'Wursday, March 11, 197 i THE MICHIGAN DAILY Anne Nina '~iursday, March 11, ~l97i THE MICHIGAN DAILY' r ,ayc 1 I lr M Michigan takes N first in Big Michigan accepted a bid to the National Invitation b a s- ketball tournament yesterday to become the first Big T e n NIT participant in history. The Wolverines were extended 4ie invitation after the Big Ten changed its rules this season to allow any conference team other than the champion to play in the NIT. Michigan clinched at least a tie for second place Tuesday night by defeating Iowa,.86-82. Conference winner Ohio State will play in the National Col- legiate Athletic Association tourn- ament. The 16-team tourney will be played in New York's Madison Square Garden from March 20-27. Besides Michigan, teams already selected are St. John's, N.Y., Pro- vidence, Massachusetts, St. Bona- venture, LaSalle, Georgia T e c h, Hawaii, Syracuse, Tennessee, Day- ton and Oklahoma. There are four places yet to be filled and at least one is expected from the Missouri Valley Confer- ence and the Atlantic Coas ference. Drake, Louisville a Louis all tied for first in the and an NCAA representive selected this weekend wit others eligible for the NIT An ACC champion will be ed in a conference wide t ment this weekend, and th will select f r o m the rem schools. Also, another Bi school still could be picked. possibilities are independen New Mexico, Utah S., West State or Rutgers. Michigan last appeared in season play in 1966, Cazzie sell' last year, when the W ines lost to UCLA in the IT bid; history t Con- tournament finals, 91-90. Michi- nd St. gan had reached the semi-finals MVC, the two previous seasons. will be The tournament will mark the 1h the return of 6-4 sophomore ace Henry. -. Wilmore to his home-town, and he select- is looking forward to the trip. ourna- "Madison Square Garden is every te NIT New York kid's dream," Wilmore aining said. g Ten He said he didn't think he would Other be hindered by nervousness be- ts like cause of appearing in the Garden. Texas "I think it would inspire me to do better," he said. a post- Rus- rolver- NCAA The. only definite team the Wolverinesl this year is Hawaii, Michigan lost, 83-76. Ali wants rematch; Frazier uncommitted .. tournament have played to whom -Associated Press PITTSBURGH GOALIE Doug Favell (1) intercepts a pass from Penguin center Ron Schock (17) as he tries to center the puck. The Penguins and Flyers, both fighting for fourth place, ended in a 2-2 tie. NEW YORK VP) - Joe Frazier did not rule out yesterday a" re- turn fight with Muhammad Ali but also said he would seriously con- sider his manager's advice to re- tire. Rest and relaxation come first, said Frazier after emerging from seclusion to tape a television inter- view to be beamed to England. The champion said he would talk' with Manager Yank Durham about the possibility of retiring. Dur- ham said after Frazier's victory over All that he would recommend Frazier retire. But when told Ali had said he would like a rematch, Frazier re- plied, "Sure, I'll fight him-any time he wanted it." As for All's statement that he thought he won the fight, Frazier said: "He's talking about another fight, not the one with me." The rights to a rematch are owned by Fight of The Champions, headed by Jerry Perenchio and Jack Kent Cooke, and such a fight would be held in Cooke's Forum in the Los Angeles suburb of Ingle- wood. Meanwhile, the New York State Athletic Commission announced yesterday it has suspended Drew Bundini Brown, Muhammad Ali's assistant trainer, for excessive coaching and other infractions during Monday night's fight against Joe Frazier. A commission spokesman said the indefinite suspension was levied against Brown at ringside during the heavyweight champloniship bout at Madison Square Garden by Executive Secretary Armand Star- ace, who .was in Ali's corner. The action was confirmed Tuesday by Chairman Edwin Dooley and the commission. The spokesman said Brown was warned throughout the fight for coaching too much and shouting instructions to Ali during the ac- tion. Then, according to the commis- sion, when All was knocked down in the opening seconds of the 15th round, Brown soaked a sponge in a bucket of water and made a flinging motion, sending a spray of water on his downed fighter-- and on reporters, photographers and spectators. For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits.....