Wednesday, January 17, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine 11 'r--o What t i'j ?I orih Dolphin days . . . flopping with Flipper Randy Phillips } OH MY GOD. The Dolphins won the whole thing! (Hopefully, George Allen can forgive Him this once.) Can it be? Can those very same aquatic creatures now claim the World Champ- ionship to be theirs when so very few years ago they were the laughing stock of the old AFL not to mention the real football league - the NFL? Those lean laughable years now mean so much more for me. Growing up with the Dolphins may not seem quite like growing up with the Giants or Jets. but those Dolphins were often remin- iscent of the young Mets. Certainly the Miami folks could have picked a not so queer name as "The Dolphins." My choice in the name-the-team con- test was "The Barracudas." Well, I was still young then. At least, "The Barracudas" would have been a little tougher sound- ing name. I guess, though, "The Dolphins" was an apt name for those first few memorable seasons. Anyways, the winner won two free season tickets - a not so cherished prize in those days. And with Flipper flapping in the endzone pond, you couldn't argue. Front office men Joe Robbie, Joe Thomas, and Danny Thom- as molded an awesome squad filled with great talent like Joe Auer, Wille West, Wahoo McDaniels, and the coach's son at quarterback, George Wilson, Jr. And we all know and remember George Wilson, don't we? That Lions' club has put out so many great coaches. Wilson, Jr. was an all-nothing from Xavier. Auer was a home-grown boy who ran back the first kick-off in Dolphin his- tory 95 yards for a 'score. Needless to say, the Dolphins blew the game. Wahoo, a terror at linebacker, now mauls his foes on the mats as a professional wrestler on the Florida circuit. Danny Thomas soon left those Dolphins for bigger and better things such as Maxwell House commercials. That was sad because Miami always considered Lebanese Danny to be friendly despite his origins. That nose of his qualified him to be made an honorary Jew. Those hanky-waving throngs upwards of 80,000 a game start- ed out as a handful of thousands all getting the best seats in the house - the Orange Bowl. They're even thinking of painting the Bowl orange these days. My high school often played in the big stadium and for a couple of games we pulled in nearly 25,000 spectators - more than several Dolphin contests.' I remember the time when students and senior citizens could buy $1 dollar seats in the corners and then move near the mid- field seats. Now my friends' parents have those same seats - located at the minus 10 yard line - and pay $50 dollars for the r season. The Dolphs have already moved in on the University of Miami crowds. Not a bad business. In the early days no one was a Dolphin fan - except for a few weirdos. Everybody liked the Jets or Colts. Even the local sportscaster was a former Colt announcer. B u t no- body, but nooo-body had any love for those Green B a y Packers. I hated the Packers almost as much as the Yankees, and that was a lot. When the Jets came to town it was like a neutral site. Namath and Unitas were heroes and the fans flocked to see them. The days of amateurish ball, Gene Mingo missing 10 yard field goals, and the "We want John Stofa" movement are long past. Good drafts and trades and the biggest catch of them all, Don Shula, has brought professionalism to the team and a whole slew of victories and titles. A few old time solid performers still hang around such as Howard Twilley and Norm Evans. But even with all the talent Miami has now, the Super Bowl was reached and won with more than talent. Dallas and Kansas City are dripping w i t h talent. The Dolphins just play good solid ball-control football. And they execute flawlessly. Some viewers and some sports writers thought the game Sunday (except for Garo's debut as quarterback) was dull. In fact, they called the contest "boring". Remember