Tuesday, May 18, 1 971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Tuesday, May 18, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Trackrnen bow to Purdue Angels' Johnson, Phillips feud By DALE ARBOUR Suffering from injuries, the Michigan track squad dropped its fifth dual meet of the year this past Saturday. This loss came at Purdue with a score of 90-64, and was quite a reversal of last year when Michigan swamped essentially the same Purdue team by a 108-45 score. The brightest events for Michi- gan came with a 1-2 sweep in the mile run and a 1-2 sweep in the 120-yard high hurdles. In the mile, Phil Pyatt led teammate Rick Storrey most of the way and cruised home with a fine 4:08.4. Storrey, who later finished third in the half mile, finished second in 4:14.8. In the high hurdles, Godfrey Murray won the race, running for the first time since injur- ing his leg three weeks ago at Penn Relays. His time was a comparatively slow :14.6, but was run against a strong headwind. Second place went to Mel Reeves of Michi- gan in a time of :14.9. Michigan's fine high jumper, John Mann, captured another first in his event, three-stepping over the bar at 6-8 to easily de- feat his opponents. Mann, who cleared the seven foot mark for the first time a week ago against Illinois, also competed Sunday at the Martin Luther King Games in Philadel- phia, taking fifth with a 6-8 leap. Other Wolverine winners at Purdue included Dave Eddy in the three mile, Bob Mitchell in the pole vault, and team captain Lorenzo Montgomery in the 440- yard dash. Long jumpers George Gilchre.,t and Mark Rosenbaum took sec- and and third, respectively, in the long jump, while Steve Rosen copped the third spot in the triple jump. Although both teams captusad nine first places, Purdue took most of the second and third places which provided them with their margin of victory. Due primarily to iniuries to a few of their key performers, the Wolverines were deficient in either talent or depth in many of the events. The loss of Gene Brown in Ine 100- and 220-yard dashes was ap- parent Saturday as Purdue swept the 100 and placed 1-2 in the 220. Michigan is particularly vulner- able in the sprints without Brown since he is their only sprinter. %-,/ AL ANAHEIM (P) - Alex John- son, the taciturn outfielder who won the American League bat- ting title in 1970, has b e e n benched by California Angels Manager Lefty Phillips, w h o terms the player's attitude "de- fiant.' "He's sitting down," declared Phillips, "because us all-around play and practice have not satis- fied me. If he does not satisfy me in his actions, I will not play the man." A year ago, in his first sea- son with the Angels, Johnson edged Carl Yastrzemski of Bos- ton for the batting title with an average of .3289 to .3281 for the Gridde Picks aficionados, BEWARE!, RIO DE JANEIRO (P) - A washer woman, who said s h e knew nothing about soccer, bet 38 cents and won $658,740 in this week's Brazilian soccer pools. Sebastina Paulo Dias, who lives in the central Brazilian state of Goias near the federal capital of Brasilia, made a per- fect score in picking results of 13 weekend.games. Red Sox star. Two hits in three trips to the plate in the final game of the season provided the slim edge. Johnson currently bats .240, but that's not the reason Phil- lips benched him. "Everyone else -works out, tries to improve himself," t h e manager says. "He ,doesn't. He defies me." Tabbed by many to win the American League West, the Angels currently rank only third, six games behind the Oakland Athletics. During his first season with the Angels, Johnson feuded with some sports writers covering the club and at one point chal- lenged a teammate. "Last year, I took m ore heat from umpires over him than from any other player I've ever had," Phillips continued. "I took it for a whole year and I had to take it because I knew they were right. "I thought that this year, the pride of being the league leader would straighten him out. It hasn't." Johnson wasn't available af- ter Phillips made his comments Sunday, but during the spring had said the title meant little to him. Since Johnson's bat was sup- posed to play a major role in the Angel's title bid this year, Phillips was asked what t h e Ends DIAL Thursday _ 5-6290 PLEASE NOTE TIME SCHEDULE FA1Tr,. IS BEST! BEST PICTURE nACAEYAR S BEST ACTOR E ABEST DIRECTOR Shown Daily at 3:30 and 8:45 PLUS- Shown Daily at 1:35 and 6:45 COMING FRIDAY: "RYAN'S DAUGHTER" the ann arbor film cooperative presents W.C. 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On May 6 in Baltimore, Frank Robinson went from first to third on a ground single to left and subsequently scored on a sacrifice fly. The Angels man- ager felt Robinson should have been held to second base and then could not have scored on the sacrifice. Three days later at Cleve- land, a runner went from se- cond to third after a short fly ball and again the manager felt alert play by Johnson could have avoided the advance. Asked when Johnson mi g h t play again, Phillips answered: "When I see fit." 49ers' Nolan signs new pact SAN FRANCISCO (A) - Dick Nolan, who last season coached the San Francisco 49ers to their first National Football League divisional title, was given a new five-year contract yesterday. No salary terms were disclosed but it was indicated Nolan was given a generous increase over his old contract, which sdIl had two years to run. "What Dick Nolan has done for the 49ers has made everyone aware he is one of the finest young coaches in professional football," said Lou Spadia, club president. "This new contract is a real- firmation of our conidence in his leadership as well as airpre- ciation for a job well done." Nolan, 39, came to the 49ers from the Dallas Cowboys. "I'm certainly very happy with the terms," said Nolan, who took over the team in 1968 and reached his goal of building a title team within three sea- sons. TV RENTALS $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 ECONOMY Jet Flights to Europe One Way $120 Round Trip $186 to $230 Charters within Europe-Inter- national Student ID's-Motor- cycle Purchase & Transportation Package EUROFLIGHT, INC. Room 313 370 Lexington Ave., N.Y. Tel. 212-725-8350/8418/9 95 Long flair Shoand He Cut As Often As Short Hair NOW 4 SHOPS 0 EAST UNIV. AT SO. 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