Thursday, Dete ber 31 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page SevenM T h ur d ~ y D e c m b e 3, 9 7 0T H E I C H G A N A I L Pistons roll over Knicks By The Associated Press DETROIT - Dave Bing and! Jimmy Walker led the scoring as- sault last night as the Detroit Pis-G tons snapped the New York Knicks' six-game winning streak 101-82. in a National Basketball Association game. Bing whipped in 29 points while Walker added 22 as the Pistons recovered from a slow start to# gain the lead in the second quar- ter when they knocked in eight! straight points and remained in front the rest of the way. The Pistons took a 55-47 half- time lead, before breaking the game wide open in the final period. j Montreal's other scores were by Guy LaPointe and Cournoyer. * * * dlailyF Rangers dump Blues NEW YORK - The New York p o Rangers, stopped cold most of the first two. periods, exploded with NIGHT EDITOR: three, last-period goals and whip- JIM KEVRA ped the St. Louis Blues 4-2 last night in the National Hockey League. sixth straight National Basketball The only offense New York was Association victory. able to manage was a tip-in shot Don Chaney added two free by Ted Irvine at 5:02 of the sec- throws with two seconds left after ond period as Blues' netminder third period, gave the Chicago Goldsworthy got the winner on Black Hawks a 4-3 victory over a power play at 4:31 of the second the Boston Bruins in a fight- period. filled National Hockey League * * * game last night. Pros pummel Pacers Phil Esposito, the league's lead- ing scorer, picked up all of Bos- INDIANOPOLIS-The Memphis ton's goals with a three-goal hat Pros outscored Indiana 11-1 in the trick, final two minutes last night and The victory, which extended the whipped the Pacers 106-100 in an Amaia BRertalAanarv i the Celtics let an uncontested The winning Jerry West score layup. streak is the long- The New York scoring total was est for the Celtics since December, the lowest of the season for the 1967. Havlicek led the Celtics in defending champions whose pre- scoring with 20 points. Wilt vious low was 91 points against Chamberlain and West had 29 Baltimore two weeks ago. points for the Lakers. Willis Reed with 17 points top- * * * -Associated Press DAVE DE BUSSCHERE, star forward for the New York Knickerbockers, gets off a pass in last night's game against the Detroit Pistons as Erwin Muller attempts to block the ball. DeBus- schere's 11 points weren't enough as the Knicks fell to the red-hot Pistons, 101-82. Dave Bing had 29 to lead the Pistons in scoring. ped the Knicks. Celtics sink Lakers BOSTON - JoJo White hit a 20-foot jump shot in the closing moments last night and John Havlicek added a clutch free throw with six seconds to play as the Boston Celtics defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 114-111 for their "'tin ON FRENCH SEPARATISM ProU By TERRI FOUCHEY Heightened awareness of his situation in society, and of the operation of that whole society surrounding him is slowly be- coming the stereotype of t h e college athlete. His knowledge (and intelligent conversation) no longer ends with the f i n e points of his sport, but he can, and will, in guarded comments, talk about the world around the playing field and how he feels about it. This has been especially ob- vious in the actions and words of black athletes across the na- tion. Last spring's BAM strike at Michigan is an example of this. However, this awareness and willingness to speak and act is not restricted to black ath- letes alone. Recent occurrences in Can- ada made the world take a se- cond look and give a second thought to the whole French- Canadian situation. Several Michigan athletes come f r o m Quebec. Two members of the hockey team, junior forward, Bernie Gagnon and junior de- fenseman Punch Cartier, d i s- cuss growing up in this situa- tion, their views of the recent happenings, and the French- Canadian separatist movement. GAGNON DESCRIBES t h e basic situation. "What the sep- aratist movement wishes is a Quebec separate from the rest of Canada, economically, soc- ially, and culturally." There are several organizations working towards separation. "Very few people support the FLQ (Front de Liberation du Quebec). How- evr, 24 per cent voted for the moderate PQ (Parti Quebecois) in the election last April." The PQ wishes to separate through legal procedure and proclaims; long-term goals for separation. S 