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April 03, 1975 - Image 8

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-04-03

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Page Eight
WILD WEFT tJMajor League
v#Leaders
1304 YARNS NBA SCORING LEADERS
For w vn ,knitting S R N l i f .A g
Frweavf~ nting , Me- doo, Buf. 1042 617 2701 34.6
crocheting, macrame Barry, G.S 1001 391 2393 30.7
Abdul-Jabbar, Mil. 759 309 1827 30.0
Archibald, KC-O, 726 630 2082 26.4
Scott, Pho. 675 262 1612 24.4
415 North Fifth Ave., Kerrytown I1 Lanier, Det. 716 346 1778 24.0
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Hayes, Was. 684 381 1749 22.7
31-6_26 Goodrich, L. A. 617 309 1543 22.7
313-761-2466 Haywood, Sea. 586 299 1471 22.0
{tO<-ryot?o<: {>----C}G----e ---< o -- Carter, Phi. 691 249 1631 22.0 f

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, April 3, 1975

FRIEDER LOOKS EVERYWHERE:

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By AL HRAPSKY
Although the Michigan basket-
ball coaches are heavily recruit-
ing Berkley star Bruce Flowers,
as well as Tom Staton of Fern-
dale and Alan Hardy of Detroit
Northwestern, the list of out of
state talent is the longest in
recent memory.
Flowers, one of the most
sought after M i c h i g a n high
school players since Campanella
Russell, arrived on campus yes-
terday and will complete his
visit this afternoon.
After meeting with Floyd A.
Bond, Dean of the Business
School, lunching with President
Robben Fleming and talking to
head football coach Bo Schem-
bechler and Athletic Director
Don Canham, Flowers was in-
troduced to the Michigan play-
ers at Crisler Arena yesterday.
Leading the cornucopia of
out of state talent are 6-6
Bobby Jones, 6-5 Ray White,
6-7 Phil Hubbard and 6-2
Ricky Greene. While head
coach Johnny Orr admits that
Flowers is the key to their re-
cruiting efforts, he expressed
confidence in the abilities of
the other players.
"If we can get Hubbard,
Hardy and Jones, we'll be al-
right," he said. "They're not
that big but they're all good
players."
Hubbard, one of the top nlay-
ers in Ohio, broke all of Nick
Weatherspoon's (currently with
the Wasihngton Bullets of the

NBA) records at McKinley Iigh
in Canton. He hit 48-57 from the
floor in his last three games
and hauled down 27 rebounds in
one of them.
Assistant coach Bill Frieder
who carries the brunt of Mich-
igan's recruiting load and who
admits he's been on the road so
If we can get Hub-
bard Hardy and
Jones, we'll be al-
right.

-Johnny Orr

i
I
f'
', ;.
:

FOR FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
CHEERLEADER SQUAD
APRIL 10-7 P.M.
CRISLER ARENA
Practice Sessions: April 7, 8
Preliminaries, April 9
Crisler Arena, 7 Pv.M..

much in the last three months
that he's only had time for two
homecooked meals, said "he can
jump, shoot, and run and could
start right away for us." ,
En route to capturing the
Mississippi s t a t e champion-
ship, Jones and White helped
push Gulfport High over the
100 point mark 15 times and
amassed a 40-0 record. The
pair have already visited Ann
Arbor and according to Fried-
er, "if we can convince them
to leave the south, we can

