Top Banner
CounciJ Exec Comm. To Gather The annual spring meetings of the NCAA Council and Executive Committee will be held in late April in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the site which has been the location of these sessions for three consec- utive years. The 18-man policy-making Council will meet April 25-27. Those gatherings will be preced- ed by the Executive Committee sessions April 23 and 24. All will be at the Galt Hotel. Financial Aid Committee Topping the Council agenda are the reports of a number of com- mittees, with that of the Financial Aid Committee certain to receive the most thorough analysis. That body, with the Council, is targeted to present to the January, 1972, NCAA Convention, legislative proposals which would limit the number and substance of the grants-in-aid awarded by NCAA members. Among the other bodies with proposals or suggestions for the Council are the Academic Testing, Drug Education, College, Long- Range Planning and Professional Relations committees. The Extra Events Committee will recommend which post-sea- son events should be certified for the 1971-72 academic year. A traditional action by the Council will be appointment of the Nominating Committee and the Committee on Committees for the 1972 Convention, which will be held January 6-8, in North Hollywood, Fla. The Executive Committee Will begin final planning for that event and will adopt dates and sites for 1971-72 National Colle- giate and National College Divi- sion Championship events. Basketball Attendance Marks Fall i,,, More basketball fans than ever attended the NCAA’S two basketball championships this season-the College Division and University Division tour- naments. A total of 61,183 fans wit- nessed first round games in the University Division Tourna- ment at Utah State, Houston, St. John’s, Pennsylvania, Notre Dame and West Virginia. An- other 96,071 watched games at four regional sites-Utah, Wichita State, Georgia, and North Carolina State. That left the pre-Finals at- tendance figure at 157,254, with only 20,216 people needed for the entire Finals Tournament to set a new total attendance mark. In the Astrodome’s spacious quarters, that record wasn’ t hard to achieve, as 63,193 fans watched two nights of basket- ! ball action. That pushed the i Tournament attendance total to 219,447, far ahead of the old mark of 177,470, set in 1962. The Tournament’s one-game attendance mark also fell, as 31,765 fans witnessed Saturday afternoon’s Championship game action. The old mark was 19,153, set in 1963 in Louis- ville’s Freedom Hall. The College Division Tour- nament drew 100,622 fans for its regionals and Finals Tour- naments, the first time that the tourney has drawn over lOO,- 000 fans. The old mark of 98,- 195 was set in 1968 in 23 ses- sions. Comparatively, this year’s record was set in only 20 sessions. VOL. 8 . NO. 5 APRIL 15, 1971 NCAA, NAIA Officials To Discuss Intercollegiate Athletics May 5 Three NCAA representatives who currently are serving the Association in several of its high- est capacities will meet with three members of a National Associa- tion of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Committee May 5 in Washington, D. C., to discuss common problems in the national administration of intercollegiate athletic programs. Richard P. Koenigof Valparaiso University, who has served on the NCAA Council since 1969, was appointed by President Earl M. Ramer to serve as chairman of the NCAA delegation, which also will include NCAA Secretary- Treasurer Samuel E. Barnes of Howard University and Marcus L. Plant of the University of Michi- gan. Plant, who is on leave to Washington and Lee University, is an NCAA past president and currently is a member of the Association’s Executive Commit- tee. Fort Lauderdale “We (the NCAA delegates) plan to meet to decide what we’ ll talk about when the Council and Executive Committee meet at Fort Lauderdale (April 23-27),” Koenig said. “Mark will be there with the Executive Committee, Sam will be there as an officer, while I’m a member of the Council. “We hope that we will be able to get suggestions from the rest of the membership on what areas we should cover in the meeting with the NAIA,” Koenig contin- ued. “We would like institutions to contact us immediately with suggestions for topics for discus- sion.” The NAIA Board of Directors originally suggested the meeting. The three members on its Com- mittee include chairman Dr. Ar- nold Kilpatrick, fourth vice-pres- ident of the NAIA and President of Northwestern State College in Louisiana; Eddie Robinson, NAIA second vice-president and direc- tor of athletics at Grambling Col- lege; and Ted Runner, NAIA first vice-president and director of athletics at Redlands. Among the topics thatthe NAIA wishes to present are: Avoiding conflict in dates of events on the nationallevel; adop- Richard P. Koenig Samuel E. Barnes NCAA Council S~CdO~y-T~~USU~W tion of consistent rules in the area of professional-amateur standing; creation of a national letter of intent; and discussion of problems jn the recruiting of athletes. “We are very happy to sched- ule the meeting,” Koenig said. “We are always interested in fur- thering the national programs of intercollegiate athletics.” All three NCAA committee men have had extensive experience in the Association’s affairs. Koenig, besides serving on the Council since 1969, has been di- rector of athletics at Valparaiso since 1957, and a member of the Association’s College Committee, College Division Basketball Com- mittee and Committee on Com- mittees. Law Professor Plant, a professor of law at Michigan and that institution’s Marcus 1. Plant Executive Commitfee faculty representative to the Asso- ciation, served as NCAA Presi- dent from 1967 to 1969, a post which involved him in many varied NCAA activities. Barnes took over in January as NCAA secretary-treasurer. He had previously served on the NCAA Council since 1965, and has been at Howard University since 1947, serving as that institution’s director of athletics from 1956-69. Chicago: 1973 NCAA Convention - With the 1973 NCAA Conven- tion set for the Palmer House in Chicago January 11-13, work has already begun to locate three of the other NCAA-affiliated organi- zations which also meet at the convention. “The American Football Coaches Association will meet at the Con- rad Hilton Hotel January g-10-11, while we’re working on locating the Baseball and Track Coaches and Business Managers Associa- tions,” NCAA Director of Events Gene Duffy said. The ‘73 NCAA session will be the third held in Chicago. The Convention proper was housed at the Hilton in 1962 and 1965. meeting, the Association’s dele- gates will gather at the Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood, Fla., north of Miami, for the 66th Convention, January 6-8, 1972. Like the Chicago convention, the 1972 Convention will be held under a different format-Thurs- day through Saturday instead of the usual Monday through Wednesday program. “The ‘72 Convention was orig- inally scheduled for the tradition- al days, but the selected hotel for the event was turned into a con- dominium, thus making it neces- sary for the NCAA to look for new headquarters,” Duffy said. “We wanted to keep the Con- mat. We couldn’ t hold it Jan- uary 10-12, on Monday through Wednesday, because the football coaches already were scheduled to meet there. “Therefore, the best solution seemed to be to move the Associa- tion’s dates forward.” Other Miami Convention dates include: *U.S. Track Coaches Associa- tion, January 4-5, Marco Polo Ho- tel. @American Association of Col- lege Baseball Coaches, January 4-6, Marco Polo. aCollege Athletic Business Man- agers Association, January 10-12, Marco Polo. l American Football Coaches 1972 Convention vention in the same city, so we Association, January 11-13. Dipln- A year before the Chicago decided to move into the Diplo- mat. Fifteen Basketball Standouts Awarded $lOOO NCAA Postgraduate ScholarsAips for Academic Excellence Fifteen top senior basketball players who epitomize the term “student-athlete” have just won $1,000 Postgraduate Scholarships from the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association. The total number of Postgrad- uate Scholarships awarded by the Association since the program’s inception in 1964 is thus brought to 432 for a total allocation of $432,000. The group includes Jan Essen- berg, Virginia Military Institute; George Faerber, Purdue; Rick Howat, Illinois; Mike Newlin, Utah; Bill Drozdiak, Oregon; Howard Grcenhlatt, Trinity (Corm.) ; Bruce Wheeler, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Paul Shechtman, Swarthmore; Dave Finholt, St. Olaf; Chuck Williams, Southwest Missouri State; Mark Estes, Case Western Reserve; Pat Lillis, LO- ras; Vaughn Wedeking, Jackson- ville; Dennis Bresnahan, Creigh- ton; and Terry Schofield, UCLA. “Too often student-athletes get recognition only because of their athletic prowess,” said Laurence C. Woodruff, chairman of the NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Committee, which selects award winners. “The program originally was created to recognize student-ath- letes academically,” he continued. Each of the 15 cage stars just awarded the scholarships has achieved an exceptional collegiate academic and athletic record. Each has earned at least a 3.0 or “B ” accumulative grade point average for three years of college work and has performed with dis- tinction on the basketball court. The grade point average of the 15 is 3.46. The highest g.p.a. is that of Utah’s Newlin (3.725). Four English Majors Four of the winners majored in English and two each in business, economics and biology. Other ma- jors include history, chemistry, physical education, engineering, political science, religion and psy- chology. Each recipient must have signi- fied his intention to begin grad- uate studies as soon as possible and must have been judged cap- able of doing postgraduate work by his major professor. To date, 319 of the now 432 awardees have enrolled in post- graduate programs. Football play- ers who won scholarships in the fall will enroll later this year. Others who have not begun their postgraduate careers have been delayed by military obligations, Continued on page 7 Vaughn Wedeking Jcrckronville ploymaker wins Podgradude Scholarship.
8

The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

Apr 05, 2023

Download

Documents

Khang Minh
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

CounciJ Exec Comm. To Gather

The annual spring meetings of the NCAA Council and Executive Committee will be held in late April in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the site which has been the location of these sessions for three consec- utive years.

The 18-man policy-making Council will meet April 25-27. Those gatherings will be preced- ed by the Executive Committee sessions April 23 and 24. All will be at the Galt Hotel.

Financial Aid Committee Topping the Council agenda are

the reports of a number of com- mittees, with that of the Financial Aid Committee certain to receive the most thorough analysis. That body, with the Council, is targeted to present to the January, 1972, NCAA Convention, legislative proposals which would limit the number and substance of the grants-in-aid awarded by NCAA members.

Among the other bodies with proposals or suggestions for the Council are the Academic Testing, Drug Education, College, Long- Range Planning and Professional Relations committees.

The Extra Events Committee will recommend which post-sea- son events should be certified for the 1971-72 academic year.

A traditional action by the Council will be appointment of the Nominating Committee and the Committee on Committees for the 1972 Convention, which will be held January 6-8, in North Hollywood, Fla.

The Executive Committee Will

begin final planning for that event and will adopt dates and sites for 1971-72 National Colle- giate and National College Divi- sion Championship events.

Basketball Attendance Marks Fall

i,,,

More basketball fans than ever attended the NCAA’S two basketball championships this season-the College Division and University Division tour- naments.

A total of 61,183 fans wit- nessed first round games in the University Division Tourna- ment at Utah State, Houston, St. John’s, Pennsylvania, Notre Dame and West Virginia. An- other 96,071 watched games at four regional sites-Utah, Wichita State, Georgia, and North Carolina State.

That left the pre-Finals at- tendance figure at 157,254, with only 20,216 people needed for the entire Finals Tournament to set a new total attendance mark.

In the Astrodome’s spacious quarters, that record wasn’t hard to achieve, as 63,193 fans watched two nights of basket- ! ball action. That pushed the i Tournament attendance total to 219,447, far ahead of the old mark of 177,470, set in 1962.

The Tournament’s one-game attendance mark also fell, as 31,765 fans witnessed Saturday afternoon’s Championship game action. The old mark was 19,153, set in 1963 in Louis- ville’s Freedom Hall.

The College Division Tour- nament drew 100,622 fans for its regionals and Finals Tour- naments, the first time that the tourney has drawn over lOO,- 000 fans. The old mark of 98,- 195 was set in 1968 in 23 ses- sions. Comparatively, this year’s record was set in only 20 sessions.

VOL. 8 . NO. 5 APRIL 15, 1971

NCAA, NAIA Officials To Discuss Intercollegiate Athletics May 5

Three NCAA representatives who currently are serving the Association in several of its high- est capacities will meet with three members of a National Associa- tion of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Committee May 5 in Washington, D. C., to discuss common problems in the national administration of intercollegiate athletic programs.

Richard P. Koenigof Valparaiso University, who has served on the NCAA Council since 1969, was appointed by President Earl M. Ramer to serve as chairman of the NCAA delegation, which also will include NCAA Secretary- Treasurer Samuel E. Barnes of Howard University and Marcus L. Plant of the University of Michi- gan. Plant, who is on leave to Washington and Lee University, is an NCAA past president and currently is a member of the Association’s Executive Commit- tee.

Fort Lauderdale “We (the NCAA delegates) plan

to meet to decide what we’ll talk about when the Council and Executive Committee meet at Fort Lauderdale (April 23-27),” Koenig said.

“Mark will be there with the Executive Committee, Sam will be there as an officer, while I’m a member of the Council.

“We hope that we will be able to get suggestions from the rest of the membership on what areas we should cover in the meeting with the NAIA,” Koenig contin- ued. “We would like institutions to contact us immediately with suggestions for topics for discus- sion.”

The NAIA Board of Directors originally suggested the meeting. The three members on its Com- mittee include chairman Dr. Ar- nold Kilpatrick, fourth vice-pres- ident of the NAIA and President of Northwestern State College in Louisiana; Eddie Robinson, NAIA second vice-president and direc- tor of athletics at Grambling Col- lege; and Ted Runner, NAIA first vice-president and director of athletics at Redlands.

Among the topics thatthe NAIA wishes to present are:

Avoiding conflict in dates of events on the nationallevel; adop-

Richard P. Koenig Samuel E. Barnes NCAA Council S~CdO~y-T~~USU~W

tion of consistent rules in the area of professional-amateur standing; creation of a national letter of intent; and discussion of problems jn the recruiting of athletes.

“We are very happy to sched- ule the meeting,” Koenig said. “We are always interested in fur- thering the national programs of intercollegiate athletics.”

All three NCAA committee men have had extensive experience in

the Association’s affairs. Koenig, besides serving on the

Council since 1969, has been di- rector of athletics at Valparaiso since 1957, and a member of the Association’s College Committee, College Division Basketball Com- mittee and Committee on Com- mittees.

Law Professor Plant, a professor of law at

Michigan and that institution’s

Marcus 1. Plant Executive Commitfee

faculty representative to the Asso- ciation, served as NCAA Presi- dent from 1967 to 1969, a post which involved him in many varied NCAA activities.

Barnes took over in January as NCAA secretary-treasurer. He had previously served on the NCAA Council since 1965, and has been at Howard University since 1947, serving as that institution’s director of athletics from 1956-69.

Chicago: 1973 NCAA Convention - With the 1973 NCAA Conven-

tion set for the Palmer House in Chicago January 11-13, work has already begun to locate three of the other NCAA-affiliated organi- zations which also meet at the convention.

“The American Football Coaches Association will meet at the Con- rad Hilton Hotel January g-10-11, while we’re working on locating the Baseball and Track Coaches and Business Managers Associa- tions,” NCAA Director of Events Gene Duffy said.

The ‘73 NCAA session will be the third held in Chicago. The Convention proper was housed at the Hilton in 1962 and 1965.

meeting, the Association’s dele- gates will gather at the Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood, Fla., north of Miami, for the 66th Convention, January 6-8, 1972.

