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April 12, 1977 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-04-12

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Tuesday, April 12, 1977

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

WOMEN'S TRACK CLUB SHINES w1 o,,,. ! i

Tigers tripped,

5-3

TORONTO - Run-scoring singles by Pedro
Garcia and Doug Ault keyed a four-run Toronto
rally in the seventh inning yesterday and car-
ried the Blue Jays to a 5-3 victory over the
Detroit Tigers.
IT WAS THE third victory in four games for
the expansion Blue Jays, while the Tigers have
yet to notch a victory.
Trailing 3-1 entering the bottom of the seventh,
Toronto sent eight men to the plate to take the
lead. Besides the clutch hits by Garcia and Ault,
Bob Bailor's sacrifice fly to center scored a run
and the other came in on a balk by rookie Dave
Rozema.
STEVE HARGAN, who came on in the seventh
in relief of Toronto's starter Jesse Jefferson,
got credit for the victory. He blanked the Tigers
over 21/3 innings allowing only a single to Jason
Thompson.
John Hiller, replaced Rozema with one out in
the seventh, and was the loser, giving up three
of the Toronto runs.
The Tigers had taken a two-rn lead in the
top of the seventh on leadoff walk to Rusty Staub
and a towering home run over the right-center
field fence by Thompson.--AP

T hinclads tough in debut
special To The Daily
Last Saturday, April 9th, can be considered a
"Red Letter Day" for women's sports at Mich-
igan. The women's Track and Field Club took
part in the first meet ever for Wolverine women.
Michigan's fourth place finish behind Illinois,
Purdue, and Wisconsin was quite respectable
considering that only eight women from Mich-
igan were entered. Other participants included
Notre Dame, Indiana, St. Francis, and St.
Joseph.
"I WAS EXTREMELY proud of the Michigan
women's performance as it was their very first
competition, We had been able to train outdoors
for only three days and their perofrmance show-
ed the competitive attitude that Michigan ath-
letes always have," said coach Kenneth "Red"
Simmons.
Standouts for Michigan consisted of Roberta
Zalt who took second in the shotput and third
in the discus, and Laura Lowy, Ina Grayson,
Jonie Huls, and Pam Moore who collectively took
third place in the 440 yard relay.
The club has two more meets scheduled, one
at Michigan State on April 16th, and the other
at Central Michigan on April 23rd.

u o eayoE ulMAm ,1tds

Vp
NOW

BGSU WINS IN OT:
AP Photo tickmen stuc

310 MAYNARD-
HAPPY
HOURS

Sleeping on the job

New York Islanders' Dennis Potvin tries to put the puck as
well as himself past Buffalo goalie Dan Edwards. The goal
was disallowed, but the Islanders beat the Sabres 4-2 in the
first game of their playoff series.
Netters seek revenge
over improved MSU

By PETE LEININGER
After falling behind 3-0, the
Michigan lacrosse club made a
miraculous comeback only to
lose 6-5 to powerful Bowling
Green in the fifth sudden-death
overtime period, Sunday.
Michigan had a number of
chances to win the game in over-
time but its shots went wide.
Michigan put the ball in the net
once only to have the goal nuli-
fied because of having a man in

igan's Steve Bissell split the'
Falcon defense for tMichigan's
first goal, and the only scoring
of the period.
The third period was played
fairly evenly, with both teams
picking up one goal. Bob Gor-
don scored an unassisted goal,
for Michigan.
Michigan out-played the Fal-
cons in the fourth period scor-
ing two goals to tie the game
at 4-4 and send it into over-
time.

lk 6-5
sudden-death periods are played.
Both teams scored twice in
the first overtime, but were
unable to score in the second
overtime, sending the game into
sudden-death.
Michigan's Fred H a r t m a n
scored Michigan's first goal, fir-
ing a, rebound past the Falcon
goalie. Chris Phillips scored
what was to be the last score
of the day for Michigan.
Neither team was able to

Tuesday

-t/2 price
7-11 P.M.

