ry Wednesday, March 12,° '1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pa e Blues play patsy for Habs; Stars tie Bruins 05 By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - Yvan Cournoyerf and Henri Richard scored early power play goals, leading the Montreal Canadiens to a 3-0 vic- tory over the St. Louis Blues Tues- day night in a National Hockey League game., An alert Montreal defense eased goalie Gump Worsley to his fifth shutout of the season. It was the 14th straight time the Blues failed to beat Montreal. Cournoyer started the Canadiens, on their way with a bouncing slap f shot at 5:04 of the first period.g Bobby Rousseau and J. C. Trem- I blay set up Cournoyer's 40th goal 1 of the season. n The ,Canadiens took advantage . of the harried Blues' second pen- c alty of th'e first period as Richard, pulled the trigger. Jacques Lemaire a UCLA By The Associated Press t LOS ANGELES - Hope, once t again springs eternal in the i human breast, thanks to the u: Southern California Trojans. TheyT have proved that UCLA's basket- v ball team is mortal after all. a Where only five days ago the d teams remaining -in the NCAA postseason tournament were given f little chance of dethroning pow- C erful. UCLA, the much-beaten tc Trojans made the once impossible dream come true. UCLA seeks its third. straight t national title and probably will be favored despite the loss to South- m ern California. 1 USC, which is not even in the i t daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT BERRY The puck was bouncing around ston's Bobby Orr tied the record' in St. Louis ice when Richard and for most points by a defenseman. Savard worked it to Redmond. He Grant notched his 30th and fired from 15 feet out and Hall 31st goals to eclipse Bernie Geof- did a split across the goal mouth. frion's record of 30 with Montreal But Redmon's soft shot slipped during the 1951-52 season. under Hall's extended knee. Esposito registered his 67th and ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - 68th assists on goals by Ron Minnesota's Danny Grant and Murphy. Boston's Phil Esposito set Na- The feat broke the record of tional Hockey League season rec- 67 held by Montreal's Dickie I l t i htasth t f htMoore and Chicago's Stan Mikita. oru slast rn to a 3-3 t fired from the point but Blues' The No goalie Glenn Hall blocked the shot. when defe It bouced to Cournoyer who re- shot boun ayed it to Richard at the goal Cullen at mouth at 8i52. period. Mickey Redmond put the Cana- Esposito diens ahead 3-0 early in the second sists may period on assists by Serge Savard games. Gr and Richard. most goal remains ournament, did it by upending aged 89.1 r he Bruins 46-44 Saturday night of the sea. n a colossal upset in the last reg- They hit ular season game for both clubs, times and The loss ended UCLA's 41-game lina 78-55 victory streak, its 85-game string game for t at home and was only its second "I think defeat in 90 games. of streaks The other loss was a 71-69 de- John Woo eat at the hands of the Houston up. We di Cougars on Jan. 2, 1968 in Hous- did," he sa on's Astrodome. Two yea How did the Bruins react to Boyd triet hat defeat? tactics tha They went on to win their re- night, maining 16 games, including a In that 11-69 thrashing of Houston in shot misse he NCAA semifinals, and aver- regulation tie .UCLA agn asBtielueamsdeougdplayofga. tie. Both included playoff games. rth Stars earned a tie enseman Bob McCord's ced in the net off Ray 13:47 of the third raised the all-time as- k, including playoff ant broke the record for s by a rookie and Bos- Esposito surpassed the regular} season record of 62 Sunday night against Los Angeles. Murphy's second goal gave Bos- ton a 3-2 edge late in the second period after Grant had tied the game on a deflection of Cullen's slapshot earlier in the period. Orr, who assisted on Murphy's first goal, which had given Boston a 1-0 edge, slid in a goal from point-blank range to give the Bruins a 2-1 first period lead. The two points tied the record of 59 points for a defenseman set by Chicago's Pierre Pilote. * * * NEW YORK-Dave DeBusschre ' poured in 38 points-his high for New York-as the Knickerbockers blasted the Philadelphia 76ers 121-101 last night, tightening the National Basketball Association's Eastern Division race. The victory moved the third- place Knicks back within one game of the 76ers and three of first- place Baltimore, which was idle. The 6 - foot - 6 DeBusschere, whose previous high with the Knicks was 26 points, also hauled down 17 rebounds. The Madison Square