Sunday, April 1, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine MHSAA CHAMPIONSHIPS: Cage By BOB McGINN Before the state high school { basketball tournamenthbegan four weeks ago, Detroit Southwestern coach Bob Whitehouse termed his team's play "disappointing." But yesterday in Crisler Arena, after his longshot Prospectors had cut down everyone's favorite, Sag- inaw, 66-60, to seize the Michigan Class 'A' championship, White- house was singing a different tune. Southwestern's first state title1 in its history didn't come easy,: however. The contest was nip and; tuck throughout, with the Pros- pectors holding a razor-thin 32-20 halftime edge. Saginaw had done its damage chiefly through its ferocious board game, as they piled up an over- whelming 28-15 first stanza re- bound advantage. But the hustling S'westerners, combining the overall talents of, 6-7 cornerman Kenny Davis and A 6-4 guard Darryl Robertson, just were not to be denied. Davis led the way with 20 points, while Rob- ertson hit for 16 and six assists. Coach Charlie Coles' Trojans were again paced by their sharp- shooting junior backcourt ace, Tony Smith. He hit 11 of 23 for 23 points. Seniors Willie Dawkins and Bob Chapman closed out their prep careers with 12 points apiece. Unity disintegrates By JEFF CHOWN Everyone's All - Stater Mark Veenstra walked out of Crisler Arena yesterday with 34 points and 14 rebounds after a brilliant per- formance. But underdog Dearborn Divine Child exited with the Class B State Championship trophy, as they shocked heavily favored Hud- sonville Unity Christian 58-54 in perhaps the biggest upset in a day of upsets. Everyone predicted Dearborn would have to play almost the per- fect game to upset Hudsonville, rated at No. 1 in the Class B polls with a flawless 27-0 record. The well-disciplined Falcons proved equal to the task,acommitting only six turnovers and allowing the Cru- saders only two foul shots the en- tire game. Y Hudsonville, led by 6'8" Veen-. stra, dominated the boards, grab- itl Wings still live, beat Hawks, 4-2 GRADUATING? Make your job search,more pro- ductive. Trained consultant will write your 'resyme. 50 one-page copies for $26.00. BEST RESUME SERVICE PHONE: 1-356-2332 (mail orders invited) 17220 W. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield, Mich, 48"075. dailyv sport~s NIGHIT EDITORS: GEORGE HASTINGS MARCIA MERKER bing 33 rebounds to Divine Child's 21. Hudsonville made 26 field goals for 53 attempts for 49 per cent compared with the Falcons 20 of 46 for 47.8 per cent. But as Hudsonville's Coach Andy Ten- Harmsel said: "They had only six fouls, we had 17 - that's what beat us." The Falcons canned 14 of 17 charity tosses to Christian's' 2 for 2. Chargers strike By ROGER ROSSITER Detroit East Catholic's Larry Merchant, whom Charger coach Dave Soules calls "our pressure player", dropped in an 18 foot jumper with two seconds remain- ing last night to pull the Crusad- ers into the MHSAA Class C championship circle 50-49 over Saginaw St. Stephen. With 2:30 left in the contest, All- Stater Elijah Coates canned a short jumper from the left base- line to pull St. Stephen into a 46- 46 tie. Jim Beavers then tossed BELL (MIMES: in a charity for the first St. Ste- phen lead since the game's initial moments. An exchange of turnovers gave Merchant the ball, and his fifteen footer regained the lead for East Catholic 48-47 at the 1:00 mark. Coates connected on a one-and- bonus with :45 left, and St. Ste- phen retrieved a loose ball only to have Terry Franz fouled and miss the subsequent free throw attempt. Catholic's Greg Guye ripped down the rebound and the Charg- ers worked valiantly to set up Merchant for the game winning shot. Crusaders crucify By JOHN KAHLER A fine final quarter effort by center John Bol sparked Grand Rapids Covenant Christian to a 68-61 upset victory over previously undefeated Flint Holy Rosary in the Class D championship game. Bol, a 