THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 4, 197 1 TH IHGNDIYTusarbur ,17 NOTICE: CINEMA GUILD announces petitioning for mem- bership on its board. All interested and qualified persons ore welcomed. Under-classmen especially encouraged. face By RANDY PHILLIPS eren tennis champions alumni in '71 SIGN-UP for torium lobby. column there. interview appointments in Architceure Audi A sign-up sheet will be posted on the centra - READ -JAMES WECHSL ER- ' Michigan's tennis squad comes under the scrutiny of the public eye for the first time this sea- son on Saturday when t h e y take on a group of alumni rack- eteers at the newly built Ann Arbor Racket Club. This match marks the end of the long fall-winter condition- ing practices and the beginning of full-scale workouts in prepa- ration for the coming season. The Wolverines concluded a successful 1970 campaign with their third straight Big Ten Ti- tle, including five singles and two doubles individual champ- ionships, and w i t h a twelfth place finish in the NCAA- championship matches. However, this year's contin- gent is minus four of the top six singles players of I a s t year's in e A441-gall Btttly FOR THOSE WITH A DISCERNING EAR We Invite You to Save$40 to $50 oftour K LH Sale group. The number two, four and six players (Jon Hainline, Dick DeBoer, and Dan Mc- Laughlin) have graduated, while first seeded Mark Conti turned pro, and is now teaching in De- troit. Returning from the starting singles line-up will be Joel Ross, last season's number three con- ference singles champion, and last year's number five runner- up in the conference, Ramone Almonte. But despite the depletion in the line-up caused by gradua- tion, Wolverine coach Brian Eisner is very optimistic, "Last year we lost our top three and performed as well as the year before. And the improvement in all our people is more advanced than that of last year." Eisner stresses competition and conditioning as he readies his players for another cam- paign. These two training as- pects should prepare. the Wol- verines for the pressure a n d 1 stress of match play. IChallenge matches provide the best means for both the im- provement and evaluation of a player's ability. This year's crew Eisner noted, "is close in abil- ity, and the competition is forc- ing improvement." Eisner sticks to the results ofI the challenge matches since! they best reflect t h e player's ability to win while the pres- sure's on. "Challenge matchesj take the personality conflict out of it. If you can't beat him, you can't play ahead of him." As the season advances the Wolverine mentor must lock in his final line-up. Eisner com- piles all the results of the ious matches to determine who will play where in the Big Ten Tournament. This year's squad sizes up to be a very hard-working and de- termined group. Leading the pack at this stage is an )ut- standing sophomore from San Francisco, Dick Raverby. Last year Raverby sat out almost the entire campaign with a calcium deposit in his thigh, but has re- bounded to become an impres- sively sound all-around player. Hanging in there about even for the second two slots a r e sophomore Tim Ott and Fresh- man Kevin Senich. Ott's renew- ed confidence in his game has enabled him to become more of O a thinking player and as a re- sult he has cut down greatly on his mistakes. Eisner remarked that he's learned "to temper his power and use it to his advan- tage." His net game has also im- proved drastically. A highly touted newcomer from Cleveland, S e n i c h has pushed his way into a starting role alongside Ott. Senich is a lanky 6-4 power server who is rated fifth in junior doubles in the nation. This year's captain Ramone Almonte and surprise sopYO- more Mike Ware are also knot- ted up for the next two spots. Almonte has always been a very fine ground stroker with fluid controlled arm motion. But he's been wary of coming up to the debut national tournament Ross suf- fered a case of tennis elbow and was not able to play during the fall. But since his return to ac- tion this term he has come on strong and is undefeated in challenge matches. However, he has not met a n y of the top starters yet. Eisner believes Russ is playing as well as last season despite his elbow injury tnd a sore shoulder, and should move up. A couple other improvement cases include senior Doug Mc- Claury and junior Randy Toig. McClaury has shed some excess poundage and is playing "far better than last season." He's always had a tremendously pow- erful serve, but now he can run down more balls and stay with a volley longer. Toig has also improved over last season's performance, but has lost a few heartbreaker challenge matches in practice. Others making the team this season are Andy Geller. Dave Donzal, Mike Durst, Bob Ep- stein, and Ricky Turetsky. Eisner is searching for some workable doubles combinations since the excellent team of Con- ti and Hainline have left. The Wolverine mentor looks for two players who get along well on and off the court, and who play well together. We have "to put good right and left court ser- vice men together," expounded, Eisner. So far the teams look like Raverby and Ross, Senich and Ott. and Almonte and Ware. The weekend's tilt against the alumni should present a con- siderable challenge for the Wol- verines. Listed for action for the Alumni are Ray Senkowski, former Big Ten number o n e singles champ and NCAA run- ner-up, and 1970 starters Hain- line, DeBoer, McClaughlin. Har- ry Fauquier, Canadian Davis Cupper, will play behind Sen- kowski and will team up with him in first doubles. The match will begin at about 1 p.m. at the Racket Club which is located on Cherry Hill Rd. in Dixboro. Eisner hopes the increased competition will givehhis team members an edge when t h e y compete against other schools, but as he said, "You never real- ly know until you play." 4. Tim Ott Coach Brian Eisner net until