Sunday; January 28, 1973- Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page ~lght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 28, 1973 'Bruins DO THE By The Associated Press the ac SOUTH BEND, - "I'm happy scorer Awe set the record and the pressure Walton is off us now, but this really doesn't came compare with winning my first person Our MID-SEASON SALE Features national championship." Ph That was Coach John Wooden 'sisa reaction after his top-ranked UCLA sive Bruins set an all-time college bas- gethe ketball record of 61 successive vic- shoot tories, beating Notre Dame 82-63 in what the same arena where the Bruins he d On Marker Ro tor t Bind ings were last beaten on Jan. 23, 1971. Ask Although the Bruins, now 16-0, sation WIT H PURCHASE OF ANY PAIR OF KZ'stook early control and kept com- mand behind Bill Walton's su- perb floor play and Keith Wilkes' shooting, it was a game of rous- ing contact before a roaring sell- ut Irish crowd, and witnessed, by a national television audience. ped: Late in the game, Wooden, whose his boc Bruins seek a seventh straight" 2455 South State HOURS:. NCAA title and their ninth since Teri Wooden 's first crown in 1963-64, was COLT 1 mile south of campus M, W, Th, F: 10-8:30 joltedout of his serene character, Jim 662-7307 Tues., Sot.: 10-5:30 striding to the Irish bench and cludin scolding Notre Dame Coach Digger closin Phelps. Mary] "I told Digger to keep his play- to def ers under control," said Wooden, lina 94 who was particularly upset aboutterda9 whip tion of Notre Dame's leading O'T , John Shumate, against the f r. Wooden said Shumate of 13 to him after the game and are n nally apologized. Atlan elps commented that "UCLA Nor very good, physical, aggres- play, team that plays well to- halfti er. You have to have a great fore ing day to beat them and Terps can you say about Walton- Tu oes so much?" and ed about his sideline conver- cutD with Wooden, Phelps quip- 2:39 "He asked me if I had read ook They Call Me Coach." ps twinkle LEGE PARK, Md.-Senior O'Brien scoredt38 points, in- g four free throws in the g minute, as fourth-ranked land rallied in the second half eat third-ranked North Caro- 4-88 in college basketball yes- Y. ND Brien sank 13 of 20 shots from loor and converted all but one foul shots for the Terps, who ow 14-1 including 4-1 in the tic Coast Conference. th Carolina, 3-2 in league and 15-3 over-all, led 48-44 at me and trailed just 72-71 be- a Maryland streak upped the s' margin to 82-73. vo baskets by John O'Donnell a free throw by Bobby Jones Maryland's lead to 82-78 with remaining before the Terps erted five consecutive one- one free throw situations. rien and Bob Bodell each four of the final free throws, Elmore scored Maryland's field goal in the final four tes, and Tom McMillen con- d the final two foul shots for 'erps. Millen, Maryland's scoring r with a 23.7 average, at- ted only eight field goals and ted with 13 points. phins dunked OVIDENCE-Providence Col- connected on its first nine from the floor and then held epeated charges by Jackson- in registering an 87-84 basket- 'ictory yesterday before 11,834 e Civic Center. ee Friars, hitting on 12 of first 14 shots, built up a iint lead at one stage of the half and enjoyed an 11- edge, 49-38, at halftime. Dolphins, paced by -Abe ard, Butch Taylor and Henry ims, made repeated efforts to up cutting the Providence in to three points 65-62 with futes to go. * * * ers strike gold N YORK-Ed Ratleff's 20 led a parade of five double- scorers as fifth-ranked Long State turned back Northern 's 101-86 yesterday in the of a college basketball triple- r at Madison Square Garden. erve Frank Weiss made two brows and a field goal in the, g minutes to lead Army to a, triumph over Manhattan John Somogyi's 31 points Rutgers past Columbia 83-74 opener. tleff's layup, with 5:41 left e first half, put Long BeachI p to stay 36-34 and the 49ers a 52-44 margin at the inter- on. They had it up to 78-63 nother Ratleff layup with remaining. k Aberegg added 18 points and y Gray had 16 as Long i's balanced attack offset a ian show by Billy Harris and Bradley of Northern Illinois, iad 35 and 23, respectively. pite his team's 15th triumph games, Long Beach Coach Tarkanian called it, "the defensive game we've played ason. We looked like we were walking out there." ers trample COLN, Neb.