Friday, January 16, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rage Nine Friday, J~nuary 16, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine IMfornxution l1 EASY OPENING VICTORY, 65-48 Tankers drown SIU 3 - iA By TOM CAMERON The new semester has brought some new sports to the intramural sports scene, new students in need of information and straightened the outlook for the divisional team races. The intramural divisional races have taken shape as the teams begin the second half of the intramural season. In the Independent division, the Crabs (last year's divi- sion champions, Ubermench) are resting comfortably in first place with 703 points. The Brazilian Toadstools follow I with 535 points and Great Stuff is third with 510 points. White Joint holds the fourth position with 493 and Beaver Patrol is fifth best with 447. Couzen 's on top Couzens Hall is currently on top of the Residence Hall divi-' sion with 811 points. South Quad's Taylor House is in second with 786, Markley's Elliott in third with 750, and West Quad holds the fourth and fifth positions as Allen Rumsey has 745 points and Williams 733. Delta Upsilon has risen to first place in the Fraternity divi- sion with 1133 points, 39 points ahead of second place Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Phi Delta Theta has dropped to third place with 1076 points. Theta Chi and Sigma Phi trail with 933 points and 896 points, respectively. There are plenty of new sports this semester and plenty of new entry dates to go with them. Paddleball players will need to get their entries in near the end of January. Graduate players must enter by Jan. 26, residence halls by Jan. 27, independents by Jan. 28, frats by Jan. 29, and All-Campus division takes entries only beforeI 5 p.m. on Feb. 2. Except for the All-Campus division, paddle- ball is a team sport and requires four players. Swim meet comtn The swim meet (for all divisions except All-Campus) will be' held on Feb. 10 and it is important that everyone have their entries in by Feb. 6 as this is a one meet season. Women's intramurals will be featuring badminton doubles and team bowling with entries due Jan. 27 and Feb. 3, respec- tively. Co-Recreational teams should enter bowling, badminton and table tennis by Feb. 1. Two things will remain the same in the intramural program: the building hours and the campus "Hotline" (763-0050). The intramural building is open for tennis on weekdays from noon until 1 p.m. and on Saturdays 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. for those with reservations. The main gym is open from 8 a.m.' to 10 a.m. and from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. for badminton, basket- ball, tennis, and volleyball. From 3-5 p.m., the gym is open for basketball on the rotation system. The Sports Coliseum, located on the corner of Fifth and Hill, is available for informal recreation from 9-12 a.m. From noon until.2:00, the Coliseum entertains tennis reservations. From 2-5 p.m. on weekdays and from 9-5 p.m. on Saturdays, the build- ing is open for basketball. Barbour and Waterman Gymnasiums, located at the north- east corner of the diag, is open from 8 a.m.-10 p.m. on week- days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturdays and from 1 p.m.-S p.m. on Sundays. The gyms are also used for physical education classes and a schedule of these is posted inside. Margaret Bell Pool and the pool in the IM building are open at various times for different activities. Call 764-9450 for information about Margaret Bell and 663-4181 for IM pool hours. Evert named Female Athlete of the Year By RICK MADDOCK butterfly, along with a first in the 1000-yard freestyle where The Michigan swim team ;he recorded a new Michigan opened its home season in style record of 9:36.10. last night, with a surprisingly McClatchey commented about easy victory over Southern Ill- his upset over Delgado, "Del- nois, 65-48. gado is one helluva swimmer. I The 400-yard medley relay, wanted to make sure I stayed the opening event, set the pace with him through the first half for the evening. The Salukis of the race." The junior from took the lead in the beginning, Scotland added, "It's good if but the Michigan tankers kept you can get your mind set to closing in. However, when the challenge a big man." last turn was made, Southern H Illinois appeared to have an in-i. SZUBA HAD two strong wins, surmountable lead. Then, Norm in the 200-yard individual med- Semchyshen made an incredible ley and the 200-yard backstroke. comeback to edge the Salukis In both events, he cruised home by .02 of a second. nearly three seconds ahead of THE WOLVERINES were not anyone else.