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March 24, 1971 - Image 8

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-03-24

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, March 24 1971

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 24, 1971

STUDY RENAISSANCE ART AND CULTURE
IN FLORENCE, ITALY
Live in a Renaissance Villa
The Sarah Lawrence College
Summer Session in Florence, Italy
JUNE 26th to AUGUST 5th
$800 Room, Board, Tuition
Courses in The Art of Michelangelo, Renaissance Art in Tuscany,
Humanism Philosophy and the Renaissance Arts, Italian Lan-
guage, Italian Renaissance Literature, 6 credit hours acceptable
at Michigan.
f Program directed by PROFESSOR CHARLES TRINKAUS
of University of Michigan History Department-Study Abroad Office
For brochures and applications see Jan Apple, '1223 Angell Hall
or call Professor Trinkhaus, 761-5864

GRAD
COFFEE HOUR
This Thursday
4-6,p.m.
RACKHAM

Super Bowl to New Orleans;
Tar Heels lose ace Wuycik
By The Associated Press
. PALM BEACH, Fla. - New Orleans was a surprise selection
on the 14th ballot to host the Super Bowl game Jan. 16, 1972, Com-
missioner Pete Rozelle of the National Football League announced
yesterday.
The Super Bowl was played in New Orleans following the 1969
season before a crowd in excess of 80,000 as the Kansas City
Chiefs upset the Minnesota Vikings 23-7 in Tulane Stadium, site of
the Sugar Bowl.
Miami and Dalas, bidding to host the game for the first time
at the new 65,000-seat Texas Stadium, were considered the favorites
going into the race among six cities.
. CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - North Carolina forward Dennis Wuycik
will definitely be unable to play tomorrow night when the Tar Heels
face Duke in the semifinals of the National Invitational Tournament
in New York City, UNC announced yesterday.
Wuycik, UNC's leading scorer with an 18.4 average, suffered a
knee injury last Saturday in North Carolina's NIT opener against
Massachusetts .He missed Monday's quarterfinal game against Pro-
vidence.
* * *
0 NEW YORK - The National Basketball Association decided
yesterday that undergraduates still can not be selected in the up-
coming college draft.
Commissioner Walter Kennedy made the announcement follow-
ing an all-day meeting of NBA owners, including Seattle's Sam Shul-
man, who had indicated previously that he might choose a collegian
whose class would not graduate in June.

Wolverine golfers open
with Miami Invitational

Norelco introduces the micro-thin head.
Shaves up to 44% closer,50% faster
than ever before.

By BOB HEUER
While the snow continued to fall
and turn to slush in Ann Arbor
last week, eight members of the
Michigan golf team packed their
bags and headed for the sunny
South to whip their games into
shape and battle it out for the
first four varsity positions.
The arena of competition for
the golfers is the Miami Inter-
collegiate Invitational Tourna-
ment where 40 of the nation's best
college teams will get together for
four days and plod the fairways
seeking both team and individual
honors.
Michigan golfers who made the
Florida trip were Capt. John Ros-
ka, Jim Robson, and Rocky Pozza,
all seniors; juniors Gary Balliet,
Dan Hunter, and Pete Clark;
sophomore Neil Spitalny, and
freshman Jon Dale.
In a pre-tournament triangular
meet held yesterday, Michigan
finished in t h e middle, behind
Miami and ahead of little Alma
College. The five-man totals were:
Miami 364, Michigan 385, and Al-
ma 414.
Medalist for the Wolverines was
Robson who fired a 73. Robson
was followed by Spitalny with a
76, Dale 77, Pozza, 79, and Hunt-
er, 80.
Competition in the Miami In-
vitational begins today and con-j
tinues through Saturday with each
team playing six men every day,
and taking the low four scores.
Favorites in the field include
defending champion Florida, Flor-
ida State, and the University of
Miami, all warm weather schools

In fact, the Florida trip is the1
first official outdoor look, coaches
Bill Newcomb and his assistant'
Bill Newton will have - at theirt
charges.
For the players who could afford
to get there on their own, theret
was a trip to Georgia over spring
break. Spitalny was low man everyt
day shooting in the low seventies,
and overall, Spitalny has been thez
most consistent performer so far.
Among the other veterans, Poz-c
za, Roska and Balliet all playedt
last year and must be regarded as1
front-runners in the battle for the
first four spots. Pete Clark playedr
consistently well last fall and willr
also challenge the leaders.

hockey team.
Upon their return from Florida,
the team will next see action in
the Kepler Invitational Tourna-
ment in Columbus, Ohio on the
weekend of April 10. The field at
Columbus will include most of the
Big Ten teams and some of the,
top Southern schools.
There will be no Big Ten dual
meet season as such this year. The
season will be made up almost ex-
clusively of weekend invitational
tournaments with, up to 20 teams
participating. The Big Ten title
will be determined solely on the
results of the conference tourna-
ment held near the end of the
season.

which lend themselves to year- Breathing down the necks of
round golf. the top eight are sophomores
As far as individual perform- Chuck Burnham. Peter Spitalny,
ances go, the players haven't seen Neil's twin brother, a n d junior
enough action to separate the men Paul McIntosh.
from the boys yet; it's quite diffi- A capable freshman delegation
cult to see which man hit a is headed by Dale and also in-
straighter 4-iron shot when both cludes Rene Desmarais and Bill
balls are hit off a rubber mat and Blanchard. Desmarais traded in
travel all of 20 feet before being his hockey stick for his golf clubs
engulfed in an equalizing nylon a few weeks ago after performing
net. as a forward on the Wolverine ,

OR m New super Microgroove'
J 0.09mm-thin heads shave
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New 90-slot design O© shaves
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iIVe/CO
0 1971 North American Philips Corporation,
100 East 42nd Street, New York, N. Y. 10017..

