Thursday, March 1, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nime Thursday, March 1, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine CHESS ,I I It's Begovac .. . . ... if he plays MIKE DUWECK The Michigan Junior Chess Championship will be held this weekend at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan. Playing strength being what it is among most juniors (under 21), the group of players from which the new champion will emerge is small and easily definable. Certainly in contention this year is reigning champion Steve Feldman. Feldman, who happens to be a freshman at the big 'U', is an expert who has been playing in local tournaments for the past four years. Last summer he beat a senior master from Wisconsin in a stunning upset, and finished fourth in the Michigan Championship last September. Josip Begovas, an exchange high school student from Yugo- slavia, has to be the top challenger to Feldman's crown. In his native country, Begovac was considered of "candidate master' strength, roughly equivalent to a United States expert rating. He has been playing in local tournaments, winning a number of them. He has lost only two or three serious matches since coming to Michigan last summer. He should be in top form going into this tourney, having just won the Southern Michigan Open two weekends ago. Reports have circulated, though, that Begovac may not appear at the tourney due to the lack of a prize fund. Expert Tom Sloan, of East Detroit, is a strong contender for the title. A successful chess organizer as well as player, Sloan is the current Region V junior champion. Region V covers Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. Expert Richard Borgen, a student at MSU, is a strong con- tender, with three years of high level play behind him. He is also the current MSU champion (whatever that's worth). Ray Stone, of Windsor, Ontario, has been an expert for two years, and was for some time the Detroit area's only junior player of that caliber. Stone is a chess journalist (the kid ob- viously knows a prestigious position when he sees it), having written articles on Spassky and Fischer, both of whom he has met. Unfortunately, chess ability is not gained by osmosis, making Stone a contender, but not a favorite. Probably the best of the dark horse threats to the 18, 19 and 20-year-old experts is 15-year-old Bob Savage. Although he is not an expert, he has been improving rapidly and will win at least one major upset in this tourney. Last and least, there is me. I figure on being at the short end of the game that grabs the quickest' mate award. It's my devious plan to get into the record books of the 1973 MJC. The following are my predictions for the tourney. If Begovac enters, the results will be: Begovac, 6-0; Feldman, Sloan, 5-1; Borgen, Stone, Savage, 4/2-1%. If Begovac doesn't enter, the results will be: Feldman, 6-0; Sloan, Borgen, 5-1; Stone, Savage, 41/2-1/2 * * * The United States Championship Playoffs concluded two weeks ago with these results: First-Robert Byrne scored 3-1-He defeated and drew both Reshevsky and Kavalek. Second-Samuel Reshevsky scored 2-2-He lost and drew with Byrne, won and drew with Kavalek. Third-Lubomir Kavalek scored 1-3-He drew and lost to both Byrne and Reshevsky. By placing first and second, Byrne and Reshevsky win the right to represent the U.S. in the 1973 Interzonal tournament which determines the players who will fight it out for the right to challenge Fischer in the 1975 World Championship Match. Observers felt Byrne played the steadiest chess while Reshevsky played the most interesting games. Kavalek was clearly not up to form. Reshevsky, when asked who he felt would be the next challenger to Fischer for the World Championship, answered that there was "no doubt it will be Reshevsky." Local expert Ben Crane commented on Reshevsky's perform- ance, saying it was a good result for him. He added, however, that the Interzonal tournament, which is much longer and tends to wear a player down, would be to the disadvantage of the 63- year-old Reshevsky, by far the oldest active U.S. Grandmaster. * ~* * Josip Begovac and Robert Ciaffone scored 5-0 results in the Southern Michigan Open, February 17-18, in Detroit. Tournament director Tom Sloan handed out $1,030 to the numerous prize winners in the 107 player event. The tournament was not particularly strong, with only one master, four experts, and 10 Class A players participating. John Brooks and Thomas LaForge tied for third place