ednesdoy, November 15, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Wednesdoy, November 15, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Nine Club sports By MARK ROMAN Club sports. Ah yes, those are the old-guys, now long past their prime, who wander about the ars of golf courses with big green buttons proclaiming "I'm Irish: In case of emergency give me a beer" and who think whopee cushions and signs say- ing "Kick me, I are stupid" rank among mankind's greatest achievements. Actually this world harbors an- other manner of club sports and this university offers a number of activities for those who would wish to direct excess bodily en- ergies in a constructive vein. There for the choosing are such diverse sports as rugby, la- crosse, soccer, paddleball, volley- ball, skiing, fencing, and a host of others. Those who step to the beat of a different drummer may select the National Association of Pershing Rifles, a drill team. Women s t u d e n t s are offered swimming, basketball, and field hockey. Several of the above mentioned sports such as cricket and field hockey enter full ac- tivity only in the late spring. Sports clubs are, to a large degree, aptly described by their name. Each club is composed by a collection of people sharing an active interest in a sport who have come together to join in competition as individuals or as members of a team. The competition may take sev- eral forms. Five of the clubs, rugby, lacrosse, volleyball, soc- cer, and cricket compete on an extramural basis, that is with opponents from outside the uni- versity. , At the present time, members of the handball club are compet- ing among themselves in club tournaments. Triumphant mem- bers will later journey to the regional tournaments meeting ac- NIGHT EDITORS CHUCK BLOOM an RICH STUCK complished players of w tribution. Perhaps some will then earn an invitE the national collegiate ment. The paddleball club is gaged in the process of ing other state schools Eastern Michigan, M State, and Western Mich hopes of forming a stal gram of competition. Several times a year,1 Kwon Do Club, afficiai Korean Karate, particil tournaments with outside but of late they have und a striking venture. It1 hope to establish a brot with a similar club at a university and then ul' meet with Japanese and clubs, traveling to the one year and hosting the players the following yea Just two weeks ago tennis team was forme they intend to play in cl naments and possibly sen players to national comp Over the entire expans club sports presides a organization known as th igan Sports Club Fe whose purpose it is to p foster, and develop a sports of a non-varsity st Beyond any doubt th mural Department ser equally significant role. whole, their assistancei diversify than financial. Assistant Director of the Intramural Sports Pro- gram Dick Pitcher explained that the department distributes about $2,000 yearly, most of which goes for travel purposes to the five major extramural clubs with due consideration given to need as submitted by budget and the demands of the schedule. Yet this is merely a limited ide dis- portion in comparison to the players sums collected through member- ation to ship dues and spent by the clubs. tourna- From time to time, the depart- ment serves as a buying agent now en- for the clubs. As a bulk buyer contact- the sports equipment so pur- such as chased is less expensive, but the Michigan funds employed are those of the higan in clubs. ble pro- Direct financial assistance may the Tae be prescribed; however, other ndos of f o r m s of departmental help pate in abound.. e clubs, The playing facilities such as lertaken pools, gyms, and playing fields is ttheir are supplied by the IM Depar - herhood ment as is the supervision of Korean the facilities. Maintainence of timately the facilities is also assumed by Korean the department. Orient While the department itself foreign does not enter into the internal a table affairs of the autonimous clubs, d, and it is willing toact in an advisory b tour- capacity so