-Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday; November 15, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY HILLEL FOUNDATION AND MIDRASHA COLLEGE OF JEWISH STUDIES PRESENT BILL NOVAK editor of Response: a contemporary Jewish review SPEAKING ON "Philip Roth and Our Situation" An examination of Roth's attitudes toward Jewishness and self-hatred with a view toward psychological understanding of the American Jewish Community. 8 p.m. THURSDAY, Nov. 16 at HILLEL, 1429 Hill DOCTORS, NURSES, PSYCHOLOGISTS, PEOPLE IN ALL MEDICAL AND PROFESSIONAL FIELDS ... HELP SUPPORT A CONSUMER ADVOCATE GROUP CONCERNED WITH MEDICAL INFORMATION. We Would Like To Add Your Name To Our "Support" List. This Involves No Time Or Money On Your Part Unless You Wish To Donate It. ADVOCATES FOR MEDICAL INFORMATION CALL JOSEPH GRAEDON, 662-6598 or 663-7095 INDIANA FAVORED: f By CHUCK BLOOM A safe bet, in this year of many upsets, would be that Indiana will again emerge as the na- tion'spowerhouse in swimming. The Hoosiers are loaded with Olympians and have an out- standing crop of freshmen. In the Big Ten conference, there is only one team that poses any kind of threat to the Hoosier dy- nasty, and that isaMichigan. Swimming coach Gus Stager faces the yearly battle of what to do to dethrone Indiana. Us- ually the answer comes up to be the same; nothing. But this sea- son just may prove to be dif- ferent. Mark Spitz, swimming's answer to Superman, has grad- uated to bigger and richer things. Gary Hall was the big disappointment in Munich and it may affect his swimming this year. Last year at the Big Ten Championships, the Wolverines spent most of the meet worrying about holding second place against Ohio State. This season, with the championships being held here in Ann Arbor, the Wol- verine aquanauts can go after wi mmers face atnnual chase Coach Gus Stager the kings of the mountain. The Wolverines are led by defending Big Ten champion Stu Isaac, junior from Amherst, N. Y. Isaac took the only two titles for Michigan in both the 100 and 200 breaststroke. He finished fifth in the NCAA champion- ship in the 100 and ninth in the 200. Isaac has all the potential to be a national champion ac- cording to Stager, but it is all a matter of concentration. Backing up Isaac are two vet- eran swimmers, if such a term can be used at a young age. Mike Whitaker, a senior from Calgary, swam in the recent Summer Olympic Games, and was sec- ond to Isaac in the 100 yard breaststroke in the Big Ten meet. Pat Bauer is an Ann Arbor sophomore who came in fifth in the 200 in the Big Tens. Add to the list, Brad Brockway, a fresh- man from Dearborn, and the Maize and Blue has the swim- mers to make the breaststroke Michigan's strongest event. The sprint events could also be a plus for the Wolverines. Heading the group is Jose Aran- ha, junior from Brazil, who swam for the Brazilian Olympic team. Aranha had outstanding times in Munich which should help him in the upcomingsyear. Aranha took a third and a sec- in the Big Ten championships last year. Senior Ray McCullough came on strong at the end of last sea- son and set the Michigan var- sity record for the 100-yard free- style in the NCAA championships last March. McCullough is a ver- satile swimmer as he is able to go middle, as well and sprint dis- tances. If Michigan is to go anywhere, conference-wise or nationally, they must get production from their two big freshmen guns, Tom Szuba and Paul Foster, both from Dearborn. Szuba is rated as one of the nation's outstanding collegiate freshmen. His special- ity is the individual medley where he finished sixth in the U. S. Olympic Trials. But Stag- er plans to use him in other needed areas. Szuba will help fill the butterfly void caused by the graduation of captain Byron MacDonald. Foster finished in the top 15 in both backstroke events dur- ing the U.. S. Trials and was statechampion lastyear in the 100. Foster has the potential to be a national champion in the backstroke and will help score points along with senior Steve McCarthy and junior Chris Han- sen, the Michigan record holder. Birmingham has as much poten- tial as any diver around but last season the freshmen blahs af- fected his performance. Hope- fully for Quint andsthe rest of the Wolverines, this season will be different. 