in the tourney and first place in Class A. John Midock, Atilla Lehotsky, and Tom Jenkins tied for first, Class B. Sam Willner and Mike Gaiefsky tied for first, Class C. Jim Daniluk and Ian Callum tied for first, Class D-E. The Unrated prize was won by Joseph Holstein and Ricky Moore. Bob Savage was best junior. If you're looking for chess activity this weekend, it is all going to be at the Michigan Junior Championship at Oakland University, Walton Blvd., Rochester, Michigan. Three tourneys will all be going at the same time. Registration for all three ends at 9:30 a.m., Saturday. The Junior Championship, being played Saturday and Sunday, is open to all under 21. The Young Junior Champonship, open to all under 12, will be played Saturday only. Both of these are six round Swiss tourneys. The Junior Sponsor's Tournament, played Saturday and Sunday, is a five round Swiss tourney open to anyone who wishes to support the Junior Championship. Rumor has it that many strong players will y, participate, local master Wes Burgar among them.. Swimmers splash for lea By BOB SIMON Just because this year's Big Ten swim meet will bring back memo- ries of the past 12 years of con- ference pool action doesn't mean it won't be exciting. Some of the greatest individual efforts in the nation will be on display at Matt Mann over the weekend. Also, a great scramble for high team fin- ishes behind Indiana is predicted. The meet starts today and con- cludes with the finals on Saturday. The preliminaries each day start at 1:00 in the afternoon with tthe finals set to begin at 7:30 p.m. daily. For the last 12 years, Indiana, under the guidance of Coach Doc Counsilman, has captured the Big Ten crown. In each of those years it was the Wolverines who were relegated to the anonymous second place finish. Neither team figures to move from these seem- ingly permanent consignments this year. The Hoosiers lost the glamorous Mark Spitz. But they also kept a large number of swimmers, be- sides recruiting many more fine talents. According to Counsilman and Michigan Coach Gus Stager thi4 is the best Hoosier team ever, and the lengthening of Indiana's dual-meet string of victories to 88 leads no one to suspect differently. More important than Counsilman to the team's success hasbeenthe tremendous individuals that, have gue honors daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JIM ECKER swum for Indiana. The present is no exception as the Hoosiers' John Kinseila, Gary Hall, John Murphy, Mike Stamm and Gary Connelly all will put on brilliant displays of speed and endurance. , Probably the most outstanding swimmer in the meet will be Kin- sella. The former Sullivan award winner has been destroying all competition during the dual meet' season with his long distance swims, including a memorable vic- tory over Michigan's Tom Szuba three weeks ago. Just last week Kinsella set yet another NCAA record in the 1000- yard freestyle event. He chopped eight seconds off his previous rec- ord, so now all opposition must shoot for his unbelievable mark of 9:09.5. Kinsella also holds Ameri- can records for the 500 and 1650 yard events. AS MENTIONED previously, the rest of the Hoosiers are not far behind Kinsella, if at all. Hall holds the nation's fastest time in the 200 butterfly this year along with possessing records in the 200 and 400 individual m e d 1 e y events. Stamm holds the nation's best time. in the 200 yard backstroke eventa with a clocking of 1:50.6 and heI has never been beaten. All together, the Hoosiers are the owners of seven of the nation's SCOlElS 7 NBA Boston 118, Golden State 111 Philadelphia 102, Baltimore 96 Seattle at Milwaukee,. inc. K.C.=Omaha at Phoenix, inc. NHL Chicago 3, N.Y. Rangers 3 Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 2 Detroit 6, Philadelphia 5 Toronto 7, Vancouver 2 Minnesota 7, California 3 Los Angeles at Montreal, inc. ABA New York 115, Memphis 108 Indiana 109, San Diego 106 Kentucky 117, Virginia 97 Carolina at Denver, inc. fastest times in the 11 events that have been run in dual meets. Therefore, Michigan must be satis- fied with second. Michigan's solidity and depth will help. them avoid finishing any worse than second, though. The breaststroke is where the Wolver- ines will pick up many of their points as a one, two, three finish is not out of the question. The Blue's Stu Isaac is the out- standing individual in this stroke. He not only is the defending Big Ten champ but has continued to break his own records in the 200- yard