Saturday, March 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven _..dyMrh23 98TH ,HGA AL Porter Makes Finals; Gridder's Scrimmage Moved to Fieldhouse M' Grapplers Special To The Daily \UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. --- About all Michigan had salvaged after the completion of the semi- finals in the NCAA Wrestling Championship was a little pride. And not too much of that. Dbwn in tenth place with 20 points after the results of yes- terday's action, Michigan hangs ten points 'behind fourth place Michigan. State and 45 points behind first place. Oklahoma. Only Dave Porter and Pete Cor- nell/are left in competition. Porter, perhaps rued by two previous losses to his nemesis. Jeff Smith of the Spartan's, was the only survivor of the semi- finals, as he beat Smith; 7-0, in the run-away heavyweight grudge match. The two had met twice previous this year, with Smith" grabbing both the victories. De- fending.champion Michigan State *had its hopes for, a repeat crown jolted by Porter, although Smith could still grab a second place berth. In the finals tomorrow Porter, seeded third, will face number( [enthI fall at 4:29, which stretched his pin streak to three. The other representative from Michigan in the NCAA semi- finals, 167-pounder Cornell, was pinned by Fresco State's Mike Gallego with 4:59 gone in the match. Gallego, first seeded in the tournament, also beat Cor- nell last year when the two faced each other. Cornell is still alive in the con- solation finals, with a win in his first match, and still has a chance for third place. The three other Michigan wrestlers with a chance to wres- tle-back - Geoff Henson at 137, Steve Rubin at 123, and Fred Stehman at 160 - all saw their victors lose, putting them out of competition. Henson's previous opponent, Martin Willingan of Hofstra, was beaten by Michigan State's Dalej Anderson, the 137 division de-' fending champion. Oklahoma State's lone finalist, Dwayne Kel- ler dashed Rubin's hopes for a wrestle-back with a win over Bill DeSario, Rubin's quarterfinal con- queror. And Dave Wiendl, Steh- man's victor also lost, to leave Michigan with only two conten- ders. Favored Oklahoma State faded out of the picture as bitter rival Oklahoma racked up a 65 point' total, and placed four men in the finals to Oklahoma State's lone wrestler, Keller. Iowa State, still within striking distance, was second with 57 points and three finalists. With Oklahoma State holding faraway third at 36 points and MSU fourth, Portland State rounds out* the first five going into today's finals. With everyone else looking for be no kicking.Instead of moving spring, the Michigan gridders are in a continuous fashion toward already on their way toward next the goal lines, the units will be fall. running several different forma- A few "never-say-die" specta- tions from the same place. The tors will be on hand at Ferry Field emphasis is on fundamentals. this afternoon for the first "foot- There won't be any scorecards, ball" game of the year - better either, but they wouldn't help known as an intra-squad scrim- much anyway because none of the mage. jerseys have numbers. However, The encounter is scheduled to there will be recognizable combi- begin at 2 p.m., but that time is nations like Dennis Brown, Garvie no more definite than the location. Craw, John Gabler. and Ron The local weather gods may force Johnson. the entire affair into adjacent Now that the first week of prac- Yost Field House. tice is under the gridders' belts, Head coach Bump Elliott calls the coaches will rearrange the it a "preliminary scrimmage," units as each player receives in- rather than a game. tense scrutiny-starting with to- It may even get boring. The day's game. Blue offense runs against the Gold MICHIGAN "BLUE" TEAM (second) defense. Then the Gold1 Offensive offense runs against the Blue de- ENDS-Jim Mandich and Bill fense. Then the White units get Harris into the picture. TACKLES-Bob Penska, Werner The idea is to give everyone a Hall chance to play.i GUARDS--Bob Baumgartner No score will be kept. There will -4# -. Dave Porter -Daily-Jim Forsyth