SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April $, 1971 Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April 6, 1971 (Continued from Page 5) PERSONAL IT'S A WONDER anything this good is legal The Four Rivers Company, 769- 8235, dist. for waterbed company. Prices start at $30. cF99 FIDDLERS' CONVENTION - good old mountain music in the spring. We're looking for a ride to N. Carolina Apr. 9. Call 761-0232 if you have any in- formation. dF73 RADICAL LESBIANS - Get it togeth- er! Meeting tonight, 8:00, 224 Tyler, Sesidential College. New people es- ecially welcome. 78F71 TOM couldn't get his motor to start. It was causing his girlfriend to part. He bought a waterbed,completely lost his head, and now he's afeared for his heart. Love, Tom and Harry cFto ISRAEL-AMSTERDAM - Tours trans- portation and more, July 1-Aug. 19, Coll. & Univ. age-cheap. Write Mori Herscowitz, 5658 S. D r e x e 1, Chicago, Ill. 60637. 53F71 BOWLING, Table Tennis, Billiards, re- duced 9-noon Mon.-Sat. Union. M Pin Bowling Sun. 1 p.m.-mid. cF73 CAN YOU BELIEVE IT? Tom and Harry have sold enough waterbeds so that they can offer Klngsize waterbeds for $29. Special finals sale to brighten those bleak days. Wave of the Future. 214 E. Washington, 769-9020. cFtc CONGRATULATIONS Marc Etheridge! All-Campus Bowling Champ! cF71 GRAD COFFEE HOUR-Wednesday, 4-6 p.m., 4th floor, Rackham. cF72 BELLA ABZUG is coming. April 17, 2 p.m., 331 Thompson. Don. 75F74 AUTO TUNE-UP & REPAIR. U.S. and import cars. Still ludicrously reason- able. A.A. .Motorsports (student own- ed/operated). 662-6746. 28F75 RE-ORDER YOUR PRIORITIES. Help disturbed children. Attend "Tristana". Vth Forum Theatre. April 7. 33F72 THINK YOU'RE pregnant? Call 76- GUIDE for Problem Pregnancy Coun- seling Referral. cFD TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 PERSONALt Turn on Your Radio in the' A.M. Tiny's. on WNRZ-FM 102.9. 1290 Too. He Plays Good Music-and Tells Bad Jokes. cFtc GIRL TRAVELING to EUROPE May 5, UAC 007, wishes travelling companion. 764-1677. dF78 SINCE ALMOST all gem diamonds come from Africa, a brand label for a ring mounting does not guarantee the quality of the major diamond in the ring. Austin Diamond, 1209 . University, 663-7151. cF Creative Photography WEDDINGS andportraits. Professional quality at student rates. Call John Evans at 769-0053 for appointment tot see portfolio . F60 HAPPY BIRTHDAY LITTLE LOVE, SKIP 37F71 HAPPINESS FOR $12.95 If you love your VW give it plugs and 'points and a 'complete tune up on our spring sale. Wagon Werke, 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor. 662-2576. 60F781 RICHARD LEE, Inc. PLEASE, don't price me against the_ businessmen operating studios. I'm NOT THE CHEAPEST Photographer -the best is slightly more expensive than the rest. Call 761-9452 for quality. Ftc 3% minute walk from a good flick at the Campus CARRIAGE HOUSE 1224 Washtenaw 665-8825 cFtc UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER presents EUROPE $159.00 SUMMER: DETROIT DEPARTURES { CA007 Det-Lon-Det 5/5 - 6/8 $159.00 CP049 Wind-Ams-Lon- , Wind 5/6-6/17 $179.00 CA08 Det-Lon-Det 5/6-6/21 $159.00 CA94 Det-Lon-Det 5/6-6/21 $159.00 CP071 D-Ams-Lon-Det 5/15 - 6/6 $189.00 CA009 Det-Lon-Det 5/15 - 8/15 $199.00 CAOO1 Det-Lon-Det 6/28 - 8/28 $219.00 CA002 Det-Lon-Det 6/29 - 8/26 $219.00 CAO1O Det-Lon-Det 7/2 - 8/19 $219.00{ CAO51 Det-Lon-Det 8/1 - 9/1 $219.00 SUMMER: N.Y. DEPARTURES DA014 N.Y.-Lon-N.Y. 5/31-8/13 $199.00 CA013 N.Y,-Lon-N..Y. 6/29 - 7/30 $209.00 Administrative and Travel Services by Students International UAC Travel, 2nd floor Michigan Union 763-2147 or 769-5790. 2Ftc YOUR DRUGSTORE away from home. Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. Ili cFtc ac rossemen sweep weekend competition PERSONAL IT'S A WONDER anything this good is 1Pg . ThQ Fmi Mvri ~mmn i iegai .une rour rvers uompany, 769-1 8235, dist. for Waterbed Company. By RICH STUCK Prices start at $30. cFP99 possessing what may be the fin- The Cecil Taylor Unit tonight (9:30- est team in the midwest, the 2 a.m.) STRATA CONCERT GAL- , i T Clah4 n a LERY, 2554 Mich. Ave., Detroit. 