U

..:~'4,.
} <!
featuring original works of
graphic art-etchings,
lithographs,-by leading
20th century artists:
Picasso Dali

XWrAVS

'Liberated Seven' battle in
National Swim Tournament

1 .

DID YOU RECEIVE
OUR SHERWOOD S.O.S.?

4i 1

The Liberated Seven on Michi-
gan's women's swim team are out
in Arizona battling the top teams
in the country with their limited
squad.
The team is liberated because as
a club sport it has to pay its own
way. It is small because most peo-
ple don't want to. In spite of this
obvious disadvantage, the swim-
mers have done remarkably well
this season, winning the Michi-
gan relays and coming in third in
the International and Big Ten
meets.

Miro,
Chagall
Searle
Vasarely

Calder
Friedlaender
Rouault
and others.

IT'S WAITING FOR YOU NOW
HCI-Ft BUYS
ain Phone
Ann Arbor - East Lansing

628 S. Ma

769-4700

IL
rE

MERIDIAN GALLERY'S
2nd Annual Art Auction
SUNDAY, MARCH 28th
The Main Ballroom
WEBER'S INN
3050 JACKSON ROAD
Auction time: 3:00 p.m.
Exhibition of art: 1:00-3:00 p.m.

All new works!

Admission FREE

The Up Against the Wall Street Journal
presents
FOUR FORUMS
FOR POLITICAL DISCUSSION
1. ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT
WED., MARCH 24
7:30 P.M., Michigan Union Assembly Hall
2. WORKERS
WED., MARCH 31
7:30 P.M., Angell Hall Auditorium D
3. COMMUNITY ORGANIZERS
WED., APRIL 7
7:30 P.M., Angell Hall Aud. D
4. ORGANIZING THE "U"
THURS., APRIL 8.
7:30 P.M., East Quad Rm. 126

S1

Michifish perform

THE GREAT SOUNDS ON
ATLANTIC-.ATCO- COTILLION

Cathy Mancino, co-captain of
the team, said it could have won
all the meets if it had been able
to get enough swimmers to the
meets. She added that Michigana
State had three Olympic swim-
mers last year which allowed it
to wipe Michigan out in the In-
ternational and Big Ten meets.
The strongest swimmer on the
team is senior Johanna Cook who
managed a double win at the Big
Ten meet in the breast stroke.
She's been on the team four years

1

and is in Arizona now compet-
ing in the National Inter-Colleg-
iate Championships for Women.
Juniors Janet Gardner and Pam
Pfleegor are also in Arizona com-
peting in the individual medley
and the sprint freestyle, respec-
tively.
In the diving competition will be
Senior Mary Bennet, freshman
Grace Drennan and junior Barb
Kaufmann. They were trained by
volunteer diving coach Allen Gag-
net.
In the medley will be Gardner,
Pfleegor, Bennet and Cook, train-
ed by volunteer coach, Tom Aru-
'NA playffs
on tonight
for 4 teams
By The Associated Press
Four National Basketball As-
sociation teams are moving into
the first round of the post-season
layoffs tonight and four m o r e
are awaiting action later this
week.
Tonight Central Division champ-
ion Baltimore opens its series with
Atlantic Division runner-up Phil-
adelphia and Pacific Division
Champion Los Angeles entertains
midwest runner-up Chicago.
San Francisco and Milwaukee, 1
and New York and Atlanta begin
their best-of-seven series on
Thursday and Saturday respec-
tively.

On this Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday evenings, March 25,
26, 27, MICHIFISH, the syncro-
nized swim club of the Univer-
sity of Michigan, will present
their annual water show at the
Margaret Bell Pool. The show,
titled Myth or Miracle, begins
at 8:15, and will include rou-
tines by the Michigan trampo-
line team. Tickets are avail-
able for all three performances
and may be purchased for $1.25
at the Woman's Pool this week
or at the door just prior to, the
shows.

M-Pin Bowling
SUNDAY-1 p.m.-Mid.
Michigan Union

i

1rl

[2

i

CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG
FOUR WAY STREET
Atlantic SD 2-902 (Two LP Set)

WODDSTOCK TWO
Cotillion SD 2-400 (Two LP Set)

DAVID CROSBY
IF I COULD ONLY REMEMBER MY NAME
Atlantic SD7203

STILL HAVEN'T CITECKELIOUT

SOS DAYS AT HI-FI

BUYS?

Gus Johnson the ailing captain
of the Bullets, predicts a five-game
victory for Baltimore over Phil-
adelphia. "We should knock them
off in five games with Wes and
myself healthy, Johnson said.
The problem, however, may be
just how healthy forward John-
son and center Wes Unseld really
are. Both have missed much ac-
tion during the closing weeks of
the season.
Another problem for Baltimore
is trying to hold down the 76ers
highscoring Billy Cunningham.
Crippled by the loss of super-
star Jerry West, the Lakers face
a tough assignment against t h e
Chicago Bulls in their series.
Chicago came on fast in the sea-
son's final month to win the play-
off assignment. Bob Love and
Chet Walker provide a potent one-
two scoring duo with Tom Beer-
winkle the board strength.
Love averaged 25.2 through the
season and Walker 22.0.
With West out, the Lakers must
count even more on 7-foot-1 Wilt
Chamberlain, who came back with
determination from last year's
knee operation and averaged 20.7
points per game while playing all
82. He led the NBA in rebounds
with 1,493.
New From Levi!
For the Student Body:
Boot Jeans

}'

KING CRIMSON
LIZARD
Atlantic SD 8278

ALEX TAYLOR
WITH FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
Capricorn SD 860

KATE TAYLOR
SISTER KATE
Cotillion SD 9045

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check it out with the other higher or lower priced systems we have during S.O.S. DAYS
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