THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine ________________________U PO- %,Ia. 1-V& li f I .i-r.. nr- - . It's too heads or talesiwDuCeS Sq Ma eda ayto win 'Mlwaukee eornebaek Ieeze byAT N.Y. romps with God on your side WITH ICE AND SNOW still appropriately on the ground all over the state, the long high school basketball season wil be climaxed today with the finals of the Michigan High School Athletic Association's roundball tournament at East Lansing's Jenison Fieldhouse. As a neutral observer of Michigan's "March Madness" (I went to high school in New Jersey), a couple of major struc- tural differences between the Michigan and New Jersey tour- neys come to mind, especiaHy when the list of schools that have advanced to the semi-finals of Michigan's four classes in the past two years is perused. In New Jersey, seven rather than four state champions are crowned each March: four for public schools of varying sizes and three for the best parochial school teams. Ordinarily this de- viation in form would be considered insignificant, but in re- cent years, parochial schools have come to disproportionately dominate the Michigan tourney, especially in Classes C and D. As illustration, in the past two years, 32 schools have reached the semi-finals of the four classes, and no fewer than 17 hve been parochial. The predominance in Classes C and D is even more striking as 12 of the 16 semi-finalists have been parochial schools. The tendency among many old high school cage fans is to brand this development as a coincidence or temporary trend, but some of the administrative differences between public and parochial schools, and their relationship to sports, speak other- wise. Under the traditional system of school financing through property taxes, the jurisdiction of ,each public high school is limited to a certain political or geographic area. Parochial schools are constrained by no such boundaries and therefore are able to seek out athletically-inclined eighth-grad- ers to compete for their athletic teams as a matter of stand- ard policy. Whether the majority or even a small minority of paro- chial schools do indeed recruit is not that important. But they can, if they choose to do so. But these are the exceptions rather than the rule and usually it is difficult to draw the line between the boys who really want to go to a particular parochial school and happen to be basket- ball players, and those who enroll specifically do play basket- ball. In addition, a parochial school can deliberately set out to attain a specific enrollment to be classified in a certain class while by definition, a public school must accept any bonafide resident of a municipality. According to Dick Kishpaugh of Parchment, Michigan, who has been covering the Michigan High School Tourna- ment as a writer, historian, and statistician for 31 years, the disproportionate dominance of the parochial schools is not a real problem. "Of course there are some schools, especially in the large metropolitan areas, that recruit players, but the number that consciously do so is small," says Kishpaugh. "As far as the parochial dominance in the last couple of years, I feel this it not a permanent trend, but there are some reasons why they have done so well in recent years. "I think the unsettled conditions in many public schools has been a factor. In the parochial schools, the situation has been more stable and the pride, prestige, and school spirit connected with a successful athletic team still exists," Kishpaugh observes. Ironically, when the MHSAA was founded exactly SO years ago, the thought of parochial schools having a com- petitive advantage was far from the minds of those patri- archs. "One of the basic things attempted by the early tourna- ment directors was to eliminate the bias against parochial schools, especially those that were Catholic," Kishpaugh re- calls. "At that time no public schools wanted to play them and many boys were recruited away from the neighborhood schools to the public schools, not vice versa. 