COACH TONY MASON demonstrates the art of efficient ballhandling to Michigan grid hopefuls, The spring's first scrimmage which was scheduled for tomorrow on Ferry Field will be moved into Yost Fieldhouse because of the weather. The light head-knocking session will begin about 2:00 P.M. IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR one seeded Jeff Lewis of Okla- homa State. To reach his match against Smith, Porter had to defeat Rich- ard Schumaker of East Strouds- berg College. He did it with a Ohio State Bombarded in Semis Spitbsall Feud Sparksh Tiger 8- Slugfest *By The Associated Press let Len Gabrielson score the North Carolina, ranked Number LOS ANGELES WP)-All-Ameri- can Larry Miller led North Caro- lina to a resounding 80-66 vic- tory over Ohio State's Cinderella team last night in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's basketball semifinals. North Carolina, ranked Number Four nationally, will meet the winner of the Houston-UCLA clash in Saturday's finals for the national collegiate championship. Miller scored 20 points but had solid aid from Rusty Clark in rebounding and Charlie Scott de- A fist fight between Dennis Ribant, Detroit pitcher, and George Thomas, Boston outfield- er, enlivened the exhibition base- ball scene yesterday. It happened during the sixth inning of the game at Lakeland, Fla., won by Detroit 8-6. Thomas, at bat, asked plate umpire Jo O'Donnell to examine the ball after one of Ribant's pitches.. "He threw me a couple of spit- tels, and I asked the umpire to look at the ball," Thomas -said. v Ribant threw the ball over Thomas' head. Thomas ran to the mound as players of both teams rushed onto the field.. Thomas and Ribant exchanged punches on the mound before they were parted. Both were ejected from the game. Los Angeles came up with two runs in the ninth and beat St. Louis 3-2 in St. Petersburg, Fla. A wild throw from outfielder Dick Simpson on Tom Hutton's single winning run. Hutton's single had scored Jim Lefebvre with the ty,- ing tally. Philadelphia snapped a seven- game losing streak on Tony Tay- lor's ninth-inning single for a 9-8 victory over Oakland at Clear- water, Fla. 76 ers Wa fensively. Playoffs' to' PHILADELPHIA (P) - A bril- liant all-around performance by Wilt Chamberlain sparked the Philadelphia 76ers to a come- from-behind 118-110 victory over the New York Knicker-bockers last night in the first game of the Eastern Division semifinal playoffs of the National Basket- ball Association. rriors Take Openers SContinue Tonight Ohio State battled gamely, but was badly hurt when" captain Bill Hosket fouled out with 9:30 min-° utes left after scoring 14 points and spearheading the work on the boards. North Carolina jumped into an early lead before the Los Angeles UCLA beat Houston 101-69 last night to qualify for the NCAA finals against North Carolina tonight. Led by Lynn Shackel- ford and Lew Alcindor, the Bruins jumped out to a 24 . point half time lead and were , . . never threatened the rest of the . way. Sports Arena capacity crowd but Hosket and reserve Jody Finney . sparked an Ohio State rally. -- The Buckeyes pulled ahead at NORTH CAROLINA'S LARRY 21-20 and the lead changed hands Heels past Ohio State and their1 six times before the 6'4" Miller. the NCAA semifinals last nig paced a Tar Heel surge to a 34-27 halftime lead. Hosket was ejected from theg Miller, Clark and then Millersurge, including t hree straight again scored field goals just be- field goals, gave him 13. Steve fore the intermission. Howell led the Buckeyes with 15 Finney cut the lead with a bas- and Hosket and Finney scored 14 ket as the second half opened, but ndeach. four points by Bill Bunting in- H. creased the margin again. Hosket collected a pair of free jus after he scored a basket. He was called for charging on the throws before Miller hit twice, play The score was 58-50 at the sending North Carolina ahead by time Both teams played a ragged and Stan Broadnax. CENTER-David Denzin BACKS-Dennis Brown, Gar- vie Craw, John Gabler, and Ron Johnson Defensive ENDS-John Kramer and Phil Seymour TACKLES-Tom Goss and Ger- ry