Tuesday, January 11, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I Tuesday, January 11, 1977 THE MICHiGAN DAILY PaeSee -i * Inside StraightI Andy NGlazer nA laeAthletic tradition .. * Michigan not unique REMEMBER THE FIRST good report card you ever brought home? Marvelous reaction, right? Congratulations all around,, you were top dog for a while and everything was aokcoolgroovy- neato ...d . Until you found out that the standard of excellence was now higher and you were expected to do it every time from then on. This is the "behind every silver lining there's a dark cloud" syndrome. Well, it seems that every time you put a ball into some- one's hands and put an "M" on his jacket around here, he and his fellows beat up on the oher guy. Football, basket- ball, baseball, tennis, cross country, gymnastics and to a lesser extent damn near every team at this school. That's not so strange. With the financial resources at he University's disposal, and a genius like Don Canham at the top, it's not surprising at all that Michigan can run roughshod over its poorly neighbors. Every once in a while, though, the mighty Blue venture out of the relative comfort of the midwest and take on schools with traditions of their own. Schools like Alabama, Nebraska, Okla- homa, Texas . . . or USC. Asuperior feeling Ann Arbor is not the center of the collegiate sports universe, no matter how much we like to think it is. But I must have had 20 people remark to me how "lousy" Michigan played on Janu- ary 1. People around here just naturally expect Michigan to win every time even if its opponent has (shudder) an equal amount of talent and/or motivation. We're not alone. There is an eastern race called New Yorkers that are infamous for thinking New York the best in everything. And while it might not seem that way, it's normally an uncon- scious process. New Yorkers don't think New York is superior it's just that, well, how could anyone not live in New York? Everyone lives in New York. How could Michigan not win? I mean, Michigan always wins. There has to be a reason, a scapegoat. In all four of my years here, that scapegoat has been the pass. "Oh, if we could only pass," we cry. "Why doesn't Bo pass more against these weak teams?" we ask. 0. J. Simpson labeled Michigan's offense as "one-dimensional" in explain- ing his alma mater's glorious conquest. Certainly an improved passing attack wAld make Michigan's affense more dynamic. But you just don't wish for an improved passing attack and get it for Christmas. More time must be devoted to the pass in practice, and it must be used in games. But practice time is finite; any additional time spent on the pass means less time spent on the run. You can't get some- thing for nothing. And we all remember all pass-no run Stanford, all 51-0 of them. It's hard to pass And as to throwing more in the early games, of course the1 passing attack would then improve. But all it takes is a couple early interceptions to fire up an average team. Give a team an inch and instead of demoralized Navy you . get fired-up Purdue. These arguments are just as extreme and one-dimensional as most of the pro-pass arguments; there is a middle ground where the true answer probably lies. But they serve a purpose. Michigan fans want the pass. They want their cake and to be able to eat it too. They want to beat the living $&! ?*! out of every team Michigan faces. And it won't - can't - happen. Some of those other teams are just as great as Michigan, and the Wolverines can't win every game they play. The pass can help Michigan, but it's not the Holy Grail. The next time you remember how "lousy" Michigan played on Janu- ary 1, consider how superbly USC played against Michigan. So root for Michigan and have fun doing it. But remember, those other guys aren't always "other guys." Sometimes they're pretty damn good. .....................