PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, 13 JANUARY 19-65 PAGE SL~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, 13 JANUARY 1905 ,. MOVE CALLED HASTY: AFL Critizied for Game Shift Improved Underdogs Tighten Cage Race By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS-Mayor Victor' Schiro stated yesterday that AFL Commissioner Foss acted hastily in removing the AFL All-Star game from New Orleans "after3 hearing only one side without per-I sonally investigating all of the an- gler, involved." The Negroes, continued Mayor Schiro "have done themselves and their race a disservice by precipi- tous action." "If these men would play foot- ball only in cities where every- body loved them, they'd all be out; of a job today. Their reaction will, only aggravate the very condi- tion they are seeking, in time, to eliminate. We are a very cosmo- politan and tolerant city, but we are also a Southern city, and thereI are times when personal reaction is unpredictable.- No Previous Trouble1 "Our experience thus far with integrated football, basketball and1 even track meets has been excep- By SCOTT BLECH tionally good. In fact, there hasn't "We all agreed that the game A pre-season look at Big Ten been a single personal incident should be played if at all possi- basketball showed that Wisconsin that I know of in this connection. ble. We sympathize with the prob- would have trouble defeating any- "The Syracuse football team in lem of the Negro players and want one and Iowa would not be much the Sugar Bowl with eight Ne- them to be in the game. better. groes in the lineup is a case m "From what we could gather The Big Ten was supposed to, point. All of them left here prais- there were eight separate and dis- be a race between Michigan, Illi- ing the hospitality and kindness tinct cases of discrimination. nois and Minnesota. So what hap- of New Orleans 'people." These included transportation, re- pens--Indiana enters the scene The game first scheduled on fusal of admittance to clubs with an undefeated non-confer- Saturday i New Orleans was can- name-calling and things like that. ence record. celled after 22 Negro players re- ThP W ttr ConfPrnP b kt- Jones is a big help to center George Peeples who is quickly be- coming a big-name center. Pee- ples was named to the Classic's All-Tournament team and scored 22 points in Iowa's loss to Wiscon- sin Monday night. The key to the Iowa attack this season is Cris Pervall, a guard who transferred from Coffeeville (Kan) Junior College. The Hawkeyes, however, ran in-' to trouble Monday night as the Indiana Hoosiers put a halt to a late Iowa scoring surge. The Hoos- iers who have also stopped North- western have only lost to Illinois this season. The dangerous Hoos- fused to play because of racial discrimination. Later it was moved to Houston. Tommy Addison, Boston line- backer and president of the Ameri- can Football League Player Asso- ciation, says: Already Gone "Most of the Negro players had already left town before we first heard that they had voted not to play in the game.hI called a meet- ing because I felt it was our duty! to let the commissioner and thej owners know how the representa- tives of all eight teams felt about the thing. Wanted to Stay1 "I do know that nearly half ofI the Negro players wanted to play ! the game here in New Orleans de-; spite what happened." Commented Patriots' teammate Bob Dee: "It's a general feel-, ing of regret that all the white players feel. I personally have nev-t er encountered anything like this, and it's a rotten shame that it has caused so much trouble. "But we're all in this together7 and certainly those boys are with- in their rights." .lle WesG. eY n. n ' e enlce. Las e- ball season is very young and the basketball prophets around the Midwest are finding it more and. more difficult to pick the winners. The big story at Iowa City is ier full-court zone press and tall two newcomers and an improved starting five have made the dif- center. The Hawkeyes have al- ference. Tom and Dick Van Ars- ready defeated Wisconsin and dale are the 6'5" forwards; cen- Michigan State and topped Minne- ter Ron Peyser stands 6'8"; Jon sota in the Los Angeles Classic. McGlocklin (6'") and Steve Red- Another Cazzie? enbaugh (6') round out the Gerry Jones, a 6'4" forward lineup. from Chicago's Carver High Surprise Five School, is starting to look like Wisconsin surprised Purdue former Carver star Cazzie Russell Monday night with Keith Stelter, in the rebounding department. a 6'8" 'sophomore, delivering 18 points in the 77-66 victory. Davej entertain the Minnesota Gophers. Getting Better Minnesota is once again led by Lou Hudson, a forward who is improving every game. Hudson also made the All-Los Angeles Classic Tournament team and has averaged about 21 points per game this season. The Gophers, with returnees Archie Clark, Don Yates and Mel Northway, seem to miss Terry Kunze. Kunze, who was ear- lier dismissed from the team for illegal academic activities, has been replaced by Dennis Dvoracek, Ohio State with Dick Ricketts and Michigan State with Stan Washington and Marcus Sanders have 0-1 Big Ten records and do not figure to be contenders as they have been in the past. Green 'Cats The sophomore-laden North- western Wildcats host the Wolver- ines Saturday and have been working to fill the center posi- tion. Veteran Jim Pitts has been plagued by chronic arthritis in his knees and junior John Printen is now ineligible. The Wildcats have been paced by high school All Americans Jim Burns, 6'4" guard, Ron Kozlicki, 6'6" forward, and Walt Tiberi, 6'1" guard. Returnee Don Jackson and sophomore Rich Mason are also counted on by Coach Larry Glass to play important roles in the Northwestern attack. In other Big Ten action Satur- day, Michigan State and Iowa battle on regional television and Indiana faces Ohio State. Iowa and Indiana encounter in the only conference game next Monday. Purdue hosts Notre Dame on Tues- day, Jan. 19. 