'He' continues, "Montreal is two-thirds French, one-third English, and yet there are three English universities and only one French university to serve the majority of the population. French Canadians are demand- ing that the federal governmnt wake up to their needs. We're asking for justice in the laws and the opportunities offered us." Gagnon dos not feel that con- ditions are such that he is or has been treated as a second class citizen. "We have to work as hard as an Englishman to get a job. There are some sim- ilarities with the black situation in, the U.S., but that is by far worse that what we have en- dured." One of the similarites he does feel exists is the fact that the non-violent m-thod emoloyed in the early Civil Rights Move- Quebec, icen.4 -7 i ., 1v ment is probably th way through which French Canadians w i 11 gain equality. This more moderate stance is why he feels the PQ holds the key to Quebec's future. "Most older people have turned against both the FLQ and the PQ. The English, in fact, think that the recent trouble has brought Canada togethr. However, t h e youth still supports the PQ and they are French Canada's fu- ture." ANOTHER REASON he be- lieves youth will be the van- guard is that education is one of the necessary steps to gain- ing the separatist goal. "T h e French system used to allow col- leg entrance after 11 grades, but the government has chang- ed it to be closer to the English. Now it is required that stu- dents in French schools go to 13 grades, with the thirteenth grade becoming equivalent to the first year of college. The English system is similar to the American with 12 grades and then college. This change has hurt a great many people, especially those between 18 and 21. It will also be hampered by the fact that there will now be more people prepared for college and still the same amount of French Universities. The fed- eral government, along with en- acting this change should also spend more to create more French univeristies and raise the subsidies of existing univer- sities." Gagnon thinks that separa- tion cannot be achieved u n t il American investment has been removed from Quebec and he feels that economically is the only way through which French Canada can obtain its independ- ence. Education is important be- cause we can use it to get into the English and America con-' trolled systems and succeed and gain independence. It's basically using all the opportunities they present us within their own sys- tems and helping ourselves with the results afterwards." * * * - PUNCH CARTIER takes a more militant view, but not to the point where he is ready to kidnap someone . "Everything's involvd in this, our language, culture, education system. I see many similarities to the black struggle in America. We're try- ino, to assert our own identity just as they are and to have a say in what becomes of us." He adds, "Canada is a strat- ified society and we're the strat- um that has to reach up to the standards of the English. If we apply for a job in Montreal, w hav to be bi-lingual, the Eng- lish don't." His sympathies lie with t h e FLQ, but he agrees with Gagnon that moderate, non-violent tac- tics will gain more. "FLQ is faster, but it won't get any- where. I kind of dig the FLQ, but it's a situation where we have to outmouth them, rather than shoot them. In my mind, the PQ is existing, the FLQ is living." The most important part of his heritage is his language. "I don't want to lose my language. It's the part of my culture that I especially want to pass on to my children. It is also the one area where entering the English Canadian system demands weakening the cultural link. "In order to get a start in any area, from school to a job, one has to be bi-lingual. One of the most important" points of the separatist idea to me is the fact that the French schools and universities could concentrate on French culture and still be sub- sidized equally and eventually work up to the level of the Eng- lish system. If they give us the opportunity for education, or if we make the opportunity our- selves, we'll show that we can do as much as an Englishman, without being bi-lingual." CONCERNING recent events, Cartier sees them as initiating a panic of opinion against all sep- aratist organizations. "The whole affair ridicules what the PQ had been doing prior to that time. The twenty-four per cent vote is evidence that a great many people support the