Garden crowd of 19,177, which swelled the Knicks' season home attend- ance to 548,663-an NBA record- saw the home club break open the game in the second quarter. Willis Reed, who scored 10 points in the opening period, put in two quick field goals to give the Knicks a 29-19 margin and: ignite the burst. Then, in a four- minute blitz, the Knicks outscored Philadelphia 15-1 for a 45-23 lead. The 76ers never got closer than 10 points. Reed scored 23 and Bill Bradley 21 for the Knicks. Bill Cunning- ham topped Philadelphia with 23. conj points per game the iest son. t 100 points or more six demolished North Cat o- in the season's final the national title. people make too muen s,' said UCLA Coach den. "We were not fired in't play well and they id, praising the Trojans. rs ago USC Coach Bob d the same slowdown at beat UCLA Saturday game, a Southern Cal d at the buzzer ending play and, from a 29-all won 40-35 in overtime. the style of play ex- the Trojans surprised rident The UCLA coach did bright note in the defeat, "I don't believe we've b sharp and needed somethi overtime against Californ double overtime apparentl see a saying, een real ing. The nia and .y didn't -Associated Press BOSTON'S ALL-STAR DEFENSEMAN Bobby Or moves in on Minnesota goalie Cesare Maniago en route to his nineteenth goal of the season which is one short of the .all time NHL record for goals by a defenseman in one season. The tally equaled the single season record for total points by a defenseman for the Bruin's "Boy Wonder." U ......_..........._... SPORTS BULLETS: Snder to lead Wildcats, Czech icers smash U.S. By The Associated Press . * EVANSTON, Ill.-Brad Snyder, interim coach for the final six games of the season, was named yesterday head basketball coach at Northwestern University. Snyder, 30, directed the Wildcats to a 4-2 Big Ten record and lifted them from last to fifth place in the conference standings after replacing Larry Glass, who resigned'Feb. 1. The appointment was announced by Athletic Director Tippy Dye who said: "This was a situation where a coach really won his job." Snyder was given a one-year contract. 0 PRAGUE-Czechoslovakia trounced the United States 11-0 yesterday in an ice hockey match. The UA. team arrived only 5% hours before the rhatch. It played here as a warmup for the World Hockey Championships next week in Stockholm. ' The American team, which arrived here on a round about flight from Chicago to Toronto to Paris and Frankfurt, had no sleep for 26 hours. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-St. Louis Cardinals General Man- ager Bing Devine said yesterday he received word from Julivan Javier that the second basenian was ready to sign a contract for the original terms offered. Devine said Javier will fly to St. Petersburg tomorrow night and is expected to sign Friday and begin practice that day. Last Friday, Javier reversed a decision 'to sign a contract and returned to his home in the Dominican Republic. He had reported last Thursday night and had agreed to sign the next day. But Friday morning he announced that he wasn't signing. Javier was the last of the National League champions' holdouts. * * * * - i ORLANDO, Fla.-Dean Chance, right-hander pitcher, signed a 1969 contract with the Minnesota Twins yesterday, leaving only two players still unsigned by the American League team. Chance accepted the last offer from Twins President Calvin Griffith, $55,000, a $5,000 cut from what he received last year, when he 'was 16-16. The only Twins not signed are pitcher Jim Kaat and Cesar To- var, infielder-outfielder. Tovar has not arrived at the Twins' camp from his native Venezuela but is not expected to be a holdout. Southpaw Kaat, a frequent critic of club policies, is regarded as a more serious holdout possibility. * CLEARWATER, 'Fla.-Chris Short, a 19-game winner last year, had his right knee in a cast as injuries continued to plague the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday. Short is feared to have strained tendons, which could sideline him past the opening of the regular baseball season next month. " BALTIMORE-A federal bankruptcy referee approved yes- terday the conditional sale of the Philadelphia Eagles football team for $16,055,000 to Leonard H. Tose, a Norristown, Pa., trucking executive. Tose won the right to purchase the National Football League team with a last-ditch, offer that topped by $5,000 a bid submitted by Thomas D. McCloskey, a Philadelphia builder. Asked if } hibited by him, Wooden answered, "The style was what we expected but we were surprised