sign them."
Jones and White are also con-
sidering Mississippi, Mississippi
State, Alcorn A&M, and Ne-
braska. Orr said that White is
a potential All-American but
added, "so are all the other
guys we're after."
Ricky Greene, a guard from
Vincennes Junior College in In-
diana - a reputable hotbed of
talent-is considered by Orr to
be "the best junior college
guard in the country."
Greene played with Michigan's
Johnny Robinson -n Chicago
Hirsh's state championship team
of 1972, and originally planned
to enroll at Michigan. A low
grade point and non-preditor
status, however, curtailed any
such thoughts.
"When he came here with
John Rob, I thought he was the
best of the two but I don't think
he's as good as John now," Orr
said.
Michigan is still in the pic-
ture as far as signing New
Yorkers Bernard Rencher and
Lynbert Johnson but the two
have expressed strong inter-
ests in other schools.
Johnson, a 6-4 forward from
Manhattan, who Frieder rates
as "the best player in New
York, made P a r a d e' s igh
s c h o o I All-American second
team. He's narrowed his choices
down to Cincinnati, Detroit,
Dayton, and Michigan.
Rencher, a 6-3 guard from
Mater Christi High School in
Astoria, has already visited Ann
Arbor. Also a Parade Al-Aner-
ican (fourth team), he is look-
ing at Cincinnati, Nrre Dame
and Maryland as well as Mich-
igan for a possible collegiate
career.
Pegged as "s le e p e r s" by
Frieder, Illinois players Ken
Ferdinand, Bob Bender and Tom
Dorerare also potential recruits.
Ferdinand, a 6-8 forward from
Urbana, is leaning towards Pur-
due and wants to go to a na-
tional contender.
"He's a tremendous shooter

and a fairly good reb under,"
Frieder said. "He would make a
tremendous Big Ten player.
The Wolverine coaches are
high on Bender, a 6-3 guard
from Bloomington who is cut
in the Steve Grote mold, but
Indiana appears to have the in-
side track.
Michigan is not exactly going
all out to recruit Dore, a 7-2
center from East Leyden. Fried-
er stated, however, "he'll be a
tremendous ball player some
day and could give us immedi
ate help."
A long shot but a potential
gold mine is 6-7 Bill Willough-
by, a first team high school
All-American and one of the
most sought after players in

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Major League Leaders
...........:.:{{": . ... ...:....}:'..........11;yV~ r.:}" :"L} . V.s. j.:.:.l....:.::?;;1. }5: r.;:. m e

state
the nation.
Willoughby, from Englewood
N.J., has made it known that
he wants to sign a professional
contract so only the oro draft
in April will tell the story.
In addition to signing some of
these potential recruits, Mich-
igan has two transfer players
waiting in the wings.
Tom Bergen, a 6-10 center
from the University of Utah who
played behind Mike Sojourner,
and Edgar Burch, a 6-1 guard
who started for Duke as a fresh-
man, will be eligible under
NCAA and Big Ten regulations.
The Wolverine coaching staff
will have to wait until April 9,
before they can legally sign any
of these recruits.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Exhibition Standings

;
.-- -___ <<

California
4 Baltimore
Texas
Kansas City
Minnesota
Cleveland
DETROIT
Oakland
Boston
New York
Milwaukee
Chicago

W L Pct.
14 5 .737
13 9 .591
14 11 .560
12 11 .522
13 13 .500
6 7 .462
12 15 .444
S 8 .429
11 15 .423
11 15 .423
8 11 .421
11 17 .393

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Exhibition Standings
Los Angeles 17 6
Montreal 17 7
Philadelphia 15 8
San Francisco 11 6
Cincinnati 16 9
San Diego 9 7
Pittsburgh 15 13
Houston 11 15
St. Louis 10 14
Atlanta 8 16
New York 7 -15
Chicago 5 13

.739
.708
.652
.647
.640
.563
.536
.423
.417
.333
.318
.278

I

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REG. $199.95
CHANNEL MASTER AUTO REVERSE STEREO
CAR CASSETTE PLAYER
Geared for power with fast forward and rewind and
automatic reverse for continuous play. Thumbwheel
balance, continuous tone and balance controls. Model
6399. REG. $99.95

Litronix Scientific
Pocket Calculator

Comparable to
other brands!
t'9

calculators selling for $20 to $30 more in
Does squores, square roots, reciprocal and
sign change. Accepts numbers in
"powers of 1 0" format and gives
answers in correct scientific notation.
Parentheses allow grouping of opera-
tions exactly as written. Includes
case are full year warranty.

