Jino Thursday, February 13, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pnnp N Thursday, February 1 3, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY r I "9wine e Lee B By CINDY LEATHERMAN "You're not too impressed with him at first. You have to get to know Lee Bisbee to understand the quality in him," noted Coach Gus Stager. Bisbee is the captain of the Wol- verine swimming squad this year, and deservedly so. But he is the first to explain that he 'doesn't like to be called "captain." "I feel it's more of an honor-all the other seniors on the team are cap- tains in their own way," he com- mented. But there are some special quali- ties in Bisbee that connote a more than ordinary leader. And Stager is probably more aware of these attributes than anyone. "Lee makes it easier for himself in leading others by performing well pra.ctice-wise," Stager ob- served. "In fact, he works so hard in practice, he's sometimes a little run down for the meet. "But he's doing what we want him to do," Stager continued. "He keys the guys up when it's needed, for example.- But more important than this, Lee helps with the dis- cipline on the team. You very rarely find a captain who would have the 'guts' to do this. The better he does his job, the easier 4 my job is made." If it's an example to follow that marks a good leader, Bisbee is certainly doing his job. Swimming since the seventh grade, his high school career in Jackson, Michi- gan, was outstanding. He won the conference championship every 0 year as well as All-State and All- American honors his senior year. Bisbee's specialty is the butter- fly. "I swam backstroke in junior, isbee: Leader without glory PRO SPORTS. Surging Celtics defeat Pistons; fact, his father was set on a pit- ching career for his eldest son. "My Dad wanted me to piBch, and my brother to catch-prefer- ably for the Washington Sen- ators," he reflected. But a brief Little League career and a crucial inning in which he walked thir- teen men quickly brought an end to any aspirations Bisbee might have hadsabout becoming a b se- ball great. The summer after his freshmtan year at Michigan, Bisbee perform- ed well enough at the AAU's to win a trip to the Middle East. "That was one of my biggest re- wards from swimming," he said. "We spent six weeks in Algeria, Tunesia, Afghanistan, Lebanon, and all around there." His sophomore year saw hin being named All-American in the, 100-yard butterfly. As a junior, Bisbee placed seyenth and ninth nationally in the 200 and 100 yard fly respectively. He was also - named All-American in both these. events. Bisbee will graduate in April} with a degree in business. "I .tax t. ed out in LS&A, switched to Ed ucation, and finally decided on WOLVERINE CAPTAIN LEE B Business," he explained. "It all butterflyeg of the 400 yard oeE stems around French-I didn't who specializes in the 100, hope want to take it, so I transfers ed to different schools not requiring yard fly against the Hoosiers a language." finding that out more and more He is serious about business, adIgtt o tmed. though, and hopes to go on to as I get older. graduate school here. Well aware of his own ability, As a senior on the squad, Bis- Bisbee is critical of his perform- bee is reflective about his swim- ance this year. "I've been doing ming career, as well as I ever have in the 100, "It's been great-I've really en- but not as!well as I want to in the joyed it. And as many times as 200." it's been said, it's the guys you But( whether he's playing thel meet that make it worthwhile. I'm !lead or a supporting role, Bisbee has been an important figure in the success of this year's team. The meet everyone's looking for- ward to now, of course, is with Indiana this"Saturday. And Bis- re ch an ges ;esees his role as that of maiin- El oaebotrrgtnw "We were a little down after However, negotiators for, both the SMU meet, but I think we lost sides in the baseball players' pen- because of alot of stupid mis- sion dispute met for three hours takes," he noted. yesterday, but little progress was°1 "Right now, we have to forget New York, Baltimore blast foes By the Associated Press DETROIT - Veteran guard Sam Jones, who is retiring at the end of the current season to be- come a college basketball coach, paced a final quarter spirt lastj night as the Boston Celtics rallied for a 113-106 National Basketball Association victory over Detroit.E Jones dropped in 121 of his 19 points during the lasteDight min- utes and shared honors in the closing drive with fellow guard Larry Siegfried, who scored eight daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL DINNER games ahead of the second-place New York Knicks, who defeated Phoe nix. Philadelphia is f o u r~ games behind but tied with New York in percentage. Held to two points in the open- ing quarter. which ended with the Warriors in front 29-24 as they sank 