Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY IV I { . Page Eight IHE MI(~HIQ~AN DAILY BOUFFANT HAIR FASHION AND HAIRC WEA ECENTER Complete Hair Care Afro Shaping and Styling Permanents sh-pr-cu - 66.8-9356 eve. 662-8401 307 S. 5th Ave. 0< >< >< ><'Sn OLYMPIC CAGE FINAL: Russi P Icomes to PACKARD & STATE! holiday camp great A / PINBALL EXPERIENCE come to Tommy's: surround yourself with QUADRASONIC sound Best FOOSBALL in town 632 PACKARD MUNICH (A) - The United Stat- es filed a formal protest 1 a s t night, minutes after Russia's Alex- ander Belov scored a confusing "second chance" basket with two seconds to play that beat the U.S.j team 51-50 and ended America's supremacy in Olympic basketball.: DOUG COLLINS of Illinois State hit two free throws with six sec- onds remaining, after a clutch steal, but Russia got a sudden re- prieve after missing a despera- tion shot in the final three seconds. The officials, amid mass confus- ion and American rejoicing over an apparent 64th straight Olympic, triumph, determined that there were three seconds still to go, and that Russia deserved another ef- fort. This time, Zurab Sakandelidze heaved the ball the length of the, floor and it bounded high off the rim and the 6-foot-7 Belov follow- ed it from in close as the Rus- sians erupted in glee. Tearful, screaming American players, along with Coach Hank Iba, loudly appealed the decision to give Russian a second attempt but it fell on deaf ears. Russia was in control through most of the bitter international bat- tle that saw two men ejected for fighting and Belov, the eventual hero, left at one point with blood streaming from his forehead. The Russians, finishing t h e Munich Games with a 9-0 record, were in a comfortable position at 44-36 with 6:07 remaining. The Americans then began to explode offensively. Jim Forbes of the University of Texas at El Paso, hit a tip-in at 4:25 to make it 44-38. KEVIN JOYCE, a 6-3 South Ca- rolina guard, bagged a followup shot to make it 44-40 at 4:03 ans nip U.S. and he hit again 23 seconds later Seconds later, 6-9 Jim Brewer of on a 15-footer that made it 44- the University of Minnesota went 42. crashing to the floor and w a s Three straight foul shots' by Mo- sprawled out for several minutes desta Paulauskas extended the before recovering from a head in- Russian edge to 47-42, but Joyce connected again f r o m 18 feet and it was 47-44 with 2:10 to play. Collins drew a charging foul and sank two free shots at 1:50 as the United States came within one at 47-46 the closest the Americans had been to the lead since t h e opening tip-off. Zurab Sakandelidze was -fouled by Joyce at 1:28 and made one of two free throws to make it 48- 46, but Forbes ripped one from the top of the key with 0:41 to keep the Americans in the battle at 49- jury. t ;E i l l i Russia had everything going its way at 10:15 when Belov connected on a short jumper to make it 38-28. But consecutive baskets by Ed Ratleff of Long Beach State, Brew- er, and Mike Mantom of St. Jos- eph's, Pa., got the Americans back into contention at 38-34 with 8:40 to play. Two straight baskets by Be- lov made it 42-36 and set the stage for a stirring United States rally that failed only on the contro- versial final play of the game. Brewer and Henderson were high for an American team that w a s more impressive on defense than offense throughout the tournament. They each scored nine points. Col- lins had eight while Jones, Joyce, and Ratleff hit six each. .I F ', 48. Russia was attempting to use all the time possible while sitting ion the one-point lead, but Collins made a brilliant steal and w a s fouled by Sakandelidze with six seconds left. Collins, ;with the 6,500-seat arena resounding with whistles, and yells, calmly connected twice from the! foul line and the Americans were in front 5049, their first lead of the game. Then came the incredible end- ing, with the Russians missing on a long throw at the buzzer, but being allowed to have a second chance when officials decided the+ first opportunity had not been a+ fair one due to persons flowing on-, to the court and the American vic-1 tory celebration. Russia was ahead 34-28 with 12:04 to play, when Dwight Jones of the University of Houston and Mishako Korkia became involved in a brief