$6.98 (All Colors) Bells......$8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans .. $10.00 Bells.........$8.)0 Pre-Shrunk .. $7.50 Super Slims ... $7:00 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty -- # HAWKS TOP SUNS Cincinnati sneaks past Knicks By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Nate Archibald erupted for seven points in over- time as the Cincinnati Royals nip- ped New York 120-118 last night and kept their National Basketball Association playoff hopes flicker- ing. Norm Van Lier sank a field goal with 50 seconds to kgo in the over- time for what proved to be the winning shot as the Royals came back after blowing a 17-point mar- gin in the third period. Archibald, held to only five points until late in the fourth quarter, hit one three-point play in the extra period and two field goals. Tom Van Arsdale netted 16 of his game-high 31 points in the third period as the Royals moved out to their big lead. But the Knicks, minus injured guard Walt Frazier, knotted the game at the end of regulation at 104-104 with two seconds to go on a shot by Willis Reed. Pete pops 37 ATLANTA - P e t e Maravich poured in 37 points last night and daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: RANDY PHILLIPS led the Atlanta Hawks to a 139- 98 National Basketball Association victory over the Phoenix Suns. It was Atlanta's fifth straight victory but its first in five games with Phoenix this year. Maravich also had nine assists and sat out the final nine minutes of the game after Atlanta had built a 40-point lead. Ivy League approves freshmen NEW YORK MP- - The presi- dents of the eight Ivy League col- leges have approved the use of freshmen athletes beginning in the fall except in those sports which consist of team competition. The sports which still may not use freshmen are football, basket- ball, baseball, hockey, soccer, la- crosse and crew. In the fall, first-year students will be eligible for such sports as cross-country, track, swimming, wrestling, fencing and tennis. The Hawks, trailing 11-4, scored Gene Pronovost gave Pittsburgh 14 straight points during a three- a 1-0 lead early in the second per- minute span that pushed them to iod on a 20-foot slap-shot but Gary a 25-14 lead late in the opening Dornhoefer tied the game with a quarter. Atlanta built it to 17 40-footer at 15:58 of the period, points late in the quarter and led 75-51 at halftime. The Penguins went ahead again * * * when Ron Schock rolled into the rnnn~n ~1,~Y,,rlFlyers' zone and centered it. The -Daily-Terry McCarthy Ken Brady (15) lays one in v Professional League Standings } TORONTO - Norm Ullman's 30th goal of the season in the third period carried the Toronto Maple Leafs to a 2-1 victory last night over the Montreal, Cana- diens, before 16,485 N a t i o n a l Hockey League fans. Ullman's goal, with just over six minutes remaining, came on a perfect passout from linemate Ron Ellis and ended a see-saw battle in which Canadiens' John Fergu- More Sports, Page 7 son was assessed a rare triple minor penalty. Rookie Denis Dupere counted his first NHL goal to open Toronto's scoring at 10:10 of the first period. Ferguson got the Canadiens back on even terms with the only goal of the second period at 6:01. * * * Flyers draw Penguins PITTSBURGH - Jean Guy Gen- dron tipped in a rebound early in the third period to life Philadelphia to a 2-2 tie with the Pittsburgh Penguins in a National Hockey League game last night. M CHARGER' FLARES No-iron solids, stripes and plaids. $10 to $11.. QUALITY 1 IS HERE .. . I . ITALIAN ICES-ICE CREAM SHERBETS-FRENCH ICE CREAM ICE CREAM ROLLS-HAND PACK ICE CREAM/CAKE ROLLS 33 FLAVORS ICE CREAM SHOP at "THE CORNER"-PACKARD & STATE GT AffENTIO -mm puck went in off the body of Phil- adelphia's Bobby Clarke. Schock was credited with the goal. U hs:f}" lA'?SY "'"'{:rri:rrti?:}?