Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, Ma, Ch1amberlain will quit if Meuienot pickied Pag Si TH MIHIGN DILYThusda1 M PHILADELPHIA (P) - Wilt Chamberlain says he won't play for the Philadelphia 76ers next season if Frank McGuire or someone comparable doesn't get the National Basketball Associa- tion club's vacant coaching job.I Does Chamberlain, the 7'1" superstar want to be a player- coach? "Rather than have some stum- blebum on the bench," he told basketball writer George Kiseda ofI the Philadelphia Bulletin, Tuesday night, "I would consider coaching. I think no one knows player Wilt better than Wilt." NO ONE ELSE He was asked if it was fair to say he will not play for the 76ers in the event they select a bench coach of someone less than Mc- Guire's stature. "That's fair," he said. "If it isn't McGuire, that's the way it seems. Right now I can't think of anyone else." At no time did Chamberlain say he wanted the job of player-coach. "I, Wilt Chamberlain, will first have to find out where I am," he said. "I'm going to talk with Mr. Kosloff (76ers owner, Ir vKos- 1off) and, see where I stand. I would like to talk contract with him as soon as possible, with the whole thing involved. I would hope he would confide in me about the coach. Who coaches is of some im- portance." HANNUM RESIGNS It was ,learned that the 76ers have offered the job vacated Mon- day by Alex Hannum to McGuire, who has a long term contract at the University of South Carolina. The 76ers aren't commenting on, the report. McGuire has rejected offers, to return to the East; he coached the Philadelphia Warriors of the NBA in 1961-62. Chamberlain was on that team which lost the Eastern final play- offs in the last seconds of a sev- enth game against the Boston Celtics. The Warriors were sold and moved to San Francisco and, Twins By The Associated Press DETROIT - Willie Horton's sacrif ice fly drove in Dick Mc- Auliffe with the winning run last night and the Detroit Tigers de- feated the Minnesota Twins 3-2.4 McAuliffe had tripled with one out and after Al Kaline walked, Horton flied to Rich Reese and' McAuliffe beat the throw to the plate. Denny McLain earned the vic- tory with a six-hitter, besting Minnesota's Jim Merritt, who al- lowed five hits., One of the hits off Merritt was a two-run homer by Jim North- rup that gave the Tigers a 2-1 lead in the fifth. Harmon Killebrew's sixth home run of the year had given the Twins the early edge. After North- rup's shot, Reese tied it for Min- nesota with his first homer of the year in the seventh. BOSTON-Roger Repoz' ninth-! inning single drove in two runs last night as California beat Bos- ton 5-3 and ran its winning streak to four straight games. The Red Sox have lost four in a row. Bobby Knoop led off the ninth with a single and moved to sec- ond when Red Sox reliever John 'Wyatt fielded a smash by Paul Schaal, but threw wildly to sec- ond. Knoop and Schaal then worked a doubledsteal ndbRepoz' single to right drove in both runners. The Red Sox, held to one un- earned run by Angel starter Ricky Clark for seven innings. rallied to tie it 3-3 in the eighth on Ken Harrelson's bases-loaded single off reliever Jack Hamilton. Right-hander Hamilton was making his first appearance in Fenway Park since his errant Uccumi pitch beaned Tony Conigliaro last! Aug. 18, apparently ending the, slugging young Red Sox outfield- er's career.1 Hamilton was greeted by a chorus of boos, then Harrelson drilled his first pitch to left field to score Joe Foy and Carl Yas- trzemski with the tying runs. He was the winning pitcher, though. * 4 CLEVELAND - Sam McDow- ell struck out 16 Oakland batters last night and Cleveland rallied' for a 3-1 victory after John Odom had retired the first 15 batters he faced. McDowell's single in the sixth inning tied the score and the In- dians scored two more in the sev- enth. The Indians' big left-hander retired 20 men'4n a row after the Athletics' scored an unearned run in the third to take a 1-0 lead. Odom stopped the Indians in the first five innings, allowing no hits and only two balls out of the infield. Then Chico Salmon singled in the sixth, stole second and scored on McDowell's single to center. Cleveland added two more in the seventh. Tony Horton and Duke Sims singled and Horton scored on the passed ball. Sims then scored on Salmon's second single. Oakland's run in the third came on Reggie Jackson's triple and a fly to Jose Cardenal. Jackson tried to score after the catch and was safe when catcher Duke Sims dropped the throw from Cardenal for an error. McDowell's previous strike out high for a nine-inning game was 15 against Detroit in 1965. He fanned 16 in a ten-inning game against Baltimore the same year. to McLain, PITTSBURGH - Al McBean hurled his fourth victory, a six- hitter, and Donn C 1e n d e n o n cracked a run-scoring single and home run last night as