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Remembrances and Thank Yous by Alan Cotler, W'72
Remembrances and Thank Yous By Alan Cotler, W’72, WG’74 When I told Mrs. Spitzer, my English teacher at Flushing High in Queens, I was going to Penn her eyes welled up and she said nothing. She just smiled. There were 1,100 kids in my graduating class. I was the only one going to an Ivy. And if I had not been recruited to play basketball I may have gone to Queens College. I was a student with academic friends and an athlete with jock friends. My idols were Bill Bradley and Mickey Mantle. My teams were the Yanks, the New York football Giants, the Rangers and the Knicks, and, 47 years later, they are still my teams. My older cousin Jill was the first in my immediate and extended family to go to college (Queens). I had received virtually no guidance about college and how life was about to change for me in Philadelphia. I was on my own. I wanted to get to campus a week before everyone. I wanted the best bed in 318 Magee in the Lower Quad. Steve Bilsky, one of Penn’s starting guards at the time who later was Penn’s AD for 25 years and who helped recruit me, had that room the year before, and said it was THE best room in the Quad --- a large room on the 3rd floor, looked out on the entire quad, you could see who was coming and going from every direction, and it had lots of light. It was the control tower of the Lower Quad. -
Aw a Rd Wi Nners
Aw_MBB01_sp 10/10/01 11:15 AM Page 107 Awa r d Win n e r s Division I Consensus All-American Selections .. .1 0 8 Division I Academic All-Americans By Tea m .. .1 1 3 Division I Player of the Yea r. .1 1 4 Divisions II and III Fi r s t - Te a m All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 6 Divisions II and III Ac a d e m i c All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 8 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By Tea m. .1 1 9 Awar MBKB01 10/9/01 1:41 PM Page 108 10 8 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections Second Tea m —R o b e r t Doll, Colorado; Wil f re d Un r uh, Bradley, 6-4, Toulon, Ill.; Bill Sharman, Southern By Season Do e rn e r , Evansville; Donald Burness, Stanford; George Ca l i f o r nia, 6-2, Porte r ville, Calif. Mu n r oe, Dartmouth; Stan Modzelewski, Rhode Island; Second Tea m —Charles Cooper, Duquesne; Don 192 9 John Mandic, Oregon St. Lofgran, San Francisco; Kevin O’Shea, Notre Dame; Don Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Joe Schaaf, Pennsylvania; Rehfeldt, Wisconsin; Sherman White, Long Island. Charles Murphy, Purdue; Ver n Corbin, California; Thomas 1943 Ch u r chill, Oklahoma; John Thompson, Montana St. First Te a m— A n d rew Phillip, Illinois; Georg e 1951 193 0 Se n e s k y , St. Joseph’s; Ken Sailors, Wyoming; Harry Boy- First Tea m —Bill Mlkvy, Temple, 6-4, Palmerton, Pa.; ko f f, St. -
Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1971-1972
Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1971-1972 Eastern Kentucky University Year 1972 Eastern Progress - 23 Mar 1972 Eastern Kentucky University This paper is posted at Encompass. http://encompass.eku.edu/progress 1971-72/24 ^ "to Bryant Student Leads Voting Page 4 Uic Eastern Broatess Page 7 /I Setting TheTh* PacePar* In A ProgressivtPmtrp <niv» fraFra I1 •^»"k— ^* 1 ?~rr ' 8 Pages Thursday, March 23, 1972 49th Year, Number 24 Student Publication of Eastern. Kentucky University, Richmond, Ky. At Founder's Day Dinner Martin Releases Ginger Addresses Audience "One never knows what Martin. "The development teaching should be tried," he Landfill Statement decisions today will affect under Dr. Martin is nothing said. short of sensational," he said, Dr. Ginger indicated that the tucky University but excludes thousands tomorrow," ac- BY JIM HOUSE cording to Dr. Lyman Ginger, "a miracle has occurred In little new voting student regent may "any garbage or trash collected more than a decade." be an indication of things to Newt KdHor by commercial haulers or State Superintendent of Public Instruction. "Institutions of higher come. "Students are