100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 15, 1986 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1986-04-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Men's Lacrosse
vs. Toledo
Tomorrow, 7:00 p.m.
Tartan Turf

SPORTS

Women's Tennis
vs. Michigan State
Tomorrow, 2:30 p.m.
Track and Tennis Building

The Michigan Daily Tuesday, April 15, 1986 Page 7

Michigan out to

flatten Ferris State

By SCOTT G. MILLER
"You don't get much sleep when
you get beat," said a yawning
Michigan coach Bud Middaugh in his
office yesterday.
Middaugh has reason not to rest
easily. His squad was less than im-
pressive in splitting a pair of
doubleheaders this past weekend ver-
sus Big Ten foe Purdue. The two
losses, coupled with a 7-2 'drubbing by
Minnesota last Monday on ESPN,
completed a tough 6-3 week.
"IT IS HARD to explain why but at
this stage you go through a period of
I time every year that your club doesn't
play that well," said Middaugh. "I
think this week was a week we didn't
play well."
Good play and an opponent like
Ferris State may make Middaugh
sleep comfortably. The Bulldogs enter
today's doubleheader with a 10-21

mark. However, the team is in first
place of the Great Lakes Conference
with a mark of 5-1.
While Michigan is playing some of
its worst baseball of the season,
Ferris is playing at its best. The
Bulldogs swept two doubleheaders
this past weekend from Northwood
Institute and Saginaw Valley. .
SENIORS BOB Hegbloom, Ken
Kramer, and Scott Kelly form the
Ferris State nucleus. Hegbloom, a fir-
st baseman and catcher is hitting .364
with three home runs. Left fielder
Kramer has a .340 average and three
home runs, and third baseman Kelly
has a .361 average and four home
runs.
Despite their solid hitting, the
Bulldogs will need quality pitching to
contend with the Wolverines. "You
can take the smallest school in the
world and give them a good pitcher
and they can be in the ball game,"

'You can take the
smallest school in
the world and give
them a good
pitcher and they
can be in the ball
game.
- Bud Middaugh

Middaugh said.
Unfortunately for Ferris, it is doub-
tful the team has such a pitcher. Scott
Hunt will take the mound in game one.
Hunt is 0-1 with a 10.84 earned run
average this season. Game two will
feature Craig Etelamaki. The junior
is 1-4 with a 6.43 ERA.
WITH THEIR scarcity of pitching,
the Bulldogs take a realistic approach
into today's games. "The talent isn't
there like it is on Michigan, but we
aren't going down there not to beat
them," said assistant coach Russ
Bortell. "Michigan is right there with
Central Michigan as the top programs
in the state.
"Michigan may be the top program
in the Midwest. We always look for-
ward to playing against Division I
teams to make a name for ourselves.
Michigan seems to be a more
prominent name than any of the other
schools we play."
Michigan's prominence will be in
danger if its poor fielding continues.
The team committed 14 errors against
Purdue, which cost numerous runs.
The pitching must also improve.
Freshman Chris Lutz was the
Wolverine most effective hurler
against the Boilermakers. Lutz pitc-
hed a four hitter and struck out seven
to beat Purdue Sunday, 6-1.
TODAY'S likely starters are Paul
Wenson (1-0) and Jerry Wolf (0-0).

Tomorrow against Eastern Michigan
Dave Karasinski (3-0) and John Gret-
tenberger (1-1) will get the starting
assignments. Ace Scott Kamieniecki
is lost indefinitely with a sore elbow.
Both doubleheaders start at 1:00 at
Ray Fisher Stadium.
While the pitchers have been slum-
ping, outfielder Casey Close shows no
signs of stopping his amazing offensive
place. The senior was Michigan's
nomination for Big Ten player-of-the-
week for his.8-14 performance at the
plate against Purdue. He also scored
nine runs and slugged four home runs.
His season slugging percentage is now
1.000 for 31 games with 105 total bases
in 105 at bats.
"I don't know what we would have
done without Close this weekend,"
said Middaugh.
Other Wolverines swinging a big
stick are Hal Morris, who was 8-16
versus Purdue, and Billy St. Peter,
who had three hits on the weekend.
This weekend's opponents will be first
place Indiana. The Ferris and
Eastern games will serve as tuneups.
"The Hoosiers seem to have as many
things going well as we do wrong right
now," said Middaugh. "We can't af-
ford another bad weekend, or we
could be out of the Big Ten race after
only two weeks."
A prospect that could cause Mid-
daugh many more sleepless nights.

Daily rPhoto by DAN HABIB
Outfielder Casey Close gives the thumbs-up sign after reaching third
while head coach Bud Middaugh stands nearby. Close currently leads
the team with a .467 batting average.
'Unniraculous' Mets lose

NEW YORK (AP) - New York
Mets' third baseman -Howard Johnson
let Tito Landrum's ground ball boun-
ce through him for an error that
allowed two runs to score inthe 13th
inning and gave the St. Louis Car-
dinals a 6-2 victory yesterday.
Johnson's error with the bases
loaded and none out broke open the
game between the two National
League East teams that battled to

the final weekend of last season
before the Cardinals won the division.
Starting pitchers Dwight Gooden of
the Mets and Ricky Horton of the Car-
dinals each pitched well although
neither got a decision. Horton went
seven innings and gave up one run on
two hits, while Gooden worked eight
innings, yielded two runs on five hits
and struck out six.