that a club sport d some may be established and to pub- etition. licize the sport to students e of the through its channels of com- student munication. e Mich- Efforts are now being expend- deration ed by interested individuals to romote, initiate bicycle, waterpolo and ll club judo clubs and to revive the atus. t Intra- archery club. Interest and par- ves an ticipation in the clubs has ex- On the perienced amazing growth in the LA tips Bucks; Bockers romp By The Associated Press with the Knicks leading 79-73 and MILWAUKEE-Jerry West pour- the Suns never got closer than ed in 15 of his 26 points in the four points. fourth quarter last night, rallying The victory, 14th in 17 games, the Los Angeles Lakers to a 95-92 enabled the Knicks tb pull within National Basketball Association a half-game of the Atlantic-leading victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. Boston Celtics. The loss halted a Happy Hairston, Gail Goodrich five-game Phoenix winning streak. and Wilt Chamberlain added 16 * points each for the Lakers, who won the teams' first meeting since Seattle bulled Los Angeles eliminated Milwaukee in last season's Western Confer- CHICAGO-Norm Van Lier and ence playoffs en route to the NBA Howard Porter combined for 18 title. points during a fourth-quarter The Bucks, (town 82-76 with six splurge that carried the Chicago minutes left, pulled to an 86-86 tie Bulls to a 97-80 triumph over the on Oscar Robertson's basket with Seattle SuperSonics last night in 2:52 remaining. A 25-foot shot by a National Basketball Association; Hairston put Los Angeles in front game. to stay. The Bulls, winning their 10th After Goodrich stole the ball from game in 14 starts, dealt Seattle its Milwaukee's Kareem Abdul Jab- eighth straight setback. bar, Chamberlain put in stuff shot The Bulls could not gain an ad- at the two-minute mark. vantage until early in the fourth The Lakers' Bill Bridges stole quarter when Porter replaced Bob the ball on Milwaukee's next trip Love. up the court, and West followed Porter, who has been on the with a layup to make the Laker bench all season, and Van Lier, lead 92-86 with 1:40 left. who wound up with 28 points, scor- Abdul-Jabbar led Milwaukee with ed six points between them in the 37 points and 16 rebounds. Cham- first two minutes and Chet Walker berlain, with 15 rebounds, and added a basket while Seattle was Hairston, with 11, gave the Lakers held scoreless. 58-45 rebound control. * * * AP Photo CHICAGO GUARD Bob Weiss chases a loose ball in last night's win over Seattle 97-80. Desperately trying to latch on to the elusive ball for the Supersonics are guard Dick Snyder and center Jim Fox (31). Huskles d By BRIAN DEMING The return of Sonny Sixkiller was "a very important part" of Wash- ington's 30-21 victory over pre- viously eighth-ranked UCLA, ac- cording to Huskie head coach Jim Owens. "You have difficulty against real top teams when you don't have somebody like that in the lineup," remarked Owens, now in his six- teenth year at Washington. is other past several years. Hawks (Barry)ed Knicks surge ATLANTA-Rick Barry sparked SIXKll LLER STA 'a fourth-period Golden State surge, NEW YORK-Walt Frazier scor- leading the Warriors to a 114105 ed 32 points and Bill Bradley fired National Basketball Association in 30, pacing the New York Knicks victory over the Atlanta Braves T ow er ][ clan s' o ses to a 103-97 National Basketball last night. Association victory over the Phoe- With Golden State trailing 88-84 nix Suns last night. entering the final quarter, Barry, Sixkiller made his return worth- ington, leaving them with only one In a tight battle throughout, the who finished with 19 points, sunk while, completing nine passes for conference loss. The battle between Knicks took a 75-73 lead with 21/2 a 20-foot jumper with 4:04 left to 212 yards. "No. 6" has now passed the Trojans and the Bruins in Los minutes left in the third period play and put the Warriors ahead for over three miles in his career. Angeles this Saturday will be sure when Dean Meminger scored a