6-7 senior, contributed 15 points to the late Covenant surge. Covenant Christian seemed tight in the first half, as one would ex- pect from a team that has to prac- tice in other people's gyms. (The school is too small to afford one of its own). The Chargers committed an embarrassing 16 turnovers in the first half. Holy Rosary could not capitalize on them, however, and the Chargers trailed by only one point, 32-31, at the half. By The Associated Press DETROIT - Detroit moved to within one point of fourth-place Buffalo in the battle for the final playoff berth in the National Hock- ey League East Division by ripping Chicago 4-2 last night. WITH one day of the regular sea- son remaining, Detroit visits the New York Rangers tonight while Buffalo hosts St. Louis. Buffalo can clinch a playoff spot with a victory. Should the two teams end in a tie for fourth place, Detroit would enter the playoffs on the strength of their head-to-head record against the Sabres. Ace Bailey broke a scoreless tie with his 8th goal of the season- his second since being traded from the Boston Bruins to Detroit last month-at 18:25 of the first period. Bill Collins took a 20-foot shot which Chicago goalie Gary Smith saved. The puck fell to Smith's feet and Bailey punched the pads of the Black Hawk goalie until the puck went over the goal line. CHICAGO protested to referee Art Skov, but to no avail. Detroit got three goals in the second period as Henry Bucha scored his 13th goal, Al Karlander his 15th and first in 12 games, and Guy Charron scored his 18th as the Wings outshot Chicago 17-7 in a blistering attack. * * * MONTREAL - Jacques Lemaire scored his 43rd goal of the National Hockey League season on a rare penalty shot and added three as- sists to power the Montreal Cana- diens to a 5-1 victory over the New York Rangers yesterday. Lemaire's penalty shot, coming barely 1% minutes into the game, was only the eighth awarded this season, and only the second suc- cessfully converted. It came when New York net- minder Ed Giacomin was trapped out of the goal and defenseman Jim Neilson illegally caught Lemair's shot. On the penalty shot, in which all players except one shooter and the goalie leave the ice, Lemaire swept in alone on Giacomin, faked and easily beat the goalie, who was making his first appearance for the Rangers in six games since be- ing sidelined by a knee injury. Lemaire then set up what proved to be the winning goal, defenseman Larry Robinson's second tally of the season at 5:11, and assisted on Chuck Lefley's goal about 11 min- utes later. Scores NHL Detroit 4, Chicago 2 Montreal'5, N.Y. Rangers 1 Toronto 7, Boston 3 Philadelphia 10, N.Y. Islanders 2 St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 2 Vancouver at Los Angeles, inc. WHA Cleveland 4, Ottawa 2 Philadelphia 5, Chicago 1 ABA New York 114, Carolina Ill High School Basketball Det. Southwestern 66, Saginaw 60 Dearborn Divine Child 58, Hudsonville U. C. 54 Det. E. Catholic 49, Saginaw St. Stephens 48 Grand Rapids Covenant Chr. 68, Flint Holy Rosary 61 AP Photo Two number 44's, Southwestern's Al Bates and Saginaw's Bob Chapman, go after a rebound during yesterday's Class A state high school basketball final at Crisler. Southwestern woon, 66-60. Stickmen rivet Purdue 1wn and easy, By MARK RONAN No one on the Michigan Lacrosse Club could have asked for anything more. Senior attackman Bob Di- Giovanni received the Quivering Quim Award, which might pass for the Purdue Golden Girl in a pinch, and, most importantly, the Michi- gan Club gave the Boilermakers a thorough lesson in humility with a 20-6 shelling yesterday afternoon. Michigan simply overwhelmed the Purdue squad for most of AmbushU1. Hilitoppers crush tracksters By MARCIA MERKER Despite the old college try to boil athletic theory down to an exact science, the decisive factor in any sport is still the competitor's. spirit. Yesterday in Bowling Green, Michigan's flesh was