PQ. Most people felt that the PQ had been doing a good job un- til the FLQ started. "After that many who had been sympathetic, if not sup- portive, turned against the whole separatist movement, not just the radicals who had in- stigated the trouble. It's a pan- icky reaction, but now the ma- jority have lumped the two groups together and will no longer be sympathetic with even the moderate aims of the PQ." Cartier agrees with Gagnon that youth will be in the fore- front of the movement for a sparate Quebec. "Since it's deal- ing with long term change youth are really the only ones who can carry it through and so they and their support a r e vital to the separatist move- ment." THE PRIME MINISTRY of Pierre Trudeau has not helped the cause of French Canadian separatism in any way, he feels. "I don't like him, because he hasn't really done anything special. For all he's done for us it's the same as having an Eng- lishman as prime minister. Many observers outside of Canada think that the ultimate aim of a separate Quebc is to eventually unite with F r a n c e. Cartier disagrees, "Quebec gain, ing their independence has no relation with France. W h e n DeGaulle made that 'vive Que- bec libre' statement a few years ago, he had no right to because it's none of his business. Cartier's ambition is to some- day play pro hockey. If he plays for an American team he in- tends to retain his Canadian citizenship. "I'm a Canadian, a French Canadian and if there's any way I can help the French- man, I'd love to do it." Sonics dethrone Royals CINCINNATI-Don Kojis, with 30 points, led the Seattle Super- Sonics back from a 25 point half- time deficit to upend the Cincin- nati Royals 119-111 in a National Basketball Association contest last night. Seattle, down 66-41 at the half, outscored Cincinnati 75 to 45 in the second half. The game was halted in the third period when a fight broke out between the Royals' Johnny Green and Tom Meschary. Green had scored all his 19 points in the first half. Pete Cross, 6-foot-9 Seattle center, put the game away with a late layup making it 115-109. Cincinnati's Norm Van Lier- haer had 22 points and 17 assists. * * * Penguins, Canadiens tie PITTSBURGH-Pete Mahovlich scored on a rebound shot midway in the third period to give the Montreal Canadiens a 3-3 tie with the Pittsburgh Penguins in a Na- tional Hockey League game last night. The Penguins held a 3-2 lead scoring all their goals within nine minutes of the second period, two by Ken Schinkel, the Penguins leading scorer with 20 points and another by Nick Harbaruk. Mahovlich took a rebound of a shot by Yvan Cournoyer and drill- ed it past goalie Les Binkley for the tying goal. 1 _ I t i t } I i 1 r; ,', Ernie Wakley battled the Rangers with acrobatic goal-tending. But Ron Stewart scored in the' third period on a breakaway shot and Jean Ratelle and Dave Balon added the crushers later in the stanza. Jim Lorentz and Jim Roberts had third-period goals for the Blues. The victory extended the Rang- ers' home ice streak to 12 games without a loss. * * * Leafs annihilate Kings TORONTO - tree goals by, Dave Keon, including two while Toronto was a man short, and shutuot goaltending by 41-year- old Jacques Plante last night car- ried the Toronto Maple Leafs to a 7-0 National Hockey League victory over the Los Angeles Kings. The two short-handed goals were the fifth and sixth Keon has scored this year. Ron Ellis, with two, Darryl Sit- tIer and Norm Ullman were the other Toronto scorers. Plante's shutout, the first by a Toronto goalie this year, was the 74th of his career. * * * Hawks bump Bruins CHICAGO-Dennis Hull's sec- ond goal of the night, early in the Hawks' unbeaten streak on homeI ice to 13, moved them six points! ahead of St. Louis in the West.I Boston dropped into a first place tie with New York in the East. The night's main brawl broke out late in the first period with the score tied at 2-2. Chicago's Jim Pappin and Bruin defense- man Don Awrey came together at the Chicago blue line and soon fists were flying. Both benches emptied shortly thereafter and referee John Ash- ley issued five minute penalties to Awrey, Johnny McKenzie and Ted Green of the Bruins and to Pap- pin, Keith Magnuson and Dan Maloney of the Hawks. Maloney and Lou Angotti scored' Chicago's other goals. North Stars shine MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Bill Goldsworthy ended a 16-game goal-scoring slump