Miklos MIDDLE GUARD-James Wil- hite LINEBACKERS-Tom Stincie and Mike Hankwitz CORNERBACKS-Brian Healy and Jerry Hartman or George Hoey SAFETYS-Tom Curtis and Barry Pierson Dianondmen Lose 9-0 In Seasoii Debut TEMPE-The Michigan Wol- verines opened their 1968 season last night down in Arizona (with 78-degree temperatures) against the number one ranked team in the nation, Arizona State. Michigan lost 9-0, but went into the eighth inning behind only 4-0. Arizona State scoring five runs in their last inning. Threatening in the fifth, sixth, and ninth innings, the Wolverines MILLER (left) paced the Tar big center Bill Hosket (right) in ht in Los Angeles. The fired up game early in the second half, SPORTS BULLETS: Austrian Skiers Roll 0 SUN VALLEY, Idaho (A)-Paced by Gerhard Nenning, who won the men's downhill, the Austrian ski team, moved into a first-day lead yesterday in the three-day American Inter- national team ski meet. Canada's Nancy Greene walked away with the women's downhill as she was almost a full three seconds ahead of her nearest competitor. Nenning, in winning the men's at 2:02.81, was 35 seconds ahead of French skiing sensation Jean-Claude Killy. The Austrian was jubiliant after the race and said he be- heved the Austrian team could beat the french if the Austrian girls did well. Killy appeared morose and refused to talk to newsmen. 0 LOS ANGELES (A')-Guy Lewis of Houston was an- nounced yesterday as winner of the United States Basketball Writers award as coach-of-the-year. Lewis' Cougars went through the season undefeated and reached the NCAA championship round with a 31-0 record. Bob Polk of Trinity University in Texas was the winner of the Na- tional Association of Basketball Coaches' award as College Division coach-of-the-year. Trinity finished third in the College Division tournament. 0 MEXICO CITY (1)-Topseeded Arthur Ashe of the U.S. Army advanced to the semifinals singles of Mexico's Interna- # tional Tennis Tournament yesterday, defeating Roberto Chavez of Mexico 7-5, 6-4. Mexico's Davis Cup player, Rafael Osuna, also entered the semifinals beating countryman Andres Donnadieu 8-6, 6-3. The lanky, bespectacled Ashe meets Mexican Joaquin Loyo Mayo in the semifinals Saturday, while Osuna will meet Pa- tricio Rodriguez of Chile. ! ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. ( P)-Roger Maris, the man who seven years ago, broke Babe Ruth's single season home run record, intimated yesterday this would be his last season as a ballplayer. "I feel fine," said Maris, referring to his winter trouble with Bell's Palsy. "But it gets tougher every year. I don't want to say anything definite, but I really didn't think I would play his year, just as I felt certain when I left the Yankees two years ago that I'd retire." The best-of-7 series resumes tonight night in New York. New York held a 10-point lead at 69-59 with 8:46 remaining in the third quarter, before Phila- delphia spurted for 10 straight points and a 69-69 tie with 5:26 left. Philadelphia then got hot and opened up an 82-76 lead entering the final period. The 76ers' big- gest margin was 13 points at 109- 96 with 2:45 remaining as Cham- berlain and Wally Jones provid- ed the spark. Chamberlain scored 37 points, pulled down 29 rebounds and handed off seven assists to wreck the Knicks, who had bothered Philadelphia the second half of the regulation season with a zone press as they won three of the last four games between the two clubs. Willis Reed took game-scoring honors with 38 points for New Reed and Dick Barnett, a 29-' point contributor, that kept Newj the game. Dayton vs. Kansas In NIT Finale NEW YORK (W)-The tall, deep Jayhawks of Kansas were favored by just one point' yesterday to beat Dayton's streakingebasket- ball Flyers for the championship of the National Invitation Tour- nament today. Another sellout crowd of 19,500 was assured at Madison Square Garden although the title contest will be telecast locally as well as nationally by CBS. Starting time is 2 p.m. Notre Dame, edged 76-74 in overtime by Dayton in the semi- finals Thursday night, will meet St. Peter's, N.J., trounced 