fight. Both men, who had been battling over a rebound were tossed out of the game by officials Renato Rig- hettogofmBrazil and Artenik Arba- djan of Bulgaria. AMERICAN GEORGE WOODS comes within % inch of a gold medal in the shot put at the Olympics yesterday with this heave of 69 feet, 5% inches. Wladyslaw Komar of Poland won the event. Amer- ica's track fortunes took a turn for the worse yesterday as Russia forged ahead in the total medal race. U.S. tracksters failing miserably WHO THE HELL WANTS TO LIVE IN A 5-MAN APARTMENT SOUND LIKE Well take just a moment t Perhaps the first thing to consider is money. You can save about $10 a month just in rent alone, plus additional savings with food and utilities Crowded living? Perhaps with most 5-man apartments - however at Charter Realty we have a special group of atypical apartments designed speci- fically for FIVE people- (not a makeshift 4-man). A living room the size E 1a A DRAG? look at the advantages. 5 -man apartments are not for everyone. It's a special kind of living - however, with the right apartment it can be quite rewarding. Sharing respon- sibility for cooking, cleaning and food purchasing in an apartment large enough for FIVE is communal living at its best. We would like to tell you more. If you need a fifth person, or if we can help you with any other apartment need drop over to our office on FIVE is communal living at give us a call at 665-8825. We're open every day from 9:00 to 5:30. Saturdays 930 to 1:00. ~jarty t5^iy BIMBO'S ON THE HILL (THE OLD VILLAGE INN) OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY, including Sunday DANCE TO S.J.Q. The Seven James Quintet North America's Hottest New Group! WEDNESDAY thru SUNDAY at 9:00 3411 WASHTENAW Near Arborland 973-2100 MUNICH ()P) - Randy Williams capped a brilliant season with an Olympic gold medal for the Unit- ed States in the long jump yes- terday despite hurting his leg while warming up. Otherwise, America's track and field fortunes, already on a skid, continued downward. Williams stood erect on the vic- tory stand. He bit his lip and gulped a couple of times while the National Anthem was played. All I could think of is that it's good to be from the USA," he said. Williams, a black, was the first American to step to the gold medal stand since 400-meter runners Vince Matthews and Wayne Collett were banished from the Games for facing away from the flag on Thursday. The 5-foot-10, 152 - pound Wil- liams, a University of Southern California freshman, leaped 27 feet 1/2 inch on his first attempt. The markhwithstood the challenge of West Germany's Hans Baumgart- ner, who did 26-10 for the silver medal, and Arnie Robinson of the U.S. Army whose 26-2 , was good for the bronze. Williams said he "popped" something in his leg while warm- ing up and it still hurt after he won. Meanwhile, America's two re- maining entries in the men's 1,- 500-meter run, Dave Wottle of Can- ton, Ohio, and Bob Wheeler of Duke University, failed to qualify ond silver medal in succession. - - ~ - --__ the only other final event of FINAL GRID SCRIMMAGE: teday was won by Russia's Lud- '' mila Bragina, 29. She won the 1,- world record. Williams' victory was the first in field event competition for the U.S. team, which is far below its usual performance. Only four Americans have won gold med- als. in semifinal heats. And two of ago by four American girls. The est gold medal total in U. S. America's three high jumpers, time yesterday qualified the wo- track history-eight in the 1928 Chris Dunn and Ron Jourdan, fail- men for the final. games in Amsterdam. ed to qualify for the final in that Also scheduled for today, is the Two other American disappoint- event. Possibly the most stinging 5,000-meter run and the marathon ments were expected. defeat came in the shot put, an races. Steve Prefontaine of the Olga Connolly, competing in her event normally dominated by University of Oregon is one of the fifth Olympics, failed to qualify Americans. favorites in the 5,000 and Ken for the final of the women's dis- Wladyslaw Komar, a 32-year-old Moore and Frank Shorter will be cus. She was ranked far down the from Poland, won the gold medal running for medals in the mara- list of women discus throwers this with an Olympic record 69-6, as