4 Saturday, March 21, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine SaedyMrh-1-97-H -CiA DIYPaeNn ... . ..,.. ..d,.. ., ...... ,. .,....,. _ _.. .._ . - w W - W W- W - W W W WTJr. - .. i .. . ic. im. .. .re B By AL SHACKELFORD Another exciting season of col- lege basketball will reach its cli- max this afternoon w h e n the jazzy Jacksonville Dolphins (also known as The Big Brokers) meet perennial champion UCLA for the national championship. St. Bonaventure and New Mex- ico State will provide an appetizer -0 for the hoop fans as they meet for third place before the main course begins. UCLA walloped the tough, Ag- gies from Las Cruces for the third straight year in tourney play, this time 93-77, to advance to the fi- ,~nals and 'get 'a chance to continue their boring monopoly on the crown they have won for the past three years. The Bruins h a v e waltzed through this year's tourn- ament without challenge; f a n s are about ready to start yelling "Fix." Brokers ba le Bruins Idailly sports NIGHT EDITOR: JIM KEVRA WICKS, ROWE, Bibby, Vallely and Patterson will again start for the Bruins. Coach Lou Henson of New Mexico State calls this team "just as good and possibly better" than the Bruin's recent Alcindor- led squadrons. This year's aggre- gation is tough on the boards, they get great outside shooting from Bibby and Vallely, use the press well and play good defense. They also have a strong bench -- or to put it another way, they have no apparent weaknesses. Jacksonville, however, does have the raw talent necessary to de- throne the mighty Bruins, b u t they have shown a tendancy to bumble in the late stages of their games, most memorably against Iowa and Kentucky. JACKSONVILLE also could be called a team without a weakness, although they might be vulner- able to the UCLA press. The Dol- phins have the talent to stick the Bruins, but UCLA's edge in ex- The finals wil be held today in both the NCAA and NIT bas- ketball tournaments. Television coverage of the NCAA games starts with the' consolation game at 2 p.m. on channel 4 and the championship game will follow. Channel 2 will tele- cast the NIT tournament start- ing at 1 p.m. perience should carry them to an- other national title and 1 e a ve them subject to investigation un- der federal monopoly laws; but maybe the Dolphins will be able to breathe some fresh southern air into the smog-ridden national crown. St. Bonaventure will be t h e sentimental favorite to beat New Mexico State in the consolation game because of their gutty per- formance against Jacksonville. In that game, t h e Bob Lanier-less Bonnies broke into a 13-3 lead before returning to earth and los- ing 91-83 as the Dolphins sank an almost unbelievable 35 tosses from the charity stripe. on this and that Harvey Blanks goes to court eric siegel EVENTS, A CHICAGO newspaperman once observed, move in and out of headlines like the tides - they're in in the morning and out by the afternoon. That observation has more truth today than it ever did. Today's page one story is buried somewhere in the middle of tomorrow's paper; a day later, it doesn't even appear in print. All this is merely by way of introduction to a subject that has been in the headlines of various publications across the country intermittently since early last fall - the subject of the black athlete. One of the athletes whose name figured rather prominent- ly in those headlines was Harvey $lanks. Blanks, you will re- member, was one of four black football players at the University of Washington suspended by head football coach Jim Owens last October 30 for failing to give "100 per cent committment to the football prograin." Sometime in the next year or two, Blanks' name should be back in the headlines. Blanks, who will be a senior in the fall and was an All-American candidate before he broke his ankle before the start of the season, is planning to go to court to get reinstated on the football team. "We plan to file an action within the next week or so," Gary Gayton, one of two, Seattle lawyers who are working on the case, said over the phone the other day. Gayton, whose brother Carver resigned as assistant coach shortly after Blanks' suspension, said the civil action will be filed in federal court and be based on "about 15 counts." One of the major contentions of the suit will be that by suspending Blanks, the University is depriving him of his possible livelihood, Gayton stated. John Lackland, one of two representatives of the state attorney general's office working on the case for the University, said Wednesday that 'As a lawyer,- you can sue for anything you want, but I don't agree with their reasoning and I don't think they have much of a case." Lackland's own reasoning is bolstered in part by a de- cision handed down by a federal judge in Wyoming in regards to a similar case involving 14 blacks who were suspended from the University of Wyoming team last fall. In that case, the judge ruled that it was the perogative of Wyoming Coach Lloyd Eaton to suspend, a player or group of players as part of his coaching job. It is this "perogative" that Blanks will be challenging, contending that his rights supercede any "perogative" of his coaches. His suit, in fact, will be based on the Federal Civil Rights laws. There is also something of an "extenuating circumstance" that makes Blanks' contention more tenable. The other three players who were suspended along with Blanks on Oct. 