THE MICHIGAN DAiE.Y D er 'I THE MICHIGAN DAILY r£ '.' V eVWI . East batters West, 142-135 ..~....... ~ ... .~ PHILADELPHIA (IP) - Oscar1 Robertson and Willis Reed each scored 21 points last night as the East beat the West 142-135 in the 20th annual National Basketball. Association All-Star game. The East, after breaking a 4-4 tie, led all the way for its 14th victory against six defeats in the All-Star series. Robertson's 21 points broke the' All-Star game career record for points scored. The Cincinnati star now has 230 points in 10 All- Star games, breaking the old mark of 224 set by Bob Pettit of the old St. Louis Hawks in 11 games. Reed of the New York Knicks scored 15 of his total as the East built a 72-59 halftime lead. The. East led 36-21 as they scored -11 points in the last 2:15 of the first period.: Seven points by Philadelphia's Hal Greer on three long jump shots and a free throw, all in the last 58 seconds, keyed the 11-point spree. The West, led by Elvis Hayes' 26 points and Jerry West's 19, sliced the margin 'to six points with 4:30 to go in the third period. Seven consecutive points by Boston's John Havlicek restored . the East advantage to 13 points. The East led 120-96 with 7:40 remaining in "the final period, but the West rallied towithin seven points at 133-126 on a free throw by West of the Lakers with 1:34 to go in the game.. Havlicek again scored a clutch basket as he took a pass from. Greer and layed it in. Lo Hudson of Atlanta made two free throws to make it 135- NIGHT EDITOR: PAT ATKINS 128 with 1:10 left. Philadelphia's; Billy Cunningham drove for a basket and Greer stole an in- bounds pass to break the West's1 momentum. The closest the West got after that was six points at 139-133. Reed, who came here after learning recent stomach pains were not due to an ulcer, was voted the game's most valuable+ player. Towering Lew Alcindor, the million dollar rookie of the Mil- waukee Bucks, playing in his first All-Star game, scored 10 points. The 7-foot-1 star didn't have too much playing time as he got into early foul trouble. Reed earned his MVP prize with 9 for 18 from the field and 3-for- 3 from the foul line along with 11 rebounds. The star center of the Knicks played 30 of the 48 minutes be- fore fouling out late in the final period. Robertson hit on 9 of 11 field goal attempts and handed out 4 assists, while Alcindor played only 18 minutes before fouling out. West, who was No. 1 in the voting for the West squad, hit 7 of 12 from the field and was 8 for 12 from the foul line as he and San Diego's Hayes along with Joe Caldwell and Hudson of Atlanta led the West's futile last period rally. I i . r' ,} * t t ;; ;. d +:2;a , ;J -. .. AUTO INSURANCE FOR EVERYONE Cancelled 0, Rejected Declined We also write motorcycle and motorscooter insurance. "EASY BUDGET TERMS" '; .,-> . : Y:..SS 7 7 Yc' : . .. \" 482-9533 234 W. Michigan Ave. Ypsilanti 665-3789 2465 W. 5todium Bvd. Ann Arbor ~ . '~.. ,'..'S'.-'. I EUOP Howe, Hull combine to smash West, 4-1 I ST. LOUIS (') -- Superstars Gordie Howe and Bobby Hull each scored a goal and the East Divi- sion battered the West 4-1 in the National Hockey League's record- breaking 23rd annual All-Star Game last night. Howe, of Detroit, the NHL's all- time scoring champion, got his 10th career all-star goal on a feed SUMMER CHARTER FLIGHTS - thed evi/'i i' Sweet noth Bill Cusumano_ tgs ~nCthe cor from Chicago's Hull, who 1 a t e r scored his third All-Star tally. Those goals and two others by Montreal's Jacques Laperriere and New York's Walt Tkaczuk all came in the first half of the game against. Philadelphia's B e r n 1 e Parent, the West's starting goalie. After Tkaczuk's goal, Jacques Plante of the St. Louis Blues took over in the West nets and dis- played some sensational g o a 1 tending, holding off the powerful East squad the rest of the way. The All-Stars shattered t h r e e scoring records in the first half- minute of the game when first La- perriere for the East, at 203 se- conds, and then Dean Prentice of Pittsburgh for the West, at 37 seconds, traded goals. Laperriere scored an unassisted goal on a slap shot from the left points and then Prentice tied the score, lobibng a soft 60 footer that skipped into the East net. The two goals were the fastest in All-Star history as well as the fastest from the start of a game and fastest from the start of a period. The East broke a 1-1 tie at 7:20 of the first period on Howe's power tally set up on a perfect pass by Hull. Parent never had a chance as the two East superstars; threw the puck around in front; of his net. Hull struck again early in the second period, whipping a patent-, el, 35-foot slap shot that whistled past parent. The shot had so much velocity that it bounded, right out of the net, but the red light went on and the East had a 3-1 lead. -Associated Press THE WEST'S Connie Hawkins (42) battles with the East's Billy Cunningham for a loose ball in the first period of last night's NBA All-Star game in the Philadelphia Spectrum. Hawkins finished the night with 10 points while Cunningham had 19 as the East