Like the Chicago convention, the 1972 Convention will be held under a different format-Thurs- day through Saturday instead of the usual Monday through Wednesday program.

“The ‘72 Convention was orig- inally scheduled for the tradition- al days, but the selected hotel for the event was turned into a con- dominium, thus making it neces- sary for the NCAA to look for new headquarters,” Duffy said.

“We wanted to keep the Con-

mat. We couldn’t hold it Jan- uary 10-12, on Monday through Wednesday, because the football coaches already were scheduled to meet there.

“Therefore, the best solution seemed to be to move the Associa- tion’s dates forward.”

Other Miami Convention dates include:

*U.S. Track Coaches Associa- tion, January 4-5, Marco Polo Ho- tel.

@American Association of Col- lege Baseball Coaches, January 4-6, Marco Polo.

aCollege Athletic Business Man- agers Association, January 10-12, Marco Polo.

l American Football Coaches 1972 Convention vention in the same city, so we Association, January 11-13. Dipln-

A year before the Chicago decided to move into the Diplo- mat.

Fifteen Basketball Standouts Awarded $lOOO NCAA Postgraduate ScholarsAips for Academic Excellence

Fifteen top senior basketball players who epitomize the term “student-athlete” have just won $1,000 Postgraduate Scholarships from the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association.

The total number of Postgrad- uate Scholarships awarded by the Association since the program’s inception in 1964 is thus brought to 432 for a total allocation of $432,000.

The group includes Jan Essen- berg, Virginia Military Institute; George Faerber, Purdue; Rick Howat, Illinois; Mike Newlin, Utah; Bill Drozdiak, Oregon; Howard Grcenhlatt, Trinity (Corm.) ; Bruce Wheeler, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Paul Shechtman, Swarthmore; Dave Finholt, St. Olaf; Chuck Williams, Southwest Missouri State; Mark Estes, Case Western Reserve; Pat Lillis, LO-

ras; Vaughn Wedeking, Jackson- ville; Dennis Bresnahan, Creigh- ton; and Terry Schofield, UCLA.

“Too often student-athletes get recognition only because of their athletic prowess,” said Laurence C. Woodruff, chairman of the NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Committee, which selects award winners.

“The program originally was created to recognize student-ath- letes academically,” he continued.

Each of the 15 cage stars just awarded the scholarships has achieved an exceptional collegiate academic and athletic record. Each has earned at least a 3.0 or “B” accumulative grade point average for three years of college work and has performed with dis- tinction on the basketball court.

The grade point average of the 15 is 3.46. The highest g.p.a. is that

of Utah’s Newlin (3.725). Four English Majors

Four of the winners majored in English and two each in business, economics and biology. Other ma- jors include history, chemistry, physical education, engineering, political science, religion and psy- chology.

Each recipient must have signi- fied his intention to begin grad- uate studies as soon as possible and must have been judged cap- able of doing postgraduate work by his major professor.

To date, 319 of the now 432 awardees have enrolled in post- graduate programs. Football play- ers who won scholarships in the fall will enroll later this year. Others who have not begun their postgraduate careers have been delayed by military obligations,

Continued on page 7

Vaughn Wedeking Jcrckronville ploymaker wins Podgradude

Scholarship.

Page 2: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

Editorial

Tickets, Television, Constitution Hopefully these comments will serve as a warn-

ing, a sounding board and an informative sum- mary.

They are prompted by the confluence of several related issues of direct importance to the admin- istrators of college athletics. This interlocking was spotlighted by the recent heavyweight cham- pionship fight, and the manner in which it was arbitrarily confined to closed circuit (high- priced) theater television.

Suddenly the issue of the “peoples’ right to see sports on TV”-which has been raised against the black-out policy of professional football-was amended to become the “peoples’ right to see sports on TV for free.”

Debate on the issue was heated by growing pressures from the television and communica- tions industries concerning the increasing role of cable television. Prophets of doom (and spokes- men for over-the-air commercial television) gloomily predicted an early end for presentation of top sports events on free television.

Cable TV (or CATV) has the commercial TV industry scared, the networks concerned, the ad- vertisers worried, the government studying and subscribers interested. Whether CATV will have more to offer sportswise than a clearer-than- usual picture may well be determined soon.

Politicians Rush Rills Some politicians sensed a chance to become

champions of the “free” sports cause and rushed forward with bills which would prohibit spon- sors of major sports events from showing them

exclusively on closed-circuit and/or CATV. Spon- sors would have to obtain a permit from the Fed- eral Communications Commission before they could advertise or sell admissions to major sports events. These permits would be granted upon evidence that the TV and radio networks had had an opportunity to bid for the broadcast rights to the event. Further, broadcasters and wired media (CATV, closed circuit, pay TV) would be pro- hibited from “seeking, contracting for or exer- cising exclusive rights” to sports events.

At the same time, interestingly and contradic- torily, one closed circuit company is suing the NFL to force the League to permit the company to bid for TV rights to the Super Bowl, and to grant it the exclusive TV rights if it submits the high bid.

This brings us back to the earlier contentions that the public has a “right” to see an event, and a “right” to insist the event be presented on free television when sold out or played in a distant town.

Rights of Management and Buyer As dependent as sports (college, high school,

professional) are upon the entertainment dollar of the public, the essential rights belong to and their saIe must be determined by the sponsoring agency. The only persons with a tight to see a sports event are those who purchase a ticket, Management will be held in check by the financial pressures of the public-bad policies or lack of consideration for the local fans will result in economic disaster.

Fortunately, the courts have so held, to date. But the government should not enact laws

which force utilization of a specific means of communication. This borders on thought control, and definitely reflects management of the news processes. Latitude, freedom and competition be- tween media should be encouraged.

Hopefully, the Congress will continue to let management and sponsors de t e r m in e whether particular events are best suited for closed cir- cuit or over-the-air television. For many orga- nizations, a higher price from closed circuit would not begin to pay for the greater exposure of over- the-air. Conversely, CATV may offer television avenues to sports events now unable to attract the sponsors’ dollars necessary for commercial television presentation. However, this is much the same Congress which recently passed the patently un-Constitutional (to this writer’s view) ban on advertising cigarettes in one me- dium.

Accordingly, all those in college sports should study these points and issues and be ready to speak and act should any of the bills advance in Congress.

Otherwise, some Washington bureau may be determining the manner in which the school-col- lege community may present its events to the nation.

Thomas C. Hansen

! N C A A, Director of

1 NEWS Public Relations. Tom Hansen E

Editor.. . . .Bruce E. Skinner i stafp . . . . . . . . . . . . Louis J. Spry, 1 Grayle Howlett !

1 Published 19 times a year by the National Collegiate Ath- g $ ctic Association. executive and editorial ofI%ces, Midland Z E Building. Kansas City. Missouri 64105. Phone: (AC 816) ; ; 474-4600.

Drug Committee Presents Diversified Program (Editor’s Note: This is the last in a series of three articles on the NCAA Drug Education program. It deals with the misuse of drugs by athletes.)

The NCAA Drug Education Commit- tee first met October 21-22, 1970, but in the short period since that time it has provided the impetus for one of the NCAA’s most comprehensive programs.

The Committee, of which Robert W. Pritchard, Director of Athletics at Wor- cester Polytechnic Institute (Mass.) is chairman, is composed of Dr. Donald Cooper, team physician at Oklahoma State; Thomas J. Hamilton, Pacific-8 Conference executive Director; and James H. Wilkinson, NCAA. It was formed by the NCAA Council last Au- gust.

“The Committee was formed,” said Wilkinson. “because of the rising Dub- lit concern over drug abuse by-young people and athletes.”

Robert W. Pritchard Thomas J. Hamilton Dr. Donald 1. Cooper James H. Wilkinson drug Committee chairman Pacific-8 Execufirs Director Oklahoma Sf. feam physician NCAA Staff

The steroids are used to gain weight 1968 and a British cyclist in 1967. And lem.” at an extremely fast rate. studies have shown that the steroids The Committee has undertaken sev-

“What I’ve tried to get across to the may cause testicular atrophy and hypcr- era1 other projects. coaches and delegates (Cooper has spo- trophy.” Over 27,000 posters have been dis- ken to over 2,000 now) is that we real- The program presented by Cooper, tributed to every college campus in the ly don’t know too much about these Jones and Garfield has been widely re- country, as well as to junior college drugs. ceived. and state high school athletic associa-

“Not only don’t we know the imme- “I had one person come up to me tions. They in turn have passed them diate effects, but we also don’t know after we presented our program,” down to their respective institutions. what is going to happen to athletes who Pritchard said, “and tell me he had Display advertising with anti-drug take them, five or ten years from now. been to this convention for 20 years and messages has appeared in football and

“There just is not enough knowledge ours was the best session he ever at- basketball programs. on these drugs to know the facts. We tended. Anti-drug messages have been pre- don’t even know if aspirin works for “The front of the room is always sented on NCAA football and basket- sure. And if we don’t know how aspirin crowded with people after the panel- ball broadcasts and telecasts. works, how are we supposed to know ists are through speaking, and there about the steroids and amphetamines? always is significant response from the Anti-Drug Resolution

People give the medical and science coaches.” The Committee headed a drive for fields a lot more credit than they de- The Committee presented the pro- the unanimous passage of a resolution serve.” gram to the football, baseball, and at the NCAA Convention, which con-

A basic concept Cooper presents to track coaches and NCAA delegates at demns the use of nontherapeutic drugs coaches as part of the Drug Education the NCAA Convention in January. by any member institution. Committee’s program is that there is The program was so popular, that it “In the future,” Pritchard comment- no SAFE way anything can improve a was given to the basketball coaches at ed, “we hope to get the athletes and normal, healthy, well-fed, well-hydrat- their convention when they met at the coaches involved on television. We also ed human being. time of the National Collegiate Basket- need physicians and trainers to speak

hall Championship. out against this drug abuse. Dangerous Drugs “I think that these coaches are going “Another thing we can do is to pro-

“The amphetamines and steroids have back to talk with their students,” said vide more coaches with handouts and proven to be dangerous. The ampheta- Wilkinson. “They’re aroused now and include more articles in high school mines killed a French soccer player in are aware that there is a drastic prob- publications.”

Successful Panel One of the most successful functions

of the Committee has been presentation of an educational panel discussion to football, track, baseball and basketball coaches at their annual conventions, as well as to NCAA Convention delegates.

Cooper, who has spent years studying the drug abuse problem while a train- er, in private practice, an Olympic team physician and an Oklahoma State team physician, has spoken to each of the Coaches’ Associations, along with Dr. Hardin Jones of the University of California, and Frederick M. Garfield, Assistant Director of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in Washington, DC.

Cooper says that the drugs most abused by athletes are the ampheta- mines and the anabolic androgenic ster- oids.

The amphetamines and related “speed” and “uppers” are taken by ath- letes, “and they think they are the greatest,” Cooper said.

“But in effect, the athlete’s perfor- mance probably is worse, even though he doesn’t think so. It has a reverse effect.”

2

Page 3: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

UCLA, Evansville Winners Of NCAA Hoop Tourneys

Dwight Lamar SW Louisiono OCB Ied College Dirision

tourney scoring with 33.2 oreroge.

Besides Basketball

The UCLA dynasty, which has under- gone three complete changes of personnel in winning the National Collegiate Basket- ball Championship seven of the last eight years, won its fifth straight in Houston’s Astrodome March 27.

And UCLA has given notice it may not want to end the victory string-now at 28 straight NCAA tourney wins.

The Bruins extended their current string and won their fifth straight by slowing down on offense and edging Villanova 68-62, after defeating Kansas 68-60 in the Thursday semi-final.

Western Kentucky took third place with a 92-89 win over Kansas. Jim McDaniels, Hilltopper seven-foot center, scored 36 points, while Jerry Dunn hit a one-and- one from the foul line with 12 seconds left to ice the contest.

Dunn had missed a free throw against Villanova in a Thursday semi-final with four seconds left that would have given the Hilltoppers a win over the Wildcats in regulation time. Villanova went on to win 92-89 in double overtime and earned the right to meet UCLA for the championship.

Left Alone “Everyone left me alone this time,”

Dunn said. “I would have made it Thurs- day night but all my teammates kept giv- ing me advice.”

In the title game, the Bruins went into a second-ha!f stall after leading 45-37 at the half.

The strategy almost backfired. UCLA still led by 12 with 11:35 to go, but then Villanova steadily whittled at the lead. With 2:38 to go it was within three, 61-58.

UCLA scored, but Howard Porter, the tourney’s Most Outstanding Player, hit a jumper to make it 63-60. Then Bruin guard Henry Bibby hit three free throws and center Steve Patterson shot a lay-in on

which Porter was called for goal tending and it was all over.

It was Patterson who led the way for the Bruins this night, scoring a game and career high of 29 points.

Meanwhile, the Bruins’ awesome for- wards, Sidney Wicks and Curtis Rowe, were held to seven and eight points re- spectively, although they took only 10 shots between them as they were content to feed Patterson.

Next year the names for the Bruins won’t be as famous as Wicks, Alcindor, Hazzard, Goodrich, Patterson, Rowe. Only one player who has a chance to start next season has reached national acclaim- guard Henry Bibby.

However, UCLA’s freshman team went 20-O last season, and should provide plenty of talent. The dynasty may not have ended.

But despite the talent up from the frosh team, it will be young, and the Bruins may have trouble getting out of the con- ference. Southern Cal returns guard Paul Westphal, center Ron Riley and forward Joe Mackey-all starters this season, and will probably rate as the favorite role in the conference race.

Evansville Wins CD Evansville won its fifth College Division

championship with a convincing 97-82 win over Old Dominion in the finals March 19 at Evansville’s Roberts Municipal Stadium before a record crowd of 13,124.

Both finalists could have been classed in the Cinderella mold. Each entered the title game with a 21-8 record and each upset favored opponents in the semifinals.

The Aces pulled the surprise of the tour- nament in beating Southwestern Louisiana, 93-74, in semifinal action. The Cajuns’

Continued on page 4

Steve Patterson 29 p&k helped UCLA to Universify

Division championship

Six University Division ChampIons wowned in March Villano va Track Winner

By Gordon f. Morris Defroif News

The National Collegiate Indoor Track Championships, sponsored annually by The Detroit News and held in Detroit’s modern Cobo Arena, is “the best indoor track meet in the country,” according to Villanova coach Jim (Jumbo) Elliot.

His team, thanks to distance star Marty Liquori’s double win in the mile and two- mile events, captured the 1971 team title with 22 points. Runnerup Texas El Paso had 19% points, Wisconsin was third with 15.

Top Attraction “I’m not fooling,” Elliot continued. “This

is the best meet we go to all year. The competitive facilities are great, the meet runs like clockwork, and the kids are royally treated.

“And the crowd . . . well, who ever heard of a track meet selling out two days back-to-back?”