20 were reinstated ten days later. At the same time,. Blanks was per- manently suspended from the team. According to the offical University position, Blanks was permanently suspended for "problems not solely related to the events of Oct. 30." Gayton, however, was a little more biting in his appraisal of the reasons for Blanks' permanent suspension. "First they suspended him because he wouldn't give them loyalty," Gayton said. "Then they suspended him for everything he ever did." Blanks case has already had some positive results. Uni- versity officials have promised to review the charges of racial discrimination in the athletic program, although, somewhat less positively, it has said that such a review would not come until after the case had been decided in the courts. In view of 'the original suspensions of the four athletes, and in view of Coach Carver Gayton's resignation because of a serious "communication chasm" between himself and Coach Owens, the review is sorely needed. But Blanks and his attorneys are still hopeful that the case will be decided before next season. Blanks has just one year of eligibility left; under NCAA rules, he must play out his eligibility at Washington or not play at all. A t Meanwhile, the case of Harvey Blanks, a case which his laywers have vowed to take to the Supreme Court, has made the 20-year-old black athlete something of a hero. "Some people consider him a rebel," says Gayton, "but most people consider him a leader." C AMPITS PI Z ZA No.' 2 7 DAYS A WEEK 4820042 5 P.M.-2 A.M. FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN - HAM, SALAMI, LET- CTUCE AND TOMATO ITALIAN CHEESE WITH OUR OUR DRESSING - $1.00 HOT FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN WITH A GENEROUS PORTION OF CHOICE BEEF -$1.29 "THESE ARE SU MARINE SANDWICHES ASK FOR THEM WHEN YOU WANT PIZZA" FREE FAST DELIVERY RADIO DISPATCHED CA NDLELIGHT WALK FOR SVITJEWS Comne and Join ... Students - Religious Leaders - Show Business Personalities - National Political Leaders - and many others - 3,000,000 Soviet Jews are persecuted, silent and for- gotten ... MONDAY, MARCH 23, 7:30 P.M. Come ... Bring a candle ... Walk with us ... from Diag to Union Ballroom ALL RELIGIONS - ALL POLITICAL OPINIONS - ALL RACES University of Michigan Committee on Soviet Jews-Larry Schwartz, Chairman 769-1074 ~CLIEN~fl -Associated Press MATT GANTT of St. Bonaventre (with ball) pulls down a rebound during Thursday night's NCAA semifinals game with Jacksonville at College Park, Md. Dolphin ace guard Rex Morgan guards Gantt as Bonnies Tom Baldwin (30) and Greg Gary (23) watch. FACE WARRIORS Redmen go after NIT crowni By AL SHACKELFORD ' Marquette, t h e number eight team in the country, will face the4 quick Redmen of St. John's to- day in the finals of the National Invitational Tournament at Madi-; son Square Garden. Both teams were tabbed as good bets to make the finals; Marquet- te breezed past Massachusetts, Utah, and the LSU team of mis- firing Pistol Pete Maravich, while St. John's has picked up hard- earned victories over Miami of Ohio, GeorgiaTech, and Army. Michigan f a n s will remember Marquette for the 86-78 defeat they absorbed at the hands of our fast breaking Wolverines back in 1969, but the Warriors of 1970 bear no resemblance to the quin- tet that Michigan beat. T h e y looked very tough in shelling LSU 101-79 behind a 28-point per- formance from front court brawl- er Joe Thomas and a fine triple- teaming defensive job which held the Tigers' Pete Maravich to 20 points. MARQUETTE is a tough de- fensive team which hits the boards like a locomotive, often outrebounding much taller teams. They get g o o d scoring balance from forwards Gary Brell a n d NBA "drops Houston franchise 'NEW YORK (IP-Houston has been dropped from the National Basketball Association's expansion plans for the 1970-71 season and the NBA will start next season as a 17-club league, it was announced Friday by Commissioner Walter Kennedy. "The simple fact is that Hous- ton could not come up with a nec- essary payment before our college draft next Monday," said Kenne- dy. "And the possibility that they could not do so was discussed at a meeting of our owners last Mon- day in Chicago." Thomas and center Ric C o b b; smooth Dean Meminger and ex- cellent outside shot Jeff Sewell are a fine guard combination. St. John's brings a fine squad into the tournament it has won four times, more than any other team; playing at the Garden is just like playing at home for the Redmen. This will be coach Lou Carnesecca's last g a m e at the helm of St. John's, and he has guided his team to a 21-7 record this season and a career record of 104-34. He will become head coach of the ABA's New York Nets next year. CARNESECCA'S REDMEN are led by 6-5 forward Ralph Abra- ham and 6-4 guard Joe DePre, both explosive scorers and key men in St. John's aggressive de- fense. Six-foot ten pivot man Bill Paultz and 6-6 forward Richie Gilkes provide enough height to battle bruising Marquette on the boards and, along with playmaker Richie Lyons, round out the St. iJohn's starting five. THE BUS. AD. MAJOR SAID STATI STICALLY: MILLER MAKES IT RIGHT! 11 W.e know what you want towear Because you told us. HEAR CANDIDATES FOR SGC 4 All 3 Presidential Candidates MARTY SCOTT BRUCE WILSON JOE GOLDENSON * Candidates for Member-at-Large MON_ 7_7:0-UNION ASSEMBLY HALL I ft. : .;S: ". 7 J'::< SEND US YOUR AD-VERBIAL PUNS ABOUT o, I I I