THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridov_ Fakninrv 9 .11070 .. .< .1 FIAuny~ , 3fU1yIV,1 ~7f 1)L' .I .r . BACKCOURT BRILLIANCE: 1342 N. Main 662-9569 ANN ARBOR'S MILL END FABRIC STORE FABRI( SALE BEGINS FRI., FEB. 6 Wools-$2.00-3.50 yd. Acrylics-$2.75 yd. Brocades-$3.00-6.00 yd. Metallics-$2.75 yd. Upholstery Fabrics-$1.50- 5.00 yd. Drapery & Sipcovers- $1.50-3.50 yd. All other fabrics reduced 10 % or more Gigantic Floor Pillows Made to Order Choose your own fabric $31.00 to $70.00 Near Freeway Gas Station & U.S. 23 Bridge FREE PARKING Mon-Sot. 9:30-5:00; Fri. eves. 'til 8:30 p.m. Guards gain ground on court behemoths Against The Wiall By AL SHACKELFORD The year of the big man in college basketball has passed with the graduation of Lew Alcindor and a squadron of comparatively little men are dominating the 1969- 70 season. Take a look around the country. Only a few big ballplayers a r e anywhere near Alcindor's class, notably 7-2 Artis Gilmore of Jack- sonville, 6-9 Sam Lacey of New Mexico State and 6-11 Bob Lanier of St. Bonaventure. Guards are grabbing all the headlines. Pete Maravich of LSU and Calvin Murphy of -Niagara are winding up great careers and Maravich is getting more publicity than David and Julie put to- gether. Charlie Scott of North Carolina and Austin Carr of Notre Dame are two more superb guards; and these two along with Mara- vich and Murphy, may be the four best ballplayers in the country. Maravich, now the leading major college scorer of all time, stands by hinself as the finest player in the country. He has no appar- ent weakness: his scoring average of almost fifty points per (game speaks for his offense, he dribbles! and passes like a Harlem Globetrot- ter, he plays defense when he has Ito. I don't think it makes m u c h difference whether you play man- to-man or zone or what," K e n - tucky Coach Adolph Rupp says of Maravich. "He's just too tough. "I wouldn't let my boys shoot from some of, the places he does," continues Rupp, "but by golly, they go in." Rupp's statements were prompted by Pistol Pete's throwing in 55 points against his Wildcats earlier this season.' Next in the procession of stars is stubby Calvin Murphy of Niag- ara, who almost by himself is lead- ing the Purple Eagles to their fin- est season in years. Murphy is a super-shooter who can bomb in rockets of thirty-five feet w i t h amazing accuracy and drive just as well. Calvin can dunk the ball with both hands, no mean feat for a man 5'10". He also twirls a damn fine baton. After Maravich and Murphy come a whole herd of guards, all just about equally fantastic in ability. Charlie Scott of N o r t h Carolina is familiar to basketball fans for his NCAA television per- formances of last year, where his spectacular displays of clutch shooting should have won him an Emmy. He is a natural at 6'5", has great inside moves and is that rarity, a fine defensive player. His a CAMP RAMAH HEBREW RELIGIOUS EDUCATIONAL CAMP SUMMER POSITIONS AVAILABLE. For Details see Rabbi Leonard S.'Berkowitz at the HILLEL HOUSE 10-4:30 February 12 Call for appointmer't or drop-in 663-4129 the boards hard. 'Carr fired in 37 last December 3 against Mich- igan in Notre Dame's 87-86 win. Charlie Davis of Wake Forest, Dean Meminger of Marquette and Rick Mount of Purdue make it tough to pick the nation's fifth- best guard. Davis might be called a darkhorse, but only because Wake Forest receives little national publicity; he's got all the goods. Deadly from anywhere on t h e court, Davis has engineered Wake Forest to upsets over North Caro- lina and Davidson this season. All that stands between him and greatness is a few pounds: Char- lie's lack of weight cuts down his endurance. Meminger didn't score much in Marquette's loss to Michigan ear- lier this year, but impressed peo- ple with his poise and natural talent. He may be the best defen- sive guard in America, has great moves and gets up on the boards. Meminger's biggest liability is an inability to hit well from t h e outside, something a man of his size must do. Another guard who needs no in-, troduction is Rick Mount, w h o ripped up Michigan last Saturday with 53 points. Mount is all of- fense though; once you get past his great shooting ability there's nothing left but his jock. Some other top guards are Nate "Tiny" Archibald from Texas at El Paso, a great offensive play- er cut from the same cloth as Calvin Murphy; Michigan State's Ralph Simpson, just a sophomore but another great scorer; Mike Casey of Kentucky, out most of the year with a broken leg but with two good years behind him; John Vallely and Henry Bibby, who give UCLA probabl the fin- est pair of guards in the