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March 18, 1971 - Image 9

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-03-18

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Thursday, March 18, 1971

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

3'

Warriors

jolt

ALL AMERICANS PICKED:
Seniors rule over college elite

sagging Royals

By The Associated Press.
CINCINNATI - J e r r y Lucas'
ignited an early rally as San
Francisco mounted a 16-point lead
and rolled over Cincinnati 110-92
last night, dealing a crushing blow
to the Royals National Basketball
Association playoff hopes.
Lucas sank his first three field
goals as the Warriors- raced to a
31-15 bulge at the end of the first
quarter. They ran up the lead to:
as much as 22 points near the end
of the contest.
Lucas wound up with 15 points,
20 rebounds and seven assists.
Teammate Jeff Mullins topped
both teans with 30-points.
The Royals, now trail second-
place Atlanta in the NBA's Central
Division by two games with two
games to go. -
Sam Lacey paced the Royals
with 20 points.
Bullets barrage
BALTIMORE - Earl Monroe
and Jack Makin led a fourth-quar-
ter rally as the Baltimore Bullets
beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 113-.
109 in a National Basketball As-
sociation game last night.
The Cavaliers led 102-94 with
about six minutes left when Ma'in
hit nine consecutive points, giving
the Bullets a lead they never re-

daily*
sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
JOEL GREER
linquished as they broke their
four-game losing streak.
Walt Wesley, who led all scorers
with 33 points, converted 13 points
in the second period as the Cava'
Tiers held a 58-55 first half lead.
Monroe led Baltimore with 32
points, while Marin had 26 and
Loughery scored 24.'
Celtics charge
BOSTON - The Boston Celtics
held Walt Chamberlain to one
point in the first half, posted a
19-point halftime lead, and de-
feated the Los Angeles Lakers 112-
104 in National Basketball Asso-
ciation action last night.
John Havlicek paced Boston
with 27 points. Don Nelson added
18 and Don Chaney 17.
The Lakers, down 55-36 at the
half, made a game of it in the
second session with Chamberlain
pouring in 24 points.

From Wire Service Reports
Sidney Wicks, 6'8" jumpingjack
of UCLA and Austin Carr, 6'3"
shooting whiz of Notre Dame, top-
ped the 1971 All-American team se-
lected yesterday by the Associated
Press.
Also named to the all senior
squad were Artis Gilmore of Jack-
sonville, Jim McDaniels of West-
ern Kentucky, and Dean Memin-
ger, who led Marquette to 39
straight victories.
Henry Wilmore, super sophomore
of Michigan, received honorable
mention.
Three more seniors, a junior, and
a sophomore were named to the
second team on the basis of votes
by 479 sports reporters and an-
nouncers.
John Roche of South Carolina,
Dave Robisch of Kansas, and Cur=
tis Rowe are the seniors. Paul
,Westphall of Southern Cal is the
junior and Jim Neuman of Mis-
sissippi the sophomore.
Indiana's George McGinnis is
the only sophomore among four
seniors on the third team. The
seniors are Rich Yunkus, Howard
Porter, Fred Brown, and Cliff
Meely.
High on the list of honorable
mention were Jim Cleamons of
Ohio State, Ken Durret of LaSalle,
AP All-Americans
FIRST TEAM
Sidney Wicks, UCLA, 61S", Senior;
Austin Carr, Notre Dame, 6'3",
senior; Artis Gilmore, Jacksonville,
7121", Senior; Jim McDaniels, Ken-
tucky, 710"1, Senior; Dean Meming- _
er, 61"1, Senior.
SECOND TEAM
John Roche, S.C., 6'2f1, Senior;
Dave Robisch, Kansas, 61101, Senior;
Curtis Rowe, UCLA, 6'7", Senior;
Jim Neumann, -Mississippi, 6'6/",
Soph.; Paul Westphall, southern
Cal., 6'4", Jr.

Corkey Calhoun of Pennsylvania,)
Stan Love of Oregon, Jimmy Eng-
land of Tennessee, Tom Payne of
Kentucky, Charlie Davies of Wake
Forest, Dennis Wyucik of North
Carolina, and Charlie Yolverton of
Fordham.
Gilmore, whose college career
ended in Jacksonville's first round
loss to Western Kentucky, signed
a reported multi-million dollar
deal with the Kentucky Colonels
Tuesday.
Wicks, Carr, and Meminger will
resume play in the second round
tonight.
Wicks will lead defending NCAA'
champs UCLA against Brigham1
Young in the Far West semifinals.