that line, Bo? Miami threw 11 times and Washington 18. That's not exactly a Namath-Unitas aerial contest. But look at both Super Bowl teams - Miami and Washington. They are solid running squads that pass effectively to comple- ment the running attack. Look also at Green Bay, Pittsburgh, and Cleveland. All rely mainly on the run. All have strong defenses and good kicking games. Certainly, Griese to Warfield or Twilley could have connected much more frequently this season if it had to. But Shula doesn't try it more. Miami wins. And if you're a Dolphin fan, that's not boring at all. Incidentally, two former Wolverines provided some of the bigger thrills Sunday. Jim Mandich's diving grab at the two set up Miami's second TD, and Mike Bass "hauled in" Garo's only career pass and ran it' for Washington's lone tally. But Purdue's Griese to Ohio State's Warfield's nullified TD pass play was perhaps the prettiest of the game. I nearly had two football championship teams to root for this season. I can't complain. But you just have to feel sorry for a fan from a city like Philadelphia. What's he got to live for? The Phillies? The Eagles? The Flyers? Maybe God was on my side this time around. Sorry, George. SCORES NBA Lander 39, wofford 36, (ot) Atlanta 130, Detroit 129, overtime Voorhees 79, Claflin 78 Chicago 10, Portland 89 Franklin, Ind. 102, Northwood, Ind. 82 Milwaukee 108, Philadelphia 92 (ot) Boston 106, Buffalo 102 Grace 109, Concordia 44 Seattle 125, KC-Omaha 122 Indiana Tech 86, St. Francis, Ind. 74 ABA I;Quinniplac 52, S. Conn. 49 Virginia 127, Memphis 122 Framingham St. 58, Fort Kent St. 51 Indiana 130, Denver 113 Princeton 44, Temple 37 NHL 'Wright 44, Temple 37 Minnesota 1, NY Islanders 0 !Wright St. 65, Rio Grande 64 WHA Northwestern 83, St. Joseph's, Ind. 77 Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 3 Ohio Northern 56 Heidelberg 49 Quebec 5, Ottawa 4, overtime Otterbein 77, Denison 74 College Basketball Lander 39 Wofford 36, (ot) Minnesota 64, Marquette 53 Valdosta St. 94, Oglethorpe 73 Ohio University 89, Eastern Michigan 73 Fayetteville St. 92, Elizabeth City St. 82 Princeton 44, Temple 37 Lafayette 77, LeSalle 68 John Hopkins 89, West. Maryland 66 Siena' 78, Hartwick 76 TURNER SHINES: Gophers outlast Marquette By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS - The sixth- ranked Minnesota Gophers, with! Clyde Turner scoring 20 points, broke open the game with a stall and then ran away from cold- shooting Marquette with a fast- break for a 64-53 victory in college basketball last night. Minnesota held a 50-43 lead with 6:01 left in the game, before a crowd of 17,987 plus a closed-cir- cuit television audience of 4,002 next-door in the hockey arena, when the Gophers went into their delaying tactics. The Gophers held the ball until Ron Behagen gave them a nine- point lead at 4:27. The seventh- ranked Warriors, 11-2 after their second straight loss, closed to with-1 in five points, 56-51, in the final two minutes on a basket by Allie1 McGuire. Bob Nix and Greg Olson each sank two free throws, then Turner and Nix twice laid in fast-break baskets in the closing seconds. The Warriors were 23 of 77 from the field, 29.9 per cent. Minnesota, defending Big Ten champion with an 11-1 record, was 27 of 50 for 54 per cent. d H sports NIGHT EDITOR: RICH STUCK Larry McNeill, Marquette's lead- ing scorer for the season, and Maurice Lucas each had 16 points for the Warriors. But McNeill made only 6 of 25 shots from the floor. The Gophers took a 34-26 half- time lead and increased it to 13 early in the second 20 minutes before Marquette, chagrined by two technical fouls against Coach Al McGuire for protesting offen- sive goaltending calls, pulled with- in three points with 7:66 to play. But that was as close as they got. Behagen, Nix and Jim Brewer had 10 points apiece for the Goph- ers. Minnesota held a 48-38 edge in rebounds. AP Photo Where's the ball? Boston Celtic center Dave Cowens certainly doesn't seem to know during action in last night's Celtic win over the Buffalo Braves. Braves beaned BUFFALO, N.Y.