56 per cent of their shots, Monroe' scored 10 points in each of the naxt two quarters. Nate Thurmond led the War- riors with 28 points, half of them in the final quarter. Jeff Mullins of his 27 points in the quarter. John Havlicek added 24 while Bill Russell grabbed Lee Bisbee high until they had a time trial for the butterfly and I beat their best man," Bisbee explained. "Everyone got fired up- and I've been swimming butterfly ever since." Michigan got pretty fired up about Bisbee too. "We saw what he could do and encouraged him to come here," explained Stager. "He came and he's been great' ever since." Bisbee's first love in sports wasn't always for the water. In -Michigan Daily ISBEE catches a breath on his dley relay against Indiana. Bisbee, s to improve his time in the 200 this Saturday in Bloomington. all about that and fire up .or In-{ diana.! "We're going out for it, and I' think we have a better chance to beat them now than before," Bisbee commented. "If all our guys swim well, we'll beat them-! we may need a break or two, but we're tough." At any rate, it's apparent enough in Bisbee to make Coach Stager predict "Lee is going to end up as one of the better captains} we've had."7 It wouldn't be a surprise to any- one. N1 NHL Standings {{ BULLETIN DETROIT (/P)-Spencer wood, the star of the U States' Olympic basketball1 was tossed out of the gain striking a referee as Univ of Detroit edged Toledo last night. Haywood was ejected 16:55 left for sluggingr George Struthers during a gument over a personal fc Both teams and several piled onto the floor afte incident, but police quickl stored order. Extra police been assigned to the game threats of racial incident campus radicals. Haywood , had scored points and grabbed 16 rebo rebounds and scored 12 uoi fourth :had 23, but only five after inter- fourth from a 17-all tie by outscoring the Suns 21-6 over the next sev- mission. points en minutes, as Dave DeBusschere Seven of the eight Baltimore off 30 and Don May scored six points players scored in double figures. apiece, and raced to a 61-41 half- * time lead. C1l4CINNATI - Stu Lantz seor Phoenix narrowed the margin ed 12 points in the final period to 78-73 early in the final period to help squelch a Cincinnati rally Hay- by scoring 13 straight points, but and send San Diego past the 'nited three key baskets by Willis Reed Royals 118-114 last night. team, sparked, a 10-4 burst that nailed The Royals held # the Rockets' ie for down the Knicks' 27th victoryi1 in leading scorer, Elvin Hayes, to a ersity 31 games and 19th straight at pro career-low 12 points but 92-90 home. could not hold down Lantz and Reed scored 28 points, Bill John Block who tallied 22 and 29 with Bradley 22 and Walt Frazier 20 points, respectively. f as the Knicks matched last sea- San Diego ran up a 16-point ner- son's 43 victories. They have 18 lead at the end of the first quar- oul. games left. Gail Goodrich paced ter at 30-14 and held double fig- Phoenix with 26. ure margins throughout the re- fans *1mainder of the half. But Cincin- r the BALTIMORE - Earl Monroe nati, behind Adrian Smith and y re- . scored 20 of his 29 points in the. Tom Van Arsdale, who topped the had,. middle two periods and led the Royals with 28, points, closed the after Baltimore Bullets to a 120-110 gap to 86-85 early in the fourth ts by National Basketball -Association period. victory over the San Francisco Then Lantz turned hot to help 24 Warriors last night. insure the victory over Cincin- unds. The victory was the third in nati absent the services of Oscar a row for the Eastern Division Robertson who is suffering from leaders and kept them three a sore ankle. ints to~ :; k:,' i t > , 'f STRIKE TALKS S-TALL: Kuhn to seek structui By The Associated Press BOSTON - Bowie Kuhn, base- ball's new commissioner, says one of the major objectives during his r term in office will be the restruc- turing of major league baseball.- "There'll alwLys be an American League and a National League,", Kuhn )said, "but, in the future they will have less impact on the game gs separate entities." Kuhn, a tall and articulate New York attorney, said the game itself has been under quite a bit of criticism lately, and this, too, will come under his restructuring program. I "But," he added, "baseball is more apple pie than apple pie. It still has a stronghold in t h I S country and I don't think it is anything less than a sensational part of the American scene." , As to the threatened players strike, Kuhn said he is confident owners and players will, come to terms before spring training be- gins. He said he has "no inten- tion of being a compulsory arbi- trator" in - the dispute. East Divisior W L Lombardi appoints staff for rebuilding Redskins reported. "We've hit a snag," said John4 Gaherin, spokesman for the own- ers. "It will just have to be work-' ed out." Gaherin refused to reveal