Tuesday, April 13, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Mwomen nip Cinci, Kentucky Special To The Daily The Michigan women's tennis team defeated the Uni- versity of Cincinnati 4-1 and the University of Kentucky 3-2 in a triangular meet held at the University of Cincinnati yesterday afternoon. The women took five of six singles> matches to pace their victory. <" SINGLES No. 1: B. Selden (M) def. K Cassidy (K) 6-2, 6-2; B Selden def. L. Kiefer (C) 6-1, 6-2 No 2: J. Karzen (M) def. L. Fisher (K) 6-2, 6-3; J Karzen x;def. B. Eschmneyer (C) 6-2, 6-3 No. 3: S. Sommerville (M) def. E Ruby (K) 6-1, 6-3; P. Kerie- kes (C) def S. Sommerville 7-5, 4-6, 6-3 DOUBLES No. 1: J. Gibson, B. Rentz (K) def M. Pollick, M. Fertig (M) 6-2, 6-3; M. Pollick, M. Fertig def. M. Meakin, K Stuart (C) !'"6-4,5-7, 6-4 'No. 2: C. Kerney, K. Rose (K) def V. Tinsley, N. Doerer (M) 4-6,,7-6, 6-1; V. Tinsley, K. Rose def. M. Mazor, C Urkancic (C) 7-6, 6-3 . .Q The women's next action is tomorrow afternoon againstl i Central Michigan. The match will take place at 3:00 on L the Varsity Tennis Courts, or, in case of bad weather, in the Track and Tennis Building. F .i................................* FACE WESTERN TODAY Blue By PAUL CAMPBELL Aided by nine bases-on-balls, Michigan's baseball team stroll- ed to a 4-1 victory in the second game of yesterday's doublehead- er at Ray Fisher Stadium. The Titans nipped the Wol- verines 2-1 in the opener. Michigan scored all four of its second game runs in the second inning. It wasn't exact- ly, your classic rally - five walks, one infield hit, and a sacrifice fly--but the U of D pitchers didn't give anyone a chance to hit the ball. First baseman Bob Wasilew- ski led off the inning. His bat never left his shoulder as south- paw Chris Wallis missed the strike zone four straight times. Catcher Mike Kalil chipped in with a passed ball that sent splits with Titans WHY WALK FURTHER! LEVI'S BRAND Available at Wild's Varsity Shop Wasilewski to second. Wallis yanked the lefty in favor forced Mike Parker to pop out righty Tom Niedowicz. in the infield. Then the real fun began. Niedowicz only succeeded Left fielder Bill Haslerig hit completing the walk to Be a high hopper over the mound and walking Dan Damiani on a 1-0 count. Wallis had dif- four straight pitches to driv ficulty getting back to the ball two more easy runs. The and it bounced behind him. liever got his first out w Okay, men on first and third. Dave Chapman flied deep Designated hitter Greg Lane center,tbut Capoferi cruised walked on four straight pitch- after the catch with the M es to load the bases. Jim verines' fourth tally. Capoferi, catching in place of Dick Walterhouse was vict Ted Mahan, who injured his ized when Detroit shortstop right hand on a foul tip in the captain Ken Hamann leaped first game, got the third free grabbed his blistering line dr pass of the inning to score for the third out. Wasilewski. When Wallis t h r e w t w o The discerning eye h straight balls to ninth hitter Jim proved to be a more effecti Berra, Detroit coach Bob Miller weapon than the timely b decided he'd seen enough and Only Haslerig and Park of in rra on e in re- hen to 3in Wol- im- and and rive ad ve at. :er t E t t I smacked a towering fly down the left field line in the third that appeared headed fora home run. But Bernie Czarniecki drew a bead on the ball, drifted back, and thrust his glove above the fence to snatch the drive. Detroit starter Jack Booth was generously wild, walking' six .men in six innings of work. That sixth man was to Lane to lead off the seventh inning. Mil- ler opted to pull Booth in favor, of Jerry Trybus. A fielder's choice, another walk, and a double play later Trybus had a save. Michigan travels to Kalama- zoo today for two games, fac- ing the Broncos of Western Michigan University at 1 p.m. The Wolverines then open their Big Ten schedule with con- secutive road twin tilts against Minnesota and Iowa on Friday and Saturday. FEATURING: " Demin Bells " Flannel Shirts POIPnatel " Brush Denims 0 Denim Jackett Boot J " Work Shirts * Corduroys . Pre-W Wild's Varsity Shop 311 S. STATE STREET el* ISks eans ash Slaiks IN THE NATION THIS WEEK THE AMERICAN MERCENARIES Today post war recession, inflation and unemployment have set adrift a small army of veterans of Vietnam who must sell their skills. . .. It has become clear that there .is indeed a community of "fiahtinq men" imbued 'with right- wina ideoloav who are for sale in the United States. A network reporter who spoke to the "meres" reports, "that as many as 5 out of .6 mercenaries who went to Angola were killed" "They do not vet make up a coherent political movement but their special weaponry, special skills and special dis- enchantment are very real. They rather ominously number in the thousands, they are for hire and they will bear watchinc." From an article in this week's Nation The Nation. 333 Sixth Av., NYC 10014 Special rates fpr students managed to get balls out of the infield for hits in the GOOD SHOWING IN DOGWOODS: Thinclads open ou By ERNIE DUNBAR Eight Wolverine runners clocked their personal bests, one school record was broken; and another tied as Michigan's track team competed in the Dogwood Relays in IKnoxville, Tennessee April 9-10. The relay meet was the first Idaily Ii isiis NIGHT EDITOR: KATHY HENNEGHAN "I thought we could run a' little faster," said Warhurst. "We're going to rearrange the order of the relay for the Ohio State Relays this weekend, and hopefully we can get some bet- ter performances." IN THE steeplechase, War- hurst got an excellent perform- ance from freshman Bruce Mc- Fee. Running in only his sec- ond steeplechase race, McFee was timed in 9:09.1. game, and neither of these were factors in the scoring. Larry Sorenson made sure the lead stood up, hiking his record to 4-0 with a solid performance. Sorenson scattered six Toledo hits while striking out seven and walking only two. The Titans' only run came in the fourth when left fielder Mark Your- Grace, Dave Furst, Williams, chock drove in Hamann with a and McLeod had the makings single up the middle. of a quick relay, but Williams Hamann was the hero and dropped the baton and added Wolverine hurler Mark Weber approximately six seconds to the victim of his heroics in the the time. Once the team gets first game. the exchanges down though, After Weber had walked Your- Warhurst is predicting times chock on a 3-1 count in the sixth around 3:07.0 to 3:08.0. inning, Hamann blasted the first John Grabowski and Bob Mai- pitch over the fence in left cen- stros both had personal records ter. The line drive shot was over in the 10,000 meters. Grabowski, the barrier before Haslerig could a junior transfer from Orchard even get back to the fence. . uRP outdoor competition for the team, and overall, assistant finishes in both the shuttle hur- coach Ron Warhurst was pleas- dle and two mile relays. - a:hhie ft r t f ed wi i eai. The latter event saw Steve "MeFee just ran super," said Considering it's the first Elliot record a personal best Warhurst. "It was a great race time outdoors, I think we ran for the half mile in a relay for him." pretty well, said Warhurst. (1:50.4). Dave Williams, runn- Michigan got a disappointing It'll take a couple meets before ing in only his second half mile 9:05.8 from Meyer in the everyone is running their best, outdoors, ran a fine 1:50.7. steeplechase. Justithe week be- though." stelcaeJuttewkb- t fore he had recorded a 8:53 in THE WOLVERINES' four mile the event, but seemed to lack MICHIGANfS BEST per orm relay team of Mike McGuire, the necessary concentration at ances came from hurdler Greg Meyer, Bill Donakowski, the D Charles Crouther and decathlon and Elliot, broke the school re- Dogwoods. man Lynn Dobosy. cord of 16:59.4, which had stood. THE MILE relay team of -since 1968. - ILake, will take part in next I Monday's Boston Marathon, the premier marathon in the na- tion which annually attracts some of the best distance run- ners in the world. In the field events, Jim Stokes tied the school record in the pole vault with a jump of 16'0". Stokes offered only a preview of things to come how- ever, and should