Tuesday, March 26, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven a Tuesday, March 26, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wolfpack From Wire Service Reports finals and came sky high into last GREENSBORO-Hometown idol night's finals. G David Thompson led irrepressible: North Carolina State to its first NCAA collegiate basketball title' as the Wolfpack throttled Mar-' quette 76-64 last night.I The victory before 15,752 fans at the Greensboro Coliseum climaxed' a "year of revenge" season for the Wolfpack. Soaring to score on his "alley- oop" shots and leaping high to Intimidate Marquette's shooters, Thompson was the instrument of defeat for the emotional Warriors. The Wolfpack's dazzling All- American forward scored 21 points, many of them on his favorite play of leaping over the basket, grab- bing a teammate's lob pass and UCLA THIRD eats With their fans screaming "Gol Pack, Go," North Carolina Statel scored 10 of the game's first 12 points and made it look like their pre-game 101/2-point e d g e was right on. But the Warriors battled back! behind team leader Maurice Lucas and soon gained the lead. Lucas scored 11 of his team-leading 21 points in the game's first eight minutes to give Marquette a 19-18 lead. THE TEAMS were evenly match- ed before Thompson, voted the tournament's Most Valuable Pray- er, took charge of the game'sf rhythm. Marquette grabbed a 28-27 lead on a basket by Marcus Washington with less than three minutes left; in the half. da~ily' sports NIGHT EDITOR: LESLIE RIESTER ON PROBATION last year for, dropping the ball in for two points, recruiting irregularities involving and bringing the crowd to its feet. the fabulous Thompson, North Car- olina, State waited patiently for a TOM BURLESON, who playedE crack at the national championship much of his career in the shadow long held by UCLA. of UCLA's Bill Walton, was an- Although it lost its only game other ,tower of strength for the in two years to the seemingly in- Wolfpack. Burleson-a menacing 7- destructible Bruins last December, foot-4-clogged the area around the North Carolina State came back to basket and constantly warded off whip UCLA in Saturday's semi- Marquette's smaller team. Washington's shot, however, ac- tually triggered the tide against the Warriors when he was called for charging. The foul call brought explosive Marquette mentor Al Mc- Guire to his feet. When McGuire screamed to no avail against the call, he was hit with his'first tech- nical of the game. With 2:48 remaining, Thompson converted both ends of the one-and- one foul situation, then threw in the technical foul shot for a 30-28 North Carolina State lead. FIFTEEN SECONDS later; Tom Burleson knifed in for a layup and the 7-foot-4 North Carolina center scored 20 seconds later to give the favored Wolfpack a 34-28 advant- age. Phil Spence was credited with a basket on a goaltending call with 1:55 left to move North Carolina State into the lead at 36-28. When McGuire drew a second technical by vehemently protesting the call, Thompson converted the foul shot to cap a 10-point Wolfpack spree and push the advantage to 37-28. A field goal by Wolfpack guard Monte Towe gave the Wolfpack a 39-30 halftime lead.tTowe finished with 16 points-the same as back- court mate Morris Rivers. THOMPSON GAVE the crowd more thrills at the start of the second half. The 6-foot-4 superstar soared high for a field goal and tossed in another foul shot to get the Wolfpack moving in the second half. Then Burleson barged in for a layup and Towe delivered a long shot from the outside to give North Carolina State a game-breaking 45-30 lead and sew up the Wolf- pack's 30th victory in 31 games this year. Bruins roar GREENSBORO - In the third- lace consolation match played earlier last night, UCLA's Pete Trgovich triggered a 26-3 Bruin explosion shortly after the start of the second half to lead the ex- NtCAA champs to a 78-61 romp over outclassed Kansas. The Bruins played much of the game with their starters on the bench, and just went through the motions during the first period, al- lowing Kansas to jump off to a 38- 31 halftime lead. When Norman Cook canned a Warriors bucket for the Jayhawks to open I x I I, F I' l i r : C l the second stanza, nobody had any idea it was to be the last sign of life Kansas was to give off for a long time. Trgovich triggered the Uclans with a pair of fast- break layups, and the fun began in earnest. KEITH WILKES, closing off a brilliant career as UCLA's All- America forward, chipped in four points and Dave Myers added four more