Tuesday, February 1, 1972 Page Seve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 1, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever~ Michigan, Minnesota pa .w ir i out to lunch mort novock Continuing controversy ... r . on a slow decision THE LIST of those upset with Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke's inaction after the Ohio State-Minnesota brawl is growing. Many Big Ten leaders were already upset with the fact that Duke did nothing while the disturbance was actually happening. He just sat in the stands and watched the fight without making an effort to help. It was Minnesota Athletic director Paul Giel that called the game with 36 seconds to go. Others lost their patience when Duke took two days to investigate% the incident before reaching a decision on what action to take. The man was there, he saw the whole thing, yet he refused to commit himself until he could see the films. It makes one wonder whether Duke wanted to see the films because he enjoyed the fight or whether he fell asleep at the game and missed the whole thing. When he finally decided to act, his move was condemned by all except Minnesota 'coach Bill Musselman as inadequate. It fact, he really didn't do anything at all. Musselman had already suspended Corky Taylor and Ron Behagen, all Duke did was to add his name to the order. Some were upset because nothing was done to Luke Witte. The Gopher players may not have impressed anyone as gentle- men, but even -a brawler has to be provoked before starting a fight. There's a feeling that Witte must have done something to make Taylor kick him. There was also those who thought that something should have been done to Musselman. There is a sign in the Minnesota lockerroom stating that death is better than losing because you don't have to live with death. The idea is that the Gophers are taught to kill. That their coach will condone anything as long as it means a victory. This philosophy is not compatible with the image of college athletics, so some feel that Musselman should be held responsible for the trouble. Ohio State coach Fred Taylor is the latest to voice his disapproval. He called the fight, "public muggings," and has become very vocal in his criticism. He feels that the pun- ishment doesn't begin to cover the crime. "The only penalty is that they will miss nine games," he said. "They are still on scholarship and they are still practicing with the team." Taylor thinks that more should be done. He wants the investigation to reopen and he is urging his injured players to start legal action. "I think we must seek legal counsel about civil or criminal action on behalf of Witte and Wagner and I hope our school would instigate it," he stated Sunday. Court suits over fights between athletes during games are not that common, but there is some precedent for Taylor's action. Wayne Maki was charged with assault and battery after he clobbered Teddy Green over the head in a National Hockey League game. He didn't go to jail for it, but the case was heard in court. Detroit Tiger manager Billy Martin was held liable for damages a while back for an incident in which he slugged pit- cher Jim Brewer. Brewer did not file criminal charges, but he did start a civil suit and when the case finally got to trial Martin had to pay up. Of course the whole OSU incident may just fade away. Witte and Wagar may return to action tonight and decide to forget the whole thing. They will probably be under pressure from the Big Ten not to take action. If the two players did file suit and win It would make Duke's action look even more impotent. A commissioner must be tougher than a court. He should be able to police his own league without having every dispute turned over to lawyers. Professional commissioners are often much more harsh than the law. Players have been suspended for infractions which are not illegal. They are deprived of their livlihoods just because they associate with the wrong people. However this is not to say that Duke should have done more to Minnesota. It is possible that his assessment of the situation is correct and that suspension for the rest of the year is ade- quate. Where he made his mistake was the way in which he handled the whole thing. He is the head of the league and is in the hot seat. Whatever he did, he