deter- Richmond City Commissioner Eastern Kentucky University of learning are so important mined to be heard on matters H.K. Porter Plant in Richmond, Dr. Ginger was guest speaker Virgil McWhorter, on behalf of at Eastern's 66th annual socially, politically, and that really count," he said. himself and Com million Kentucky." Founders Day celebration last economically that any in- Higher education on the majority members R.J. Notion 2. Eastern Kentucky night in the University Center. vestment in them is a good Eastern campus dates back to and Edward Murphy, issued a University has not made any The ceremony com- one," he continued. -
2011-12 USBWA Directory
U.S. BASKETBALL WRITERS ASSOCIATION ALL-AMERICA TEAMS MEN’S ALL-AMERICA TEAMS MEN’S ALL-AMERICA TEAMS NATIONAL PLAYERS OF THE YEAR IN BOLDFACE 1964-65 1968-69 1956-57 1960-61 John Austin, Boston College Lew Alcindor, UCLA Elgin Baylor, Seattle Terry Dischinger, Purdue Rick Barry, Miami Spencer Haywood, Detroit Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas Roger Kaiser, Georgia Tech Bill Bradley, Princeton Dan Issel, Kentucky Chet Forte, Columbia Jerry Lucas, Ohio State A.W. Davis, Tennessee Mike Maloy, Davidson Frank Howard, Ohio State Bill McGill, Utah Wayne Estes, Utah State Pete Maravich, LSU Rod Hundley, West Virginia Tom Meschery, St. Mary’s Gail Goodrich, UCLA Jim McMillian, Columbia Jim Krebs, SMU Doug Moe, Notre Dame Fred Hetzel, Davidson Rick Mount, Purdue Guy Rodgers, Temple Gary Phillips, Houston Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt Calvin Murphy, Niagara Len Rosenbluth, North Carolina Larry Siegfried, Ohio State Cazzie Russell, Michigan Bud Ogden, Santa Clara Gary Thompson, Iowa State Tom Smith, St. Bonaventure Dave Stallworth, Wichita State Charlie Scott, North Carolina Charles Tyra, Louisville Chet Walker, Bradley Sidney Wicks, UCLA 1965-66 1957-58 1961-62 Dave Bing, Syracuse 1969-70 Elgin Baylor, Seattle Len Chappell, Wake Forest Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt Austin Carr, Notre Dame Bob Boozer, Kansas State Terry Dischinger, Purdue Jack Martin, Duke Jimmy Collins, New Mexico Pete Brennan, North Carolina Jack Foley, Holy Cross Dick Nemelka, BYU Dan Issel, Kentucky Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas John Havlicek, Ohio State Pat Riley, Kentucky Bob Lanier, St. Bonaventure Archie -
The Daily Egyptian, March 04, 1972
Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC March 1972 Daily Egyptian 1972 3-4-1972 The aiD ly Egyptian, March 04, 1972 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_March1972 Volume 53, Issue 102 Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, March 04, 1972." (Mar 1972). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1972 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in March 1972 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • Baturday Magazine of the 'Daily 'Egyptian ~. Saturday. M/JICh 4. 1972-Vo/. 53. No. 102 Southern Illinois University .~ Becoming recognized as an art stimluls. photography has become very much with u~ . This silk screen print by David Gilmore is only one direction photography is heading. See story on page 2. .. • The deep religious faith of Southern Illinois is caught in Itlis monument to God in Goo fry, Illinois. (Photo by C. William Horrell) • in one visual image. C. William Horrell sums up the future of this Southern illinois town. whose forefathers were fooking ahead when they named it. Photography as Seen hy Photographers By John Burningham of a projectile or an abstract represen· chooses his own colors and their camera and the photographic process Staff Writer tation to an artist. placement. Gilmore defined his silk multiple exposure, high contrast film, Three faculty members of SlU's screen prints as "an abstraction, one slow shutter speeds and out of focus Photography has evolved from the Department . of Cine ma and step further from reality." images." Swedlund maintains that the time when Nicephore Niepce made the Photography, C. -
Men's Basketball Award Winners