- expecting to win the opening Wolverine coach Gus Stager event. With that 7-0 lead, the commented, "McClatchey swam tankers only relinquished the very intelligent races, so did top spot once. That was after Szuba." He added that Szuba the 50-yard freestyle, when the swam fast enough to work the score was tied 17 apiece. Salukis in his events. Acting captain Alan McClat- Freshman Ric Pepper also chey and senior Tom Szuba pleased Stager. Pepper swam gave outstanding performances. well in the opening medley re- McClatchey u p s e t talented lay, plus finishing first in the Jorge Delgado in the 200-yard 200-yard breaststroke and sec- onddin the 200-yard individual medley., as he finished nearly a second ahead of Dave Swenson in the 500-yard freestyle. The surprising Wolverine vic- tories in the medley and the butterfly were the keys to the triumph. STAGER SAID, "The meet went much easier than we an- ticipated. They (SIU) had to win the medley relay to win the meet." He added, "The 1000 (freestyle) and the relay were the clinchers to the meet." Since Southern Illinois, has very weak diving compared to Michigan, the Salukis had to win both the medley and 400 freestyle relays to offset the diving events. Their defeat in the medley insured their event- ual defeat. in the meet. Although the meet went eas- ily for the Wolverines, they had some apprehensions .about it. Senior Tom Szuba explains, "I was really worried this week. At Wisconsin we were really emotionally high, and' I was afraid we may take these guys too lightly. The Salukis top swimmer Jorge Delgado was definitely their leader. Although he lost in the butterfly, he still had a fine meet. Delgado is from Ecuador and is using his swim- ming in the United States as a tune-up for the 1976 Olympics. Ie competed in the 1972 Olym- pics' 200 freestyle, 100 butter- fly, and 200 butterfly. His best showing was fourth in the 200 butterfly, where he missed a bronze medal by .002 seconds. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN SOUTHERN ILLINOIS star Jorge Delgado and Wolverine Gordon Downie clash in the 200-yard freestyle race. Downie lost to Delgado, but the Wolverines won the meet, 65-48. SPORTS OF THE DAIY1 *MSU By The Associated Press DETROIT - The National Collegiate Athletic Association wants to place Michigan State University on probation for three years and have assistant football coaches Howard Weyers and Charles Butler dismissed, the Detroit News said yester-j day. The News, in a copyrighted, article, said it confirmed the penalties with "sources close to the NCAA investigation."~ Comment was not immediate- ly available from either MSU or the NCAA. MSU, which has been under an order of silence from Pres- ident Clifton Wharton, is to appeal earlier findings of the probe Sunday at a meeting in St. Louis. The News said lie detector tests passed by the two coaches p-lus an athlete's admisison he lied to the committee failed to change the NCAA's mind. The News said such a strong to bite the bill1kI. .W.1 %A recommendation from - the In- - fractions Committee m e a n s, MStU likely will not get off 1 without a strong penalty.x The newspaper indicated the two coaches might be "sacri-t ficed" in order to have the1 over-all sentence reduced. I The News also said the case was expected to go to federal, court, as an attorney for theJ coaches has threatened to file suit claiming his clients were deprived of (clue process be-r cause he wis banned from the h4?ring room in Denver.- Switz moneyr NORMAN, Okla.