-Seventh-ranked uri charged to a 17-0 lead for record fi -0 AP Photo THE DOMINANT FORCE "in yesterday's 82-63 UCLA win over Notre Dame was 6-11 Bruin center Bill Walton (32), who finished second in team scoring behind Keith Wilkes with 16 points, but played a ferocious board game to lead UCLA to its 61st straight win. over Nebraska yesterday and never ed Alabama used shooting accuracy was threatened in coasting to a and stingy defense to swamp Ten- 78-65 Big Eight Conference basket- nessee 72-56 yesterday and take ball win. a commanding lead in the South- Nebraska never got closer than eastern Conference basketball race. 12 after that and it was only an The conquest was Bama's 12th 18-6 spurt by the Cornhuskers in straight and sixth in a row in the the last five minutes which made SEC. the final score respectable. Alabama. jumped to an 18-4 ad- Five Tigers scored in double vantage midway in the first half. figures, led by Al Ebernard's 22. The tight Tide defense allowed Nebraska, 6-9, was led by Lee Tennessee to make good on only Harris, with 12. two of its first 18 shots. The Tigers, now 14-2, who wonot s s 12 straight at the start of the The Vols made a small come- season before losing two of the back with six minutes left in the first three of their conference half before Alabama supersub Paul games, committed 28 turnovers to Ellis hit a basket and got the Tide 16 for Nebraska. rollng agan. However, a 54-28 rebound advan- Bama's Charles Cleveland led tage and 48 percent shooting from all scorers with 20 points. Larry the field were more than enough to Robinson had 18 for Tennessee. compensate for the bobbles. * * * The Huskers shot only 38 pervent HornedFflop from the field as they dropped to Frogs 1-2 in the Big Eight. * FAYETTEVILLE, Ark - Arkan- ' -- 4 Tol IGNTI The word at a time reader. s i M ) The skimmer. At Tonight's Mini-Lesson you'll actually improve your reading efficiency, both speed and comprehension, by using our techniques which have worked for over % million people just like you. Whether you're a "Lazy Reader" unable to concentrate, a "Word-at-,a-time Reader" who spends days, weeks, and months reading material that should take minutes and hours, a reader who can't remember anything you read, or a "Skimmer", who reads fast but retains little ... we can help you. All the advantages of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics will be explained and demonstrated completely at the FREE Mini-Lesson. Stop wasting valuable time .. you've got nothing to lose, everything to gain! Attend a FREE Mini-Lesson Tonight also MONDAY and TUESDAY Ann Arbor U of M Union 530 S. State Street Times: 6:30 pm and 8:30 pm Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge 2380 Carpenter Rd. Times: 6:30 pm and 8:30 pm PrmEVELYN WOOD .. -.I. m . ^ . ... m ain __ Tide tingles TUSCALOOSA, Ala.-Ninth-rank- THERE WILL BE A MEETINGOF... THE UNDERGRADUATE POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION On TUESDAY, JANUARY 30th At 7:30 P.M. in ROOM 429 MASON HALL As the Weather Gets Hotter, So Do the Issues. ALL ARE INVITED TO ATTEND sas' Martin Terry, the leading scorer in the Southwest Conference, poured in 34 points to lead the Razorbacks to a 90-75 conference victory over Texas Christian yes- terday. Terry, who was saddled with four fouls throughout much of the sec- ond half, scored 21 points in the first half as the Razorbacks grabbed a 47-35 lead at inter- Imission. The victory gave Arkansas a 3-1 conference record and a 10-6 season record. TCU,, which owned six straight victories over the Razorbacks, dropped to 0-4 in the conference and 2-13 for the season. Arkansas never trailed from the time Terry hit a jump shot for an 11-10 lead in the opening minutes, although TCU tied the score on two occasions intthe first half. Bill Bozeat paced TCU's attack dwith 22 points and Lynn Royal added 14. HEREARE THE FACTS fi.: ) The lazy reader. LSA Coffee Hour TVUESDAY 3:00-4:30 January 30 Philosophy Department Packed into more than 900 pages of the 1973 Official ASSOCIATED PRESS ALMANAC are tens of thousands of facts R N A...4 ... .1. - &L.L 1:1. .....:.