Page Eigh# THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 15, 1968 Page EIght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 15, 1968 FRIDAY, SATURDAY-MARCH 15,16 HARBOR- LIGHTS presents KWESKIN JUG BAND plus DETROIT VIBRATIONS Only 25 min. from Ann Arbor at, 4195 W. Jefferson at Outer Drive ESCORSE, MICHIGAN OPEN 7:30-1 :30 Call for Reservations 386-2599 I NNCAA R Inter-House Assembly AaR The Big Ten champion Ohio preseittS State Buckeyes are rated a slight favorite over East Tennessee to- night in the Mid-East regionals AAsemi-finals at Lexington, Ken- EF RALD Ntucky, in the sprawling NCAA bas- S MI-FORMAL DANCE the efforts of its front line of Bill Hosket,. Steve Howell, and v~ Dave Sorenson, is given the edge with "bTHE CHESSMEN" ecause of its 51.6 per cent shoot- ing average, the best in the Big Ten this season. Kentucky, the Southeast confer- ence champion and number five in 8:30-12:50, March 22, 1968 1 the country, tangles with Mar- C quette in the second game. MICHIGAN LEAGUE BALLROOM The Wildcats will automatic- ; aly set two records in the tour- } 9 naments, and the other for play- ing in their 39th game. They have won the NCAA crown a record $3.00 per couple four times. Hayes-Unseld A matchup of All-Americans Tickets available at IHA offce Elvin Hayes of Houston, and C inSAB and at residence Wes Unseld of Louisville takes Ill a place following the Texas Chris- halls desks.tian-Kansas State encounter in halls esks.the Mid-West regionals at Wichi- ta, Kansas. It's likely Louisville will start ;op substitute Rodney Knowles, in the eliminations at four cent- averaging 10 points or more a ers-Raleigh, Lexington, Wichita, game, and Albuquerque. Tenth ranked Columbia is headed by Dave Duke is in the NIT at New York Newmark, a seven-footer regarded The second round winners to- as an excellent outside shooter, night at each site will meet to- and high scoring Jim McMillan. ;morrow to determine the four The second game features St. !semifinalists. The semifinals and Bonaventure, ranked third in the! finals, March 22-23. will be held final poll, who has relied on five at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. starters to carry the load this Tonights games (with team season, against fourth-ranked rnigadreos)r: NorthCarolinasstrong in bench rakgs and records are: material. 0 East regional, Raleigh-Co- Another All-American "lumbia, No. 7 (22-4), vs. David- The Tar Heels also have All-;son, No. 8 23-4); St. Bonaven- American Larry Miller, who is tue, No. 3 (23) vs. North Caro- averaging 20.9 points a game. Center Bob Lanier leads St. Bo- * Mideast regional. Lexington, naventure, with senior Bill Butler -East Tennessee, (19-6), vs. Ohio the number two man. State, (18-7); Kentucky. No. 5, A crowd of more than 15,000 is (21-4), vs. Marquette, (22-5). expected at Albuquerque, New « Midwest regional, Wichita,- Mexico, when UCLA and T1%f2" Texas Christian, (14-10), vs. Kan- All-American Lew Alcindor meet sas State, (19-7); Louisville, No. rugged independent New Mexico 9, (20-6), vs. Houston, No. 1, State in the West regional. (29-0). Alcindor averaged 26.3 points West regional, Albuquerque- per game this season and pulled UCA oI,(2-) s e down 386rebounds heL rMexico State, (22-5); New Mex- high scorers are guards Lucius ico, No. 6, (23-3), vs. Santa Clara, Allen, with a 15.2 average, and (2,3) Mike Warren, at 12.2. Sam Lacey, 6'9" sophomore, provides muscle and scoring pow- er to go along with New Mexico State's speedy guards, Bob Evans Jlb oar and Jimmy Collings. Santa Clara, the West Coast Athletic conference champions, Anyone interested in becom- meet New Mexico in the anti- ing a varsity football manager climatic second game. should contact Rik Kohn at In all, nine of the nation's 769-1052 or at the athletic Top Ten teams will be involved offices (663-241). 'egionals Tip Off Tonight 'J DAVE SORENSON Admit one FREE with this ad and one paid admission J 0 I its 6'9" transfer Mike Grosso, tot combat the Cougars' huge front line which also includes 6'9" Ken Spain and 6'7" Theodis Lee. That leaves the guarding of 6'9 12" Hayes, the nation's Player of the Year to 6'8" Unseld, unless Louis- ville uses a zone defense. Meanwhile, four Top Ten teams shot it out in the East regional at Raleigh, North Carolina. Bang, Bang Eighth-ranked Davidson pits a 13-game winning streak against Columbia, Ivy League champion for the first time since 1951 and rated seventh in the country. Davidson has a balanced attack with Mike Malloy, Doug Cook, Jerry Kroll, Wayne Huckey, and, ' ' Gene Mc~arthy' A MAN FOR THIS SEASON Senator Eugene McCarthy's campaign is steadily gaining in strength and signifi- cance * * ' * * Every serious political campaign repre- sents an interaction between the candidate and the issues. Senator McCarthy, compar- atively little known on the national scene, is tapping a'sizable vein of antiwar senti- ment. He is winning support because he is willing to talk sensibly and calmly about Vietnam, the subject that is most on the minds of the electorate, and is, willing to submit his beliefs to the judgment of the voters. The McCarthy campaign appears novel because so many Americans have become accustomed to political campaigns in which issues are ruthlessly subordinated to per- sonalities. It is rare and refreshing for a man to be more concerned with his ideas than his image. Mr. McCarthy is not mer- chandising himself as if he were a popular singer or a new brand of detergent; he is not seeking support because he has an at- tractive wife or children or dog or any other irrelevancy. Like any man who has ever run for po- litical office, President Johnson has a heal- thy respect for the ballot box. An outpour- ing of McCarthy support may convince him of the deepening public conviction that the war cannot be won in the terms in which he is trying to win it. A Johnson change of viewpoint on the war is not probable, but it is more clearly within the realm of the pos- sible than it was before Eugene McCarthy began to campaign. Senator McCarthy has succeeded in naking a negotiated settlement in Vietnam a more credible alternative simply by cam- paigning for such a settlement. He has re- moved the issue of the war from the side- shows of controversy to the main tent of politics where the two great parties con- tend. For' all citizens, but particularly for students and young people, he has provided constructive political leadership in a hard, confused time. For that service alone he commands the respect and gratitude of all who cherish democracy. -from a New York Times editorial, Sunday, March 10, 1968 GENE MCCARTHY NEEDS YOUR HELP in Wisconsin, Saturday, March 30, -Sunday, March 31, Monday, April 1, or on Primary Election Day, Tuesday, April 2. CAN YOU DRIVE? CAN YOU GO? Call CARPOOL HEADQUARTERS N03-6039 or N03-9885 IAI A C IT11 A 1AIIELA lA ITc rr- - -. .....__. -=, F I _________ __________ ______________ __________ 1 A* L - ii 4f f ( if 1 ha mon ka rdon iI, aIXuiyc Center '304 S. Thayer li II == 1 the *i~r 4' 94(ei I .; y^' by 4 London Fogo :rd and playback on the go! The TR-8060 makes loading and operation 'eeze. 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