58-43 by Kansas, for third place. This game will start at noon. "Our styles are similar," said Dayton Coach Don Donoher. "We both use a disciplined offense and stress defense. The rebounding could be decisive." SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT BERRY first half and the Buckeyes alsoh were cold from the free throw orr, line, hitting only three of nine at- Tito Arvi tempts. Mad From the floor they hit only Reds 35.3 per cent, although North Car- Ho s olina wasn't much better at 40.5 Fish, per cent. schn Fors The tempo picked up in the Rent second half. Ka North Carolina quickly moved Bays out to a 68-54 lead after Hosket Tota M fouled out. A could n't generate ne, ph ai, of dox, of Imon, 311 on, c er;, iB her, of midt, ss ythe, 2B kiewicz, p It ster, p als 3' 1 0 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 33 000 110 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 1ot 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 ' 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.0 8 0 000-0 05x-9 a run producing Tonight's final and consola- tion rounds of the NCAA bas- ketball tournament will be tele- cast tonight over WWJ TV Channel 4, starting at 9:30 p.m. Unranked Ohio State, which won the right to represent the Big Ten by winning a playoff, battled gamely but lacked the fin- esse of the Tar Heels. Bunting wound up with 13 points in the second half and was second high for the winners with a total of 17. Clark had 15 and Scott's late SCORES Exhibition Baseball Detroit 8, Boston 6 Atlanta 5, New York 1 Minnesota 11, Cincinnati 1 Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 Philadelphia 9, Oakland 8 Washington 8, iPttsburgh 2 Chicago 10, California 0 San Francisco 5, Cleveland 4 Baltimore 7, New York 3 NCAA Basketball Playoffs North Carolina 80, Ohio State Uni- versity 66 versity 66 NBA Playoffs Philadelphia 118, New York 110 San Francisco 111, St. Louis 106 Wilt Chamberlain ST. LOUIS (A') - Jeff Mullins scored 13 points in the final per- iod as the San Francisco Warriors! beat the St. Louis Hawks 111-106 last night to take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven Western Divis- on playoffs of the National Bas- ketball Association. Mullins, who had 29 points for the game, helped the Warriors break open a third-period dead- lock. When St. Louis came back to within one point late in the game, Mullinsrhit a jump shot that killed the rally. The Warriors had drawn event at 75-all as Bob Warlick scoredc nine points in the last three min- utes of the third period. Warlick took over the scoring load afterI Rudy LaRusso scored eight of: the Warriors' first 10 points in the third period. Don Ohl, who had 26 points, rallied St. Louis in the final min- utes with key jumpers. SUNDAY, MARCH 24 11:45 A.M. AMANDA FENWICK Sandals - Boots -Leather Goods NOW OPEN 522 East William in Maynard House A MUSKET CS PETITIONING NOW FOR 68-'69 CENTRAL COMMITTEE ALL POSITIONS Petitions available at Musket office 2nd floor Michigan Union DUE SAT., MARCH 23 "RACISM IN ANN ARBOR" Mr. Robert Hunter, Asst. Director, Human Relations Commission of Ann Arbor NOON DINNER-FORUM at the Campus Presbyterian Center, 1432 Washtenaw Dinner-75c Reservations: 662-3580 or 665-6575 I UNiON-LEAGUE 1:30-4:30 P.M. DELI HOUSE Spring Thing GAME DAY 3rd floor Union 11 resumes next Sunday, March 31 at 5:30 P.M. (No Deli this Sunday) 1 PRIZES FOR EVERYONE Call 665-4034 for information I UN ION-LEAGUE ,I University Charter Caledonian Airways FLY TO LONDON from DETROIT $230 Roundtrip T 1 I SOPH SHOW '68 UNION-LEAGUE UNION-LEAGUE ANNOUNCING T H E PETITIONING FOR SUMMER COMMITTEE .i .L E . . U. - * 2 k . A I " A liberal thinks somebody else needs help. A radical knows that he is the one who needs help." -Rev. William Sloane Coffin And what does William Rusher think? He knows he is RIGHT.I WILLIAM USH PuhUic~ah i. of h 12£) ]*,J1_,, ii l£) announces petitioning for the following Central Committee positions: Assistant Props General Chairman Stage Manager Director Publicity Musical Director Program Choreographer Treasurer Costumes Secretary Make-up Lighting I Ili