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February 18, 1973 - Image 8

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-02-18

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, February 18, 1973

I

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 1 8, 1973

i

Hustling Frosli caged;
Lansing power perks

By JOHN KAHLER
The Michigan Freshmen basket-
ball team was swamped yesterday
in Crisler Arena by Lansing Com-
munity College by the score of 101-
84. The Lansing school, which had
won 12 of its last 15 games and
was scheduled to meet Vincennes
in the Junior College regionals,
was simply too strong for the Baby
Blue.
Lansing jumped off to a quick
14-7 lead with forward Dan De-
Martin and guard Tom Bowie
providing the spark. DeMartin,
who had 18 points in the first
half, proved impossible to guard
inside. Two baskets by Bill Bur-
ress cut the margin, but Mich-
igan had problems getting clos-
er, mostly due to an aggressive
Lansing press and their own turn-
overs.
Late in the first period, Greg
Bailey of Michigan dove after a
loose ball. Hie missed the ball and
skidded hard into the scorer's tab-
le, fortunatelv without seriously
hurting himself. This, unfortunate-
ly, was an omen of things to come
in the second half. Lansing lead
at the end of the first period, 45-
38.
The Capital cagers wasted no
time in putting the game olit of
reach in the second period. They
outscored Michigan 14-4 from the
center jump, awing the crowd of
875 with a powerful display of re-
bounding and shooting. If Michigan
managed to get the ball upcourt
against the Lansing press, they
had to face a 2-1-2 zone that limit-
ed them to one shot, usually from
far out.
Attempting to regroup, the Baby
Blue tried to get back into the
game with a press. They had mod-
erate success in forcing Lansing
turnovers, but inability to sink the
shots and continued hot shooting
by LCC blunted all attempts to
close the gap. Fifteen points was
the closest Michigan could come,
as Lansing coasted home from
there.
Coach Richard "Bird" Carter
praised Lansing after the game
as "a good club that shot well.
This is a prime example of the
problems we have playing teams
that have organized ball p r o-
grams. They'd !played more
games and were more experienc-
ed than we were."
DeMartin lead the victorious LCC
cagers with 34 points, followed by
Bowie with 25. Lansing center Ed
Allen scored 10 points, grabbed 15

rebounds, and was called for goal-
tending four times.
Don Johnston was Michigan'sE
leading scorer with 22 points. John-
ston, a 6-5 forward who bears an
amazing resemblance to C. J. Ku-
pec, even wearing Kupec's old
freshman number 45, also hauled in
a game high 16 rebounds. Bill
Burress with 10 points, Gary Paav-
ola with 11, and Cameron Cheeks
with 11 were the other Blue cag-
ers in double figures.
Gymnas ts
challenge
Spar tans
By PERRY L. BARS
Tomiorrow evening at Crisler
Arena th6 Michigan gymnastics
team makes its final home appear-
ance in a meet against arch-rival
Michigan State.
The 8:00 affair promises to be a
gala one with the seniors, Terry
Boys, Ward Black, and Captain
Ray Gura, being honored at a
special presentation. All three have
been outstanding this year and are
gearing up for their last home
show.
Michigan Coach Newt Loken
expects an excellent showing by
both teams, noting, "They both
will get real psyched-up for this
one."
Competition will be especially
keen between Spartan captain
Randy Balhorn and Gura. Both
men are very capable all-around
men having scored in the 53's
all season.
Black and Boys will try to finish
out their Crisler career in the
soectacular fashion they h a v e'
shown throughout the past. Their
floor exercise antics are a b i g
reason why Michigan should be
right in the thick of the race for
the Big Ten championship.
There figures to be a good crowd
on hand for the meet. Local high
school gymnastic teams, alumni
(invited by Loken), and the State-
faithful are expected to pack the
house.
The MSU match brings to a close
a great set of home meets this
year that saw the top teams in the
country invade Crisler. Missing t~-
orrow's extravaganza would be as
tragic as hosting a party and find-
ing out your john is backed up.

Guitar, Flute, Recorder,
Banjo, Drums, Moog Synthesizer
If you would like private or class instruction
for any of these instruments, CALL 769-4980
,la &6v ~uac 4Jm v l
336 S. STATE OPEN MON-SAT. 9:30-9:00
TUESDAY, FEB. 20, 1973
THE
E a TiNE A
IUAIYAT CijL
IOZ S.NiSr T (1ET W441~O
PRESENTS THE
SLAVIC FOLK
DANCERS
40 Dancers, Singers, Instrumentalists
in Authentic Costumes
PERFORMING DANCES OF
RUSSIA
An al-SlvicPOLAND
An al-SlvicCROATIA
seven course dinner SERBIA
$5.00 per person MACEDONIA
UKRAINE
(NO GOURMET CARDS BULGARIA
HONORED THAT NIGHT ONLY) MOLDAVIA
-- --- -

All

LS& A

Students ... LOOK.