Michigan third baseman Matt Siuda kneels in the dirt ,while waiting for
a throw. Siuda and the rest of the Wolverines will face the Ferris State
Bulldogs in a doubleheader today..

CILAVJJiI liIlL

A1

MISCELLANEOUS

ROOMMATES

Continued From Previous Page

HELP WANTED

SUMMER HELP WANTED: Murry Hotel, Macki-
nac Island, MI 49757. Needs cooks, housekeepers
and personnel for rotation between waitress-
waiter and other hotel jobs. Send request or call
for application. P.O. Box 7706 Ann Arbor, MI 48107
(313-665-3307). 71H0423
b WORK WITH THE U-CLUB
The U-Club needs dishwashing help M-F days, and
all evenings and weekends. Opportunity for ad-
vancement. Great Working conditions! U of M
students only please. Apply in person to Kather-
ine, 2400 Michigan Union. A non-discriminatory,
affirmative action employer. 37110418
PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE
NBD ANN ARBOR BANK will be interviewing
for parttime tellers and other parttime positions
on April 15, 1986 at the Michigan Union, Michigan
Room, form 9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Competetive
salary and benefits. 73H0415
ACCOUNTING $15,000/YEAR TO START.
NOW HIRING, CALL TODAY.
1-419-471-1440 Job Exchange
Only Fee $65.00-ADV.-Job. Info.
W cH0418
COMPUTER OPENINGS FOR: PROGRAM-
MERS, OPERATORS, ANALYST AND OTHERS.
NOW HIRING, CALL TODAY.
1-419-471-1440 Job Exchange.
Only Fee $65.00-ADV.-Job Info.
cHO4lS
ENGINEERING $30,000-$40,000 A YEAR.
CALL TODAY. HIRING NOW.
1-419-471-1440 Job Exchange
Only Fee $65.00-ADV.-Job Info.
cH0416
LOOKING FOR individual to post flyers around
U of M campus area. Payment $20.00/negotiable.
Call 485-0079. 58H0415
MANAGEMENT POSITION $25,000-$35.000 A
YEAR. ENTRY LEVEL. HIRING NOW. CALL
1419-471-1440 Job Exchange
Only Fee $65.00-ADV.-Job Info.
cH0418
MARKETING $20,000-$25,000 A YEAR
NEED TO HIRE, CALL US TODAY
1419-471-1440 Job Exchange
Only Fee $65.00-ADV.-Job. Info.
cH0418
BUSINESS SERVICES
PAPERS JUST 1.50/pg. with this ad. Generic Word
Processing Service. 662-1068. cJtc
CIBACHROME
COLOR STATS
. Color Transparancies
S* Pearl or Glossy Paper

BUSINESS SERVICES
LETTER-PERFECT quality typing. FREE cam-
pus pick-up/delivery. Fast, accurate, reliable.
995-0325. 66J0423
TYPING - all types - Guaranteed work at reas-
onable rates. 668-6109. 91J0613
DATA CONVERSION SERVICE. T.O. 2/from
most media. Disks to tape etc. Call Ray Okonski.
353-2345. 23J0423
FOR PROFESSIONAL, accurate, and dependable
rates, call: Sweeney's Word Processing and
Machine Transcription. 482-7092. 43J0423
"YOU can turn an INTERVIEW into a JOB." ,
CALL - Video Interviewing, Inc. - 968-5431.
cJtc
IT'S ACADEMIC (WORD PROCESSING) for
unparalleled. aesthetically magnificent word pro-
cessing. Our work procures professional praise
and excellent grades. 994-4663. 94J0423
WRITE ON ...
Student editing and typing
$1 .50/page
996-0566
0J0423

TWO HETEROSEXUAL MALES seeking rooms
in 4-6 person dwelling - spring. Scott 663-0409.
44S0416
ROOMMATE NEEDED for comfortable apt.
Students only. Call John 761-8048. 40S0418
3 FEMALES LOOKING for a 4th roommate
for a beautiful 3Fbdrm apartment on Church,
fully furnished. For more info call Michelle,
764-0914 or Florence, 764-2849. c50423

TRAVEL
* SPECIAL.
$1.00 off
instant passport photos
I klnkors
limit one per customer
Expires 4/30/86
OPEN 24 HOURS
540 E.Liberty

