURGH - Pitt's t o p scorer Kent Scott tossed in 30 points to help pull the Panthers past the North Carolina Wolfpack 89-75 in a college basketball game yesterday. The 6-foot-3 guard, who holds the Pitt record for the best shoot- ing percentage in a season, shot 13 for 19 from the field. The Panthers jumped off to a 48-40 halftime lead, shooting 62 per cent from the field. Then the Wolfpack pulled even early in the second period, 55-55, and briefly went ahead 66-61. However, Scott came to the res- cue, hitting on two baskets with 5:02 remaining to put the Pan- thers ahead for good. By JOHN PAPANEK The Baby Blue lost a hard fought battle with Michigan State yesterday in overtime, 90-89. Michigan, which led throughout most of the first half and much of the second, was repeatedly pelt- ed by the hot shooting of MSU's super frosh, Mike Robinson and Tyrone Lewis, who poured in 37 and 28 points respectively. Robinson threw in the winning two points with 15 seconds left in the game. Jake Whitten was the big man for Michigan, scoring 24 points and grabbing 21 rebounds. Terry Tyler hit for 23 and John Bridges racked up 20. Michigan pulled into the 1 e ad for what looked like the final time with 12:30 remaining in regula- tion time, on an 18-foot baseline jumper by Tyler. The Baby Blue went on the build up a six-point lead, their biggest of the game, when Bridges dropped in an 18- footer with 7:50 left. A steal and full court drive by Robinson, followed by a driving dayup by Lewis, closed the gap to 71-69 and the heat was on for the Wolverines. A display of breakneck speed and hot shooting by Bridges and Robinson increased the score to 77-74 in just 30 seconds. A lay- up by Jim Miltenberger brought State to within one. A steal of the inbounds pass and a layup by Robinson put the Spartans ahead' 78-77. A free throw by Whitten tied it at 78. After a timeout, Michigan came out in a slow-down offense, appar- ently intending to freeze the ball for the last shot, five minutes lat- er. State went into an ineffective 3-2 zone defense, but got the ball after a missed Michigan f r e e throw. The Spartan babies also used the stall, but Robinson b r o k e free and'took a pass from Lewis, to score and put MSU up by two but Whitten sunk a 12-footer to Edged out unces 0=89 tie the game at 80 as time ran out. As the overtime began, it ap- peared as if the Wolverines would win going away. Tyler hit on two 24-footers and a driving layup. Af- ter a free throw by Kevin Casey, Michigan led by five, 87-82 with 1:13 left. But Robinson found cause to go wild. He took a pass from Terry Fagan and drove the length of the court, throwing in a few Henry Michigan's women's s w i m team finished third in the Sec- ond International Swimming and Diving Championships held yesterday at the University of Waterloo, in Ontario. Finish- ing first was Arizona State, fol- lowed by Michigan State. Wilmore-type moves and sunk the layup to make it 87-84. He then stole Michigan's inbound pass, drove to the hoop and dropped in two more, while getting fouled by Casey. Robinson missed his free throw, but Whitten was charged with pushing under the board, and Rick Jenks went to the line. He made two and put State up 88-87 with 1:01 remaining. John Lonchar fired in an 18- footer to put Michigan in the lead again with 0:27 left, but Robin- son won it with a 12-foot swish with 15 seconds left. A last se- cond shot by Bridges fell short at the buzzer. ABA East drops West GREENSBORO, N.C. (A') -Rick Barry, no stranger to all-star games, flipped in two free throws and then added a field goal in the final 49 seconds yesterday giving the underdog East a stirring come-from-behind 126-122 vic- tory over the West in the fourth annual American Basketball As- sociation game. Barry finished with 12 points while Kentucky's Dan Issel and Carolina's Joe Caldwell led the East with 21 points each as the winners evened the series at 2-2 before a record ABA All-Star Game crowd of 14,407, a thousand below capacity in the Greensboro Coliseum. Prior to the game, the ABA announced that Austin Carr of Notre Dame and John Roche of South Carolina. two of the na- tion's top college