'The discrimination against Catholics was really bad in In- diana, where they got very bad treatment. In fact, parochial schools were not allowed in the Tournament until after World War II. But in Michigan we wanted all schools to participate and there has never been any distinction between public and parochial here." It's probably silly but to me the state tournament loses something when the small backwoods schools far away frm the urban centers are knocked out of the Tournament and never make it to the "Big Time" of Jenison or Crisler. There's a certain romance to thinking that the kids play- ing in the Class C and D finals practiced their foul shots on the side of a barn and not on the city playgrounds of Detroit, Saginaw, Flint ,or Grand Rapids. But these schools earned their way to Jenison in the state's time-honored method and deserve .their chance for a moment in the spotlight also. Despite some structural unfairness, the tournament should not be changed since the traditions and lore of 50 years of "madness" are probably more vital. But personally, I'll take White Pine of the Porcupine Moun- tain Conference or Ewen-Trout Creek in the Class D finals over a small urban parochial school any time. powered by reserve MILWAUKEE (P) - Reserve: side work of Elmore Smith to Ron 'Williams scored six of his build a 70-61 lead with 4:17 left eight points in the last five min- in the third quarter. utes Friday night, rallying the Mil- Dandridge retaliated w i t h waukee Bucks to a 99-95 victory three long jump shots and Jon over the Los Angeles Lakers in theI McGlocklin with another as the, first game of their National Bas- Bucks crept'to within four points. ketball Association Western Con- After a hook shot by Abdul-Jab- ference playoff semifinals. bar, Curtis Perry stole the in- Williams, starting in place of in- bounds pass and hit a layup to jured Lucius Allen, had spent much pull Milwaukee into an 81-81 tie. of the night unsuccessfully chasing The game was tied four times after Gail Goodrich, who poured in 31 that, the last at 91-91 on a jump points for the Lakers. shot by Lakers' Connie Hawkins, But Williams sank two free who contributed 21 points. throws, then dropped in a 20 Williams followed with his two footer as the Bucks, who had free throws to give the Bucks the trailed by nine points Inte in the 'lead for good with 4:47 to play. third quarter, took a 95-91 lead The Lakers sank their first with 3:19 to play. five shots, including four by Goodrich retaliated with a bas- Goodrich to break to a 12-2 lead. ket, but Williams pulled down a However, Smith committed three defensive rebound after the Lak- fouls in the next two minutes ,' nand was replaced by Bill Brid- ers' next trip ilpcourt. ges. Williams fired in another long Abdul - Jabbar used his eight- jumper as the Bucks took a 97-93 inch height advantage over Brid- lead with 46 seconds left. Oscar ges to pour in three baskets and Robertson hit two free throws as Dandridge hit a pair of corner the Bucks wrapped it up, taking a shots to pull Milwaukee to within 99-93 lead with 24 seconds to play. 26-23 after one period. Hayes' 40 c by New Yoi NEW YORK (A') - Earl Monroe and Walt Frazier teamed for 461 points, offsetting a 40-point per-: formance by Capital's Elvin Hayes, and the New York Knicks defeated( the Bullets 102-91 last night in thet opening game of their National1 Basketball Association EasternJ conference semifinal playoff series.i !Game Two of the best-of-seven series will be played Sunday after- noon in Landover, Md. The Knicks, trailing 26-20 after1 one quarter, went on top for good late in the second period. Willis Reed, who entered the 1 game with 7% minutes to play a in the period, brought New York1 to within 40-39 on a short jump1 shot with 3:59 to play in the half. A Monroe jump shot put the1 Knicks ahead to stay, 43-42 with 2:37 remaining, and seconds later, an offensive foul on Kevin Porter nullified a Hayes dunk shot. Frazier scored a basket, Dave DeBusschere sank a pair of free throws and Willis Reed scored on a layup with six seconds left to put the Knicks on top 49-42 at the half. They increased the margin to 53-42 with 11:03 to play in the third period on a short jump shot by Frazier. The Bullets rallied to within one point, at 57-56, on a long one-hander by Mike Riordan mid- way through the period, but that was as close as they came. IiC O RES I ABA PLAYOFFS kN. Y. Jets 108, Virginia 96 San Diego 131, Denver II WHA Edmonton 3, Minnesota I EXHIBITION BASEBALL Milwaukee 9, Oakland 4 New York (N) 11, Pittsburgh 5 Texas 3, Houston 0 Cleveland 4, Chicago (N) 0 Baltinore 7, New York (A) I s3 Dtonii, Minnesota 7 vercome rk guards A three-point play by Reed put New York on top by six points with a minute and a half to play in the period, and the Knicks broke it open with four points in the final two seconds. DeBusschere sank a long jump shot and Frazier hit a jumper after stealing the Bullets' inbounds pass at the buzzer. New York's largest lead of the night, 92-78, came on a three-point play by Bill Bradley with 4:58 re- maining in the game. Monroe