MEN’S BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 2 Division I Academic All-Americans by School 14 Division I Awards 16 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School 22 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School 27 Divisions II and III Players of the Year 30 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School 32 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS 1909 1915 BY SEASON Biaggio Gerussi, Columbia W.P. Arnold, Yale Teams used for consensus selections: (Helms Julian Hayward, Wesleyan (CT) Leslie Brown, Cornell Foundation 1905-48; Converse Yearbook 1932- Tommy Johnson, Kansas Ernest Houghton, Union (NY) 48; College Humor Magazine 1929-33, 1936; Charles Keinath, Penn Charlie Lee, Columbia Christy Walsh Syndicate 1929-30; Literary Digest Ted Kiendl, Columbia George Levis, Wisconsin Magazine 1934; Madison Square Garden 1937- Pat Page, Chicago Elmer Oliphant, Army 42; Omaha World Newspaper 1937; Newspaper John Ryan, Columbia Tony Savage, Washington Enterprises Association 1938, 1953-63; Colliers Raymond Scanlon, Notre Dame Ralph Sproull, Kansas (Basketball Coaches 1939, 1949-56; Pic John Schommer, Chicago Wellington Stickley, Virginia Magazine 1942-44; Argosy Magazine 1945; True Helmer Swenholt, Wisconsin Ray Woods, Illinois Magazine 1946-47; International News Service 1950-58; Look Magazine 1949-63; United Press 1910 1916 International 1949-96; Sporting News 1943-46, William Broadhead, NYU Roy Bohler, Washington St. 1997-present; The Associated Press 1948-pres- Leon Campbell, Colgate William Chandler, Wisconsin ent; National Assoc. of Basketball Coaches Dave Charters, Purdue Cyril Haas, Princeton 1957-present; U.S. Basketball Writers Association William Copthorne, Army George Levis, Wisconsin 1960-present). -
USF Basketball 1971-72 a WCAC Title In
The BASKETBALL PREVIEW Salt Francisco ISSUE FOGHORN VOL. 66. NO. 12 UNIVERSITY OF SAN FRANCISCO 151 DEC. 1. 1971 USF Basketball 1971-72 A WCAC Title in Sight? Athletic Tradition — A History of USF's Basketball Heritage By BILL DUPLISSEA earmarked by Coach Newell as tion at Michigan State Univer spect at least; it indelibly troupe a star of some renown. "the steadiest man on the sity. Filling his shoes would be marked USF in the minds of Bob Gaillard (currently head To have a prc-occupation with team." Joe McNamee was the a difficult task at best, and af basketball fans on a national USF basketball coach), all the past is today considered by team's leading rebounder par ter long consideration, Father scope. Although as yet there has WCAC and All-Northern Cali most people, especially a uni tially due to his then uncommon James Duffy S.J., athletic mod not been comparable success by fornia for the past two seasons, versity community, unhealthy at height of 6' 9". erator, named Phillip D. Wool- USF teams, the Bill Russell era hinted that USF basketball best. In the area of USF basket 1918-49 As many of today's pert as head coach of the Dons. created an athletic tradition on might return to the limelight. ball, however, it is difficult to USF students were being born, From the same basketball philo the Hilltop, something necessary Although Bob Gaillard had an restrain oneself from being in a Coach Pete Newell's Giant Kill sophic mold as his highly suc for perennial athletic achieve other great year (so great that word nostalgic. -
Ncaa Men's Basketball's Finest
The NCAA salutes 360,000 student-athletes participating in 23 sports at 1,000 member institutions NCAA 48758-10/05 BF05 MEN’S BASKETBALL’S FINEST THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION P.O. Box 6222, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-6222 www.ncaa.org October 2005 Researched and Compiled By: Gary K. Johnson, Associate Director of Statistics. Distributed to Division I sports information departments of schools that sponsor basketball; Division I conference publicity directors; and selected media. NCAA, NCAA logo and National Collegiate Athletic Association are registered marks of the Association and use in any manner is prohibited unless prior approval is obtained from the Association. Copyright, 2005, by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Printed in the United States of America. ISSN 1521-2955 NCAA 48758/10/05 Contents Foreword ............................................................ 