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February 13, 1975 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-02-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, February 13, 1975

i

'M' diver Craine aims

for

Moore,

Oly

By JEFF LIEBSTER
This weekend begins Don
Craine's dive for the top. It
will be the first of three times
in the next six weeks he is to
face Ohio State's Tim Moore,
last year's Big Ten and NCAA
diving champ.
Craine, a native of sunny Fort
Lauderdale, is the premier diver
on Michigan's swim team. In
last year's national AAU cham-
pionships, he finished fifth in the
one meter competition and sixth s
off the three meter board.
This Saturday at 4:00 p.m.
Michigan hosts the Buckeyes
swim team at Matt Mann Pool.1
Also, on Friday at 8:00 p.m.
there will be a special diving
match between Craine and
Moore. For the team, Saturday's
meet will probably mean an-
other dual meet victory. For
Craine, it means the beginning
of his big showdown.
TIMMY MOORE, State's ace,
boasts one of the finest array of

Katy Mellen. Graduated in '71 with a
B.S. in Textiles and Clothing. Doing
well - and moving forward - in Car-
gill's Commodity Marketing Divison
Graduating Seniors and M.B.A.'s:
Accounting * Agriculture - Business -
Engineering + Liberal Arts
Cargill-at the leading edge. Active in agricu
tural, industrial, and consumer commoditie
and products, and in a variety of other relate
businesses. You could be there! We need to
people for a wide range of positions, caree
that lead to management. Our policy is-
stimulate leadership potential. To encourag
personal creativity. To recognize and rewa
' individual achievement. And to promote fro
within
A Carqill representative wi11 be interviewing o
campus February 26. Check with the placemen
office now for the dates and location. Loo
into leadership!

diving credentials ever estab-
lished. The hard working pre-
med student, while managing to
maintain a 3.95 grade point
average, has collected 12 major
titles, including 5 Big Ten
championships, last year's NC-
AA title off both boards, and
several others.
Both divers have lost only
once in dual meet competition
this season, and it was to the
same opponent, Billy Heinz of
Princeton.
Craine, the former Florida
State low board champ, as-
sessed his chances against
Moore as "very good."
"It could go either way," he
surmised. "I definitely could
win it, but I can't afford to
miss a dive."
CRAINE'S teammate and fel-
low diver Dick Quint expressed
confidence in Don's ability to'
beat Moore. "Don's been work-
ing so hard that he appears
deceptively stale in practice,"
said Quint. "He hasn't missed a
workout since September, and
will be ready for Moore."
Craine will definitely have to
dive his best on Saturday after-
noon because Moore is coming
off a spectacular performance.
Last week against Michigan
State, Moore amassed a remark-
able 380 points. Craine's best
score is around 360.
"That was the best three
meter performance I've ever
seen," said Buckeye diving
coach Ron O'Brien. "He's an
amazing diver."

'mpics
Bearing all this in mind,
Craine will really have his work
cut out for him. He realizes
what he has to do, and appears
calm and willing to do it.
DIVING HAS not become
second nature at all for Don,
even though he has been doing
it for 16 years. He still works
2 -3 hours daily and has im-
proved steadily over his three
years at Michigan. Craine en-
joys being here, diving, and he
is especially fond of Coach Dick
Kimball.
"COACH KIMBALL is the
greatest," exclaimed Craine.
"He is the best coach in the
world. He makes working out
lots more fun because of all
the innovations he introduces.
I'm always learning something
new."
Craine, a junior in the school
of education, has several goals;
immediate and long-range. He's
working on Big Ten, NCAA and
AAU diving championships, and
aspires to represent the United
States in the 1976 Olympics in
Montreal. But his love of diving
and respect for his coach are
accentuated by his expressed
desire to be like Kimball, a
coach.
Don has a firm foundation for
his dream, not because of his
dedication or love of the sport,
but because of the confidence
he exudes and will undoubtedly
pass on to his students.

es
ed
op
rs
to
ge
rd
m
n
nt
k

SCIENCEi
FICTION
FANTASY
FESTIVAL
FEB. 13-16 ONLY
Community
Newscenter
301 S. UNIVERSI TY

Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS
MICHIGAN STATE'S Terry Furlow, the Big Ten's leading scorer averaging over 21 points a
game, is on probation by Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke for an incident in a game
February 2 against Illinois. Furlow allegedly punched the Illini's R i c k Schmidt during the
game at Champaign. Here he is shown in action against Michigan last Saturday.
der
'Wgrddr ISports ofTheDal
named to OfDal