event all season. No one has much of a chance of catching him. Mike Whitaker and Pat Bauer are the other specialists in this stroke who will finish high. The other area where Michigan can pick up some much needed points is in the diving competition. This could be the most exciting part of the meet, as Michigan's Joe Crawford will be attempting to capture championships off both boards. The rest of the teams will be fighting for spots in the first divi- sion. Now that Ohio State has fallen apart the battle for third is left open for three squads. Illinois has one of its finest teams ever with individuals like George Con- grave, Greg Scott and Russ Meyer. Right behind them will be a young and improved Michigan State contingent which features sprinter Bruce Wright, Alan Dilley and Ken Winfield. Wisconsin also has a chance to finish in the first five. After that the teams get { progressively worse. ART IN ANN ARBOR Speaker: MRS. FRANKLIN FORSYTHE of Forsythe Galleries Paintings will be shown and discussed by Mrs. Forsythe 10:30 A.M., SUN., MARCH 4 502 W. HURON ALL ARE WELCOME TO THIS RARE OCCASION MEET INTERESTING PEOPLE Everyone Welcome! BACH CLUB- Flying high 23rd STRAIGHT ROAD LOSS Spartans slaughter By ROBIN WAGNER Special to The Daily EAST LANSING-Scoring seven goals in the final two periods, Michigan State's hockey team ran away from Michigan's icers last night, 9-3. After holding a 2-1 lead for the first period, the Wolverines stalled on offense and were non- chalantly blown out of the arena by the Spartans. The game possessed a constantly changing complexion. At times, both squads "displayed incentive and hustle, while at other times, the action was as emotional and inspiring as playing with toy boats in a bathtub. Six minutes into the opening rer- iod, Michigan initiated the scring. After a Randy Neal shot was block- ed by Spartan goalie Tom Bowen, Julian Nixon and Don Dufek both failed to put in the rebound. Don' Fardig then collected the puck. briefly stickhandled and shot it through a pile'ip in front of the net and into the twine. Ten minutes later, MSU's Bren- don Aaroney, receiving a pass from Tom Ross, knotted the score f Following this goal Michigan's dekers were never again in the game. Seventy seconds after Tru- deau tallied, Colp left Dennis Olm- stead a drop-back pass which Olm- stead proceeded to deposit in the goal behind Moore. Colp's brilliant passing spelled more trouble for Michigan later. With 15:50 gone in the middle frame Colp slid a perfect center- ing pass across Michigan's goal mouth, past an unaware Moore and onto the stick of Mark Calder, who easily scored into the semi- open net. THE THIRD PERIOD of play consisted of a goal-hungry MSU contingent and a weary Michigan team. Sturgis opened the three goal deluge by drilling a backhand shot along the ice surface, past Moore's stick and into the net. Later in the period, Boyd, on a Spartan power play, fired a slap leers shot from the point which directed itself through a maize of players and behind the helplessly screened Moore. Later, it was the ever-present Colp again. Engufling a pass from Maroney, on another power play, the flashy, flatfooted freshman blistered a wrist shot high into the twine from a position directly in front of Moore. So ended Michigan State's scoring barrage and Mich- igan's agony. In the locker room after the final buzzer, Renfrew commented, "It's been a long year. We played our guts out tonight, though. And I guarantee one thing. This is going to be one good hockey team some- day." Perhapsthose last few words should be taken to heart. 'Red V down in 6-5. - on a 20 foot slap shot. (na fstPaul Paris quickly put the Maize' and Blue back on top with a wrist shot which deflected off Bowen's Yitstretched leg and just inside the Lyerpost. Paris' score was on a power play after Bob Boyd, MSU's neigh- borhood bully, had been whistledI th riiii iiu off the ice for interference. 1 LOeflhImHL1Hntill Ln l n ai Id _________ I I eon--- -----JL!-.. 