4 Players................................................................ 7 Player Index By School........................................168 101 Years of All-Americans.................................174 Coaches ..............................................................213 Coach Index By School........................................288 On the Cover Top row (left to right): Tim Duncan, Bill Walton, Michael Jordan and Oscar Robertson. Second row: Jerry West, Dean Smith, James Naismith and Isiah Thomas. Third row: Bill Russell, Shaquille O’Neal, Carmelo Anthony and John Wooden. Bottom row: Tubby Smith, Larry Bird, Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul- Jabbar) and David Robinson. – 3 – Foreword Have you ever wondered about how many points Michael Jordan scored at North Carolina? Or how many shots were swatted away by Shaquille O’Neal at LSU? What kind of shooting percentage did Bill Walton have at UCLA? What was John Wooden’s coaching won-lost record before he went to UCLA? Did former Tennessee coach Ray Mears really look like Cosmo Kramer? The answers to these questions and tons more can be found in these pages. -
The Early Rounds
The Early Rounds Opening Round Records .......................... 2 First-, Second- and Third-Round Game Records ........................................... 3 Regional Game Records ............................ 5 Sweet 16 Records......................................... 8 Elite 8 Records ............................................... 8 All-Regional Teams ...................................... 10 2 OPENING ROUND RECORDS Opening Round Records 8, Marcus Stewart, Winthrop vs. Northwestern St., WINNING MARGIN Single Game, Individual 3-13-2001 24, Richmond (89) vs. Rider (65), 3-13-1984 8, Marcus Fleming, Alcorn St. vs. Siena, 3-12-2002 22, Monmouth (71) vs. Hampton (49), 3-14-2006 POINTS 8, Rawle Marshall, Oakland vs. Alabama A&M, 19, Alcorn St. (79) vs. Houston Baptist (60), 3-13- 38, Kevin Mullin, Princeton vs. San Diego, 3-13-1984 3-15-2005 1984 31, Prosper Karangwa, Siena vs. Alcorn St., 3-12- 8, Kenneth Faried, Morehead St. vs. Alabama St., POINTS SCORED BY LOSING TEAM 2002 3-17-2009 87, Long Island vs. Northeastern (90), 3-13-1984 29, Clif Brown, Niagara vs. Florida A&M, FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED 84, Texas Southern vs. UNC Asheville (92), 3-18- 3-13-2007 16, Kevin Mullin, Princeton vs. San Diego, 3-13-1984 2003 29, Rawle Marshall, Oakland vs. Alabama A&M, 14, Andre Smith, UNC Asheville vs. Texas Southern, 77, Alcorn St. vs. Siena (81), 3-12-02 3-15-2005 3-18-2003 FIELD GOALS 28, Allen Lovett, Texas Southern vs. UNC Asheville, 13, Marcus Fleming, Alcorn St. vs. Siena, 3-12-2002 39, Long Island vs. Northeastern, 3-13-1984 3-18-2003 13, Allen Lovett, Texas Southern vs. UNC Asheville, 36, Richmond vs. Rider, 3-13-1984 28, Andre Smith, UNC Asheville vs. -
Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1971-1972
Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1971-1972 Eastern Kentucky University Year 1972 Eastern Progress - 06 Apr 1972 Eastern Kentucky University This paper is posted at Encompass. http://encompass.eku.edu/progress 1971-72/26 Intercession Catalina Club Schedule Performs Page 5 (The i.isrmi progress Page 8 I/ S Sittinjetting JhtThe PittPate In 4J ProjrtssiviPrnere<<ive iraFra /1 «^*^"~ <> of Eastern X|n tucky University, Richmond, Ky. 8 Pages Thursday, April 6, 1972 49th year. Number' 29 Student Publication Nader Cites Abuses, Fraud Birth Control Is Urges Students To Fight Senate Topic BY LISA COLLINS Commenting on the Student Staff Writer Senate's pregnancy information the consumer. He said that which involves calling a specific BY PALI.A GOODIN helped by issuing a pamphlet The question of distribution of telling people how to watch consumers are cheated on the phone number, Student Featare Kditor contraceptives was the main