this year. "He's been playing the finest tennis he's ever played," commented t h e Wolverine coach. "He's gained confidence in his service and his volley game. He doesn't have great size but has great quick- ness." The cinderella story of this fall's workouts has been Mike Ware. Last season Ware wasadown at the bottom of the team's hist and saw very little match ac- tion. But this season he already owns challenge match victories over Raverby (his only loss) and Ott. Eisner attributes the great improvement to his more con- sistent and less wristy serve, his mental attitude, a n d an im- proved overhand slam. Rounding out the top six slots is junior Joel Ross. In last year's -Daily-Jim Judkis kBlcks quit TCU eleven; Wills seeks managerial slot By The Associated Press * FORT WORTH, Tex. - Four black football player at Texas Christian University.told Head Coach Jim Pittman yesterday that they are quitting and transferring to Florida State. "They explained to me," said Pittman, "that they had not been happy with the social activities the last two years. They said it had nothing to do with the present coaches or any of our rules." * * * " MEXICO CITY - Maury Wills, who made his managerial debut this winter in Mexico, says he wants to manage the Los Angeles Dodg- ers. If successful, Wills could become the major leagues' first Negro manager. The base stealing star, a 12-year major league veteran, who batted .268 last year for the Dodgers, saw his club the Hermosillo Orange Growers, clinch the Mexico Triple A Pacific Coast Club championship Tuesday night in a playoff. In a telephone interview Tuesday Wills said: "Next, I want to manage the Dodgers. But I'n afraid I may have to wait a few years until Walt Alston retires. In the meantime I will continue'to play in the regular season and,manage minor league teams in the winter." * ~** " WASHINGTON - A record price of $30 was announced yesterday for the closed circuit television showing of the Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier heavyweight championship fight at Washington's Hilton hotel, 4 according to promoter Lee Guber. MODEL TWENTY REG. $399.95 NOW $349.95 MODEL TWENTY-FOUR REG. $319.95 NOW $279.95 !'1 HI-FI BUYS Ann Arbor-East Lansing 618 S. MAIN 769-4700 "Quality Sound Through Quality Equipment" IN HALL OF FAME Baseball t NEW YORK (/P) - The way was cleared yesterday for the inclusion of such outstand- ing stars of the old Negro baseball leagues as Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige in Base- ball's Hall of Fame in a special category. That became a reality when Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced the formation of a special 10-man committee to select the top Negro stars of the pre- 1947 era "as part of a new exhibit com- memorating the contributions of the Negro League to baseball." The first player honored by the com- mittee will be announced next week with the anticipation that it will either be Gib- son, the slugging catcher who has been call- ed the Babe Ruth of black baseball, or Paige, the longtime pitching ace of the Kansas City Monarchs who later pitched in the majors when he was about 50 years old. The inclusion of the stars of the Negro leagues, which began to disappear after Jackie Robinson broke the major league col- or line with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, comes after a long campaign to have them recognized. But they will not actually be Hall of Famers. honor black players However, Kuhn did not see that as any compromise. "I wouldn't call it a compromise." Kuhn said. "The rules for selection to the Hall of Fame are very strict and I think those standards are correct. Through no fault of their own these stars of the Negro leagues didn't have major league exposure. "The purpose here is to recognize the great contributions made by the Negro leagues and I think the stars should be iden- tified and recognized by the public. Eddie Gottlieb, onetime owner of a Negro baseball team and a member of the new selection committee, said the players who would be recognized would have been of major league caliber if there had been no color line at the time they were playing. "If they were inferior players, the com- missioner wouldn't allow them to be re- cognized," Gottlieb said. "They probably would have been of major league caliber if they had played in a later era." According to the rules for selection, play- ers eligible must have played at least 10 years in the Negro baseball leagues up to and including 1946. To be elected, a candidate must receive eight votes from the 10-man committee. Besides Gibson and Paige, others likely ot be considered are Oscar Charleston, a center fielder for the Pittsburgh Crawfords; John Henry Lloyd, a shortstop for the Lincoln, N.Y., Giants; Cool Poppa Bell, a center field- er for the St. Louis Stars; Buck Leonard, a first baseman for the Homestead Greys, Ray Dandridge, a third baseman for the Newark Eagles and Judy Johnson, an infielder for the Crawfords. Johnson and Gottlieb are two of the com- mittee members who will vote on worthy nominees. Roy Campanella, a Hall of Fa- mer who was with the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Monte Irvin, a former player with the New York Giants, also are committee mem- bers. The others are: Everett Barnes, a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee; Frank Forbes, former Negro league player now a boxing judge for the New York Athletic Com- mission; Sam Lacey, sportswriter for the Baltimore Afro-American; Alex Pompez, for- mer owner of a Negro team; Wendell Smith, writer for the Chicago Sun-Times, and Bill Yancey, former star in the Negro leagues. IL 4, FEBRUARY BOOT REDUCTIONS./ /'5 CJLEAN SWEEP SALEl All remaining Winter Boots now reduced 25%J/0to 50%. Leather, suede and vinyl, lined and unlined/F Li styles in Black, Brown, Tan, Red, and Navy. Hurry for best selection. Sizes 512 to 10. NOW tous I