-John HavlicekI bounced back from a scoreless! third period and pumped in 16 points to lead a fourth-quarter rally that lifted the Boston Celtics to a' 106-102 National Basketball Asso- ciation victory over the Buffalo Braves last night. The Braves, who have never beaten the Celtics in 14 meetings, led 90-82 with 91/2 minutes left but+ the Celtics reeled off four con- secutive baskets - three by Paul Silas and one by Havlicek-to tie the score. After Bob Kauffman tallied for! Buffalo, Havlicek tied the score once more. Dave Cowens' layup put the Celtics in front for good with five minutes left and they gradually built an eight-point lead of their own. Havlicek paced Boston with 33 points and Don Nelson added 18: points, 14 in the second half.I Si(ck)ers off ed MILWAUKEE - Kareem Abdul- Jabbar scored 28 points and Bob Dandridge 23 last night as the Milwaukee Bucks ran their Na- tional Basketball Association win- ning streak to six games with a 108-92 victory over the Philadel-! phia 76ers. Abdul-Jabbar scored 16 of his points in the third quarter when Milwaukee extended a 13-point halftime lead to 31 points. Fred Carter totaled 21 points for Philadelphia, which has lost six games in a row and 44 of 48 this season. Philadelphia guard Mike Price! was assessed two teclnical fouls and ejected with 2:38 left in the! third quarter. Price angrily shout-! ed at referee Richie Powers claim- ing he had been fouled on a shot seconds earlier. TheBucks jumped to an 8-0 lead and ran it to 24-12 late in the first7 period. Milwaukee twice led by 17 points in the second quarter before John Q. Trapp led a brief rally that narrowed the gap to 10 points. Bulls blaze CHICAGO-Chicago's free-wheel- ing offense, led by Garfield Heard and Bob Love, rolled to a 100-89 victory over Portland last night in an error-troubled National Basket- ball Association contest. The Trail Blazers, winners of 3 Montreal Boston N.Y. Rangers Buffalo Detroit Toronto Vancouver Chicago Minnesota Atlanta Los Angeles Pittsburgh Philadelphia St. Louis California East W L T 26 6 11 28 10 4 28 13 3 23 14 7 21 16 6 15 2 6 12 27 6 West 24 16 3 / 21 16 6 20 19 7 20 20 4 18 20 6 18 20 6 15 21 7 8 24 10 Pts GF 63 173 60 186 59 167 53 157 48 136 36 133 30 127 GA 95 121 112 124 131 141 194 12'7 119, 125 135 °141 154 144 176 only 11 games this season, did not quit until the final three minutes when they trailed 94-87. But Heard and Love, each of whom had 27 points, put the finish- ing touches on the contest with three baskets between them in the final two minutes. After grabbing a 46-38 halftime lead, the Bulls moved ahead by as many ias 13 points in the third quarter behind the 17-point output of Love and Heard. Portland's Jeoff Petrie, who led his team with 21 points, kept the Trail Blazers in contention until the final three minutes of play. Sidney Wicksradded 20 points in a losing cause. Pro Standings NHL WRITER DONS TOGS 51 48 47 44 42 42 37 26 159 .139 121. 130 1.49 149 120 124 Pseudo By JIM ECKER Remember studying Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus in your philosophy and English classes? Well, a part of their existential philosophy u r g e d experiencing' life's various offerings whenever the occasion arose: The more op-{ portunities seized, the richer the' the individual's life. Well, wrestling ;presents just ' such a chance for a rare mind- boggling m e n t a 1 and physical awakening. Last December, Michigan's in- tramural department staged its! annualtgrappling competition for students of all shapes, sizes, back- ground and intelligence. One un- suspecting suspect equipped with4 the bulk of a splinter, the limbs of a spider and, the frame of a coat- hanger volunteered for service.a Jean-Paul and Albert, stand aside!1 Normally, a gangly, gawky, and incredibly green grappler attracts little attention