Association President Chuck color TV. "I wonder how many market by being offered unsafe order of business at the Student small children read that products when industry has the Kelhoffer stated that the Senate meeting Tuesday night. Student Senate does not run an "We are developing the pamphlet." said Nader. technology to produce safer Senator Stephan Louis abortion agency or give out disease* and maladies of the In 1970 industry spent «'* products. proposed that the campus in- such information. "All we do is 1980's and two's right now," billion on pollution Compared "The automobile is at present firmary be given the authority said Ralph Nader at Tuesday to the $80 billion made before the sight for the greatest source get the person in touch with and responsibility of Planned Parenthood in night's lecture- taxes and the expension of $80 of domestic violence. -
(Charlotte, NC). 1972-09-21
.. .1. i'',.. f Sports Six Former A&T Athletes »! : i Beat Named To Hall Of Fame with GREENSBORO N C Six i: * He was dialled m the Inst i \ of the finest athletes ever M.ixe a native of Green- to round h\ the New for York Giants Mile \ c Bill Johnson compete North Carolina in 15*5(i competed for A&T and played two veers A&T State University, have rmm 18:14-38 He He has also coached at been selected for induction 'Mis .1 two time All-CIAA y JohnsonT Smith. Shaw and Jnto the university's Snorts iiultback .ind also a track star Southern University WILL Hall GET YOU TWO OF .. of Fame on Saturday jJtONE C. Smith Oct. 7 ^■Aohnson University got by Tuskegee Alston, a Greensboro \ (' Retore* his death, he ■sLtute here was., ... That Saturday night Morgan native was an All-UI'AA principal ol Robinson High out The ''cliool m ■pte College. whichjaombed in Atlanta last second group of in- baseball star at VAT Indore Winterville night, is very pleased with Its^per^ ductees includes Art Statum. becoming a major leaguer ^■turday■•mance Carolina The St against Grambling in New York City Cougars Begin varsity wrestling coach at Louis Cardinals paid {■s week before. -LaFawtte CoIIppp San Diego of thi* Pacific Coast Hamilton, a native of ^ ■ Penna Robert- LragUe~rinii.o'io mi m ....— ..Mortolk \ .i was pop ■The Bears held the big Tigers scoreless for the "Stonewall" of the Jackson, tract. Mi st \&T to Hst time since 1969. The last assistant football boxers earn All- time_Grambling I coach at North Carolina \A honors He graduated in to score a touchdown was Kaiford. -
Thousands Killed in Iran Quake \ by JOHN A
The Weather W a ylH m rd h Cloudy tonlgM and moat ot Tueaday, with a chance ot brief Bytohn Gruhet rain or anow. Low tonight In the 30s, high Tueaday near b4. Outr look for Wedneaday — fair. MancHe$ter^A CUy of Village Charm (CliMUIed Advertlaiiir on Fage 17) PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS VOL. Xa* NO. 162 ( (TW E N TY PAG ES) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, APRIL 10, 1972 Thousands Killed In Iran Quake \ By JOHN A . gOHNgTON (Herald Beporter) TBJHRAN, Iran (AF) — A de Sunday — ii^en residents of the area M in Laurie Lee Osgood, l^yeiu**oId daughter of Mr. earthquake rocked southern Iran early 060 miles south of Tduran were stin wd Benton Osgood of Vernon, was named Miaa < today. Oovemment (^cials said they asleep in their mud-brick villages. Manchester 1972 Saturday night at the fburth annual ^ could not estimate the number killed yet, Officials in Shiraz and Tehran launched Miss Manchester Scholarship Pageant, sponsored by the but unofficial reports said between 2,000 relief meastu-es for the stricken region. Manchaster Jaycees, in Bailey Auditorium of Manches- and 4,000 died. Hellc(q>ters loaded with mediCBl siq^ ______ \ ' ___________ ter High &ho6L "This is one of the biggest earthquakes pUea, blankets and food took off, and ever to hit Iran," a spokesman for the She also received the MIm convoys of trucks loaded with relief siq>- Congeniality Award, voted by Terhan University Geophirslc institute plies began moving toward the region. the IS conteatanta. said. He reported it registered a 7 on the Richter scale.