The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 15, 1978-Page 9 Tangled 4UpIn N. C. STA TE RUTGERS MOVE ON: So long NIT, Titans fall t Blue - by Henry Engelhardt A hoop full of .. reflections After the Northwestern game, in which Mike McGee scored 38 points, highest of the season in the conference, I asked him the $20,000 question. "What do you say?" I inquired. "They went in," McGee countered. That's the way it was for this year's Wolverines. Sometimes. r A long season has,come to a close. A season that started about this time last year with the games.of recruiting. What follows is a potpourri of thoughts stemming from a season that, for many, ended a month too soon. " Do you remember how hard it rained all day and into the night last April 22? That was the day Earvin Johnson announced that the college of his choice was Michigan State. Just think how great Michigan would have been with 'Magic' and a healthy Phil Hubbard. I'm sure the Michigan coaches are still thinking about it. * Notes from October 15, the first practice: "The three-man weave looks like Groucho, Chico and Harpo working on a comedy routine." And, "they recruited five new faces. And six new bodies. (Which one is Mark and which one is Marty?)" Actually it's easy to tell the twins apart. One of them has sideburns and the other doesn't Marty has the sideburns. I think. One of you guys ever consider growing a beard? " My Big Ten all-leaping team: Joel Thompson, Mike Woodson of In- diana, Clay Hargrave of Iowa and Greg Kelser of MSU. Wisconsin's Larry Petty (blubbery number 00) got no votes. Most overshadowed player? Kelser of MSU. He averaged over 17 points and almost nine rebounds a game. Has anyone asked him if he's going to jump to the NBA? Happy New Year * Other questions to ponder: How many years will Mike McGee stay before turning pro? (McGee, perhaps joking, perhaps not, says he will go pro after next season.)Why do Michigan teams have such trouble winning their final game of the season when it's in California? " NCAA balance? Of last year's final eight teams only one has made the final 16 this year, that's Kentucky. None of last year's final four, Marquette, North Carolina, NC-Charlotte and LasVegas made it to the 1978 Sweet 16. The bad thing about the NCAA tournament? One team goes all the way to the final four and ends its season with two straight losses. They ought to eliminate either the semi-finals or the consolation game. " Go ahead and make fun of Jud Heathcote's flashcards and strange (futuristic?) hair style, Jud'll laugh with you all the way to St. Louis. * The drive from Ann Arbor to Madison and Bloomington to Ann Arbor is exactly 1200 miles. A cohort and I did it covering the Wolverines under the most torturous conditions possible - we had only an AM radio for enter- tainment. (Don't try this trick in your own home, kids.) " The Chinese New Year is in early February, the Jewish New Year in the fall, many people celebrate New Year on January 1, but for basketball coaches it comes in March. " Even before adding new recruits three Big Ten teams are much im- proved for 78-79. Illinois - Derek Holcomb, a 6-11 transfer from Indiana, a former prepster, becomes eligible. Wisconsin - Stretch Gregory and Wes Matthews will be back after losing a battle with the books (probably). Ohio State - all those great freshmen will be great sophomores..Plus Kelvin Ran- sey. I get excited about next year just thinking about the man-to-man mat- chup between Phil Hubbard and Earvin Johnson. Who's on tap? b Prep news: Dwight Anderson, a 6-3 guard averaging 38 points and 13 rebounds a game in Dayton looks to be headed to Kentucky. Rudy Woods, 7-0 (he looks bigger) from Texas, on campus yesterday, has cut Kentucky from his list. "They don't need me," he said. The schools he's still considering: Michigan, USC, Texas A&M, Washington and New Mexico. The Michigan coaching staff claims it has a good shot at making three or four blue chippers into Maize and Blue chippers. The first signing date is April-12, look for Michigan to sign either Thad Garner, a 6-6 defensive specialist from Hammond, Ind. or Trent Tucker, 6-5, one of the top players in this state from Flint Northwestern. Michigan State has a grip on Walker D. Russell, brother of Campy Russell. The Spartans also have a good shot at a top Chicago prep, 6-6 Mit- chell Anderson, who averaged 40 points a game this year. Johnny Orr and the other coaches aren't talking too much about Walker D., but Orr does speak at many banquets in the off-season. Last week he spoke in Madison and Washington D.C. No truth to the rumor he and Frieder plan on guest-hosting the Tonight Show. " There's a 6-7 kid in the Chicago area that scored 1,045 points two seasons ago but is not being highly recruited. His name is Walter Downing and he's a 15-year-old high school freshman. He scored all those points in eighth grade. He is being billed as the next Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. " Michigan's