2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 16, 1998 NATION/WORLD STILLMAN Continued from Page 1A matters. That's not what we'll remember. At least not those of us who know they Could have -should have - won. Those of us who know a Michigan-Duke game, with a trip to the Final Four on the line, could have - should have - happened. " Anyone who saw the Wolverines dis- Tnantle Indiana by 48 points or upset Duke had every reason to believe Michigan belonged in the Final Four. It wasn't a stretch of the imagination, or a case of unrealistic optimism. Michigan vas a Final Four-caliber team. Traylor said it and the Wolverines showed it, until yesterday. It's not that they didn't get the calls, or that Louis Bullock's leg was less than 100 percent. The Wolverines just fell short. They didn't play the kind of defense they 'needed to and they didn't come up with the basket when they needed it. The Wolverines just fell short. This tournament is not about who the better team is. If that were the case, we'd be talking about Friday's game between Michigan and Kentucky. This tournament is about who can rise to the occasion at the right time. UCLA did, time and again. Michigan did not. Valparaiso did, Richmond did, Rhode Island did, Michigan State - as painful as that is - did. Michigan did not. If all this seems harsh, that's because it is. But that's what Michigan's about - the strive for perfection, going all the way. Michigan settles for nothing less. That perfection was realized once at Michigan already this year. It could have - should have - happened again. Congratulations to the Wolverines on so many positives. It's just a shame they seem all in vain. Dan Stillman can be reached at dns@umich.edu. BASKETBALL Continued from Page 1A , "Tonight was just one of those nights," said Traylor, who might have played his last game for Michigan. The 6-foot-8, 300-pound center, who had a team-high 19 points but was contained pretty well by the UCLA defenders, said he will decide in the next few weeks whether to enter the NBA Draft or return for his senior season. Earlier in the weekend, Traylor said his decision will depend in part on whether Michigan interim coach Brian Ellerbe returns. Goss said he will name the new coach no later than April 8, if not sooner. For seniors Travis Conlan, Jerod Ward and Maceo Baston, the game marked the end of their Michigan careers.. "I'm trying to repress my feel- ings," Baston said. "I guess it will sink in on the plane." Then there's Ellerbe, who had to be feeling all sorts of emotions. The interim label was with Ellerbe all season as he led the Wolverines to a 25-9 record despite his uncertain future. The Michigan coach, who looked glassy-eyed in the post-game press conference, said it is a painful end- ing to an all-around grueling first season. "It's tough to put it into words right now," Ellerbe said. "This is a very difficult loss for our basketball team because of the way we lost." The way Michigan lost was the most frustrating part for the players and their fans. The Wolverines refused to quit after UCLA took an 11-point lead into the second half of the game. Michigan trimmed the deficit to 67- 66 on a Bullock breakaway dunk with 4:55 remaining in the end of the game. But in a key sequence of events, Michigan's next trip down the court summed up the day for the Wolverines. Trailing by two, Ward (16 points, 10 rebounds, 3 of 6 3-pointers) missed a 3-pointer from the top of the key. Baston grabbed the rebound, but his finger-roll attempt lipped off the rim. Ward had another chance but missed a follow-up attempt. The Bruins proceeded to run off nine consecutive points and took a 76-66 lead on Travis Reed's layup with 2:06 to go in the game. "We could never get over that hump," Baston said. "UCLA played well and they didn't give anything easy to us. We didn't give up, there are no quitters on this team, they just outplayed us today." If ou think ou're pregnant.. cal pus--we ifsten, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP A m 75-437 s ,any time, any day, i24 hou..s. U I LIKE TO WRITE? JOIN THE DAILY. COME BY OUR OFFICES AT 40 MAYNARD OR CALL 76-DAILY. LIKE NORTH CAMPUS? YOU'LL LOVE WILLOWTREE! 1 and 2 bedrooms Plenty of Free parking Now leasing for Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall WILLOWTREE APARTMENTS 769-1313 Look for us at the U-M Housing Fair! EHO AROUND THE NATION Willey: President Clinton was 'reckless' WASHINGTON - Telling her story for a national television audience, Kathleen Willey said "I could not believe the recklessness" of President Clinton in groping her as she met with him about her husband's imminent financial disaster. With Willey's account now an important element in the Paula Jones lawsuit at Kenneth Starr's criminal investigation, Clinton supporters attacked the former White House employee yesterday, saying she and other witnesses have given dif- fering accounts of her 1993 Oval Office meeting with the president. He denies any sexual encounter but says he may have kissed her on the forehead because she was so distressed about her family's economic situation. "I could not believe the recklessness of that act," Willey said of the incident in which she has sworn Clinton put his arms around her, tried to kiss her on the lips, then placed her hands on his genitals. She