country; Heywood Dotson of Columbia andj Jeff Petrie of Princeton, the best in the Ivy League; and from the Big Ten, Mike Price of Illinois and Fred Brown of Iowa. Maravich, Murphy, Carr, Scott; and the others are all great, but' what messes your mind is thatj there may be some other guards hidden away at a small school, who are just as good. Look at the1 Baltimore Bullets' EarlkMonroe< (Winston-Salem) or the New Or-; leans Buccaneers' Jimmy J o n e s (Grambling). But right now, the fans (and1 the pro scouts) are watching Mara- vich and Company as they leave a trial of old scoring records be-( hind them, and it's one exciting show. .An end to a mid-winter's dream By ERIC SIEGEL IN THE FEW WEEKS since the NCAA announced that its members would be allowed to play an eleventh football game this fall, Wolverine grid fans have been sustaining themselves with dreams of an extra home game here in Ann Arbor. These dreams have in turn spawned their rumors, and the rumors have it that Michigan will play either Notre Dame (a game that is slated to become part of the regular schedule later this decade), or Southern Cal, on September 12 .in Michigan Stadium. Well, you would-be gridiron matchmakers can forget the dreams and stop the rumors. The unofficial word is that there will be no eleventh game in 1970. The main obstacle to scheduling an extra game, according to athletic director Don Canham, is a Big Ten rule which states that a team may play only 10 football games a season, exclus- ive of the Rose Bowl. "The NCAA ruling doesn't really affect us," Canham says. "The Big Ten rule takes precedence. The conference would have to change its rule before we could schedule an eleventh game. "Even if they should approve an eleventh game," adds Can- ham, "they will most probably stipulate that the game must be against another Big Ten school." THE RULE WILL probably be discussed at a meeting of the Big Ten faculty directors in March. However, the prospects for a change in the rule this year are not too favorable. "It's get- ting a little late to schedule a game," Canham explains. However, Canham feels that the Big Ten will waive its 10 game only rule sometime in the near future, possibly as early as 1971. He explains that there is a growing sentiment among the conference reps for establishing a round-robin schedule in the Big Ten, where every team in the conference would play every other team once during the season. "I don't think they're going to be able to have a round- robin tournament unless they allow a school to add a game to its schedule. As it is now, the main objection to a round-robin is that it is too restrictive in regards to the number of non-con- ference games a school can play. "We (Michigan), for example, like to schedule some other schools. We like to go out to the West Coast, and bring some other teams in here." Under the present rule, a round-robin would leave a school with an opportunity to play only one non- conference opponent, exclusive of the Rose Bowl. "ACTUALLY," CANHAM POINTS OUT, "allowing a team to play an eleventh game would move the Big Ten closer to a round-robin schedule, especially if that game was a Big Ten game." The Big Ten has already approved an eight game con- ference' schedule for 1983. According to Canham, adding an eleventh game to the schedule would enable the Big Ten to set up its eight game conference yslate much sooner. If an eleventh game is added to the schedule, Canham is enthusiastic about the idea of a round-robin tournament. "If you're going to determine a conference champion," Canham likes to say, "then the'only really fair way to do it is to have each team play all the other teams." The Wolverines' athletic director has a good point, and I think most officials and possibly all the coaches around the Big Ten would agree with him. But it seems that the dream of a conference round-robin, like the dream of an eleventh game in 1970, will have to be stashed away for another winter. .only apparent weakness is a ten- dency to shoot in streaks from the outside, but who's criticizing? Austin Carr of Notre Dame has been unstoppable in every game this year with the exception of UCLA. He is more consistent from - I the outside than Scott, and hits -Daily-Mort Noveck Austin Carr rebounds against Michigan Pistol P paces pack of potent collegiate 'scorers At KLH, we believe that music, given a proper introduction, always will speak for itself. By The Associated Press NEW YORK - College basket- ball's three 'M' boys, Maravich, Mount and Murphy, continued their domination of the collegiate scoring race again this week as they held down three of the top four spots. Only Notre Dame's Austin Carr, who