Page Six TH'E MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 19, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 19, 1970 .. .. a __ NB' CONTENDERS ALL WIN: NBA's East wins toss -~ ~Th. >. , n , , y. New beauty Idea from London! The leggy London look is in. And thousands of London girls are wearing the sandals that help, make it such a fashion sensation. Scholl Exercise Sandals. The exclusive toe-grip. gently exercises your: feet. Tones your. muscles. Gives you a livelier, lovelier walk. Actually niakes every step you take a beauty treatment. These are the new Scholl Exercise Sandals featured< on television. Available in bone and red with flat or raised heel. $10.95 4 _ Exercise Sandals for first draft choice NEW YORK (R) - Either the Detroit Pistons or the Boston Celtics, battling for last-place in the National Basketball Associa- tion's Eastern Division, will get the No. 1 pick in the NBA's collegiate draft. The Eastern Division won t h e coin-flip for the No. 1 selection Wednesday at a hastily summoned news conference conducted by NBA Commissioner Walter Ken- nedy. DETROIT IS currently in t he Eastern cellar. Boston, which play- ed at Phoenix Wednesday night, is 11/2 games out of last place. The Pistons have three games left, with San Diego, Los Angeles and Atlanta. Boston's final foes are Phoenix, Seattle and New York. NBA play concludes Sunday and the draft will be conducted Mon- day in New York. A long-distance telephone c on- ference call linked Kennedy with Detroit, Boston and San Diego, which has already clinched I a s t place in the West. THE PISTONS and the Celtics' both need a big man and this means that All-American Bob Lan- ier of St. Bonaventure could be the No. 1 pick. The 6-foot-11, 275-pound giant underwent surgery earlier this week to repair torn ligaments in his right knee which he injured last Saturday in the NCAA East- ern Regional championship game. S Thehulking Lanier is expected to recover completely from t h e surgery. Robert Rreitburd of the San Diego Rockets called tails and then Kennedy said: "Gentlemen, I'm going to flip a quarter."' It came up heads. THE NBA EARLIER this week' advanced the draft to March 23, obviously in an attempt to catch up with the rival American Bas-' ketball Association, which conduct- ed the first four rounds of its draft some time ago. ABA teams have already signed three of their No. 1a selections. Kennedy said the other NBA teams would draft in the inverse' order of their percentage stand- ings. The four new ABA members - Houston, Buffalo, Cleveland and Portland - will draft seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth in t h e first round but the particular or- der probably won't be decided un- til Monday. I s Wings By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS - The Detroit: Red Wings used two quick bursts of power in the second and third periods last night to overwhelm Minnesota and maintain their grip on third place inthe torrid East- ern Division race in the National Hockey League. The Red Wings spotted the North Stars a first period power play goal, scored by Dan Grant at 7:04, and were listless for the remainder of the period. But Detroit came to life early in the second period when Minne-1 sota had the man advantage. Alex Delvecchio picked up a loose puck at center ice and passed ahead to Frank Mahovlich, who had brok- en behind everyone. Mahovlich put the puck past veteran goalie Gump Worsley at 4:50. 1 M flatten Norstars Three minutes later, W a y n e H ks ooed their goalie, Al Smith, in fay- Connally picked up a loose puck or of a sixth attacker. in front of Worsley and poked it TORONTO - Bobby Hull slam-Bu'sh over him to give the Wings a 2-1 med home Chicago's first two Balon set up Nevin's goal when lead, and Gordie Howe got his goals, then set up three others asg he carried the puck down th he 24thgoa oftheseasn afewmm-the surging Black Hawks trounced right lane and faked a shot to pull 24th goal of the season a few min- esurging BlkH ktrnd mith to one side. He then flipped utes later on an assist from Ma- Toronto 7-4 last night and climb- Smi the puck across ice to Nevin who hovlich. ed within one point of first place soe aiy in the National Hockey League's scored easily. Gary Unger brought the Wings East Division. The Penguins had a chance to to life in a temporarily lethargic It was the Hawks' third con- break the scoreless tie in the third period as he scored on an secutive victory and stretched second period when Keith Mc- assist from Mahovlich while Min- their unbeaten string to eight Creary was awarded a penalty nesota was changing on the fly. games - seven wins and a tie. shot after being hooked from be- On the ensuing face-off, Nick Li- First-place Boston was. idle Wed- hind on a solo dash against goalie bitt blasted a slap shot past a sur- nesday night. Ed Giasomin. prised Worsley to ice the game. Hull's linemates, Chico Maki McCreary took the puck in and The win