Carr, coming off an outstanding
52 point performance against TCU,
will head the Irish against Drake.
Meminger, who last year starred
as Marquette swept the NIT will
try a repeat performance in the
NCAA -'tournament as Marquette
tackles Big Ten Champs Ohio State
in the Mideast. semis in Athens,
Georgia.
Wilmore, McGinnis, and Clea-
mons were the only Big Ten rep-
resentatives. Honorable mentions
were also given to John Mengelt,
Jeff Halibruton, Al Sanders, Tom
Owens, Randy Denton, Gene Phil-
lips, Eugene Kennedy, Julius Erv-
ing, Jim Chones, Dennis Layton,
and Henry Bibby.

Young in the Far West semifinals. Iand Henry Bibby.
I,

v F n
5 Come

SPRING
FEVER?
Want to get into
some thing new?

-Daily--Sara Krulwich

Football already?
The crunching sounds of bouncing bodies once again filled the air
Wolverines began spring practice at Ferry Field. The Wolverines
very un-springlike weather, and will crack for 20 sessions, ending

yesterday, when the 1971 Michigan
started a day late because of the
with the spring game on April 17.

MASS MEETING
Wed., March 24-8 P.M.
420 MAYNARD ST.

Irish battle Bulldogs

ASTRODOME BOUND
Marquette invades Regionals

By The Associated Press
Notre Dame, only team to beat
top-ranked UCLA this season, bat-
tles Drake and Houston faces
Kansas tonight in the NCAA Mid-
west regional basketball playoffs.
The Notre Dame-Drake game
starts at 8:05 p.m. EST, and Hous-
ton, No. 14, runs up against No.
4 Kansas at 10:05 p.m.
Notre Dame, ranked No. 12, has
the biggest individual star among
the four teams in Austin Carr, the
nation's second leading point pro-
ducer, who has a 38-point average.
Carr scored 52 points Saturday
night4at Houston in Notre Dame's
102-94 NCAA first round victory
over Texas Christian. Irish coach
Johnny Dee says of Carr: "I've
felt guilty about not having paid
to see him play." Dee regards
Drake as a team which has fine
quickness and likes to run.
Drake's big scorer is Jeff Hal-
hiburton with an 18.3 average.
Houston, 21-6, led by Dwight
Davis and Poo Welch, gained a
Midwest regional berth by wiping
out a 19-point deficit and going on
to whip New Mexico State 72-69 in
the first round.
Kansas, 25-1, breezed through
. the Big Eight Conference 14-0,
and has a 19-game winning streak.
Kansas has four players in
double figures, the' ringleader

Dave Robisch with an 18-5 aver-
age.
Ellsewhere, UCLA, which drew
a bye into the West Regional
semifinals at Salt Lake City, will
play Brigham Young of the Wes-
tern Athletic Conference. Inde-
pendent Long Beach State will
play the University of the Pacific
on the West Coast Conference.
In the East Regional semifinals
at Raleigh, N.C., Ivy League
champion Pennsylvania, 27-0, and
the only other undefeated team in
the tournament, meets South
Carolina of the Atlantic C o a. s t
Conference, and independent Vil-
lanova plays independent Ford-
ham.
The winners of tonight's games
will play for the regional titles
Saturday and then the four sur-
vivors will play in Houston March
25 with the championship game
there March 27.
UCLA, No. 1 in the final Asso-
ciated Press poll, takes a 25-1
record into its game with Brigham
Young, 19-9. The Bruins earned a
shot at their fifth straight na-
tional crown by winning the Pa-
cific-8 title with a victory over
arch-rival Southern California last
Saturday. Sidney Wicks, 6-foot-8
who hits the boards like a bigger
man and moves like a smaller one,
is the key to the Bruins' cham-
pionship dreams.