--1/2 price on all
drinks 7-10 P.M.

Friday

-15c hot dogs
2-5 P.M.

in.. n nv ASTI T LWi?

+I,- -- - t~l^" -

By BOB MILLER matches this year. We are do-'
ing very, very well," he said.
In some ways the Michigan "Kalamazoo was the Division
men's tennis team will be look- III champions last year and they
ing at a mirror image of itself said that we were toughest
when it takes on the Michigan team they've played this year."
State Spartans at East Lansing EISNER ALSO indicated that
at 3:00 today. the weather will play an impor-
Both squads are stocked with tant -factor in his club's matches
new faces and Michigan coach this week. "People think a day
B r i a n Eisner indicated that like today (sunny, high tempera-
MSU 'has been getting better"tures) is a good day to practice,
each match."x but it was so windy tliat it's dif-
Coming oft routs of Eastern ficult to practice." -
Michigan and Kalamnazoo, the 'Wind is a definite detriment
Wolverines have a busy sched- to the stronger team. "You have
ule ahead with four matches this to play conservative in the wind.
week beginning with the Spar- It pulls down the stronger player
tans: to the level of the weaker play-
RETURNEES ON MSU are er," said Eisner.
Tom Gudelsky at number one er s.
singles' and Kevin McNulty at
third singles. 1oth players help-
ed Michigan State to a respec-
table fourth place finish in last
year's conference tournament
behind Michigan, Wisconsin and"
Ohio State.
Michigan will go with the
same lineup that started against ABC CHARTERS
Kazoo. The only question mark
is the extent of Judd Schaufler's ADVANCE BOOKING
muzscle pull.
muscl pullAIR ONLY FROM DETROIT
Eisner believes it to be minor,AIONYRODEOI
but nonetheless he will watch AMSTERDAM rom '289
Schaufler's p e r f o r m a n c e CSLSIFrom'1
at State, since Wisconsin comes FRANKFORT From '309
to town on Friday with a real GLASGOW From '319
threat to end the Wolverines net HAWAII From 1299
dynasty, meaning Eisner will ITALY From '399
need all his starters to be LONDON * From '319
healthy and rested for the MUNICH From '379
Badgers. ZURICH From1379
At the moment, Eisner is OTHER DEPARTURES AVAILABLE
happy with the way the team TOOCAGO, NEW YORK AND
has been responding in its EURAIL PASS

the goal area. v Michigan's Jeff Haroldson and srunti owlng Greens
The first period saw Mich- Pete Lindquist tallied one goal Lee Murphy fired a shot past
IMichigan's Mike Bussi, at 1:18
igan playing a bit tight and each to account for the scoring of the fifth overtime.
making a number of mental in the fourth period.
errors. Bowling Green held a Two four - minute overtimes "The key to the game was our'
3-0 lead at the end of the are played if the game is tied play while we- were a man
period. after regulation time. If the down," c o m m e n t e d Falcon
In the second period, Mich, score is still tied, four-minute coach Jim Planut.

NO COVER

310 MAYNARD

LN

..

y

e

S

1

cea

Report to the University Community

GOVERNING
STRUCTURE

11

NHL .Playoffs
Boston 8, Los Angeles 3
NY Islanders 4, Buffalo 2
Montreal 7, St. Louis 2
Toronto 3, Philadelphia 2
S- A AniiMch 48I 2
te'phtiS 954

FIRST CLASS
15 DAYS $170
21 DAYS $210t
1 MONTH '260
2 MONTH 1350
3 MONTH 1420

I

STUDENT PASS
SECOND CLASS
2 MONTH

1230

w sM1.1AIRLINE t AMTRAK
TICKETS At NO CHARII I0 CLINT
REGENCY TRAVL INC.
INDIVIDUAL &
GROUP TRAVEL
665-6122 -
AIR-{{ E ALAND
6011. Wllan m(crner of MaYnard)
Ann Arbor, Mih. 48103

