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March 13, 1971 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1971-03-13

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, March 13, 1971 #°

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 13, 1971 ~

0

Ui

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Liquori cops

Cobo

two-mile

11

CUNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH
1001 E. HURON
9:30 a.m.-School of Christian Living
10:30 a.m.-"Who is Jesus?"
DR. CALVIN MALEFYT speaking
5:30 p.m.-Student Supper, 50c
6:30 p.m.-Folk Worship-Communion

By SANDI GENIS
Special To The Daily
DETROIT-There was little doubt
about who was the crowd favorite
at the NCAA Track Championships
in Cobo Hall last night as Marty
Liquori, the collegiate world's ace
miler since Jim Ryun left Kansas,
was greeted with thunderous ap-
plause as he coasted to victory in
the two mile run.
In the first leg of an attempted
double for the Villanova star as his
team endeavored to cop the na-
tional title, Liquori. posted a fine
time of 8:37.1. The flamboyant star
took the lead from steeplechase
champ Sid Sink at the gun lap and
sprinted to the tape to the delight
of the near capacity crowd.
Earlier in the evening Liquori
had finished second in his pre-
liminary heat of the mile with an
adequate time of 4:06.7. He quali-
fied for the finals to be held this
afternoon when he will endeavor
to capture the indoor title from
William and Mary's Howell Mi-
cheal. Micheal, who also qualified
winning his heat with a 4:05.9 time,
pulled an amazing upset over
Liquori in Detroit last season in
copping the mile finals.

Chuck LaBenz and his fellow
competitors barely stole the light
from the collegiate competitors as
he thundered to victory in the in-
vitational mile.
Representing the Pacific Coast
Club, the former Arizona State star
narrowly missed breaking the four
minute barrier, posting a fine
4:00.9 time, for a new meet record.
Former Kansas star Brian Mc-
Elroy, who recently transferred to
Villanova, gave Kansas a few
pangs of regret as he finished third
with a time of 4:01.1.
For Wolverine fans, however, the
evening was not particularly sur-
prising or exciting. Three Michi-
gan stalwarts, Gene Brown, Mel
Reeves and John Mann managed
to fight their way to the semi-
finals.
Brown exhibited amazing tenac-
ity and fine speed as he won both
his preliminary and quarter final
heats with clockings of 6.2 and 6.1
respectively.
Brown's perennial rival, and
NCAA defending champ, Spartan
Herb Washington also turned in a
fine performance as he won both
his heats.
Kentucky's Jim Green, NCAA

J

Lam..

champ two years ago, turned the Vince Monari of UTEP ousted
same tricks to set the itaage for Kansas' Steve Wilhelm from his
some exciting competition in to- traditional second place spot, cop-
day's finals. ping that position for aimself with
Reeves, only a freshman. dis- a heave only one-half an inch short
played remarkable poise in his of Salb's. Wilhelm finished third
first NCAA meet finishing second with a 64-10112 toss.

in his preliminary heat of the 601
yard high hurdles with a 7.4 per-
formance, and third in his quarter
final heat with a 7.3 time.
But Colorado's amazing Marcus
Walker, the second ranked hurdler
in the world, stole the show with
a 7.0 time to run away with his
quarter final section.
Mann, regaining his earlier
form, qualified for the high jump
finals with a leap of 6'10".
Earlier in the afternoon, Eric
Chapman failed to qualify in the
880, posting a 1:57.0 run.
Wisconsin's Mark Winzenreid
successfully defended his 880 title
as he handily defeated Villanova's
Chris Manson, who recently posted
the fastest time ever in the three-
quarter mile. Winzenreid's time
was 1:50.9.
In the 600 yard run MSU's Bob
Cassleman, the Big Ten champ,
nearly failed to qualify for the
finals. Tied for the eighth and final
qualifying position with Indiana's
Doug Chokey, Cassleman was
awarded the spot on the basis of a
time a few hundredths of a sec-
ond faster.
Despite a mediocre day, Kan-
sas' Karl Salb accomplished the
expected and finished his indoor
collegiate career with his third
consecutive NCAA victory in the

In another weight event, the little
known 35 pound weight throw, two
Kent State stars finished 1-2 to
displace the traditional Eastern
powers. The winner, Al Schoter-
man, set a new meet end collegiate
record with a toss of 68-10 1-4.
The weightmen's performance
managed to boost the Kent State
team into a tie for first place with
Villanova.
. / 1

Order Your Daily Now-
Phone 764-0558

-Associated Press
USC trackman, Henry Hines broad jumps for 26 feet 1/4 inches in
the NCAA indoor track championships being held at Cobo Arena.
Hines' jump was good enough to earn him first place in the event.
Yesterday's action marked the first of the two day competition.