5 i i S 1 5 S r 5 1 7 7 l 1 t i 3 1 i .i DEMONSTRATION 1000 TO 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION You cOn read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature. and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will allow you to accomplish-in your required reading and also in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. A class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught on Tuesday evenings at the Michigan Union beginning February 16, 1965. Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method and see it applied. BRING A BOOK! Demonstrations will be held at the Michigan Union on: Wednesday, January 13 at 7:30 P.M. Wednesday, January 20 at 7:30 P.M. National School of Accelerated Reading, Inc. THE VAN ARSDALE TWINS, Tom (left) and Dick are two good reasons why Indiana's Hoosiers are the fifth ranked team in the country. A muscular pair of 6'5" forwards, the twins have started in every single Indiana game since becoming eligible two seasons ago TOPS AGAIN: Newc Faces Spark UCLA* Tie Drive. Free to Michigan Students- 25o to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda- tion, tells which career field lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year - which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other-what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor- tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli- gation. Address: Council on Op- portunities, 5 50 Fifth Ave.. New York 36, N. Y., 'UM1-11 Shellhase, who averaged 24.5 points per game last season, once again paced the Boilermakers, scoring 30. The lanky forward is; fourth in the country in scoring, with a game average of over 31 points. Illinois, another team to be reckoned with, found the ,going rough in Ann Arbor Saturday, but has defeated Wisconsin and Indi- ana as a result of top perform- ances from Skip Thoren, Tal Brody and Don Freeman. The Il- lini will have to fight for, their, lives again Saturday when they 1'p to daleJ -Aor darkime and dalelime By RICH GOODMAN The Los Angeles Classic is a Manyp ,i lookiprime example of Erickson at his Many pcee, hi yokn at best. Against Minnesota he was UCLA's success this year are be- the leader in every respect: he put ginning to wonder if Walt Haz- UCLA out in front for good with zard was really that good. successive steals and baskets. A person who wants to try toMost Valuable find a few concrete reasons for Mst Vlable I And after UCLA won the tour- UCLA's victories should look at nament for the third straight year, the entire picture. First of all, it Erickson was named as its Most is important to remember that Hazzard was not an especially high scorer. Gail Goodrich took the honors last year with a 21.5 aver- age, and he's back. Hazzard's main contributions were playmaking and that general term, ballhawk- ing, which refers to good plain basketball sense. What have the Bruins got this year to replace the sparkplug that Walt Hazzard was? First of all, the team is bigger than last year's version. The average is 6'4" per man. But the most significant ad- dition is the new lineup for UCLA. Good Old Gail They still have Gail Goodrich, the 61" great who consistently scores over 20 points a game. But the players that answer the ques- tion about the 11-1 record that .. the UCLAns have compiled so far are more or less newcomers. GAIL GOODRICH The three names that come un- der this category are Fred Goss, Valuable Player. Edgar Lacey, and a much improv- Ed Lacey is a 6'6" sophomore ed Keith Erickson. Especially forward who leads the team in prominent is Erickson, whose play- rebounding. In starting this year, ing so far this year has prompted Lacey beat out Kenny Washington speculation about him as a pos- who played so well in last year's sible All-America candidate. NCAA finals against Duke. This is t i 18964 Coyle Street Detroit 35, Michigan 5 f f i M1V::::.:::::"i."t.":.1 : : ::. . ....... . :"'i" ""A": ",{.a;. 4. a'tib: :.va : . : . ...... .... ......,..... START THE YEAR OFF BI . fit. ' ;t ' r . " { . . ; ;,.. ' " } j. ,r: :y Yw :: F i . BE CLEVER I . . a. ., : ,..,Y. z ' , . M«. '/ in 'r.' U' in Ji RIGT BE T ITTY! D I iDaily Editor-in-Chief, ntercol leg iate. icial Bulletin. tre and Concerts, [ze. 7u Can Make a /"yr} .:y: an indication of the rising young team that Coach John Wooden has this year. Fred Goss is starting this year after a year's absence from the basketball court. He averages around 15 points a game and is a marksmanl from the free throw line. The fifth member of the team is the center, Doug McIntosh who is 6'6" and a fine pivot man. But, again, McIntosh was not a starter last year. Classic Bruin UCLA still retains its classic style of play-the famous full court press which hurt Minneso- ta and Utah so much. And the fast break is still an integral part of the Bruins' strategy. UCLA lost its first game, and the defeat was a sure one. Illinois beat them by a score of 110 to 83, and Wooden made no excuses. This game obviously helped the team more than it hurt it. Utah's Coach Jack Gardner, after see- ing his team trounced 104-74, said that UCLA is a better team than last year's NCAA championship team. In commenting on his team Wooden says, "I believe the team is coming along in good shape, with no surprises or disappoint- ments at this stage.'We are mak- ing steady progress." UCLA is a young, strong team with a great deal of potential. And they are certainly making steady progress. ;'. KEITH ERICKSON finest quality laundry- BE PANTS SKIRTS (plain) SWEATERS (plain) 55c A & P CLEANERS 312 E. Huron across from City Hall NO 8-9500 Subscribe to The Michiga with FaraPressTM Never Need Complete Coverage of All News From the Student's Point of View. I WANINTER r EEND '65 "FIVE FIFTHS OF MYTH" Proudly Presents ' Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D., H. Neil Berkson. Provocative Editorials by ' Complete Coverage of All Michigan Sports; Intramural as well as I * That Fabulously Witty Column by the Administration, The Daily Off * Unforgettable Cartoon Comment by Jules Ffeiffer and Bill Mauldin. * Thought-Provoking and Intelligent Criticism of Motion Pictures, Thea To Guide the Discerning Student through Ann Arbor's Cultural Ma ' The Classifieds. Featurina the Famed Personals Column, Where Yc Th Ironing ey're ironing while they're drying7M ANONYMYTI AOM% Farah casuals a a re way out I l II