-------------------: UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS: w " CALCULATORS, STEREOS: Eni,, payment in, lull wth t rder, r rtnit 0%witht rder, balance CO.O. PLEASE CHECK BOX FOR ITEM ORDERED " ADD $3.00 FOR HANDLING AND SHIPPING 'IT'S NICE TO START'... DR. DUNK LSA SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS for Fall- T h Winter 77-78 and for Spring-Summer 1977 are now available in Room 1220 Angell Hall. To qualify for scholarship consideration, a student must be an LSA undergraduate and have attended the LS&A f o V College of the U of M for at feast one full term. Sopho- By DON MacI ACHLAN put up a shot while I was fall- marked. "I think I've got a well at times, rebound well at mores must have a U of M grade point average of 3.7 or Joel Thompson has waited a ing to the floor. It almost went pretty long range, but I am times and play good defense better and Juniors and Seniors must have -at least a 3.6 long time to gain a berth in in - damn, I wish I had made kind of conscious of when I put at times but rarely did he put GPA in order to apply for a scholarship. Students must the Michigan starting line-up, that shot."up those long jumpers. I usu- them all together. Now he is alsoapply to the Office of Financial Aid as part of their Sixty-six varsity games to be AFTER TWO frustrating sea- ally take a look over at Coach doing it. Joel has the potential LSA Scholarship application. The awards are based on both exact. One New Years Eve, sons of warming the bench, a Orr and see his reaction. I used of becoming a great player be- cations must be returned to 1220 Angell Hall by Feb- 1976 Thompson finally got the good attitude and more confi- to be looking to pass the ball, fore he leaves Michigan," Fried- ruary good news. dence have made Thompson a but now if I have the shot I'll er said. "I was really surprised," much improved player. take it." Thompson said. "Coach Orr "When I found out I wouldn't "I think my percentage has told the team I would be start- start at the beginning of the improved because I have bet- The Top 0d ing and I began to look for- season I decided I wasn't go- ter shot selection," Thompson ____p_________________ff _________ ward to that South Carolina ing to get down - I was just added. game." going to play as hard as I Last year the junior skyrock By The Associated Press - MCAT-LSAT - DAT WHEN THE BALL went up in could," Thompson said. et would block opponents shots 1 1. san Francisco 39 17-0 1084 . GMAT * CPAT " VAT " GRE " OCAT * SAT Columbia the following Sunday, "I talked to some older peo- - and get a piece of the play- 1. Kentucky 8 5- 0 4. NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS Thompson was ready to play. ple who thought I might have er at the same time. After two , 4.Alabama 1 12-0 738 In front of a national televi- a good season," Thompson add- such fouls, kerplunk, and Joel 5. North Carolina 3 10-1 688 ECFMG .*FLEX sion audience the 6-8 forward ed. "They told me to play hard was back on the bench. 6. MICHIGAN 1 9-1 546 Flexible Programs and Hours 7. Wake Forest 11-1 484 Oe 8yaso xeineadsces ml lse.Vlmnu pumped in 17 points before foul- when I get the chance and I "I think my defense has im- 8. Nevada-Las Vegas 13-1 385 Over 38 years of eperience and success. Small classes. Voluminous ing out late in the second half. made up my mind that was proved but it is not as good as 9. Minnesota 10-0 334 home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers The junior from Flint has not what I was going to do." I would like it to be," Thomp- 10. Arizona 11-1 288 open days aesnd s all year. Completetape facilities for review really had that much exposure "I worked on my game to son said. "I am trying to get 11. Marquette 9-2 254 missed lessons at our centers. to pressure while at Michigan. make me a more complete, in my mind that instead of just 12. UCLA 11-2 247 His first real test came in player," Thompson said. "I boxing out, -I have to box out 13. Louisville 9-2 163 Write or caIl: the Providence game when practiced shooting regularly and and get in a rebounding posi- 14. Maryland 10-2 98 1945 Pauline Blvd. Thompson replaced Tom Staton knew my offense would be good. tion." 15. Providence 10-2 92 Ann Arbor 48103 T" and played most of the second I worked on boxing