Page "Eighf (HE MiCH!UAN 1-)A1LY Wednesday, march U, ;r; r r F U-Il: M1(JHIC~AN uAILY Wednesday, March 3(3, 1 ~t I A LL. YOU CAN- EAT! Wednesday Special 5 to 10 P.M. Baked Lasagna DINNER INCLUDES: "EHome Made Baked Lasagna ' Large Pretzel Bell Salad with Choice of Dressing * Steaming Hot Basket of Russian Rye Bread with Creamery Butter $3.95 ADULTS CHILDREN Under 12-$1.75 THURSDAY SPECIAL "FRENCH FRIED SMELT". All You Can Eat $3.95 The Pretzel Bell * Restaurant SERVING DINNER 5 TO 10 P.M. Milwaukee goes wild as M1arqueti By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE-"This crowd is just like it was when the Braves won the World Series. It's younger, but just as big," the elderly man observed, vying for viewing position with an estimated 15,000 shriek- ing, beer-chugging Marquette University fans yesterday morning. The scene occurred several hours after Marquette had won the NCAA basketball championship. The mob scene had shifted from traffic-snarled Wisconsin Ave., the city's m a in thoroughfare, to Mitchell Field's main air terminal, where fans awaited the Warriors' charter flight from Atlanta. When it arrived, shortly before 2 a.m., 6-10 center Jerome Whitehead, hero of the Warriors' last-second semifinal victory over Carolina-Charlotte Saturday, was the first Warrior player off the runway._ returns home 120 E. LIBERTY 761-1470 __ MME9 VI SM3 \ i THUR. / V Reynold's 100 % wo 3.6 oz. Reynelle 4 ply/ wor Bulk t --a Jut A for meon - thur 9-9 fri 9-5:30 sat 10 -5 march 31- april P 12 pFRI. & Sl ,. f b ( JflL ,_ AT. SALE REGULARLY PRICE Lopi Yarn ..... $2.25 )OL $1.97 119 yd. Al Photo MARQUETTE fans, in jovial -spirits, celebrate the Warriors' NCAA basketball chaipon- ship victory over North Caro- lina, 67-59. ACNE SCASR, PITS FRENCH HERBAL HOME SKIN PLANNING TREATMENT W4rite: HERBS FOR YOUTH Box 1214 Hollywood, Fla. 33022 r <> If something's going wrong, it'll tell you. 1. Change in bowel or 2.bladder habits. 2.A sore that does not heal. 3. Unusual bleeding or discharge. 4. Thickening or lump in breast or elsewhere. 5. Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing. 6. Obvious change in wart or mole. 7. Nagging cough or hoarseness. If you have a warning sig- nal, see your doctor. If it's a false alarm, he'll tell you. If it isn't.you can give him time to help. Don't be afraid. It's what you don't know that can hurt you. "WE'RE NO. 1," thundered the crowd. Then the chants changed to "We want Al" and "Give 'em hell, Al." But Al McGuire, the retiring Marquette coach whose 404th career victory had brought an NCAA chamiponship, was hus- tled out a side exit by harried airport security. So were others in his entourage, including members of his family, Wiscon- sin Gov. Patrick J. Lucey and the Rev. John P. Raynor, S.J., Marquette president. A beaming, Lucey was reminded that Marquette's was the second NCAA cham- Campus AMI SERVICE & SALES HEADQUARTERS FO : Jeep pionship won by a Wisconsin team within three days. The University of Wisconsin had won the NCAA hockey title in Detroit during the weekend. "To think that the fans of Wisconsin had to sit through two overtime games to pull the Badgers through," thegovernor said. "Then to see Marquette win like this. "I WOULD REALLY like to think I helped a bit," he said, "except what good would my Irish luck have done compared to that of Al McGuire?" Semi-normalcy had returned to the Mar- quette campus late yesterday, with classes in session as usual. But the emotional outpouring isn't over in Milwaukee, which until Marquette's 67-59 victory over North Carolina in the NCAA finals in Atlanta Monday night had savored only two na- tional championships of its major sports teams: the Milwaukee Braves' World Series triumph in 1957 and the Milwaukee Bucks' 1971 National Basketball Associa- tion title. The spontaneous celebrating, which be- gan as soon as the game ended, saw Mar- quette students burst from the student union and campus area bars, guzzling beer and heaving toilet paper rolls. Some barged into cars, hopelessly stifling traffic along seven blocks of Wisconsin Avenue. Others streamed on foot, undaunted by a drenching rain, to a park along Lake Michigan, nearly two miles from the heart E CAMPUS .0 Gremlin u i Hornet JEE WASHTENAW COUNTY 2448 WASHTENAW (Ypsi) Pacer Matador EP 434-2424 REG. SALE AP Photo AL McGUIRE-a winner in the end of campu4 The noisy procession stretched for as many as 15 blocks. "IT JUST SEEMED like the thing to do," one student said, water streaming down his stringy locks. "Don't ask me why. But this school has never had any- thing like this before." When the airport orgy finally abated, sometime after 3 a.m. yesterday morn- ing, parking lot attendants suspended fees as motorists slowly drove through the rain toward the airport gates. One fan asked a Milwaukee County sheriff's deputy if he knew of any - avail- able telephones in the terminal building. "Not on this end," the deputy replied, wearily. "They've all been ripped off the walls." I Yarn..........