Sunday, April 7, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, April 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page N~e As Nation Mourns: A Somber Sport World By The Associated Press A saddened sports world con- tinued to pay homage to Dr. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. yesterday, im- posing on itself a virtual cessation of mapor activity for at least two days starting today. The latest postponements in- cluded tomorrow night's opening baseball game at Houston plus numerous events scheduled for today, when the nation will ob- serve a day .of mourning for the slain civil rights leader. King's .funeral will be held Tuesday in Atlanta. Stanley Cup Moved, The latest among today's post- poned events include the National Hockey League playoff game be' tween San Francisco and Los Angeles, two American Basket- ball Association playoff games, and four matches in the North American Soccer League. In addition, a number of ma- jor league baseball exhibition games were canceled. Tigers Postponed Opening baseball games in a Washington, Detroit and New York were put back from Tues- day to Wednesday. The traditional opener in ihe nation's capital had previously been shifted from tomorrow to Tuesday. Ccincinnati's o p e n e r, scheduled for tomorrow, was rescheduled for Wednesday, as was Houston's first game. The following sections will de- tail the various cancellations and postponements in the different ! sports. BASEBALL Tomorrow's opening games in W a s h i n g t o n Cincinnati and M'Ruggers, Give MSU The Boot 14 The Michigan rugby team kicked the ruggers from Michigan State all over the f'ield yesterday as they beat the Spartans twice. The score of the 'A' game was 6-0, while the Wolverines really romped in the 'B' contest, taking it 14-0.' The Spartans took' it on the chin, in the teeth, and across the chops, as the charging chiaps from Ann Arbor refused to let MSU get a single paint during the whole sweaty 'afternoon. In the first game, for Michigan, MacDonald got a penalty goal and a drop goal, each goQd for three points, as he took all the Wplver- ine scoring honors. In the 'B' funfest, in which the Spattans were again skunked, Bal'- lard scored a try, good for three 4 points, Forbes kicked a penalty goal, Owens got a try which Forbes converted for a total of five points, and finally Forbes scored another penalty goal to bring the Michigan final score to 14. With the MSU mauling and Spartan straight-lacing complete, t the Wolverine ruggers charged off to celebrate the double-drubbing with a party. Houston have been shifted to Wednesday, the first two for the afternoon and the Astros' game at night. Tuesday's American League openers at Detroit and New York were rescheduled for Wednesday afternoon. A number of today's final exhibition games were canceled. POSTPONED GAMES Pittsburgh at Houston, to wed. Minnesota at Washington, to -wed. California at New York, to Wed. Boston at Detroit, to wed. Oakland at Baltimore, to Wed. Chicago at Cincinnati, to wed. Atlanta at St. Louis, to Tues., night. Philadelphia at Los Angeles, to Tues. night. Ne "York at San Francisco,, to Tues. Cleveland at Chicago, to Tues. BASKETBALL The second game in the San Francisco-Los Angeles Western Division NBA playoff series was shifted from tonight to Wednes- day night. Postponement of this afternoon's Philadelphia-Boston Eastern Division playoff game to Wednesday night had been pre- viously announced. Today's ABA playoff games, Pittsburgh at Minnesota and Dallas at New Orleans, were also postponed. POSTPONED GAMES San Francisco at Los Angeles, to Wed. night. Philadelphia at Boston, to Wed. night. HOCKEY This . afternoon's Stanley Cup game between the Black Hawks and the Rangers was rescheduled for Tuesday night in New York and the others in the series moved back. The National Hockey Lea- gue said no changes were con- templated in the three other play- off series. POSTPONED GAMES Los Angeles at Minnesota, Tues. night. Philadelphia at St. Louis, Wed. night. to to SOCCER Four of today's games in the North American League were post- poned-Baltimore at Los Angeles, Washington at San Diego, Chicago at Oakland and St. Louis at Kan- sas City. The Toronto-Vancouver game will be the only one'played. Also called off were tomorrow night's Boston at Atlanta game and Wed- nesday night's Detroit at Kansas City tilt. The new dates: Baltimore at Los Angeles, Sunday, April 14;, Washington and San Diego, Wed- nesday, April 10. POSTPONED GAMES Baltimore at Los Angeles, to next Sun. Washington at San Diego, to Wed. Boston at Atlanta, indef. Detroit at Kansas City, Indef. BULLETIN TUCSON, Ariz. (P) - Califor- nia upset Southern Illinois for the team title in the NCAA gym- nastics championships last night. The Bears captured the team crown by one-tenth of a point, 188.25 to 188,15. Iowa with 186.55, and Temple, 176.45, finished third and fourth In the team competition. The four finalists were the survivors from among eight regional win- ners. * * * Porter Defeated At All-Star * * As est Whips East, 23-11 1 * PRO HOCKEY: ontreal, Phiadelphia Win i Playoffs Py The Associated Press STILLWATER, Okla. - In a rather unclimactic end to his Michigan wrestling career, Dave Porter was decisioned in his final match. But considering his op- ponent was Curly Culp of Arizona State, whom no one but Porter himself has beaten in the last two years, the loss was justifiable. Porter's match was one of 11 in the East-West All Star Wrestling Tournament which the West won 23-11. In the last minute of the six minute match, Porter was taken down by Cuip, to give the the margin of victory, 