SUMMER INSTITUTE
ON
Film, Video and Photography
June 15 through July 4, 1975
Hampshire College, Amherst, Mass.
An intensive three-week program for the study
of film, video, photography and related media
arts. The Institute offers a unique curriculum
of seminars and workshops for six (6) credits.
Sponsored by the University Film Study Center.
SEMINARS
Anthropological Film, History of Avant-Garde Film,
Analysis, Contemporary V i d e o, Renoir: Critical Ap-
proaches, Screenwriting, and Directing Film Actors.
WORKSHOPS
Filmmaking, Animation, Optical Printing, Creative Half-
Inch Video Experimental Studio Video, Photography,
and Photo Silk-Screen,
FACULTY
Richard Leacock, Ed Emshwiller, Roper Greenspun, Pat
O'Neill, Jonas Mekas, Robert Breer, Frank Daniel, Ann
McIntosh, Jerome Liebling, Hollis Frampton, Emilie de
Brigard, Stan Lowder, Vlada Petric, Russell Connor,
Brice Howard, David Hancock, Len Gittleman, and many
others.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Gisela Hoelcl
Summer Institute Director
University Film Study Center
Box 275, Cambridqe, Mass. 02138
617-253-7612

Sorts of TheI Daly
McAdoo named MYP
NEW YORK - Bob McAdoo of the Buffalo Braves, the
National Basketball Association's leading scorer, was named
the league's Most Valuable Player for 1974-75, the NBA announc-
ed yesterday.
The 6-foot-10 center, runner-up to Milwaukee Bucks cen-
ter Kareem Abdul-Jabbar In last year's voting, polled 81
first-place votes and 547 points in running away with the
Podoloff Trophy balloting by NBA players.
Boston Celtics center Dave Cowens was second this time
with 310 points, Elvin Hayes of the Washington Bullets was third
at 289, Golden State's Rick Barry was fourth with 254 points
and Abdul-Jabbar rounded out the top five with 161.
-AP
W ooden's successor picked,
LOS ANGELES - Gene Bartow, who guided Memphis State
to the NCAA finals in 1973 before moving to Illinois last season,
was named yesterday to take over as basketball coach at UCLA,
replacing legendary John Wooden who retired after guiding the
Bruins to its tenth national collegiate title.
Bartow was a strong candidate to replace Wooden since
last Saturday when the 64-year-old coach announced he was
stepping down, but athletic director J. D. Morgan made it
official yesterday saying, "I regard Gene Bartow as one of
the nation's outstanding coaches who is a fine, proven teach-
er of the sport of basketball."
At 44, Bartlow is young. He is also similar in style to the
"Wizard of Westwood." He dresses in business suits, rarely
screams from the bench, and coaches a fast-break brand of
basketball.
-AP
Coaches Take Tourney
Michigan wrestling coach Bill Johannesen and assistant Cal
Jenkins finally came home from a tourn^,nent as winners.
Both Johannesen and Jenkins won championships in their
weight classes in the senior (31-40) division of an Old-Timers
wrestling tournament at Knoxville, I1. last weekend.
Jenkins repeated as a champion at 160 while Johannesen
took first at 150. Billy Jo also won the tourney's outstanding
wrestler award and received a trophy for scoring the most falls
(four) in the two-day meet.
-RICK BONINO
The Auburn -Crunch
AUBURN - An Auburn University football player faces a
court hearing April 23 on a charge of malicious damage to pri-
vate property . . . slugging a car bearing a University of Ila-
bama window sticker.
Tom Ball, 6-7 tackle from Sanford, Fla., was arrested
after another Auburn student alleged Ball did $50 worth of dam-
age to the trunk of his car by hitting it with his fist.
-AP
Opener slushed out
The Michigan baseball team is scheduled to open their home
baseball season today against the University of Detroit, but the
slush and snow, characteristic of a beautiful spring day in Michi-
gan, will no doubt keep the diamond men inside for the day. The
doubleheader is scheduled to begin at 2:00.
The team will now wait until this Saturday to open the
gates of Fischer Stadium. The Wolverines will host the Eastern
Michigan University in a double header beginning at 1:00.

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