out oppo- DOCTOR DUNK a longtime 16. Arkansas 10-1 65 62-3149 SPECIALS SINC 1938 boxin-DOCOR DUKCIALtISTS17 CleCon 1-236 half and in both overtimes. nents and improving my de- fan favorite, is happy he has 17. Memphis 10-23 With one second remaining in fense by guarding smaller and findly made it into the start- 1. Memphis state 13-1 S Call Toll Free (outside NY. State) 80 - 221-9$40 fthe second overtime guard Steve quicker forwards." ing five. 0. Oregon 11-2 44 Affiliated Centers in Major U. S. Cities Grote lofted a long full court Now that the season is al- "It is a very nice feeling to pass in the vicinity of the bas- most half over, Thompson knows be in the starting lineup now,": ---r ____ ket and Thompson nearly man- he still has some facets of his Thompson said. "There's prob- aged to tip it in and keep the game to work on but he ishap- ably not much difference in my' Wolverines undefeated. py with his offensive perform- playing time because I'm still "I went from the corner and ance to date. In his first two playing about the same but it's :r ran towards the basket," seasons Thompson hit on only a good feeling to be starting." Thompson recalled. "I jumped 44% of his field goal attempts Assistant coach Bill Frieder for the ball and the next thing but this year he is hitting at feels Thompson is a more com- I knew the ball was in my a 62% clip from the field. plete basketball player now, hands. Then a guy pushed me "I DON'T WORRY about my playing both ends of the court. Bell Midrasl while I was in the air and I shots anymore," Thompson re- "In the past, he could shoot C COURSESIN JU DAICA PREPARE FOR BIG TEN 4R W t R:iJIC A--P_.-, ^,,,. Tankers strive for perfection By TIM PFOHL to Champaign for a 7:30 meet If you heard a sigh of relief against Illinois the next night. coming from Matt Mann Pool Purdue, in the midst of re-' yesterday, it was probably the building its swimming pro-; men's swim team completing gram, has shown improvement nearly two weeks of two-a-day over last year., drills in preparation for the up- Stager isn't taking Illinois coming Big Ten schedule. lightly though as the Illini1 In their first action of the turned in a strong showing+ new easy ineMichi Oakland last against Wisconsin last week.I Saturday night. Coach Gus Coach Stager feels however. Stager felt the Wolverines were that senior sensation Gordon well - prepared for the meet, - but were hampered because Women cagers three of their top swimmers, Gordon Downie, Rob Helt, and face EMU Bob Bauman, stayed at home The Michigan women's writing grad school entrance basketball team hopes to exams. make its first mark in the "Realistically the compet- win col-mn tonight when tition was only fair, and I they tnke on the Eastern was somewhattdisappointed Michigan Hurons in an 8:00 with some of the boys who p.m. game at Crisler Arena. lost when they shouldn't Coach Carmel Borders' have," Stager said, squad is 0-3 this season, los- Diver Matt Chelich, who fin- ing both games i the ished in the NCAA Top 40 as a Wayne State Christmas freshman last year, qualified Tourney along with their for this year's regional post- home opener last Thursday season meet bysscoring an ex- 'against Grand Valley. To- cellent 335 points against Oak-j night's non-conference con- land. test is Michigan's last be- The squad opens their Big fore they begin Big Ten play Ten season with two meets in at home against Purdue on two days. They travel to Pur-I Jan.1S. due on January 21st, then driveI Downie could win almost every ; event he enters, but knows that he is unable to use his ace in back to back events. I So thanks mainly to the . schedule makers and the ab- I sence of more than one star, , the Blue seem to have a close contest awaiting them early in the Big Ten race. SCORES NHL Washington 2, DETROIT 0 New York Islanders 8, Philadelphia 3 NBA rWPK ------E-------.-----.-----.-----Mon. & Wed. 7:00-8:30 INTERMEDIATE HEBREW----------------------------. Mondays 8:30-10:00- HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB/ADVANCED HEBREW . Tuesdays 7:00-8:301 JEWISH COOKERY .