page sue THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 10, 1973 I T H-I C I A N D I L Wednesday, January 10, 1973 FOCUS the other side of learning Short term & weekly groups with trained leaders to explore issues of growth and identity. AVAILABLE THIS SEMESTER-- Sex Roles Workshop Art Workshop Massage Workshop Self-Awareness for Students in Helping Professions Couples Group Workshop on Men's Issues Workshop for Divorced People Workshop on Black Women's Issues Consultation to living units-dorms, fraternities, sororities, communes, coops, etc. available on request Conse to a Group Orientation Meeting Wed., an. 10th or Thurs., Jan. 11th AT 7:30 IN 25 ANGELL HALL FOR INFORMATION CALL BART-764-8437 OR ANN, JAY, OR JOHN-764-9179 FOCUS-sponsored by Counseling Services, Office of Student Services and Project Outreach King named nominee for prestigious trophy Special To The Daily Former Michigan graduate and Olympic gold medal winner Cap- tain Maxine "Micki" King has been announced as one of the 10 finalists in the running for the prestigious James E. Sullivan Award. The winner of the award is generally acknowledged as the outstanding American amateur ath- lete of the year and will be an- nounced January 15, 1973. Captain King's selection was made public at the recent National Convention of the Amateur Ath- letic Union (AAU) in Kansas City. She was nominated by both the Interservice Sports Committee, as the outstanding military athlete of 1972, and by the AAU Joint Men's and Women's Diving Committee. King, a captain in the Air Force, is the first active duty service wo- man to be nominated for the Sul- livan Award. Eight other gold medalists w e r e nominated wrestlers Wayne Wells and Dan Gable, marathon runner Frank Shorter, 800 meter runner Dave Wottle, swimmers Melissa Belote and Mike Burton, hurdler Rodney Milburn, and speed skater Diane Holum. Bronze medal winner Larry Young (race walk) rounds out the nominees. Mark Spitz, winner of seven gold medals in swimming, was not elig- ible for the award due to a rule prohibiting an athlete from win- ning the award twice. Spitz cop- ped the honor in 1971. Should Captain King win the award she would become the fifth female recipient since the award was initiated in 1930. Among the laurels of the former Pontiac, Michigan resident's il- lustrious 18-year career are: ten National AAU diving titles, three collegiate , titles, Pan American Games medals, and selections as both AAU All-American diver and water polo goalie. Captain King has also made the finals of every AAU diving championship since 1963 with the exception of 1969 when she -was injured. The injury came in the 1968 Olympic games where she broke an arm on one of her last dives, still going on to finish fourth. Gifte By DAN BORUS There are a couple of things they just don't talk about at the University of Minnesota - foot- ball, the brawl with Ohio State and losing in basketball. While the first two have scarcely been mentioned at all, the rough and rumble Gophers have found themselves with one black mark against their record. Unfortunately for the seventh ranked men from the North the loss came last Saturday night against the Iowa Hawkeyes and plummeted the defending Big Ten champions to thenbottom of the pile in the Big Ten. Surprisingly, t h e Gophers lost the game on the boards. "In a nutshell," said Iowa coach Dick Shultz, "our outrebounding them summed up the game." Coach Bill Musselman, vilified for his conduct during last sea- son's incident and the unnatur- al emphasis' he places on win- ning, concurred: "This was the first time we have been outre- bounded. We just didn't react well." But before anyone starts ban- BREWER, BEHAGEN LEAD WAY f Gophers eye ti tie ishing the Gophers to burrow the basement burrow, another look is in order. THE GOPHERS, who last sea- son existed on the talents and determination of five men known as the "Iron Five" are well stocked and the preliminary favorite