MTS AND PERSONAL COMPUTER Users! Your computer system has just become a typesetting machinp! Use our easily-remembered codes to set your own type via phone to our office, up to 50% off. Call Delmas at 662-2799. 94J0413 N.L. East: JUNIORS Don't be left out of your 1984 MICHIGAN EN Yearbook! Sign up for your portrait appointment TOD calling 784-9425 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Or stop1 office at 420 Maynard St. These portraits will in the senior section of the 1984 ENSIAN. MI$C ~NLL- WANTED - Othello cartridge for Atari 26 trade or buy. Call eves. 994-0107, days 764-0556 MASSAGE, relaxing, complete body, call b a.m. only Paul, 668-8631. THOMAS E. MANNING - You have just free tickets to the State Theater. Come to the pick them up. FREE RIDE to California. Help me drive U S.F. Bay area, leaving April 13-15. May haw for some of your stuff. 994-0107 evenings and ' By MIKE BRADLEY SIAN A Daily spdrts analysis What's the best division in baseball? If one listens to the AY by propaganda pouring out of the American League, he would be con- by our appear vinced that the American League East, that aggregation of Brew dJ0406 Crewers, Bronx Bombers, and Red Sockers et al, is by far the cream of the major league crop. I've got some bad news for all of those deluded souls over in the AL. The best division in hardball these days is the National League East. That's the senior circuit, people, not the little league. 0. Can Why do I maintain this? The answer is simple. Of the last four dM0410 World Series winners, three hail from the NL East. Since divisional before 9 play began in 1969, there have been five NL East World Champs. No 37M0405 other division can match that mark. won two Which team is going to win the World Series, er, I mean win the Daily to East this year? Sorry Cardinal fans, no repeat this season. The title dM0405 of the best of the best will go to the Montreal Expos. Let's see how. -Haul to MONTREAL - The Expos are loaded, again. This time, however, ve room Sunday there will be no August swoon. Bill Virdon is on hand to see to that. dMtfc Virdon replaces nice guy Jim Fanning, who was unable to capitalize on Les Expos talent-laden squad last season. The pitching stafful is probably the best in the division. Steve Rogers, Bill Gullickson, Scott Sanderson, and Charlie Lea provide the starting punch, but the Expos lack a real stopper in an other- wise above-average bullpen., There is, of course, offensive firepower. Al Oliver, Gary Carter, Andre Dawson and Tim Raines supply that. If Terry Francona rebounds from the knee injury that interrupted his phenomenal fir- cPtc st year, the Expos could make it a runaway. ST. LOUIS - Everything fell right into place last year for the Car- NT. ds. Bruce Sutter could do no wrong when he came into a tight game, Willie McGee always hit a double, Lonnie Smith always led off the n house game with a single, stole second and scored when George Hendrick ect 805- always drove him in. 22L0407 Obviously, these men have a great talent, and when Keith Her- nandez, Darrell Porter, Joaquin Andujar, and Bob Forsch are ad- ded, the team takes on an aura of greatness. However, this season, Baseball toughes toppedbthe ser the aura will not be great enough to overcome the Expos' speed and pitching. PHILADELPHIA - This is the Phillies' 100th anniversary, and it seems like the majority of the Phils on this year's squad were around for the inaugural game at Recreation Park back in 1883. Six Phillies are over 35 years of age. This doesn't mean they aren't any good. Steve Carlton heads the list of old-timers. If he continues at his present pace, the big lefthander will win his 300th career game sometime in August. Pete Rose is another geriatric. This year, he The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April5, 1983-Page 9 it division to be 'ies-boundExpos will be joined by former Cincinnati teammates Tony Perez, and Joe Morgan. The three