Page 8 -The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, March 13, 1985 T rD e nets UPI honors Guards also lauded UPI All-America Team The college basketball season. may not be over quite yet, but that hasn't stopped the individual honors from rolling in for Michigan, as three Wolverines made notice yesterday on both the United Press International All- America squad and Associated Press All-Big Ten team. Center Roy Tarpley added to his evergrowing list of seasonal honors when he was named third team All- America by UPI and first team All-Big Ten AP. The 6-11 junior from Detroit, who is the leading candidate for Big Ten Player of the Year, earlier had been named a third team All-America by AP and first team All-Big Ten by UPI. JOINING Tarpley on both squads is the Wolverine guard tandem of Antoine Joubert and Gary Grant. Grant, 6-3, freshman from Canton, Ohio, made the second team of the AP all-conference squad and was an honorable mention UPI All-America selection. Last week, Grant was named to the third team of the UPI All-Big Ten squad. - Joubert, a 6-5 sophomore, was honorable mention on both the UPI and AP teams named yesterday. Earlier, he was a second squad UPI All-Big Ten pick. Wolverine forwards Butch Wade and Rich Rellford also made the AP All-Big Ten team. In addition, both were also honorable mention on the UPI Big-Ten squad. First Team C-Patrick Ewing, Georgetown F-;Keith Lee, Memphis State F-Wayman Tisdale, Oklahoma G-Chris Mullin, St. John's G-Johnny Dawkins, Duke Second Team C-Jon Konchak, SMU F-Xavier McDaniel, Wichita St. F-Kenny Walker, Kentucky G-Dwayne Washington, Syracuse G-Steve Harris, Tulsa Third Team C-ROY TARPLEY, MICHIGAN F-A.C. Green, Oregon State G-Sam Vincent, Michigan State G-Alfredrick Hughes, Loyola G-Mark Price, Georgia Tech Honorable Mention G-ANTOINE JOUBERT, MICHIGAN G-GARY GRANT, MICHIGAN AP ALL-BIG TEN First Team C-ROY TARPLEY, MICHIGAN C-Greg Stokes, Iowa C-Uwe Blab, Indiana F-James Bullock, Purdue G-Sam Vincent, Michigan State Second Team G-GARY GRANT, MICHIGAN G-Scott Skiles, Michigan State G-Bruce Douglas, Illinois G-Tommy Davis, Minnesota F-Scott Roth, Wisconsin Honorable Mention ANTOINE JOUBERT, RICHARD RELLFORD, BUTCH WADE, MICHIGAN; Efrem Winters, Doug Altenberger, Anthony Welch, Scott Meents, Illinois; Michael Payne, Gerry Wright, Andre Banks, Iowa; Brad Sellers, Ron Stokes, Troy Taylor, Ohio State; John Shasky, Todd Alexander, Minnesota; Steve Reid, Troy Lewis, Purdue; Mike Heineman, Rick Olson, Wisconsin; Ken Johnson, Michigan State; Andre Goode, Northwestern; Steve Alford, Indiana. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Grant is Big Ten's top freshman ONE SMALL VOICE By Jeff Bergida Cagers'ten best moments ... ... Casey counts them down IT'S LIKELY that whatever happens to Michigan in the forthcoming NCAA tournament will overshadow the regular season. If the Wolverines make the Final Four, people will remember the post-season hysteria. If they get upset early, it will cast a pall over past successes. But these first 28 games deserve their moment in the sun. And who better to give it than the master of the insignificant. "This is'Casey Kasem for America Counts Down. We just gave you the list of the country's favorite detergents and, wow, wasn't it an exciting race between Tide and Fresh Start? "Our next request for a countdown comes from Bill in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Bill's letter asks us to compile the top ten moments of Michigan's basketball season. It seems that the Wolverines have had a pretty good year out in the Great Lakes State. "Bill, we'll be happy to play your long-distance request. Here's your an- nouncer with those exciting highlights." 10. Beating Illinois at Crisler Arena - Any victory over the hated Illini is sweet but this one put Michigan into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten, a lead they would never relinquish. Illinois was handicapped by more than its lack of intelliegence as center George Montgomery broke his foot two nights earlier. But revenge was still sweet. After struggling through the first half, Michigan blew away Lou Henson's club and pulled out to a 57-45 triumph. 9. The first time Gary Grant stepped on the court - We had all heard great things about the kid from Canton. But he was only a freshman. How good could he really be? It didn't take more than a glance to see that this was one special kid. His quick hands and persistent defense were the first clues. His touch from the outside came next. Purdue coach Gene Keady believes that Michigan would be a middle-of- the-pack team without Grant. Sounds about right. 8. Winning at Purdue - A Bill Frieder-coached team had never beaten the Boilermakers anywhere. But the Wolverines bounced back from a hear- tbreaking overtime loss at Illinois to clobber the Boilers, 81-65, in raucous Mackey Arena. Assistant coach Steve Fisher says that the spirit the team demonstrated on this trip convinced him that it could go places. 7. Clinching the Big Ten title - This would, be higher except that, by the time Ohio State lost to Iowa and was.mathematically eliminated, everyone knew that the championship was in the bag. The league was expected to go down to the final weekend but Illinois, Iowa and Ohio State each had a slump which took it out of contention. Pre-season co-favorite Indiana finished at 7-11. Shucks. 