THE MICHIGAN DAILY 't'1UKf 'J.JYat NOVEBEr~t R 7 .w,. 1983,,. TTIiIALHUSDAY,NEMBE71963 I GUYS & GALS-MEET YOUR PALS RELAX THIS SEMESTER AT THE COZY A O f f t Al NCAA, AAU Continue Struggle for Power "'"PRCI irs DiGravio 1> Y RDS FUN FOR EVERYONE ! 314 S. FOURTH AVE. BILLAI POCKET BILLIARDS SNOOKER NO 8-9729 F m Im 963 WORLD'S FAIR OPENING BY PRESIDENT HATCHER WASHINGTON ()-The Ama- teur Athletic Union and the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Associa- tion, observing a cease-fire until after the 1964 Olympics in Toyko, resume their struggle for power at the biennial meeting of the U.S. Olympic Committee Sunday and Monday. This will be a political battle for voting power which doesn't figure to violate the directive of Gen. Douglas MacArthur that Utah State Tops Total Offense NEW YORK (P) - Utah State continues to lead in total offense and Nebraska in rushing offense among the nation's major college football teams. However, statistics answered yesterday by the NCAA Service Bureau, point up the difference in attacking styles between Texas, the nation's top-ranked team, and Baylor. The teams meet in Aus- tin, Tex., Saturday.r Baylor leads in passing offense with 109 completions in 197 at- tempts for a .553 average. The Bears' passes have covered the most yards, 1,410, and their 197 passes is more than any other team except Tulsa, which has tossed 207. Texas, on the other hand, has managed to get off 421 rushing plays, more than any other major outfit. The Longhorns, unbeaten and untied, are ranked sixth in rushing average with a 244.3 yards per game average. Y neither group do anything to hamper the development of the best possible American team for the Toyko Olympics Oct. 10-24, 1964. Gen. MacArthur was appointed by President Kennedy to arbitrate the dispute between the two rival groups. The main objective was to permit athletes from all groups to compete and prepare for the Olympics. MacArthur has suc- ceeded. The battle in Washington will be over a series of proposed amendments. The most important is an AAU-backed proposal to give governing bodies of sports affiliated with international fed- erations the majority of votes in the U.S. Olympic Committee. It pertains to the 26 federations in- volved in Olympic sports. This actually is a rule of the International OlympicrCommittee which has not been observed by the USOC in recent years. No group has majority voting power now. These 26 groups have a total of 270 votes out of about 756. They form the Class A group in the USOC. This is the group which must have majority voting power according to IOC rules. The NCAA, which has supported groups seeking to unseat the AAU as the international representa- tive in several sports, is in Class B along with the National Asso- ciation of Intercollegiate Athletics, the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, and the equestrian body. The NCAA has 100 votes and the others 10 each. There are many other organiza- ivio u r caj tions and college athletic confer-, ences which are in separate classes and have additional voting power. Other controversial proposed amendments include: Permit President Kennedy to name three citizens not affiliated with any group to the USOC's Board of Directors. Give the NAIA, junior colleges and high schools representation on the various Olympic sports com- mittees, including track and field, basketball and swimming. The AAU is the official repre- sentative to nine of the 26 inter- national federations connected with the Olympics. The sports it represents include basketball, box- ing, bobsledding, gymnastics, judo, track and field, swimming, wrest- ling and weightlifting. There are separate groups for soccer, fencing, rowing, modern pentathlon, shooting, ice hockey, equestrian, archery, cycling, figure skating, speedskating, skiing, ca- noeing, field hockey, tennis, vol- leyball and yachting. The NCAA is supporting fed- erations in track and field, bas- ketball, gymnastics and some other sports. These federations seek to supplant the AAU as the U.S. representative to the inter- national federations. By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - Michigan State rehearsed rushing the pass- er in a workout yesterday. Coach Duffy Daugherty showed he was sincere when he termed Purdue quarterback Ron DiGravio about the most dangerous passer in the conference. "He's hard to rush," Daugherty said. "He'll run around all day before he gets rid of the ball." Looking for Rollout CHAMPAIGN-Dick Door, jun- ior varsity quarterback, was the marked man of Illinois' football drills yesterday. He imitated Michigan's Bob Timberake on rollout pass or run plays as the Illini sharpened their defenses for the Wolverines Sat- urday. Power vs. Power COLUMBUS-Ohio State drilled yesterday on defense