1 I I thpWann iarbor1 T f1 im cooet ive 1 Commentig on the rst pero Specialto The Daily of play following the contestt DETROIT - The Detroit Red Michigan Coach Al Renfrew g Wig ogh akfrma20stated, "We played well. If wFIdRST PERIOD deficit to overwhelm the Philadel- taken advantage of an SCORING: 1. M-Fardig (Dufek, Nix- inpaiaatiernhe three raatle any of on) 6:15; 2. S-Maroney (Ross, Sturgis) phia Leg- meahNrtilast the three breakways we had, it 16:51; 3. M-Paris (Neal, Werner) 17:26. Hockey League game here last would have been a different CISECOND PERIOD night. hokygm. SCORING: 4. S-Colp (Boyd, Calder) In a hockey game 1:05; 5. S - Sturgis (unassisted) 1:50; penalty-marred contest The second period featured total 6. M-Trudeau (Werner, Neal) 11:01; Mickey Redmond a n d Marcel Michigan State domination. In the 7. s-Olmstead (Colp, Boyd) 12:11; 8. Dionne each scored two gaals to stanza's opening two minutes, a S-Calder (Colp) 15:50. ice the game for the Wings. -in and a rink length THIRD PERIOD Redmond scored what turned out St e -tip dSCORING:.9.5 Sturgis (Ross, Pave- to b th winin gol 1i te tirdrush, triple-fake and score by John lich) 2:06. 10. S-Boyd (Colp) 7:04. 11. to be the winning goal in the thryd'Sturgis put MSU on top, 3-2. S-CoIp (Maroney, Boyd) 13:52. period when he took a neatly play- The Wolverines still had a bit of SAVES ed drop pass from Alex Delvee.;hio 'spark left in their loss-ridden a20z 15 12 47 to fire a slap shot past surprised kbodies. Witth 11:01 gone, a wrist s 16 9 20 45 Philadelphia netminder Doug Fa- shot by Randy Trudeau found the GOALS BY PERIODS vely h upper portion of the twine to again M 123 T Early in the final stanza it seem- !tie the score.s 1 4 3 8: ed as if Redmond had earned his t hat trick when a whistler from the blue line off the stick of Al Kar- -~ lander changed directions in front of the net and ripped the crds. However, it was ruled that the puck wentt off the Philadelphia de- fenseman a n d Karlander was, awarded the tally. Philly jumped out to a 2-0 lead Make extra bread by bringing back your old before the Wings could enter into the scoring column. But swift little comicsscience fictionbaseball cards, Dionne whipped the puck into theca net to close the first period gap Beatle magazines, etc. Ito just a mere one. The Wings' victory moved them within two of the idle Sabres.flID flIK II fl RANk N OD Tl - ------U-ED- -K----P---- I INI= %Among M[ POWN Sonoma 4ww .v...... I OFFERS YOU " STEREO SOUND & ZENON LAMPS IN EVERY SHOWING (T., W., & THU. AUD. A, ANGELL HALL). " EDITING FACILITIES FOR 8mm & 16mm. " A PLACE TO STOP BY AND TALK ABOUT FILM: 537 E. LIBERTY, NO. 210, OPEN 5 DAYS/WEEK 12-2 PHONE 769-7787 Musico Nuova (RECORDER CONSORT) MARIANNE MILKS (soloist for Ars Musica) HANNAH KLAUS MARYBETH NEAL TINA KRUGLER_ CATHY CALDERONE ELLEN ROBIN ANITA CHADWICK LINDA KLINE SUSAN LAWLESS BEATRUS OLENDER CRISTI GALAN PLAYING: H. ISAAC SUSATO FRECABALDI VAN EYCK HANDEL BOISMORTIER STAEPS REFRESHMENTS AFTERWARDS Thursday, March 1, 0 P.M., 'East Quad, Greene Lounge CONTRIBUTION 35c More Info: Eileen, 763-6256 Due to Spring (?) Break, there will be no I BET CAFE this coming Friday, March 2-73 (but look for our ad when/if you come back) I SPRING B R EAK1 UUKIVUJ UJLV UVVII hmVrF , 340 S. STATE ~MAR 4 -4( alAP 1i N 1-6 An important ann toemento every student in the heaii. professions: NEW SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. THEY COVER TUITION AND RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL. 761-0112 OPE / l+ _ __ _ NEW WORLD MEDIA presents 'PLEASE STAND BY' "In the very near future a band of radical freaks will take over control of a communications satellite and begin to broadcast messages to a captive world T.V. audience." Starring DAVID PEEL as FREEMONT ZAPATA OPE PM P iN MUSIC BY: DAVID PEEL and the LOWER EAST SIDE JOHN LENNON and YOKO ONO TEENAGE LUST 1984-OTHERS WITH: Wendy Appel (Putney Swope) Alex Bennet (WPLJ-FM) Roberts Blossom (Slaughterhouse-5) David Peel If a steady salary of $400 a month and paid-up tuition will help you continue your professional training, the scholarships just made pos- sible by the Uniformed Services Health Professions Revitalization Act of 1972" deserve your close attention. Because if you are now in a medical, osteopathic, dental, veterinary, podiatry, or op- tometry school. or are work- on active duty (with extra pay) for 45 days. Naturally, if your academic schedule requires that you" remain on campus, you stay on campus -and still receive your active duty pay. Active duty requirements are fair. Basically, you serve one year as a commissioned officer for each year you've participated in the program, with a two year minimum. hard, expensive training. Now we are in a position to give you some help. Mail in the coupon at your earliest convenience for more detailed information. - - ..C-C . In A. IUniversal City. Tax"a 7811! I I desire informastion for the followingI et OVeterinay odaty ry Other (Pea pecify}. t NameI I I 1 - , I