Sundoy, March 27, 1977 El IrlC MIL-ti: ,i UTAfLT- Page Sever JOHNSON STARS FOR 'A' CHAMPS Everett trips Rice _~(~ AVNSEEYR L N] I PB IFIoI' By ERNIE DUNBAR All the pre-game attention had been cen- tered on Ali-Staters Earvin (Magic) Johnson of Lansing Everett (27-1) and Kevin Smith of Birmingham Brother Rice (21-4). But it was senior guard Jamie Huffman that eventually brought the Class A state bas- ketball title to Lansing with a 62-56 overtime victory. After falling behind by as many as seven points in the fourth quarter, Everett whittled its way back into the see-saw game and tied the contest at 45-45 with 1:43 left in the period on a juniper by Johnson. THE TWO TEAMS then traded baskets un- til Everett center Paul Dawson grabbed a re- bound off a Johnson shot and sunk a layup with only three seconds remaining. Thinking they had captured their first state title in their school's history, the Everett play- ers rejoiced on the sidelines, following a Brother Rice time out. But Smith took the succeeding inbound~s pass, dribbled to mid-court, and fired a 45- foot desperation shot that his the glass and fell through the nets, sending the game into overtime. HUFFMAN, WHO ALLOWED Smith 25 points in the game, fell to the floor in amazement. But his heroics were yet to come. After Johnson had fouled out with 1:06 left in overtime, Huffman took over with clutch free throw shooting and tight defense on Smith. "He won us a state championship today," said victorious coach George Fox. "He did some great things." Among Huffman's efforts were 14 points and floor leadership in the overtime period. BUT HOFFMAN didn't seem that overwhelm- ed with his performance. "I knew I had a joh to do tonight and I knew what I had to do. I was trying to make him (Smith) do what he's not used to doing, trying to make him go to his left," Huffman said. Although Fox said he felt relieved after the game, the fourth quarter was a different story. "Toward the end of the game it looked like we might not take, that state championship back," said a smiling Fox. "But you saw the real Everett basketball team come through in the last two minutes of regulation time, plus the overtime.", Fox felt that Rice's man-to-man defense caused his squad to make some changes. "WHEN THEY GOT that seven-point lead, we just said we'd have to go inside the rest of the route and we did," Fox remarked. While Huffman was taking care of the de- fense, Johnson was more than contributing his part on offense. The prep All-American canned 34 points and hauled in 14 rebounds. "This is a great win for us," said Johnson. "Going into the game I thought we were going to win anyway. We played great defense and that was the key to our success all season. "It was a nip and tuck ball game all the way," added Johnson. "Our shots just weren't falling in the beginning of the game." . Johnson felt that playing with four fouls most of the fourth quarter didn't effect his play. "If I was going to get that fifth foul, I was going to get it," Johnson said matter of fact- ly. "I had to go out and play just as hard the rest of the way." two.NN { i{ r I E ,, (Continued from Page 6) PERSONAL SUNDAY afternoons for reduced rates. Billiards at the Union. 1-6 p.m. cF327 WELL ESTABLISHED professional executive seeks friendship with at- tractive, educated single woman be- tween 21 and 25. Ultimate goal- marriage. If genuinely interested write to: P.O. Box 241, Jackson, MI 49201. 68F331 WHAT EVER IT'S BETTER CANOEING ARGO PARK CANOE RENTAL 668-7411 OPENING APRIL 9th 88F409 STEVE'S LUNCH-Come for home cooking. Breakfast all day, great soups and egg rolls. 3 egg omelets with fresh vegetables and fresh bean sprouts served all day. Sundays 10-8. 