Tuesday, December 7, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY poA win r full court _ RES 771 WIN 3rd STRAIGHT, 97-76 Blue crush rage win r yes Vandv pitted two the second half tonight, they ers, missed could have beaten a lot of pro goaltended teams," praised Vanderbilt's inute, much head coach, Wayne Dobbs. By KATHY HENNEGHAN NASHVILLE The first black athlete to play in the Southeastern Confer- ence was Vanderbilt's Perry Wallace. The year ? 1968. As they say, things move more slowly in the South. What is to follow may not seem like much. It's up to you. But several of Michigan's black players think the ser- vice in the Nashville-Vanderbilt Holiday Inn's dining room has been sort of slow. And they feel it is slower for the black members of the team than for the whites. "I haven't eaten here, except for'the pregame mneal," said John Robinson. "The service was just too slow. Yes- terday (Sunday) the waitress wouldn't even give us menus. She told us just to sit and wait. "I didn't stay around. I could see it coming then. Later, (Alan) Hardy said she didn't, come back, with menus for 45 minutes," said Robinson. By TOM CAMERON Special To The Daily N A S H V I L L E - The; top ranked Michigan Wolver- ines won their first game in un- friendly territory as they over- vis were chasing a blocked shot near the sidelines. As the ball went out of bounds Thompson turned and both players start- ed swinging. Michigan comm fouls, three turnov three shots, and twice in the next m to the delight of th But the Commodo e crowd. ores did not a nui th 1 Cnm-UU came Vanderbilt and a loud AFTER 1THEY fell to the fully capitalize, scoring only partisan crowd last night, 97-76.1 floor, an official literally threw three field goals during the Wol- "We didn't expect to win like his body between them as both verines eight errors, and led that," said coach Johnny Orr. benches emptied and local po- only 12-6. "Not many teams come in here lice moved in. and beat Vanderbilt like that." "I was going after the ball MICHIGAN then got its fast after I blocked the shot," break in gear, and within three MICHIGAN, after adjusting to Thompson explained, "and he minute, took a lead that it the crowd, marched out to a (Davis) hit me in the back of never gave tip. ten point halftime lead, led by the neck and then again in the With eight minutes left to John Rebinson's twelve first back (with a forearm). When play in the first half, Michigan half points. I turned around, I thought I scored 10 unanswered points in After halftime, the Wolverines' saw him swinging so I swung a two and a half minute shot an awesome 81.8 from the back." stretch to widen its lead to 12. floor to suppress any hopes Although Davis did not do Vanderbilt played even with Vanderbilt might have had for any damage to Thompson, (Ric- Michigan the rest of the half a comeback. key Green gave the fight to despite some super plays by The game almost ended with Thompson all the way,) he did Thompson - including a block- 47 seconds remaining when cause problems to the Wolver- ed shot followed by a dunk on Michigan's Joel Thompson and ines with his shooting. the fast break that resulted. Vandy's Charles Davis started fighting. The incident started THE 6-6 freshman forward, ROBINSON, scored 12 first when both Thompson and Da- named the top high school half points - six for six at the r "THEY DID a good job," said assistant coach Bill Frie- der. "When we play good de- fense, we score points. Look at the scoring spurts and that's when we were playing good de- fense. "When we play good defense and rebound well, we can get the running going. When we don't and they score, we can't (work on the fast break)." Co-captain Steve Grote played only 17 minutes while suffer- ing with a mild case of intes- tinal flu. See GREEN, Page 10 DEAR STUDENT, Need a skill for a summer job? Need a practical skill for future employment? Well,' Washtenaw Community College in cooperation with The University of Michigan sponsors an enrichment program during the Winter Term which is designed to let you take courses in the various practical and career-oriented areas. Although none of the courses earn degree credit at U-M, each can provide a valuable supplement to your total edu- cation. Cost for the courses is $14.00 per credit hour. You may register for classes by signing up at the WCC campus. For further information, contact Washtenaw Community College, Office of the Registrar, 971-6300. Registration begins December 6, 1976 and ends January 4, 1977. "I bility. might can't really say if it was intentional, but it's a possi- It happened to us in Denton last year. I thought there be a resemblance." rl According to Rickey Green, he, Robinson, and several other black players sat for close to an hour and received, service only when they specifically asked for it. Green was unequivocal - white players and other white parties who came in later were server sooner. (Managers Mitch Kauf- man and John Anderson, both white, wholeheartedly agreed with Green's story.) "I wouldn't say it if it wasn't true," said Green. "They didn't serve us until we asked them to. We waited for an hour. This morning it was bad, too." Phil Hubbard agreed with Green that the slow service could' have been racially motivated. Assistant coach Bill Frieder' dismissed the matter, say- ing, "In all honesty I don't think it was intentional. Things in the south are just slower. It was a coincidence." Freshman Mark Lozier downplayed the situation. "The peo- ple in the dining room were busy, but that (the racial aspect) could probably have been in the back of their minds," he said. "I guess they just expected us to go to the buffet," Alean Hardy shrugged, "But there was no sign explaining that." & -.