beat the West, 142-135. CAGERS BACK FLOOD Pro basketball to expand This is the year of the great experiment in Michigan basketball. This is the year that saw the arrival of girl cheerleaders on the court for the first time in history.. Being, at heart, a male chauvinist I was ecstatic about the idea when Fred Snowden first informed me. After all, what could be better than adding a little sex appeal to the game? Besides, from my own experience, chick cheerleaders usually get a better response from the crowd. The result is more yelling and better atmosphere. Atmosphere was something that Michigan basketball needed too. Events Building crowd are easily the deadest in the whole, Big Ten. Sterile is the best word to use when describing typical crowd reaction in the big barn. Now I don't know about anyone else, but I think that takes some of the fun out of the game. Fans are part of the action and make the whole spectacle even more worthwhile when they are really' roaring. Also, it must be remembered that a raucous home crowd can help to lift a team. So I was all set to see the girls change the complexion of Michigan basketball. Things didn't start off too well, though, as the Detroit crowd and cheerleaders clearly out- yelled their Michigan counterparts in the opening game. However, being the fair-minded guy that I am I decided that I would wait to pass final judgment. - With the season more than half over now, the time for a decision on the cheerleaders is ripe. The verdict, unfortunately, is that the girls are duds. I don't mean anything personally, girls, but I'm sorry, you just don't have it. There are a few things that have to be fixed before the girl cheerleaders will be effective. The first thing that is needed is a change of personnel. I think that our current crop is a really cute group of girls and, of course, I love them all but, damn it, they are just not sexy. And that friends is what you need in a cheerleader. All of you who attended the Duke game and saw those sweet little Blue Devils will know what I mean. Even a mute would've tried to yell when they led the cheers. Now that we have established that a little visiual appeal is needed we must approach the second problem; cheers them- selves. At the moment Michigan has only one cheer that is worth anything, namely Let's Go Blue. If you can find another one I'll let you have this column for a day. What the Wolverines need is a bunch of riotous, insulting cheers, the kind that appeal to a typical fan's savage instincts. Obviously, at the moment, we have no such cheers. But I have the solution. The Athletic Department should send the cheerleaders down to Detroit some afternoon and have them watch Northwestern, Pershing, Kettering or one of the other top city schools play. There they can learn what good,. old hate cheers are all about. There's nothing like a good chorus of Kill, Kill, Kill to get the fans' blood running. The cheerleaders could also jot down a few notes on when to cheer. It seems that someone neglected to inform the girls that time-outs are the places for truly effective cheerleading. In the Events Building time-outs have become nap period. Things got so bad last Saturday that two little old ladies in the stands had to start singing The Victors in attempt to stir things up. However, to give credit where it's due, I will admit that the cheerleaders joined in after the little, old ladies had set the example. But joining in after the yelling has started seems to be our girls' trademark anyway. Once the crowd starts cheering spontaneously the girls are very good at encouraging them. Un- less I am misinformed, though, it is the cheerleaders who are supposed to get the crowd to join them. It could be that Michi- gan's cheerleaders are actually developing a totally new concept in the arts of cheerleading. Personally, I think they can stick the new concept in a garbage can and get back to trying to make the crowd part of the game. A cheerleader should be some chick who gets out there and screams her lungs off, who exhorts the loyal fans from the moment they enter the building until the moment the game is over. What a girl cheerleader shouldn't be (at least at Michigan) is a duplicate of her male counterpart. If you dig watching cheer- leaders do backflips I guess you'll disagree with me but as far as I'm concerned, if we're going to .be subjected to a gymnastics By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - The Na- tional Bas ketballyAssociation owners voted yesterday to expand, possibly into four cities, for the 1970-71 season. A league spokesman said the owners would reconvene at a spe- cial meeting within the next two weeks to announce the details of their expansion decision. New franchise applicants are Buffalo, Cleveland, Houston and Portland, Ore. Carl Scheer, NBA administra- tive assistant to commissioner Walter Kennedy, made the an- nouncement after a two-session meeting of the 14 club owners. Those who favored expansion muscled the move through by dis- missing one expansion committee' Monday and appointing a new: committee. The new