Thursday, April 5, 1973 '-'~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine aroused Rangers maul Brurns By The Associated Press BOSTON-New York exoded for including a air of tallies by Walt to only three shots on net as the Rangers won their opening round Stanley Cup game 6-2 over the Bruins last night. Bruce MacGregor and Brad Patrk also flipped goals past Bruins goalie Jacques Piante in the Na- an 3 or te night a shot from the blue line past Habs hum acGregor got his goal at 7:25 MONTREAL - A power play- o.the secontd period after a scrm goa rbyt rigt wingtr Yva ter- a5-ooe at 8:53 Tkac last night gave the Montreal slapped a3-ot t :3 a-Canadiens a 2-1 victory over the zuk came out of the penatlty bx, tenacious Buffalo Sabres and a immediately pckedaupth puck 1-0 lead in the best-of-7 Stanley Plante at 11: 48. He got his second Cup quarter-final round. at 15:55 when he shot through two As soon as the first puck was: defenders and Plante in front of dropped, NHIL playoff history was NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS PHILADELPIA-nddThe Minnet advta sg from1 the ldlhiad Flersd with a 3-0hvictrym last niht inethme pen gae ofne aurtr Stey Cu playoffga .Itwsh chckigh scrlss duel Piad9:21hI thneth1-9 seodsero, an ennis Flyerk net byitholy1 ec ork letane me ei hhog e r Jen Driedf secndd the Mine- fee inie N th blue lie he Flers, in loing, ieta si2nce ther 19g8-ar season eruies goals during the regular sea ion, , saof the first pero and thnd hs third goa at 2:13 of the secon period. The Hawks, who finished first in . the Western Division while St. Louis had to struggle to make the playoffs as the number four team, got off to a poor start. L.Y.SEORESRIE -I May flower lovers might like the rainy weather, but for Ann Arbor baseball fans it's been a drag. Yesterday's double- header against Eastern Michi- gan, which was Tuesday's re- scheduled season - opening twin bill, was cancelled. Due to re- scheduling d i f f i C u 1 t I e s, the chances ofkreplaying the The University of Detroit visits .town Friday afternoon at 2 p. m. for a pair of games, hopefully getting the season un- Torrid Kicks bite Ba ets Iderway. I* * * Center Jacques Lemaire evened CHIA ODck Reds ods core tam we at17:1mofte econda the first three goal hat-trLck of stlianzwhl teamate Pe MarH- his National Hockey League career hovlch nd ufflo' Lary ll~ last night and veteran Pit Martin man were serving out their high- also scored three times, leading sticking penalties. the Chicago Black Hawks to a 7-1 The Canadiens, first place fin- victory over the St. Louis Blues in the opening game of their Stanley ishers in the NHL East, again host 1Cup quarterfinal playoff. the Sabres tonight. IRedmond, who scored only 12 Women lead assault ( atclumsily-managed By The Associated Press first two games of the series, Atlrantic Division champions a 2-0 wen BALTIMORE - Bill Bradley and scored 12 of his game high 23 in edge in their National Brasketball W Willis Reed combinetd for 39 points, the second half. He also had six Association Eastern Conference Clt virtually equaling their output in rebounds and five assists for the semifinal playoff. afte two previous playoff games, and Knicks, who pulled away with a Game N6. 3 will be played at jAtla led the New York Knicks to a 103- 20-8 spurt which began midway Boston tomorrow night. rm 96 victory over the Baltimoge through the third quarter. Havlicek, - who scored 54 points Bost Bullets last night. Reed, who has been hampered in Boston's opening game victory poin The Knicks .took a 3-0 lead in with injuries late in the season, Sunday, contributed 29 points while Haw~ the best-of-seven National Basket- scored 12 of his 16 points in the J0 Jo White added 24 and NBA jum ball Association Eastern Confer- New York led 74-65 at the end Most Valuable Player Dave Co- gone ence semifinals, with game No. 4 of the third quarter and continued - . .