final game of next season is scheduled for March 4, 1979 in the Pontiac Silverdome against Notre Dame. A Digger Phelps team has never beaten a Johnny Orr team. The Michigan coaches are working very hard on the upcoming season. And they are making real progress. Monday morning in his of- fice I asked Orr for his thoughts on next year. "I have no thoughts about next year," he said.N I Just 10 hours later in Crisler Arena he told 750 alumni and two highly sought-after recruits, "I can tell ya, we won't lose a game here next year." Funny combination of words, basketball and bust, that signify the end of one campaign and beginning of another. RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) - Kendall "Tiny" Pinder scored 18 points and Charles "Hawkeye" Whitney added 17 last night as North Carolina State shut down Detroit's high-scoring offense and rolled to an 84-77 triumph in the quar- terfinals of the National Invitation Tournament. North Carolina State led most of the game and held a 44-38 lead at the half. The Wolfpack stretched the margin to 55-44 when center Glenn Sudhop put in a rebound with about 17 minutes left. FRESHMAN guard Kevin Smith came off the bench and scored three buckets as the Titans rallied and cut the lead to 61-58 with 11:06 remaining. But the Wolfpack moved ahead again by 10 and went into its spread offense, slowing the action with about seven and a half minutes left. Detroit, which had averaged nearly 95 points a game, was stymied by the Wolfpack's quick defense. The Titans hit only 41.9 per cent of their shots from the floor. PINDER, a 6-8 junior, pulled down 21 rebounds and Whitney got 14. The Wolf- pack dominated the boards, 64-33. Detroit's Terry Tyler had 19 points, John Long 17, Terry Duerod 16 and Smith scored 12. The Wolfpack, 20-9, meets the winner of the Georgetown-Dayton game Sun- day in New York's Madison Square Garden. Detroit finished with a 25-4 record. * * * Rutgers squeaks PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP)-Center James Bailey hit a jump shot with 17 seconds remaining to give Rutgers a 57- 56 victory over Indiana State last night. Rutgers, 23-6, will face the winner of tonight's Nebraska-Texas contest in the NIT semifinals at Madison Square Garden Sundy. BAILEY, WHO played only 18 minutes because of foul trouble, scored just 13 points, but tallied the Scarlet Knight's final seven points. Abdel An- derson led Rutgers with 16 points while Hollis Copeland added 12. All-America Larry Bird of Indiana State took game honors with 23 points, despite a box-and-one defense em- ployed by Rutgers. Forward Harry Morgan added 18 for the Sycamores, who dropped to 23-9. Rutgers edged to a 30-26 halftime lead, but with only 37 seconds gone in the second half Bailey drew his fourth personal foul-all offensive. Indiana State closed the gap but could not pull away. Bailey re-entered the game 12 minutes later with the score knotted at 48. AFTER AN exchange of baskets, the 6-9 center scored with a slam dunk 3- point play to give Rutgers a 53-50 ad- vantage. But Morgan, who scored 14 of his points after intermission, hit two shots in a row and Steve Reed added a jum- per to give the Sycamores a 56-53 lead with 3:46 left. Following a Rutgers miss, Indiana State went into a stall but coughed up the ball twice on turnovers. After failing to convert on the first error, Bailey brought the Knights within one point with 1:42 to go. Bailey then set up the winning basket by stealing an inbounds pass with 30 seconds remaining. Yanks, LA favored LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Spring training isn't even over, but yesterday oddsmakers at one sports book made the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers the favorites to clinch the pennants in their respective leagues. The Yankees are 4-5 favorites to take tne American League pennant, accor- ding to the odds posted at the Hollywood Race and Sports Book, while in the National League Los Angeles is an 8-5 favorite. Bettors wanting to back the Yankees must put up $5 to win $4, while Dod er fans can win $8 on a $5 bet. in he American League, Kansas City was right behind New York at 3-1 odds. In third place was Texas at 4-1, followed by Boston at 5-1, California at 6-1, Baltimore at 10-1, Detroit at 12-1, Cleveland at 50-1, Chicago White Sox at 50-1, Milwaukee at 50-1, Minnesota at 100-1, Oakland at 150-1, Seattle at 200-1, and Toronto at 200-1. Following Los Angeles in the National League were Cincinnati at 8-5, Philadelphia at 3-1, Pittsburgh at 4-1, St. Louis at 10-1, Chicago Cubs at 10-1, Houston at 15-1, Montreal at 20-1, San Diego at 40-1, San Francisco at 100-1, Atlanta at 100-1, and the New York Mets at 100-1. PLATIGNUM ITALIC SET NFL OWNERS MEET The rules have C PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)-The National Football League voted yester- day to clamp down on players who showboat and bait opponents and ap- proved rule changes to