at these shoddy af-. fairs. However, when the rookie jock hits victory circle wrestler also doubles as a rookie wrestling writer, a hertofore her- alded match becomes the evening's main event. Referee Dave Curby (he spends his spare time wrestling varsity) called the principles of the fra- ternity 160-pound opening round match onto the mat. Suddenly, med Ali psyche-out scowl, listened inattentively. Refs shouldn't blab- ber when you're psyching out the opposition. The horn burped its starting connotation. First p e r i o d-one' minute. I The grapplers approached each other hesitantly. (Grapplers always' One unsuspecting suspect equipped with the bulk of a splinter, the limbs of a spider and the' frame of a coat-hanger volunteered for service. p,."t: vw; :vrv,.F.R :e,%.;. . rvv.ri:4S '.}:v:4"}" 'Curbs' spotted t h e scurrilous scribe. "What's he grinning about?" mused the pseudo jock. "I'm out here to do battle and the ref's laughing at me." Grim determina- tion creased the grappler's furrow- ed brow. Curby explained the rules. The rookie, wearing his best Muham- Orr leads NHL All-Stars; Sanderson Blazers settle By The Associated Press " MONTREAL-Bobby Orr, Boston's sensational defenseman, was! the only unanimous choice yesterday for the National Hockey League East Division All-Star team, which will face the West Jan. 30 at New York's Madison Square Garden. Orr, who missed 14 games of the season because of knee surgery, received a perfect 120 points in voting by members of the Professional Hockey Writers' Association in each of the eight East Division cities. Goalie Ken Dryden of Montral was second in the voting with 114 points and was one of six Canadiens chosen among the 12 players picked for the first two teams. Selected with Orr and Dryden as starters were defenseman Guy Lapointe of Montreal, center Phil Esposito of Boston, right wing Yvan Cournoyer of Montreal and left wing Richard Martin of Buffalo. * * * * BOSTON-Derek Sanderson has agreed to a $1 million settle- ment of his contract with the Philadelphia Blazers of the World Hockey Association, the Boston Herald American said yesterday. Sanderson, a former center with the Boston Bruins of the National! Hockey League, has been injured and has not played for the past two months with the Blazers, with whom he signed a $2.35 million, 10-year contract last year. The newspaper's report said Sanderson, 26, would become a free agent later this week and would be able to.. negotiate with any pro hockey team. * * * * PHILADELPHIA-Steve Carlton signed a contract with the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday for a reported $165,000, making the outstanding lefthander the highest paid pitcher in baseball. Carlton won 27 and lost 10 for the Phillies last season, despite pitching for the worst team in baseball. He posted a 1.98 earned run average and led National League pitchers in almost every phase of the game. approach each other hesitantly in the first period.) The rookie start- ed dancing and darting, bobing and weaving, dancing and pranc- ing, searching for an enemy faux pas and a shooting opportunity. Jerry Hubbard (That's two-time Big Ten champ and NCAA runner- up Jerry Hubbard) zeroed in on the action. "You're too high, man, too high. Bend over. Crouch down." The rookie crouched and bended. Unexpectedly, t h e adversary lunged forward. The Daily's man- on-the-scene lunged backward, the standard defensive maneuver for that situation. A standoff. Soon af- ter, the first period ended, score- less. So far, only the wrestler's feet had contacted the mat. The second period started with the foe in the advantageous "wres- tler's position." Our hero, on his hands and knees, felt the lumber- ing fool's sweaty left arm enclose his waist from the rear. The dastardly enemy pressed his other arm in the small of the de- fender's back. Clearly, not the most advantageous of situations. In a flash, the lithe journalist sprang upward. A