what, the new problem entailed but ad- mitted that the talks had at least temporarily stalled.I "We are continuing to talk," heI said. -"We've made progress in the last several meetings, but I ion't think we made much pro-' gress today."a The first test of the threatened major league baseball players'c strike will come tomorrow morn- ing when batterymen of the Chi-r cago White Sox are due to ap- pear in uniform at the club's Sar- asota, Fla., spring training base. The Pale Hose have the earliest reporting date among the majors' 24 clubs with pitchers and catch- ers scheduled to check in Thurs- day and take the field at Payne Park in Sarasota at 9:30 a.m., EST Friday. e NBA Standings I i Boston Montreal New York Detroit Toronto Chicago 33 32 29 27 24 25 9 15 20 20 17 25 Fa Baltimore Philadelphia, New York Boston Cincinnati Detroit Milwaukee we! Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego Chicago Seattle Phoenix stern Division W L 44 16 39 19 42 21 Pct. GB ,731 - St. Louis .672 4 Oakland .67 314 Los Angeles .603 7Y2 Philadelphia .520 13 Minnesota "405 0 Pittsburgh .280 277 West Division 27 16 12 20 27 8 19 27 6 12 28 15 13 33 9 11 36 8 36 31 24 17 23 29 36 44 68 48 44 39 35 30 154 145 127 120 130 131 115 177 166 167 192 190 n T Pts. GF GA 12 78 217 143 8 72 197 153 5 63 151 133 8 62 174 149 11 59 162 143 6 56 205 185 help in the Boston victory. Dave Bing had 28 points for the losers. NEW YORK - The New York, Knickerbockers equalled their all- time record of 10 straight victor- ies set earlier this season a n d moved into a virtual tie for se- pond place in the National Bas- ketball Association's Eastern Di- vision by downing the Phoenix Suns 112-105 last night. S C 0ItE S College Basketball Results Duke 122, Wake Forest 93 Detroit 92, Toledo 90 L aSalle 96, American 72 Temple 70, Penn State 50 Connecticut 74, Boston Univ. 72 East. Mich. 126, Hillsdale 90 Oakland 99, Albion 89 Kalamazoo 89, Hope 70 Mich. Lutheran 87, Detroit College 71 Long Island 73, Hofstra 55 Fordham 67, Geo. Washington 50 Alma 91, Adrian 55 Norfolk State 107, Grambling 98 Xavier, Ohio, 59, Miami, Ohio, 51 "Man Against SocietyJ" 'Showing ANATQLE LITVAK'S FRENCH CLASSIC [MAYERLING with CHARLES BOYER at NEWMAN 331 Thompson Friday, February 14 75c 8PIM. { stern Division 40 120 38 25, 27 33 27 34 24 38 22 40 13 46 .667 .601 .455 .433 .387 .355 .220 3k' 13? w 14 17' !w 192 27 Yesterday's Results Toronto 7, Minnesota 1 New York at Oakland, inc. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 3, tie St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 0 Only games scheduled. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Vince Lom- bardi named a six man coaching staff yester.day to help him try to 4rebuild the Washington Redskins of the National Football League. The crew includes two former head coaches and. two Redskins holdovers. Lombardi tapped Harland Svare, former boss of the Los Angeles Rams, to take charge of the Red- skins' defense. Bill Austin, deposed Pittsburgh Steelers coach, will have over-all responsibility on offense. Other staff members will include George Dickson, who will handle the offensive backfield. Dickson has been in charge of the offense for the New Orleans Saints theI past .two years. Lew Carpenter will also work on offense with his specialty being the ends. Carpenter is one of Lom- bardi's former players ind has coached with Minnesota and At- lanta. Mike McCormack and Don Doll, both Redskins holdovers will join Svare on the defensive staff. Mc- Cormack was once an All-Star lineman for Cleveland and Doll is an ex Detroit Lion. A minor surprise resulted when former Atlanta head coach Norb Hecker was not named to a posi.- tion. Recker instead took a post with the New York Giants. No other appointments by Lom- bardi are expected now for some time, if at all. Yesterday's Results San Diego 118, Cincinnati 114 Boston 113. Detroit 106 Atlanta 113, Milwaukee 106 New York 112, Phoenix 105 Los Angeles at Seattle, inc. Baltimore 120, San Francisco 110 Only games scheduled. Today's Games Detroit at Chicago Only game scheduled. RSign the Tenant Union pledge ? BLESSED ARE THE RIGHTEOUS! The Tenants Union will help you sublet your apartment Register your apartment NOW at 1532 S.A.B. HURRY! Service starts Feb. 23! Today's Games Montreal at Detroit New York at Los Angeles St. Louis at Philadelphia Only games scheduled. STUDY I Cu ERNAVACA Learn to speak SPANISH * Intensive courses, with drills, supervised labs, and theory taught b experienced Mexican teachers. " $135 per month. Study in the INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES. * Examine themes such as "Protest and its Creative:Expression in Latin America" and "The Role of Education in Social Change" in 10 to 30 new courses each month. " Access to excellent library. 6430 per credit. 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