willing but its spirit was weak and the Wolverines fell to Western Kentucky 93-60 + in the Maize and Blue's first outdoor dual track meet of the season. In the pained words of vanquished Michigan coach Dixon Farmer, "We did not perform well due to the lack of competitive effort on our part, which Western Kentucky seemed to be full of." The Maize and Blue won five events in spite of not having had nearly as many outdoor practices as Western Kentucky. Kim Rowe, Big Ten indoor 440 champ, was Michigan's only triple winner with blue ribbons in the 440, 220 and mile-relay, clocking 48.0 and 20.8 in the former two events. Rowe ran the anchor leg as part of the relay team's 3:18.0 winning time. Placing first along with Rowe in the mile relay, Eric Chapman and Al Cornwell reeled off firsts in their respective events, the mile and half mile. Chapman, a middle distance runner, timed 4:16.7 in the mile while Michigan's standard mile runner, Bill Bolster, managed second in the three mile. For the first time in the Michigan '73 track season, the Maize and Blue field event men were unable to produce a decisive edge over their opponents. Steve Adams, Big Ten shot put champion, fanned in the discus and got a second to NCAA shot put runner-up Jesse Stuart in just that event. The devastating Wolverine high jumpers, Mike Nowacki and Doug Giggs, tied for first in their event at 6-8. As foreseen, Western Kentucky's Emmett Briggs clipped Abrahamn Butler in the long and triple jumps. Godfrey Murray, the man who seldom lets Michigan down, pulled through in the 120-high hurdles setting a new Western Kentucky stadium record at 14.1. Murray clocked 10.0 against a 5-15 MPH wind for a second in the 100-yd dash. the first three quarters, and en- joyed a 16-0 lead when the Boiler- makers tallied their first goal late in the third period. Michigan owed much of its win- ning margin to the scoring prow- ess of midfielders Jim Kilkowsky and Clark Bell, both of whom pushed in four goals. Attackman Don Holman was credited with three second - half assists and one goal. DiGiovanni, cast in the sturdy image of Mickey Lolich, continued his offensive blitz by contributing four points to the Wol- verine cause. Before the game, coach Bob Ka- man admitted that Purdue would not likely prove to be the tough- est opponent in the league. "They have had a team for only two years, and now they have admin- istrative and coaching problems," he said. Kaman's observations were shortly borne out. Kilkowsky won the opening face off, the ball was quickly forwarded to DiGiovanni who flashed it in after just eight seconds had elapsed. A brief time later Holman brought the ball in toward the Purdue goal only to lose it as it rolled over the edge of his stick. However, Kilkowsky was there to shove it by the hap- less Purdue goaltender. Extremely fine passing charac- terized the Wolverine e f f o r t throughout the afternoon. Once the somewhat fitful Purdue attack' carried the ball to the Michigan BULLETIN The Michigan Ruggers fell to their second straight spring season loss yesterday to . the Iron City Pittsburgh team by the scores 19-9, 10-0 and 16-6. Bill Osborn and Jacque Pas- sino led the Blue team scoring for the Michigan Rugby Club. end, but was halted by the strong defensive resistance of Buck Foot. He passed .to Dick Dean, not en- tirely recovered from an injury re- ceived last week, who flung a long cross field pass to Bell as he raced up the field. Bell culminated the beautiful play by 4tching his first goal of the afternoon. The defense led by the strong play of Pete Lodwick and Foot thwarted nearly every offensive thrust mustered by Purdue. Vth. ANNIVERSARY SALE! thanks to your response, continues thru April. 