Wednesday, March 20, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine WensaMrh2,16 H IHIGAN DAILY Page- N-ine I Royals Tip '76ers in Overtime PHILADELPHIA - Cincinnati moved into a tie for fourth place and a possible playoff berth by defeating the Philadelphia 76ers 131-130 in an overtime National Basketball Association game last night. Cincinnati is deadlocked with Detroit. Both teams play games tonight The Royals will be in New York and Detroit visits Boston. If the teams are still deadlocked after the game, they will meet in a one-game playoff in Detroit Fri- day night to decide the coveted playoff position Wilt Chamberlain missed a last- second, desperation shot after Philadelphia cut Cincinnati's lead to one point with 28 seconds left in the overtime. A three-point play by Bob Love' with 58 seconds left had pushed Cincinnati in front 131-127. A free throw by Chamberlain and two by Bill Cunningham with 28 seconds to go made things tight. Cincinnati then held on to the ball and failed to get off a shot before the 24 second clock expired. *. * * Irish Win in NIT NEW YORK - Notre Dame overcame Larry Newbold's one- man show and nipped Long Island University 62-60 in the National Invitation Tournament last night on reserve George Restovich's bas- ket with two minutes left. Dan Obrovac's siz free throws in the final two minutes lifted AIMAU FRY Dayton past Fordham 62-61 in the opening game. Dayton meets Notre Dame and St. Peter's N.J, faces Kansas in tomorrow night's semifinals Restovich's basket gave the Irish a 61-58 lead but there was plenty of action to follow, and LIU wast- ed two chances in the final 40 sec- onds in its bid to become second straight No 1 small college team to win the NIT. Closed the Gap Newbold, who hit 23 of his 35 points in a second-half drive that carried the Blackbirds back from a 41-28 deficit, closed the gap to 61-60 with a basket with 68 sec- onds remaining. LIU got the ball back seconds later, but Newbold lost it on a drive. Notre Dame ran out all but four seconds of the remaining time be- fore Jim Derrig was fouled and made one of two free throws. LIU had a final chance but Newbold missed from the corner, only the third shot he missed in the half after hitting 10 field goals. Notre Dame, paced by Bob Whitmore's 16 points and Bob Arnzen's 12, led 36-28 at halftime. Whitmore finished with 23 points and Arnzen 16. Drops in Two Dayton's obrovac. in foul trouble himself early in the opener, drop- ped his first two decisive charity tosses with 2:48 remaining and gave the Flyers a 57-56 lead they never relinquished. Two more free throws came with 45 seconds left for a 59-56 lead and the final two made it 61-58. But Dayton, a heavy favorite with an 11-game winning streak going still almost blew the game in the final seconds. Frank McLaughlin came quickly down the court and hit a jumper with six seconds left and when Dayton threw away the ensuing inbounds pass McLaughlin had one more chance but missed from far out. Early Lead Fordham, which never reached the semis in five previous tries, surprisingly jumped in front at the start and the Flyers didn't catch up at 36-all until early in the sec- ond half on Obrovac's basket. Only the steady scoring of sec- ond-team All-American Don May, who finished with 28 points, kept the floudering Flyers in the game until Obrovac took over in the final minutes. SPORTS BULLETS: Pro Players Ask Rights * CHICAGO - The National Football League's Players Association presented a list of demands to management yester- day in the first formal collective bargaining session in pro football history. The demands included a grievance and arbitration pro- cedure, no discrimination to any athlete because of race, re- ligion or national origin, and the right to negotiate individual player salaries reserved for the individual player and owner. " NEW YORK - The Philadelphia Flyers said yesterday that repairs to the roof of their wind-damaged arena will be- gin today but unless there is some guarantee the repair work will be approved the National Hockey League team will make arrangements to hold its playoff games elsewhere. " MIAMI - The National League's three-man expansion committee will meet here today to discuss increased sentiment for enlarging to 12 teams by 1969. This would match the move of the American League which will field 12 teams next year. The National League previously planned to do so by 1971. 0 KANSAS CITY - Joe Allen of Bradley and Tom Boer- winkle of Tennessee head a seven-player contingent named last weekend to the NCAA Olympic basketball tryout squad. FRIDAY REMATCH: UCLA, Houston Keyed for Semis Boycotts Are Often Childish Reactions After a week of muddling through rules and regulations, the Big Ten finally decided to have a playoff to determine the conference representative to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) gymnastics championships. Michigan State immediately disagreed with the decision. The Spartans feel they are the rightful representative to the national tournament. Because of this, they have threatened to boycott the playoff. Such a move would be not only foolish but extremely unsportsmanlike. The boycott would be foolish because eliminating themselves from competition would not gain the Spartans any moral victory, but would just eliminate any chance of competing in the nationals. Whether or not Michigan State is correct in its interpretation of the NCAA rules, a decision by the national committee stated that the Big Ten could determine its representative by any method it chose. Thus, a proposal which was passed by the conference athletic directors calling for a playoff, is legal. Even assuming, for the moment, that the NCAA directive had not been sent to the Big Ten, the Michigan State position cannot hold its ground. In its September meeting, the gymnastics coaches voted down a measure to accept the NCAA rules of com- petition and decided to determine the conference champion by P a different method. Briefly, this method counted dual meets and the conference meet as equal parts of the conference championship. Because the three schools reversed their positions in each area, they ended in a three- way tie. The NCAA rule which was voted down stated that the winner of each conference meet is conference champion and is entitled to be representative in the national championships. Michigan State argues that this NCAA rule can't be modified and thus it is the