More than 19,000 attended the 1971 meet, hosted by the University of Michi- gan. The meet has been a two-day sellout for each of the last five years.

New Mark Wisconsin junior Pat Matzdorf set an

NCAA high jump record of 7’ 2” in win- ning his title, and Duke freshman Bob Wheeler wiped out the NCAA lOOO-yard mark with a sparkling 2:07.4.

Friday morning, Kent State’s Al Scho- terman bettered the NCAA indoor mark in the 35-pound weight throw with a heave of 68’ lOy4”. The event was held at Eastern Michigan University’s Bowen Field House.

But the crowd favorite had to bc Li- quori.

Friday, he captured his first NCAA in- door title with an 8:37.0 clocking in the two-mile run, and Saturday got revenge on William and Mary’s Howell Michael- his conqueror last year-by capturing the mile in 4:04.7.

Liquori’s 12 points were the key factor in Villanova’s team victory.

Wrestling: Okla. St. For the second straight season, the 142-

pound match was the event to watch at the National Collegiate Wrestling Cham-

NCAA NEWS / April 15, 1971

pionships, held this year March 25-27 at Auburn University.

Both times Washington’s Larry Owings was involved in the match and both times the event produced the meet’s Most Out- standing wrestler.

Last year Owings defeated the legendary Dan Gable of Iowa State-undefeated until that time in collegiate and high school competition--to win the Award.

But this season Darrell Keller of Okla- homa State, who moved up after winning the 134-pound NCAA title in 1970, uPset Owings 16-12 to win the Most Outstanding Wrestler award this year.

Keller’s efforts, plus place finishes by six other Cowboys, gave Tommy Ches- bore’s Oklahoma State team the Cham- pionship. The Cowboys scored 94 points to second-place Iowa State’s 66 to win their 27th team championship since the meet first was held in 1928.

While Darrell Keller was winning, his brother Dwayne was being upset by Roger Wcigel of Oregon State in the 134-pound division. The lighter Keller had won 106 matches in a row.

TWO other Oklahoma Staters took first places, Yoshiro Fujita easily winning the 126-pound classification, 13-2, and Geoff Baum winning at 177. Meanwhile, Jay Arneson was second at 150 pounds, Jim Shields third in the heavyweight division, and Ray Stapp fourth at 118.

Iowa St. Gym Champ Iowa State swept-to the team title-that

eluded it the previous year and then two Cyclones won or shared three individual titles in the final day of action at the 1971 National Collegiate Gymnastics Champion- ships April l-3 at the University of Michi- gan’s Crisler Arena.

Iowa State, nosed out the year before by Michigan, eased by Southern Illinois and Penn State to win its first national Gymnastics title. In the individual compe- tition, Brent Simmons from Iowa State won the horizontal bar competition and tied Penn State’s Tom Dunn for the paral- lel bars title. Russ Hoffman brought an- other individual championship to the Cy- clone camp with a win on the side horse.

Yoshi Hayasaki of Washington success-

fully defended his all-around crown with a gutty performance despite injured shoul- ders.

Charles Ropiequet of Southern Illinois was another repeat individual winner, tak- ing the rings with a fantastic final score of 9.6.

A Tie for Fencing Title The NCAA Fencing Championship was

won by the East for the 13th year in a row in 1971, but the Midwest made a run for the title this year at the U.S. Air Force Academy-hosted Championships March 18- 20.

The East has won 25 out of the 29 cham- pionships, and again New York University was in first place, its ninth NCAA cham- pionship and fourth in the last six years.

However, this year the Violets had to share the title with Columbia, as each scored 68 points.

The Violets showed strongest in the epee and saber, where they had an individual champion and a runnerup. George Scun- yogh won the epee competition with a 20- 3 record, while Steve Kaplan was second in the saber with a 19-4 mark.

The third member of the team, foil man Ed Ballinger, was 10th with a 14-9 mark.

Columbia’s champion won in the Saber event, as Bruce Soriano had a perfect 23-O mark to win his second title in succession.

Mark Haselkorn was fifth for the Lions in the epee event with a 14-9 record, while Bob Berger was third in the foil at 16-7.

Tyrone Simmons of Detroit broke the NYU-Columbia stronghold on individual championships by winning the foil event with a 20-3 mark.

Swimming: Indiana With pool records broken inall 16 events,

NCAA meet records in 14 events and American records in 10 events, the 1971 National Collegiate Swimming Champion- ships were a statistician’s dream.

Indiana won the team title for the fourth straight year, but the Hoosiers had been conceded the title long before the meet was staged. What everybody was inter- ehted in was how many records would be

set March 25-27 in the waters of Iowa State’s Beyer Hall pool, recognized as a “fast track.”

Gary Hall, a Hoosier standout, set three American records in the 200-yard indi- vidual medley, the 400-yard individual medley, and in the 200-yard backstroke. Hall also set meet records in those events.

Teammate John Kinsella, only a fresh- man, won the 1650 freestyle in 15:26.510, shaving almost 10 seconds off his American record. Kinsella also won the 500-freestyle in NCAA Meet record time.

In other American-record performances, Brian Job of Stanford lowered his stan- dard in the 200-yard breaststroke and he teamed with Fred Haywood, John Fer- ris and Martin Pedley to set an American record in the 400-yard medley relay.

Tom Bruce of UCLA is the new Ameri- can record holder in the loo-yard breast stroke, while Southern California now has American records in the 400-yard freestyle relay and the 800-yard freestyle. The lat- ter team trimmed a remarkable eight sec- onds off the old record.

Boston Wins in Hockey Boston University, playing near-perfect

hockey, kept the National Collegiate Ice Hockey Championship in the East in 1971 with two 4-2 victories March 18-20 at Syracuse’s War Memorial Arena.

Staunch net-minding by BU’s Dan Brady, who was named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player, and two goals by center Steve Stirling brought the Terriers their first NCAA Championship over a tough Minnesota team.

Denver defeated Harvard, l-0, for third place.

Boston University relied on its strength to get on the scoreboard first in the title game, as Steve Stirling netted a power play goal. Boston was devastating all year long when it had the advantage. Bob Gryp gave Boston a two-goal lead with a red- lighter later in the first period.

Boston, a team described as “having no weaknesses,” held the troublesome Gophers scoreless through the first two periods. Meanwhile. Stirling turned on the red light with an unassisted goal in the second period to swell the BU lead to 3-O.

3

Page 4: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

Evansville Wins CD Tournament

Continued from page 3 starting lineup averaged 6-5 in height while Evansville’s tallest starter reached only 6-S. Speed, quickness and defense then were the decisive factors.

Don Buse, Evansville guard voted the outstanding player, put the defensive clamps on South- western’s Dwight Lamar, a 6-1 backliner who led the NCAA Col- lege Division in scoring with a 36 points-per-game average. Against the eventual champs, however, Lamar scored “only” 21 points, connected on but 9 of 33 field goal attempts, missed his last 10 shots and scored only a single free throw in the last 15 minutes of the game.

Meanwhile, the Evansville front line of John Wellemeyer, Bob Clayton and Rick Coffey scored 23, 21 and 20 points, respectively, against the Ragin’ Cajuns.

Old Dominion earned its berth in the finals by besting three-time champion Kentucky Wesleyan, 97-83. All five Monarch starters hit in double figures with Randy Coulling leading the way with 24 points. Wesleyan forwards John Duncan and Jim Smith scored 23 and 22 points, respectively, but 36 per cent shooting compared to the 50 per cent for the winners tipped the scales to the team from Virginia.

Lamar easily led the tourna- ment in scoring with 166 points, a total previously exceeded only by Jack Sullivan of Mount St. Mary’s (185) and Earl Monroe of Win- ston-Salem State (176).

It was a record-breaking tour- nament from start to finish. Southwestern Louisiana raised the points per game standard to 97.6 for five games, including a record average of 40 field goals per game. The Cajuns combined with LSU New Orleans to shatter the two-team scoring record. SW Louisiana won the first round scoring duel, 113-107.

A full house-9,500 plus fans-viewed the NCAA Indoor Track Championship at Detroit’s Cobo Hall Arena March 12-13. Marty Liquori won the mile and two-mile titles to lead Villanova to the team title.

College Division

Wrest#n,, Gym, Swim 7Zists UC Irvine Again Mike Martin and UC Irvine

continued to reign over College Division swimming at the eighth annual Championship conducted March 18-20 at Springfield Col- lege (Mass.)

ley was third with 152 points, while UC Davis was next at 108 and host Springfield close behind with 106.

the Championship. Caling won his event with an 8.7875 score in the side horse.

Individual star of the meet was John Crosby of Southern Con- necticut, who won the all-around, free exercise and parallel bar competition. He placed second in side horse, rings and long horse, and third on the horizontal bar as well.

In each of the last three sea- sons, UC Irvine has swum home the victor in the College Division Meet, with Martin winning the 200, 500 and 1650-yard freestyle events each time.

And also each year, he has swam a leg on the winning UC Irvine 400 and EOO-yard freestyle teams.

Added to his victory in the 500- yard freestyle in his freshman season, he has now won 10 events, an NCAA record for most swim- ming titles in a career.

His nearest competitor in that category, Gary Ilman of Long Beach State, won five events in 1965-66.

UC Irvine scored 242 points this year, to second place South Florida’s 176. San Fernando Val-

Gym: Fullerton California State College Fuller-

ton broke the block in 1971 which had controlled the NCAA College Division Gymnastics Champion- ships for the last three years.

The Titans tallied 158.150 points to win the fourth annual Cham- pionship at Illinois Chicago Cir- cle March 25-27.

In the past, San Fernando Val- ley, and more recently North- western Louisiana State, Spring- field and Southern Connecticut have done most of the scoring.

Last season, the latter three in- stitutions placed l-Z-3, and some thought it was possible for a re- peat order of finish.

But the Titans, who are enjoy- ing relatively new success in gym- nastics, received place-winning performances from Leon Mims, Leonard Caling, Glynn Hecken- laible and Mike Kelly to capture

Cal Boly on Mat The National College Division

Wrestling Championships has been conducted nine times, and California Poly San Luis Obispo walked away with its fifth title March 12-13 at North Dakota State University at Fargo, N.D.

The win was convincing. Cal Poly piled up 118 points in the 336-man, 404-match tournament, to second place Slippery Rock’s 58 points.

The Mustangs had a place win- ner in every one of the 10 events except at 167 pounds. And six members of their IO-man team are sophomores, giving the Mus-

tangs a shot at their fifth straight title next year.

Crowned The Mustangs got a champion-

ship at each end of the program, Gary McBride stopping Stan Opp of San Diego State, 4-2, at 118 pounds, and Tim Kopitar decis- ioning Herman Pettigrew of Ash- land in the Heavyweight division, 9-7.

The Mustangs also got three second place finishes-from Larry Morgan at 134 pounds, Pat Farner at 177, and Gary Maiofli at 190.

Third-place Mustang finishers were Glenn Anderson at 126, Lee Torres at 142 and John Finch at 158, while Allyn Cooke was fifth at 150.

Slippery Rock was led by Stan Dzicdzic at 150 pounds, who won that weight division and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Wrestler. Dziedzic was 37-O following the College Division tournament, and went on to win the 150-pound title at the NCAA University Division Cham- pionship at Auburn University March 25-27.

What Coaches Were Saying Following NCAA Tourney j

2.

Ted Owens

1 2

KQIISOS

“It was a great sea5on for us. We i have no regrets. I think we played = awfully hard. I was proud of our -: team’s effort.” After loss to UCLA in z semi-finals Thursday night: “We don’t : have any excuses, no alibis. UCLA E produced and we didn’t. I had ~~ no idea how we’d do against UCLA. 1 We had the chances and didn’t = capitalize on them. UCLA did 2 1 a good job and responded to every r= 5iluation.” On Henry Bibby’s hot m~I shooting night, after a relatively bad z shooting year all season: “We ; played him like a good shooter, G and you can understand why.”

“With Western playing here, they ought to change the name of this place

John Oldham

to the Astro-Cardiac Dome. (Wildcats lost to Villanova in double

Western Kenfucky

overtime 92-89, beat Kansas 77-Z). Every win is enjoyable to coach. Kansas has a great ball club. They could have won as easily as we, but we won. They are a physical ball club.” Hank Siemiontkowski’s 31 points against We5tern on Thursday night: “We had Clarence Clover on Howard Porter and (Jim) McDaniels was helping him, leaving Siemiontkowski wide open.”

Jack Kraft Vil/onovo

After championship game with UCLA: I, . we were tardy with Patterson. We were concentrating on Rowe and Wicks inside and he’d come OUI front and we were late gettin’ to him.” The UCLA slow-down in championship game: “I think the slow down made our players scrap all the more. You’d have to say that the slow down got us back in the game because that’s what happened. He (Coach John Wooden of UCLA) is perfectly within his rights u5ing that strategy. After all, we’re playing for big stakes here.”

John Wooden UCLA

Regarding slow-down: “We wanted to draw them out of their zone. But you never know how it’s going to work. SometImes it backfires when you 5low down the tempo and lo5e momentum.” Defense: “This year I’m content to play defen5e again5t anybody. That’s why I left four 5tarlers (Steve Patterson, Sidney Wicks, Curtis Rowe and Henry Bibby) from last year in the entire game today. This is not one of our better running or offensive team5. Wicks needs no excuses, but he had a sore toe. He really played on courage and I have nothing but respect for him.”

4

Page 5: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

NCAA Scoreboard of Championship Events 36-Pound Weight Throw - 1. Al Scho-

terman (Kent State) 6%10% : 2. Jacques Accambray (Kent St&e) 67-7v2; 3. Tom Sirvirr INorthewtem) 64-X% : 4. Ron Furcbt (Colum’bia) 68-l%; 6. Ed Nosal (Harvard) 61-7%. (New meet reconl, old 66-K.Y, by Bob N=rceesian (Rhode IBland) 196X: new National Collegiate record, old 67-4 by Sch0ternv.q 1971.)

ScurinK Leaders G TP Avg.

Dwight Lamar. SW La. 5 160 aa 2 Jim Smith, KY. Wrs. 6 116 2i2 John Duncan, KY. Wes. 5 108 21.6 Rick Colley. Rvnnrj. 5 96 19.2 John Wcllemeyer, Evxns. 5 93 1X.6 Skip Noble, Old Dam. 5 18.2 Don Buae. Evans. 5 2 17.0 Dave ‘I’wnrdaik. Old Dam. 5 R3 16.6 Roy Phron. SW Ln. 6 83 16.6 Charles Lowerv. Pug. So. 3 81 27.0

Side Horse-l. Leonard Caling (Fuller- ton) 8.7875, 2. John Crosby (S. Corm.) 8.6X7,5. 3. Ron Brown (Springfield) 8.5626. 4. Andy Wahtera (Springfield) X.6316; 5. Flynn Hrekenlaible (Fullerton) X.3626. 6. Rich Martin (SDrin&?ie]d) X.1750.