Hurons humble
KANSAS CITY (JP) - Sixth
seeded Eastern Michigan rolled
into the finals of the NAIA
basketball tournament with a
second half explosion that stun-
ned second - seeded Fairmont,
W.Va. State 89-78 lastnight.
Eastern Michigan will meet
the winner of last night's sec-
and game between ,Kentucky
State, the No. 1 seed, and 12th
s e e d e d Elizabeth City, N.C.
State for the championship to-
night.
Trailing 42-39 at the half,
Eastern Michigan took control
of the game with 12:30 remain-
ing. Kennedy McIntosh made
good on a three point play and
Earl Dixon followed with a field
goal that gave the Hurons a
63-58 lead.

4

IN NCAA REGIONALS:
Three matmen move into semis

Special To The Daily

I

DE KALB, ILLINOIS - - -
Three Michigan wrestlers ad-
vanced to the semifinals of the
National Collegiate Athletic Asso-
ciation in the preliminary rounds
yesterday, and five more have a
chance to wrestle back.
Michigan's team total of 10
points places the Wolverines in
third place in the team standings
trailing only Big Ten champion
Michiga'n State and Ohio Univer-
sity. The Spartans have 22 points
while the Bobcats earned 20.
The three advancing Wolverines,
all representatives of the middle
weight classes, are Jerry Hub-
Scores
EXHIBITION BASEBALL
Philadelphia 9, Detroit 4
Kansas City 8, New York A 6
Cincinnati 4, Minnesota 3
New York N 7, St. Louis 1
San Francisco 4, Oakland 3
Cleveland 11, Milwaukee 9, 11 inn.
Boston 5, Chicago A 0
Chicago N 8, California 7
* *B *
ABA
Indiana 106, Utah 95
New York 132, Denver 127
Texas 129, Carolina 120
ACC Tournament
So. Carolina 69, N. Carolina St. 56
No. Carolina 78, Virginia 68
College Hockey
ECAC Semi-finals
Clarkston 4, Cornell 1

I

bard (150 pounds), Tom Quinn carious position for Michigan are
(158) and Bob Huizenga (168). Jerry Hoddy, Mark King, Rick
Hubbard, along with Quinn, a Neff, Therlon Harris, and Jim
champion in the Big Ten Tourna- Hagen.
ment last week, drew a bye in the Hoddy who was impressive in
first round and then took care of the regular season competition had
Clyde Smith of Northwestern, a for- trouble with Greg Johnson of
mer Big Ten champ, to move into Michigan State and wound up on
today's semifinals. the wrong end of a 10-0 score.
Quinn, who was shifted into the Hagen and Neff were the only
158 weight class only two weeks other Wolverine grapplers to score
ago came up with two very im- triumphs in the first round, before
pressive wins on his way to the meeting their fate in the second
semis. round.
A disappointment last weekend One of Michigan's other s t a 1-
in the Big Tens Huizenga shut out warts in match - competition,
both of his foes. In the first round heavyweight Rick Bolhouse didn't
he topped Indiana's Dale Kiney, compete because of the broken
6-0, and then came through with a leg he suffered last week.
4-0 shutout of Bob Bezbechkech of The favored Spartans 'will be
Marquette to qualify for today's sending six men into the semi-
action. finals today while Iowa advances
Five losers for Michigan in yes- five, and Ohio U. sends 4. Only
terday's action still have a chance the Spartans and Hawkeyes' fin-
if their conquerors can advance ished ahead of Michigan in the
past the, semifinals. In that pre- Big Ten tourney.
:pY:"" "::{Q x"""" ; f l. f.:.. "r"{.J,"::?d!;e' "Y""'rr'.S:'".Vfltflfl"}Y.":i{ V .{r"{? ;r.. - ; R':-$r:i s ,;r t""v "'.?
"r..:Jr t":.m~:""asw".:.rv". :.....Z{.6: w ::Y.. "'i{".shrv r:..$""...h ' :::{""vs4 .