should have done it quickly and authoritatively. The Big Ten needs a strong leader. It will have one, but it won't be the commissioner if Duke leaves the rest of his de- cisions open to as much question as this one. It is true that he doesn't have absolute power, but he could have called the athletic directors right after the fight and had them vote on some action. Duke might not be able to act on his own, but he must be the leader. But he can only lead if he is supported by the conference, and weak decisions are not going to gain him support. Ps...... .......s......... ....... SProfessional League Standings g By BOB ANDREWS With the smoke in the process of clearing after one of the m 0-s t ly turbulent weeks in Big Ten his- 1 tory, the Michigan and Minnesota cagers came off big wins Saturday I p o t st to emerge as the new conference co-leaders. The Wolverines mangled the NIGHT EDITOR: crippled Ohio State Buckeyes 88- RANDY PHILLIPS 78, while Minnesota, minus tvo of their star performers, played sol- idly to topple Iowa 61-50. Both and Wagar back for tonight's game squads ran their conference re- against Iowa and will start action cords to 5-1, while the loss sent only one half game out of first. As' the Bucks into third. Michigan head Coach Johnny Orr Before a sellout crowd in Ann remarked: "There are eight games Arbor, the Buckeyes played with- left, and there's a long way to out the services of seven f o o t go."o center Luke Witte and 6-8 reserve Last Friday, Big Ten Commis- forward Mark Wagar, who were s i o n e r Wayne Duke, announced injured in the chaotic free-for-all the suspension of Minnesota cag- against Minnesota last week. ers Ron Behagen and Marvin Already without two of their "Corky' Taylor for the rest of the tallest players, the Buckeyes' cen- season for their part in the mam- ter, Jack Wolfe, and forward War- moth brawl. dell Jackson got into early f o u I Nevertheless, against Iowa last trouble which gave the Wolverines Saturday, the defense-minded greater control of the boards. Gophers used just five play 'rs to Although ahead by four at the coast to a 61-50 win. According to head Coach Bill Musselman, end of the first half, 11-37, O h i 0 "We were about as ready as we State finally collapsed under the have been all year." pressure as three of th.ir play- Indeed this must have been the ers eventually fouled t. ithout case as his players committed only starters Wolfe, 6-5 forward Mark 11 fouls throughout the game and Minor and 6-6 reserve Gary Kira -___ _____ ce Big managed to hold Rick Williams, the Hawkeye guard and number two scorer in the conference, to; one field goal for two points. In his two previous games, Williams had scored 75 points.{ Leading the Gophers in scoring1 was Clyde Turner with 19, while; Kevin Kunnert paced the Hawk- eyes with 21. Although other Big Ten schools are yelling for more legal action, against the school, Minnesota should remain tough and ready as the chase for the conference crown continues. Purdue remained in the running for first as they nipped lowly Northwestern 78-75 to run their record to 2-1. Although they never trailed, the Boilermakers had it rough the entire way as the Wild- cats employed a semi-zone, semi- man-to-man defense to perplex them. "They messed us up with that defense," commented Purdue coach George King, "and, frankly, we weren't prepared." Although it did manage to stymie Bob Ford (11 points) and Dennis Gamauf (6 points), it didn't hinder Bil1 Franklin, who pumped in 26. Indiana entered Big Ten play with an 8-2 record and a national ranking. However, the winless Ten Hoosiers have not been able to get untracked as Michigan State sent them to their fourth consecu- tive conference defeat, 83-73. Sophomore Mike Robinson and Bill Wilgore combined for 55 points as they paced the Spartans to their second Big Ten victory against three losses. Tonight, the Buckeyes, most pro- bably at full strength, host Iowa and with a win, could join Michi- gan and Minnesota for the confer- ence leadership. The only other Big Ten team involved in action is Michigan State, which enter- tains Notre Dame in a non-con- ference game. Big Ten Standingsr_ W L Pet. MICHIGAN 5 1 .833 Minnesota 5 1 .833 Ohio State 4 1 .800 Purdue 2 1 .677 Wisconsin 2 2 .500 Michigan State 2 3 .400 Illinois 1 2 .333 Iowa 1 3 .250 