The University Cellar is an agency of
the University under the direct control
of a student-faculty-administrator Board
of Directors. The Board is composed of 6
students appointed by Michigan Student
Assembly, 3 faculty appointed by the
faculty Senate assembly and 1 admin-
istrator appointed by the President of the
University. Through this Board of Direc-
tors the Cellar is responsive to the needs
and desires of the e n t i re University
Community.
The Cellar is incorporated as a Mich-
igan non-profit corporation and is gov-
erned by both State and Federal regula-
tions on non-profit organizations. Any
funds earned by the corporation are re-
tained for operating capital.
Any student of the University may be
appointed to the Board of Directors. In
order to insure that the Board is repre-
sentative of a spectrum of the student
community, the bylaws provide that no
more than two members can be from
any one school or college and that at
least two members must be undergrad-
uates and two members must be gradu-
ate students.
The current members of the Board of Directors
are:
James Burns student 995-4147
Gaynelle Burt faculty 763-0010
Marv Bylinsky student 663-4356
Steve Carnevale student 761-2373
Thomas Easthope administration 764-7420
Thomas Kinnear faculty 764-1388
Richard Mann faculty 663-8446
Larry Pulkownik student 665-3806
Robert Schneider student 665-4356
Esther Ullman student 663-2682
HISTORY-

if capital could be raised.'To accomplish
this a referendum of the student body
was held to establish a $5.00 rolling
assessment to provide capital. The stu-
dent body was so committed to the idea
of a student owned bookstore that the
election generated a turnout of 10,000
students (a record) who voted 10 to 1
to assess themselves $5.00 to capitalize
a student store. Since that time the Uni-
versity Cellar has grown and improved.
The textbook rush was moved into the
Michigan Union Ballroom in 1972 reduc-
ing the tremendous crowding problems
which had been experienced up until
that time (If you think it's bad now you
should have seen it then). In 1974 the
Cellar opened a branch on the North
Campus to serve the students of the Art,
Architecture, Music and " Engineering
Schools.

UNIVERSITY CELLAR, INC.
BALANCE SHEET 5/31/76

ASSETS
CURRENT ASSETS
Cash
Accounts Receivable
Inventories
Deposits & prepaid expenses
Total current assets
NON-CURRENT ASSETS
Rental equipment
Property & Equipment
Recoverable Property Tax
TOTAL ASSETS
EQUITIES
Current Liabilities
Student Assessment Dep. Payable
CAPITAL
Contributed by Regents
Contributed by Students
Retained Earnings

21,072
40,030
676,338
6,633
744,073
44,998
68,484
8,828
866,383

PURPOSE-

I

ill

-m

F7

I

ALL YOU CAN EAT!
TUESDAY SPECIAL 5 to 10 P.M.
BAR-B-OUE BEEF RIBS
DINNER INCLUDES:
0 Tasty Bar-B-Que Beef Ribs
0 Golden French Fried Potatoes
* Large Pretzel Bell Salad with Choice of Dressing
* Steaming Hot Basket of Russian Rye Bread
$3.95 ADULT CHILDREN Under 12-$1.75
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL: >

The University Cellar is a non-profit
corporation established and run to serve
the University of Michigan community
with emphasis on student needs. It pro-
vides goods and services when it is ap-
parent that the private market is not
adequately fullfilling the needs of the
community at a reasonable price.
FINANCIAL-
An additional goal of the University
Cellar has been to phase out the $5.00
rolling assessment. The Cellar has not
collected the assessment since the fall
term of 1974. The earnings of the Cellar
have combined to eliminate the assess-
ment and to provide capital for future
expansion. The accompanying statement
of operations and balance sheet are in-
tended to give you a general idea of our

25 1,825
100,000
100,000
142,945
271,13
514,558
866,383

Total Capital
TOTAL EQUITIES

STATEMENT OF OPERATION
year ended May 31, 1976

NET SALES

COST OF GOODS SOLD

I

GROSS MARGIN

3,315,638
2,527,393
778,245
484,163
92,326
148,769

EXPENSES
Salaries & Wages
Rent
Other expenses

II

G

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