finished with 26 points, Frazier had 20 and Bradley had 18, 10 in the last quarter. Phil Che- nier added 20 points for the Bullets. Hayes' 40 points represents a Bullets' club record for a playoff game. 1 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar led the Bucks with 35 points and Bob Dan-: dridge added 22-14 in the second half. The Lakers, ahead by two points at halftime, rode the outside, shooting of Goodrich and the in-I A pair of free throws by Rob- ertson gave Milwaukee its first lead, 39-38 with 4:05 left in the half. The score was tied four times from then until halftime, when Los Angeles took a 49-47 lead on a 30-footer by Jim Price at the buzzer. AP Photo WITH DETERMINATION written all over his face, Los Angeles Laker Jim Price drives toward the hoop. Price's enthusiasm wasn't enough to stop Milwaukee, however, as the Bucks rallied to down the Lakers, 99-95. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY, CELTICS HOST BUFFALO Pisto ns From Wire Service Reports The winningest team in Detroit Piston history wheels into Chi- cago today for its nationally televised opener of the NBA Western Conference semifinal series with the Chicago Bulls.S The Bulls, who shaded the Pis- tons by two games for second place behind champion Milwau- kee in the Midwest division, have never survived an opening play- off round in six previous tries. Walker The Pistons, led by 6-11, 260 18.8. pound Bob Lanier and star guard Detro Dave Bing, posted a 52-30 record Piston in gaining the playoffs for the Lanier first time in six years. Any] It's the first time in four sea- emerge sons the Bulls have not opened a not pla playoff series against the Los ning o Angeles Lakers. Scott. "It's refreshing not to be open- ad ing against the Lakers," said aecord Chicago coach Dick Motta, whose offoei Bulls were bumped out of the be a ke first round playoffs by Los I hope Angeles the past three years. of coni "It's also refreshing to finally have the home court advantage Buffa for the first time in our club his- tory." The Bulls and Pistons stack up It wi fairly even offensively and de- the yot fensively. Although the Bulls ful est swept all four Chicago Stadium falo B games and won five of seven all age-oc season from the Pistons, Detroit playof has a slight scoring edge, 104.4 Boston to 102.2. Onec On defense, the Bulls hold a 98.7 to 100.3 margin behind the sticky play of Jerry Sloan, Norm Van Lier and Cliff Ray. Individually, the brawny La- nier brings the best season scor- lea mg average, 22.5, into the play- offs-a shade better than 22.0 by Chicago's Bob Love. The No. 2 scorers are Chicago's Chet U invade Cliican49go daily NIGHT EDITORS: BILL STIEG r with 19.3 and Bing with oit coach Ray Scott denies chances hinge solely on ybody with a hot hand can e the key player and I'm cing responsibility for win- r losing on Lanier," says on't think the home court tage or regular season s meanranything in a play- ther. Bench strength may ey factor in this series and it is because I have a lot fidence in our bench." lo vs. Boston By RICH LERNER ill be a classic struggle of ung lions versus the power- ablishment when the Buf- raves challenge the herit- h Boston Celtics indtheir series beginning today in 1. of the keys will be in the unate to ve N oning proI H BEND (P) - Notre All-American center, John e, announced yesterday he ss up his final year of eli- to turn professional. -9 star was granted an ex- r of eligibility after a ser- ness kept him out of ath- n his sophomore year. ate said he will graduate in ather than prolong his ng another year. g able to help my mother, and sisters was the biggest influencing my decision," Dame's coach, Digger said, "I'm sure it was a time for John, and I told e would respect whatever he reached." match-up at the center position. Buffalo headlines with Bob Mc- Adoo, who led the league in both scoring and field goal percentage and finished in the top five in rebounds and blocked shots. On the other hand, Boston's pivotman is last year's MVP, Dave Cowens. Cowens is sur- passed only by Wes Unseld at grabbing .a rebound and, seem- ingly before he has the ball, mak- ing the outlet pass. Often one finds Cowens on both ends of the fast break, something few other centers in the pro game do. In the regular season McAdoo averaged nearly 38 points a game against the Celts while holding Cowens to an even 22. But Boston just might let McAdoo get his points and concentrate on stymy- ing the other potential Niagara scorers, Jim McMillian, Ernie DiGregorio, and Garfield Heard. The Braves ultimate downfall