last night with, a tie breaker that thrust the Min- nesota North Stars over the Cali- fornia Seals 3-2 in a National Hockey League game topped off by a wild, free-for-all fight. Both benches cleared as fights erupted across the ice with three minutes to play. Tom Reed of the North Stars and Tony Feather- stone of the Seals started the brawl. Referee Ron Wicks dished out 32 minutes in penalties and eject- ed Goldsworthy and California's Dennis Hextall, who engaged in the longest battle. american asketbaii association game. .1 Steve Jones and James Jones paced the Pros with 24 and 21 points. Both scored 15 points in the second half as Memphis made a one-point halftime edge stand- up. Leading scorers for Indiana were Bob Netolicky and Freddie Lewis with 22 each. " Nagel quits Iowa position By The Associated Press DAVENPORT -- University of Iowa football coach Ray Nagel an- nouncd that he would not seek an extension of his contract which expires on I)ecember 21, of this 'year. He led the Hawkeys to a 16-32-2 record during his five year stay at the university. In stepping down after five con- troversial years that saw the 43 yar old ex-UCLA standout move from one crisis to another, Nagel lauded the school's football pro- gram. "In my five .years at Iowa the program has made great suc- cess. It is a healthy football pro- gram and one of the strongest in the Big Ten. The future is very bright." Iowa went 3-6-1 in 1970 and fih- ished fourth in the Big Ten, i t s highest placing in ten years. Professional League Standings NHL East Division W L T Pt' Boston 14 5 4 32 New York 14 5 4 32 Montreal 11 8 4 26 Vancouver 10 13 3 23 Detroit 8 11 3 19 Toronto 7 15 1 15 Buffalo 4 13 4 12 West Division Chicago 15 4 5 35 St. Louis 11 4 7 29 Minnesota 11 8 3 25 Philadelphia 10 10 2 22 Pittsburgh. 5 10 9 19 Los Angeles 8 12 1 17 California 6 16 2 14 Yesterday's Results Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 3 Toronto 7, Los Angeles 0 New York 4, St. Louis 2 Chicago 4, Boston 3 Minnesota 3, California 2 s. GF GA 98 60 72 50 77 60 77 91 68 77 73 83 39 75 Milwauk Detroit Chicago Phoenix San Fra Los Ang San Die Seattle Port land Western Conference Midwest Division Kee 18 3 .857 17 10 .629 13 8 .619 z 14 12 .538 Pacific Division ncisco 15 10 .600 geles 13 9 .590' ego 15 13 .464 13 14 .480 d 9 19 .321 87 54 54 55 64 56 51 50 42 54 57 69 73 85 Yesterday's Results Boston 114, Los Angeles 111 Seattle 119, Cincinnati 111 Detroit 101, New York 82 Atlanta at Phoenix, inc. Only games scheduled. Today's Games Chicago at Milwaukee 4 5 a/2 1Y2 3 7 4 GB 3 6% f 9 10 2 2 2 9 , i 44 Presented By The in Hill Auditorium, Ann Arbor FRIDAY, DEC. 4 at 8:30 SATURDAY, DEC. 5 at 8:30 SUNDAY, DEC. 6 at 2:30 THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION MEMBERS OF THE INTERLOCHEN ARTS ACADEMY ORCHESTRA LUCIA EVANGEL ISTA, Soprano JOHN McCOLLUM, Tenor ELAINE BONAZZI, Contralto JEROME HINES, Bass MARY McCALL STUBBINS, Organist CHARLES FISHER, Harpsichordist DONALD BRYANT, Conductor TICKETS: $3.OO-2.50-2.OO-1.50 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 to 4:30; Sat. 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium box office 1 / hours before performance time) l 7 l l J 1 1 Today's Games St. Louis at Montreal Boston at Buffalo Los Angeles at Detroit Only games scheduled NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L Pet. NeW York 21 8 .724 Boston 15 10 .600 Philadelphia 15 13 .536 Buffalo 7 17 .292 Central Division Baltimore 14 12 .538 Cincinnati 9 14 .391 Atlanta 6 17 .261 Cleveland 1 26 .037 only game scheduled. A BA East Division W L Kentucky 18 6 Virginia 14 8 Floridians 11 12 New York 10i 11 Pittsburgh 10 16 Carolina 7 15 West Division Utah 15 7 Memphis 13 9 Indiana 14 10 Denver 7 15 Texas 6 16 GB 4 5!/ 11} 3 2 6 13!/2 Pet. .750 .636 .478 .476 .384 .318 .682 .590 .583 .318 .273 Yesterday's Results Kentucky 139, Pittsburgh 127 Virginia at Utah, inc. Memphis 106, Indiana 100 Only games scheduled. Today's Games New York at Memphis Virginia at Denver Carolina vs. Floridians at Tampa Only games scheduled. ., -- r - -: - --mow.- -w-_ ,-..r-. -. - _ - .- . ...- - . _ -. _. -.. .. e..- 1 .a .. , i.. t i ... mow, l i .. 49 T T The MICHELE (1100) is a show stealing ladies' two-piece worm up suit made of our whisper soft lustre-glo ny- Ion, with a jacket front right pocket match- ing a pant right rear pocket, all topped off with plenty of fashionable stitching. $80.00 m