Advance Classification Appointment Schedules

I,

Spring

V;/

Spring-Summer, Fall Terms, 1973

OFFICE OF UNDERCLASS ADVISING-1213 Angell Hall
LS&A FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES (WITH 54 CREDIT HOURS OR LESS AT THE END OF THE
PRESENT TERM) may make appointments for group advance classification sessions through 1213 Angell
Hall according to the following schedule:
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19............................last names A-E
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20 .......................... last names F-J
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21 .......................last names K-O
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22 ......... ..............last names P-S
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23 . .......................last names T-Z
Students wishing to sign up for special groups (CULS, pre-business, Medical Technology, Physical Ther-
apy) should come during their appropriate alphabetical grouping as listed above.
LS&A Freshmen and 1 st Term Sophomores living in Couzens, Alice Lloyd, Mosher-Jordan or Markley should
consult their dorm advising offices for detailed information and need not schedule group appointments
through 1213.
Underclass BGS students see "BGS Information" below.
1223 Angell Hall-Junior-Senior Counseling Office
In an effort to reduce the confusion and the chance of e r r o r during the Preclassification period, the
dates upon which completed forms may be turned in to 1223 Angell Hall will be staggered.
Students may begin to schedule Preclassisification appointments according to the following schedule:
ALL SENIORS (84 hours +)

4.
,$

Group 1:
Group II:
Group 111:
Group IV:
Make up date:
Group I:
Group II:
Group Ill:
Group IV:
Make up date:
Group 1:
Group 11:
Group Ill:
Group IV:
Make up date:

February 12-16
February 1 2
February 13
February 14
February 15 & 16

Appropriate
1223 Angell
1223 Angell
1223 Angell
1223 Angell

departmental office
Hall
Hall
Hall
Hall

ALL JUNIORS (55-83 hours)

February
February
February
February
February

19-23
19
20
21
22-23

Appropriate departmental office
1223 Angell Hall
1223 Angell Hall
1223 Angell Hall
1223 Angell Hall

ALL SECOND SEMESTER SOPHOMORES (55 hours end of Winter 1973)

February 26-March 2
February 26
February 27
February 28
March 1-2

Appropriate
1223 Angell
1223 Angell
1223 Angell
1223 Angell

departmental office
Hall
Hall
Hall
Hall

r MON.-WED.
' FEB. 19, 20, &21
FEB. 22, 23, 24, & 25
DETROIT,
ilk

You must appear in person and bring your ID card
number, find your field of concentration.
GROUP I

to make an appointment. To determine your group

Anthropology
Astronomy
Biophysics
Chemistry
Class. Arch.
Class. Studies

Far East Lang & Lit
For East Studies
Geography
Geology
History of Art
Linguistics

Near East Lang & Lit
Physics
Pre-Professional-
1058 LSA Bldg.
Psych-Speech-Hearing
Romance Linguistics

Russian & East European'
Slavic Lang & Lit
Social Anthropology
Studies in Religion
Zoology

IVOTE

I

GROUP II
American Culture
Communication Science
English
GROUP III
Biology
Botany
GROUP IV
Anthropology-Zoology
French
French T.C.
German

Mathematics
Philosophy

Social Work
Mathematics T.C.
Journalism
Political Science

Economics
History

ANNE
BOBROFF
Mayor

Music
Psychology
Sociology
Spanish

Spanish T.C.
Speech
Speech Correction
Pre-Professional only
go to 1058 LS&A

Microbiology
Cellular Biology

217 SASHLEY

1 A.M.-2 A.M.

FACE IT
Few complexions are naturally perfect.
Some people think thaF acne, like the commOn cold, has to
run its course. Europoan-trainedi Catherine Alexander knows

LISA
NORTH
2nd Ward

Actual appointments will begin on Monday, March 12, and forms will be accepted in 1223 Angell Hall for
processing beginning Monday, March 12, and continuing through Friday, April 13.
All forms will be processed and forwarded in direct ratio to degree program population. In this way the
election of a degree program (i.e. BGS) in itself does not provide any unfair advantage. Once a student
has met with an adviser, and has an approved set of elections, the completed Election Request form is
returned by the student to 1223 Angell Hall.
OPTIONAL COUNSELING
Graduating Seniors (Fall 1973) must make pre-classification appointments (February 14-16) to get ap-
proval for the last semester's elections and to secure a concentration release form.
All other Optional Counseling students may secure pre-classification materials beginning February 26, in
1223 Angell Hall and may return the completed Election Request forms on Thursday, March 1, for pro-
cessing beginning on Monday, March 12.

FOR A RADICAL PARTY:
o Work with local activist groups-fem-
inists, labor, blacks, gay people.
f City funds for community controlled
healthcare, childcare, housing.
s Expand HRP outside the student com-
munity.

BGS STUDENTS

GRADUATING SENIORS (Spring, Summer, or Fall)-Contact Linda Fink, 1223 Angell
complete Senior Check beginning February 22.

(764-0312) to

I

S Strengthen ties with the
the National Peoples

state HRP and
Party.

SENIORS AND JUNIORS - Come to 1223 Angell and pick up materials beginning February 26.
SECOND SEMESTER SOPHOMORES-Come to 1223 Angell, complete "request to elect" or "request to
continue" forms and trade for election materials beginning February 26 (Fruit stand beginning Feb-
ruary 28).
FIRST SEMESTER SOPHOMORES AND SECOND SEMESTER FRESHMEN-Come to Fruit stand and pick
up election materials beginning February 28.
FIRST SEMESTER FRESHMEN-Make group advising appointments with 1223 Angell beginning Feb. 19
to Feb. 23. Students participating in advising programs (Mojo, Couzens, Pilot, Markley) may complete
registration through the dorm or with the University at large. Second semester sophomores, however,
must come to 1223 to complete forms.
All BGS operations will be centralized at the BGS Fruit stand (opposite 1220 Angell) from
Feb. 28 to March 2 AND March 12 to March 14. Completed election materials may be turned
in to 1223 Angell on March 8-9 and to the Fruit stand beginning March 12, for processing be-
ginning March 12.

41

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