1972 Schedule (HOME MEETS IN CAPITALS) Dec. 2 Big Ten Relays Dec. 8 at Purdue Dec. 9 at Illinois Jan. 12 WISCONSIN Jan. 26 TEXAS Jan. 27 SMU Feb. 3 at Princeton Feb. 10 INDIANA Feb. 17 OHIO STATE March 1-2-3 Big Ten Championship in Ann Arbor I 4 A Ray McCullough Gridde Pickin.gs T E Come SK In and Jose Aranha Michigan's distance men are junior Dan Fishburn, from Cha- grin Falls, Ohio, and sophomore Mark Anderson, from Glenview, Illinois, along with Szuba. Fish- burn finished a surprising sixth in the conference meet in the gruelling 1650-yard freestyle. The butterfliers are Szuba, Lar- ry Day, a Saginaw senior, Au- gusto Gonzales, junior f r o m Peru, and Cadillac's Don Peter- son, who also swims the individ- ual medlies. Diving was a sore spot for the Wolverines l-st year and diving coach Dick Kimball hopes for a lot of improvement this year. Michigan's top diver is All- American Joe Crawford who fin- ished seventh in the national championships and fourth at the AAU championships. S t e v e Schenthal and Peter Agnew are a pair of juniors who are count- ed on to give the Wolverines needed meet points. Schenthal was a AAU finalist last year. Sophomore Dick Quint from 'Tis truly a sad day in Daily Libel history. Their star defensive end, Big Bubba ConstricTOR has decided to hang 'em up for good. It seems that all the waring on the turf of combat has taken its toll on this sensitive, sweet person. "I'm doing it for the good of the team," says the mighty, but humble giant. "I find that I am unable to do the job that is required of me. I've lost too many steps thus impairing my ability to play this fine game we call football. I can't say enough for the other drunks on the team. Just that old Tors never die, they just eat away." Prick Papanek, coach of the fifth-ranked Libels was lost for words. "I just don't know how I'm going to replace that big mother." TOR also revealed at his press conference, held at the Del Rio, that he has kept a secret diary of the team's activities and will be published next week, entitled "Illegal Use of Hands." An autographed copy will be sent to T. Dawson, this week's winner in Gridde Pickings. TOR will now retire to an exclusive suburban commune of APBA freaks and will stay high on red dice. If you want him to un-retire, send all sympathy cards and your final Gridde Picks to 420 Maynard, c/o Daily Libels. Get l/ the Latest Word, on the RED, WHITE & BLUE'S 1. Purdue at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. MSU at Minnesota 3. OSU at Northwestern 4. Wisconsin at Illinois 5. Iowa at Indiana 6. Colgate at Boston U. 7. Navy at Georgia Tech 8. Iowa St. at Missouri 9. Idaho at Western Michigan 10. VPI at Alabama 11. Kentucky at Florida 12. SMU at Arkansas 13. Texas Tech at Baylor 14. Colorado at Air Force 15. Brigham Young at Utah 16. Wyoming at Arizona 17. Oregon at Oregon St. 18. Washington at Wash. St. 19. USC Fat UCLA 20. UC Davis at Pacific :i 'I Do The K2 2455 South State 1 mile south of campus 662-7307 HOURS: Mon., Wed., Thur., Fri. 10-8:30 Tuesday 10-5:30 Saturday 9-5:30 a - Good Food Forest fires burn more th$n trees. M.iuaetd o tepu a w 4 A A )77 I Fish Fry $1.39 I 0 0 A 3035 Washtera. -I In the past few years, many students have missed training and financial opportunities because they have excellent let others do their THINKING for them. This statement refers to the Uni- versity of Michigan Army ROTC program and the students that failed to take advantage of all the benefits offered simply because they locked all the FACTS. Students relying on hearsay rather Direct From the Facilities of the World's Largest NwAgency, Comes a Book You Can't Afford ob tot ! Hee s ho mstcpe terfernc gudefr veyhoeofie n school Te AoAMAAsi mr thousandsofothe itesof ifrma ....:.volmetha.beong:o.evryoe' I. nuiesapfor ae spel owfice aof " conly$150pls-2 cntsfr oage andandling.sOrde orcp oa by sig heattce coupon. v w h t I ti stcs s r ifomat rim m m m inpimn a n dimnnmimnnnnn esanenwJre 066 * of APAlmanacof the o. tu - g > I n sae Uc ::::>::::;::>; ::.:>:>:;<:::>:>: .. :::.:.:<. n ame _1.50 __l __us__25__cents___for________e I9 .andress __________ I than FACTS misguided. M in determining the course of their future are sadly +I Aen and Women! You may ask, "How can I get back on the track. "The answer -simple'! On Wednesday, 15 November 1972, the A r m y Officer Education Program staff will conduct a seminar on the Army and ROTC in Lecture Room No. 1, Modern Language Building f r o m 4:00 P.M. to6.:00 P.M. All male and female students are invited to III III1