10% OFF on all hardbound BOOKS and 78 phono records Wooden Spoon Used Books 200 N. 4th AVE. OPEN SUNDAYS, NOON-6 769-4775 Ann Arbor Needs Progressive Leadership FRANZ MOGIIS and a DEMOCRATIC COUNC L can give it to us! Jogging with a friend is a fur way to exercise, and keeping in shape always seems easier with good company along. So you don't want to give up even one day's run, and U0 certainly not several days due to your period. That's why you should depend on the protection of Tampax tampons. Because they're worn internally, you'll feel completely comfortable. When the tampon is properly in place, you won't even know, it's there. And you'll be free to keep up with your jogging. Active lives demand reliable internal sanitary protection. So is it any wonder that more women in more countries around the world turn to Tampax tampons? The internal protection more women trust *r xi .,. OEVELOPE" #Y A DOOTO S10w USED 9Y MILOONS OP WOM#M MADE ONLY BY TAMPAXINCORPORATED, PALMER, MASs. Join The Daily 0 THE 1973 DEMOCRATIC TEAM, left to right (first row) : MONA WALZ, Fifth Ward, ETHEL LEWIS, Fourth Ward, ELIZABETH KAUFMAN, Third Ward, (sec- ond row )Incumbent NORRIS THOMAS, First Ward,- CAROL JONES, Second Ward, and FRANZ MOGDIS, Candidate for Mayor. ELECT FRANK MOGDIS and A DEMOCRATIC COUNCIL VOTE MONDAY APRIL 2 paid for by Citizens for Mogdis, Martin Plack, Treasurer _..-- ------ - --_- - - - -___ - --- tl MONDAY, APRIL 2 Dr. Robert L. Iglehart PROFESSOR, SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN SPEAKS ON "Science and Visual Arts" THE INFLUENCE OF SCIENCE ON THE VISUAL ARTS OF OUR TIME 5th Lecture of a Series entitled MAN AND HIS WAYS 7:30-9:00 P.M. International Center Recreation Room 603 E. MADISON London-just 3 blocks away+[ ! There's a whole new charter system called Advanced Booking Charter. It's for every- body who ever wanted to fly inexpensively to Europe but never before qualified. Now you do. A. 22 non-stop charter flights to London for anybody from $220. No age restrictions. No group membership requirements. B. Fly a Boeing 707 from Windsor Airport to London's Gatwick Airport. Connecting flights available to Amsterdam and all of Europe. C. The following are the flights of the summer ABC schedule: Last Sign-up Date Flight No. Dates Route (deposit due $75) Total Price 627 5/3 -5/20 Win/Lon/Win April 15 . 220 629 5/10-5/3111 220 Walking to Eur( i I1 __ -- ------ __ ._..-- . i L' I I li It's the only cheaper way than flying group charter. Take a load off your feet. Sit down and consider the Obvious Alternative: illl + + +. +± you get the least expensive flight available. you get all the comforts of scheduled service. you get a large selection of flights and destinations. AND you get there on a non-stop jet. Read on - and if this isn't enough, good luck on your journey. By for the puddles the way, watch out 0/7 LZV 631 5/31-6/21 " 220 633 5/31-7/1 " 235 635 6/1 -6/21 235 637 6/1 -7/1 235 639 6/14-7/5 " 235 641 6/28-7/18 April 15 235 643 6/28-8/29 235 645 7/1 -7/18 235 647 7/1 -7/29 "235 649 7/5 -7/26 235 651 7/12-8/1 235 653 7/26-8/16 235 655 8/1 -8/23 May 1 235 657 8/1 -8/30 " 235 659 8/8 -8/31 235 661 8/8 -9/6 235 663 8/16-8/31 235 665 8/16-9/6 235 667 8/17-9/7 220 669 8/30-9/21E "220 Cond~itons and~ Regulationis: 1. Each flight is regulated by Canadian ABC rules. Flight No. 011 013 015 017 019 023 027 033 035 041 049 055 057 059 061 067 099 Dates 5/3 - 5/1 - 54-, 5/4 5/9 - 5/27 5/31- 6/10- 7/2 7/6 - 7/22- 8/30 5/17- 6/8 -- 6/22-- 6/28- 8/7 -- 8 / 25--- -6/15 6/3 -6/27 -7/3 -8/15 -8/2 -8/11 -8/3 -8/11 -8/30 -8/1 1 -8/9 -7/14 -8/18 -9/4 -9/4 Route Det/Ams-Lon/ Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams-Lon/Det Det/Ams NY/Ams-Lon/NY NY/Ams-Lon/NY NY/Ams-Lon/NY NY/Ams-Lon/NY NY/Ams--Lon/NY Det/NY/Lon--Lon/NY/Det Admin. Cost 170 170 175 175 200 200 210 210 210 220 100 170 189 179 189 179 200 Total 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 Cost 190 190 195 195 220 220 230 230 230 240 120 190 209 199 209 199 220 f ' 1. Before you Financial arrangements -- cancellation privileges - traveler's insurance air, medical, baggage) 11. 11 T li I l I.:I°i ill