400-Yard Individuat Medley ~ 1. Gary Hall, Indians 3 :6X.260. 2. Richard Colella. W,aehinzton 4 :03.467. 3. Steven Power. Washington 4 :0’?.787. 4. Patrick O’Con- nor, Indiana 4 :Oa.638. 6. George Smith. Indiana 4 :11.686. 6. Dale Komer, So. Illi- nois 4 :lZ.YZl.

One Meter Diving-- 1. Mike Fin~neron. Ohio St. 620.98. 2. Craig Linculn. Mianc auts 496.11, 3. Dick Rydze, Michigan 46X.04, 4. Phil Boggs. Florida St. 464.26. 5. Tom Cramer. Michigan St. 451.26. 6. David Bush. Wisconsin 446.43.

Threa Meter Diving - 1. Philip Boggs, Florida ‘6’6t2.93. 2. Mike Firmeran, Ohio St. 621.67. 3. DIvid Bush. Wieconarn 612.79. 4. Craig Linmln+ Minnesota 612.62, is. Gary James. Indlanrr 47X.32. 6. Richard Rydze, Michigan 476.82.

400-Yard Medley R&r - 1. Stunford (Fred Haywood, Brian Job. John Ferris. Martin Pedley) 3 Z2.616. 2. Indiana 3 :22 .X91. 3. UCLA 3 :26.664. 4. Tennessee 3 :26.733. 5. IAJIIK Beach St. 3 :26.696, 6. Michigan 3 :28.033.

400-Yard Freestyle Relay ~ 1. USC (Kim Tutt. Jim M&on&, Mike W~trm. Frank Heck]) 3 :02.3X2. 2. Tennesace 3 :02- .t31, 3. Indiana 3:03.466. 4. So. Metho- dlat 3 :05.211, 6. Ohio St. 3 :05.661, 6. UCLA 3 :06.703.

SCM-Ywd Freee~yle Relay ~ 1. USC (Andy Strenk. Kim Tutt, Tom McBreen. Jim M&m&a) 6 :8’9.048, 2. UCLA 6 :61 23% 3. Lono Beach St. 6 :61.890. 4. So. Methodist 6:62:639, 6. Washington 6:6!5 .931. (Indians disoualifled for jumping in pool tru neon)

CD Swimming TEAM RRSULTS

1. UC Irvine 242. 2. South Floridrr 176. 3. San Fernando Valley 1162. 4. UC Davis 108. 6. Springfield College 106. 6. Kenyon 103. ‘7. Hayward 88. 8. Ashland 81, Q. Johns Hopkins 11. 10. Puuet Sound and Amhemt 73, 12. W&em Illinois 69 13. Fullerton State ‘64, 14. Northern Michigan 63, 15. Central Michigan 47. 16. Williamn 46.

17. Onkland 44, IR. Denison 34. 19. Illi- noia Chicago Circle 32, 20. Elizabethtown 29, 21. Valpuraiso 24, 22. Wheatin 23. 23. Chico State 21, and Grinnell. Cal Poly Pomona 21, 26. Southern Connecti- rut 20. 27. ButTalo State 19. 28. Grove City 16. 29. Evansville 13. 380. Mankato State 12 and Humboldt 12. X2. Oberlin 11.

33. Cc&land State and Oueonte State 10. 36. UC Riverside 7. 3,6. Wayne StRte and Cleveland Sbnte 6. 38. Tufti 4. 39. Bowdoin College. SUNY New Peltr. Wm- leyan University, Washingtgn & Lee, Mia- souri Rolls and Brockport St&e 3. 45. Franklin & Mamhall and W~trrn State I.

INDIVIDUAL 1LRSULTS 50-yard Freestyle .~- 1. M’artin Vovea,

Hayward State 22.09; 2. Phil Miller, Chico State 22.21: 3. Bruce Rollins Grinnell 22.30: 4. David Wilson. Valpara’iao 22.31 : 5. Barry MCCOY. Springfield 22.84: 6. Colin Montgomery. Ashland 22.40.

IOO-yard Freeatytel. Rich Fe,son, UC Irvine 47.89: 2. Dave Wilson, Velpareiro 4X.73: 3. Mike Campbell. Oakland 48.87; 4. BalTv MCCOY. Springfield 48.96 : 6. Tom Grain, willioms 49.01: 6. Bruce Rollins, Grinnell 49.62.

ZOO-yard Freestyle~~l. Mike Martin, UC Irvine 1:43.19; 2. Rich Fsnon, UC Irvine 1:46.89: a. RM-WY V.WI ‘H0~orn. w-tern Illinois 1 :47.36: 4. Bzslph Lee. San Fer- nandu Valley 1 :47.RX: 6. Jim Waska. Fullerton State 1~48.30; 6. Mike Camp- bell, Oakland 1 :49.64.

500-yard Free&yltl. Mike Martin, UC Irvine 4 :43.61 : 2. Ramsey Van Horn. Western Illinois 4 :49.26: 3. Ralph Lee, San Fernando Valley 4 :53.90 : 4. Jim Fer- rue. UC Irvine 4 :%.X2 : 6. Steven Lougee. Pug& Sound 4 :6’5.91: 6, Jerry .%bweick- et-t, UC Davis 4 :58.6,6.

1650-yard Freeatyltl. Mike Martin, Uc F:;,.nl6 :31.?2 ; 2. Rrrmsey van horn.

lllll-l”,~ 16:53.99 ; 3. Sehweickert. UC Davis 17 :05.23 ; 4. izi$ Lee. San Fernando Vnlley 17~36.97 : 5. John Dnvia. Kcnyon 17 :37.34 : 6. Steve Lougee, Punet Sound 11:31.61.

loo-yard ButterRy-1. Bill Milne. Johns Honkins 52.46: 2. Gary Hmag, Amhemt 52.61 : 3. Mike Carnahan, UC Irvine 63.19; 4. Robert Srrhams. Elizabethtown 63.22: 5. Greg Ortega, So. Florida 63.88: 6. Joe I.ewkowiea, SO. Florida 63.88.

ZOO-yard Butter& 1. Gary Haag, Am- hemt 1 :56.33: 2. Joe Lewkowica. So. Florid- 1 E69.26 : 3. Wllliam Bruns. Evans- ville 2 :nn.lX : 4. Robert &,hma Elizabhrth- tr,Wn 2:01.11: 5. William M;lne, John* Honkinn 2 rOl.22 : 6. Fred Eisenhardt, Northern Michigan 2 :02.78.

IOO-yard Rsckntrokbl. John Leder- house. w%entnn 66.28: 2. Richard Jamor, Kenvon 55.40; 3. George Starkweather. Amhemt 66.16: 4. Richard Ramband, Cal Polo Pomona 66.94: 6. .Stu Blumkin %n Fernando Valley 66%,6; 6. Wil]& Ruhland, Rullalo St. 68.27.

ZOO-yard Backetrokep1. Rich James. Kenton 2 :01.18 ; 2. Mark Nelson, UC Ir- vine 2 :03.7R : 2. Jack Harris, Humboldt St. 2TO5.41: 4. Bob Stewnrd. UC Davis 2 :06.?7: 5. Rich F&nhsud. Cal Po]v Pw mma 2.07.31: 6. John Fellman. so. ~lor- ida 2 :n9.4n.

100-yard Brreststroke - I. Rick More- head. So. Florida 1 :01.60 : 2. Bruce Dodue. Snn Fernando Vallev 1:02.12 : 0. Art Alt- t,unen. Ashland 1 rO2.93: 4. Steve Pung. Cent& Michirrsn 1 :0X04 : 6. John Bene- nick. Iinvwuaxl State 1 :Ot.Rl ; fi. Guerry Bethel]. Poget Sound 1 :03.76.

ZOO-rnrd Brenatstmk~l. Rirk More- hmd. So. Florida 2:14.94: 2. Stwe Ba- rhorik, Northern Mirhimn Zr15.94: 8. Bmr- Dodge, San Fernando Valley 2 :17.76 : 4. Art Halttuncn. Ashland 2 :ll- .9X. h. Mike O’Donnell. Johna Honkins 2 :1X.26 : 6. Dan Brendle. So. Florida 2 ~20.96.

ZOO-ye-d lndividoml Medlev-1 Ri-k Morebend. So. Florida 2 :Ol.l : 2. Rich Faso”. UC Twine 2 :01.21 : 3. Willism Mil- ne John- Hopkins 2 ~01.82 : 4. Mike Car- n%hnn TTC Irvine 2 +l.l8 : 6. Steve Patrh- in<?. TTC Davis 2 :OS.71 : 6. Ed O’Meara, Fast. Springfirld D -n5.83.

400-yard Individual Medley 1. Brad MCCOY, Ashland 4:26.48: 2. Jerry Srhweickert, UC Davis 4 :27.17 : 3. Mark Nelson. UC Irvine 4 :29.98 : 4. Steve P&oh- ina, UC Davis 4~30.81: 6. Robert Steffer- son. Curtland 4 :34.9X: 0. Jerry Mejeur, Buffalo 4 :43.39

400-yard Medley Relay ~ 1. Amherst :I :x8.11 : 2. Kenyon 3 :40.12 : 3. So. Florida 3 :40.76 : 4. Sen Fernando Va]lrv 3 :41.36 ; 6. Johna Hopkins 3 :43.01 ; 6. SpringReId 3 ~43.42.

Continued on page 6

5

Basketball

Shot Put ~ 1. Knrl Salb (K&o&as) 65-a: 2. Vince Monsri (UTEP) 66-8’/4; 3. Steve Wilhelm (Kanaaa) 64-10%; 4. Fred DeBernardi (UTEP) 64-l%: 6. Jeaae Stuart (Kentucky) 62-4.

REGIONAL RESULTS Enat ~Pennsylvania 79. Swutb Carolina

64 : Villanova X6, Fordham 75 ; Fordham 101). South Carulins YO; Villanovn DO. Pcnnsylvnnis 47’.

Mideast -WesLern Kentucky 107. Ken- tucky 83; Ohio State 60. Maruuette SD: Mamuette 91. Kentuekv 14 : W-tern Ken- tucky 81, Ohio State in*.

Midwek&Drnke 79, Notre Dame 72 Cot, : Kanaxs 1% Houston 71; Huuaton 119. Notre Dame 106: Kansas 73, Drake 71..

Still Ring-l. Keith Fuerat IE:. Ill.) 8.9600. 2. John C-by (S. Corm.) 8.8625. 3. Jamen Ball (S. Corm.) 8.8100. 4. George Engbrecht ISan Fernando) 8.7600. 6. Scott 1tadod.n (LSU New Orleans) X.60l~O. 6. Paul Tickenoff (NW La.) 8.3600.

Horimntal Bar ~ 1. Rich Martin (Springfield) 9.07.60. 2. Jeff Wilem (Spring- field) X.9250. 3. John Cmaby (S. Corm.) X.X81(5, 4. Bruce Boutd (Chicago Circle) 8.62.50. 5. Bruce McGrrrtlin (NW Lg.) 8.4X7,6. 6. Dan Swetman (Chicago Circle) X.2150.

West-UCLA 91, Brigham Young 7.1. Long Brach St. 78, Pacific 66: Pacific 84, Rrirham Youn~g Xl: UCLA 57, Long l&h St. 56..

All-Tourney Teem Don Uuae. Evnnavillc’ Dwight Lamar, &uthwrstern Louisiana Rick Coffey, Evarmville John Dun-n, Kentucky W~llevan Skip Noble, Old Dominion *Muat out*tanding player

Fencing TEAM SCORING

1. Columbia nnd New York University 6X. 3. Detroit 63. 4. Harvard 6R. 6. St. John’s 67, 6. Notre Dame 64, 7. Penn- rrylwnia 52. 8. Wayne State ‘61. a. Illinois Chicago Circle end Princeton GO.

11. Temple 49. 12. Montclair St. and Navy 47, 14. Army 46. 16. UCLA 32, 16. SUNY Uinghnmpton omd Soothern Cal 31. 1x. Cornell 29. 19. Penn state 28. 20. SUNY Buffalo 25.

21. Ohio State end Rutgers 23, 23. Case Western Reserve 22. 24. San Francisco end Wismnsin lY, 26. Air Force 18. 27. MIT 17. 2X. North Cnrolina St.. Stevens Inst. Tnh. and North Carolina 16.

31. K~nsnn and Miohigan St. 14. 33. Virginia 13, 34. Brooklyn Poly 12. 36. Oberlin 11. 36. Clevelnnd St. 10. 37. Indiana nnd San Fernando Valley a. 3a. Texas Chriatinn 3, 40. Cal St. Fullerton 2.

41. LOny Brnrh St., Clemson. Muhlen- hrrg. Rice and Sun Diego State I.

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS Epes

1. Gorge Scunyogh, NYU (20 wins. 3 lObheR), 2. Dar&l Wigodsky. I’rinceton (19-4). 3. John Seich. Ohio State (16-T). 4. Peter .%lrcki. Navy (14-B). 6. Mark Hanelkorn, Cvlumhin (14-a), 6. Richard Deladrier, Notre Dame (14-a). 7. Fredie Hmker, Dctmit (13-10). 8. Brooke Mek- Irr Pennsylvania (l&10). a. Dan Sims, Temple (12-11). 10. Anthony Papciak. St. John’s (12-11 ,.

Saber 1. Bruce Sorisno, Columbia 123-O). 2.

Steve Kaplan. NYU (19-4). 3. William Kazer, UuFTnlo (1%5’~. 4. Frank Nagomey. case webtern (1’5-X). 6. Lawrence ce- tmla. Harvard (1.5-X), 6. Ken Balke. De- troit (1’6~8). I. Felix GrvLnkn (16-R). 8. Douglru, Upher. Notre Damr (14-g). 9. DRV&~ Hoolocm. Armv 114-91. 10. Nick Goachy, Penn State ,I?-10).

FOil I. Tymne Simmons. Detroit (20-X). 2.

Thomas Keller. Hxvrrrd (17-fi), 3. Bob Berger, Columbia (16-7). 4. John NiBhi- rour~. Illinois Chicago Circle (16-l), 5. Jay St. Clair. IJSC (15-X). 6. Richard Mi- lnr,zo. Wnyne St. (15-X). 7. Ronald Lxw. Penn (16-X). X. Andy Shirw. Temple (15- X). a. Richard Frcdn, St. John’8 (15-E), 10. Ed Ballinner, NYU (14-9).

Triple Jump ~ 1. Mohinder Gill (Cal Poly) 62-Ba/,: 2. Barry McClure (Middle Term.) 62-4:X: 3. Charles Stiffer (New Mexico) 62-2; 4. Henry Jackson (South- ern Cd, 51-9x: 6. Patrick On~ango (Wiaoonsin) ‘61-x.