will try to relive old times by winning the - World Series. Don't count on anything but a lot of wheezing and a third place finish in Philadelphia this year. PI'TSBURGH - Why fourth place for this team? Too many things have to go right for them. Dave Parker has to show that he can play baseball again, now that he has lost his excess baggage; Jim Bibby has to recover from his torn rotator cuff and pitch like he did two 'years ago; and Chuck Tanner must find a capable replacement for departed center fielder Omar Moreno. If all of this goes right, the Bucs will be dynamite. John "Horse, Face" Candelaria and Don Robinson pitched very well last season and their success should continue this campaign. Kent Tekulve is a monster out of the bullpen, and Jason Thompson, Bill Madlock, Mike Easler, and Johnnie Ray are enough to scare any pitcher to- death. Add these guys to successful comebacks by Bibby and Parker and Pittsburgh will win the division. Don't bank on it. CHICAGO - The Cubs enter phase two of their new tradition; con- struction with a solid foundation. The addition of Ron Cey to the power of Bill Buckner and Leon "Bull" Durham will help Chicago immensely. Youngsters such as Keith Moreland, Ryne Sandberg and Mel Hall must turn in spectacular performances to offset the lack of starting pitching on 1 days Ferguson Jenkins doesn't pitch. There should be some exciting baseball played at Wrigley Field this year, and for once it will be by the Cubs. NEW YORK - What can be said abbut the Mets? Nothing. The Magic was back last year and it didn't do much good, because it was still the Mets playing on the Shea Stadium turf. Manager George Bamberger has no starting pitching after Tom Seaver, and we all know what kind of year he had last season. Offensively, New York is a little better. George Foster was really bad last season, but that was a fluke. He should produce this year. Dave Kingman will again hit about 30 taters but also .215. Hubie Brooks, Mookie Wilson, Neil Allen and Ron Gardenheire are all good but they aren't enough to get New York anywhere near .500. There you have it, the World Series, er, the NL East winner will be Montreal. Maybe the AL East will concede in June. I BIKE EUROPE IN '83 For Details: BIKE EUROPE INC. 234-A Nickels Arcade; 668-0529 I WANE FACULTY MEMBER in Calif. interested in sitting for a month or two months. Call coll 255-9571 early mornings or weekends. S,~- Carter and Oliver ... Expo offensive threats TWO BEDROOM furnished Apartment, Bi-level, A/C, Balconies, Parking. 526 Linden. 761-8104 43UO410 SPRING-SUMMER sublet: two bedroom apartment. Minutes from campus. Available April 25. 995-1895. 31U0408 LARGE EFFICIENCY for Spring/Summer. Fur- nished, carpeted, lots of windows, private entrance, wired for cable, all utilities paid. Two blocks from campus, pets allowed. Call Jan 769-6950. U070405 ROOMS AVAILABLE in 6 bedroom house on Hamilton St. Completely furnished with other extras. Rent negotiable. Call 665-3610 ask for Mike Z. or Tom T. 10U0405 SUBLET! May-August. Three-bedroom furnished apartment. Free Parking. Great location. Inexpen- sive. 761-9357. 21U0406 JILL NEWBOLD - Be bold and ask someone to share popcorn with you at the State Theater with the two tickets you have just won. Come to the Daily to pick up your tickets. dU0405 SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET. E. University and Hill. 3 or 4 spacious spaces in house. Price negotiable. Call 996-8387 persistently! 25U0407 Rooms available on OLD WEST SIDE, fall option. Rent Negotiable. Adam, 662-2551 eves. 23U0407 MAY-AUGUST. Female grad student. Own room in beautiful 5-bedroom house near arb. Non-smoking, semi-vegetarian. Call 994-3073. dU0405 SUBLET - Efficiency, quiet, cool, close to campus, and hospital. After 5p.m., 996-1907. 42U0409 SUMMER SUBLET, possible fall option. Mid-April or May 1 to August 25; unusual two-story apartment, older house 1/ blocks from Law School, excellent for * one or two. Call 662-6817. 