r- - -Ay,- & F .v.--m oe-r-I - 1 I1 1 i / - Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November Page TenTHEMIHIGN-DIL \ f ( -- 4 t . 'i ,:: 1, ' a a ""i J" .. V~ * '\ 4 * t 7l I,. t HOCKEY PLAYERS 10% OFF ANY HOCKEY PURCHASE WITH THIS ADi Skates, Gloves, Pads, Pants and Sticks Moe Sport Shops 711 N. University NO 8-6915 This week, get JBL stereo systems for a song._ By ED LANGE Depth plays an instrumental role in the success of any swim- ming team, and quite often, newcomers have to fill the void left by graduating seniors. Such is the case at Michigan where coach Gus Stager is hoping that this year's frosh will ma-I tare fast enough to help the Wolverine tankers better their third place Big Ten finish of I974. This year's frosh group was requited largely due to the fine reputation that Stager and div- ing coach Dick Kimball have built at Michigan. They come from as far away as California and Puerto Rico. Tom Roos and Brian Wylie are home town products, prepping at Ann Arbor Pioneer where they co-captained the .squad their senior year. Last year Roos was named most valuable swimmer on the This week, get Advent stereo systems for a son g. Vivaldi, Bonacelli, Michaelangello, Marconi, Bernini, Caruso,Garibaldi, Machiavelli, Ferrari, SMussolini, DaVinci... ..- ALL ATE SPAGHETTI Syoushould to at the Vi1 VilageBell EVERY SUNDAY " spaghetti dinner for two * salads, bread & butter * pitcher of beer for two . all for $4.95I tankters ps WHY A WATCH? REASON NO. 33-Be the first to know when your class is over. REASON NO. 39-Use the tick to test your hearing. REASON NO. 62-Keep the Swiss economy going. quality " dependability * style All at a damn fine price! HAMILTON WATCHES AT THE UNIVERSITY CELLAR IN THE BASEMENT OF THE UNION 769-7940 NEW SWIMMERS ADD DEPTH team while Wylie set league records in the 100 yd butter- fly and 200 yd individual med- ley. Two years ago, both were named high school All-Ameri- cans for the 400 yard relay. In the summer of 1973, they were second in the 400 yard relay inI the Junior Olympics. Roos will swim the 200 yard freestyle and help out in the individual medley. Junior vet- eran Tom Szuba calls Roos "a great all round swimmer." Wylie is a butterflier and ac- cording to Coach Stager "is coming along quite well." Clark Kogen hails from Mountain Lakes, New Jersey where he was fourth in the state in the breaststroke last year. During the summer he swam for the Princeton Aqua- tic Asociation and he is noted for being a hard worker. When asked about Kogen, Szuba stated simply "I can't believe how hard he works." Stager complimented Clark by say- ing "he's the most improved frosh on the squad." Dick Brown is from Shaker Heights, Ohio and will likely perform in the butterfly and the individual medley. This past summer he swam for the AAU affiliate, Lake Erie Silver Dol- phins. Stager calls him "a multi- purpose swimmer, "basically an IM (individual medley) man." Brown cited that the "very fine academics and the campus" were some of his rea- sons for coming to Michigan but added that he chose Michi- gan "because of Gus Stager." The Wolverine swim team al- so has a member from Puerto Rico-John Daly. He went to high school in San Juan and was the island's butterfly champ for the past two years. Last summer, he competed in the Central American Games in Santo Domingo where he won five medals, two in the butter- fly and three in the relays. He was also supposed to compete in the World Games in Bel- grade but he broke his foot. In Belgrade he met Gus Stager and Gus talked to him about coming here. "My uncle, Jack Daly, is a good friend of Gus and he told me what a good school it was, but Gus really impressed me," commented Daly. William "Whit" Davis is a native of Irvine, California and was a high school All-American for four years as a breast- stroker. Davis was also an All- California water polo player and this summer participated in an AAU international water polo tourney. Freshman divers, Jim Black and Curt Wilson, have been impressive so far. Black is from Grand Rapids and went to Northview High School, where he took the State Class B championship the past two years and followed up his senior year by placing fifth and seventh in the YMCA na- tionals last April. Surprisingly, Black did not start competitive diving until his sophomore year. in high school. Jim said that Michigan's aca- demics played a big part in his choice, especially the art program, but he also said that Dick Kimball also was a fac- tor. "He pulls out Olympic champs and I was hoping a little of this would rub off on me," quipped Black. Wilson is another fine fresh- man diver from Palos Verdes Peninsula, California, where he was the California Interscholas- tic Federation diving champion his sophomore and junior year and runnerup last year. This summer, Curt was the state AAU champion for his age group (17-18) off the one and three meter boards. He liked the diving program at Michigan and also mention- ed that "I've lived in Cali- fornia all my life and I wanted to see something else, so I choose Michigan." According to diving coach Dick Kimball they both "have a lot of courage' but stressed that they had to work on their lineups and on consistency. None the less, Kimball stated that they would be battling Dave Eddy, Kirk Donaldson and Tom Caluory for the spots behind returning national finalists, Don Craine and Dick Quint. Make a mental note: Tech Hifi has special savings on systems with JBL components. -1 I 122 East Washington Street, Ann Arbor. Make a mental note: Tech Hifi has special savings on systems with Advent components. 122 East Washington St Ann Arbor. K ,: 'i5 ' !,? I~YI 1 .0 d" - -8 mm&jum - om - - mll A - r. ,r. -- . -.. 0 IDooLe TGIF Thank God It's Friday s= ions ,Now, 6m: rigs=; L "V- :> '"tfz=- u Iti , . ...- OFFICE HOURS CIRCULA TION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-4 p.m. i L " i lid '' I A to __ __ _ 17 n {, " ". { A" " ' Y. ;, r'c Ywif: i < ti > k G ': :.., 4. i. : ...:: ::{. ... ._..u '.. !..':.... 5 1 : p;: S , t Y 4 i S .+ . ' .K.. ,v:.y: : .s:w.".+ S ;r r _ p Y. ^ . ' +. X .o'. ., ,'i: M -w - Today and every Friday -15c Hot Dogs 2.5 P.M. WHILE THEY LAST Ski Movies every Mon. & Tues. Nites Live Entertainment: SOUNDS by CRAIG MARSDEN Every Sunday night 1-10 P.M. N O E NO . '' C V EN (YVF Sam, CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 man Was P- % ' lEli ROSE* BOWL. Information Now Available Call Travel World Corp. 313-994-0244 310 MAYNARD I ci ..., ,,,. ,a,..r...,.. .. N., .,.,y. ..., , I -- - 1 ROSE BOWL vOUND CELEBRATE WITH DOME NO'S PIZZA FAST, HOT, FREE DELIVERY Central Campus-761-1111 North Campus-769-5511 Georgetown Mail-971-5555 mmmm... .. ...- .. .... .. -- - --- m -.m mmmm - .-m..-m - mm mm mm. . mc.---.. - -- This coupon good for -7r er 10 a m.-4 p.m.. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY--12:00 pm. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRIDAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- THURSDAY at 5 p.m- DEADLINE 2 days in advance by 3 p.m. Friday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday's paper ANNIVERSARY SALE Enjoy the l o n g lasting Luxury of Authentic PER- 4 10% SALE: SIAN RUGS All Persian Rugs j y::