expansion committee apparently convinced enougi of the holdouts against increasing the league to get the 11 votes ne- cessary for passage. Meanwhile, the Players Associa- tion of the National Basketball Association met for some three: otre Dame hours in a discussion of pensions, schedules, player benefits and the reserve clause. Oscar Robertson of the Cin- cinnati Royals, president of the association, said the NBA team player representatives hope Curt Flood is successful in\ his bid to upset baseball's reserve clause. "We hope he makes it illegal," he said. Judge delays Flood civ il suit for two w eeks NEW YORK (A')-Federal Judge Dudley B. Bonsal postponed yes- terday until Feb. 3 arguments on outfielder Curt Flood's civil suit challenging baseball's r e s e r v e clause. The $90,000-a-year former star of the St. Louis Cardinals, traded last October to the Philadelphia Phillies, is asking the major leagues to show cause why he should not be permitted to nego- tiate as a free agent. He contends the reserve clause, which twice has been upheld in the Supreme Court, puts a player in "a state of involuntary servitude." The reserve clause binds a player to the club which owns him for life or until sold, traded or re- leased. The baseball hierarchy contends that erasure of the reserve clause would kill the game. "The wealthier clubs could sign unbeaten teams of all stars, total- ly destroying league competition," the presidents of the two major leagues-Joe Cronin of the Amer- ican League and Charles Feeney of the National League-said in a joint statement last Saturday. FLIGHT NO. 1: FLIGHT NO.2: FLIGHT NO. 3: Windsor to London Brussels to Windsor AIR CANADA JET Detroit to London Paris to Detroit TWA JET Windsor to London Brussels to Windsor AIR CANADA JET May 3 June 1 May 7 June 26 May 6 Aug ust 16 $210.00 $Z1 0.00 $215.00 . Sponsored by the University of Michigan ' ONLY Charters from the campus which are regularly scheduled I.A.T.A. Carriers 't- First Class Service; Free, open bar 'ftftPossible rebate if plane fills . ft * Sponsored by UAC-a NON-profit organization Returns from the Continent Sign Up at the UAC Travel Committee Desk, UAC Offices, 2nd Floor Uanion 2-5 daily 163-2147 or 163-1107 EL IGI BILITY: 1. Any student, faculty member or employee of the University or life member of Michigan Union. 2. Members of their immediate family (i.e. mother, father, spouse or children) . as Spartans grab upset EAST LANSING, Mich. QP) - Sophomore \ Ralph Simpson was back in top form last night and he scored 35 points to lead Michi- gan State to an 85-82 upset bas- ketball victory over 20th ranked Notre Dame. Simpson had his worst night of the season Saturday when he fouled out mid-way through the second half. But his hot shooting yesterday allowed the Spartans to Rugby Club selects slate; naxmes of ficials By JOEL GREER The Michigan Rugby Club held its annual meeting last night with the reelection of officers and the naming of the 1970 spring sched- ule among the important items performed. One of the highlights of the 1970 schedule is an invitation to the Virginia Commonwealth Invi- tational 'tournment held the week of May 9. The tournament, sponsored by Sports Illustrated- and Look Maga- zine, is aurather prestigious one. "This one determines the best in America," explains Hank Lukaski, new president of the club. Two teams invited along with the ruggers are the Chicago Lions and the Missouri Tigers, both of which the ruggers defeated in the fall. Other squads invited are eastern teams Brown, Princeton, Virginia, the Toronto Old Boys, and a west coast team yet to be named. Other highlights of the spring schedule are the Big Ten tourna- ment April 10-11 at Champaign and the midwestern tour after exams. Another possibility is a Chicago Sevens tournament May 23 where there are seven men on a squad instead of the customary 15. t go ahead to stay early in the sec- and half. Michigan State led 40-36 at the half, but the Irish came back with six straight points-four of them by John Pleick-to forge ahead 42-40. The. Spartans tied it up and Simpson drove in and sank a jump shot with 16:30 remaining in the game giving Michigan State a 44-42 lead, it never lost. Simpson fouled out just before the final buzzer.. The Irish closed to within two points with just under 10 min- utes left, but Michigan State then opened the game wide open and at one point led by 13. Notre Dame's Austin Carr led all scorers in the game with 39 poitlts. The defeat left Notre Dame with an 11- season mark. Mich- igan State is now 6-7. COLLEGE SCORES Michigan State 85, Notre Dame 82 Cincinnati 79, Bradley 64 Davidson 79, Furman 71' Texas Tech 9U, SMU 6 SGeorgia Southern 72, Mercer 64 SPEEDY Copy and Duplicating Center l yping-Printing A COX OpI S 100 COPIES-$1.95 601 E. William (next to Mark's) 761-3596 The U-M Tae Kwon Do Association CU-EDUCATIONAL The ultimate in self-defense and physical fitness WEST-SOUTH QUAD CLUB TIME: Tues. and Thurs., 7-9 P.M., Sun., 2-4 P.M. PLACE: West Quad 2nd Floor Dining Room MASTER INSTRUCTOR: Robert B.C. You, 5th Dan Korean Black Belt