24U0404 HALF PRICE for spring-summer. One or more mon- ths. All utilities included. Furnished. Rent a whole house, a room in a house, or a one or two bedroom apt. Call David M. Copi, 663-5609. cUte SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET. Park Plaza, next to Bagel Factory. Single or Double occupancy. 668-6729. 91U0406 ONE FEMALE NEEDED to share bedroom in 2- bedroom apartment. $160/mo. Call 994-5695 or 761- 2551. 73Y0405 764-0558 764-0558 _ 4Judging from all the bunny r b ist a appe ar do ntle iso n this week, there is no doubt that Easter weekend was upon us. To all avid sports fans that means only one thing: No intramural sports. Thus, the only action to report took place on Thursday. The competition in both mini-soccer and volleyball was hot and heavy, though, compensating for Sunday's brief hiatus.- MINI SOCCER In the first Super-Star match, the Samba Kids ran away with a 6-1 victory over the Grad Club. The first half ended even at 1-1 and it looked as though it would be a close game. "Both teams were measuring each other," said Samba Kid Guilherme Rabello. "We were seeing who was who on the other team and what plays were working." In the second half, the Kids broke the game wide open with five unan- swered goals to end all scoring and the season for the Grad Club. One of the major factors leading to the amazing scoring barrage by the Kids was the performance of Eros Chaves, who did not start for the Kids in the first half. Any team that has any hope of beating the Kids had better find some way of stopping Chaves or it will fall the way of the Grad Club. In their next game the Kids will take on the Gato's Prowlers, who defeated the Strykers by the score of 6-3. The Strykers were one of the weaker teams we played in the tournament," said Prowlers' manager Ed Munoz. "They were physical, but not really good." The Prowlers had a slim half-time lead of 3-2, but with three second half goals to the Stykers' one, the Prowlers finished the game with a rather com- fortable margin of victory. Munoz praised the play of two team members, Fatih Tezok, who is the team's leading scorer, and goalie Jay Weis, who played particularly well in the second half. In regards to their upcoming match versus the Samba Kids, Munoz says that it will be a tough game. "The Kids are the top team in the league," said Munoz, adding "We are confident that we can beat them." In the one game played this week in the Competitive 'A' division, the Or- bitals defeated the F.C. Spaz, 6-3, in a come-from-behind victory. "We were totally disoriented at first," said Orbital Jan Vanderest. "In the first five minutes F.C. Spaz scored three goals against us because many of our players had not arrived. We got our heads together enough before the end of the half to score two goals and to make the game close." The arrival of one of the Orbitals' top defenders, Chuck Noon, was a major factor in their second-half shutdown of the Spaz. Four more goals nailed down a victory for the Orbitals. Vanderest also was pleased with the performance of Dave Kirchoff, saying he played great in the second half. Rounding out this week's mini-soccer results was the rather uneventful, 4- 0, whipping Triangle suffered at the hands of the Couzens Rowdies. Two goals in the first half and two more in the second was all it took for the Rowdies to put away the fraternity team. Speaking on behalf of Triangle was Tom Oh, who said, "We were whooped." The 1M Digest relates briefly the activities of the Michigan in- tramural department during the previous week. This week's digest was compiled by Daily sports writer John Tayer. Reds steal victory, 5-4 CINCINNATI (AP) - Dave Concepcion's two-out single in the bottom of the eighth inning scored Eddie Milner with the winning run and gave the Cincinnati Reds a 5-4 victory yesterday over the Atlanta Braves in the 1983 National League season opener. Milner singled