says she pushed him away. A few quotes from her interview for last night's program "60 Minutes" on CBS were read on "Face the Nation." Willey said she has thought many times since whether she may have sent "si - nals" to Clinton that she was interested in him. "The only signal I was sending that day is that I was very distraught," Willey told "60 Minutes.' IRS penalties in late taxes alone totaled $10.8 billion in 1996. That's greater than the need of reform agency's $7.3 billion budget that year. WASHINGTON - The IRS is after A comprehensive fix is unlikely this more than taxes. The agency hit errant year. Roth vowed "to do as much as po taxpayers with a bill for penalties and sible" with a pending IRS overhaul bi interest totaling $18.3 billion in 1996, but declined to say what that might and collected more than $4.4 billion of include. it. I m tsc uds a The penalties are so large that even Inmates could swap the Internal Revenue Service's com- organs for freedom missioner says it's time to re-examine a system that punishes not only tax JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Milton cheats but also people who make hon- Griffin, scheduled to be executed March est mistakes. 25 for choking, beating and fatally stab- The chair of the main Senate commit- bing a man in 1986, says he would glad- tee that oversees the IRS says the penal- ly swap a kidney or some bone marro ties are "out of control" to save his neck. Sen. William Roth Jr. (R-Del), "I can never make up for the crime Finance Committee chair, said prob- that I committed," Griffin said from his lems with the penalty system add up southeastern Missouri prison cell. But to a "reason the income tax is losing with an organ donation - in exchange the confidence of the American peo- for sparing his life - "I can give back to ple. Make no mistake about that" the community." If Congress fixes the system to Such a transaction isn't legal. But it reduce the amount collected, howev- would be allowed under a controver- er, the government would lose rev- sial proposal in the Missouri Stat enue. Net interest on penalties and Legislature. AROUND THE WORLD Former soldiers face awarded the Soldier's Medal, the highest U.S. military award for bravery not ghosts of My Lai involving conflict with the enemy. The were honored for putting down th MY LAI, Vietnam - For two scout chopper between U.S. soldiers and Americans who tried to protect villagers a group of fleeing Vietnamese to prevent from fellow soldiers 30 years ago, Kosovo brutality stirs returning to My Lai meant struggling to OSV DrtlySis explain the inexplicable. It also provided Albanian sympathy great Joy. There were the highs from meeting TIRANA, Albania -- Cut off from two women that Hugh Thompson and the world for years and beset by their Lawrence Colburn helped save from the own problems, Albanians have paid soldiers' massacre. And there were the scant attention to the Albanian comm - lows of being asked why it happened - nity across the troubled border questions they could not answer. Kosovo - until now. "It was very humbling," said Graphic TV footage showing their Thompson, of Lafayette, La. "You think brethren being killed by Serbian police about all the people who perished. You in the southern Yugoslav province has bring back images of people and places" increased awareness and sympathy for And many of those images are ugly: a people who long have considered Americans killing as many as 504 Albania their motherland. unarmed civilians, then relaxing in the "I haven't had a great affection for shade not far from piles of bloody bod- Kosovo, but I feel pain when I see ies. Albanians, women and children, being Just a few days ago, former helicopter slaughtered like animals for nothin " pilot Thompson, gunner Colburn and said Natasha Gjylametaj, a Tiranan sho crew chief Glenn AndTeottaho, who was owner. killed during the Vietnam War three weeks after My Lai - belatedly were - Compiled from Daily wire reports. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165, On-campus sub- scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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EDITORIAL Jack Schillaci, Edito ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Lockyer. STAFF: Lea Frost, Kaamran Hafeez, Eric Hochstadt, Scott Hunter, Jason Korb, Yuki Kuniyuki, Sarah Lemire. Erin Marsh, James Miller, Aaron Rich, Joshua Rich, Stephen Sarkozy, Megan Schimpf, Paul Serilla, David Wallace, Josh White, Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Jim Rose, Managing Editor EDITORS: Chris Farah, Sharat Raju, Mark Snyder, Dan Stillman. STAFF: Drew Beaver, T.J. Berka, Josh Borkin, Evan Braunstein, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Dave DenHerder, Chrs Duprey, Jordan Field, Mark Francescutti, Rick Freeman, John Friedberg, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Rick Harpster, Kim Hart, Josh Kleinbaum, Chad Kujala, Andy Latack, John Leroi, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Pranay Reddy, Kevin Rosenfield, Danielle Rumore, Tracy Sandier, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Emily Lambert. 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GRAPHICS Jonathan Weitz, Editor STAFF: Alex Hogg, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. BUSIESSSTAF MeganMoor, Bs nes aa*1 I