JENNIFER BUCHWALD
DEPT. OF PHYSIOLOGY
UCLA MEDICAL CENTER
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

An Equal Opportunity Employer MIF

"Brainstem Substrates of Classical
Conditioning and Habituation"
FEBRUARY 13
MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE SEMINAR SERIES
TEA: 3:15 a.m., Room 2059
SEMINAR: 3:45 p.m., Room 1057

L

-1

-TONIGHT ONLY-
Indochina Peace Compaign in Ann Arbor
presents
Seven Days in May
7:00
with Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Ava Gardner
Burt Lancaster as the chairmmn of the U.S. joint chiefs of
staff who leadsthe Pentagon and some members of Con-
aress in coup against the president and the Constitution,
on the eve of signing an arms treaty with the Soviets.
Chilling, improbable action.

honor roll
Michigan football player Kirk
Lewis has been named to the
first team of the 1974 Academic
All-American team.
Lewis, a 6-3, 240 offensive
guard, is a student in Michigan's
Inteflex Program, an accelerat-
ed six-year medical program.
He carries a 3.13 grade point
average in the highly competi-
tive program.
Lewis, a starter most of the
way last fall, is one of two
Big Ten players named to the
first team. Ohio State's run-
ning back Brian Baschnagel
was the other. Michigan
State's Rich Baes made sec-
ond team offense as a run-
ning back.
The Academic All-American
team is co-sponsored by the
American Heritage Insurance
Company and the collegiate
sports information directors.
World Community Food Bank
presents
A BENEFIT FOR
STARVING CHILDREN
STARRING
'The Dramatics'
'24-Carat Black'

From Wire Service Reports
Furlow on probation
CHICAGO - Michigan State's Terry Furlow, the Big Ten
Conference's leading basketball scorer, was placed on proba-
tion yesterday by Commissioner Wayne Duke for striking Illi-
nois' Rick Schmidt in a Feb. 1 game at Champaign, Ill.
Duke, citing the conference's Sportsmanlike Conduct
Code as applying in the case, said any further act of "un-
sportsmanlike conduct" by Furlow would result in his sus-
pension the remainder of the season.
Duke's action came after a study by conference officials
of a video tape of the incident in which Furlow slammed
Schmidt in the face with his forearm.

s

Davis

jailed

-and-

* BURT LANCASTER 0
ROBERT RYAN 0 WILL GEER
in MARK LANE'S exhaustively researched
EXECUTIVE ACTION
9:30
Lancaster aain, this time as a top professional retained
by the corporate racist Right to assassinate John F. Ken-
nedv. A considerably more probable retrospective'theory of
"change within the system."
"Factual Material never before published."-New York
Times
NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM
FEB. 13
$1.75 single, $2 double-bill contribution-994-9041 A.A.-IPC

LOS ANGELES - Outfielder Willie Davis of the Texas
Rangers has been sentenced to five days in jail after being
found in contempt of court for failing to make support payments
to his divorced wife and their three children.
Davis was originally sentenced to 90 days in jail by Su-
perior Court Commissioner Philip Erbsen, who found him guil-
ty on 18 counts of contempt Tuesday.
But 85 days of the sentence were stayed on the condi-
tion the former Los Angeles Dodgers' baseball player start
support payments of $1,750 a month and serve five days
behind bars.
According to court records Davis, recently traded from the
Montreal Expos to Texas, earns $110,800 a year and had made
no support payments during an 18-month period.
The couple was divorced in January of 1974.
Champ turns pro
BLOOMINGTON, MINN.-Harold "Champ" Henson, the
Ohio State fullback who sank to obscurity the past two seasons
after leading the nation in scoring as a sophomore, has signed
with the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League.
Henson suffered a knee injury early in the 1973 season
and was awirded another year of eligibility. He was also
eligible for this year's pro draft and Minnesota took him
in the fourth round.
"I decided after the Michigan game last fall that I was go-
ing to pass up my last year of eligibility. I didn't even get into
that game."
Snowed out
Due to inclimate weather on the East Coast, the ABA game
between the New York Nets and the Indiana Pacers has been
postponed.
Other cancelled basketball games include Seton Hall at
Army, Lafayette College at Rider, and Brooklyn College at

and "JUNIE" of the
OHIO PLAYERS

Valentine's Day
February 14, 1975
Show starts 7:30 P.M.
HILL AUDITORIUM
DONATION: $5.00 advance
$6.50 at door
Sponsored by:
Spiritual Committee of the Sun

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E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354

i
i

Billboard
In 1975, the University of
Michigan will field another
championship football team.
If you would like to be a
member of this team, have
fun, and travel, then you qual-
ify as a Michigan football
manager. For details call Jeff
Young at 665-0583.

skiing

.it's F

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