Long Jump ~ 1. Henry Hines (South- ern Cal) 26-l%; 2. Danny Brahhmn (Baylor) 216-2% : 3. Tom Geredine (North- eest MisaouriJ 2,6-Z%; 4. Greg Johnson (Wisconsin) 26-l% ; 6. Ray Lee (Adelphi) 24-674.

High Jump - 1. Pat Matzdorf (Wla- conain) 7-2: 2. Lorenu, Allen (Arizona) 6-I”: 3. Chris Dunn (Colgate) 6-10; 4. John Mann (Michigan) B-IO: 6. Scott English (UTEY) : Rrnd ‘Buetow (Min- nemta): Tony Wilmn ITennessee); Joe David IMaryland) 64. (New meet record. old 7-0.x by Ron Jnurds.n (Florida) 1969.)

Pole Vault ~ 1. Scott Wallick (Miami. Ohio) 16-X: 2. Scott Hurley (Florida) 18-4 : 3. Vince Struble (Marylrmd) 16-4; 4. Paul Heglar (UTEP) 16-4; 6. Tom Blair (Penn) 164.

TEAM SCORES 1. Villanova 22: 2. Texas El Paso 19% :

3. Wisconsin 1’6: 4. Colorado nnd Kansas 12: 6. Adelphi 11; 7. Ken% St&e 10: 8. Michigan State and Pit&burgh 9: 10. Tennessee 8%.

11. New Mexico. Murrav State and _~. Southern Californiu x : 14. Duke end Kentucky I; 16. Cal. Poly ISLO), Okla- homa St&e. Miami (0.) and Rutgers 6.

FINALS SCORES Villanova 92, Western Keotucky 8Y (2ot) UCLA 68. Kansas 60 western Kentucky 11, Kansas 7’6 UCLA 6X. Villanova 62’ *Indice& championship game

championship Game VILLANOVA (62)

FT. F-r Reb. FF T

Ice Hockey CHAMPIONSsHIP GAMIC

Boston ~a. Minntmta g;;;< y.d:

B.U. 1. Stirling (Danhy, &own) 6 :a2 B.U. 2. Gryp (Cowing) ln:io

Prnaltiee.- Minn. 1. Sanders (Charging) ii :01 B.U. 2. Murr&y (Holding) 14:lE

Second Period : Goals-

B.U. 3. Stirling (Unnasisted) a:13

Smith 4-11 l-1 Yortcr IO-21 K-6

l-2 1-l 2-a o-o

TOtSIR 26-62 IU-I:* UCLA (68)

ItAawr 2-3 4-6 Wicks l-l Fatteraon’

a-7 13-18 3-5

Uibhy t:i 526 Booker Schofield : 3-;

o-o o-o

Retchley l-2 Tot& H-49 14-1X Villanova UCLA

Attend~ncc31,766

2 4 8 1 Tr .3 4 2 6 4 2 0

a1 14 Penalties-

U.U. 3. LaGarde (Highsticking) 9 :32 B.U. 4. Andelaon (Elbowing) 11:18 Minn. 16. Olda (Interference) 19:44 R n

9 2 Third Period: GoaL- x 1

2 1 0 IJ 1 4 1 1

Minn. 4. D. Peltier (Sarnier, McIntosh) 13 :07

U.U. 6. Andermn (Dolloff. Brown) 17 :46 Minn. 6. Blais (McIntosh) 19 :26 34 9

37 26 46 23

Fenal ti.e- B.U. 6. LaCnrde (Holding) 1l:M B.U. I. Murray (Hooking) 18 :09 Minn. R. D. Feltier (Offensive

check) 18 :oa Minn. 9. Hlnin (Cmsx’hecklng) la :49

CHAMPIONSHIP SCORES Semifinals

Boston University 4. Denver 2 Minnesota 6, Harvaxl 5 (OT)

Cons0lrtion Game: Denver 1. Harvard 0

championship Game: Boston University 4, Minnesota 2

Indoor Track INDIVIDUAL

QO-Yard Dash - 1. Jim Green (Ken- tucky), 6.0: 2. Herb Washington (Mich. St.). 6.0: 3. Jimmie Lee Harris (Ohio). 6.1: 4. &OIW Dnniels (Culorado). 6.1 ; 5. Gene Brown (Michigan), 6.2; 6. Mer- lyn Hood (Tenneasr). 6.2.

60-Yard High Hurdtss~~l. Marcu Wal- ker (Colarado). 1.0: 2. Bill Hish (Ten- nessee), 7.1 : 3. Paul Gipaon (UTEP). 1.2 : 4. Richard Taylor (Northwestern). 7.2: 5. JeB Hmvser (Duke). 7.2: 6. Wayne Hartwick (Michigan State). 7.3.

440-Yard D-h-1. Tom Ulan (Rutgem). 48.X : 2. Clyde McPherson (Adelnhi) 4X.9 : a. Cliff Branch (Colarxdo)! 4a.2; 4. Bob Wood-f (Abilene Chriatmn). 49.4: 5. George Daniel6 (Culorndn). 49.6: 6. Lam matte Wyman (Villanova), 49.7.

600-Yard Run-l. Tommie Turner (Mur- ray State). 1:09.6 : 2. Uale AIexsnder (Kanaes State). 1 :10.X; :3. Reid Cole (New Mexico), 1:11.4: 4. John Perrigo (Air Force). l :11.5 : 5. Paul Hackett (Brigham YOU~K). 1:11.6 : 6. Bob Cnasleman (Mich- iyan State). 1 :11.X.

680-Yard Run - 1. Mark Winzrnried (Wisconsin), 1 :60.9 ; 2. Chris Mason IVil- lti”OW). 1:61.6 ; 3. Mike Hoses (C.W.

l%lU- 4. Tom Erieaon E:ik) i :iZ.:3. 6. Robert Manno ((:lz nois), 1’:66$; 6: Jim Neihouse (Kansas). 1 :59.1.

IoOO-Yard Run- -1. Bob Wheeler (Duke). 2 :07.4 ; 2. Larry Rose (Oklahoma State). 2 :OR.7 ; 3. Morgan Mosacr (W. Virginia). 2 :I%?: 4. Greg Jonen (UTEP). 2:08.8: 6. Wayne Seiler (Eastern Michigan). 2 :09.3 ; 6. Allan Judd (Brigham Youna). 2:14.6. (New meet record. old 2 :07.R by Rau Arrington, Wisconsin. 1967.)

Mile Run - 1. Marty Liouori (Villa- nova), 4 :04.1: 2. Jim Johnson (Washing- ton), 4 :06.X: 3. Ken Ponejoy (Michigan State). 4:OB.0: 4. Peter K-1 (Oklahoma Stetc). 4 :11J.l : 6. Dave Dieters (Michimn St&e), 4 :lO.C ; 6. Howell Michael (Wil- liam & Mary). 4:13.1.

Invitational Mile ~. 1. Chuck J&Benz (Pacific Co-t Club). 4 :00.9 : 2. Tom Von- Iluden (Pacific Goast Club). 4 :00.9; 3. Brian McElroy (NYAC). 4 :Ol.l : 4. Byron Dyce (United AC). 4:02.X; 5. Sam Bair (Pacific Coast Club), 4:U4.0; 6. Joris Luzinn (US Marine Cows). 4~12.0.

Two-Mile Run-l. Mrrrty Liuuori (Vi]- IRIIOVL). 8::jT.l; 2. Sid Sink (Bowling Green). X:38.0: 3. Jerry Richey (1 Itts- burgh), 8:41.‘7 : 4. John Jones ‘iAir Force), 8 :42.1 : 6. Dave Hindley (Brigham Youns). 8 :46.4.

Mile Relay - 1. Alelnhi lHpv Lee, Keith Davis. Dennis Wnlker. Clyde Mc- Pheraon). 3~18.6: 2. Tenne,xe (James Cr~ir, Darwin Bond, Audry Hardy. Car-y Womhle), 3:16.6; 3. Villsnova (Ken Schsppert. Boh Carpenter. Greg Govan. Iamotte Hyman). 3:16.6; 4. Murray State (Lee Roy McGinnis. Fred .Sowerby. Ashman Samuel% Tommie Turner). 3 r1’1.4 ; 15. Michigan S&te (Mike Holt. Mike Mumhy, John Mock. Boh Cnss1eme.n). 3:11.6; 6. Kanr~as State (Jim Hegerie. Fred Merrill. Mike Lee. Dnle Alexunder). 3 :21.3.

TwbMite Relay ~ 1. UTEP (Peter Romera, Fernando DeLaCrrda. Rod Hill. Kerry EllisonJ, 7 :31.4 : 2. Nebraka (Boa- er Chrrdwick. Jim Hawkins. Dan Sneck. J,strry Cimatu). 1.37.6: 3. Kanru (Doug Smith. Rick .Jacoues. Jim Neihouse. Kevin Reabe). 7 :39.6 : 4. Drake fBoh Reeker. SOeve Johnson. Dave Nnuman. Warren Whitted). 1:40.1 : 6. Florida (Dennis Bruce, Jxck Stewart, Ken Rumned, Ben- ny Vnughn), 1 :40.7.

Distance Medley Relay ~ 1. Pittsburgh (Ken Silau. Dorel Wetley. Mike Schurko. Jerry Richey) . 9 :46.7 ; 2. Mnnhattnn (John Lovett. AI Logie, Joe Savage. Tom Donahue). 9 :47.1 : 3. Villanova (Wilson Smith, hmotte Wyman, John Hartne’ct. Chris M-on). 9 :48.X: 4. Georgetown iConrnd Zink. Bill Borrow. Joe Lucns. 1:nrl.h MoKrr~). 9:61.0: 6. Knnasn State (Clnrdy Vinson. Dan Fiets. Dave Peter- son, Jerome Howe). 9 :54.6 ; 6. Houston (Eric Siymont. Tim Burg-a, Mchdi Jaou- bar, Len Hilton), 9 :‘55.7.

Scoring Leaders 20. Florida and Kansas State 6; 22.

Air Force, ‘Baylor. Bowling Green State, Arizona, Manhattan Middle Tennaaee. Nebranka and Washington 4: 30. Marv- lend 3u.

31. C.W. Post. Michigan. Northesrrtcm, Northeast Missouri. Ohio State, West Vir- ginia and Colgate 3; 38. Abilene Chris- tie”, Brigham Young, Columbia, Drake. (:e.,rgetown and Northwestern 2.

44. Eastern Michigan, Harvard, Illinois arld ~ennsylvanla : 4R. Minneaotn %.

Swimming TEAM SCORING

1. tndiROp 351. 2. Southern Cal 260. 3. UCLA 202. 4. Stanford 166. 5. Low Reach St. 139. 6. Tennessee 126. 7. Waah- inpton 112. R. Southern Methodist 101, a. Ohio St&e 70, 10. Michigan 69.

II. Southern Illinois 60, 12. Florida state 37. 13. North Carolina Stnte 28. 14. Floride 27. 15. Minnesota 24. 16. wiscon- ain 23. 17. Villanavrr 20. 18. PennEvl- vani= and Michigan St. 19, 20. Pacific ant1 New Mexico 11.

22 Oregon 12. 23. Oklahomn and Dnrt- mouth 10, 2.6. Cornell 9. 26. Nnvv 7. 27. Burknefl and Princeton 6. 29. Hnrvard an<, catif,xnia a. 31. Colorndo Stnte and Kunsns 1.

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS SO-Yard Freestyle ~ I. David Edgar.

Tenne*aec 20.302, 2. Barr,. Townsmd. I,CLA 20.762, 3. John Trembley. Tennes- -ee 20.X52. 4. Mark Spitz. Indiana 20 997.

&an ~=rger Florida St. 21.176, Ladin Pedl~y. ktsnford 21.234.

6.

loo-Yard Freeat& ~ 1 Dave Edcxr. Tenneaaee 4R.10, 2. Frank Heckl. USC 46.3’2. 3. Mnrtin Peale”, Stanford 45.72. 4. Pnul Tietze. So. Methodist 46.a6. K. .~errv Peidenreich, So. Methodist 46.02, 6. Kim Tutt. USC 46.46.

20O-Yard Frmtyte 1. damea MeCon- icp. USC 1:39.152. 2. Frank Heck]. USC l :40.004. 3. John Kinaella, Indiana 1 :40- .475. 4. Kim Tutt. USC 1 :4ll.R35. 5. Rob- ert Gent-r. UCLA 1~41.276. 6. Richard Renler. Pacific 1 :41.967. 7. David O’Md- ,ev. UCLA 1 :42.341.

snO-Yard Frcertrle ~ 1. John K;naella, TnJiann 4 .2139R, 2. James McCnnicn. TTSP, A :SO.!XU 1. Thorn** MrRrren. USC 4 :31!8n6. 4. Graham White. Tan= Beach St. 4 :R5.(il9. ‘6. Robert Genter. UCLA 4 :36 F,94. 6 Huna Faesnacht. LonK Bench st. 4 :36.?61.

1650-Ynrd Preestylb 1. John Kinvzlla. Indiana 15:2,6.‘610. 2. Thvmaa McBrepn. TTSC l’Tr:53.Xn2. 3. Graham White. Lone Rerrrh St. 16:03.12X. 4. Hens Fnexmrbt, Tnnc, Rrarh St. 16 :05.264, 6. Jnm~s Mr- Cnnira. IJS’C 16 :10.4R9, 6. Steven Power, Wayhington 16:13.746.

1 OO-Ynrd Bresatstroke - 1 Brian Job. St>wfwd h7 249, 2. Thomas Bruce. UCLA 67.6gg. 3. Michael Dirkscn. Oregon ‘68.0X9. 4. Pichard Colella. Washington 66.191,

Stuart Tsaar. Michigan ‘68.246. fi. k,mnr Artez, Vitlunova ‘58.706.

ZOO-Yard Rreaststroke - 1. Brian Job. stanford 2 :0x397. 2. Rirhard Colella. Waqhinmn 2 :04.870. 3. Thomna Bruc?, UCLA 2:nX ‘7!14. 4. Thomas Atiez. Villa- nova 2 :09.791, 5. Dale Komer, So. Illi- noin 2:OQ.R00, 6. David Shilling. Stanford 2 :09x62.

loo-Yard Butterllv ~ 1. Mark Soit%. In- dinnsa 48.419. 2. John Ferris. Stanford 49.917. 3. Rprd Slevin. Ohio St. 60.300, 4. .John Tremblw. Tennessee 60.4K1, 5. T,arrv Peters. Oklahomr ‘50 606. 6. Byron MncDnnald. Michlgnn isO.63R.

ZOO-Yard ButterRy ~ 1. Mark S&z. Indiana 1:60.106. 2. Robert Clarke, IJCLA 1~62.118. 3. Rnhert Dickmn. So. Illinois 1 :62.249. 4. Charles Orr, USC 1:62.521. R. John Ferris. Stanford 1 :62.890. 6. Steven Cm.ven, New Mexico 1:154.302.

lOO-Yard Brrknttoke - I. San&w Fpteva. Indian= 61.717, 2. Michael Stamm. Indiana K1.732. 3. Stephen Doyle. UCLA 52.124, 4. Mitch Ivey, Long Beach St. 62.229. 5. Lawrence Rnrbiere, Indiana E2.327. 6. Reed Stevin, Ohio St. ‘62.406.