the Pitts- burgh Pirates downed the Chicago Cubs 4-0 in a game protested by Cub Manager Leo Durocher. McBean overcame some early shakiness in going the distance for the fourth time. The Pirates got a run in the first inning when Roberto Cle- mente tripled off the right field wall with two away and scored on a single by Clendenon. Cub starter Rich Nye gave up two harmless hits in the second inning, then put the Bucs down in order until Clendenon opened the seventh inning by clubbing a towering home run over the left- field wall, his second of the sea- son. Manny Mota doubled in two runs in the ninth. McBean gave up five hits and walked two batters in the first three innings then kept the Cubs hitless the rest of the way. Tigers , ALEX HANNUM McGuire refused to go along. Kiseda's interview with Cham- berlain was by telephone to Los, Angeles where the giant center and other members of the Cham- berlain family are at the bedside of Wilt's ailing father. WILLIE HORTON DICK McAULIFFE WEd UNS SQUARE SERIES: North Stars blitz Blues, 5-1 ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (R )- Bill Goldsworthy scored two goals and added an assist before a Me- tropolitan Sports Center crowd of 15,172 as Minnesota belted St. Louis 5-1 last night. The victory enabled the North Stars to tie the National Hockey League West Di- vision on final playoff series. With each team now owning three victories in the best-of-7 series, the North Stars and Blues return to St. Louis Friday night. The winner will meet the Mon- treal Canadiens in the NHL Stan- ley Cup championship series open- ing Sunday afternoon. Goldsworthy caped his evening by setting up Milan Marcetta with the North Stars' fifth goal mid- way through the third period. Marcetta tapped in his own re- bound as Minnesota rushed Blues' reserve goalie Seth Martin. The issue was settled in the first period when the Stars scored twice. St. Louis never got closer than a two-goal deficit after that. k ..k:: By The Associated Press Based on 30 at bats. AMERICAN LEAGUE Player Club G AB R H Pet. Alvis, CIe 17 60 5 22 .367 Carew, Min 17 66 10 24 .364 White, NY 16 43 7 15 .342 F. Howard, Was 18 65 8 22 .338 Allison, Min 17 60 7 20 .333 Freehan, eDt 17 62 9 20- .323 Unser, Was 18 76 10 24 .316 Andrews, Bsn 16 54 10 17 .315 R. Jackson, Oak 18 68 13 21 .302 Uhlaender, Min 17 65 8 20 .308 Home Runs Repoz, California, 6; Sims, Cleve- land, 5; Killebrew, Minnesota, 5; 7 tied with 4. Runs Batted In Killebrew, Minnesota, 14; F. How- ard, Washington, 13; Webster, Oak- land, 12; Reichardt, California, 12; Oliva, Minnesota, 12; Uhlaender, Minnesota, 12; T. Horton, Cleveland, i . Pitching 2 Decisions Hardin, Baltimore, 3-0, 1.000; San- tiago, Boston, 2-0, 1.000; McLain, Detroit, 2-0, 1.000; Warden, Detroit, 3-0, 1.000; Lindblad, Oakland, 2-0, 1.000. NATIONAL LEAGUE Player Club G AB R H Pct. Minnesota took a 4-1 lead into the final period, thanks to a pair of second-period goals by Gold- sworthy from in front of the cage. First, Goldsworthy tapped in a short pass from Marcetta. That was the third goal off veteran Glenn Hall and Blues' Coach Scot- ty Bowman promptly replaced Hall with Martin. Goldsworthy got his second with less than three minutes to go in the second when he poked the puck under Martin after it stopped right in front of the cage. St. Louis broke through on Ce- sare Maniago at 13:53 of the sec- ond period to momentarily cut Minnesota's lead to two goals. Gary Sabourin slapped in a re- bound. The North Stars grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first period on a pair of long shots by Wayne Connelly and Andre Boudrias, which eluded Hall. Rose, Cin Flood, StL Kessinger, Chi H. Aaron, AtI Valdespino, AtI Grote, NY M. Alou,IPgh T. Aaron, Ati Riatt, SF Hart, SF 17 18 18 18 14 16, 11 9 12 17 71 75 70 68 45 48 30 30 36 61 14 17 13 7 4 3 1 3 10 29 30 26 25 15 16 10 10 12 20 .408 .400 .371 .368 .33 .333 .333 .333 .333 .328 Ex-NHL great Adams struck by fatal attack 41 Home Runs Swoboda, New York, 7; H. Aaron, Atlanta, 6; Santo, Chicago, 4; Perez, Cincinnati, 4; F. Alou, Atlanta, 4; Cepeda, St. Louis, 4; Shannon, St. Louis, 4; Hart,San Francisco, 4. Runs Batted In Perez, Cincinnati, 17; B. Williams, Chicago, 16; Swoboda, New York, 16; Cepeda, St. Louis, 15; Flood, St. Louis, 14. Pitching - 2 Decisions Regan, Chicago, 2-0, 1.000; Ma- loney, Cincinnati, 2-0, 1.000; Koos- man, New York, 4-0, 1.000; Briles, St. Louis, 4-0, 1.000; Carbpon, St. Louis, 2-0, 1.000; Hoerner, St. Louis, 2-0, 1.000; Washburn, St. Louis, 3-0, 1.000. 