----- scheduled in Baltimore tomorrow their hot string into the final per- ni. iod. Walt Frazier scored six points~ night.during the streak, while Reed and Bradley, held to 17 points in the Dave DeBusschere added four _____ _ ~second h'alf after sitting out the IE Can .entire second period. The big New S reco rd s Yor cne r thad scored 24 points PAST,P E The Bullets, who trailed 49-46 A D F A~~T ~at halftime after Elvin HayesAN FU A AU event edt ihi 05:n h h A SYMPOSIUM MARKI quarter before the Knhcks put the ANNIVERSARY OF TH E game out of reach. there were bad feelings among the apiece. OLAS COPER NICUS (14 contestants and bad times in the DeBusschere finished with 19 event itself. Mark Chatfield of points, Earl Monroe 18 and Frazier Participation is open to all p Southern California won the event 'had 16. disciplinary interest in scien as 1972 gold medalist and 1973 NC- I 4students are admitted to the 1AA Champion Don Hencken touch-Cescoqemnt fth rgirton ee ed second.Clscnurmn ftergsrto e Michigan's Stu Isaac finished IATLANTA - John Havlcek and held in Rackham lecture hall. fourth and thus helped his own Paul Silas triggered a 10-0 Boston~ attempt to secure a spot on the spurt early in the second quarter, A - CI f AND World Student Games team that leading the Celtics to an easy 5I. JJ Ufe goes to Moscow at the end of 126-113 triumph over the Atlanta August. Hawks last night and giving the $fA , tephen Touli - .- ~.. IlrlUJ shad 20. ith White hitting 10 points, the ics raced to a 29-13 margin r the first 12 minutes In which nta hit on only five of 33 shots ithe field, a .1S2 percentage. on ripped off the first nine ts of the game before the 'ks could score on a Maravich per after three minutes had by. - - -U SOCIETY SENT URE 4: By CHUCK BLOOM Special To The Daily, CINCINNATI - What is the sec-. ond - best thing other than an ac- tual Olympic meet??? It's an AAU meet complete with 39 Olympians entered, namely the AAU Short Course Nationals being held at Keating Natatorium here. ~ During last night's first-day Icompetition, which saw four U.S. AP Photo Two for tiw Pearl Knick star Earl "the Pearl" Monroe drives for a bucket past Phil Chenier In last night's New York victory. See story on this page. REDS HOST GIANTS: Baseball kicks of f '73 season From Wire service Reports The Cincinnati Reds, defending champions of the National League, will begin their title defense in the first game of the 1973 season when they host the San Francisco Giants at Riverfront Stadium. 52,000 base- *ball fans are expected to be on hand. THE TRADITIONAL o p e n e r, honoring Cincinnati's status as the most ancient franchise in baseball, will feature two'pitchers trying to come back from near-disasterous 1972 seasons: the Reds' Don Gul- iett and long-time Giant ace Juan Marichal. Gullett, who was severly hamp- ered by a case of hepatitis, posted a 9-10 won-lost record last year for one of the strongest hitting teams in the game. "I guess I was kind of surprised to get the opening day start," he s aid yes- teerday, "but I'm happy about it." Marichal, who the Giants hope has recovered from back surgery, had a miserable 6-16 total for 1972, far below his usual standard. Al- though he has been reasonably effective this spring, Marichal still has quite a way to go before he Is YOUR 1 will convince baseball observers company travel to Cleveland Mu- that he didn't go over the hill after nicipal Stadium to meet the per- the 1971 season. 1petual-fifth-place Indians and Gay- lord Perry. THlE REDS ARE favored by~ Lolich will be out to quiet many people to repeat as chain- springtime critics who have en pions ofteNtoa egeWs' speculating that he's lost his touch while many people have written -as they have been doing for sev- cff San Francisco because of the eral years-while Perry will again Giants' thoroughgoing youth move- prove to be the master of disguise, ment' causing moisture to appear upon But Cincinnati manager Sparky the ball from out of thin air. Anderson cautions that "people who ' are just talking tabout Houston and 1973 may well prove to be a forgetting the Giants are going to watershed for professional base- be surprised. They've got super ball. For several decades, other talent over