to hand the Bruins a 43-41 lead with 15 minutes left. That was it for the Jayhawks. Bill Walton, the controversial semi- vegetarian who had earlier indi- cated reluctance to play in the con- solation final, dropped in two split- second layups to lead the Bruins to a 55-43 lead with 11 minutes re- maining. With the game in hand, coach John Wooden called Walton to the bench, and the UCLA great was sent off with a 30-second standing ovation from the nearly 16,000 spec- tators. Wilkes was similarly three minutes later, to standing ovation. retired another TRGOVICH LED UCLA in piav- ing time with 30 minutes, and in scoring with 14. Walton canned six tallies in the 20 minutes he trod the hardcourt, and Wilke: added 12 in the identical timespan. AP PMoto Thompson skies for two Sports of TheIDaly VOTE IN RACKHAM STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS TO BE ELECTED: President, Vice President, 15 Representatives ELIGIBLE TO VOTE: Every student enrolled in Rackham DATES: March 25-29 and April 1-5, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. LOCATION OF POLLS Grapefruit season squeezes on Exhibition baseball rambled merrily yesterday. The hoary Detroit Tigers sent out two teams: Mickey Stanley had five hits while Woodie Fryman and Bill Slayback combined for a six-hit shutout as one pack of Bengals mauled the Mets 14-0. Mike An- derson and Greg Luzinski drove in three runs apiece to lead the Phillies to an 11-9 squeeker over the Detroit "B" team. Elsewhere, Dave Campbell drove in Bob Gallagher in the eighth inning to give Houston a 2-1 win over Cincinnati . . . Fritz Peterson grooved fat ones to Fernando Gonzalez and Fred' Patek handing Kansas City a 4-1 victory over the Yanks . . . Steve Blass gave up six walks, a hit batsman, and five runs in the first inn- ing, enough to give the St. Louis Redbirds a 5-4 triumph over the Pirates . . . Juan Beniquez drove in the winner with an eight- inning pinch single to give Boston a 5-4 success versus Montreal . ..and Bobby Valentine singled twice, stole two bases and notched a ribbie to lead California to a 4-2 surprise against Oak- land. 'ABUcn cans Chris and Duffy { By The Associated Press GREENSBORO - The American Broadcasting Company has benched Chris Schenkel in favor of Keith Jackson for its 1974 NCAA football telecasts, The New Haven Journal-Courier, report- ed yesterday. The newspaper also reported that the network plans to bring In present coaches on days their teams don't play to replace Duffy Daugherty as football analyst. Schenkel is reportedly considering an offer to announce the World Football League games for TVS. Heavy George vs. thinker Ken Ken Norton goes against heavyweight champion George Foreman tonight in the 15-round title bout. "I am a thinking fighter-not a physical fighter," says Norton but it remains to be seen whether he will continue to function through a bevy of Foreman blows. However, Foreman, seven pounds heavier than at his fight with Joe Frazier, looks a little flabby. Mon., Mar. 25-Rackhan Building Tues., Mar. 26-Grad Library Wed., Mar. 27-Fishbowl Thurs., Mar. 28-Engin. Arch Fri., Mar. 29-Education School Mon., Apr. 1-Rackham Building Tues., Apr. 2-Grad Library Wed., Apr. 3-Fishbowl Thurs., Apri. 4-Kresge Library Lobby Fri., Apr. 5-Rackham Building For information, call 763-0109, weekday afternoons 9~ IFOREST TERRACE 1001 SOUTH FOREST Fall Rentals odern Two-Bed room Apts. 0 fully furnished & carpeted 14ecch apt. equipped with its own burglar alarm system * private parking-free f-garbage disposals 0@24 hr. emergency maintenance service b live in resident manager * Cable TV-free 08 or 12 month lease available See Randy or Andy Young Apt. 211, 769-6374 AP Photo N. C. STATE'S hustling Monty Towe appears to be eating the basketball during this struggle with Marquette's Lloyd Walton, but in the end it was Marquette who swallowed the roundball as the Wolfpack from N.' C. State ripped the Warriors 76-64 to capture the NCAA Championship last night in Greensboro, N. C. DOGWOOD RELAYS FIRST: II Thinclads head outdoors 1 r SF( BY RICH LERNER The Michigan track team has been looking forward to spring since the onslaught of winter and will be overjoyed with the sight of the first crocus. Lacking an indoor facility, the thinclads com- muted to Ypsilanti twice a week for practice and consequently had a disappointing indoor sea- son, garnering only fifth place in the Big Ten meet. "We'll definitely be better in the outdoor Big Tens," coach D i x o n Farmer remarked. "They'll have the discus outside and our 