-Thursday, March 30, 1978-The Michigan Daily 'OGNITION SLOW IN COMING: etmen have high hopes By BILLY NEFF 'trivia buffs, here we go again. eam at the Michigan has won ten t Big Ten championships, fields better contingent than last year an't even get ranked in the s Top Twenty? The answer is Brian Eisner's men's tennis 1 terbeek remains one of the top' players in the nation. However, Etterbeek may not have secured the top slot had freshman sen- sation Matt Horwitch not broken a bone in his small toe. Horwitch, rated #26 in the nation last year and a performer on the National Junior Davis Cup cham- pions, would have provided him quite a stiff challenge. Horwitch is also a two- time state champion from Illinois. ry time we step out on the court lay, we're being pointed at. division.teams will always play etter against us since they havei to lose; we are always expected because we always have won," Ied the affable Eisner.'; UGH THEY have piled up these isive statistics, since they are in irth, they have not and will not e any national recognition unless, ner sees it, "we win all the dual in this part of this country, we t as Big 10 champs and we per- well in Texas." They must also iplish these feats in order to be. I to the NCAA tourney. ier's Big Ten champion squad is its top player in Jeff Etterbeek, nference runnerup to Bill Rennie liana last year. Etterbeek also to the nationals where he suc- I to the shotmaking of Califor- Viarty Davis in the first found. Et-! - U Mar. 31 Apr. 1 Apr. 7 Apr. 8 Apr. 11 Apr.8$4 Apr. 16 Apr. 19 Apr. 28 Apr. 29 May 1 May.3 May 5 May 6 May 9 May 12 May 13 May 15 May 18-20 May 22-29 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS-EDWARDSVILLE Ann Arbor KENTUCKY............... Ann Arbor MINNESOTA ............... Ann Arbor IOWA ...................... Ann Arbor MICHIGAN STATE........Ann Arbor Northwestern .............. Evanston Wisconsin .................... Madison EASTERN MICHIGAN ..... Ann Arbor PURDUE .................. Ann Arbor ILLINOIS...............Ann Arbor WESTERN MICHIGAN..Ann Arbor KALAMAZOO COLLEGE... Ann Arbor Ohio State................... Columbus Indiana .................. #Bloomington Southern"Methodist ...........Dallas Trinity ................. San Antonio Texas .......................... Austin Pan American............Edinburg Big Ten Championships West Lafayette NCAA Championshis.........Athens the only loss to Mid-America conferen- ce champ Miami, when he broke the bone in his toe. The season swings into full form this Friday and Saturday with matches against midwestern power Southern Illinois-Edwardsville and Kentucky. Both are at 7 p.m. in the Track and Tennis Building. Southern Illinois boasts the heir ap- parent to Arthur Ashe as the top black player in the country, Juan Fawow from St. Louis. He was the NCAA champion in division two play last season. HOWEVER, SIU may not even make the trip to Ann Arbor as they have several players sick or injured. If they do, Eisner stated plainly and simply, "they're as tough as boiled oil since they have,all their players back from last year." Already this season they have downed Big 10 contender Wiscon- sin,7-2. Kentucky will not be as formidable as they fell to SIU, 6-3. Nevertheless, Eisner's crew has many stiff tests ahead of them when they travel to Texas. While in the Longhorn state, the Wolverines will tangle with second- rated Trinity of Texas, fourth-ranked Southern Methodist, seventh-rated Pan American, and 16th-ranked Texas. Eisner's hopes for the upcoming campaign are extremely high as he claims this group is "much deeper than last year's team." And although he lost the services of Mark Freedman and Scott Seemen, two of his top players, his analysis seems correct. But his forces still will not receive the recognition they probably deserve unless they knock off the top flight competition they will face down South. Eisner knows how difficult that will be. hll I ALWAYS FRESH, 