Thursdav. Februarv 24. 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine ThuqYV F]/ uay"2.j 975THEMIHIGN DIL I -~ ii i IMf orma lion Jersey trio emerge s for Blue .. Basketball championships ... highlight open house By JEFF LIEBSTER The IM sports department will present its 44th annual Open House this evening. Highlighting the activities will be the bas- ketball championships in several divisions. At 6:30 p.m. the Foul Outs take on Has Beens for the right to meet the Nets in the Independent finals. Also at that time there will be the co-rec championship game between Hacker's Row and Milford High. At 8:00 p.m. two West Quad powerhouses meet in the Residence Hall finals as Adams plays Chicago. On court two there will be the Women's all-star game, brought to you directly from Ann Carney & friend from the Coliseum. At 9:00, for those graduates who can leave the picket lines long enough to come down and watch, the IPPS meet the Draftdodgers for the Graduate crown. Wrapping up the basketball action, will be the fraternity championship, pitting strong Delta Upsilon against their surpris- ing rival Theta Chi. Basketball won't be the only action. The all-campus swim- ming and diving championship meet will be held beginning at 7:00. The competition will match participants from all divisions in the sky blue waters of Matt Mann pool. The feature attractions will be presented by the various snorts clubs. The women's gymnastics club will compete against Western Michigan University. The Kayak Club will maneuver around the IM pool in a rare and entertaining aquatic demon- stration. Among the other cl'bs on exhibition tonight will be: Volleyball, Fencing, Ki Society, Lacrosse, Frisbee, Boxing, Bicycle, Water Polo, Folk Dance and Tae Kwan Do. There will also be a squash exhibition presented by ranked players from the Michigan Squash Racquets Association. Everyone is invited to enjoy the activities which will take place in the Sports Building, Yost Ice Arena, and at the Sports Coliseum (corner of Fifth and Hill). Admission is free. For those men and women interested in officiating volley- ball, there will be a meeting on Tuesday February 25 at 7:30 in the collisium lounge. Experience is appreciated, but by no means necessary. For the pure shooters, and anyone else, the IM foul shoot- ing competition will take place next week. Monday night, Febru- ary 24th, the Residence Hall competition is on. The following evening the Fraternity and Women's will take place. On Wednes- day will be the Independent players chance at the charity stripe. And the following night, the graduates will have their tournament. All the free throwing will take place at the IM building main gym at 8:30, except the women's which will be held in the Sports Coliseum. You did not have to play on a regular season IM team to participate in foul shooting. During the spring break, the facilities will be available on a limited basis. The following is a schedule of the IM Sports Bldg. hours: 0 March 1-2: CLOSED March 3-7: Open 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. *March 8-9: CLOSED The mini gym will be used for open tennis from 9 to 10:30 a.m. on the days the IM Sports Building is open. It will be available the rest of the time for open basketball. The Sports Coliseum and Waterman-Barbour will be closed the entire vacation, March 1-9. By ED LANGE how they arrived at Michigana The state of New Jersey is is not particularly hard to un- I not exactly known as a hotbed derstand according to Michigan b of high school swimming, but Coach Gus Stager.j you won't hear anyone associat- "Bill Kogen was my college' ed with the Michigan swim team roommate and he was principal complaining. Three of its mem- at the high school Robbie and bers, Clark Kogen a freshman Freddie went to (Morristown breaststroker, Rob Helt, a soph- High)," explained Stager. "If omore backstroker, and Fred anything could happen, he want- ed Clark to go to Michigan and# swim. Freddie and Robbie were coached by Bill Groft, a former Michigan swimmer who holds the 50 freestyle record, and he had a lot of influence on them," Stager finished. Helt also cited, Groft as an influence but claims that "Clark's father was the princi- pal force in our coming here. Having him as a principal really helped us," stated Helt, "be- cause