6. Coming back to win at Minnesota - The Gophers were psyched to upset the league-leading Wolverines, who were coming off a .difficult win over Iowa. Michigan trailed by seven late in the contest but never panicked. A brilliant pass by Grant to Butch Wade set up the winning basket and a 66-64 victory at Minneapolis. 5. Grant's first-half against Kansas - With a national television audience looking on, Gary went nuts. He scored a point a minute for the first 20, hitting from everywhere on the court. The highly-ranked Jayhawks didn't know what hit them. Kansas' Danny Manning couldn't shoot, pass or smile as well as Grant on this day. 4. Garde Thompson's two second-half baskets at Iowa - The biggest win of the year was gained, in large part, by a couple of 12-footers by the 6-1 sophomore. Iowa had pulled ahead by five with time running out. The 15,450 Hawkeye fans on handhad visions of a Big Ten title. But Frieder inserted the Grand Rapids native into the line-up and the lead shrunk to one in 30 seconds. Iowa lost that game and five of its next seven. 3. Leslie Rockymore's half-court bomb versus Kansas - It was so ap- propriate for the only senior on the team to achieve his glory on national television. The Rock let one go from 46 feet as the first half ended that hit nothing but net. The shot was shown on sports broadcasts everywhere. It even made Mary Albert's Plays of the Month on Late Night with David Letterman. 2. Gary Grant's buzzer beater to defeat Indiana - This one almost made number one. The outcome didn't mean much in the general scheme of things but to finally beat Bobby Knight in his home asylum was a genuine thrill for everyone involved with Michigan basketball. The look on Knight's face when Grant capped off the Wolverine comeback was priceless. 1. Roy Tarpley's shot to beat Iowa in the third overtime - If Michigan had any fans, they would have suffered strokes during this one. The tension was unbearable. On numerous occasions, it looked hopeless for Michigan. But Tarpley ended the tension by following an Antoine Joubert miss back in as time ran out. This game gave the Wolverines the impetus to win 13 more in a row. "That's all for now. This is Casey Kasem reminding you to tune in next week when we count down the ten best Bobby Knight tantrums." Baseball owners see bleak financial future ANN ARBOR (UPI) - Gary Grant turned down big money to play basket- ball at the University of Michigan. No, not from another university - from the Milwaukee Brewers of the American League. Grant, a crack center fielder, was Milwaukee's choice in the 20th round of last June's free agent draft. "THEY TOLD me they were going to give me first- or third-round money," Grant said. "They told me they weren't going to draft me then because nobody knew about me." The Brewers offered Grant $30,000 to $40,000 but he spurned it quicker than he swipes the ball on the basketball court. "They were already counting on me at Michigan for basketball," said Grant, unanimous selection by Big Ten coaches as "Freshman of the Year" for United Press International. "If I had accepted, I would have let a lot of people down who had already signed (letters of intent)." He was the No. 1 choice of all 11 coac- hes as the league's top freshmen. Troy Lewis of Purdue, Al Lorenzen of Iowa and Todd Alexander of Minnesota drew runnerup consideration. COACH BILL Frieder was impressed with Grant from the beginning. He went THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AND CORNELL UNIVERSITY Announce with pride a new program of foreign study for 1985-86: THE MICHIGAN-CORNELL ACADEMIC YEAR AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SEVILLE, SPAIN JUNIORS - SENIORS In-residence credit - Financial Aid applies Instruction in Spanish - Proficiency Required Applications niav be obtained at: CENTER FOR WESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES 5208 Angell Hall 764-4311 and are due April 1 Kqain st .. UNION BALLROOM 9:30P THURS. MARCH 14 $1 LAST CHANCE TO VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE ROCKALIKE CONTESTANT ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT MS -$1= 1 VOTE- BE THERE!! SUMMER SCHOOL IN CLEVLAND AT JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY SESSION I SESSION II June 17-July 19 July 22-August 22 Gain one year in one summer! G rant .. top rookie with the freshman as a starter right away. The only contest the Canton (Ohio) McKinley did not open was senior Leslie Rockymore's final home game. "We didn't expect as much as he's givenyus," Frieder said. "There are always problems with freshmen lear- ning your system, developing, maturing. "But we knew he played hard," Frieder said, "and that he was well- coached and had extreme quickness. We figured because of his defense he would blend in quicker than most freshmen. "What's surprised us is that offen- sively he's been so good," the coach said. "He gets big baskets." UNL V caught cheating LAS VEGAS (AP) - The University of Nevada-Las Vegas football team was ordered yesterday to forfeit 18 wins over the last two years and surrender its California Bowl championship and conference title because seven ineligible players were on the team. The Pacific Coast Athletic Association compliance committee im- posed the penalty despite