7 days... vith our own special touch md introducing: Bagelchips 490. at the Bapel Factor 130 South University "Expert in Tray Catering COACH EISNER is hoping for a speedy return of Horwitch. In his stead will be the much improved senior from Chicago, Brad Holland. Holland teamed with fifth man Jack Neinken for the Big Ten title a year ago at second doubles. The third and fourth slots will be manned by Jud Shaufler, also a league champ in #2 singles and Ihor Debryn, a freshman from Detroit who was tabbed as tie 50th best netman in the nation.' Shaufler, incidentally, also copped the Big Ten doubles championship with Et- terbeek. Neinken and transfer student Peter Osler round out the singles players. Osler played as high as third singles at Indiana, according to Eisner. A doubles player will -be Ollie Owens, a returning letterman from Ann Arbor Pioneer. Steve Solys and Rick Garcia have also seen action this campaign. THIS SEASON has already begun for Eisner and his optimistic charges as both Miami of Ohio and Notre Dame came to Ann Arbor and left on the short end of 8-1 defeats. Horwitch suffered OUT OF MY WAY! New Jersey Net star and rookie of the year candidate Bernard King attempts to drive past the defensive pressure of the Washington Bullets all-star forward Elvin Hayes. The Nets, who play their home games in Piscataway, N.J., can't seem to find anyone to aid the helpless King and continue sliding downhill. AP Photo BASKETBALL ROUNDUP Pistons muffle Sonics, 121 -116 GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION at our new location-207 E. Ann St. Fri. Mar. 31 Free Hatha Yoga Workshop 6-8 p.m. bring floormat, towel, loose clothes, empty stomach Sat. Apr. 1 Vegetarian Dinner $2.50 6:30 p.m. Musical Concert 8:00 p.m. Sun. Apr. 2 Open House-demonstrations of all 3 series of yoga asanas 1, 3, 5 p.m. Free Refreshments. NEW CLASSES BEGINNING* Hatha Yoga-beginning classes Mon. Apr.3 6-8 p.m. Wed. Apr. 5 6-8 p.m. Sat. Apr. 8 10:30-12:30 p.m. *NEW LOCATION BRING: mat, loose clothing, towel, and an empty stomach YOGA CENTER OF ANN ARBOR-769-4231 DETROIT (AP) - Center Leon Douglas led a balanced scoring attack' last night as the Detroit Pistons outlasted the Seattle Supersonics 121- 116 to keep alive their slim National Basketball Association playoff hopes. Douglas finished with 23 points while M.L. Carr had 18 and John Shumate 17 to top six Pistons who finished in double figures. By winning, the Pistons moved to within four games of Milwaukee for the last playoff spot in the Western Con- ference. Detroit jumped on top 34-28 with Douglas hitting 13 points in the first period and went on to pull.in front by 113-96 in the fourth period. Then, the Sonics, led by Wally Walker and Gus Williams, pulled to within 119- 116 with four seconds to go. But two free throws by Detroit's Jim Price put the game out of reach. Williams had 32 points while Jack Sikma and Dennis Johnson each had 20 for the Sonics, who are playoff bound. It was only the third loss in Seattle's last nine games. Spurs paste Pacers INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-Billy Paultz and George Gervin tossed in 20 points apiece while Larry Kenon had 19 last night as the San Antonio Spurs defeated Indiana 106-91 in National Basketball Association play. The Spurs, trailing 18-17 with 3:08 left in the first period, outscored the Pacers 10-2 in the next three minutes to open a 27-20 advantage. A Louie Dampier jump shot built the lead to 37-26 with 8:46 to play in the first half and Indiana never drew closer than six points after:, that. Rookie James Edwards paced In- diana with 18 points while Ricky Sobers and Mike Bantom tossed in 16 apiece. Sixers sweep up Basketball Association.' The victory, Philadelphia's third straight and 24th in a row at home, moved the 76ers to within two games of clinching the NBA's Eastern Conferen- c title. McGinnis finished with 25 points as Philadelphia jumped out to a 