54F69 Tired of those greasy kid jocks? switch to TINY, a dirty old freak. WNRZ-FM STEREO, 102.9, PLEASE 1290, TOO. cFtc ATTENTION - Pinball freaks, the Wiz- ard has come to Mark's Coffee House (605 E. William) bringing a room full f pinballs. DF7O DEAR MILDRED Go to the Wagon Werke at once. I just traded 75 lb. of brown rice for a spring tune-up worth $12.95. It's just off Industrial Hwy. in Ann Arbor, 1245 Rosewood, phone 662-2576. 59F78, GOING TO EUROPE? Girl needs tra- vel companion May-June. Call 764- 7618. 79F73 FREE Computer Dating information. Send name, address to Data-Mate, 1324 CD Commerce Center, Lansing. 99F80 Red is a rose, green is the grass, you'll feel much better, with a waterbed under your mass. Love, Tom and Harry cFtc WATER BEDS - don't consider this a fad. Proven to aid the back and aid, the couple. 50 yr. guarantee. All sizes. Lowest price anywhere. Willing to make deals on 5 or more. Four Rivers Co. 769-8235. cFtc HYPNO-THERAPY: to help you lose weight and stop smoking. Douglas Beltz, 761-0440. cFtc GIRLS! rt d T.R~ i i ffin wok in c rergan Lacrosse uu power eu its way to two victories over the weekend. After beating Michigan State, 8-3 Saturday, the lacross- men came back Sunday to defeat the Cleveland Lacrosse Club 11- 8. With the two wins Michigan's season record now stands at four wins against only one loss. On Saturday the Wolverines ran into both adverse weather and a very physical squad from MSU. Although trailing at the half 4-2, the Spartans were actually out- hustling Michigan on grounballs. In the second half, however, Mich- igan came on strong to outscore 'the visitors by three goals, nullify- ing any hopes the Greenies may have held for a second half come- back. The scoring for Michigan was pretty well divided, as seven play- ers tallied the eight goals. Lead- ing the way was Sandy Ervin with two goals, while Roger Mills had a goal and three assists, and S k i p Flanagan notched a goal and two assists. The combination of Steve Hart and Don Holman who play- ed so brilliantly in the trouncing of Bowling Green last Wednesday, both continued their fine scoring as they each tallied one goal. The other goals were scored by Mich- igan's outstanding midfielders, Don Dworsky and Dick Deald. An important aspect of t h i s game was Michigan's ability to effectively kill off the unusual time accumulated by Michigan should indicate the roughness of the tilt. As coach Bob Kaman comment- ed, "It was a pretty physical af- fair. We won that game but we have to play them again Wednes- day and they're really going to be out looking for us." The squad from Cleveland that played here Sunday threw quite a scare into Michigan at the open- ing of the contest, jumping to a quick 2-0 lead. After the second goal Kaman immediately asked for a time-out to talk with his start-* led troops. What he said should be recorded for future use, as Michi- gan took complete control of the game and thundered to a 10-2 third period advantage. Kaman said, "The guys really came alive after being behind. The only thing I told them was that we would have to start play- ing better lacrosse if we expected to win." After blitzing Cleveland for ten straight goals, Michigan had to hang on tenaciously for the vic- tory. They withstood a furious really that saw Cleveland net six consecutive goals to close with- in two, 10-8. But Michigan held on to register the win, scoring an insurance tally with five seconds remaining to pad the final margin. As far as the individual scor- ing was concerned, Michigan's Mills completed a great weekend for himself by scoring three goals in Sunday's game. Dean played what Kaman termed "his best game this year" as he accounted for two goals and two assists. Flanagan played well for the se- cond game in a row as he tallied Ervin and Dan Lamble each count- ed a single marker. Ervin added an assist as did another middie Chico Rogers. The midfield line of Ervin, Lamble, and Rogers, therefore, all figured in the scor- ing for the Maize and Blue. Don Holman, however, w a s completely shut out of the scoring column for the first time t h i s season. Holman, a freshman from New York, has been a vital cog in Michigan's attack and they can