currently holds d o w n the third spot, keeps the potent three- some from holding the leading po- sitions. Maravich, who this past Satur- day became the highest scoring player in history and earlier be- came the first player to score ov- er 3,000 points, stayed far ahead of the other contenders with an almost unbelievable 46.7 average. Michigan's Rudy Tomjanovich continued to hold down the num- ber eight slot with a 30.1 aver- age. g fg ft Pts. Avg.I 1. Pete Maravich LSU 15 264 2. Austin Carr, Notre Dame 17 240 3. Rick Mount, Purdue 11 146 4. Cal Murphy, Niagara 17 206 5. Dan Issel, Kentucky 16 195 6. Ralph Simpson Mich. State 15 183 7. Bob Lanier, Bonaventure 14 175 8. Rudy Tomjanovich, Michigan 15 176 9. Jim McDaniels, W. Kentuckys16 202 10. Willie Humes Idaho State 13 151 173 113 72 701 593 364 46.7 34.9 33.1 32.2 135 547 Al 119 590 31.8 100 466 31.1 77 427 30.5 100 452 30.1 74 478 29.9 82 384 29.5 Idaho State 13 151 82 384 29.5 U I - WCHA Standings 1 Now, aren't you glad you waited? James Goodfriend Collection S a. MAKERS OF HIGH-PERFORMANCE STEREO EQUIPMENT /ew SonyFstereo! FM-AMrcCeiver. The 6060 receiver. draws upon the famous Sony transistor know-how in its sen-' sitive FET front end and 62-transistor circuit. The result is that even the weakest fuzziest FM stations sound like the strong ones. And they don't get clobbered by the strong ones. Stations you never knew existed come in crisp and clear. FM stereo is superb. AM broadcasts are'richer. And tapes and records retain their; original-performance brilliance. The amplifier delivers a powerful 110 watts IHF into 8 ohms-all the power1 needed to drive any speaker system with plenty in reserve for difficult passages. It reproduces the entire audio range without the slightest trace of distortion to intrude upon the performance. The 6060 is not only a pleasure to listen to, its appearance and operation make it a pleasure to use and display in your home. It has all conveniences you'll ever need: automatic stereo reception;.zero-center tuning meter; front-panel head- phone jack; switches for.tape monitoring, muting, speaker* selection, tape head or Aux. in put, loudness -the works. Come in and hear the new Sony ST R-6060FW today. Minnesota 12 4 0 .750 Michigan State 7 5 0 .583 Michigan Tech 5 4 2 .545 Denver 6 5 1 .542 UM-Duluth 7 6 1 .536 North Dakota 10 10 0 .500 MICHIGAN 7 7 0 .500 Wisconsin 5 7 0 .417 Colorado Col, 0 11 '0 .000 This Week's Games Colorado College at Denver Mich. State at Mich. Tech. MICHIGAN at Mimn.-Duluth Bemidji State at N. Dakota DANIEL'S ANNOUNCES NEW LOWER PRICES ON ALL C : "WITH THIS RuING. . . RAW" SET $12.50 to $200.00 From this day forward their wedding bands be- come perpetual symbols of those sacred vows. Since 1850, more brides and grooms have selected Art- Carved wedding bands than any other. Here is a sam- ple of our new ArtCarved matching band designs. Won't you come see them sail?9 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Trip: A happening of sensoryrespons- es over, under, around, and through the campus, Barbour Gym 2:30 p.m. Astronomy Colloquium: Dr. H. D. Prince, McMath-Hulbert Observatory, "The Development of Centers of Solar Activity", P&A Colloq. Rm. (296), 4:00 p.m. Slavic Department Russian Film, Idiot: Multipurpose Room, Undergrad. Library, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Professional Theatre Program (Phoen- ix Theatre): Helen Hayes and James Stewart in Harvey: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Stearns Collection of Musical Instru- ments Lecture: Louis Stout, "The French Horn, from the Forest to the Concert Hall", Rackham Amphithea- tre, 8:00 p.m. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 SAB, Lower Level Interviews at SPS: Feb. 6, Camp Ma-Hi-Ya, Jewish Com- munity Center of Toledo, Soc. Work Camp, ineerviewing, 1-5 p.m., Admin. asst., program director, waterfront di- rector, spec. in arts and crafts, music, campcraft, maint. maxi. Feb. 9, Miss Liberty, London, Eng., interviewing, 2-5 p.m. Register by phone or come to SPS. ORGANIZATION +i NOTICES 14 / International Students Association is sponsoring International Night at Wat- erman Gym, Friday, Feb..6, 7 p.m. Re- creation will be followed by relaxation and refreshments. * * * * T. & I. F. Fri., Feb. 6. 9 p.m. on 1440 Hubbard. 21 and over only. Proof of age required. * * * * "Idiot" - film version (1958; Soviet) of Dostoyevsky's novel. Russki Kruz- hok, Feb. 6, 7 & 9p.M., Multipurpose Room, UGLI. Dostoievsky's IDIOT Soviet film version (1958) COME IN AND LET US INTRODUCE YOU TO THE KLH SPEAKER SYSTEMS $54.95-$1 ,140.00 O:]E -5 ppliance av . _ l rnu Hi-Fi Headquarters in Ann Arbor for 23 Years U I1