$1.45 4 oz. knitting rsted wt. 100% orlon y Reynelle.....89C $1.27 SALE 77C I 1: oz. skeins 100 % orion .. AN D... to Tone ..... AL L COLORS. EG. SALE ... 8 1.30 $1.17 Summer Jobs in Wisconsin NIPPERSINK MANOR, a large summer resort located in S.E. Wisconsin has openings for: WAITERS - WAlT- RESSES - BUS PERSONS - MAIDS - KITCHEN - BELL- HOPS - BARPERSONS - HOUSEPERSONS - LIFE- GUARDS - LAUNDRY - COFFEE SHOP - SUMMER PERSON FOR MANAGR'S FAMILY. Salary plus room and board furnished for all positions. macrame 4 oz. 75 yd. s 2 tp sun 12-5 stop in INTERVIEW DATES: Wed. & Thurs., March 30 & 31 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT: Mrs. Cooper (SAB) 763-4117 9 a- Use Daily Classifieds t American1 Cancer Society T45$ SPACE cONTRiBMfED By T *PUBtiWR I JEWISH STAR Is COMING! ~pirt4",fthe aI By The Associated Press Pistons snare Trapp DETROIT - The injury-riddled Detroit Pistons yesterday signed their former forward, George Trapp, as a replacement for Marvin Barnes, who underwent surgery Monday for a fractured bone in his left hand. Trapp will finish out the NBA season with the Pistons but under league rules will not be eligible for the playoffs if the Pistons make them. League rules freeze playoff rosters as of March 1. Injured All-Star center Bob Lanier was to have pins removed from his broken hand Friday, but the team said yesterday that has been delayed until next Monday. The Pistons added that a date for his return was uncertain. Wounded Bird flies home LAKELAND, Fla.-Mark "The Bird" Fidrych, ace pitcher of the Detroit Tigers, was scheduled to be examined today at Fora Hospital in Detroit for possible cartilage damage in his left knee. The injury hadn't appeared serious until an examination yesterday in Lakeland. Dr. Glen Barden reported Fidrych had "experienced severe disturbing symptoms in the knee." "Why do I have to go anyplace? There's nothing wrong," Fidrych said, just before being informed of his upcoming trip to Detroit. "They ain't telling me nothing," Fidrych said. "I'm just telling them about the pain. The other day I was feeling good." Bookies bet on rerun LAS VEGAS, Nev.-With a little more than a week before the start of the baseball season, the bookmakers here are betting that the 1977 World Series will be a repeat of last year's match up between the New York Yankees and the Cincinnati Reds. According to the Delmar Sports Book, the Yanks are even money favorites to take the American League crown while the Hollywood Sports Book makes the New Yorkers a 4-5 choice. In the National League, the Delmar book makes the Reds a 6-5 favorite for the pennant while the Hollywood Book makes the odds 4-5. Meanwhile, the Tigers are a 15-1 shot to win the division and 30-1 to play in the World Series. Not surprising to any seasoned bettor are the odds being offered on the chances of the expansion Seattle and Toronto American League clubs winning it all in their first year: NFL reaches sweet 16 PHOENIX-The National Football League voted yesterday to expand its regular season to 16 games and to add two wild card playoff teams for the 1978 season. Join The Daily Sports Department Phone 764-0562 Buy A r; : - S f ' , - -. . _ PUT A STUDENT ON CITY COUNCIL s C. x For CITY CC PD. POL. AD HOUSING No new student housing has been built in e i g h t years. Since there is a visible need for it, we must clear the way for developers to build new housing. This w o u I d bring down the high cost of rents. Val iaskiewicz OUNCIL, 1st Ward V i) Just fill in and bring to Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard, behind Student Services and Betsy Barbour Hall. Price is $11.00 'til Aprilm1, $12.00 thereafter. .. $1.00 extra for mailing. Lots of Rose Bowl fun!! Woody and Bo at OHIO! N am e .* - -n nrb rAd r s_ Ann Arbor Address _______ APRIL GRADS to attend commencement voumust order a cap and own by APRIL 1, 1977 From the U. CELLAR 769-7940 ROSE BOWL-1977 Michigan vs. USC I I