with two out in the eighth off losing reliever Steve Bedrosian, then stole second. Concepcion then hit a soft single to right to give the Reds their come-from-behind vic- tory over the defending NL West champion Braves. REDS' STARTER MARIO Soto, 1-0,'surrendered five hits and four runs - two of them earned - over the first eight irr- nings for the winning decision. Tom Hume got the save by working the ninth. Bedrosian came in the eighth for 44-year-old starter Phil Niekro, who gave up four hits and four runs in the first seven innings. It was the seventh time Atlanta and Cincinnati opened the National League season, with the teams splitting their first six meetings. The game was played on a mild spring day before 42,892 fans, the smallest Opening Day crowd at Riverfront Stadium since 1972. It was the first time in 11 years that the Reds' opener wasn't sold out. A submarine commander threw out the cermonial first pit- ch with a ball that travelled aboard the nuclear-powered submarine USS Cincinnati for nine months. Kansas City 7, Baltimore 2 BALTIMORE (AP) - Georg Brett hit a two-run homer; and Willie Aikens and Jerry-Martin added solo shots to power the Kansas City Royals past the Baltimore Orioles, 7-2 yesterday in the first American League game of the 1983 season. Brett, who had gone 2-for-32 in his last 10 exhibition games without a home or RBI, scored three runs besides getting his two RBI. HE DOUBLED with two out in the first inning and scored when right fielder Dan Ford dropped a fly ball by Amos Otis.' Then,he homered in the third off Dennis Martinez following a leadoff walk to U.L. Washington. Aikens connected in the sixth and Martin in the eighth off reliever Storm Davis. The Royals, losers in Baltimore's last three home openers, scored two unearned runs in the seventh following a two-oute fielding error by shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. Willie Wilson beat out an infield hit and Brett followed with a grounder that Ripken misplayed as both runner were safe. Otis then singled home Wilson, sending Brett to second, and a double by Hal McRae scored Brett. A E m - m m m m m ------------. - m m m m mm, SiPO TS EIdITAP LADIES DAY IS EVERY DAYu 1 o athe U BASEBAL LCROSS-EYEDMOOSE& 1QUINAS (DH ), April 5, 1:00 p.m. CO SEE O $ VESTERN MICHIGAN (DH), April 6, FLIP cE' 1:00 p.m.FIPR tE' :ASTERN MICHIGAN (DH), April 10, 1613 E. Liberty 1217 S. University I 1:00 p.m. MEN'S TENNIS at Purdue, April 8, 3:00 p.m. at Illinois, April 9, 1:00 p.m. WOMEN'S TENNIS MICHIGAN STATE, April 7,3:00 p.m. MIAMI OF OHIO, April 10, 10:00 a.m. SOFTBALL WAYNE STATE, April 5, 3:00 p.m. at Grand Valley, April 6, 3:00 p.m. at Eastern Michigan, April 7, 3:00 p.m. NORTHWESTERN, April 9, 1:00 p.m. NORTHWESTERN, April 10, 11:00 a.m. IM SCORES Frasers 15-15, Alphachi/Sig Eps 10-8 Dirt 15-15, Steve's Kids 0-0 Figi-Thetas 9-15-16, Meat Cleavers 15-12-14 Swing-Swear 15-15, Squirrel Punters 1-3 sigma Alpha Mu 15-8-15, Fiji 10-15-11 Triangle 15-15, Sigma Nu 5-3 Phi Alpha Kanna 15-15. Delta Unilan 7-12 beo DC 2 FREE tokens LADIES: Bring in for visiting us & this coupon Tues., April 5 2 more with first and Receive * $1.00 Purchase 10 FREE tokens! - m mm m m m m m m m m m mm - mm m m m 3== = == = = Ulrich's Annual Inventory Sale Involving every item in our store except textbooks. Special prices on calculators, computers and computer products. Sale Ends Saturday, April 9th 20 % OFF . 11 ff*411 All Office Supplies ~ INCLUDING File Folders Attache Cases Brief Bags Lamps Staplers Paper Pens Roladex Pencil Sharpeners ~~-~ And Many More for Home and Office Smith Corona Typewriters 220.00 12" Manual (Classic 12) ......176.00 399.00 12" Electric Portable Cartridge w/return (2200)..... sale price - $319.20 plus $20 rebate .... 299.20 f e e o J0 IU) W ~ SESIl 1 SUMERZ SMMRO TUEI-1 t 5JL18qV1 4 DON'T GET CAUGHT IN THE R ! University Towers is now renting for fall and winter mQ~a N.. a hp . s. Inpnin n nn a