shot-put with 65-9 heave. _ _ _

HAYWOOD CASE:

Judge rules against NBA

Professional League Standings
NHL Atlanta 33 44 .424 8
East Division Cincinnati 30 46 .389 10/

II

Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Buffalo
Detroit
Vancouver
Chicago
St. Louis
Minnesota
Philadelphi
Pittsburgh
Los Angele
California

W L-T1
50 10 71
43 14 11
34 19 13
34 27 6
18 36 13
19 36 10
19 40 7
West Division
42 16 8
27 13 16
25 29 14
[a 24 30 13
20 30 17
s 19 35 12
17 46 5

Pts. GF
107 349
97 227
81 240
74 223
49 177
48 178
45 181

GA
169
151
179
182
249
243
251

Cleveland

G1 MV
i ~ 13 63 .170'
.* * * *
Western Division
Midwest Division

_ 7Z
12'la

c-Milwaukee
Chicago
Phoenix
Detroit

65 12
48 27
45 30
43 33

.844 -
.639 16
.604 '19
.560 21

LOS ANGELES UIP) - A federal
judge said yesterday he has issued
an order in the Spencer Haywood
case invalidating the National
B a s k e t b a 11 Association's rule
against signing college athletes be-
fore their class graduates.
U.S. District Court Judge War-
ren J. Ferguson ruled the NBA's
four-year rule violated the Sher-
man Antitrust Act and said he will
enjoin the league from enforcing it.
The ruling could have widespread
repercussions for professional bas-
ketball and football.
Ferguson said the order recorded
in the court minutes Wednesday
grants Haywood's motion for a
summary judgement against the
NBA.
The order was sought by a bat-
tery of attorneys representing the
Haywood interests, among them
Beverly Hills attorney Frank Roth-
man.
Haywood, being sued by' Denver
of the American Basketball Asso-
ciation in a breach of contract suit
after he jumped that team for
Seattle of the NBA on Jan. 2, in
turn filed an anti-trust suit against
the NBA. It concerned the NBA's
rule that no college player can be
drafted until his college class
graduates, a four-year period.
Denver had signed the 6-foot-8
Haywood out of the University of
Detroit as a financial hardship
case following his sophomore year
in college, and his college class
won't graduate until June.
The breach of contract suit to
start Monday here, with the anti-
trust suit to follow.

92
70
64
61
57
50
36

23
17
16

WORSHIP

Friday's Result
New York 7, Philadelphia 2
Only game scheduled.
NBA
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L Pc
New York 44 29 .6
Philadelphia 45 32 .5
Boston - 40 38 .5
Buffalo 21 56 .2

39 158
74 176
67 197
82 199
90 197
95 250
62 264
GB
3%
9
27Y2

Pacific Division
c-Los Angeles 46 30 .605
San Francisco 37 39 .487
San Diego 36 42 .462
Seattle 3 41 .461
Portland 24 52 .316
c-clinched division title
Yesterday's Results
Chicago 116, Phoenix 92
Buffalo at Los Angeles, inc.
Seattle at San Francisco, inc.
Atlanta 119, Cleveland 107
Cincinnati 124, Boston 108
Detroit at Portland, Inc.
Only games scheduled.
Today's Games
Atlanta at Cincinnati
Milwaukee at New York
Baltimore at San Diego
Detroit at San Francisco
Phoenix at Chicago
Only games scheduled.