ill afford to see him go into any kind of a prolonged slump. Coach Kaman expressed o n1 y one note of dissatisfaction over the weekend's games. "I really regret not having the opportunity to play our younger kids; they need some experience," he said. "But we're not playing any patsies and its tough to get them in there." After playing two games in two days this weekend, the lacross- men swing back into action to- morrow with the game at State. With four games remaining on their schedule Michigan can fin- ish with a fine 8-1 record by winning them all. But as Kaman reiterated, "They're all going to be tough because these teams will be waiting for us, since we knock- ed off Bowling Green. 4 -Associated Press The rites of spring ! Baseball is back on the national scene once again. Washington's Mike (Supe) Epstein flaps his wings in vain, but can't get high enough to fly over the glove of Oakland catcher Dave Duncan. Epstein was out, but his team took an 8-0 victory. (See story, photos, page 7.) HOST TWINBILL Diamoudmen oppose Falcons I uiu;i nteestea n oince wor in London this summer? Call Ginny, amount of penalties they received. 769-7029 for information. F10 While garnering 14 infractions, 3z minute walk from -they were able to hold MSU to a fbeers at the Bell only one man-down goal. With their normal penalty time o n 1 y two goals and assisted on three CARRiAGE H OUSE averaging about five minutes alothers. 1224 Washtenaw game, the 14 minutes of penalty Dworsky also scored twice while 665-8825 cFtc WATERBEDROOMS have lots of poten- SIGN WITH NBA- tial. Consider the possibilities at 0 Wave of the Future Waterbeds. Tom and Harry discount everything. 214I E. Washington.769-9020. cFtchig C A nLJVLIN I U Q rr3 SihzPr Send $12.95 in cash silver or gold buillion to the Wagon Werke along with yourVW and get a spring tune- up for "cheep." 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor. 662-2576. 61F78 I/ t_111 I The Ecology Center's "Living With the Earth" Series presents CLIFF HUMPHREY, founder of Calif. Ecology Action TOPIC: "The Environmental Movement and Ecological Life Styles" TUES., APRIL 6 ANN ARBOR YMCA 5th at William Help disturbed children. Attend "Tris- tana", April 7. Vth Forum Theatre. MAEDC. 35F72 CAN'T GET IT UP? Maybe you need a Wave of the Future Waterbed. Re- sults not guaranteed but lots of fun trying. See Tom, Harry, and Cathy at 214 E. Washington for further con- sultation. 769-9020. eFtc EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc 1SALES CONSULTANT, "PLACING SALESMEN IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 2155 Jackson Rd., Suite 101. 769-8270 Ftc WOW: That Wilbur! Guess they'll put up with almost anybody who's FUNI in the basement snack bar of the Michigan League. Open daily except Sunday, 7:15-4:00. For those who like atmosphere, good food, and insane prices. cF72 * ...... CLIP AND SAVE ..o.eso YOUR ABORTION!0 IL NLOTTERYIL" " 61" Ca the people who've taken the chancey out of abortion.-" ':(212)490-3600: * OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK " " PROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE, INC. " " 545 Fifth Ave., New York City 10017 " w0 0 There is afee for our service 0 0" By The Associated Press The Cleveland Cavaliers and the Buffalo Braves of the Na- tional Basketball Association an- nounced the signings of their top draft choices yesterday. The Cavaliers inked a c o n - tract with Austin Carr, named College Player of the Year by the Associated Press. The Braves signed 7-foot, 250- pound Elmore Smith from Ken- tucky State, but disclosed little of the contract terms. Cavaliers' owner Nick Miletti would say only that Carr was signed to "a contract fitting the No. 1 college player in the country." It was estimated that Carr, an All-American selection, had signed for more than $1 million, spread over a multi-year con- tract with the National Basket- ball Association expansion club. Carr, a Washington, D.C:, na- tive, was Cleveland's first choice in the recent NBA college draft. Cleveland had- first choice in the draft. Present for the signing w e r e Carr's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Carr Sr., his brothers, Roderick and Arnold, and his agents, Jerry Davis and L e w i s Schaffel of New York. Carr was the second leading scorer in the nation the past two years and averaged 34.5 points a game in his three years at Notre Dame, where he accumu- A\. 