sharp elbow to the midsection released him from the flimsy fellow's grasp. He had escaped. An escape! One point and the lead! In the excitement, the sec- ond period expired before the rookie recovered from his exhila- rating conquest. During intermission, the exhila- ration gave way to an uneasy, q u e a s y sensation. A churning; grinding process enveloped the scribe's stomach. Ninety seconds of wrestling remained. One thought struck the leader's mind: Stall. Thankfully, third period position- ing put Joe Journalist on top. On Curby's signal, the stanza began. If the assailant escapes, the lead is lost. "Hang on, hang on." With about 30 seconds remain- ing, the grapplers left the wrestling area, tripping off the mat. As the now dazed dummy lay sprawled on the floor, Curby warned his sportswriter friends about the evils of stalling. "If you keep stalling, I'll have to give the other guy a point," cautioned the Ann Arbor native. "Let's go now!" "Keep talking, Curbs. Keep talk- ing. Warn me some more, keep warning me," pleaded the physical wreck. "Cut it out. Get back on that mat," ordered the, dispassionate 190 pounder. "Come on, I'll get you all the ink you want. Features, interviews, advertisements for your dad's busi- ness. Whatever you say, just keep talking," he begged. It was hopeless. Disaster beckon- ed. Just when things looked bleak- est, the opponents stumbled into each other. Their eyes crossed. An understanding nod passed between them. Thirty seconds later, the contest over, two gassed grapplers hardly cared when Curby raised the sportswriter's arm in victory. Wellwishers rushed the winning wrestler. Coach Hubbard, first to the sceneof the accident, played the scribe: "How do , you feel?" queried Joliet's jester. "Leave me alone," mumbled the fatigued athlete. "You writers are always messing around where you don't belong. DELTA SIGMA DELTA Dental Fraternity T.G. FRI., JAN. 19 7 P.M. 1502 HILL, ANN ARBOR LIVE BAND REFRESHMENTS New England Cleveland New York Quebec Ottawa Philadelphia Winnipeg, Minnesota Houston Los Angeles Alberta Chicago East W L 25 16 25 16 23 23 21 21 18 22 17 26 West 26 18 22 19 20 17 20 21 18 22 13 27 Yesterday's Games Toronto at Vancouver, inc. Minnesota 1, N.Y. Islanders 0 Only games scheduled Tonight's Games Pittsburgh at Montreal Toronto at California New York Rangers at Los Angeles Chicago at Detroit Atlanta at St. Louis Only games scheduled WHA T 1 1 0 1 3 Q 2 3' 4 4 ,2 1 Pts GFi 51 183 - 51 153 46 192 43 158 39 158 34 154 54 170 47 142: 44 151C 44 152 38 129 27 120 Yesterday's Results Los Angeles at Alberta, inc. Minnesota at Winnipeg, inc. Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 3 Ottawa 5, Quebec 4, ot. Tonight's Games Cleveland at Houston New England at Chicagot t r L l t STATE OF.THE UNIVERSITY DEBATES THE UNIVERSITY AND MINORITIES Jan. 17: Angell Hall, Aud. B-7:30 P.M. PARTICIPANTS: V.P. JOHN ROMANI, Opportunity Awards Program GEORGE GOODMAN, Undergraduate Admissions Assistant Director ZENA ZUMETA, Commission for Women PAUL JOHNSON, American Indians Unlimited REPRESENTATIVE FROM TROTTER HOUSE REPRESENTATIVE FROM MECHA REPRESENTATIVE FROM GAY LIBERATION JOE EISLEY, Assoc. Dean-Engineering School SPONSORED BY: LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT PESC GA 146 116 169 168 186 193 138 ]44 142 156 145 158 < «:,: i _.. _ THE 'HEALER' is Health Service's new information sheet. It de- scribes the medical care facilities at Health Services, is full of helpful hints for using the clinics and serv- ices, lists doctors' and clinics' phone numbers and describes billing and business policies. For indi- vidual copies-or a bunch--call Health Service IN- PUT or stop by room 12 (across from the Allergy Clinic in the basement). and 18 OL 20% Off All Used Surplus Merchandise CPO shirts . . . . . . $5.99 (reg. 10.00) Flannel shirts . . . . . $2.99 (reg. $4.00) 100% Wool shirts . . . $2.99 (reg. $4.00) Seafarer Jeans . . . . $6.99 (reg.7.99)