ZOO-Yard Backetruko - 1. Grrry Wall. Indiana 1 E60.601. 2. Michael A~nmm, Indiana 1 :61.410. 3. Santiaeo Es&a. Indiana 1 :‘K2.220. 4. Mitih Ivey. Long Reach St. l :‘53.268. K. Sleohen Doyle. IJCLA 1 :‘54.‘646. 6. Fral Heywmd, Stan- ford 1 :K9.226.

200-Yard Individual Medley .~ 1. Gary Hall, Indiann 1:6’2.204. 2. Frank Heck]. IJSC 1 :62.X16. 3. Patrick O’Cwnwr. In- dinne. lr54.640. 4. Steven Powers. Wash- ing-km 1 :5’5.7’Kl, 6. Bernard Stenson, IJCLA 1 :55.%X15. 6. Lawrence Rarbjcre, lndisna 1 :SG.RSE.

Player-Team G TP Jim MrDaniels, W. KY. 5 147’ Howard Porter, Vill. : 5 133 Austin Carr, N. Dame a 125 Hank S’tkowrki. Vill. 5 112 ~avr Robiscb, Kansas ., 4 96 Poe Welch. Hour. 3 R9 Charles Yelverton. Ford. : 3 8’1 Collie Jones. N. Dame 3 70 Dwighb Davis, Hous. a 61 Jim Chonea. Mnrrc. a 66 *Indiw.tcs beat figure in category.

A 2iT.4 26.6 41.7’ 22.4 24.0 29.1 59.0 23.3 22.3 22.7

All-Tourney Team Howard Porter. Villanova* Jim McDaniels. W-tern Kentucky Hank Siemiontkowaki. Villanovu Steve patternon. UCLA Sidney Wicks, UCLA *Most outatnnding plater

CD Basketball REGIONAL SCORES

Midwest at Kirkavilte. Mo.pKentocky wes~r~nn 94. ‘St. olaf 19 ; North-t Mw- *ouli 76, North Dnkota St. 66 ; North Da- kota St. a6, St. Olaf Y4; Kentucky W=- Iwan 60. Northea& Missnurl 4X’.

Gymnastics wideant st Reading. Pa.- Philadelphia Textile A3 w-t-e= 81 (ot) ; Cheyney St. 100 Ak& BY: Akron 77, Wooster 68: Chhyney St. 60, Philadelphin 58..

TEAM SCOKES 1. Iowa State 319.075, 2. Southern Illi-

nois 316.660. 3. Penn Stnte 316.150. &,&I, A(l.ntic st Norfolk. Vu.--Npr- folk St. 97. Roanoke II: Old Domlnlon xg stetsan 65: Stetson Yl. Roanoke 72: Oid Dominion 102. Norfolk St. 97..

We& sr Tacoma, Wrah.-Seattle Pacific 75 fan Frnncixeo St. 68: PUKE Sound xl’ cd pofy 51.0 69: Cal Polv SLO 70. &‘n Francisco St. 6X; Pug& Sound 86. .~--- ~~~ Seattle Pacific 78’.

All-Aroundpl. Yoshi Hryannki. Wash- ington 107.9: 2 Rrent Simmons, Iowa St. 106.3’5 : 3. Mnlyhall Avener. Penn St. 106.36 : 4. Tom Lindner, Southern Illinois 105 16: 5. Dave Uutzman, Iowa St. 103.9; 6. G~xge Greenfield, Cnlifornia 103.5.

Floor Exerclacl. Stormy Eaton, New Mexico 9.425: 2. John Crosby, So. Con- ncetirut 9.2’625: 3. Pnul Hunt, Illinois 9.162,s ; 4. Dann Shelley, New Mexico 9.15 : 5. Minor” Morisaki, California a 0625; 6. Paul TickmolT. NW La. St. 9.05.

NW England at New Britain. Conr.- I\.raumption 106. Sacred He&It 83 : Central Connecticut 111, Stonehill 99: Sacred lIeart 8x6 Stonebill Xl: Assumution 105. r‘rntva] &one&cut 77’. _...-.-. ~~~

South et Lgfayette, La. ~ Tennessee state 9%. Louisiana Tech 91 cot) : South- western Lnuisiana 113, LSU New Orleans 107 Louiaiona Tech 107, LSU New Or- lrn& XX: Southwestern Louisiilna X6. Tcnnesaee St. 82’.

Side Hors-l. Rutia Hoffman, Iown St. 9.32~5 : 2. Ed Slrzak, Indiana St. 9.2376 : 3. Ken Barr. Illinois 9 16 : 4. Ken T.iehr, Tows 9.1375. 5. Dick Kaziny. Michigan 9.1375. Ii. Rirh Schubelt. Knnsns X.4625.

Greak Lakea at Evansville, Ind.-Con- (ml Michigan ‘63, Aug~stina (Ill.) S9: Evxn~ville 72. Ashland 64: Aahlaod 8%. AIIYII~IR~~ (111.) 65: Evansville 78, Cen- _...-.. -- ~~: .~ trnl MichlgPn 60”.

East at Buffsto. N.Y. ~~ Iinrtwiek 77. C.W. I’oat 60: Buff& St. lUX, Montclnir St. ‘33: Montclair St. RO. C W. Post 68; Hartwirk 71, Bnffalo St. 70’.

FINALS SCORES Wednesday, March ll-Kentucky Wes-

leyan xg, Cheynqy State X3; Old Domin- ion Xl, pup& Sound 80; Southwestern Louisiana 110, Assumption 99; Evena- ville 106. Hartwick 69.

Thumday Old Dominion 97. Kentucky weclryan 83 : Evansville 93. Southwestern I.ouiriana 74.

Yridoy ~ %mtbwe%tern Louisiana 105, Kentucky Wesleyan 88: Evansville 9’1, old Dominion 82’. *Indicatea chamuionsbip game.

RibK.v 1. Charles Ropirquet. So. Illi- nois 9.6 ; 2. Urn Fernnndez. Indiana 9.35 : 3. Dnve Seal. Indiana St. 9.1376: 4. Bar- ney petera. California 9.025; 5. Yoahi Hayrmnki, Washlnc&m R.925; 6. George st2dter. Syracuse X.!lP’S.

Lunq Hnme~ 1. Pat Mahoney. San Fer- nando Vallev Y.225: 2. Jim Turoin. Snn Jose St. Y.ll?Z5. 3. U Simmons. iowa St. 9.10: 4. Jim Kruest. Penn St. 9.025: 6. Jim Iv&k. New Mexico R.976: 6. Tim Hallrr, Indiana X.9125.

Parallel Bars 1. Brent Simmons. Iowa St. 9.36216 : “. Tom Dunn. I’enn St. 9.3626 : 3. Dave Bntzmao. lowa St. 9.3376: 4. Yo- .hi Hnyasrrkl, Wtrwhington 9.2876: 6. Phil Rorkwcll. Cnlifomia 9.262,s : 6. Jim Ivi- rek. New Mexico 9.2125.

High Bar ~ 1 Brent Simmons. Iowa Sta+ 9.5376: 2. Jim Aitken, New Mexico 9.45: 3. Tom Lindner. So. Illinois 9.40: 4. George Granfield. California 9.2876; 6. Dave Bubmnn. Town St. 9.0626; 6. Yoahi Hgyns.%ki. Wnahington 8.975.

Championship Game OLD DOMINIC IN (82)

FG FT Reb. Coulling 2-9 1-2 6 _ _^ ^ . ._

CD Gymnastics .PF 1

TP

5 3 2

K

:; 1

13 1 a R 1 2u n 2 3 (I

FINAL TEAM STANDINGS 1. Cnlifmnin StilLe College Fullerton

l~KE.160. 2. Springfield College (Masaachu- settx) 156.9X7. 3. Northweatem Louisiana l4a.n87.

FINAL INDIVIDUAL STANDINGS All-Amund ~-1. dohn Cmahy (9. Corm.)

106.76. 2. Pnul Tickenoff (Nw La.) 104.30, 3. Uruce McGnrtlin (NW Le.) 101.35. 4. Jeff Wiles (SDringReld) 99.215. 5. Rich Martin (Springfield) 96.66, 6. Bmre Buuld (Chirngo Cl&e) 96.60.

Noble COX Nit” Twardzik Fate= Copeland ‘“-1s Baker Gruthv CO”KldO” Roach Kmrntree

n 0 0

19

2

::

x2 Tot& 37-x(5 8-1X 4X

Free Exerrire ~ 1. John Crosby (S. Cunn I 9.1250. 2. Pnul Tiekenof? (NW La.) b.0679. s. Ed Datti (S”ri&gheld) 8.9126, 4. lsoh Itu (Chicago Circle) 8.9000, 5. T,etsn Mims ICal. State) X.7626, 6. Brure MeGartlin (NW La.) 6.6760.

EVANSVILI .E (97) Coffey x-13 X-6 4 Wellcmeyer 7-14 2-3 2 Clayton 4- !I l-l 8 Busr 9-17 5-6 G Smith ‘6 7 n-n ri John ,Jm 1 l-2 4 Martin 4- R :1-s 4 W..elmer o- x I-l 2 McKiyaic O- 0 I,- n 1 sp&~ ., l- 1 n-n 0

o- n : n- 0

o- n n Oliver 2-2 1

22 lfi

a 0 a 2 1 a 3 0

Parallel Bars ~ 1. John Crosby (S. Corm.) 8.0600. 2. Bruce McGrrrtIin (NW 12.) B.OOiJO. 3. I’aul Tickenoff (NW La.) 8.96110. 4. Jetf Wilec (Springfield) 8.8600, 5. Rich Mnrt.in (Springfield) 8.4750. 6. Sol Scudrri (Springfield) 4.2860.

Lone Horse 1. Pat Mahoney (San Fer- nnndrr) 9.1KU0, 2. John Crosby (S. Cnnn.) !r.l):<7K, 3. I3wce Rould (Chicago Circle) X.9315. 4. Mike Kelly (Fullwton) X.X761). 5. Hub Rutt (San Fcrnnnrl~~J X.Xti%, 6. Kcjn Kein~ny~ t (:hirngo) X.7250.

Y 2.3 10

1 11

1 n

0 2 0 0 0 2

- ~ ~ -- TOtLllS 38-72 21-264037

Old D-minion K-i;

Evansville 51 46m-917 Attendanc~l3.124.

NCAA NEWS / April 15, 1971

Page 6: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

4-1-4 Academic Calendar Situation: An institution operates on a 4-l-4 academic calendar. A

student-athlete is eligible during and at the end of the first four-month term, but does not enroll in the one-month interim term. He will con- tinue with the second four-month term. (10-A).

Question: Is he eligible to participate in intercollegiate competition during the period between the two four-month terms?

Answer: Yes. It is not necessary for the student-athlete to be en- rolled in the interim one-month term in order to retain eligibility or participate in competition during that period. [C3-31

Situation: An institution operates on a 4-l-4 academic calendar. A student-athlete is not eligible during the first four-month term, but gains eligibility at the close of the term. He does not enroll in the in- terim one-month term. (10-B).

Question: Will the student-athlete be eligible to participate during the one-month period prior to the second four-month term?

Answer: No. The student-athlete is not eligible until the first day of classes during the second regular four-month term. [C3-31

Situation: An institution operates on a 4-l-4 academic calendar. A student-athlete is not eligible during the first four-month term, but gains eligibility at the close of that term. He enrolls in the interim onc- month term. (10-C).

Question: WlZZ the student-athlete be eligible to participate during the one-month period prior to the second four-month term?

Answer: Yes, provided he is enrolled in the one-month term in a minimum full-time program of studies equivalent on a prorata basis to the program of minimum full-time study during a regular term. rc3-31

Eligibility-l ~500 Rule Situation: A student-athlete (0.1. 100) is not eligible under the

1.600 rule for financial aid in which his athletic ability is a considera- tion.

Question: What type of financial aid is such a student-athlete pro- hibited from receiving?

Answer: All institutional funds such as scholarships, grants, loans, work-study program assistance and on-campus employment earnings, as well as off-campus employment earnings and other sources of ala for which athletic interests of the institution intercede in behalf of the student-athlete. Included as institutional funds is aid from govern- ment or private sources for which the institution selects the recipient or which the institution provides matching or supplementary funds for a previously-determined recipient. [B4-6- (b) - (1) - (2) - (3) I

Situation: A student-athlete competes (or practices) in intercollegiate competition and/or receives institutional financial assistance based in some degree upon his athletic ability while ineligible under the pro- visions of Bylaw 4-6-(b) [ 1.600 rule] .-( 19)

Question: How is the student-athZete’s future eligibility affected? Answer: If he practices for or participates in intercollegiate athletics

while ineligible, the member institution is obligated to charge him with a penalty of one varsity season of eligibility for each season of in- eligible practice or participation. Further, if he receives financial aid based in some degree upon his athletic ability while ineligible, the in- stitution is required to declare the young man ineligible for intercol- legiate competition. In either circumstance, the institution has the right to appeal for a reduction in the period of ineligibility if it feels the facts warrant a reduction. IB4-6-(b)]

Championship Scoreboard Continued from Page 5

4OO-yard Freestyle Rclav~l. UC lrvina :<:Il.49. 2. Hayward St. 3:12.78; 3. Sr,t inpticld :I :12.90. 4 Willinma College :l :,6.x11 : 6. Ashland 3 :lG.76 : 6. Su. Florl- au :,:16.x9.

X00-yard Freestyle Relay~l. TJC ;rv;; 7 :M.~I ; 2. So. Florida 7 :11.8G ; . ~,,vie 7 :,g.,;:3 : 4 San Fernando Vallw 7 9tb.w : 5 puwt s0~nrl 7 :2l.D3 : G.Sp=ing- ._ ,,elrl 7 :&so.

One-Meter Diving -1. Gnry Dworaki. llli~~oia 7lBOO: 2. Steve SaWYe=, So. CC,““. GXS.15 : 3. LEUTY wesmer. Central Micbjea” 6~3.~0 ; 4. Grorue Eiaetlhnrdt, Nc,rther” MichipR” GBO.lG: 6. John Par- k,.r, onklnnd 670.66 : 6. David Smith. Ce”- tral Michien” 652.60.

134pKen Stackdale, Mankato St. dec. Larry Morgan.Cal Polu. referees decision.

142-Jib Cuizatti. Ashland dec. Tom Cox. Slippery Rock. 7-6.

15O~Sta” Dzicdzic, Slippery Rock dec. Mike Medchill. Marlkato St.. 7-O.

15X Clint Yonnn. Northern Iowa dec. (:ernld Strumnan. Western Ill.. 2-l.