-.... . ..Sundays 3:30-6:00] TORAH AND HAFTARAH CHANT ........................Thursdays 7:00-8:301 BASIC JUDAISM ... . .... . .... Mondays 7:00-10:00 JEWISH VALUES Wednesdays 7:00-8:30 POLITICS AND PARTIES THAT SHAPED THE BIBLE Mondays 3:30-5:00 MISHNAH B'RACHOT ... . Mondays 8:30-10:00 TALMUD SANHEDRIN - - - .-- Sundays 4:30-6:00I THE ROLE OF WOMAN IN JUDAISM .. Tuesdays 7:00-8:301 MIDRASH GENESIS RABBAH ... . ...... Thursdays 6:30-8:001 ISRAELI GOVERNMENT AND CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL ISSUES . Thursdays 7:00-8:30 AN INTRODUCTION TO CHABAD CHASSIDISM ..Tuesdays 7:00-8:301 TOPICS IN AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY . Mondays 7:00-9:30 p.m. p m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. P.M. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. REGISTRATION: Jan. 11, 13 t Tues.&Thrs. 7-9:00 p.m %IteUtvWrety of@j ktn 1429 Hill St. C63-~3336 Phoenix 93, Atlanta 92 w Save $10.00 to $59.90 if you act now. If youve been thinkingDabo'it getting a program mable, special offer for you 4r I, 'II Textbooks For All Courses MORE Used Books THAN EVER Supplies Pens, Papers, Notebooks, Pencils, plus much much more Extended Hours FRI: Jan. 7,9-71p.m. SAT: Jan. 8,9-6 p.m. M-THURS: -? "1 ~ eLctronic ."'!CdC .C Q!o C Fast Delivery Guaranteed with atified davkoeit rt Pa residents, add 6% sake tax personolcheckswllldeloy odes HEWLETTS PACKARD MODEL WAS SALE HP-21 s100 s 69.95 HP-22 1165 $109.95 H P-25 $145 1126.95 HP-25c 5200 117595 HP-27 $200 $153.95 H-iP-67 1450 $389.95 HP-97 $750 $649.95 SR-56 $109.95* If you want an incredible slide rule calculator that's also programmable, then this is the one for you. There're 74 preprogrammed functions and opera- tions. And it has AOS, TI's unique algebraic operating system, the underlying reason an SR-56 is so power- ful. It'll let you handle problems with as many as 9 sets of parentheses. Talk about memory. An SR-56 has 10 (11 if you count the T-registered.). And you can do arithmetic with all of them. Chances are you'll soon discover how really easy it is to program. An SR-56 has 100 steps. Six logical decision functions. Four levels of subroutines. Dec- rement and skip on zero. Compare a test register with the display to make a conditional branch. And this is just the beginning. Think about it. Can you really afford to put off get- ting your SR-56, now? r - - - - -... ... ...- ....- - - --__..._.- _- r-, WAS S-.52....$300 PC-100 ... .$"S SR-56 ..$10 SR-51 It .... Z 80 SR-40..50S TI-SOSOM .. $130 TI-s040... .$1so SALE $186.95 $149.95 $ 84.95 $ 52.95 $ 33.97 $ 92.95 $109.95 SR-52 $299.95* If you want the computer-like power of a card pro grammable then choose this one. Techniques like optimization, iteration, data reduc- tion, what-if matrices, mathematical modeling, need not tie up your mind-or your time. But learning to use it is a hassle, you say. Not true. Prerecorded programs are gathered into software libraries: Electrical Engineering. Math. Statistics. Finance. All you need do is load a mag card, press a few keys and you'll get answers that - previously required a computer. You can make your own programs just as easily. In just a couple of hours you'll begin to prove what a powerful asset you have- right at your fingertips. And there's not a better time to get an SR-52 than right now. F----------------------------- ---- Electrical Engineering. Statistics. Math. Finance. Choose any two and (1) return this completed coupon including serial number along with (2) your completed SR-52 sealized customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan. 20 and March 31, 1977. SR-59 " "re nhaa irn f and full one yer factory warranty. STEREO i RECEIVERS SEND : FOR O ~ IONEEM ' FREE * IAYAI lfaIIP Texas Instruments will rebate $10.00 of your original SR-56 purchase price when you: (1) return this completed coupon including serial number (2) along with your completed SR-56 customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan. and March 31, 1977. SR-56 Rebate Oiler P. 0. Box 1210 c , I 1 PK 0. Box 1210 -- hren Txe 7-~ I II I I I , 1 1