Northwestern 1 5 .167 Indiana 0 4 .000 Today's Game Iowa at Ohio State Only game scheduled -Daily-Terry McCarthy MICHIGAN'S big center Ken Brady (15) goes up for two over Ohio State forward Jack Wolfe (20) during Saturday's victory over the Bucks. Brady's rebounding and scoring were a major factor in the 88-78 win which catapulted the Wolverines past OSU into a tie with Minnesota for the league lead, cofe, there was little that h e a d Coach Fred Taylor's squad.could PROFESSIONAL DISPUTE: do to overcome Michigan's con- trol of the boards as well as of ther game. # straight points in the second half Aub c to break the game open and the i tiles for ace skier Buckeye offense, which consisted! of little more than the :hooting of guard Allan Hornyak, was not potent enough to bounce beck.' Even with the victory, Michigan; could little afford to breatae easy.j The Bucks should be getting Witte' Oklahoma 62, Arkansas St. 53 Utah State 96, California 87 Central Michigan 89, Buffalo State 84 St. Bonaventure 90, South Florida 74 t Maryland 66, North Carolina State Mississippi 86, Florida 72 St. John's 86, Rhode Island 731 Oral Roberts 112, William Jewel 92 Cleveland State 83, Bowling Green 80 Kentucky 77, Alabama 741 Florida State 109, Pan American 83 C virginia 62, Clemson 58 Louisiana State 64, Tennessee 62 Temple 53, Drexel 46 Jacksonville 91, Furman 90 Western Kentucky 71, Murray State 71 By The Associated Press SAPPORO, Japan-Austria bat- tled today to regain Olympic elig- ibility for ace Alpine skier Karl Schcranz, charging he was banned with no evidence of professional- ism and no chance to defend him- self. Meanwhile, all Austrian skiers stayed off the slopes and there was a threat that they might not com- pete in the eleventh Winter Olym- pic Games, which start Thursday. The International O 1 y m p i c Committee announced M o n d a y that Schranz had been banned from the Games because he took pay for advertising skis. In a news conference Monday night, two high-ranking Austrian officials maintained that Avery Brundage, president of the IOC, had no proof that Schranz had violated the amateur code of the Olympics.1 "I can't believe it," said Dr. Karl Heinz Klee, president of the Aus- trian Ski Federation, after the 33- year-old Schcranz was disqualified by the International Ol y m p i c Committee for allowing his name to be used for commercial rea- sons. "The Russians are subsidized by their own- government and all in- ternational athletes get help from one source or another," he said. "It's an emphasis on the wrong principle. I think the Olympics should be a contest of all sports- men with no regard for color, race or wealth." There have been reports that Schranz, who was preparing to compete in his fourth Olympics, was earning $40,000-$50,000 a year from his ski connections. The Aus- trian did not deny them, but he contended he was being punished for a crime of which all athletes are guilty. Schranz won a silver medal at the 1964 Olympics and finished first in the men's slalom in the 1968 Games, but was disqualified for missing a gate on his run. The disqualification caused consider- able controversy. He appealed the ruling, but was turned down. ii This Week in Sports TODAY FRESHMAN BASKETBALL-at Central Michigan FRIDAY WRESTLING-at Iowa HOCKEY-Colorado College at Michigan Coliseum, 8 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL-at Purdue TRACK-at Indiana WRESTLING-at Minnesota HOCKEY-Colorado College at Michigan Coliseum, 8 p.m. J GYMNASTICS-Minnesota at CrisIer Arena, 1:30 p.m. HAIRSTYLING AS YOU LIKE IT! NEW TRENDS FOR 1972 TRIMS-SHAGS and RAZOR CUTS Dascola Barbers 2 SHOPS 0@611 E. University 0 615 E. Liberty HOT COMBO Extra features like a built-in condenser microphone and a backspace review button make the new CF-300 the finest Cassette-CorderuAM/FM. Radio Combination you con buy. FEATURES: Recorder " Built-In Condenser Microphone " Sonymatic Recording Control *Record Interlock * Microphone and Auxiliary Inputs Record Level and Battery Strength Indicator.' A Speaker Monitor Capability Radio 9 AM and FM Bands 0 Telescopic FM Antenna' 0 Built-In Ferrite Bar AM Antenna 0 AFC with Defeat Switch General * Built-In Recharging Circuit for Optional Nickel-Cadriium Lifetime Battery Pack :4, $119.95 N SUERSCOPE, You never heard it so good The Russians