-- 'I r IP SCORES A COLLEGE BASKETBALL. MICHIGAN 97, Vanderbilt 76 Marquette 78, w. Michigan 53 Minnesota 96, N. Michigan 50 ,Kentucky 66, Indiana 51 North Carolinan81, Michigan St. 58 Southern Illinois 63, NE Okla. St. 61 Louisville 89, Va. Commonwealth 60 Iowa 90, Bradley 77 player in Tennessee last season, free throw line. led the scoring with 31 points. The Southeastern Conference Green hit for 29 points for officials gave Michigan twice Michigan while. Phil Hubbard as many free throw attempts ended up with 21. as the home team. The game began as the Van- derbilt crowd of 15,626 greeted "I THOUGHT the officials did Michigan with ear piercing a good job," said Orr, "there screamink that echoed off the wasn't anything they really brick walls and balconies of: could do about that fight. I Memorial Gymnasium. thought they kept the game un- der control real well." THE WOLVERINES played The second half scoring show even for the first two and a was due largely to good shot half minutes, but then the selection. crowd seemed to take its toll. "The way Michigan shot in NHL. Montreal 1, Cleveland 0 NFL Oakland 35, Cincinnati 20 PRO , ' ;2~ " ~L - o it TAR HEELS DUMP MSU ,Tom but that problems Staton said the service didn't upset him a great deal, he never expected it. and had not run into similar in the past. "It was a little slow down there," said Staton. "We didn't get the friendliest service, but I figure that is the way they operate. "The whites were served within five to ten minutes, while we were still trying to get our orders in. I don't think they were reacting to us as part of the teas, but as blacks. My waitress wouldn't even look at me when she was taking my order," said Staton. "She avoided me. "They asked if we were going to leave a fifteen per cent °ip. After service like that what can you say?" said Staton. Rene Schiegg, the dining room manager, was made aware of some of the complaints. That's ridiculous," said Schiegg. "That's the first time I've ever heard that here. Half of our crew is colored. I do not call them black, I call them colored. "It's always the one's who come first who are served first," said Schiegg. "If there was a problem I didn't see it." It's up to you. Indian~ By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Guards Jay Shidler and Larry Johnson scored 20 points apiece Monday night and fifth-ranked Kentucky, bursting to a 21-point lead in the first half, rolled to a 66-51 college victory over No. 4 Indi- ana. ,N It was the first home loss for the defending NCAA champions in three years and marked the first time in four years they have lost two games in a row. Kentucky is now 3-0, while In- diana, coming off a 59-57 loss to Toledo, dropped to 1-2. The Hoosiers, hitting just 32 per cent of their ,shots in the first half, were outplayed by the quicker, more experi- enced Wildcats from the out- set. After an early basket by 6- foot-11, All - American center Kent Benson, Indiana went near- ly seven minutes without an- loses again. other field goal, and errors hurt the Hoosiers throughout the game. Kentucky never trailed in the game and bolted from a 2-2 tie to a 36-15 advantage late in the first period. Indiana could get no closer than 13 points sev- eral times in the second half. Benson led the Hoosiers with 21 points, while Jack Givens added 18 for the Wildcats. Spartans stomped EAST LANSING - The Uni- versity of North Carolina stret- ched its season record to .3-1 as it rolled 2ast Michigan State 81-58 in a non-league basketball game last night. Led by Olympic gold medal winners Phil Ford, Walter Davis and Tom Lagarde, the Tarheels breezed to a 45-27 halftime lead over the Spar- tans. Coach Dean Smith substitu- ted freely, and four of North Carolina's five starters reach- ed double figures. Ford netted a game-high 18 points, La- garde scored 15 and Davis chipped in 10. Edgar Wilson topped the Spar- tans with 16 points and Kelser added 13, as Michigan State dropped to 0-3. * * * -ophers romp MINNEAPOLIS - Undefeated Minnesota held Northern Michi- gan scoreless f ir the first six minutes of the game and rolled up a 37-8 lead en route to crushing the Wildcats 96-50 in nonconference college basket- ball Monday night. Four players scored in double figures for Minnesota; now 3-0. Ray Williams scored 21 points, Mike Thompson and Kev- in McHale 16 each and Osborne Lockhart 15. Don't Get Classes. "U Frost " Tow Bite on the .Way to vers Is Only Minutes )iaa. 4 Month Winter Away Leases From the I Available V D U HVEPSITY. Corner of S. Forest and South U. TOWE IS 761-2680 ---_-i Join The Daily's Sports Department I' , U # ... ... t...wi .f i { }j ! r I( / It'sNotALevi's'Shirt Ifs ThALevi's'Shirt The cut is pure classic, with a slightly tapered body. A style that never gets old. And Levi's quality means you can count on it giving you good long wear. 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