there." professional sports - particularly The Reds-Giants game is the football - have encroached upon only one scheduled for today. baseball's once - unchallenged su- premacy. With close pennant races TOMORROW WILL mark the expected in all four divisions, and opening of the long-awaited Ameni- the new designated hitter rule in can League season, including the the American League, maybe this first on-the-record-use of the con- will be the year that baseball stops troversial D~esignated Hitter rule. its decline. The first official Designated Hit- ters will appear in Baltimore ad ______________ Boston as the Orioles entertain Milwaukee and the Red Sox play an important contest against the; New York Yankees. Detroit will open its season on Saturdy, whn Micky LIlch an records fall, the quality of wo- men's competition far surpassed the male efforts. Three U. S. fe- male Olympians lowered Ameri- can standards while an 18- year-old California high-schooler countered for the men. . John Naber, from Menlo Park, Californiia, destroyed Indiana's Mike Stamm's 200-yard backstroke record, being the first person to go under 1:50, with a time of 1:49.84, set in the qualifying heats. Naber, who will enroll at UCLA this fall, then proceeded to win the championship, with David Jans n of N w e ic inishing The first outstanding race of the evening came in the women's renewal of anold battle datin back to the '72 Olympics between Australia's Shane Gould, 1972's female swimmer of the year, and Keena Rothhammer, Olympic gold medalist. Gould and Roth- hammer led from the start of the race and were no more than a half-second apart through the entire 504) yards. At the finish, Rothhamnmer touched out Gould by .2 seconds. The par lus 14-year old Sand Johnson, all were under the Amer- ican record. Rothhammer' s new standard was 4:52.54. Despite all the record-breaking times, one major complaint was caused by the sloppy running of the meet. The 100-yard breaststroke was sent to the blocks early; much ear- lier than the swimmers expected or were prepared for. As a result, RANDY NEWMAN ING THE 500TH BIRTH OF NICH- 73-1543) ersons with an inter- ce and society. U-M sessions without pay- .All sessions willb SOCITY: UTUR nin (University of nta Cruz), "The es of Science." Henryk Skolimowaki ity of Michigan) s'(Stanford The Unbalanced TIM BUCKLEY Revolution." Commentary: Nolan Pliny Jacobson (Winthrop College) Panel: "Has Science Any Future? Calif~rniaS Twin Moraliti Commentary: (The Universi 10:45 a m Dennis Pi''g **University), " I2 '00 p1m. Michel W. Ovenden (University of British Columbia) Alasdair Mac Intyre (Boston University C. A. Hooker (The University of Western Ontario) ~'ael d sxsin ill cosst of twenty-minute prepared papers L IB RA RY EX H IBIT: A library exhibit entitled "The Scientific Press at the Time of Copernicus" is on display during the conference in the Rare Book Room, 7th Floor, Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: The University of Michigan Extension Service, Conferences and Institutes, 412 Maynard Street, 764-5304. W ED., A pril 11 - POW ER CE NT E R $3.00 Admission Advance $3.50 at the door BOTH PERFORMING AT 7:00 and 9:30 CONCERTS ADVANCE TICKETS now: Union, 11 -5:30, Mon.-Sat. and Power Center, M.W.F., 2-5 and T.Th. 0-5 FURTHER INFO.: 763-4553 during Union hours above. II ~ 'L~.& ft... I ~ arn now ... j~mmmmmmmmininmmmmminm inminmminmminmmmmg * U [would like to proudly u U * cast my ballot for...........................u I * as MICHIGAN ATHLETE I I OF THE YEAR,, :~ICHIGAN COACH OF a THEYEARAND. ,.~.... * U * as the most exciting moment in Michigan athletics u Lhis year. I I * SEND BALLOTS TO: SPORTS DEPT. I I H MICHIGAN DAILY 1 420 MAYNARD ST., I * ANN ARBOR, MICH.. 48104 I * I I 3 BALLOTING ENDS APRIL 9, 1973 I * I I I inmminminmmmminminin ---------- -------------- k I A.S.C.E. STUDENT CHAPTER e eI M~e~ s II1~E Eh~ Men Together" DR. JOH N PLAT Thurs., April 5-3:00 p.m. I THE BEST ICE CREAM I N TH E L?. . .MAYBE T HE BEST ICE CREAM IN ANN ARBOR? .g.e DEFITELY "The Qualities of the Human Mind" DR. ADOYE LAMBO