against quick count plays, power runs and pass- Boston Breezes by Cincy; Pistons Snap Losing Streak ing formation employed by Penn State, Saturday's opponent here in a regionally televised football attraction. On offense, Tom Barrington worked at both right and left half- back. Halfback Paul Warfield, re- covering from a minor leg injury, worked without pads, part of the time on the new split-end duties to which he may be assigned. Back To Pass BLOOMINGTON - Indiana's football squad resurrected its al- most abandoned passing attack in a lengthy offensive drill yes- terday. Quarterbacks Rich Bader and Frank Stravroff led the aerial re- hearsal in preparation for the Hoosiers' homecoming game with Oregon State Saturday. Indiana has completed only sev- en of 24 pass attempts in its last three games, compared with 41 connections in 69 tries during its first three. FRIDAY at 7 P.M. UNION BALLROOM y f By The Associated Press X I KjlRIIIEG WE SAVE EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING Quick Service available on request FILECCIA BROTHERS 1109 South University BOSTON-The unbeaten Boston Celtics breezed to their seventh straight victory in the National Basketball Association last night, crushing the Cincinnati Royals, 139-121. The win boosted Boston's East- ern Division lead to three games over the Royals. Sam Jones scored 28 points to Kramer Back For Packers GREEN BAY (IP)-Tight end Ron Kramer ran without signs of any trouble yesterday as the Green Bay Packers got down to serious work in preparation for Sunday's National Football League meeting with the Minnesota Vikings. Kramer, who missed last Sun- day's 33-14 victory over Pittsburgh because of knee and ankle in- juries, indicated he will be ready. Quarterback Bart Starr, who suffered a broken bone in his right hand in St. Louis Oct. 20, continued to work out while wear- ing a splint to protect the injury. Starr is scheduled to have the hand examined later this week. pace the Celtics, who led at half- time 68-53. They hit on 31 of 55 shots. Seven Boston players scor- ed in double figures. Oscar Robertson led Cincinnati with 24 points, while rookie Jerry Lucas added 20 and picked off 19 rebounds, same as Boston's Bill Russell. DETROIT-The Detroit Pistons ended a four-game losing streak last night and at the same time spoiled Philadelphia Coach Dolph Schayes' return to an active play- ing role as they rallied for a 119- 101 National Basketball Associa- tion victory over the 76ers. The victory, Detroit's second in seven games, moved the Pistons into fourth place past the Balti- more Bullets in the NBA's Western Division. The loss was Philadel- phia's fourth straight and seventh in nine outings. Trailing by as many as 14 points in the first quarter, the Pistons caught fire midway in the second period and led by Don Ohl and Dave Debusschere closed the gap to 57-55 by halftime. GRID SELECTIONS.J Your time is running out! If you are among the unfortunates who have not yet won The Daily's fabulous Grid Picks contest, you have only three more chances to try your luck. Just think of it: honor, fame, glory, the praise and admiration of your friends and loved ones, and two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, where "Mary, Mary" is now playing, can all be yours if you win. To enter, submit your selections to the Daily before 9 p.m. Friday. THIS WEEK'S GAMES i -M SAM'S STORE LARGEST LEVI STOCK IN TOWN 1. MICHIGAN at Illinois (score) 2. Minnesota at Iowa 3. Michigan State at Purdue 4. Northwestern at Wisconsin 5. Penn State at Ohio State 6. Oregon State at Indiana 7. Dartmouth at Columbia 8. Princeton at Harvard 9. Pittsburgh at Notre Dame 10. Maryland at Navy 11. Clemson at North Carolina 12. Auburn at Miss. State 13. Georgia at Florida 14. Texas Christian at La. State. 15. Arkansas at Rice 16. Kansas at Nebraska 17. So. Methodist at Texas A&M 18. Baylor at Texas 19. UCLA at Air Force 20. California at Washington for guys and gals .. . LEVI'S GALORE in white, black, $ 49 brown, loden, cactus, and light blue ..... . 1 i f NBA Standings A LEVI'S SLIM FIT CORDUROYS in white, loden, antelope ..... . $593 Fp WESTERN DIVISION W L Pct. GB St. Louis 7 2 .778 -- San Francisco 4 2 .667 1Y3 x-Los Angeles 4 3 .571 22 Detroit 2 5 .286 42 Baltimore 2 7 .222 5 EASTERN DIVISION W L Pct. GB Boston 7 0 1.000 - Cincinnati 6 5 .545 3 x-New York 3 6 .333 5 Philadelphia 2 7 .222 6 WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Boston 139, Cincinnati 121 St. Louis 112, Baltimore 110 Detroit 119, Philadelphia 101 x-New York at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAME New York at San Francisco SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS I I 8Y a M v CHECKMATE FOR WARM OUTERWEAR! I LOOK! 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