they executed as well as they did." Boyd said the Trojans had prac- ticed the ball control game through the season largely to use late in games to protect leads. "The players were well condi- tioned to play that way and had great confidence in that style of a game." While the loss probably will serve to arouse the methodical Bruins when they begin defense of the NCAA title they have won the last . two years, it also has given all challengers the new idea that UCLA can be beaten. "It only proves UCLA is mortal," said Lou Carnesecca, coach of St. John's, one of the teams that ad- vanced to the regionals last Sat- urday with a 72-63 victory over Princeton. "The loss could be a great thing for UCLA because it now takes the pressure of the long winning streak off, or it could be that the team is mentally and physically tired. If that's the case, they could be in for trouble." USC, a crosstown rival which pushed the Bruins into double overtime Friday night before los- ing 61-55, beat UCLA for the first time in 18 games on Ernie Powell's jump shot with seven seconds re- maining. Playing a slowdown game, the Trojans, who lost 11 games this season, took only 20 shots and hit 12 of them. But just as important, they held giant 7-foot-1/2 All- American Lew Alcindor to 10 points, largely on the play of 7-1 Ron Taylor. Wooden was asked if he had considered taking Alcindor out of the Saturday night game to change its tempo. "I did think about that," Wood- en replied, "but how we do in the tournament depends on Alcindor." do the job. Maybe this will." Wooden appeared at the South- ern California Basketball Writers r luncheon Monday and was asked if he has thought of a method to attack the ball control game. "Yes," he replied, "I have. And I'm not going to tell you." He did note that New Mexico State under Coach Lou Henson used ball control a year ago in the regionals when it lost to the Bruins 58-49 at Albuquerque. "They gave us trouble last year and it's Henson's style of play," Wooden commented. The two clubs meet in the open- ing round of the Western regionals of the NCAA tournament. Weber and Santa Clara clash in the other at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion. EMU gains in N ATA play By The Associated Press KANSAS CITY--A pair of free throws by Harvey Marlatt gave fifth-seeded Eastern Michigan an , 87-85 victory over Georgetown, Ky., in yesterday's first round ac- tivity in the 32nd annual NAIA basketball tournament. Leading 85-84 with 24 seconds left, Marlatt sank both shots on a one-one situation. Stephen Moore of Georgetown was fouled and made it 87-85. In earlier NAIA action Warren Harshaw scored on a court-length pass in the final second to give Henderson, Ark., State a 78-76 victory over St. John's of Colleges- ville, Minn. In the opening game, Whittier of California defeated Corpus Christi, Tex., 77-66. With the score tied 76-all, St. John's went for the final shot. Timothy Muller missed and Hen-, derson recovered. The Arkansas team called time with three sec- onds remaining. Harshaw entered the game for the first time, got behind the St. John's defense and grabbed Ron Dunning's pass for the score. Danny Davis led Hen-, derson with 24 points. Muller was high for St. John's with 21. Marlatt hit a pair of free throws with 24 seconds remaining to ice Eastern Michigan's victory. Mar- latt had 32 points and Kenny Davis of Georgetown 28. PHI ETA SIGMA presents BRUCE W. ARDEN Associate Director, University Computing Center "THE SPECTER OF C3 (COMPLETE COMPUTER CONTROL)" WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12-TODAY, 7 P.M. STUDY IN CU ERNAVACA Learn to speak SPANISH 0 Intensive courses, with drills, supervised labs, and theory taught by 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. e Access to excellent library. * $30 per credit. Live in CUERNAVACA e Near Mexico City, at 4,500 feet elevation, with Mexican families or in dorms or bungalows. e Approx. $80 per month. Request catalog from Registrar - Cidoc W. Godot, Apdo. 479, Cuernavaca, Mexico Aud.C - An~gell Hall 10 No Deposit FREE service per month Required and delivery NEJAC TV RENTALS 6625671 SERVING BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 MORE TITAN TIN-DEEP ! Sorority and Fraternity Houses! Good cooks are hard to get Let yours enjoy a free Sunday. Have your Sunday dinner catered by us. Very good food, moderately priced. Call for free estimates, 665-4967 or Eves. 663-5895 SECOND ANNUAL VANDENBERG LECTURE March 12, 1969 DEAN. FRANCIS 0. 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