be able to eclipse this record during the season. Michigan also scored its only runs in the sixth. Wal- terhouse singled, stole second, and took third on the catcher's overthrow. After Wasilewski flew out to short left, Hasle- rig, who got three of the six Wolverine safeties for the two games, punched a single to left to cut the margin in half. Michigan had various other opportunities to dent the scoring column but came up short. Lane EI To Dispose of a Few Good Books! i 6 Crouther showe signs o coming Michigan's dominating force in the outdoor hurdles as he breezed to times of 14.1 in the 110 meter high hurdle and 53.8 in the 400 meter interme- diates. Dobosy was a pleasant prise for Warhurst,ras sophomore from Berra, sur- the Ohio The team's time of 16:44.8' was not as fast as the group is capable of running.tMcGuire led off with a poor showing with a split of 4:13.2, and Meyer followed with another bad split of 4:12.3. Although well out of the race by the time he got the baton, Elliott ran an impres- qiue 4:08.4 anchor leg.s Flyers streak past Toronto By The Associated Press The only jobs left at Camp Tamarack (Interviews will be held at Summer Placement, 3200 SAB (763-4117) Mon., Apr. 12) LAST CHANCE took second in the 10 event de- cathlon. "It's super, just incredible," said Warhurst. "He did really well in all events, considering he hasn'thad time to practice evevything since we've been FOLLOWING POSITIONS OPEN: Case Workers-M.S.W. 2 Waterfront Superv. 1 Unit Supervisors 3 Cooks, Assistants 8 Bus Drivers Counselors for Boys Bunks Nurses (Grad. or R.N.) 2 6 2 ANNOUNCING: a 50 % Permanent Reduction in price on Selected hardcover and paper edition Art & Photography Books in the University Cellar Book Dept. inoors. PHILADELPHIA - The high- THE TEAM OF James Grace, powered line of Bobby Clarke, Jeff McLeod, Doug Henningar, Reggie Leach and Bill BarberI and Andy Johnson combined scored two goals and contri- for a victory in the sprint med- buted four assists as the Phila- ley. Grace's 220 split of 21.0 was delphia Flyers beat the Toronto an indication that the big man Maple Leafs 4-1 last night. from Detroit is finally ready The victory gave the defend- to run some respectable times. Th vcor ad to rn sme rspetabl ties.ing champion Flyers a 1-0 lead! Johnson recorded one of the in their best-of-sevena National: personal records, as he was Hockey League Stanley Cup clocked in 1:49.5 for the 880. quarter-final series against the Mihi a had second lace Maple Leafs. Season runs from'Mid June to August 22 SALARY: $375-$1200 DON'T BE LEFT OUT---ACT TODAY Apolications available at Summer Placement or call (313 851-7733. Fresh Air Societv (Camp Tamarack) is an aencv of the Jewish Welfare Aqency. United Fund and is an Equal Opportunity Employer. We're also very nice Folks. e GROUND FLOOR MICH. UNION r I U w I i CORDU ROY vlc ga naub :tupdu L SCORES NHL Philadelphia 4, Toronto i (Philadelphia leads best of seven series, 1-0) Baseball American League New York 3, Baltimore 0 Texas 5, Okland National Leagiue Houston 5, San Francisco 0 The Flyers, who had a bye in the first round after winning t h e i r division championship, meet the Leafs, a preliminary round winner over Pittsburgh, in the second game of the quar- ter-finals here tonight. The Leafs' loss was another, in a long list of frustrations against the Flyers, whom they haven't beaten since March 14, 1972, and haven't defeated in Philadelphia since Dec. 19, 1971. , Iw UAC/MUSKET AND SOPHSHOW Now T a k i n g Applications for Fall Musical Central Committee Positions. Directors Musical Directors Choreographers Set Designers Publicity Heads, etc. It's a Great Way to Meet People and Gain Experience! SALE ALL CORDS( IN STORE.{ t (reg. $12) I el teatro campesino presents E Fin Del Mundo" 0 (The End of the World") D o C rsB T s ..;..i 7f v Photo our tsy of K N BC TV Lo A ngelesQ40 Wed., April 21--8 p.m. W,3 Ihj Cr a t 7 + { i E i I APPLICATIONS DuE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14 AT UAC OFFICE, 2ND FLOOR UNION 763-1107 iiE I --e-- I G. i FEATURING: I I U I t" *S ["