32-16 lead* and finished the first period ahead 38 ' 24. The Sixers gained their biggest lead of the game on a dunk by Erving, who finished with 24, with 5:54 remaining'to make it 115-84. Randy Smith scored 37 points for the Braves, who lost their seventh straight game. SC "R ES Exhibition Baseball NIGHT EDITORS: DAN PERRIN BILLY SAHN t DETROIT 4, Toronto 3 Cleveland 6, San Francisco 2 Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 2 i10 innings) Minnesota 4. New York (AL) 2 (10 innings) Philadelphia 7, New York (NI.) 6 Boston 6, Pittsburgh 0 Chicago (AL) 3, KansasCity2 Montreal 3, Houston 2 Seattle 8. Oakland 6 Atlanta 4, Texas 2 California 10, San Diego 4 Chicago (NL) 7, Milwaukee 2 NBA DETROIT 121, Seattle 116 San Antonio 106, Indiana 91 Kansas City-Omaha 108, Washington 105 PHILADELPHIA (AP) - George BILLY NEFF McGinnis and Julius Erving combined for 49 points as the Philadelphia 76ers, leading all the way, crushed the Buffalo Braves 149-118 last night in the National good eather uppers are a natural high SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y W a n.P's ntn-hi l iwnu..a..., ,,,, ''' .it:: ;c s;: . iEi :: :;ii : :.:;: ' :i" it' :i:' :;CSj i '' '- " + :} DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) - Shortstop Mark Wagners two-out bases-loaded single in the top of the ninth inning lif- ted the Detroit Tigers to a 4-3 exhibition baseball victory over the Toronto Blue Jays yesterday afternoon. Steve Kemp opened the Detroit ninth with a single off losing pitcher Dave Wallace. Kemp then reached second base on an error by Wallace, who threw wild to first on an attempted pickoff. Milt May was walked intentionally and Wallace then walked Aurelio Rodriguez to load the bases before Wagner grounded a single between first and second base to drive in the winning run. ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOURS- 3:00-6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday '/2 PRICE DRINKS 1 St HOT DOGS w/oll the trimmings 1%-/.AL MAPL W N%-/ -M JOL -W JIL A& W -AL JOL -M Reliever John Hiller came on in the Tigers' ninth to retire the Jays in order. Detroit's other runs came on a two- run homer in the third inning by Jason Thompson and a solo shot by Milt May in the fourth. Toronto scored a single run in the fif- th and added the rest in the seventh on a two-run homer by Al Woods off winning pitcher Bruce Taylor. The Tigers, who continue to lead the spring training circuit, upped their, record to 15-6. Dekers dude it up The beer was flowing, the feast was sumptuous, and the occasion was the 1978 Deker's Club Hockey Award Banquet held at Roma Hall last night, where everyone forgot the season's failings and toasted the 1977-78 Michigan hockey team. Michigan's nine seniors were presen- ted their class rings, and senior Ben fts Tigers Kawa was named as the team's most valuable player as chosen by his teammates. Kawa, widely recognized as being one of the most personable and hard- working players on the team, reacted to the award with quiet humility. "I made a lot of friends here... that's something I'll remember for the rest of my life." Coach, Dan Farrell had high praise for all of his seniors, as well as each of the recipients of the various awards presented during the night. Freshman defenseman Tim Manning was awarded the Deker's Club Award, which recognizes the outstanding rookie each year, and junior left winger Mark Miller was awarded the Alton D. Simms trophy (Most Improved Player), as also chosen by his team- mates. -GARY KICINSKt SEt and MSA Eleetions Sthe second week oMpril We urge all-.undergraduate and graduate students at the School of Education to make sure that candi- dates from their division run for office or that they themselves file for candidacy. Please file for can- not t the uac, . The right boots can make a trip go right. And just high quality materials and construction, bu proner fit to insure maximum comfort. At Bivo J1