167 ~ John Stevenson, Franklin and Marshall dec. Gerry Willetta. Wilkes. G-O.

177 Bill Demnruy. North Dakota St. Llec. Pat Fart1er. Cd Pnly. 9-2.

19O~Uob Backlund. NorLh Dakota St. der. Gnry Mniofli. Cal I’olu. K-0.

FIwb.--Tim Kopitar. Cal Poly dec. Her- mu” Yettiurew. Ashland. 9-7.

Three-Meter Diving-l. Garb Dworski. Illinois 156.76: 2. John Parker, Onkln”d ,:(4.R5; 3. David Ck,rona. San Fernando vnlky 719.16 : 4. Jerry DeMera. Manknto St*(r 714.30 ; 5. Bill Lane, Pullerto” State 7w6.35 : 6. Rclland Bell. UC Davis 700.50.

CD Wrestling TEAM SCORING

I. cal poly 118. 2. Slinpery Rock 63. 3. Mankdr, St. 61. 4. North Dakota St. 46. 6. Wilkes and East Strou&burs 42. ‘7. Northern Icwu 41. 8. Frankli” and Ma=- ahall 36, 9. Northern Colorado. Seattle l’nrillr and Ashland 30.

12. Western Illinois 24, 13. STJNY OP.- wego ‘22, 14. Chico St. 21. 15. Central Michigan 20, lfi. John Carroll 18. 17. Swth Dnkota St.. Northern Mirhiuan. Eastern lllinuia 16, 20. Eastern Michl- K&l” 14.

21. Luther. Humlr>ldt St. and Soother” lllinoia 8, 24. WratPrn St. and Colorado Schrnl uf Mines 7, 2’6. Cleveland St.. Mwrhead St.. Coast Guard and So” Frnnciano St. 6.

:<I!. Sprinpfleld (Mm.), Sonoma St. and Akw” 6. 33. Shippensburs. Roeheater Inat. of Tech.. Central Miaaouri and Cali- fnrnin St. FuIIwti,” 4, 31. Soutk ,9;: kcrla, Illinois Chicano Circle, east Mi.rauuri. Hiram. Cal Poly l’o&“n and Aubwalana 3.

43. UC I)alriS, Southweat Mixsour St.. Sl. Claud, Now York Maritime and Am- hernt 2.

IX. Nnlthwrat Miswuri St.. Wayne St.. Valpnrnirw Yunet Sound. U.S. Mcrchnnr Rlnrine. SlTNY P,rtadnm, SIJNY Onc.nnh. I\:tlnm.mr. Iklawilre Vxlley. C0rnrll il”ll c:are I.

FINALS 11% Gary Mcllride. Cal Poly dec. Stan

Opp. San Diwo State. 4-Z. 126 (‘I,, iJ Illrwk, 1’1 rrnklirl and Mar-

*h”ll dw. Mark Pavirla, Eabtern Michi- ynn. R-O.

Wrestling TRAM SCORING

1. Oklahoma Stat* 94. 2. Ivwa SLntr IiF,. .3. Michigan StnLe 44. 4. PP~” State rnd Oregon Stat.- 43. 6. Oklahomn :39. I. T.r- high 32. X. Waahinytr,” 30. Y. Navy a”rl P<rrtle”d State 26.

11. Ohio U. 24. 12. Air Fnrrr 21. 13. T~,ledu 17. 14. Michigan 14, 16. Brigham Younu. Colorado, Lwk Have” nnd Syrn- ~uxe 13. 19. NI,rthwmtrr” nnd IJCLA IO.

21. NC-W MMexico 9. 22 Hprvard X. 23. Arizunn, Illinois State, Kent State and Wrrrtrr” Michitia” 7. 27. Clarion and Wrrt Chester State 6, 29. Army 5. 30. Idaho SbnLc. Iowa. Southern Illinois and Utah 4.

34. Ncbraaka and Notre Dame 3, 36. Cnlilvrnia. Indiana, Kxnaar Stale. Martsa- rhwettn. Minnrwta. I’itfaburuh, Slanlural. Wrher State and Wyominv 2.

46. Auburn. Brow”. California State 1 Pa. ) , Drake. E:naL Car0ti”n. G&ty~huxx. Indiana State. Frrano State, Iuuisinnn Sbate. Maryland, Miaouri, Princeton, Pur- due. Ul.ah State, Wwconsi” 1.

FINALS IlR~~Crea Johnson. Michigan State dec.

Tom Schuler, Navy, 6-G. 12fi -Yoshimo Fujita. Oklnhoms State

dcr. Ken Dnnaldw”, Air Force, 13-2. 134~1Loner Weinel, Oreyu” State dec.

Dwzwrre Keller, Oklahoma State. 16-7. 142~Darrelt Keller. Oktnhnma State

dec. Larry Owinga. Wnshinatnn. 16-12. 16O~~~St.n” Dzirdzir, Slippery Rock dec.

Jay Arrmon. Okln~hnmn State. 6-1. 15X- -(:nrl Adama, lrwn State drr. Mike

.tamrr. oIrY,,n seer. 1x-5. 167 Andy Matter dcc. St.evp Shields,

l.chinh, S-K, O-O, RD. 177~CrolI Bnum, Oklahnma Stile drc.

Al Nnrin. TOWSI State, 10-S. 1!10 131,” Pcterrton. Iowa Stnte, dec.

Vinrr I’aulano. Symruse. 11-6. Ilvavywvieht CZrrg Wu>ciech,,w.*ki. To-

lcrlo, dcc. D~vc Jurwr, renn State. 6-8.

BILL BUTLER takes over at West Chester State College. He replaces

Tn t 1\1 C AA EDWIN YOWMANS who will devote time to position of Deanof the School of Health & Physical Education.

R EC 0 R D places DON UNGARELLI at varsity :::::::::st°C::e:cKy re- THOMAS GRIFFITH II. former coach at University of the South, is the

A roundup of current membership activities new coach at University of Wiscon- sin, Green Bay. He succeeds LOU

ATHLETIC DIRECTORS BRUCE ALLISON et Union College (NY.1 replaces former AD and head iootball coach GEORGE W. FLOOD, who has taken a position at Univer- sity of Massachusetts.

and personnel changes LE CALSEY. SWIMMING-RICHARDBRADSHAW replaces Bill Grant as head coach

been named as head coach at The at the University of Pittsburgh. Citadel. ED REED has been named coach at EDWIN D. MUTO takes over as coach Brown University. He succeeds JOE at State University of New York at WATMOUGH.

FRANK SZYMANSKI, head hasket- hall coach at Drexel University has accepted the position of AD and has- k&hall coach at the University of Baltimore. GEORGE KING, six years Purdue’s head basketball coach, fills vacancy left by death of Red Msckey.

COACHES BASKETBALL- JIM KILLINGS- WORTH replaces DAN MILLER at Idaho State University. THOMAS ‘SKIP” CHAPPELLE takes over as new head coach at the Uni- versity of Maine at Orono. He re- places GILBERT “GIB” PHILBRICK. GEORGE HILL, former head coach at the Coast Guard Academy, has

Coaches Express Concern Over Early Signings

A statement demanding that the American Basketball Association refrain from drafting college players who still have eligibility remaining was drafted by the Na- tional Association of Basketball Coaches at its annual conven- tion in Houston in March

The statement reads: “The National Association of

Basketball Coaches of the United States expresses shock and deep concern about the recent signing of sophomore John Neumann of the University of Mississippi by the American Basketball Assock- tion. This has continued an explo- sive situation which could destroy the good will and fine working relationships that have taken years to establish.

It would be very unfortunate if the action of the American Bas- ketball Association in first the Spencer Haywood case, then the Ralph Simpson signing and now Neumann, destroys fruitful train- ing opportunities for future pro- fessional athletes.

The claim has been made that theze cases involve the hardship rule, which rule is difficult to in- terpret and apply. However, al- most any college player having some eligibility remaining could in some manner be classified as a hardship case.

The National Association of Basketball Coaches calls upon the American Basketball Association to hereafter refrain from signing any college player who has eligi- bility time remaining.”

ADOLPH RUPP, President National Association of Basketball Coaches

NCAA FILMS An extensive library of

16mm films of NCAA Cham- pionship events is available for use by member institutions, high schools, civic clubs and other groups.

Commencing with the 1968 Championships series, all films are in color and, with 1969, sound is available as well. For the first time, the 1970 cham- pionship events may be viewed in 30-minute sound/color high- light films as well as full- length silent/color.

For complete information and a catalog of instructional films currently available, con- tact:

NCAA Films 5401 Westbard Avenue Washington, D. C. 20016 Telephone: 202-652-1885

nunaro. GENE H. HARRIS replaces H. R. (TED) TAYLOR as varsity coach at Ursinus College. GLENN ROBINSON. Franklin & Marshall College’s ireshmen coach, was elevated to head coach, replacing CHARLES TAYLOR. FOOTBALCALLYN (SONNY) HOL- LAND succeeds TOM PARACas head coach at Montana State. ALLEN W. JACOBS was named head

WRESTLING-STAN ABEL, assistant coach at Ohio Universitv is new head coach at University of Cincinnati. He succeeds JIM MAHAN. LACROSSE-STEVE JACOBSON he- comes coach at Lehigh University replacing resigned JIM SCIBLE. TENNIS-HALL GREIG named coach at University of Vermont replacing GUY CHENG. GOLF-BILL TEMPLIN takes over

coach at Westminster College. He at Naval Academy, succeeding BOB succeeds CHARLES J. BANKER who WILLIAMS who retired in Decem- has accepted an assistant coaching her after 36 seasons. position at the University of Utah. MILT PIEPtJL has been appointed at American International College. GERRY EVERLING replaces GEORGE W. FLOOD as head coach at Union College (N.Y.). EDWARD DOHERTY was named to replace BILL WHITTON at Holy Cl-OS.% BASLBALIPETE KRAMER replac- es JOSEPH OWENS as varsity coach at New PaItz State. TOM MEYER replaces retired AR- THUR “DYNIE” MANSFIELD at

CONFERENCES PENNSVLVANIA STATE COLLEGES ATHLETIC CONFERENCE-RUS- SELL E. HOUK has been elected president. BIG EIGHT CONFERENCCKEN 13. JONES, former vice president of Tarkio College. has joined stafI as assistant to the commissioner. YANKEE CONFERENCE -ADOLPH SAMBORSKI. former Harvard AD. was named as athletic commissioner

Wisconsin. NEIL SERPICO replaces retired W.

MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE-

GLENN KILLINGER as coach at FRED JACOBY, formercommissioner

West Chester State College. of the Wisconsin State University Conference has been named to suc-

TRACK-STAN HUNTSMAN replaces teed ROBERT C. JAMES. CHUCK ROHE as coach at Univer- WESTERN ATNLETIC CONFER- sity of Tennessee. CARL SIMMONS. new head coach at

ENCE - STAN BATES. director of

Hofstra University, succeeds BILL athletics at Washington State Univer-

O’SULLIVAN. sit.y. has been named commissioner. succeeding WILES HALLOCK.

1971 NCAA Football TV Schedule Date September 11

September 18

September 25

October 2

October 9 October 16 October 23

October 30 November 6

November 13 November 20

November 25

November 27

December 4 December 11

Exposure National

Regional

Regional

Regional

National National Regional

National Regional

Regional National National National National National National National Regional

Game Grambling-Morgan State (Night)

Yankee Stadium (New York City) Texas at UCLA Purdue at Washington Missouri at Air Force Houston at Arizona State Auburn at Tennessee Penn State at Iowa Oregon at Stanford Kent State at Ohio U. Michigan State at Notre Dame Texas Tech at Arizona North Carolina at N. Carolina State Colorado State at Wyoming Michigan at Michigan State Texas at Arkansas Wisconsin at Ohio State Georgia Tech at Tulane Texas Tech at SMU Wake Forest at North Carolina Colorado at Nebraska Minnesota at Northwestern Georgia at Florida Boston College at Syracuse Washington at California Four Games to Be Announced

USC - UCLA (Day) Notre Dame at LSU (Night) Nebraska at Oklahoma (Day) Georgia at Georgia Tech (Night) Army - Navy (Day) Auburn-Alabama (Night)

Penn State at Tennessee College Division I Bowl Games

Soccer Clubs Five additional soccer teams have been certified in accordance with

the provisions of Constitution 3-10-(d) The certification of each team shall be in effect until August 31, 1971, unless the membership is noti- fied otherwise.

The newly-certified teams: Colorado-Colorado Condors, Englewood. New Jersey-Eastern Soccer Coaches Association All-Stars, Irving-

ton. Ohio-Danube Swabian Soccer Club, Cleveland. Pennsylvania-Scranton Soccer Club, Scranton. VermontJohnson United Soccer Club, Johnson.

Gymnastics Meet One additional gymnastics meet has been certified by the NCAA

Extra Events Committee subject to the provisions of Bylaw 7C. The newly-certified meet : May 6-‘I-Senior National AAU Gymnastics Championships, Cedar

Rapids, Iowa.

Page 7: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

Adolph W. Samborski former Horrord AD

Samborski New Yankee loop Commissioner

Adolph W. Samborski, former director of athletics at Harvard University, will assume the Com- missionership of the Yankee Con- ference July 1.

He succeeds J. 0. Christian, se- lected as the Conference’s frst commissioner in 1966, who is re- tiring.

Samborski spent 50 years at Harvard, from his first day as a student in 1921, to his retirement as director of athletics in Febru- ary of this year.

He became Harvard’s director of intramurals in 1927, a position he held until he was appointed assistant director of athletics in 1961. Two years later he was named AD.

Samborski also has been active in NCAA affairs, having served on the Council from 1966 to the present.

Voting, Lema Award Explained

Explanations for the NCAA membership of the selective vot- ing procedures used at the annual Convention and the ban on the Tony Lema Award have been is- sued by the Association’s policy- making Council.

After several years of study and discussion, the Council con- cluded that “divided”voting along University Division-College Divi- sion lines at NCAA Conventions not only would be devisive to the Association, but also would fail to answer requests for restricted voting on issues such as those pertaining to only one sport.

Accordingly, just prior to the 1971 Convention, the Council adopted a procedure whereby the President may indicate to the delegates that the next issue to come before them may be of in- terest only to a portion of the membership, and might then ask those not involved to refrain from voting on that issue on a volun- tary basis.

All delegates would be encour- aged to participate fully in de- bate, however, on every matter before the Convention.

This system was used in 1971 in regard to an amendment to permit College Division institu- tions to play freshmen in NCAA events in all sports, and an amend- ment to permit freshmen to com- pete in all University Division events.