ATHENS, Ga. (P) - Dean Me-
minger of Marquette and Jim Mc-
Daniels of Western Kentucky head
the cast of individual stars in the
National Collegiate Athletic As-
sociation's power-packed Mideast
Regional basketball tournament
which begins tonight.
Each of the four teams com-
peting for a berth in next week's
NCAA finals at Houston's Astro-
dome was ranked among the na-
B erg-man
back With
Red Wings
Special To The Daily
Everything is back to normal on'
the Detroit Red Wings, at least
for the time being.
The latest cause for concern
was defenseman Gary Bergman
who, after the first period of
Tuesday's game against the Bostonf
Bruins, was sent home by Wing
coach Doug Barkley. According
to one report, Bergman left the
bench during the first period
shouting to Barkley, "You call this
a hockey club?"
The Red Wings went on to lose
the game to the Bruins by an 11-
4 score.
Yesterday morning, the t w o
combatents met at length at Ol-
ympia and settled (at least tem-
porarily) their differences. Neith-
er Barkley nor Bergman issued a
statement.
Late yesterday afternoon,. t h e
Red Wing publicity office report-
ed that Bergman attended a noon
meeting of the club and w o u l d
make the trip to Boston for to-
day's game.
According to a spokesman for
the Red Wings, "Barkley a n d
Bergman have talked things over
and settled their differences. We
expect that right now, Mr. Berg-
man is on his way to Metropolitan
Airport to catch the plane f o r
Thursday's game.'
Thus ends the latest chapter in1
the demise of the Detroit Red
Wings.

tion's top ten teams in the final
Associated Press poll.
Meminger, an excellent play-
maker, average 21 points per game
in leading the Warriors, ranked
second in the nation, through an
undefeated regular season and a
62-47 triumph over Miami of Ohio
in the Mideast first round last
week.
Marquette, ,27-0, this year and
winner of 39 straight, faces Big
Ten champion Ohio State in the
regional opener at 7:05 p.m. EST.
Southeastern Conference champ
Kentucky battles Western K e n-
tucky in the second game at 9:05
p.m. in the first meeting ever be-
tween the two Kentucky schools
rich in basketball tradition.
Western is ranked No. 7, Ken-
tucky eighth and Ohio State 10th.
Western earned its berth 1 a s t
Saturday by rallying from an 18-
point deficit to eliminate last
year's national runner-up, Jack-
sonville, 74-72. McDaniels, a 7-
footer who averaged 29.2 points in
regular season, scored two - vital
tip-ins on missed free throws late
in the game against the Dolphins.
McDaniels is the only senior
among four centers ranging in
height from 6-foot-11 to 7-foot-2.
The tallest is Kentucky's Tom

Payne, the school's first black var-
sity basketball player, and t h e
shortest is Jim Chones of Mar-
quette.
Payne and Chones are sopho-
mores, as is Ohio State's 7-footer,
Luke Witte.
Coach Adolph Rupp, the na-
tion's winningest coach with an
853-181 record, is sending his
Kentucky team into the NCAA
tournament for a record 19th
time. The Wildcats have won four
NCAA championships and finished
second once.
Al McGuire, the colorful Mar-
quette coach, owns a 252-117 ca-
reer mark and his winning streak
of 39 has been bettered only six
times in major college history.
Scores
EXHIBITION BASEBALL
New York N 6, Kansas City 1
Los Angeles 5, Washington 4
St. Louis 4, Philadelphia 3
Houston 8, Boston 2
Cincinnati 5, Detroits
Montreal 10, San Francisco 9
Oakland 7, Cleveland 3
NCAA College Division
Old Dominion 81, Puget Sound 80,'ot
So. Louisiana 110, Assumption 99
Kentucky Wesleyan 89, Cheney State
83

Professional League Standings{

-

EAST VS. WEST:
. N ational ice finals begin

SYRACUSE (iP)-The University1
of Denver, five times national
champion, and the University of+
Minnesota moved East yesterday1
to prepare for competition in the
National Collegiate Athletic Asso-
ciation's hockey championships.7
The two entrees from the West:
will be taking on the teams of
Harvard and Boston University
during three days of competition
at the Onondaga War Memorial
that begins tonight.
The Denver Pioneers have two
all-freshman lines, one of which
is their top scoring combination.'
The Eastern teams are not allowed
to play freshmen on the varsity.
Playing on one of the freshman
lines, Vic Venasky captured the
Western Collegiate Hockey Asso-
ciation scoring title with 14 goals
and 25 assists during Denver's 22
game league schedule.
Both Denver and Minnesota
started off poorly this year and:
it wasn't certain until two weeks
*'before the end of the season that'
Minnesota was even going to make:
the playoffs..