may be in their inability to keep others from scoring. The pass- happy DiGregorio has been tagged with the new sobriquet of Ernie "No D" in the NBA, and the only strong defenders on the Braves are forward McMillian and newly acquired sub Matt Guokas. Meanwhile, the Celtics will have defensive ace Don Chaney putting the clamps on DiGregorio, and all-star Jo Jo White match- ing with the other Buffalo guard, hometown favorite Randy Smith, -- - - ----- -- giving Boston the edge in the backcourt. At the forward position the Braves have the most depth. They continually alternate Mc- Millian, Heard, veteran Jack Marin and one of the original Braves, Bob Kauffman. Boston will counter with the transcendent John "Hondo" Hav- licek, former Iowa star Don Nel- son, and super-sub Paul Silas. On face value it may appear even but in the extra season, Havlicek reaches nirvana and becomes a virtual superman. Silas, a former Creighton' all= American, is one of the least ap- preciated players in the whole circuit. Buffalo has only beaten the Celtics twice in its history, and has never been victorious in the Boston Garden. Add to this that it is the first time in the playoffs for the men from the Niagara frontier and it spells trouble for the Braves. Last year, after finishing with the best record in the NBA, the Celtics folded in post-season play and would like nothing better than to take the cake this year. THIS WEEKEND 8:30 $2.50 FRI.-SAT BESSIE JONES & the Georgia Sea Island Singers 4 I I i i t ATTENTION ADVERTISERS Add radio to your promotional campaigns broadcasting to students only. Try us at -650 AM- 763-3501 plus GUY CARAWAN SAT.-2 P.M.- CHILDREN'S CONCERT 1421 illI STMET 711s PREM IERE PERFORM ANCES $100 except Fri., Sat., Sun., $1.50 Art 1 ends Tues., Apr. 2 :r'r"r'":^:";^'v'iS Cd{i": "}}i}'4Xv:": }::::::.; "{::: "v. : ".v.v.":. a: .... "y." ....,.r r.. ,.... .v a." .,. .1... ", }1"}.n. r :d" sS^. + . r r.. r°i°r . .. .:.. a ....... . rarT" err.{:" s"...a : . .r..a . r. r :ti{"}~'. ::^}°Y: .'": i:L r ". i :" r fit. . r:; ..:": ~........ rr.:: r. ~: :+;:44:"}:vi'r:..... r.:.rrrdi::... r,:-.exr.:v.... r}.... s..... rRvs..o r:; r::."f."}sr...... r. u,: r:"r...xi:X ::.......... ~..........';, n."}5ii; :i.vf:. r..},.: t Ser sat By SWAMI HOWILUVYUH To all people suffering from March Madness, RELAX! The Swami hath arriveth to bring peace throughout the troubled land. In spite of my modest 6 and 2 record for the semi-finals, which incidentally bettered that quack from Detroit, let me insist that I am not surprised by the results. As we all know, the Swami knows all. The finals pose a tough test for the unsuperable crystal ball. But never let it be'said that Swami can't hack it. The crystal ball is clear. Here are the inevitable results of t.oday's Jenison Fieldhouse action: CLASS A Brother Rice vs. Cass Tech A proverb of mine reads: Basketball is a tall. man's game. Apparently, Cass Tech doesn't be- lieve in my proverbs. The first five on Cass Tech average 6'1" while the first five for Brother Rice average 6'6". Cass Tech will believe after today's game. Not only does Brother Rice have height, but also a pair of talented players in the Washington brothers A comhination like that means h ., nn.o r thsooth in their way of a state championship, including Holt. According to the crystal ball Holt will need more than a sound performance from star center Jeff* Tropf to pull out a victory. The Class B. championr wil be Muskegon Heights. Muskegon Heights 86, Holt 76. CLASS Cr Bay City All-Saints vs. Detroit Servite In close tournament games, I've always wonder- ed just how the loser feels when there is but one or two points separating his team from the gloryr of victory. Detroit Servite won its last three games by a total of four points and I'm sure that they must be wondering how it feels o be on the short end, just i once. Servite will not have to wonder anymore. Bays City All-Saints rolled to an impressive victory over Benzie Central to gain entry into the glamourR game. The Saints' starting five average 6'2" and it is doubtful that Servite's luck can prevail onceY again. CLASS D Ann Arbnr St Thomas vs. Harnr nrinas SOUT Dame's Shumat will pas gibility The 6 tra yea ious i'll letics in Shum May, r schoolin "Beinj father a factor he said. Notre Phelps trying t him we decision "Funny Car Summer" Weekdays. 7, 9; Fri., Sat., 7, 9, 11; Sun., 3, 5, 7, 9-rated G Art 2 ends Tues., Apr. 2 DERANGED rated R Week, 7:15, 9; Fri., Sat., 7:15, 9, 10:45; Sun., 3:30, 5:30, 7:15, 9:00 31 N. 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