9
11
11
22

Rothman explained that the
judge's ruling has no bearing on
the anti-trust litigation.
"All that remains of the anti-
trust action is to determine the
amount Haywood has been dam-
aged," Rothman said.
Rothman earlier represented
Haywood before the U.S. Supreme
Court, which held that the contro-
versial star could finish the season
with Seattle.
Haywood, the Most Valuable
Player and Rookie of the Year in
the ABA last season, had signed
with Denver for $1.9 million, and
then later claimed that only a
small portion of the money prom-
ised him was in cash. He refused
to play early this season until the
matter was settled, and then chose
Seattle.
He has been in and out of the
Seattle lineup since then according
to several court rulings that first
sidelined him and then the Supreme
Court decision that allowed him to
play.
Stickmen f ace
tough Oberlin
Only in their second y e a r of
representative competition, t h e
Michigan lacrosse club is "already
on a level with the other teams in
midwest lacrosse," according to
coach Bob Kaman.
Just how well this year's squad
compares with the top !teams will
be determined in part by today's
contest at Oberlin. Kaman calls
the Yeomen "traditionally one of
the powers in.hidwest lacrosse."
The stickmen have a score to
settle with Oberlin which defeated
them by a 10-8 margin last year.
The game was played on a muddy
field, which completely disrupted
the dodging style of p 1 a y the
stickmen employ.
This year, in anticipation of an-
other Ohio mud bowl, Kaman has
altered the attack of his charges.
Against the Yeomen, t h e stick
wielding Wolverines will shift to4
a fast passing game designed to
screw mother nature.
Leading the stickmen is J a y
Johnson," the best undergraduate
goalie in the midwest," in Ka-
man's estimation. Only a sopho-
more, Johnson received honorable
mention recognition to the mid-
west all-star squad.

ct.
28
84
15
73

ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
10:00 a.m.-Morning Prayers.
7:00 p.m.-Holy Communion
LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL
A.L.C.-L.C.A.
801 S. Forest
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
SUNDAY
9:30 o.m.-Holy Communion.
11:00 a.m.-Matins.
1:00 p.m.-Free-form Worship.
6:00 p.m.-Supper.
Wednesday: 7:15 p.m.-Lenten-Service.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenow Ave
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m.-Worship Services, Sunday School
(2-20 years).
WEDNESDAY
8:00 a m.-Testimonv Meeting.
Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -
Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun-
days and Holidays.
"The Truth That Heals," Radio WAAM, 1600,
Sunday, 8:45 a.m.
For transportation call 662-0813.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
On the Ccmqus-
Corner State and William Sts.
Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister
Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant
Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-
Communion Meditation, Rev. Terry N.
Smith.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)

FIRST UNITED
CHURCH AND
FOUNDATION

METHODIST
WESLEY

State at Huron and Washington
Church-662-4536
Wesley--668-6881
Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister
R. Edward McCracken, Campus Minister
9:30 a.m.-Family Worship Service.
11:00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Hoover Rupert:
"Lenten Imperatives of Jesus-Get To-
gether!"
Broadcast WNRS 1290 am, WNRZ 103 fm,
11 :00ao.m. to 12:00 noon.
WESLEY FOUNDATION ITEMS:
Sunday, March 14:
5:30 p.m.-Celebration, Wesley Lounge.
6:15 p.m.-Dinner, Pine Room.
7:00 Program-"Experiencem Charleston."
Thursday, March 18-
12:00 noon-Luncheon Discussion-"Different
Strokes for Churchy Folks"-Pine Room.
Friday, March 19:
12:00 noon - Luncheon Discussion - Pine
Room.

UNITY OF ANN ARBOR
310 S. State St.
Phone 663-4314
Marlyn William White, Minister
Ron Johnson, Associate Minister
11:00 a.m.-Sunday Service now being held
at YM-YWCA, 350 South Fifth Ave.-Ron
Johnson.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Study and Prayer Class
-Mr. White
11:00 a.m. to 12 noon Wednesday-Prayer
and Counseling, also, 12 noon to 1:00 p.m.
-Healing Service-Mrs. Mattern.
Center open Mon., Wed., and Fri., 11:00 a.m.
to 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Center open at 6:30 p.m.
Daily Word, published at Unity Village, Is
available.
CANTERBURY HOUSE
330 Maynard
Hit the road for Gilead (balm provided)
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
2580 Packard Road-971-0773
Tom Bloxam, Pastor-971-3152
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Worship-11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Training Hour-6:00 p.m.
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Erwin A. Goede, Minister
Church School and Service at 10:30 a.m.-
Sermon Topic: "What Is the Church For?"
Nursery available.
HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
3150 Glacier Way
Pastor: Charles Johnson
For information, transportation, personalized
help, etc., phone 769-6299 or 761-6749.

Central Division
c-Baltimore 40 35 .533

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Ministers:
Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser,
Donald A. Drew, Brewster H. Gere
Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m.-Preaching:
Mr. Drew.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6149
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson
Worship Services at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
Church School at 9:00 a.m.

CIO l' c t 1b°e t
'Yese
buhckit

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER-DAY SAINTS

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