Dennis Bresnahan

Creightan

Bruce Wheeler MIT

George Faerber Purdue

Terry Schofield UCLA

Rick Howat lllinair

Mike Newlin Utah

15 W in NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships Continued from page 1 winner in sportswriting contest. Served as sports and news editor

of school newspAper. President of Economics Club. Active in participation in the Peace Corps, the need to complete a final year of undergraduate work in a five-year program-and other

student government. Winner of Sarah Keighn Cooper award, “presented to junior man who excels !n scholarship. leadership and character. ’ Also a lacrosse participant.

approved delays. Following is a list of the winners:

UNIVERSITY DIVISION JAN LAURIE ESSENBERG Virginia Military Institute

3.513 in English Hometown: Warsaw. Ind. Forward Captain of-this year’s VMI team. a&aging 15.6 points a game. All Southern Conference. Started every game in his collegiate career for VM149 in a row. Named to Dean’s list every semes- ter. Member of VMI Academic Policy Planning Committee and one of two Cadet representatives on Committee for recommenda- tion of new superintendent. Class president as sophomore, junior and senior. A 1971 Rhodes Scholar candidate.

GEORGEOTTOFAERBER Purdue University 3 1G in Business Hometown: West Lafayette, It-id. Economics

Forward

Started 63 consecutive games since winning a berth as a sopho- more. Only sophomore starter on Purdue NCAA finalist team of 1969. Holder of Purdue Arena rebounding record of 21, and holds Boilermaker fleld goal percentage record for single season of .619. set in 1969. Considered best defensive forward in Purdue basket- ball history. Selected to All-Big Ten Academic team. Member of Sigma Chi fraternity.

CLAUDE RICHARD HOWAT University of Illinois 3.43 in Marketing Hometown: Downers Grave, Ill. Guard Leadine Illini scorer this season. averaeinkr over 20 mints oer game. An outstanding shooter, making-&% on closer&% per cent of his field goal attempts in last two seasons as a starter. Member Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Selected to Sachem- Illinois junior men’s honorary and Omicron Delta Kappa, senior men’s honorary. An All-Big Ten Academic selection.

MICHAEL FRANCIS NEWLIN Universlty of Utah 3 725 in English Hometown: LaCrescenta. Calif. Guard An outstanding shooter who has led the Western Athletic Con- ference in scoring the past three seasons. WAC Player of the Year. Also an outstanding free throw shooter. making good on ,882 of his attempts as a sophomore. ,872 as a junior and .781 as a senior. An honorable mention All-America selection. Described by Coach Jack Gardner as a “pure shooter.” Member of Student Body President Advisory Board. Selected to appear in “Who’s Who Among College Students in America.”

WILLIAM MICHAEL DROZDIAK University of Oregon 3.18 in Economics Hometown: San Jose. Calif. Guard-Forward and Political Science A starter for three seasons for Ducks, averaging in double figures all three years. An outstanding free throw shooter, making good on .8U2 of his attempts as a sophomore, ,832 as a junior and .866 as a senior. An All-Pacific-E academic selection. Rhodes Scholar nominee from Oregon. Appointed Congressional intern for sum- mer of 1969 to work on surtax and tax reform proposals before House of Rrpresrntatives. Member of Oregon Student Senate in 19G9, and Athletic Director Search Committee.

COLLEGE DIVISION HOWARD BRUCE GREENBLATT Trinity College

3.692 in English and Religion Hometown: Hartford, Corm. Guard Averaged close to 20

P oints per game in three seasons of varsity

competition for Trin ty. Second all-time leading Trinity scorer. becoming fifth member of Trinity l,OOO-paint club. A complete player who is an excellent play-maker. ball-handler and defen- sive player. Team captain. Eastern Collegiate Athletic Confer- ence Player of the Week in February of this year for College Division. Elected to Pht Beta Kappa in September of 1970.

BRUCE CHRISTOPHER WHEELER Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. 3.8 in History. Physics Hometown: Schenectady, N.Y. Guard Only player m MIT history to serve as team captain for two seasons AveraGed in double figures every season. Also a base- ball player, bemg named most valuable player as a junior on last season’s team, and selected to Greater Boston League All- Star team. Hit .292 and compiled 2.18 ERA as a itcher last year. Member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. E ember of Tau Beta Pi Academic honorary.

PAUL LEWIS SHECHTMAN Swarthmore College 3.56 in Economics Hometown: Havertown. Pa. Guard Selected as Philadelphia Sportswriters’ Player of the Week for play against Franklm and Marshall College on Dec. 28 of this past season Also selected by Philly writers as a third-place

DAVID ALBERT FINHOLT St. Olaf College 3.30 in Chemistry Hometown: Northfield, Minn. Forward First team All-Mideast Conference selection for past three sea- sons Holds St. Olaf records for most points in one game (42). most rebounds in a season (252) and most free throws in qne game (20 of 24.). Also holds several conference record!, including most olnts in a single game (36) and most rebounds m a season (191) 4 earn Captain. Co-chairman of Black Public Relations COm- mittee. Participant in Big Brother and Campus Drug Assistance programs Also on St. Olaf golf team, placing 13th in state amateur tournament last year.

TILLMAN DOUGLAS WILLIAMS Southwest Missouri St. Cal. $.t;$arzhysical Education Hometown: Louisburg. MO. Guard-

Team Captain. Averaged 16 points a game in four years of com- petition for Southwest Missouri State. starting over 100 games All-conference for three seasons. Most Valuable Player in NCAA Midwest Regional in sophomore and junior seasons. President of Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Member of Committee on Stu- dent Affalrs and Student Government Association. Student Sena- tor representing Physical Education Department.

AT-LARGE DIVISION MARK WILBOUR ESTES Case Western Reserve Universlty

3.41 in Engineering Hometown: Rye, N.Y. Guard An All-President’s Athletic Conference selection. Leading Case Western scorer past two seasons, averaging 15.2 as a junior and 20 points a game as a senior. Also a Case Western golfer, placing second in conference championship as a sophomore and junior. Holds school record rounds for 18 and nine holes. Selected to Dean’s list each semester. Member Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fra- ternity.

PATRICK JOSEPH LILLIS Loras College 3.65 In Biology Hometown: Will iamsburg, Iowa Forward An All-conference selection. Ranks fifth in Loras College career scoring statistics with I:291 points. President of Pre-Mecl club. Member Delta Epsilon Sigma honor fraternity. Listed in “Who’s Who Among College Students in America” in junior and senior years.

VAUGHN MORRIS WEDEKING Jacksonville University 3.154 in Biology Hometown: Evansville, Ind. Guard One of the best floor leaders in college basketball. Point man for team which was second in National Collegiate Basketball Championship in 1970. A member of small men’s All-America team. Team co-captain. Averaged over 12 points a game for three seasons. As a sophomore made 90 per cent of free throw attempts. Member of Beta Beta Beta biological fraternity. Listed in “Who’s Who Among College Students in America.”

DENNIS ROBERT BRESNAHAN, JR. Creighton University 3.59 in Psychology Hometown: Oak Park. Ill. Forward Team captain for Bluejays. Averaged close to nine

B oints a

game. An outstanding percentage shooter. making goo on 51.3 per cent of his fleld goal attempts and 85 per cent of his free throws this year. Academic All-America selection. Member of Alpha Sigma NU Honor Fraternity. Winner of Creighton Unl- versity Scholar-Athlete Award in 1970. Rhodes Scholar Candi- date.

GEORGETERENCESCWOFIELD Univ. of Calif., Los Angeles 3.24 in En lish

4 Hometown: Los Angeles. Calif. Guard

Member o three straight NCAA championship teams at UCLA. Started parttime this season. sharing guard position. Described by Coach John Wooden as a man who could give a real “lift” to the lineup coming off the bench. A Rhodes Scholar state finalist. Member of Newman Center Social Action group.

ALTERNATES (In the order in which they will receive a scholarship should

one of the winners not utilize a Postgraduate Scholarship.) 1. Thomas Randall Heinz, California Institute of Technology 2. James Arp Thorne, Georgia Institute of Technology 3. Alan Ferris Morrison, Michigan Technological University 4. Wil l iam Joseph Downes, University of Pittsburgh 5. Mark Lavalle Frazer, Fairfield University 6. Kenneth Leonard Kowall, Ohio University

z

BllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllll11llllll!llllllllllllllIIlllllIlI 1lllll1llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~llllllll~llllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllliilllllllllllllll1lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllll

Special Com m ittee on Recruiting Reorganized The NCAA Special Committee

on Recruiting has been reorga- nized, while two other appoint- ments to Committees also have been made by the NCAA Officers acting for the Council.

The Recruiting Committee, created in 1968 by the Council to review recruiting practices, was restructured to add an additional member, as well as to appoint re- placements for out-going Commit- tee members.

Robert C. James, Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner, will chair the Committee, while hold-

over members from the 1968group ber of items to the Committee for of prospective student-athletes. include Howard C. Gentry, direc- consideration, including proposals: In other Committee appoint- tor of athletics at Tennessee State . to limit the number of expense- ment action, Dr. J im Robie of University, and James D. Owens, head football coach at the Univer-

paid visits a prospect may receive, North Carolina was appointed to

and also to limit the visits an the Committee on Competitive sity of Washington.

Newly-appointed members in- institution may make to a pros- Safeguards and Medical Aspects

pect’s home town; of Sports, replacing Dr. Ernst elude Harry Arlanson, director of Jokl of Kentucky. athletics at TuftsUniversity; Rob- . to further restrict the use of Wil l iam Exum of Kentucky ert L. Blackman, head football private aircraft, and to place re- State was appointed chairman of coach at Illinois; Alan J. Chap- strictions on the leasing of air- the National Summer Youth man, Rice faculty athletic repre- craft by individuals or institutions Sports Program Committee, while sentative; and Ted Owens, Uni- for the transportation of prospec- Dave Hunt of New Mexico was versity of Kansas head basketball tive student-athletes; appointed to fill a term left vacant coach. . to review the current permis- by Richard C. Larkins of Ohio

The Council has referred a num- sable practices for entertainment State, who retired.

NCAA NEWS / April 15, 1971 7

Page 8: The NCAA News - USTFCCCA

‘Z!‘V ‘uorml sd!qsuo!durmq~ 9z- Lb =ufv DUOZ!lw j0 ‘A!Un jpI) ec+qp3 lOUO!WN

‘qSDM ‘al+waS sd!qsuo!dwqD play PUD

6L-ll au”r uo+f3u~yso~ jo ‘ApIn q3DJl a+D!6allO~ lDUO!CDlr(

l pUi ‘puag q+noS sd!qsuo!dumqD 61-171 auf-r aUlDa aJ+ON j0 -A!Un S!UUal Zi)D!6allO~ IDUO!(DN

‘4!l% ‘O ’!r(D sd!qsuo!durnqD 8L-Sl =““r -ell‘Q ‘IS OS!‘43 jlog uo!s!ya a6alloa

11/9L ‘JqeN ‘Or(OI.UO d!qsuo!dt.uDq~ -IL aw &!S”A!Un Uo+q6!aJD llnqes”8 a+o!Ball03 IDUO.‘+DN

‘j!IDD ‘O+U~UlDl3D~ sd!qsuo!drumq~ pla!j ZL-IL aw aliallo3 ‘(5 O+USN.UDJ>QS pu0 43DJl uo!s!A!a a6allo3

‘PUI ‘al+SDWIaaJg sdlqsuo!dwoq> CL-8 aw AgsreAyJ MnDdaq spual uo!s!A!q e6ql03

-oW ‘pleg6yJdS d!qsuo!dwoqD 9/s-c am aBall ‘4s !Jl lOSS!W MS llDqaSI38 UO!s!A!a a6qlo3

‘KN ‘pba+sdu.IaH d!qsuo!druDqD s =w r(r!SJaA!Un DJ+SjOH aSSOJ3Dl a+o!6q~o3 IDUO!#N

‘A’N ‘ZIIDd fiaN syual &SQOD 3!+llDl&v

6Z-8ZXOW ‘1’01 MaN X+!SJaA!lln ‘(5 uo!spa a6alloD :l~uo!6aa

ama 4-H JO W!S CueA

~_~~.~~~ _~ -

6t-8Z -LZ XQW

zz xow

ZZ ADW

zz-LZ mu

ZZ-LZ A’JW

6-8 ADW

tz Wv

FL-cz l!‘dW

LZ-cz I!&

zt-lz l!JdW

WW

‘jIID3 ‘O+UWUDJ,DS SlUUBl (SD03 >!j!>Dd a674103 ‘a O~UWUDJ3i3S uo!sIAg aBello rpu0~6~6

BMOI ‘SllPj Jl3peD PI’!4 PU” ‘l-J1 asa’“‘P!W DMOI UJer(&iON j0 ‘A!Un uoppua e601103 :pu0!606

QMO( ‘SIIDj JDPOD siuuel +samp!W DMOI UJaq+JON j0 ‘A!Un uo!sIAIa e6tq~03 :puo!60~

-

‘r-N ‘J!Dl3+UOW Jeddn pla!d PUD q>DJl (SD03 ,!+UDI+v e6ql03 ‘8s J!DI3+UOW uo!s!A!q a6elloD :puo~6a~

‘Od ‘D!qdlap~l!qd D!UDA+UUad j0 -A!Un maw uw+D=w dun

‘pw ‘6Jnqs+!ww3 d!qruo!dwoqD aBalp3 S,hDW ‘4s *+w uqqw~ea umsq 44isn

-

Dmol ‘sau!ow sea d!qsuo!durlrqD &!SJ!BA!Un ay3.q uoq+DJw mm

l jyo~ ‘sala6uv sol d!qsuo!du”w IloqAellon vim a+o@a1103 lDuOf+oN

sBu!+eew eeupuuro~ ‘“I j ‘alDpJiBpllPl (JO j Wb!)n,aX~ ‘I!MlO~ VQDN

am01 ‘sau!ow saq dlqsuo!durDqD xl!smqun ay34a ww=a I”“WmN msn

+=H 10 a+!s W-3

s+uaq 6u!uro3 jo JepuqeD vvyq

1221 Baltimore Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64105 An Equal Employment Opportunity Employsr

ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED

APRIL 15, 1971

BULLETINS Washington, D.C.-The National Summer Youth Sports Program

(NSYSP). has received $3 million funding from the Federal Govern- ment, enabling the program to operate for the third straight year.

The programdo-financed and sponsored by the NCAA and its in- stitutions and the Federal Government through the President’s Coun- cil on Physical Fitness and Sports-needed the funding in order to operate during 1971.

* * * Los Angeles-The 1972 NCAA Basketball Tournament in the Los

Angeles Sports Arena was sold out just one day after tickets went on sale by mail April 1. Just under 10,000 seats of the 16,000 seat arena were sold to the public, with the rest being allotted for the National Association of Basketball Coaches and the four competing institutions. Complete details on this year’s tourney and all other NCAA March events on pages 3-5.

NCAA, NAIA O fficials to Gather in Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . . 1

Fifteen Win NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship G rants . . . . . . . . 1

Nan-Profit OrRadzatian U. 5. POSTAGE

PAID Pwmit No. 4794

KANSAS CITY, MO.

An Editorial on Cable TV . . . . . 2

1971 Television Grid Schedule . . 6