to stay at 101-100. His prime target against the Bruins to display the best from these two basket off a feed from Dave De- Barry added two more baskets was John Brady with five recep- Pacific Eight titans. Busschere. for a 106-100 Golden State lead and t Washi wl b Bradley then hit two straight the Warriors stayed comfortably in Bonh Washington a n d UCLA Washin onSta e in a rival ns jump shots to close out the period front the rest of the way. boast fine quarterbacking talent. spirited as the Michigan-Michigan, - Mark Harmon of UCLA has led State -battles. Washington State is his Bruins effectively past several coming off an upset victory over j highly touted teams, particularly Stanford. Nebraska. However, Washington' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ stifled Harmon's passing attack ---n i Year in G .l S CO I S in Freiburg [f gggI Rugger opponents gain muscle as area cOmnetitinn. iTmnrrnTs ;- - - - v -.- W - u ' m - - ' vHe is referring, of course, to Six- 1 killer's re-appearance on the grid- By CHUCK DRUKIS never lost to before in the six years accumulating needless penalties. iron after a month-long absence It has taken ten years, but the of competition. The Cobras have The Redskins finally broke through due to a knee injury. Washington's brand of rugby played in midwest- over the past few years undertak- with two minutes to go in the only two losses, to Stanford and ern North America has evolved en the task of learning the finesse game on a grub kick into the end- Southern California, were attributed from a fundamental state which of other teams and incorporating zone which they recovered for a largely to the absence of their star most English gradeschools would the moves into their own game 7-4 win. quarterback. rip to shreds to an upgraded ad- plan. Consequently, Detroit has The ruggers close out the fall Owens cited the "good balance vanced version. emerged as one of the standout ?season with a game against Palm- between offensive and defensive The early rugby powers, such city teams of 1972. er College this Saturday and OSU play" as a major factor in their as Michigan, Notre Dame, and The Big Blue then ran off three on Thanksgiving Saturday. Palmer upset win noting the good ball Wisconsin, are no longer able to consecutive victories over Toron- captured the NCAA championship control and fine running with count on winning three-fourths of to (12-6), Notre Dame (16-0), and in Virginia last spring while Mich- only one turnover on offense andj their schedules without difficulty, Michigan State (10-6). With the igan placed eighth. The Blue have and having to play their best only exception of theNotre Dame con- never defeated Palmer in fivetyebytstadefothquarter against each other. test, the Blue encountered virtualyerofcm tionbuinhs play by the defense that held the years of competition, but inti Furthermore, the early teams stalemates, but determination and autumn of upsets, a win may lie Bruins scoreless to preserve the were heavily stocked with gradu- fitness earned Michigan last mon- just over the horizon for Michigan. victory. ate students and foreign exchange ute victories. students. But nowrman of the When Michigan played the Chi- ( m''................... outstanding ruggers are undergrad- cago Lions, they met probably the;nc Sn uates who have become exposed to best team in the midwest. Chi-I Conference Standings the game through its increasing cago, also a city team, continu- popularity, and who have manag- ously frustrated Michigan's of- WCHA ed to break themselves of old foot- fense, and capitalized on all avail- W-L Pts. ball habits which were more of a able breaks to hand the Blue its Denver 2-0 8 detriment than an asset. first shutout in many years, 9-0. Michigan State 20 8 Michigan has had its ups and Of Michigan's three losses, per- North Dakota 3-1 6 downs this season, not so much be- haps the most unexpected one was Michigan Tech 2-0 4 cause the quality of play or players last week against Miami of Ohio. Notre Dame 2-0 4 has gone down hill, but