being a swimmer himself, r he took a personal interest in ...' . Freddie and me." Yawger, a 6-3, 185 pound butterflyer, probably had the most illustrious prep career ?;" , Fof the three. He was a three time state champion in the "fly" and won the 200-yard freestyle his junior year. Fred also participated in the pres- Clark Kogen tigious "Easterns" his sopho- I more, junior and senior years. Yawger, a sophomore butter- Fred, according to Stager, flyer hail from New Jersey and "exudes a lot of confidence. form, according to teammate When he says he is going to do) Gordon Downie, "the real back- it, he goes out and does it." bone of the team." Yawger believes that his best Yawger and Helt are from performance this year was. Morris Plains and Kogen lives against Ohio State. rightsdown the road in Moun- "I swam a 1:55.9 (200 butter- tain Lakes, a small, neighbor- fly) against Indiana but I feelI ing community. The story of my best performance was F against Ohio State, even though swam a 1:56.5. Maybe it was because I beat everybody by eight seconds," he grinned. Helt has been Michigan's backstroker all year, contin- ually picking up valuable points for the Maize and Blue. The well-spoken LS&A student was not overly pleased with his performance so far this and Helt rented a house this summer when they were work-1 ing out at Princeton College1 under Princeton's Coach Bill Farley, a former Michigan man. Yawger was unable to work out with them because of illness. But the three got together and "went to camp," jokes Helt. Actually the three were swim counselors at Camp DeWitt in Wolfboro, New Hampshire. "We got the jobs . through Clark's dad," explained Rob. Helt sees college swimming as a team effort, asserting that "the team generates more en- thusiasm." For Kogen, the number two breaststroker as a freshman, this year has seen a marked improvement in his swimming. Most of the season he has been in the shadow of senior star Pat Bauer. "I've improved a lot over high school," commented Ko- gen. "I cut eight seconds off my 200 time which was 2:26 in high school and my 100 time went down for the first time." Kogen attributes a lot of his success to the team, claiming that, "swimming for a good team has made a difference. If you swim with the best, you've got to improve." F Kogen is currently enrolled in engineering school and is a man who knows what he wants. "I want to score for Michigan in the Big Tens and I would like to swim in the nationals this year." Kogen's dream is "to become a nationally ranked swimmer," before he closes out his swimming career. Stager says that Kogen "is different from Yawger and Helt in that he doesn't have the confidence yet. But he's really a tough competitor. He wins the races he should." Rob Helt I try cross-country Fred Yawger year, stating that he was "pretty disappointed with the way I swam this year. Last year I had a 1:57 in the 200 backstroke and I'm not even close to that this year." Kogen, Yawger and Helt see a lot of each other back home and work out together. Kogen skiing .t's FI SIXTH STRAIGHT LOSS: Pistons Knicked FREE CLINIC ... First, sit in on one of our Saturday morning clinics, 10 to 12 a.m. Just call for an appointment. FREE RENTAL... Then borrow a set of skies, poles and boots for a full day's use, at your own convenience. FREE ON.SNOW CLINIC ... for Compfitters' customers. Snow conditions will determine date. Watch for it. WATCH FOR... our schedule of winter cross-country touring trips. By The Associated Press TC cOasts' DETROIT - W a 1 t Frazier I C at scored 35 points and New York KANSAS CITY - The blasted Detroit 24-4 in the second City-Omaha Kings jum quarter as the Knickerbockers to an early lead and nev powered to a 109-94 National ed, coasting to a 115-93 Basketball Association victory over the Los Angeles over the Pistons last night. last night behind Nat Frazier collected 16 of his bald for their fifth stra points in the first quarter and tional Basketball As: 12 in the second, including six, victory. in the stretch where the Knicks: It was Kansas City's overcame a 29-23 lead. Phil tory in its past 12 ga Jackson led the Knick spurt the 34th victory of t with nine points as New York one more than all of1 climbed to a 40-30 lead. son. THE LOSS was Detroit's sixth: 0 in a row and 10th of their last 11 