1313 South University. cFtc OPEN 1 P.M. TODAY..Bowling, pin- ball, and billiards at the Union. cF327 PLEASE DO READ THE MAGA- ZINES IN OUR SHOP. If they PERSONAL DHARMA STUDY GROUP, a Bud- dhist meditation group under the direction of Ven. Chogyam Trungpa, Rirpoche. meets weekly for medi- taton and study. For information phone 761-3352 or 994-6657. cFtc COME AND SEE our ^beautiful assortment of wool, cotton, and linen yarns for your spring knitting and crochetting at the Wild Weft Yarn Shop, 415 N. Fifth, Kerrytown.1 761-2466. cF IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENT: APPLICATIONS NOW BEING AC- CEPTED for Summer 1977 and Aca- demic Year 1977-78 for MOSCOW,s LENINGRAD, LONDON. PARIS, DI- JON, NICE, SALAMANCA, VIENNA, FLORENCE, PERUGIA, GENEVA, COPENHAGEN, AMSTERDAM. All, subjects for all students in good s t a n d i n g. Accredited university courses. 4, 6, 8-week summer terms or quarter, semester, full year terms. Summer from $710. Year term from $1590. CONTACT: CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY S/AY Admissions-Dept. M 216 S. State/Box 606 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107 313-662-5575 PERSONAL JEALOUSY IN MULTIPLE RELA TIONSHIPS. Weekend workshop foi couples and individuals. April 1-3, Bob & Margazet Blood. 769-0046. 39F331 PRIMAL At the Personal Growth Center, 403 Miller, 971-0102. cFte XEROX AND OFFSET fast, low cost duplicating COPY QUICK 1217 S. University 769-0560 cFtc DISILLUSIONED MAN, 32, with'no family, would like to meet and compare experiences with other only children. Box No. 6, Michigan Daily. 06F330 BUMPER STICKERS. Custom print- ed while-U-walt! MBL PRESS, 1217 Prospect, Ann Arbor, 761-0942. cFte 'D AP Photo EARVIN JOHNSON, prep AllaAmerican and star of Lansing Everett, the newly-crowned Class A high school champions, moves toward the basket in yesterday's 62-56 triumph over Birmingham Brother Rice in Crisler Arena. Then there were 7Th7W~T1'J fliP. flTC. U hp OIa13F330 weren't worth the reading, they__ _ = - wouldn't be in our shop. A Periodi- CRISP is coming!! Check the Stu- cal Retreat, 316 S. State. 663-0215. dent's Counseling Office Course cF327 Evaluations to get the most out of CAROL AND PHYLLIS F.- 31yourclasses! 1018 Angel, 9-5 daily, CAO N HLI . 763-1552. dF327 I LOVE YOU BOTH, MADLY, THEOPHILUS. eFtc I PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS Through B eh a vio r Modification. DON'T PAY for a store's overheadWThrie tiut 93-48diFte via high mark-up. For the area'sWt lowest prices and finest qualities FUN LOVING, lustful, happy-go- possible on an engagement ring, lucky guy seeks adventurous, daring shop Austin Diamond, 1209 S. Uni- woman. No S & M, please. Write me versity, 663-7151. cFtc at Daily Box 120. dF329 BACK IN ACTION tomorrow at 8:30k WDIG INVITATOS-Mdo a.m. UM Stylists at the Union. tradition. Cali 761-0942 anytime. cF327 eFtc WHAT'S NEW in face and eye KRISHNA YOGA Society sponsoring make-up? At the Village Apothecary free Indian vegetarian classes. Ev- we will enjoy taking the time to ery Tuesday 6 p.m. starting March show you. Village Apothecary, 1112 29th. Guild House, corner of Oak- S. University Ave. cFtc land and Monroe. Open t( everyone. CONFUSED about what classes to 52F329 take next term? Come for honest, PREGNANT? Need help? no-hassle peer counseling at Stu- Call Problem Pregnancy Help, 7609- dents' Counseling Office, 1018 An- 1283.. Pregnancy tests available. gell, 763-1552, 9-5 daily, dF329 cFte - ENROLLED IN AN { ELECTIVE COURSE O 10LWRTEC THIS TERM?OO RH We would like to talk to you about (AND COMING FROIP your met hod of course selection.I Interested? Call 764-9442. Subjects will be paid. 60F330 Take Amtrak The tr THEOPHILUS! Get out of our lives! inexpensive way to go.. Carol and Phyllis. 41F329 trip of 200 miles with A BAUBESbangles, bright shining BABLES, a -hn g under $17 in coach. The things-at the Museum Shop, Exhib- ood available on our tr it Museum (with the two black inexpensive, as well. lions in front), Geddes and N, Uni- When you go Amtra versity. Monday-Friday, 9-4:30, Sat- ~ time isn't wasted time. urday avd Sunday, 1-5:00. 