MUSICAL

ROOMMATES

HOME ROW
TRANSCRIPTION/WORD PROCESSING
572-0649
cJ0423
SANDI'S TYPING & WORD PROCESSING
** 10% off 1st paper (with this ad) "*
Fast & accurate. Papers, briefs, resumes, letters,
theses. Campus pick-up & delivery. 426-5217.
cJtc
COMPLETE WORD PROCESSING - Expressive
Images Studio, Reasonable rates. 971-1870. cJ0423
TYPING SERVICES - $2 per page - Letter
Quality. 663-1871. cJ0423
A-1 TYPING - On campus. Professional. Rush
service available. 668-8898. cJ0423
THE LETTER WRITER - Resumes; creative/.
letter writing; secretarial services; student rates
on typing. 455-8892. cJtc
TYPING - ALL KINDS - Fast, efficient service.
Reasonable rates. Laurie, 973-1592. cJtc
WORD PROCESSING
Everything in memory, low prices,
free proofing, rush service.
PRONTO PRINTING
761-TYPE Michigan Union 769-COPY
cJtc

ARE YOU STUDYING ABROAD Fall Semester?
Need someone to sublet your room? Senior female
looking for Sept.-Dec. lease. 662-6370. 77SO423
LADIES, now available for Fall, 2 spaces, double
occupancyroom. Cozy house, free laundry, fireplace,
parking, great location, furnished, fun roommates.
Call 662-8263. 90SO423
LIVING IN CHICAGO this summer? NEED a room-
mate? Call 668-6427. 89S0423
ROOMMATE WANTED: Quiet 2-bedroom
furnished apartment near North Campus;
available May/September $250/month. Prefer
Gay Male graduate student, non-smoker with
transportation. 662-5460. 06S0415
SUBLET: NS Female seeks same to share 2
bdrm. apt. very near campus. Great sunporch.
Rent 120.00 (negotiable) Call 663-5568. 60SO416
HOUSEMATES WANTED! Looking for house-
mates to fill a 6 bdrm. house. Year lease begins in
September. Great house and a great location.
Cheap! Call Michelle 764-5838 or 668-8741. 30SO416
2 ROOMMATES NEEDED for Fall - to share
large 2 bedroom apartment in Forest Terrace.
$160/mo. non-smokers. Call 764-2688 or 764-3687.
Be persistent. 28S0423

COMPLETE Yamaha Stereo System. Must Get
Rid Of. 668-7816 After 5. . 54N0418
FIDDLE/VIOLIN lessons - motivated students
wanted! Arlene Leitch 973-0736. 35N0423
TAPE SALE: MAXELL XLII-90 for $2.20 each.
TDK SA-90 for $2.00 each. Lifetime Guarantees.
In stock. Call Ron at 996-4266. 36N0421
TAPE SALE: TDK SA90, $2.00/tape. Maxell
XLII90 $2.20/tape. Lifetime Guarantees, In stock.
Call 668-7981. 62N0423
LESSONS - Special Pay for 4, take 5. Best
teachers in state. REPAIRS, bows rehaired.
Herb David Guitar Studio. 665-8001.302 E. Liberty.
cNtc
FACTORY
LIQUIDATION
SALE
VSP Labs, a prestigious high-end manu-
facturer of amplifiers and preamplifiers in
Ann Arbor is getting out of audio. All pro-
ducts at prices BELOW DEALER COST.
TM 150 transmos amp-150 w/ch -
regularly $1072...............NOW $649
TMG 200 Gold edition amp-200 w/ch-
regularly $1540 ............... NOW $879
SW2 straightwire preamp -
regularly $1090 .............NOW $649
HPF-102 subsonic filter -
regularly $187.................NOW $59
Quantities are limited.
CALL 668-1922 OR STOP AND HEAR
SOUND ASSOCIATES, AUDIO VIDEO
SERVICE CENTER, 322 S. STATE, ANN
ARBOR, MI 48104, LOWER LEVEL.
All units have a one year factory warranty.
82N0415
- --3

INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS:
The Development of an Idea
From Ancient Times Through Ayn Rand
A Speech By:
DR. JOHN RIDPATH
Prof. of Economics and Intellectual History
at York University, Toronto
Thursday, April 17, 1986
8:00 p.m. - Bus. Admin. Rm. 130
ADMISSION FREE
with open question and answer session on
any aspect of Ayn Rand's philosophy
Sponsored by the U of M Students of Objectivism

BLUE FRONT
Packard at State

$ 89 8 pack-
plus deposit 1/2 liter bottles

GOING PLACES

Sail BAHAMAS
SNORKEL, DIVE-'65 Ketch 7/12-7/19 & 8/9-8/16.
$330 inc. meals, send for brochure Our Island
Charter PO Box 47994, St. Petersburg, FL. 33743 or
call (813)347-7817-lv. msg. 22K0417

DENIS BRUTUS
"The State of the Struggle for Freedom in South Africa"
APRIL 17, ANGELL HALL, AUD. B,
8:00 P.M.

S. State at Liberty

MARSHALL'S PACKAGE LIQUOR

$19s

6 pack-
12 oz. cans

35C single 12 oz. can
plus deposit

Good thru 4-23-86

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan