Page Six We've Been" 'Waiting for You Welcome Back ! UBARBERS for West and STYLISTSV s Michigan Union By The Associated Pressarch NEW YOI VnK - Na "Tiny " r - THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 11, 1973 tops balloting BIG TEN ALSO-RAN: Badger all-star squad woes continue hibald, listed at 6-foot-I and FREE JELLY DONUTS at Bach Club Organizational Meeting Thurs., Jan. 11, 8 p.m. East Quad, Greene Lounge If you like music, friendly people, and have a little time, come on over and help us get it on for 1973. Absolutely no. musical knowledge necessary. Join The Daily IN. RYV K at - ae ny Archibald, who used to have trou- ble getting into big-city basketball arenas because of his diminutive appearance, led the balloting for the West team for the National Basketball Association's All-Star Game in Chicago Jan. 23. 155 pounds, received a near-unan- imous vote from the writers a n d broadcasters who selected the first' eight players for the squad, an- nounced yesterday by NBA Com- missioner Walter Kennedy. Archibald, who leads the NBA with averages of 33.2 points and By BOB McGINN that one, nobody in Madison would' 11.7 assists per game, will be mak- The strains of "On Wisconsin" have minded. ing his first all-star appearance in haven't been reverberating through But it was more than the Bruin this year's 23rd renewal of the Camp Randall Fieldhouse the past bombing that is sticking in the game, which will be nationally few years. Some felt this season, craws of Badger backers. A week televised by ABC. however, would be different. But ago Wisconsin had inter-state rival with the Badgers 5-5 overall and Marquette all but counted out, but Joining Archibald in the start- going no where in the Big Ten, it the Warriors of Al McGuire ing lineup will be guary J e r r y looks like it'll be the same old scrambled off the deck in two over- West of Los Angeles, center Ka- song again. times to win the game and the reem Abdul-Jabbar of Milwaukee championship of the Milwaukee and forwards Spencer Haywood of PERHAPS IT WAS the opening Classic. It was a bitter pill for Seattle and Rick Barry of Golden game that shattered this Wisconsin Wisconsin, not only because it State. outfit which returned four regulars would have snapped Marquette's Also selected for the team were from last year's 13-11 club. The 80 game home victory skein, but place was Pauley Pavilion, the host it would also have helped in this Portland's Sidney Wicks, W i 1 t was UCLA, and the score was 94 spring's recruiting battle. Chamberlain of Los Angeles and 53. If Coach John Powless had There are only a handful of col- Charlie Scott of Phoenix. punched his schedulemaker after lege prospects from Wisconsin high THE BAGELS FOR BRUNCH BUNCH STRIKES AGAIN! Prof. Murray Meisels Dept. of Psychology, EMU formerly at Hebrew Univ., Jerusalem SPEAKS ON "PSYCHOLOGICAL HANG-UPS IN ISRAEL" following lox & bagels brunch (talk is free, brunch 75c) Sunday, Jan. 14, 11 a.m., at Hillel, 1429 Hill schools each year, and McGuiret has been able to grab the best1 recently. Powless' current roster is, dotted with home grown products' (10 of 17), but few are of the blue-- chip variety. Add the fact that Mc-1 Guire has been so successful inl wooing New York players and you can see the situation Badger bas-1 ketball is inf STILL, Powless landed a pair-of' New York cornermen several years1 ago in Leon Howard and Gary Watson, and they have both per-c formed well for him. Watson, how- ever, after two campaigns of regu-1 lar duty, left the squad early inc December and his loss has hurt. Howard, meanwhile, is the Bad-1 gers' leading scorer at 15.5 points1 per game and is the team's cap-z tain. A second team All-Big Ten pick a year ago, Howard (6-5, 175) can also board with far bigger1 rivals. Starters up front with Howard' are the 6-11 Hughes twins, Kim andI Kerry. Both juniors have performed well so far, helping the Badgers to1 a rebounding edge over all but two of their foes. Kim, who lines up in the pivot, has improved slightly on his sopho- more season. He's averaging at Doint more at 12.6, and maintains1 hi fnnrm b in dnrcnrintc to play other people. He almost begged me to come back." Powless has refused to comment on Grimes' charges, saying, "No, I'm not going to put myself down by getting into any type of battle like that." But the fact remains that the basketball situation in Madison is far from peaceful. Wisconsin does not land players of the caliber of Watson and Grimes often, and their loss is painful EVEN WITHOUT these two, Wis- consin's problems haven't centered around the front-line. Powless' main worry has been in the back- court. Junior Gary Anderson (6-4) has been the most consistent guard, but he clearly isn't a threat to capture any post-season honors. Anderson is averaging 10.2 ppg. and also does a good job on the boards. The other backcourt berth has been shared by 6-1 junior speed merchant . Lamont Weaver and sharpshooting sophomore Bruce McCauley. Weaver, who is still remembered throughout the state for his last ditch 65-foot shot which won the state championship for his Beloit team, is having a horren- dous shooting year (30 per cent). He scores at a 7.5 clip. I It was the 13th all-star selec- tion for West and Chamberlain, tying them with Bob Cousy for the all-time lead in that honor. The remainder of the 14-man squad will be selected by the nine coaches in the Western Conference. The first eight members of the East team were announced Tues- day. The Next Jury To Select Work For Display AT THE WNII1i)I Gr.jAL~td&Y Will Be On Tues., Jan. 16 All work must be submitted by Sunday, Jan. 14 NEW CLAxS POLITICAL CONFLICT BEHAVIOR POL SCI 472, SECT 2 G. MARKUS First Meetings: Fri., Mon. 3:00, 5624 Haven Hall The study of violent conflict, both domestic and international. Learn about what you talk, about.- FOR INFO CALL: 764-1344 The Most Effective Way To Save is Buy Used Books Each term we ship thousands of used books to Ann Arbor and sell them for one quarter to one third less than regular. Compare our new book prices too. We care about wide selection, so we service ours with a pro- cess unique in Ann Arbor. This Access System tells us what is in stack and what must be or- dered via Telex. As classes start all orders are special de- livery or special handling. It helps get books here fast. Follett's is at the State Street end of the diag. If you didn't shop there last term you may have paid too much for text- books. aiIs norm of ooaras per conesi. . THE 6-3 McCAULEY is a com- HTS BROTHER, on the other pletely different kind of player. hand, has been a pleasant surprise His deficiencies are quickness and to Powless. Kerry lacked aggres- ballhandling, but he is a phenom- siveness on the backboards in 1971- enal marksman. As a freshman Mc- 72 and played sparingly. But this Cauley fired 58.6 per cent from the time around the Freeport, Ill. na- floor. This season his percentage tive has been tough in every phase, ha1s9717 record: 13-11 6- Big Ten snorting marks of 13.1 points and 1972-72 record: 1-11 - Big Ten 8 rebounds a contest. 1972-73 record: 5-5, 0-2 Big Ten Before the season it was doubtful Strengths: Strong frontline pro- whether Kerry would even earn a vides tough rebounding and ade- berth in the starting lineup. Wat- quate scoring. Leon Howard a su- son, whohad missed the second~ perb overall performer. half of last winter's play because I Weaknesses: Miserable shooting, of scholastic ineliibility, was inconsistency at guard. Loss of around, and so was highly-pnbliciz- Gary Watson and Kessem Grimes. ed 6-9 sophomore Kessem Grimes. He had marks of 23.9 points and 17 flj leb al boards as a freshman.1e But Watson quit, and Grimes ' 's FOLLETT'S 4 He's number one -AP Photo That week smile belongs to future Philadelphia Phillie Alan Ban- nister, first man taken yesterday in baseball's annual amateur, draft. Watching the former Arizona State shortstop sign his career away are his wife, Kathy, and Phillie scout Merrill Combs. didn't seem to fit into Powless' plans from the beginning.pOn De- cember 24th Powless dropped the sophomore from the squad for missing several practices. MONDAY, Grimes blasted his coach's "overall philosophy." "I didn't want to leave Wisconsin but Powless gave me no other choice," he said. "He told me he wanted to play me, but had outside pressures NHL Standings NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP presents DUSTIN HOFFMAN "LITTLE BIG,.MAN"l Beeny Zapped!- by not gaining enough information from what you read? . by a lot of anxiety at exam time? . with lousy grades when you really thought you were doing well? by some kind of study or reading problem? If so, call the Reading Improvement Service for information. Registration for a 6 week reading ef- ficiency and Study Skills Classes, Jan. 12. $6.00 for six hours. Reading Improvement Service The University of Michigan 1610 Washtenaw Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Phone: (313) 764-9481 East Division W L T Montreal 24 6 10 Boston 26 10 3 NY Rangers 25 13 3 Buffalo 23 12 7 Detroit 18 16 6 Toronto 14 20 6 Vancouver 12 25 6 NY Islanders 4 33 4 West Division Chicago 24 14 2 Minnesota 19 15 5 L. Angeles 19 18 4 Atlanta 17 19 7 Philadelphia 17 18 6 Pittsburgh 17 18 6 St. Louis 14 19 7 California 7 24 8F Pts 58 55 53 53 42 34 30 12 50 43 42 41 40 40 35 22 GF GA 161 92 179 119 153 105 155 114 124 127 128 134 131 184 77 193 149 113 129 110 125 126 111 122 138 144 143 135 110 132 108 162 t4ournament this weekend The state of Michigan's 1973 ptaddlehallttournament will take nlace Friday night, Saturday and Sunday (don't worry, it will be over in time for the Super Bowl) at the Intramural Building. Any Mich- igan resident or student enrolled in a Michigan school, college or university is eligible to participate in the tourney. The entry fee is $7.00 per verson per event and the deadline for entries in the double elimination affair is tonight at 6:00. Entries should be taken to the Intramural Building. Categories in the three-day tour- ney consist of men's singles, men's 3doubles, women's singles and doubles, master singles (the con- testants in this category must be over 40 years of age) and master doubles. Over 100 participants have sub- mitted entries for the tournament but more women's doubles teams are needed. Only one doubles team of women has so far signed up for the event. Anyone interested in watching the tournament is wel- come at the Intramural Building anytime during the weekend. The finals will be held at approximately 11:00 a.m. on Sunday. a FACTORY DEMO SEE COLOR PRINTS MADE AT BOTH QUARRY LOCATIONS Friday, Jan. 12-3 p.m.-9 P.m. Saturday, Jan. 13-11 a.m.-4 p.m. , Last Night's Results Detroit 2, Pittsburgh 1 Atlanta 5, Chicago 2 Toronto 4, NY Islanders 2 Montreal 6, Minnesota 0 St. Louis at California, Inc. Tonight's Games Minnesota at Boston NY Rangers at Buffalo Los Angeles at Philadelphia COLOR PRINT DEMO Will Be Held at Both Locations: 318 S. State Street 2215 W. Stadium Blvd. UNIQUE MEXICAN FOODS and COCKTAILS MEXICAN BUFFET $3.25 ANN ARBOR MON DAYS FROM 990 Broadway 4 P.M.-9 P.M. 663-0563 HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-l 1 p.m.; Sat. 2 p.m.-11 p.m.; Sun. 2 p.m.-10 p.m. O Ann Arbor's Mexican Restaurant . . 990 Broadway is on the north side of the Huron River Bridge, 100 yds. south of the intersection of Plymouth Road where it ends at Broadway. -11 MASS MEETING TONIGHT 7:00I Michigan Room, Michigan League F . /.-. . | a i. t.- i '1- - : . . "- -' . - 1 [ - .1V 1/ -/l 11 " SAVE $30 X ON TUITION FOR SPEED WRITING AND TYPING WHAT CAN YOU DO? Can you type? Can you take dictation? Can you write a good business letter? Can you get a good job with the skills and knowledge you now possess? Ennwgi fnrm v, n , Eveninn "Onssce II