53F327 cars are comfortable an DAILY PASSPORT PHOTOS-Every =;:enough for last minutec Monday night at 8 p.m., 2nd floor - term papering, if you ca Daily office, 420 Maynard. 2for social atmosphere that t d$2.50, additional copies kc. dF330 T ;..,..i..rn-rl, -n )ISSERTATION SPEC IAL LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN FOR OLLATED COPIES RACKHAM QUALITY GUARANTEED COPYQU ICK 1217 S. University 769-0560 ROSE BOWL-197 Michigan Ys. USC BEAUTIFUL FULL-COLOR 16 x 20 AERIAL VIEW $3.50 ea. P.P. BLISS AIR PHOTO Box 5152 Pasadena, CA 91107 OST OF GOING TO M) COLLEGE. Marquette squeaks by tough UNCC 51-49 By The Associated Press Marquette center Jerome Whitehead caught a court-length pass, spun out of a scramble and stuffed home the winning bas- ket at the buzzer as the Warriors beat North Carolina-Charlotte 51-49 in one of yesterday's NCAA semifinals. Moments earlier, Charlotte center Cornbread Maxwell had driven into the lane and tossed up a 10-footer to tie the score at 49-49 with four seconds remaining. Marquette called a timeout and, with three seconds show- ing, guard Butch Lee tossed the full-court pass to Whitehead, who wrestled the ball away from Maxwell at the foul line, moved to the basket and jammed it in. The Marquette fans among the capacity crowd of 16 086 at the Omni were cheering wildly at the buzzer, but the officials had to confer with the timekeeper before ruling the winning bas- ket was good. When Marquette coach Al McGuire left the throng around the scorer's table, he immediately embraced Lee. Whitehead and Lee were the dominant forces for Marquette throughout the low-scoring game. After the Warriors had blown a 23-9 first-half lead, the 6-10 Whitehead took over midway in the, second half. He converted a rebound that gave Marquette a 38-37 ad- vantage with 9:33 remaining. Then he hit a short jumper, a stuff and another flying follow-up to stretch the lead to 44-39. Lew Massey, a 6-4 forward, had kept No. 17 ranked Char- lotte in the game most of the way. With his team trailing 23-9 with less than seven minutes to play in the first half, it was three close-in baskets by Massey that helped the 49ers stay close, trail- k ing only 25-22 at the intermission. Whitehead, a 215 pound junior who averaged 10 points a game during the season, collected 21 points and 16 rebounds for the Warriors. Lee had 11 points.w Maxwell finished with 17 points and 12 rebounds, with Massey adding 14 points and eight rebounds. Charlotte, which received little national publicity during the season and reached the final four by upsetting Michigan, bowed out at 28-4. Basketball . MONDAYMARCH28 A~hr quette's h y cGuire- he yells again Monday North Carolina slows down Rebels, 84-83 By The Associated Press ATLANTA - North Carolina, sparked by All-American Phil Ford and lanky freshman Mike O'Koren, scored 14 consecutive points early in the second half and then held off Nevada-Las Vegas for an 84-83 victory in yesterday's NCAA semifinal night- cap. Ford, whose availability was in question until game time because of an elbow injury, scored 12 points and did much of the ballhandling against Las Vegas' swarming, pressure defense. O'Koren, a 6-7 freshman, was on the receiving end of many of Ford's ass'ists and scored 31 points, most of them from closej in. No. 4-ranked Las Vegas, 28-3, wasn't able to come close to its scoring average of 108 points per game against the disci- plined Tar Heels, who went to their famous slow-down, four- corner offense with over 12 minutes to play. Senior guard John Kuester hit five crucial free throws in the last minute to keep North Carolina on top. Sam Smith hit a driving layup at the buzzer, but the Tarj Heels were careful to stay