finding there was no evidence the university iten- tionally attempted to sidestep, eligibility rules, PCAA Commissioner Lew Cryer said. "I'M TERRIBLY embarrassed at this whole situation," said UNLV President Robert Maxson. "I will not again tolerate people knowingly breaking the rules of this university." The PCAA ruled UNLV must return its California Bowl trophy to the con- ference and give up the conference title it won because of the use of the players. UNLV beat Toledo 30-13 on Dec. 15 in the game, played in Fresno, California. The conference's action will be for- warded to the NCAA which could im- pose additional penalties after reviewing the decision. University of- ficials, however, said they did not ex- pect any further sanctions. By forfeiting the games, UNLV's record for 1983 will go from 7-4 to 0-11 and its 1984 record will go into the books as 0-13 instead of 11-2. "The NCAA rules are very clear; if you participate in a game with ineligible players, you forfeit that, game," said Maxson. Wings deal Williams DETROIT (AP) - Dave "Tiger" Williams was traded by the Detroit Red Wings to the Los Angeles Kings for future considerations, the National Hockey League team announced yesterday. Williams, 31, holds the league record for penalty minutes with 3,157 in his 11 years in the NHL. He had been at Detroit's Adirondack farm club in the American Hockey League since Feb. 19, the Red Wings said in a statement. HE HAD THREE goals, eight assists and a team-high 163 penalty minutes in 55 games for the Red Wings this season. He had five goals, twoassists and four penalty minutes in eight games for the Adirondack team. Williams was acquired from Van- couver last Aug. 8 in exchange for Rob McClanahan. In 774 regular season games for Toronto, Vancouver and Detroit. Williams had 195 goals and 222 assists, in addition to his penalty minutes record. I IM SCORES volleyball Fraternity A Delta Epsilon over Delta Kappa Epsilon, forfeit Evans Scholars 2, Alpha Epsilon Pi1 Sigma Chi 2, Phi Kappa Tau 0 Sigma Phi EpsIlon 2, Phi Delta Theta 0 Sigma Phi 2, Zeta Beta Tau 1 Fraternity B Phi Kappa Tau 2, Evans Scholars 0 Sigma Phi Epsilon over Alpha Delta Phi, forfeit Sigma Alpha Mu 2, Sigma Chi 0 Phi Delta Theta 2, Zeta Beta Tau 0 Independent-Rec. Hi-Ho's 2, ASCE 1 Tau Beta Pi Bombers 2, Economists 0 Independent Dirty Drunks 2, Patterson Dental 0 DSD Code Busters 2, Phi Rho Mania 0 Residence Hall A Rumsey C 2, Third Lewis Tigers 0 Third Reeves Spikers 2, Aroma 0 Residence Hall B Rumsey B over Reeves 3, forfeit Hackers 2, Kelsey Roots 0 Co-Rec 34-35 Coeds 2, Couzens Coeds 0 Action Dots 2, Evans Scholars o The Team 2, Buddies 0 PASA 2, HH Christian Fellowship 1 Wild Women of Wenly 2, Delta F Delta volley Dollies i ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Major league club owners yesterday predicted a future of "deterioration" of baseball's finances, with operating losses that could top $150 million by 1988 if management and the players union cannot come together on a plan "to safeguard" the game. Representatives of the 26 club owners presented a five-page letter to the Major League Players Association Tuesday, outlining what management says are "financial operating problems" of the teams. WHILE FULL financial statements were not available from all clubs for 1984, the report said 18 of 26 clubs showed operating losses totaling about $66 million in 1983. That represented an average of $2.5 million in losses per club. Of the eight clubs showing a profit, five clubs reported gains of less than $1 million. The report said 11 clubs had returned financial statements for'1984, nine of which showed losses of more than $27 million, an average of more than $2.4 million per club. The letter, signed by Player Relations Committee President Lee MacPhail, was delivered to union executives during a meeting at a down- town hotel. Don Fehr, acting head of the union, said the report lacked certain details that would help negotiators un- derstand the problem entirely. "WHAT WAS apparent immediately is that we had no information that we could look at and understand without more details," Fehr said as the two- hour session dispersed. "We have asked for more details." Another meeting with the management team scheduled for Wed- nesday was cancelled to allow the Player Relations Committee, the owners' bargaining unit, an opportunity to provide the requested information. Although MacPhail said the letter "speaks for itself," he indicated his committee would try to supply the union with the information it needs to get the talks rolling again. The University of Michigan CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES Presents the fourth annual ALEXANDER ECKSTEIN MEMORIAL LECTURE A SOCIALIST ECONOMY: THE EXPERIENCE OF CHINA by SHIGERU ISHIKAWA Professor Aoyama Gakuin University I " " Business Computer Science Education English Humanities " Mathematics " Natural Sciences " Religious Studies " Social Sciences ... and others WANT TO GET INVOLVED IN YOUR STUDENT UNION? The Michigan Union Board of Representatives, comprised of stu- dents, staff, faculty, and alumni, provides policy and user advice in the operation and planning of The Michigan Union. MUBR has nine student positions open for 1985-1986. Both grad- To get our Schedule of Summer Classes, mail coupon or call (216) 491-4318