1 CHRISTIAN DIOR HOSIERY SALE April ist through April 14th. . just a limited time to save on fine stockings' and panty stockings in the fashion colors of spring. Actionweor'stretch stockings. 3-pair box reg. 5.25. . . Now 4.15 Sheer nylon stockings. 3-pair box reg. 5.25. . . Now 4.15 fated 2,560 total points. He aver- aged 37.9 points a game his sen- ion year and 38.1 points a game as a junior. He was the second player in college history to score 1,000 or more points in two successive seasons. Louisiana State Univer- sity's Pete Maravich, now w i t h Atlanta, was the first. Carr's career point average also is second only to that of Maravich. His total points rank him fifth in all-time c o 11 e g e scoring. Buffalo Braves' Owner Paul L. Snyder said the payments to Smith, the Kentucky State star will be spread over "approxi- mately a 20-year period." But Snyder declined to say how long Smith is obligated to play for the Braves, except that it is a multiyear pact. Smith, who flew to Buffalo. from Kentucky for the contract- signing and news conference, also was tight-lipped about the contract terms. Asked if it were true that he had turned down a $2.2 million offer from the Carolina Coug- ars, which picked him in the American Basketball Association draft, Smith said, "Yes." "Why did you decide to sign with the Braves in the NBA?" he was asked. "I think it's a better league," Smith said. "Did you put that above mon- ey?" 'Yes." Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad By BOB ANDREWS The Wolverine diamondmen, al- ready once thwarted in their at- tempt to open theirs 171 home sea- son, will get their second crack at, it today as they host Bowling Green in a doubleheader at Fisher Stadium beginning at 2 p.m. Last Saturday, it was snowy weather that forced their twinbill against the University of Detroit to be postponed. For Michigan, the starting corps of Mickey Elwood, Pete Helt, Jim Burton and Tom Fleszar, all will probably see some action during the course of the two seven inning contests. During the spring trip in Ari- zona, these hurlers were quite ef- fective in stifling the foe, as they all compiled earned run averages of less than 2.00. Not once in those Theismann signs with A rgonauts TORONTO (;P) - John Bassett, chairman of the board of the Tor- onto Argonauts, said yesterday he has signed Notre Dame quarter- back Joe Theismann to a two-year contract with the Canadian Foot- ball League club. Theismann, fourth-round draft choice of the Miami Dolphins, thus surprised the Canadian team which had given up on him after he was reported to have reached agree- ment with the National Football League team. In Miami, Dolphins' managing general partner Joe Robbie issued a statement saying he expects Theismann to play for the Dol- phins. "We reached full agreement with Joe Theismann concerning the fin- ancial terms and the length of his contract when he was in Miami. We have never discussed or changed the amount of his salary 01r bonus or the length of his con- tract since the press conference in which he participated and ex- pressed his complete satisfaction," Robbie's statement said. ten games did Coach Mob; Bene- dict need to call in a reliever. The main reason why Michigan finished with a record as poor as they did, six wins, four defeats, was, because the pitching never got the timely hitting they needed for sup- port. Leading the team in hitting dur- ing the trip were outfielders Mike Bowan and John Hornyak, both compiling an average of .333. Also contributing with fine offensive performances were Pat Sullivan, who seemed to do all the timely hitting as he drove in eleven runs in ten games, and Jon Lonchar, who hit at a .275 clip. Although he had a very disap- pointing spring at the plate, Tom Kettinger will most likely draw, a starting assignment in the out- field along with Bowan and Horn- yak. The other probably starters for the