quali- fied team. According to Michigan State's logic, it was possible for Iowa to win the Big Ten championship outright, and still make the Spar- tan team the one eligible to compete in the national tournament. This result is absurd, even Michigan State's Coach George Szypula admits, "In such a case we wouldn't have brought up the question." th If he wouldn't have brought up the question then, what makes the present situation any more, applicable? Disregarding the legal aspects, though, it is still unsports- manlike for the Spartans to demand their representation with out consenting to a playoff. Originally, the interpretation given by all three coaches (or at least the voiced opinion) was that in case of a tie, all those teams involved could advance to the national tournament. This sentiment was even expressed by Szypula before the Big Ten meet. Satirically he had stated, "With our luck, we'll win the Big Ten meet, Michigan will place second, 'and Iowa third. Because of the resulting three- way tie, the Daily will come out two days later with a report on col- lusion between the three schools to get all three into the NCAA's." Even after the Big Ten meet, itself, Szypula expressed the same emotions. With his arms around the coaches from Michigan and AV Iowa, he exclaimed, "This is just great. All three of us deserve to go to the nationals and this way we'll be able to." When later told that only one team could represent the Big Ten, he changed his tune, "We knew after the meet that we were the representative. If the other coaches didn't read the rules, that doesn't make it right." This attitude is wholly inexcusable. To state one thing, and then turn around and say that something else is right, is a poor image to present to players and fans. While it is considered only slightly improper to say one thing and do another in government, it is deplorable that college sports competition employ such methods. It is certainly in everyone's best interests, legally and morally, for the Michigan State gymnasts to retract their juvenile actions, and agree to compete in the Big Ten gymnastic playoff. Let us hope that they do. ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT for $1.00 EVERY WEDNESDAY unt Jemimas KITCEN Junction U.S. 23 & 12 II NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION 1 xPhiladelphia Bo~ston New York Detroit Cincinnati Baltimore Western Dii xst. LouisJ Los Angeles San Francisco Chicago Seattle San Diego x--Cinched division1 W L1 61 20 54 27 42 39 39 42 39 42 36 45 ivision 56 26 51 30 43 39 28 52 22 59 15 65 title. Bie- Pet hind .757 - .667 7 .519 19 .481 22 .481 22 .444 25 .683 - .630 4%2 .524 13 .350 27 .272 331/2 .188 40 By The Associated Press UCLA and Houston continue to prime their plentiful weapons for a showdown in Los Angeles Friday night, while upset winner Ohio State and North Carolina rest up for their half of the doubleheader. The semifinal winners play Saturday night for the NCAA basketball crown won by UCLA three of the last four years, in- cluding 1967. The awesome Houston club took Texas Christian apart 1103-68 for the NCAA M i d w e s t Regional crown last Saturday night, mak- ing it 32 straight victories since UCLA and Lew Alcindor beat Houston in the NCAA semifinals last year at Louisville. Shaved The graceful 6'9 /2" Elvin Hay- es, averaging 37.7 points and op- erating with shaved head and goatee, showed why he was voted Player of the Year with 74 points, 49 rebounds and several blocked shots in his two games. The Alcindor-led Bruins, No. 2 and beaten only by Houston in a regular season game at the Astro- dome, demolished Santa Clara 87- 66 in routine fashion to win the Far West Regional and set up the rematch with Houston. "There is no use crying about it now," said Alcindor about his eye injury and the 71-69 loss. "I just want to be prepared. I hope we're ready to play." Alcindor'averaged 26.2 points this season. LEW ALCINDOR "I expect UCLA to stay with their press because they have more speed, quickness and depth than we have," said the Cougar coach. "We will try to cut off Al- cindor's passing lanes to the cor- nerman and bother him all we can at the same time." UCLA coach John Wooden, early in the week, had said, "I really can't say whether we'd be better off running or stalling against Houston. I'm surprised nobody hasustalled against them before. Maybe that's the best way to play them." Chuckled Asked if he'd be surprised if UCLA stalled, Lewis chuckled, then laughed and answered, "Very definitely." The semi-final game between the two schools Friday night will be broadcast by Sports Network, Inc. and carried locally over WJBK, Channel 2 beginning at midnight. Sports Network also will tele- cast Saturday's finals. WWJ-TV, Channel 4, will carry the cham- pionship and the consolation games beginning at 9:30 p.m. Students forI McCARTHY will hold an important meeting TODAY to discuss plans for the March 22 rally at Detroit Metro airport and the March 29 trip to Wisconsin to work in McCarthy's campaign. 7:30 P.M. in Colloquium Room of Physics-Astronomy Building (on 2nd floor of 2-story wing) Why Wait For China In The 70's.. . BLOW YOURSELF UP NOW TO POSTER SIZE Send us any block and white or color snapshot. We'll blow it up to 2 ft., by 3 ft. (Poster Size). $4.75 for one, $3.00 for each additional from same photo. Inquire as to quantity prices, group rates, and special projects. Original photo returned. Add 25c for handling. OPERATION BLO-UP, INC. 636 Pennsylvania Ave., S.E. Washington, D.C. 20003 PRESIDENT FLEMING'S FIRST .100 DAYS plus Big Ten Summer Sports Baseball Track Tennis Golf All this and more in Ending June 20th -.. -- - - - - - -- ---- - - - 1 2 term - $2 50 Full term - $4.50 I }_ _ IName~ ____ I Address_-- - (summer) (street)1 1 1 (city and state) (Zip code) spring Q summer both terms Q-] L - - - -- - - -- ...-- - --.-.......---- --£ Guy Lewis, coach of the top ranked, unbeatenCougars, said yesterday he expected a better game this time, explaining: "I think UCLA will score more points and shoot better. We'll shoot bet- ter and I really feel we'll have a high scoring game." Lewis laughed off any sugges- tion that UCLA would stall agains his basketball forces Fri- day and predicted a high scoring battle. Yesterday's Results Cincinnati 131, Philadelphia 130 (ovt) San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. Chicago at Seattle, inc. 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