for the Big Ten circuit. All five of last years anti-heroes are back, joined by brawlers Ron Behagan and Corky Tay- lor, who missed last season aft- ter a disagreement with Ohio State's Luke Witte took an un- pleasant turn. Led by the Big Ten's Most Valuable Player Jim Brewer, who ironically was not listed on any All-Big Ten teams, Clyde Turner, a 17.1 points per game forward, and Dave Winfield, the Gophers boast a strong front line. Dick Schultz of Iowa calls them the most physical team he. has played this year. The Golden Rodents, as they are unaffection- ately known in Columbus, led the Big Ten in rebounding at the conclusion of the non-conference campaign. Last season, the Gophers were disles of the Mussel-nan plin for d fease. They slowly work- ed tie bAl for the high percent- age shot and forced the unbal- anced shot while on defense. Musselman seemed to have an aversion, in fact, to putting the ball into the air. Opponents taunted the Gophers with cries of "boxing, not baskets." But Mus- selman held to his slow-down game.. This year, while the same Musselman "good defense" phil- osophy remains, the Gopher of- fense has opened up quite a bit. Scoresin the range of 120 points have been reached on at least two occasions by the rampaging Gophers, prompting one coach to refer to them as Golden Boars. Even at guard the Gophers are a physical team. Last season 6-3 Bob Nix and 6-5 Keith Young handled the ball-control duties. This campaign, however, the Go- phers have been going with a one guard offense, even though there has been plenty of help on the bench in case Musselman needed backcourt help. YOUNG suffered a severely bruised thigh and did not return to action until the ill-fated Iowa contest. Generally Nix h a s played the point with Winfield, Behagen, Brewer, and Turner in the forecourt. With an appearance somewhat similar to the goon squad, the Gophers have thus far had re- m rk ly b a I a n d e d scor- irg. F ch of t'e eight regular players h,)s had a twenty point game. Rebounding is just as strong and evenly spread with Brewer the leading ball retriever with a 17.6 caroms per game. And if that is not enough to frighten the rest of the league, Musselman has something else up his sleeve. Actually, he's too big to hide up anyone's sleeve, but 7-0 freshman Tommy Bark- er, who demolished the state of Texas on the maplewood for three seasons, is more than enough to give the residents of the Big Ten a severe migraine. Like many teams, the Gophers break from the gate fast and let up in the middle of the game, al- lowing the opposition to threaten their lead. The championship game of the Far West Classic was typical of their sometimes lackadaisical play. Brewer, Turner, and Behagen thumped the Oregon front line convincingly and the Gophers rolled to an 18 point lead mid- way through the second half. But they lapsed on defense and Sam Whitehead brought the Beavers back to within two. The Gophers held on for an 83-80 vic- tory. Musselman, however, was not exactly pleased at the trend. "If we play like this in the Big Ten, we won't win a game." he said. No one, however, is anticipat- ing that. A 4 i r k r a v ., r- }, o.; w " Sa3 p'j " E.: {i Ii { i' i1 p' . ' ='I ri Et $' t 4 r M;, u,.. {, srr ;, r :! 4 " ' 4 j " A a i I PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD TH RU SAT., JAN. 13, 1973. Meijer reserves the right to limit sales according to specified lim- its. No sales to dealers, institu- tions, or distributors. 4 4 SHOPPERS' MEN'S WORK SHOE SALE! Choose from any style work shoe in our Shoe Department and save $2.00 off the purchase price with this cou- pon. Pictured are just a few of the many styles available. Boots or shoes -long wearing qualities. OUR REG. $9.96 to $21.76 pr. $796 6$ 7 PR. I1 PR. WITH COUPON WITH COUPON SPECIALS NESCO PORTABLE O Ideal for students. O Holds a 1=/2 lb. load... avg. time 12 minutes. 43/4 gal. cap. * Thermoplastic tub, unbreakable, light- weight, rustproof, with handies and drain valve. OUR REG. $36.88 88 ONLY HAND WRINGER ATTACHMENT ONLY $10.97 JEWELRY SMALL APPLIANCE DEPT. VA S H E 4 MODEL NO. N-181-1 e Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY MOUNTAINOUS MINNESOTA PIVOTMAN JIM BREWER (52) yanks down an errant shot in last winter's contest with Michigan. Ken Brady (15) and John Lockard cautiously look on. "Brew," the Big Ten's MVP a year ago, heads an awesome aggregation from Minneapolis which will be tough to beat for the league crown. Wolfpack grab third slot, B ruins remain atop heap 4 MEN'S WORK SHOE ENGINEER BOOT ack only. Sizes 7 r12. Our Reg. $13.96 $1196 OU WITH COUPON MEN'S MEN'ST WORK OXFORD WORK SHOE Leather uppers. Sizes $ 6-inch leather uppers. 09 By The Associated Press North Carolina switched places with Marquette yesterday while UCLA and Maryland continued to play "me and my shadow" in The Associated Press' major - college basketball poll. North Carolina State (9-0) T p-. L 7 to 12. Our Reg. $9.96 WITH COUPON Sizes 7 to 12. Our Reg. $11.76 WITH COUPON SHOE DEPT. FOOD CLUB Cottage Cheese FRESH FROZEN TuAf TIPE LAUNDRY DETERGENT 1.1 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.1 7.] 8.1 9.' 10.1 11.] 12. 13. 14.. 15. 16.1 17.] 18.: UCLA (47) Maryland North Carolina St. Marquette Missouri Long Beach St. North Carolina Minnesota Vanderbilt Houston Providence San Francisco SW Louisiana Alabama Jacksonville Indidana Kansas St. Florida St. 10-0 9-0 9-0 10-0 11-0 11-1 12-1 9-1 11-1 10-2 7-1 10-1 7-1 7-1 10-2 8-2 9-2 8-3 940 767 689 656 495 394 392 364 252 203 188 156 146 130 98 80 52 47 moved into third place with 689 points while Marquette (10-0) dropped to fourth with 656 in bal- loting by sports writers and snortscasters. UCLA (10-0) remained a unani- mous first-place choice while Maryland (9-0) stayed a solid sec- ond choice. UCLA got all 47 first- place votes and 940 points while Maryland got 767 points. BIllbard The women's basketball team will be practicing tonight through Thursday from 6:30 to 8:00 at the Intramural Building. All un- dergraduate women are more than welcome. * * * The following meetings will be held this week for intramural athletic managers:' Fraternity and Residence Halls divisions, tonight, 7:30, Sports Services Bldg., Independent d i V i s i o n, Wednesday night, 7:30, Sports Services Bldg., Graduate divi- sion, Wednesday night, 9:00, Sports Services Bldg., Women's division, Thursday night, 7:30, Barbour Gym. a 9 4 s s 16 oz, wt. carton 3 C C 30 lb. 54 wt-b lb3. box Tie-St. John's, N.Y. 8-2 47 20. Louisville 10-2 34 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Arizona, Brigham Young, Cincinnati, Daily Libels, Iowa, Mar- shall, Memphis St., MICHIGAN, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oral Roberts, Penn, St. Joseph's, Pa., Santa Clara, South Carolina, Southern Cal, washington. 49 oz. wt. box 4 f WITH COUPON WITH COUPON SAVE Y2 c1 with this coupon N loward the purchase oft 0 C OOD CLUB SMALL or LARGE CURD iCOTTAGE CHEESE 23c 16 oz. wt. carton WITH COUPON 3 Prices good Tues. Jan. 9 thru Sat. Jan. 13, 1973 SAVE 2 , with this coupon I toward the purchase fi en's Work Shoes $2 off YOUR CHOICE Our Reg. $9.96 to $21.76 WITH COUPON I I Prces aocd Tues Jan. 9 thru Sot. Jan. 13, 1973 3 i- {-! 1lIl d". ' ' :-'.? l' f n " J i k :EP7+ Ii IS~ SAVE 4OC0~t a SAVE 40cwith this oupono toward the purchase of$ jc Co NI I E . . . . 49c I LAUNDRY DETERGENT 49 oz. wt. box WITH COUPON I SPr ces good Tue. Jan. 9 thru Sat. Jan. 13, 1973 3 > °>. i ,i . . .. ..., DEPT. SIGN UP NOW ! MUSIC LESSONS ANN ARBOR MUSIC MART will soon be starting Class Lessons in Guitar, Flute, Banjo, & Drums. $12.00 for 6 week's lessons A ' , -o\rpon 'I m tecl... Ro oa¢";per .ifem ond....per fhmi ::".. 1* 9P... m 'rgL,...P :3'];eym; +no.z;p. m =-^ +^T. F^ om+' y . ° " ", a +F yC ?+ wr _ _ _ Z 4 ,a ,{ ]3 LS- r 't7 F. ,P,,, . ^" F.w:, , t. _._ _. ,. . s= ,"1r1if * . a 7#. S. _ -DNS -G'---'= _, ., ixs,:"