kept the Wings in third and Lou Angotti, also played key faked the Ranger goalie but then place in the East, a mere one point roles in the triumph. Maki scored hit the post, preserving the shut- ahead of New York Rangers, who a goal and assisted on three others out. Later, Ron Schock also hit also won. The Wings stayed a while Angotti's power play goal a post for the Penguins. mere two points behind second at 5:19 of the 'second period snap- place Chicago and moved to within ped a 3-all tie and put the Hawks three points of pacesetter Boston. in front to stay. Hull scored his 33rd and 34th LIV OY goals of the season'2' 2minutes' LvLy" sal L ~apart midway through the f i r s t, period after Floyd Smith had giv- en the Leafs a 1-0 lead. Paul Hen- goes w ild y Beson knotted it for Toronto late rformtance mhe period and Chicago's J i mb Pappin and Ron Ellis of the Leafs Iy The Associated Press traded goals early in the second As part of a continuing at- by Alicia Dever, Kay Hoyer, and period before Angotti's tie-break- tempt to liven up the game of Nancy Shower. er, the Hawks' third power play baseball, Commissioner Bowie Two teams of eight girls a r e of the game. Kuhn has instructed all major AQUATIC ARTISTR Michifish prepare pe MAST'S SHOES 619 E. LIBERTY CAMPUS: PIZZA No. 2. 7 DAYS A WEEK 4820042 5 P.M.-2 A.M. COLD FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN - HAM, SALAMI, LET- TUCE AND TOMATO - ITALIAN CHEESE WITH OUR OUR DRESSING -$1.00 FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN WITH A GENEROUS PORTION OF CHOICE BEEF -W$1.29R "THESE ARE SUBMARINE SANDWICHES ASK FOR THEM WHEN YOU WANT PIZZA" FREE FAST DELIVERY RADIO DISPATCHED By TERRI FOUCHEY While the competitive s w i m team is going to its nationals, the other women's swim team on cam- pus, Michifish - the synchroni- zed swim team, is having its big splash this weekend also. However, unlike their competitive swimming sisters the girls in Michifish aren't taking part in any national competition. Their big splash is the annual Michifish show. The show will be presented starrting tonight at the Women's Pool at 8:15 p.m. and will also be given on Friday and Saturday nights. Tickets for the show are $1.25 and can be obtained at the Women's Pool, at the door, or by calling 764-9450. The theme for this year's show is "People". As coach Joyce Linde- mann states, "What we are try- KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR! * NO WAITING 0 8 BARBERS 0 OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Arborland-Campus Maple Viiaoe ing to present is the unique char- acteristics of man." The thirty members of Michi- fish have choreographes numbers involving teams of eight, duets and solos in order to demonstrate the different characteristics. The girls have been working since January on routines to fit the selected themes and on their costumes. . One of the solos features Jean Labounty presenting her interpre- tation of man's tragedy. Miss La- Bounty later teams, with Sue Eng- lish in a duet showing communi- cation between men. Another duet with the theme of violence in the world features Jil Beelan and Ann Fredricks, t h e Michifish club officers.' Fatalism and superstition and their effects on men and the world are interpreted in a trio number taking part in the show. One team is interpreting tradition as shown through folk music. The o t h e r team is trying to capture the ad- venturotis aspects of man. Synchronized swimimng is often compared to modern dance and figure skating. Each girl creates her own impression of the music and works first on this. Later she will synchronize her interpretation with the other members of her routine. Speed is the most important factor involved in competitive swiming. For synchronized swim- ming the basic skills differ great- ly. Endurance is most important and the girls must know all the strokes. This knowledge of all the strokes must be applied while' swimming withbthe head outhof the water. Synchronized swim- ming also compares to diving in that the girls learn stunts involv- ing a certain degree of difficulty. * *' * Rangers romp PITTSBURGH - Bob Nevin scored the 200th goal of his Na- tional Hockey League career ear- ly in the final period to lead theI New York Rangers to a 2-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins last night.I The victory was the first for the slump-ridden Rangers since Feb. 25. They had gone winless in nine games. The second New York goal was scored by Dave Balon in the clos- ing seconds after the Penguins lift- league teams to test an experi- mental, 5 per cent souped up baseball every Wednesday. Yesterday was second day of experiment with the ball and the result were phenomenal. In nine afternoon games an aver- age of 19 runs per game were scored and dozens balls flew out of the park. Examples of the difference made by the super-ball were such scores as 18-13, 19-14, 19- 13 and individual performances like light-hitting