games, while the Knicks le sbls broke a four-game losing streak' LANDOVER, Md. - ion the road. Hayes amassed 32 point Kansas rped out ver trail- victory Lakers t Archi- ight Na- sociation 11th vic- 'mes and he year, last sea- ing his fourth consecutive game of 30 points or more and pacing the Washington Bullets to their fourth consecutive National Bas- ketball Association victory, a 120-97 decision over the Phoenix Suns. The Central Division-leading Bullets jumped off to a 37-19 lead early in the second period and coasted to t h e i r 17th straight NBA home victory. REEl( 4 3rs4' I- I I I Michigan's oldest and largest X-country ski specialists I I RAUPP 637 S. Main 769-5574 E l v i n ts, mark- AfLT .. _ 9 Alt EMUi By RICH LERNER YPSILANTI - The Eastern Michigan junior varsity handed the Michigan varsity-reserves their only road setback of the season last night, 66-55. The Hurons never trailed in the game, grabbing a slim early lead. The Wolverines then scored six straight points and knotted the score at 17 all on a Kent Storey layup. However, EMU surged right back to score 11 of the last 13 first-half points, and take a 28-17 lead into the a NBA STANDINGS NBA E EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division tops Bkt lockerroom at the intermis- sion. The junior Hurons upped their lead in the second half to 45-31 with ten minutes remaining. The Baby Blue staged an ill- fated rally, on baskets by Jim- my Berra and Len Lillard, which cut the lead to six points with 4:42 left. Eastern Michigan responded with an effective four-corner stall offense, and expanded its lead to 61-45, putting the game out of reach. EMU played nearly the en- tire game in a zone defense, which caused problems for the cold-shooting Wolverines. Michigan shot 37.7 per cent from the floor, and could not find a+ player with a hot hand to break the zone. Foul trouble'also plagued the Baby Blue throughout the game, sending Berra, Storey, and Bur- rell McGhee to the bench cn disq'ialifications. Michigan was charged with DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 TODAY4 p.. & 8 p.m. VR' 66-55 28 fouls compared to V Eastern Michigan, and :he ons shot 20 more free t than the Wolverines. Doug Reynolds, Bill We and Glenn Ambrose pace Huron attack. Reynolds h nine of nine field goal atte and was high point man f game with 19. Ambroses 18, and Weaver added 16, 6 for: eIur- raw W meting out six assists. "We played lethargic in the first half," said Coach Bird Carter. eaver, Berra was the only Wolverine d the to gain double figures, scoring hit on 14, but center Dave Ziegler was empts, the game's top rebounder, snar- or the ing eight. scored The varsity-reserves finished while their season with an 8-3 record. ES RANCK-I T. OF PHYSIOLOGY RSITY OF MICHIGAN ARBOR, MICHIGAN F J )AM DEP UNIVE ANN Boston Buffalo ,.New York Philadelphia Central Washington Cleveland Houston Atlanta New Orleans W L 41 16 37 22, 29 30 ?5 35 Division 42 16 30 29 30 30 24 37 11 45 Pet. GB .719 - .627 5 .492 13 .417 1712 "Behavioral Correlates of Neuronal Firing in Hippocampus and Septum in Unrestrained Rats" FEBRUARY 20 MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE SEMINAR SERIES TEA: 3:15 p.m., Room 2059 SEMINAR: 3:45 p.m., Room 1057 I I I .723 .508 .500 .393 .196 WESTERN CONFERENCE, Midwest Conference Chicago 36 22 .621 K. C. - Omaha 34 27 .555 Detroit 32 31 .507 Milwaukee 28 29 .491 Pacific Division Golden State 33 25 .569 Seattle 27 31 .466 Phoenix 24 32 .431 Portland ~ 24 34 .414 Los Angeles 21 37 .363 Last Night's Games New York 109, Detroit 94 Washington 120, Phoenix 97 Kansas City-Omaha 115, Los Angeles 92 Boston at seattle, inc. 12% 13 19% 30 3 6x/2 7 6 9 12 GRADUATE BUSINESS EDUCATION College of Business Administration UNIVERSITY OF DENVER Representative of the College will be available from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Satur- day, February 22nd at the Ann Arbor Inn to talk with individuals Considering MBA, MSBA, or MPA degree programs. No appointment needed. ~~1 \ \ \ If "Early American Orange Crate" is what you find in other apartments, see us. Our apartments are FULLY furnished. Come on over and check us out. ~~~11 F- Univrsiy ToersAparmens Do" OFF .OAMPUS -r(. 1 The on-campus, off-campus auestion. 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