5-3. Coach Cliff Keen called the match "real- ly colse." Two awfully good boys were wrestling." In last year's meet, Porter had pinned Culp. The presence of nine national champions among the wrestlers reflected the caliber of competi- tion. Only Wayne Welles of Okla- homa, and this year's NCAA champ at 152, had a run-away match, beating Navy's John Kent, 60. All other bouts had margins of victory or three points or less. Besides Porter, four other Big Ten wrestlers competed. Only 130- lb. Tim McCall of Indiana won his bout, 4-1 over Pete Nord of Colo- rado, in a match Keen termed "another good one." Spartan Collapse In a rematch of the NCAA 137 class finals, Dale Anderson came out on the low end of, a 7-6 score. Masaru Watabe, whom the Spar- tan's Anderson had beaten 9-5 in the nationals, barely turned the table to eke out a victory. Another Spartan, Mike Bradley, went down to defeat in the 167- pound division. He also lost by a one point margin, 3-2 to this year's national champ, Mike Gallego of Fresco State. The fourth representative from the Big Ten's, Russ Schneider of Northwestern, was decisioned, 4-1, by 160-pounder Reg Wicks from Iowa State. Nick Carollo, who edged out an overtime win to grab the national crown at 191 earlier this year, saw his season end like Porter's, with a loss. The Adams State wrestler was decisioned in a close one, 2-1, by Rich Larenzo of Penn State. 115 lbs.-Unik (Ohio U) dec. Green (Okia. S), 7-6. 123 lbs.-Sanders (Port. St.) dec. Parker (Ind. St.), 6-4. 130 lbs.-McCall (Ind.) dec. Nord (Colo.), 4-1. 137 lbs.-Watabe (Port. St.) dec. Anderson (MSU). 7-6. 145 lbs.-Wyatt (Calif. Poly Tech) drew Pete Vanderlofske (Navy), 5-5. 152 lbs.-Welles (Okla.) dec. Kent (Navy), 6-0. 160 lbs. -Wicks (Iowa St.) dec. Schneider (NJ). 4-1. 167 lbs.--Gallego (Fresco St.) dec. Bradley (MSU), 3-2. 177 lbs.- Fozzard (Okla. St.) dec. Cook (East Stroudsburg), 3-1. 191 lbs.-Larenzo (Penn St.) dec. Carollo (Adams St.), 2-1. IHwt.-Culp (Ariz. St.) dec. Por- ter (Mich.), 5-3. By The Associated Press MONTREAL - Rookie Jacques Lemaire fired two goals and vet- eran Jean Beliveau supplied the clincher with 2%/2 minutes left as Montreal defeated Boston 5-3 in their National Hockey League playoff game last night. It was the second straight vic-. tory for the Canadiens in the best-of-7 series which continues Tuesday at Boston. Lemire, who scored 22 regular season goals, opening the scor- ing for ;the Canadiens when he beat Gerry Cheevers at 9:33 of the first period. Dick Duff as- sisted.-Ii Ken Hodge scored; his second playoff:goal for the Bruins, tying the score' four minutes later. Montreal regained the lead in the second period when defense- man Jacques Laperriere beat Cheevers at 4:15. Then Lemaire scored his second goal of the game, unassisted at 9:24. Boston closed the gap to one goal when defenseman Ted Green hit on feeds from Bobby Orr and Johnny. Bucyk at 13:06. The Canadiens were two men short ,at the time with both Beliveau and Claude Provost in the penalty box. Duff made it 4-2 midway through the third period but 23 seconds after he scored, Johnny McKenzie beat Gump Worsley, drawing the Bruins within one goal again. Then Beliveau hit at 17:34 for. the clincher. The Bruins had just 20 shots at Worsley while Cheevers faced 41 Montreal drives, .* * * PHILADELPHIA-Leon Roche- fort slapped in the winning goal at 6:51 of the third period last night as "the Philadelphia Flyers edged the St. Louis Blues, 4-3, and evened their National Hockey League Western Division playoff series at one victory apiece. The Blues applied pressure in the final 10 minutes, but excel- lent goal-tending by Philadelphia's Doug Favelle protected the lead. Philadelphia broke to a first period 3-1 lead as Pat Hannigan scored the Flyares' first playoff goal in history at 1:32. The Blues tied it at 7:11 when veteran Dickie Moore drilled in the' 40th goal of his Stanley Cup career., The Flyers scored twice within 33 seconds before the period end- ed as Don Blackburn and Claude Laforge beat goalie Glenn Hall from close range. 'Jhe Blues tied the score in the second period at 3-3 when Don McKenney and Larry Keenan scored. There were 19 penalties called, including a major for fighting and WAYNE WELLES I DICK DUFF 11 _-_ li UNION-LEAGUE FALL FOREIGN STUDENT ORIENTATION YOU ARE INVITED to an author's party to honor JOH N ROBERTS author of THE RIGHT TRUMPET winner of the Avery Hopwood Award for fiction on April eighth, 3:00 p.m. ULRICH'S 2nd floor Mezzanine JEAN BELIVEAU a 10-minute misconduct on St. Louis defenseman Bob Plager. The Flyers were able to launch 41 shots, 27 more than in their, previous 1-0 loss to St. Louis. 1111 II Any students interested in escorting a foreign student during fall orientation please fill out the below form and mail to the UAC international Mount Leads NCAA Team In U.S. Olympic Tryouts II f By The Associated Press ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.-Charlie Scott of North Carolina sparked the NCAA White team over the NCAA Blues 113-85 yesterday ~1n the U.S. Olympics basketball trials. In an earlier game, the NCAA Reds trampled, the NCAA College Division, 100-83. Scott scored a game high of 20, Ron Nelson of New Mexico had 16 points. Joe Allen of Bradley scored 19 points for the Blues, and Fred Foster of Miami, Ohio, added 18. Leading the Red team victory were Rick Mount of Purdue with 21 points and Joe Franklin of Wis- consin with 16. Larry Jeffries of Trinity, Tex., scored 17 points for the NCAA College Division, which fell behind 12-2 in the early going and never threatened. I r. 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