away from him and not give him the opportunity for a three-point play that could have tied the game. Las Vegas guard Tony Smith had kept the Runnin' Rebels close in the closing seconds, hitting four straight long jump shots. But he couldn't overcome the clutch free-throw shooting of Kues- ter, who finished with nine points. Walter Davis finished with 19 points for North Carolina and the 6-10 Rich Yonaker added 11. Sam Smith led Las Vegas with 20 points, followed by Eddie Owens with 14, Larry Moffett with 13 and Tony Smith with 12. ain is a very An average mtrak costs drinks and 'ains are ak, traveling Our coach d quiet cramming or an resist the tends to nd Intn e cars - m 1 aeveiop in our snacx anu ounge .d Think it over When you're ready to give the train a try, these people can help make the going easy for you. CONLIN TRAVEL -.uth University--Plymouth Mall- Wolverine Tower Ai t k Tel: 769-9680 Econmical travel for student bodes ... like ears! . ' ,PMATIONC(ONTAINED HEREIN IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE "Live" in Ann Arbor MON-WED MAR 27-28-29-30 SAMIV SANDERS VISIONS COVER: $2.00 I I DECIDING ON MEDICAL SCHOOL? 'I I i UNLV's Jerry Tarkanian- headache No. 8483 4:00 PM tourney approaches The fourth annual Ann Ar- bor Basketball Classic, fea- turing the top high school basketball players from Indi- ana, Illinois and Michigan has been scheduled for April 3 at Concordia College. The tournament will draw the top players from the Tri- state area, although the spe- cific names will not be re- leased until the completion of the Michigan High School Basketball Tournament. -DAILY SPORTS ,..Wl/ n i '&F-w . - ". Professor Mohamed Talbi { Department of History, CERES UMAYYAD POLICY TOWARDS THE MAGHREB ROOM 200 LANE HALLj Sponsored by the Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies POETRY''READING _ by DAVE COHEN RON GUNSAULUS and JONATHAN PRASSE TONIGHT Sunday, March 27-9 p.m. Red Carpet Lounge, Alice Lloyd Hall SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS TUNE-UP CLINIC FREE Tune-Up Class LEARN TO TUNE YOUR OWN CAR 7:30 p.m.--Wed. March 30 Auditorium D, Angell Hall TUNE YOUR OWN CAR Approximately 25 people will be allowed to tune their own car at the clinic on Sat. April 2, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the North Campus Auto Lab. 1 'TARFIRE DISCO THURS.- FRI.-SAT. FINE DINING 1130 AM-S:CO PM DAILY PRE=ME D INFORMATION NIGHT Monday, March 28 at 7:30 P.M. AUDITORIUM C, ANGELL HALL CAREER INFORMATION ON: Med School Preparation Med School Admissions Med School Requirements Planning Sponsored by Placement Pre-Professional Office 764-7460 3200 SAB 3 L i ._._ _ _ V, CONSUMER BEEF & CHEESE PERSONAL Mature young woman with beautiful'voice seeks equallymature people to join her on a romantic fantasy. REPLY: MINNIE RIPERTON CO EPIC RECORDS WHY IS THIS YEAR DIFFERENT? BECAUSE . This Year You Can Have a PASSOVER SEDER AS YOU'VE NEVER HAD ! A Passover Seder that will make you feel that YOU-not your ancesters-left Egypt. Please make reservations before March 29th I I of N PBB Consumer Beef & Cheese is one of the only A2 retailers with regular testing for PBB. Certified by the Environmental Research Group, Ann Arbor. Do you know about Nitrates? We carry a complete line of Fresh Sau- sages, Salamies, Bologna, Hot Dogs, and Lunch Meats with NO NI- TRATES, DRY MILK, FILLERS, OR DYES ADDED. All meets are U.S.D.A. TOP CHOICE, UNPACKAGED BEEF. We also carry a line of Natural Foods and feature OVER 60 DIFFERENT CHEESES. SPECIALS EVERY WEEK! [Watch for us at our new location, 202 Miller, NOTICE Non-Nalive Speakers of English All speakers of English as a second language' are invited to take part in an experimental test of English language proficiencyto be given i I-Lf" AA T 1'"}>~ AK I"CI I IU At I 1 '-4. Lf'.n fl0 AA .. I 11 CHABAD HOUSE 11 I I II i I ., 0