-Larry Swit- zer, head coach of the national. champion Oklahoma Sooners football team, got a $3,000 salary raise yesterday. boosting his annual pay to S33,000. In addition, the University of Oklahoma Board of RegentsI provided Jfor Pn annnal re- view of his salary and other terms of his letter of intent. f Switzer, who became coach three years ago when Chuck Fairbinks left to join the pro coaching ranks, has led the Sooners to two consecutive na- tional championships. Oklahoma has lost only one game since he has been head coach. * * * Arizona State's head coach to 151-3 1 for a winning percent- age of .791. He trails only Joe Paterno of Penn State in win- ning percentage among major college coaches. * * * 013mplc dedline GORDON DOWNIE had some tough breaks. He was edged by Delgado in the 200-yard free- style. Also, he appeared to have nipped Rick Fox in the 100-yard freestyle and was initially an- nounced to have won the event. Due to a malfunction of the electronic equipment, the judges had to decide on the finish. Eventually, they reversed their decision. Downie did have one victory which wasn't overruled, I WON" 7I AJ k C i J 1 T 1 '', t i !E E t f 4 i Kush top coach MONTREAL -- Jan. 31 haoms 'I as the day of decision for the ST. LOUIS-Frank Kush, who fate of the Montreal Olympics. led Arizona State to the best On that date, Quebec's Olym- presen record in the country and a No. pic installations board, charged 2 national ranking for the 1975 with readying all facilities, will S UN V'AILLEY season, was named major col- report to the International Olym- SUN oAymiLE lege Coach of the Year yester- pic Committee on whether it S R DD day by the American Football can complete the task in time G Coaches Association, for the Games. It was the first time Kush Killanin, IOC president, said won the honor. in interviews Wednesday and for more in Under Kush, Arizona State yesterday the Montreal Games sign-up Cp rolled to a 12-0 record in 1975, are not in danger of cancella- capped by a 17-14 victory over tion and will not be postponed. T : 68-092 Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl He admitted there have been, Tr:DD-Ui and the highest ranking ever some problems but expressed for the Sun Devils. confidence that the G a m e s Lisa: 995-2 The brilliant campaign boost- would take place as scheduled ed Kush's 18 year record as in Montreal. people who can: ki Club ,ts r, IDAHO .AK TRIP ifo and Andi: 995-2167 891 CAMP TAMAR"ACK TAMARACK'S I town only 280 left That's right! There are only 280 job openings left at Camp Tamarack, in Michigan's lower peninsula. Camp Tamarack is the summer camping program sponsored by the Detroit Jewish Community, and we have 3 camp sites in Michigan and Ontario. We have openings for counselors, specialists, super- visors, drivers, cooks, nurses. Contract season runs from about June 15 to August 22. Our recruiters will be interviewing for these jobs at Summer Placement, 3200 SAB on Tues., Jan. 20 and Fri., Jan. 23rd. Register in person or by phone 763- 4117. Applications available. NEW YORK - Chris Evert, who last year fit the mold of the "boring rich" by setting! money-winning records with her two-fisted backhand and base- line stance, started off 1976' with a victory, a resolution to make her tennis game more exciting and yet another trophy -as the Associated Press 1975 Female Athlete of the Year. Miss Evert.- who won the AP honor in 1974, repeated af- ter winning a record $362.227 in prize money and capturing 14 tournaments, including the U.S. Open, the French and Ttalin ovens and the U.S. Clay Court ebamnionship. The 21-year-old tennis star ran . SCORES NHL Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 1 Boston 4, Los Angeles o Buffalo 5, Washington 3 St. Louis 5, Atlanta 3 Toronto 6, Kansas City 4 NBA Atlanta 98, Cleveland 91 Buffalo at Phoenix, late game away with the title collecting; 246 votes in a nationwide panel of sports writers and broad- casters. Sandra Palmer, the I leading money winner on the Ladies Professional Golf Asso- ciation tour, was runner-up with. 64 votes. mu---- - m -m I IM owM im o lal a n 11a o e s m a o "ft" ..ssana -COUPON- 2 for 1 Special -COUPON- 1i GOOD ONLY: JAN. 19th thru 22nd Buy 1 Super Salad-GET I FRE E A large portion of fresh greens, tomatoes, cheese, mushrooms, cauliflower, olives and sprouts with our t famous yogurt dressing. NOT AVAILABLE FOR CARRY OUT Longevity Cookery 314 E. Liberty I Ann Arbor, Mich. w i i i i i i P (313) 662-2019 t GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT U I mu - u u --0 m L-,.-- E R-O. GLE ARANGE L :. " IR specalized outdoor . Y -BC TS equipment .R OVERA LS " & functional clothing C __,S - Otr!h eI i :>t., . I.R .... k' t '..:, F . ' . :? .,'^z,$ '.,,.. ?' ..