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

NHL
East Division
W L TI
52 10 71
44 14 11
3 21 13
34 29 6
19 37 13
20 38 10
19 42 7
West Division
44 16 9
29 23 17
26 30 15

Pts. GF GA
111 356 176
99 228 151
83 248 190
74 225 186
51 182 258
50 192 264
45 188 264

A series sweep over Michigan
clinched the playoff berth for the
Gophers with only two games left
to play.
Denver, on the other hand,
struggled to a mid-season 4-6
MCHA record but a twin victory
at Michigan sparked the Pioneers
to win 11 of their final 12 league
games.
WCHA champion Michigan
Tech, favorites all year to take
the NCAA crown, was surprisingly
knocked out of the playoffs early
by North Dakota.

a
!s

25
20
20
17

30
31
36
47

13
18
12
5

97 254
75 193
67 174
63 185
58 191
52 202;
39 167;

167
182
204
201
202
268
272

NBA
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pct. GB
x-Milwaukee 66 44 .825 --
Chicago 50 28 .641 15
Phoenix 46 32 .590 19
Detroit 45 35 .551 22
Pacific Division
x-Los Angeles 47 33 .592 -
San Francisco 40 40 .500 5
San Diego 37 42 .468 9V
Seattle 36 42 .462 10
Portland 25 53 .321 21'
Eastern Conference
Central Division
x-Baltimore 41 38 .517 --
Cincinnati 35 47 .415 8I
Atlanta 35 45 .438 6I/
Cleveland 14 65 .176 27
Atlantic Division
x-New York 51 29 .638 -
PhIladelphia 45 34 .570 5Y2
Boston 42 38 .522 9
Buffalo 22 58 .275 29
x-Clinched division title.
Yesterday's Results
San Francisco 110, Cincinnati 92
Boston 112, Los Angeles 104
Baltimore 113, Cleveland 109

Yesterday's Results
Pittsburgh at California, inc.
Only game scheduled.
. Today's Games
Toronto at Montreal
New York at Philadelphia
Detroit at Boston
St. Louis at Buffalo
Chicago at Los Angeles
only games scheduled

I

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HKI

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i3=4

1

This is the shoe that shod the foot
that trod the way,,that led to the shop *

For the student body:
LEVI'S

I

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

Idea No. 1-was sent in some letters, "If the wordly kings, the powers
that be, God's representatives and other thinking people had anything but
contempt for women and their ability to develop a cell to human life. It would
show in the names of hospitals. There is not even a uniform recording system
to gain facts and ideas from pregnancy." To the many hospitals I sent litera-
ture to I found only 3 names that might relate: Chicago Lying-In Hospital,
Neighborhood Maternity, Bronx, N.Y., Hospital of the Women's Medical College
of the State of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Idea No. 2-If we had absolute control of reproduction there might be a
whole new body of knowledge that could be accumulated; "Pre-pregnancy
services to women." Would it be possible to say? "A woman of your type de-
veloping a baby of 4 lbs. or more will have to have it delivered by Caesarian
methods."
Idea No. 3-Absolute control of reproduction (biological and spiritual)
might eliminate war. "How?" There will be no unwanted kids. They will not
be suicides because they were brought up full of sin. They could be brought
up with contempt for senility that uses their life in war, "To make a better
world for someone yet unborn."
Idea No. 4-All conquering powers have 2 institutions working for them:
Religion and the Military. If we had absolute control of reproduction (bio-
logical and spiritual) without emotional and intellectual degeneration. They
would slowly be phased out by criticism and intelligence. A kid might reason
that the Pilgrims did not come here for religious beliefs. They were driven
here by planned planted beliefs to build an empire. Their descendants de-
stroyed the Indians but the Pilgrims did not fight their persecutors in England.
Compare with the survival of the Indians in South America built by the re-
ligious Spanish empire.
Idea No. 5-Nothing will change the composition of the mind more than
absolute control of reproduction. And no discovery: God, the wheel, the atom
bomb will have more effect. Imagine each kid having numerous choices on
how to guide its mind with comparative ideas and results. And have a reason-
ably happy emotional development all through life, and record the results for

CORDUROY
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(All Colors)
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S may that sold sthe shoe
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as a swallow to

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