+Y:4 ."T.":rqg,{" p;"'rr.. .,.,...,... Yr:". ,"'rf " "r.':"i;r.";r.4X;ยข;"'i;." : f ": r":;: };:;:i;>A;:;r{.. S .. t f.:vi"Xv::.:.."r. .:.. I? 11 Scores EM I . G e ^- " NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L Pet. NHL East Division C New York 49 29 .628 - Philadelphia 45 32 .584 Boston 40 36 .526 1 affalo 21 56 .273 2 Central Division c-Baltimore 40 34 .541 - Atlanta 32 44 .421 1 Cincinnati 29 46 .387 1 Cleveland 13 62 .173 2 Western Conference Midwest Division e-Milwaukee 65 12 .844 - Chicago 47 27 .635 1 llpoenix 45 29 .608 11 Detroit 42 32 .568 2( Pacific Division c-Los Angeles : 46 30 .605 - San Francisco 37 39 .487 San Diego 35 42 .455 1 Seattle 34 41 .453 11 Portland 23 52 .307 2F c-Clinched division title Yesterday's Results tlanta 139, Phoneix 98 incinnati 120, New York 118, o.t. Only games scheduled. 8, 27% 9 11? 27 16Y/ 18%~ 02/ 9 11Y 1 i/ 123/ Boston New York Montreal Toronto Buffalo Detroit Vancouver W Chicaga St. Louis Minnesota Philadelphia Pittsburgh Los Angeles California w 48 42 34 34 18 19 18 L 10 14 19 27 36 35 40 T1 73 11 13 13 10 7 Pts. GF GA 103 314 166 95 220 149 81 240 179 74 223 182 49 177 249 48 175 236 43 174 248 92 239 158 70 174 1712 62 163 197 61 18Q~ 192 57 190 197 50 193 252 39 161 256 EXHIBITION BASEBALL Yesterday's Results Houston 4, New York N. 3 Minnesota 5, New York A. 2 Pittsburgh 7, Philadelphia 4 St. Louis 7, Detroit 5 Boston 5, Chicago A. 4 Atlanta 6, Montreal 4 Tokyo Giants 7, Kansas City 4 Los Angeles 13, Cincinnati 2 Baltimore 14, Washington 2 Chicago N. 2, Cleveland 1 Milwaukee 4, San Diego 0 San Francisco 14, California 1 Tokyo Lotte Orions 12, Oakland 6 M6 W,,,ELCH'S GRAPE JELLY 20 OZ. JAR U U U U39c Nest Division 42 27 24 24 20 19 17 16 22 29 29 30 34 45 8 16 14 13 17 12 5 CARNATION INSTANT BREAKFAST 7.2 OZ. PKG. . 49c Yesterday's Results Toronto 2, Montreal 1 New York 4, Chicago 2 Boston at California, inc. Philadelphia 2, Pittsburgh 2, tie St. Louis at Minnesota, inc. Only games scheduled. Today's Games Detroit at Vancouver Boston at Los Angeles Only games scheduled. " . : . { :' :"t{ . :t.. . . . . . . . :: .. . . . . . . . ." w TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi -------------------- i fir': I am a TRINITARIAN UIsoughbt my Sorel, but myr soul I cou lan't see. I sought my Goa but my Goa eluaea me. I sought my Bnothen ana I found ALL THREE. Our youngest seminarian helps the prisoner, the addict, the alcoholic, the retarded, the migrant - the left out. We don t all directly touch the poor. Some teach, staff parishes, preach, do research work. Come live the generous love of the Trinitarian way. Father Joseph - Grey Rock, Garrison, Maryland 21055 1 Dear Father Joseph, Tell me about your way of life. Name g * age ' Address City State Z ip (check preference) Priest Brother _ ---- --~- - - PALMOLIVE GREEN BATH SOAP CAMPBELLS TOMATO SOUP 10 OZ. CAN . lOc WHITE SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUE.. 200 2-PLY . .. 5for1.00 5 OZ. BAR 9Oc I CAMPBELLS TOMATO JUICE . 12 OZ. CAN .. ..10c I HAWAIIAN PUNCH 46 OZ. CAN ..... . 3for89c Transcendental meditation is a natural spontaneous tech- nique which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve his life. INTRODUCTORY LECTURE Angell Hall Aud. B 8:00 P.M. Thursday, March 11l i :: :: ::: ; : :: / MEALS IN MINUTES CHEF BOY,-AR-DEE RAVIOLA MEALS IN MINUTES CHEF BOY-AR-DEE LASAGNA 15 OZ. CAN 15 .29C 15!2OZ. CAN . . .. 29c CHEF BOY-AR-DEE MEAT BALL STEW 30 OZ. CAN . . 69c I Rls PILLSBURY SPACE STICKS 5 OZ.PKG s 319c Prices good thru Sat., March 20th, 1971 Forest Food Mart Forest at Huron Village Food Mart South U. at Church Suburbia Food & Drug Stadium at Packard A-1's he-to-..tO W ln. I COLD BEER AND WINE The great ones. Mercedes- Benz, Ferrari, Lotus Ford, Cerv 11 (0 to 60 in 2.8 secs.), plus some fifty others spanning 65 years. Im TheAction Package Liquor Complete Unique c,.,. Package Liquor h..,1.. 1W . 1 I I rod tneater I