basketball play- ers, were chosen on the third round of their secret draft. Both players were passed over on the first two rounds conducted Friday in an apparent concession to the National Basketball As- sociation. Em" *k Washtenaw Community College SHORT TERM Mechanic Training Program THIRD QUARTER CARBURETION 044 - Starts Monday, January 25, 1971, Eight (8) Weeks, 7-10 p.m. Includes operating and servicing procedures for current carburetors with line shop work. CUSTOMER RELATIONS 062 - Starts Wednesday, January 27, 1971, Eight (8) Weeks, 7-9 p.m. Course is designed to improve relations between employees and customers in the areas of salesmanship, telephone answering and writing repair orders. DRUM AND DISC BRAKES 042 - Starts Thursday, January 28, 1971, Eight (8) Weeks, 7-10 p.m. Servicing procedures for drum and disc brake systems, including hydraulic systems, drum and disc machining, caliper repair, and master and wheel cylinder repair. *I 11 Beautiful Imported and Domestic LEATHER Boots, Coats, and Accessories Morrocan Imports Distinctive Men and Women's Clothing MICHIGAN fg 7 Bridges Tyler Clancy Whitten Lonchar Casey Bernard I 11 8 3 10 4 0 2 34 STATE fg 17 11 2 - TOTALS MICHIGAN ft 6 7 3 4 0 1 0 21 ft 3 6 3 3 1 0 0 16 42 37 LOCATION: COURSE COST: COORDINATORS: PHONE NUMBER: Washtenaw Community College Automotive Service Center 5115 Carpenter Rd, Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197 $20.00 per course Mr. Kenneth Barron Mr. Thomas Hopper 434-1555 Robinson Lewis Ridley Jenks Fagan Bennington Miltenbrger SCORE BY Michigan MSU L tp 20 23 9 24 8 1 4 89 tjp 37 28 7 7 7 2 2 90 9 10 --t 1317 S. University 769-4529 2 3 1 TOTALS 37 PERIODS: 38 43 1 9 3 - 1 16 ji1 11 U of M SKI CLUB MEETING TUESDAY, 7:15, Union Assembly Room INFO AND SIGN-UP FOR: WEST NEWYORK (Jan. 30, 31) ALPINE VALLEY (every Wed. nite) TRAVERSE CITY (Feb. 6, 7) For more details call Ski Club Office 663-2277 For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Bells ........$8.50 DENIM i F TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 WE WANT YOU TO HEAR MORE We may not play more records per hour than the competition- although we could, if we only played 2V2 minute records, but we at Winners believe quality, not quantity, important. So we may play some longer records. We aren't afraid to play Led Zepplin at noon, or the Moody Blues at 6 a.m.-as a resultj at Winners you do hear MORE music by more artists: James Taylor Chicago Gordon Lightfoot Bob Dylan ALL THE MODERN MUSIC GREATS, AND WE PLAY THEM ALL DAY LONG. If Ilusie's your thing . . we do it. \VINNERS-"A music service to the conniunity \A/NRS VVR-WRN D. +M" 'V Bush Jeans Bells..... Pre-Shrunk Super Slims $10.00 ... $8.00 ... $7.50 ... $7.00 I C CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty Haircuts that don't look like haircuts TRY US- DASCOLA U-M Barbers i Near So. U. Bank . Liberty Off State 95% of the Reading Population Reads Only 250 to 300 Words Per Minute or Less I -m I 11 T : I Gd Is Not Difficult to Learn Those who completed courses held this past year at the Bell Tower Hotel achieved speeds of 800 to 2000 w.p.m. with the same or increased comprehension they had at their slower reading rates. B I SEE HOW EASILY YOU CAN: -save hours, use your time more efficiently -learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now -improve your comprehension and increase your enjoyment of reading material , , i . ' ', + 0 1 } - \ \ M1 --' a°y pr's" ESCAPE INTERNATIONAL Presents ACAPULCO S1750 AIR FARE ONLY $147.00 FEB. 27-MAR. 6 THIS PACKAGE INCLUDES: " Round trip air transportation to Acapulco International Airport " Transfer from airport to Del Monte Hotel " Accommodations at the Del Monte Hotel for 7 nights. Every room faces beautiful Acapulco bay. Two to a room occupancy. " A welcome party, water skiing, and a 3-hour cruise of Aca- pulco bay with an OPEN BAR and Authentic Mexican music " Taxes and tips on services are provided Membership in ESCAPE INTERNATIONAL wR at a cost less than HALF that of other commercial reading courses offered in this area! Bring a book to a free. live demonstration of the reading skills which will be I