chided Avery Brun- dage as guilty of bad taste and criticized the International Olym- pic Committee Tuesday for singl- ing out Austria's Karl Schranz for punishment on the eve of the 11th Winter Games. "We did not like Mr. Brundage's attack on the Winter Games at the time the games were just about to open in Japan," he add- ed. "It was not good to the Japa- nese." Jean-Claude Killey said that the winter Olympic Games will suffer more than skiing, should the sportI be scratched from the Olympic agenda over professional charges. "I don't see, how skiing can be eliminated now," said the 28-year- old Frenchman who won three gold medals in the 1968 Olympics. In other Olympic news it has been learned that a lean, dark- haired French nobleman, Count Jean de Beaumont, will be the next president of the International Olympic Committee if A v e r y Brundage retires this year-as he says-after 20 years. I For the Student Body: SALE " ,Jeans " Bells * Flares '/2 off State Street at Liberty WE'LL GIVE YOU 5 QUARTERS FOR A DOLLAR WITH THIS COUPON ANY NIGHT THRU FRIDAY, FEB. 5 AT PINBALL WIZARD'S I HI-Fl BUYS' Ann Arbor-East Lansing 618 S. Main 769.4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Available 605 E. William Below Mark's Coffeehouse I One Per Customer-One Quarter Must Be Used for Pinball 11 Clearing the boards Alabama's Wendell Hudson (20) goes to clear the boards against Kentucky Wildcat Larry Stam- per (22) in a game played last night in Lexington. Coach Adolph Rupp's boys won a thriller from the Crimson Tide, 77-74. FEBRUARY ART .FAIR, WHEN: Sunday, February 6 12-5 P.M. WHERE: Michigan Union Ballroom WHAT: Artists Displaying and Selling Their Crafts WHO: Open to Everyone; No Admission Charge Artists interested in selling or displaying their work should call 764-7409 or go to room 240 Michigan Union for information and registration. Regis- tration closes Friday, Feb. 4. SPONSORED BY: STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL . OFFICES OF SPECIAL SERVICES AND PROGRAMS UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER -Associated Press I Michigan Union Billiards NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 37 18 .673 New York 30 21 .588 Philadelphia 22 31 .415 Buffalo 14 35 .286 Central Division Baltimore 24 27 .471 Atlanta 20 33 .377 Cincinnati 16 35 .314 Cleveland 16 36 .308 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Milwaukee 43 11 .796 Chicago 38 15 .717 Phoenix 31 24 .564 Detroit 18 35 .340 Milwaukee vs. Golden State Cleveland at Buffalo, followed by com- pletion of protested game of Dec. 3. GB Only games scheduled 5 14 NHL 21; East Division PLAY POOL Half Price Tues. and Thurs. Ladies play free first two hours Wednesday - Boston 5 New York 8 Montreal 8w Detroit Toronto vancouver Buffalo 4? 121,EChicago 24s Minnesota California St. Louis Philadelphia 12 Pittsburgh 214Los Angeles 34 Ye W L T Pts 34 7 8 76 .31 9 8 70 27 13 8 62 21 21 8 50 20 20 10 50 14 28 5 33 10 29 12 32 GF 199 211 186 156 134 117 131 164 135 147 137 115 115 120 Pacific Division Los Angeles 44 7 Golden State 33 20 Seattle 31 23 Houston 19 34 Portland 12 43 Yesterday's Games No games scheduled Today's Games Boston at Balitmore Detroit at New York Phoenix at Portland Seattle at Chicago West Division 34 10 5 27 15 8 17 25 10 17 26 7 14 26 8 12 29 9 13 33 6 GA 108 109 133 161 140 158 192 89I 108 190, 165 152 160 202 i II 73 62 44 41 36 33 32 ____ al* Heavy Duty Steering and Suspension Parts o BALL JOINTS " IDLER ARMS " TIE ROD ENDS I .863 .623 .574 .358 .218 esterday's Results Open 10 a.m. Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sun. Something To Beileve In STUDENT ARTS and'CRAFTS FAIR Student Gallery- ist Floor Union No games scheduled Today's Games Montreal at St. Louis Toronto at Detroit Chicago at Los Angeles Only games'Scheduled SAVE ON DRY CLEANING with our CLEANING BY THE POUND SERVICE Cleaning by the Pound Offers These Advantages Over Coin Operated Dry Cleaning Machines for Your Minimum Care Garments 1. All Work Is Done by Our Experienced Dry Cleaners 2. Skilled Spotters Carefully Check Your Garments 3. Cleaning Is Done with Same Standards as Our Full Service 4. Solvent Purity Constantly Checked by Professional Cleaners 5. No Waiting. .. Drop It Off.. . Pick It Up at Your Convenience TV !L St~ren Rentals * * ~ * ~ E& EM U A r II