Wolverine squad will be Mike Rafferty at shortstop, Mike Carrow/' at third, Jim Kocolowski at second, Lonchar behi d the plate, and Sullivan taking care of the duties at first base. In addition to the lack of timely and aggressive nitting, Benedict's other major worry was the de- fensive play of the left side of his infield. Bath Carrow and Rafferty committed a number of miscues and Benedict will surely have a good deal ?of his attention focused on whether this situation improves. For Bowling Green, the stars of their own spring excursion were Rod Allen who hit .395, Tom Ben- nett (.316), Gary Hass (.289) and Bruce Raser (.280). Their mound ace, Steve Price, who had two vic- tories against no defeats should see some action during the twin- bill. Gop ers get new cage coach Four Bruins named all-stars By The Associated Press * MINNEAPOLIS - The University of Minnesota, spurned by Murray State's Cal Luther, announced the selection Monday of de- fensive coaching wizard Bill Musselman to take over its basketball program. Musselman, 30, built a national reputation for his defensive teams at Ashland, Ohio, College and posted a 120-30 record in six seasons there. Luther, 'athletic director and basketball coach at the Kentucky school, had accepted the Minnesota job last Friday and said at a news conference he had agreed to a four-year contract. But the 43-year-old Murray State coach left town earlier than expected Saturday and then informed university officials he had changed his mind because of what Minnesota officials said were per- sonal and family reasons. * * * * MONTREAL - Four members of the Boston Bruins and two from the New York Rangers comprised the 1970-71 National Hockey League All-Star team selected Monday by the Hockey News. The weekly publication named forwards Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge and Johnny Bucyk and defenseman Bobby Orr of Boston and goalie Ed Giacomin and defenseman Brad Park of New York. Named to the second team were goalie Jacques Plante and center Dave Keon of Toronto, left wing Bobby Hull and defenseman Keith Magnuson of Chicago and right wing Yvan Cournoyer and defense- man J. C. Tremblay of Montreal. " PITTSBURGH - The local NAACP chapter said Monday it will picket the Pittsburgh Pirates' season opener Tuesday and, asked black Pirate players not to cross it. The target of the threatened picketing is the Iron City brewery which the NAACP contends has only 26 black employes among 670. Ex-Yankee hurler dead, killed Indian with itch ' f. 1 THE JAW- STRETCHER BIG SCOT 49c double cheeseburger pleaser Sactty's 3362 Washtenaw St. (Just up from Arborland) I WAX-9. U I PRESENTS QUICKSILVER MESSENGER SERVICE -PLUS- BREWER AND SHIPLEY SAT., APRIL 10-8:30 P.M. MASONIC AUD. $5.00, $4.00, $3.00. Tickets available at Masonic Box Office and all J.L. Hudson ticket outlets I SAN DIEGO WP) - Carl Mays, the New York Yankees pitcher who threw the pitch that hit and killed' Cleveland batter Ray Chapman in 1920 is dead. He was 79 years old. Mays, the winner of 208 games as a hurler for four major league why cart clothes h a Call Green We'll deliv Fill it with y We'll picki Store them Next fall-c all those ome? le's Cleaners today! er a storage box- your winter garments- it up-clean your garments- in our air conditioned vault. -give us a call. We'll deliver- MAIL ORDERS: Send check or money order with self-addressed stamped envelope: Masonic Box Office, 500 Temple, Detroit, Michigan 48201 Passover Is Almost Here! The First Seder-This Friday night, April 0 BOWLING FOOSBALL BI LLIARDS TABLE TENNIS UNION clubs and later a scout for 20 years, , died Sunday in suburban El Cajon Valley Hospital. He had been suf- fering from pneumonia the past few weeks. The submarine pitcher shook off the effects of Chapman's death to finish the 1920 season with 26 vic- tories. He steadfastly maintained* that Chapman lunged out of the batter's box when he was hit. The following year Mays posted a 27-9 record, his career high, and from then on started a slow de- cline. In 1924 he was traded to the Cincinnati Reds, that year win- ning 20 against 9 losses. He was 19-12 with the Reds in 1923. III