440-yard relay should finish no lower than third." Steve Adams is the defending Big Ten champion in the discus and is also the early favorite in the shot put. Adams, a senior, will set his sights on the Michi- gan record of 185-5, and assist- ant coach Jack Harvey feels that the "Big Fella" will break 190. Co-captain Kim Rowe, defend- ing 440 champion, will receive some of the best competition he will ever face in practice. Dave Williams, who placed fourth in the 600 at the NCAA indoor na- tionals, will probably drop. to the quarter-mile to join Rowe and freshman Jeff McLeod. Freshman Andy John- son, plagued by mono early in the indoor season, came on to finish third in the 880 in the Big Ten. Johnson will not only run the half-mile with Bob Mills and Steve Thirys but most likely will run the remaining- leg of the mile-relay with Rowe, Williams,' and Mcleod. Miler Bill Bolster will replace McLeod to form a special two- . mile relay for the Dogwood re- lays in Knoxville, Tennessee. Dave Eddy and steadily improv- ing Fred Gault will also be run- ning the mile. Greg Meyer will switch from the mile to the steeplechase, one of the most grueling events. "Gregg did hurdles in high school and he's really interest- ed," Farmer asserted . Meyer is not the only freshman who will be trying a new event Tris Carta will run the 440-yard intermediate hurdles and will face the unpleasant task of run- ning. against Bob Casselman. The Wolverines' most bally- hooed new recruit, KensDelor is still ineligible. This leaves the 100 and 220 in the hands of Jim Howe and Tim Ossman. They will have to improve Immensely before they can expect to score points in a championship meet, but should provide adequate competition for duals. Junior Keith Brown and soph- omore Jon Cross, who hold the school records in the three-mile and six-mile runs, respectively, will carry the load for the Maize and Blue in the long distance events. Brown had a good sea- son indoors but enjoys running outside more and runs best in the open air. Ace hurdler Godfrey Murray has graduated leaving a glaring hole in the 120-yard high hur- dles, and no one has come along yet to fill it there providing a source of joy for Michigan dual meet opponents. The Wolverines will be highly competitive in all of the jumps. Abe Butler and Pete Hill both scored in last years Big Ten meet, but had disappointing in- door seasons. Hill has been ham- pered by injuries throughout his career, but is finally healthy and Harvey expects him to surpass the 50 ft. barrier in the triple jump. In addition to the long and triple jumps, Butler may also be saddled with the extra duty of running in the 440-yard relay with Rowe, Howe and an unde- termined fourth. Pole vaulters Terry Hart and Ed Kulka have been the perform- ers most affected by no place to practice during the winter months. Now being able to work outside, Coach Harvey main- tains that "both will do extreme- ly well and will come damn close to 16-10. The cindermen's first outing will be the Dogwood Relays on April 13, but their first home meet will not be until May 4 when the Hurons of Eastern Michigan visit Ann Arbor. The conference championships will be held here on the weekend of May 18. R .sa SEDER Meals for Passover at H I LLEL SATURDAY, April 6,9:00 p.m. SUNDAY, April 7, 8:30 p.m. GOOD HOUSING Reservations must be in by' Wednesday noon, April 3. Cal 663-4129 SAE TUNE-UP CLINIC' FREE TUNE-UP CLASS 7:30 p.m., Wed., March 27 170 P.A. First 30 to sign up can participate ($5 fee for non-air cond. car) ($6 fee for air cond. car) TUNE-UP CLINIC 8-5:00-Sat., March 30 AUTO LAB-NORTH CAMPUS Cost-$8 ..... ...... .. WATERSHIP DOWN A new novel by RICHARD ADAMS for people from eight to eighty We've Got It We Love It You Will Too WATERSHIP DOWN Your landlord wants you to vote against Rent Control. You know, the guy who comes around once a month for the rent. The guy who never fixes the leak in the ceiling or the broken kitchen window. Now, with a taste for the absurd, he and his fellow landlords call themselves "Citizens for Good Housing." And they're spending your rent in a slick well-financed campaign against Rent Control. To top it all off, they say they're doing it to protect you the tenant. But landlords really w a n t to protect their exorbitant profits. Rent Control means an end to this rental rip-off. On April i tell your landlord you can pro- tect yourself. Vote yes on Rent Control. CT acan /G~r~P /tn1 Send DR. ED PIERCE I -r r I I s Professional League Standings by RICHARD ADAMS Lin t Kri !"se sf Onrbtln6 O I I fl