'MEN'S OR 4 WOMEN'S $1500 to $190 VAN BOVEN SHOES 17 Nickels Arcade Eat or Live in a CO-OP Room and Board -$21.00 per week plus afew I since we oa our own WOMEN Lester, 900 Oakland Mark VIII1, 917 S. Forest Osterweil, 388 E. Jefferson Stevens, 816 S. Forest Vail, 602 Lawrence he w Board Only' $13.00 per week ours work, n and run houses MEN Michigan, 315 N. State Nakamura 807 S. State Owen 1017 Oakland Pickerill 923 S. Forest DETROIT WP-Jack Adams, who discovered Detroit Red Wings superstar Gordie Howe and had his name inscribed on hockey's Stanley Cup as a player, coach and general manager, died yester- day of a heart attack. He was 73. Adams was stricken in his De- troit office. He had been president of the Central Professional Hockey League, which he helped found in 1963. "I felt sick when I heard the news about Jack Adams' death," said Howe, 22 year veteran of the National Hockey League who holds virtually every scoring and longe- vity record. "Mr. Adams was like a father to me. When I joined the Red Wings organization I was only 16 years old, and he looked after me as though I was his own son." DEDICATION "Mr. Adams had more love and dedication for hockey than any man I ever knew," Howe added. "He helped me tremendously in every phase of my career. There are not enough men of his caliber in this world . .. and it's a great loss when one so great as Mr. Adams passes on." Adams was coach and general manager of the Red Wings fromk 1927 to 1962, when he retired. In that time, his teams won 12 NHL titles, including a record seven in a row from 1949 to 1955, and seven Stanley Cups.' "This is a great personal loss for me," said Sid Abel, coach and general manager of the Red Wings. VETERAN i "Everything I have ever done in hockey has been with Mr.' Adams. I played for him-and I followed in his footsteps as gen- eral manager." Adams is survived by his widow, Helen. They had no children. Adams played eight years in the NHL with Toronto, Vancouver and The Red Wings won their first Connelly slapped a 40-foot shot league title in 1934 and their first at Hall at 5:28. The puck took a Stanley Cup in 1935. crazy bounce right under Hall's Funeral services will be held outstretched legs and into the Saturday morning in Detroit. cage. Ottawa, retiring in 1926. When Detroit got an NHL franchise in 1927, the late Frank Calder, then president of the league, recom- mended Adams for the job.. as coach and general manager. Open tennis sqi pre-Wimbledon By The Associated Press LONDON-The first signs of a rift between professional afnd amateur tennis threatened today to halt the progress of open tour- nampents. American promoter George Mac- Call was reported planning to pull his ten stars out of the Kent Championships at Beckenham- one of the open tournaments scheduled to precede Wimbledon. He said the prize money offered was not big enough and started planning a rival tournament of his own at Eastbourne. 'Officials of the Kent Champion- ships reacted angrily and com- plained to the British Lawn T en- nis Association. Laurie McCallum,t organizer of the tournament, said: "I hope we can still sort out the situation." The International Lawn Tennis, Fedseration sanctioned open tour- naments a month ago and alloted four open events to Britain this year. A 'HAPPY GO LUCKY' The first-the British Hard !Hard Court Championship at Bournemouth last week-was won by Ken Rosewall, one of Mac- Call's professionals. MacCall said then he was un- decided whether to enter his players in the two events imme- diately before Wimbledon-the uabble seen in English match Kent and the London Champion- ships at Queen's Club. McCallum said today MacCall had now told him his players would not compete at Backenham because the prize money was too low. There is a first prize of $1,200 In the men's singles and $720 in the women's. McCallum said that MacCall's four women stars-Billie Jean King and Rosemariy Casals of the United States, Ann Jones of Brit- ain and Francoise Durr of France -had all wanted to play at Beck- enham, where they have competed in the past amateurs. APPLES ARE BETTER MacCall, who pays his 10 stars a total of $400,000 a year, report- edly did some hard bargaining .with French officials before en- tering his players for the French Championships in Paris starting May 27. Basil Reay, secretary of the British Lawn Tennis Asociation, said a tournament at Eastbourne would not be offically sanctioned to run alongside the Kent Cham- pionships. But MacCall is not an- swerable to any amateur body and obviously could defy British of- ficials and run his own tourna- ment if he wanted. MacCall has said his profession- all will play at Wimbledon. 41 Debs, 909 E. University Visit a house or contact- INTER-CO-OPERA 2546 SA B, TIVE COUNCIL 668-6872 - _ __ - Buy nice things with the 25% you save on our used textbooks. f persistent nage you arlay to a Sometimes it really hurts to spend all those crisp dollar bills just for textbooks, doesn't it? There are so-o-o-o many other exciting uses for money. Well, you can have your cake and eat it, too. Buy good-as-new used textbooks for all your courses from Follett's. Art, drafting and school supplies, too. 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