the corn- The Redskins, narrowly losing to Wisconsin 1-1 2 petition has become noticeably OSU 33-32 sported a powerful of- MICHIGAN 1-3 2 better. The Blue opened the sea- fense but poor defense. However, Colorado College 1-3 2 son with a 14-3 victory over Pur- Michigan who has not had a pow- due, but then fell to a city team, erful scoring offense, wasted nu- Minnesota 0-2 0 Detroit Cobras, a team they had merous scoring opportunities by' Minnesota-Duluth 0-4 0 picking off three interceptions as the Bruins completed only eight passes.' UCLA was forced to depend on their4ground game whichrolled up 348 yards. It was headed by Randy Tyler with 108 yards in 13 carries. Harmon displayed some of his own running prowess with 101 yards in 14 tries. TheP Bruins, however, lost the ballf twice on fumbles. The rushing leader for the Hus- kies was Glenn Bonner with 89 yards. Fullback Pete Taggares punched over the goal line four times for Washington's touchdowns. This week UCLA finds themselves facing cross-town rival and top ranked Southern California. After their performance a g a i n s t the Huskies, UCLA's visions of an up- set and hopes of a Rose Bowl berth are somewhat dim. However, the Bruins, you may recall; came up with an upset at the onset of the season with a victory over the "No. 1" Cornhuskers. Since then they lost to Michigan and Wash- NBA Baltimore 104, Houston 103 Golden state 114, Atlanta 105 Chicago 97, Seattle 80 New York 103, Phoenix 97 KC-Omaha 106, Buffalo 100 Los Angeles 95, Milwaukee 92 ABA Carolina 127; Virginia 118 NHIL Montreal 7, New York (I) 2 Minnesota 4, Los Angeles 1 WHlA Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3 First Informational Meeting Nov. 15, 1972-7:30 p.m. Lecture Room No. l-MLB All students interested in attending the Uni- versity of Freiburg should come to this meeting. F YI WILD'S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..f l'd i . w.. kProfessional Lea ue Standings Boston New York~ Buffalo Philadelph Atlanta Houston Baltimore Cleveland Milwauke Chicago K.C.-Oma Detroit Los Anger NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division w L 13 1 s14 3 3 12 hia 1 16 Central Division 8 8 7 8 7 9 5 12 Western Conference Midwest Division e 11 4 10 4 ha 8 8 5 9 Pct .929 .823 .200 .059 .500 .467 .437 .294 .733 .714 .500 .357 GB 3~ 13'4 Golden State 11 4 Phoenix 8 6. Seattle 4 12 Portland 2 11 Tonight's Games Phoenix at Boston Seattle at Kansas City-Omaha Los Angeles at Detroit ABA East .733 .615 .250 .154 1 /2 4 9 9 Last weekend's results Notre Dame 5-8, MICHIGAN 2-5 Michigan State 5-6, Minnesota-Duluth 4-3 Denver 6-4, Minnesota 2-3 North Dakota 5-8, Colorado College 4-6 Michigan Tech 6-10, Waterloo 2-3 Wisconsin 10-13, Colgate 3-1 Friday-Saturday games Michigan Tech at MICHIGAN Colorado College at Wisconsin Michigan State at Minnesota North Dakota at Duluth Notre Dame at Denver W; I-I I w :4I UE LatYMraYi.iII g I 1, AAAft:, I 1972 CHRISTMAS 0GREETINGS 1972 Give More to Christmas Seals % Carolina 1 Kentucky , Virginia New York Memphis % Indiana 3k. Utah 5N Denver San Diego - Dallas w 12 7 9 5 4 I11 11 8 9 4 L 6 7 10 10 11 Pct GB .647 - .500 .473 3 .333 5/z .267 6 y/ West 5 7 7 8 9 .688 .611 .533 .529 .308 1 2/ 214 5% les Pacific Division 13 3 .813 ERE PIE RGNG. With the purchase of our special $7.50 14 carat gold post earrings, you may receive profesionally pierced ears! Beginning Thursday and through Friday and Saturday, we will have a trained Registered Nurse in all Stanger's Stores for totally pain- less ear piercing. Taking only moments, you too can have used to take a little more nerve io do! PAINLESS!! HOUSING OFFICE In-Residence Staff Application Forms for 1973-74 Academic Year Available Starting November 21, 1972 in Ms. Charlene Coady's Office 3011 S.A.B. FROM 8:00 A.M.-12:30 P.M. & 1:30 P.M.-5:00 P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY POSITIONS INCLUDE- RESIDENT DIRECTOR, ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR, RESIDENT ADVISOR, RESIDENT FELLOW & HEAD LIBRARIAN - - ~ -*-.-'~.~.'."~""""""..." I