Eddie Brink- man's 450-foot homer. .ar, .,, 9n .,w.. : HIGH SCHOOL TOURNEY: Pontiac wins thriller . i Scores : Exhibition Baseball Boston 6, Philadelphia 5 Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 2 Washington 18, Kansas City 13, 11 in- nings Detroit 19, Chicago, A 13 Los Angeles 8, Minnesota 2 Houston 10, Cincinnati 5 Seattle 19, Cleveland 14 Chicago N 12, Oakland 11 San Diego S, California 5 New York A 8, New York N 1 Atlanta 7, Montreal 5 Baltimore at Mexico City, night The girls in Michifish work out at least three hours weekly and if they are part of several routines (which the majority are) their practice time may take up to 10 hours. This weekend's show consists mainly of synchronized swim acts the members. In addition to these the men's diving team is perform- ing a comedy act. By AL SHACKELFORD' God must have written t h e script. Pontiac Central, the number one-rated team in Michigan, edg- ed Detroit Kettering 75-72 1 a s t night at Crisler Arena when Bill Glover'hit a floor-length bomb as time ran out. Campy Russell fired in 32 points and grabbed 16 rebounds to lead Central to their amazing win. Rus- sell, perhaps the finest prep play- U Professional Standingsr SAVI NGS, FROM New York Milwaukee Baltimore Philadelphi Cincinnati xBoston Detroit Atlanta xLos Angel Chicago Phoenix Seattle San Franci San Diego x-Late g N B A Eastern Division W L i 60 19 55 25 . 48 32. a 41 39. 35, 454 32 46 31 48 Western Division 416 34 es 44 35. 38 42 d 36 43 . 35 45 . sco 29 50. 26 53. ame not included. Pct. .760 .688 .600 .513 .438 .410 .392 .575 .557 .475 .456 .438 .367 .329 GB 6 12% 19% 25% 271f2 29 8 91/ 11 16Y, 191/2 STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL NHL East Division W L T Pt. GF GA Boston 35 15 17 87 245 193 Chicago 39 20 8 86 221 155 Detroit 36 18 13 85 213 172 New York 35 19 14 84 223 165 xMontreal 33 19 14 80 213 170 Toronto 27 28 12 66 206 217 West Division St. Louis 33 24 10 16 204 164 Pittsburgh 23 33 11 57 159 210 Philadelphia 16 26 23 55 186 205 Minnesota 14 32 21 49 196 234 xOakland 18 37 11 47 144 215 Los Angeles 11 47 10 32 152 262 x-Late game not included Yesterday's Results Chicago 7, Toronto 4 New York 2, Pittsburgh 0 Detroit 6, Minnesota 2 Montreal at Oakland, inc. Thursday's Games Montreal at Los Angeles New York at Philadelphia Chicago at Boston Pittsburgh at St. Louis er in the nation, was forced to the sidelines with an injured ankle late in the third quarter but came back a few minutes later to lead his team to victory. The game had been billed be-A, forehand as Michigan's best of the year and a showdown between Russell and fine Kettering All- state center Lindsay Hairston. But Campy dominated Hairston, hold- ing him down to 18 points and ten rebounds; even many of the points Hairston scored were made when Campy was in the locker room nursing his ankle. As spectator (and part-time All- American grid star) Jim Mandich said during the game, ,"Canpy may become the greatest Russell of them all." Bill and Cazzie, be- ware. Pontiac raced to a 43-34 halftime lead behin Russell's 22 points and additional good shooting from for- wards Jerry Ratliff and Monte Herring. The game had seesawed most of the .way before the mighty Chiefs broke into a 39-29 lead. Kettering fought bock doggedly to go ahead 56-55 at 1:22 of the '4 third quarter on Hairston's tip. The game stayed close the rest of the way, but a pair of free throws by Ratliff and Glover's amazing shot clinched Pontiac's win. In an earlier class "A" quarter- final game, Detroit Pershing par- layed superior height and the fine ballhandling of guard Phil Paige into a 73-61 victory over Dearborn Fordson. Doughboy center Calvin Harper netter 24 points and led his team to a 48-28 advantage on the boards. Smooth forward S t e v e Burke scored 26 points for t h e losing Tractors, but was held down well in the second half by Persh- ing's ace sophomore Bob Hawkins. Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 119, Baltimore 113 Milwaukee 116, New York 108, Boston at Los Angeles, Inc. Thursday's Games Boston at Phoenix Detroit at San Diego ON RECORDS Students International a n n o u n ce s the opening of the S.I. General Store with this special offer ALL $4.98 ALBUMS ON SALE NOW FOR, JUST ON TRAVEL 1970 Summer Jet Flight Schedule DETROIT METRO DEPARTURES I To London 2 London 3 London 4 London 5 London 6 Depart May 4 May 5 May 15 June 21 June 26 May 6 July 16 July 5 July 12 Weeks Return 5 June 9 7 June 25 12 Aug. 20 8 Sept. 2 8 Aug. 26 7 June 23 6 Aug. 31 8 Aug. 8 3 July 31 Cost $189 199 219 229 229 169 419 239 259 Paris Japan London London 10 11 NEW YORK DEPARTURES London 7 London 8 London 9 May 5 May 17 June 14 7 June 24 13 A ug. 14 6 July 22 189 199 189 fS }"}. ji}f I Open to U. of M. students, faculty, staff, and their immediate families For more information please stop in or phone Watch our ads for special student savings on many items. " Board in Control of Student Publications I '