open up the of- fense a lot more next season. By a 26-2 vote, the NFL owners decided to let officials throw the book at players guilty of "baiting or taunting" the opposition. It's a 15-yard unspor- tsmanlike conduct penalty. "WHAT THIS IS getting at," Com- missioner Pete Rozelle said, "is things like deliberately spiking the ball in the end-zone at the feet of an opponent or scoring and taking the ball and waving it in front of his face or jabbing it at him-deliberate, flagrant acts that can foment emotional problems in the foot- ball game. "We've had some mail on this in the league office from fathers of little league football players saying that the kids really emulate what they see on television . . . that it does cause problems with the kids." Rozelle said that "lesser instances, such as needling an opposing player, would draw a warning. If it were con- tinued, then it would be an unspor- tsmanlike penalty." BY A 27-0 VOTE, with one abstention, the owners approved a rule change to allow offensive linemen to fend off charging defenders with hands open or closed into fists and the elbows flexed or locked. Previously the hands had to SCORES NBA Boston 105, Detroit 98 Los Angeles 135, NY Knicks 117 Buffalo 123, San Antonio 115 Washington 120, Seattle 115 NIT North Carolina St. 84, Detroit 77 Rutgers 57, Indiana St. 56 THE ACTION IS RIGHT HERE! Billiards Bowling and Pinball atThe UNION G1{TBR !VT w T fto be closed into fists and the elbows had to be flexed. The change figures to slow down the defenders just a bit, and will also make it easier for officials to call or not call holding. The narrowest vote, 22-3 with three abstentions, came on the rule to cut down the times defenders can interfere with potential receivers. Previously a defender could "chuck," make contact with a receiver as often as he wished within a three-yard zone of the line of scrimmage, then the receiver could be hit again further downfield. NOW THE receiver can be chucked only once within a five-yard zone, then the defenders have to keep their hands off him entirely, except to avoid being run over by the receiver. That rule and the pass-blocking change are designed to protect the quarterbacks more by keeping the defenders away' and giving him more wide-open targets for his passes. And with that combination, the league hopes there will be more offense. Two other changes approved say: -A "double-touch" will be allowed by offensive players as well as defen- ders. Previously if a receiver tipped the ball it could not be legally caught by another offensive player unless a defender touched it first. -Intentionally stopping the clock by committing a foul or penalty is illegal., It'll cost the offending team (it usually 'happens when the offense is trailing and has the ball with less than a minute to go) a penalty of 10 seconds plus five yards. A PROPOSAL to prohibit quarter- backs from trying to draw opponents hanged offside by changing the cadence of their count was withdrawn. Voted down were proposals to bring all missed field goals back to the 20- yard line; to reduce all offensive holding and illegal use of the hands penaltiesato five yards and to eliminate sudden-death overtime in regular- season games. I'rt c-t~ Contains afounan aipen, f fhalic nibs, and instruction manuaCiadCforon~y $6.00... At art materia(¥ shops, cof(e book stores...orsen4 check to ?entaic Corp., 132 West 22 St., N.Y, N.Y. 1001 Add 50 cents for fiandling. MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE COLLEGIUM MARC STUDENT HOUSING FALL AND WINTER 1978-79 Would you like to live in on elegant neo-Tudor mansion (East Quad)? Dining hall, library, cultural events, interesting associates, old-world ambience. The Medieval and Renaissance Collegium is now accepting reservations for student accommodations in the MARC Residence House, effective September 1978. If you are a MARC concentrator or if you ore interested in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, you are eligible to live in the MARC House. For information or to reserve o room for the fall, see the director, Russell Fraser (2619 Haven. 764-4140), or phone the MARC office 763-2066), or stop by the office (M-F 9:00-12:00 and 1:00-4:00, N-il, aw Quad) with your name and address. Act now on your resrvation. Only a limited number of places are available. Redeamus ad antra. Summer Positions, at Camp Tamarack Counselors, specialists, supervisors, nurses, long trip bus drivers, kitchen staff INTERVIEW MARCH 16, 22, & 29 Call Summer Placement-764-4117 Camp Tamarack is sponsored by the Jewish Fresh Air Society, 6600 W. Maple Rd., W. Bloomfield, Michigan 48033. 313/661- 0600. CALL OR WRITE FOR INFORMATION AND APPLICATION We Need A Good Writer Major advertising agency wants writer with BA in Journalism or Communi- cations for training as 8TAIJY, STAIt Y -NIqHT Stanley KubrickLs 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY AT-9 M-1 AM- 4 A.M. Sports Clubs Demonstrations - Food