thon. year, but she attributed her poor favored American George Woods But the Americans will need showing to her refusal to take managed only 69-512 for his sec- four golds just to equal the low- body building steroids. of a ski lodge. The living rooms are mammoth, and cooking and bath facilities have been carefully planned-. for FIVE people. All in all it's like living in a small home, complete with air- conditioning, dishwasher and fireplace. Itce's, lured Today's final day of track and By DAN BORUS lin popped one of 36 yards to John field shaped up as potentially There was good news and bad Daniels and another of 17 yards America's best, however. news from the practice fields of to split-end Gary Coakley. -The U.S. 400-meter relay team Michigan yesterday. When not putting the, ball sky- ran to the fastest clocking in the The good news was that Dennis ward, Franklin showed his ability world this year, 38.54 seconds, in Franklin had an excellent day at to lug the pigskin, scampering 63 a semifinal heat despite poor ba- the helm of the Michigan offense. yards for another score. ton passing. The bad news is that the defen- Franklin was not the only stel- -Dwight Stones, 18, easily sive backfield is hurting. lar performer on the offense yes- cleared 7-5/8, advancing to the First, the good news: Franklin, terday. Bob Thbornbladh had an final of the high jump. the sophomore quarterback from excellent running day at fullback, -The U. S. women's 400-meter Massillon, Ohio, put some wind in scoring one tally on a 40 yard run relay team clocked 43.07, just shy the sails of Michigan's passing during which he busted at least five of the world, Olympic and Amer- game with two touchdown passes tackles. ican record of 42.8 set four years in yesterday's scrimmages. Frank- The defensive line showed why ~-it will have to be taken into con- sideration as one of the top in the nation. Spearheading an excellent pass rush were Fred Grambau and Clint Spearman. Grambau, like a 248-pound cat, pounced on a loose ball and Spear- man snaked over from his e n d position to block a punt that even- tually ended up as a safety. The most exciting 'play -of the game was provided by little G i 1 Chapman, wearing his custom-fit- ted high top football shoes. T h e speedster from Elizabeth, New Jer- sey, took a punt and disappeared only to reappear 82 yards later in the endzone. Now the bad news: Dave Elliott, whose shoulder is still hurting, is a big question mark for the coach- ing staff as are the conditions of six others. Safety Tom Drake suf- fered a pulled muscle to add to Sarin C rpthe woes in the secondary which has already lost wolfman Steger for the season. 1) 0 Earn $100 a month and a Marine Corps commission through the Platoon Leaders Class. Nothing's happening, right? Just a lot of useless reading to do. Well DO something! F'rinstance, truck on down to 420 Maynard (that's the Daily) 'and say hi. You don't have to be a journalism major or anything like that to join the staff. If you're sports-minded, interested in advertising, or like to write, come to the MASS MEETING Tucs., Sept. 12 8:00 P.M. r440,.41P .y "y fI -M - Eligible college men The PLC also offers can earn $100 a a few good men the month each month chance to learn to of the regular school fly free. Ihe Corps year. It's like a $900 pays the entire cost annual scholarship. of civilian flight instruction ... worth about $800. All PLC leadership training takes place during the summer when it can't interfere with your college career. Upon graduation PLC members are commissioned, Second Lieutenants. U of M Barbers and HaiTstylists OPEN 8:30 a.m. thru 5:15 p.m. Monday thru Saturday MICHIGAN UNION CITY NOTICE Ann Arbor Cablecasting Commission A public meeting of the Cablecasting Commission will be held on Wednesday,MSep- tember 13, at 7:30 P.M. in the Fifth Floor Conference Room at City Hall. The prin- cipal business of the meeting will be a continuation of Com- mission discussion and public comment on the questions re- lating to the licensing of pub- lic service cablecasters. The deadline for submission of written comments on these questions, published in the Commission's Notice of In- quiry on July 28, 1972, is ex- +...A-A ., -AA U AXT ." f - 0 To get the details on all Marine I