THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Paae See f Kan sas capt in NCAA tr By KEITH WOOD Special To The Daily a DETROIT-On the str ngth of their field events, Kansas built up a quick 10 point lead last night in the NCAA Indoor Track and Field championships. The Jayhawks built up their lead 25-15 over second place Villanova after the first night's events. Kansas picked up 13 of their points by finishing 1-2-3 in the shot. Karl Salb set a new NCAA indoor record on his first toss, eclipsing the old record by over three feet. The throw was measured at 66-8 . Ron Jessie ahd Stan Whitley gave the Jayhawks ten more points by capturing the first two spots in the long jump. daily NIGHT EDITOR: PAT ATKINS Jessie had a winning flight of 25-2%1/2. Whitley fell only half an inch short of the mark. Michigan long-jumper, Ira Rus- sell, jumped the farthest he has ever done, 24-3%. But he missed qualifying for the finals by three- quarters of an inch. The Jayhavyks got their other two points by virtue of a fourth place finish in the triple jump. Kansas surprisingly lost a few expected points as Jim Ryun fail- ures ed to finish the tw Ryun had easily quali mile to be run this a running a 4:09.2 ear evening. But Ryun, th two-mile champion,tr track after three laps blisters suffered in hi mile. Ryun has a problem ers when running on cause Kansas has a ci All Ryun said was," want to talk about it." blisters, Ryun is expec pete in the mile finals Michigan's Olympiar chinskl, garnished fou the Wolverines by fir ond in the half-mile. finishing in 1:52.5, wa by Villanova's Frank R ran a 1:51.1. Another Wolverine] freshman Gene Bro qualified for the sen the 60-yard dash wit :06.3. Brown will fi among some fast com as four qualifiers finis John Carlos of San Mike Goodrich of In souri's Mel Gray, an State{freshman Herb all blistered the boar qualifying heats. Other events run ii trials for the 60-yard dles, 600-yard run, th run, and the mile rela Other than Gene B] igan has only one oth the finals. The Wolveri relay squad will run strongly favored Villa but they may b'e able t points. Another: Wolverine Larry Wolf, will com pole vault today. The strong one, led by O 1967 NCAA champion gren. Villancva's Larry J San Jose's Lee Evans time in his life to cap crown. Evans comnplaix did not run well on t losing to James. "We run outdoors nia," he said. "I'm r running' on boards," marked, "I've been run boards since high sch That San Jose State first ch ampion ship o-mile run. to running on boards was quite But if his blisters trouble him fied for the evident as their mile relay team, today in the mile, Ryun's feet fternoon by composed of three Olympians, could be the Achilles Heel of the lier in the failed to qualify for the finals. Kansas' efforts to gain the crown. Le defending Kent State's' Sam Bair thrilled If Ryun doesn't come through ran off the the crowd of over 9,000, the larg- in the mile, the Jayhawks still. because of est in the history of the meet, by might take the first-place trophy is qualifying winning the invitational mile in back to Kansas on the strength 4:01.7, setting a new meet record of their performance in last with blist- for that event. The old record was night's field events. And with boards be- set by none other than Jim Ryun Ryun sound, Kansas' lead should nder track. in 1966. be next to insurmountable. I d on 't evenc ted tocmDespithSalb smashes shot put mark-; today. n, Ron Kut- , y1 1 r points for UW Ry nishing sec- Kutchinski, By ERIC SIEGEL is nosed out By EI SEEL Murphy who Special To The Daily DETROIT-Before the doors were even opened at Cobo Hall for hopeful was the 5th Annual NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championship last wn. Brown night, Karl Salb of Kansas tossed the shot 66'83%", bettering the ni-finals of previous indoor mark, held by Texan strongman Randy Matson, by h a time of over three feet. Clearly, Salb's feat was an omen of things to come. nd himself The meet, which attracted a total of 91 teams from all four, ipany today corners of the country, was billed beforehand as a toss-up between hed in 06. USC, Villanova, the 1967 indoor champions, Texas at El Paso and Jose Statei diana, Mis-' Kansas, with San Jose State given an outside chance to capture the d Michigan NCAA crown. Washington But the Jayhawks, the pride of the natioh's breadbasket, threat- 'ds in their ened to run away with the meet with seven eventsstill to be run this afternoon. At the end of the first night's competition, Kansas holds ncluded the a commanding ten-point lead over second-place Villanova, with 25 high hur- points to 15 for Villanova. e 1000 -yard The Jayhawks amassed an early in the evening's first event, as Ys. Salb led Kansas to a 1-2-3 finish in the shot put. Salb's record heave Town, bested the efforts of teammates Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop, whose er entry in tosses of 61' and 60' 1-/4" respectively, were good for second and third iagainst a place finishes. The Kansas musclemen had given their team thirteen nova team, points before any other events had been completed. o gain some But the Jayhawks supremacy in this event was conceded even before the meet began. In fact, many observers fully expected Kansas freshman, to sweep the event. However, the strong, and perhaps overpowering, pete in the exhibition given by the central plainsmen in the Pink and Blue was field is a a somewhat discouraging surprise to the other title aspirants. lympic and In the next event - the long jump - Kansas continued its Bob Sea- heavy-handed domination of the field events. Ron Jessie, a sopho- rartes edged more, led the field with a leap of 25' 2-%/". Jessie just barely edged for the first out the best effort of teammate Stan Whitely, the Big Eight cham- ture 'the 440 pion, who registered a 25-2 mark. The 1-2 finish gave Kansas a total ned that he of 23 team points, on a 6-4-3-2-1 basis for the top five finishes. he turns in After such outstanding early efforts; Kansas could hardly be expected to continue its blistering performance. And, indeed, the Jay- in Califor- hawks did slack off a bit, picking up only two additional points. The not used to points came in the triple jump, where Ken Gaines came through James re- with a fourth place finish. zning on the Ironically, Kansas, a team best known through the efforts of soolts long-distance stalwart Jim Ryun, showed last night that its true is not used strength lay in the field events. The Jayhawks were less than im- pressive in the running events. Whitely in the 60-yard dash and Jessie in the 60-yard high hurdles, who qualified for today's semi-final heats in those events; the mile relay team, one of eight teams to qualify; and Ryun, who qualified for the mile run; are the only Jayhawks that will be running this afternoon. day in ineiacion-packed game be- tween the two fast-breaking clubs. McDivitt added the clinching basket 34 seconds later, and, after Simmie Hill scored for West Texas, Canine's free throw ended the scoring with 26 seconds to go. West Texas, 18-8, missed two final chances when Mike Mitchell, who finished with 23 points, miss- with 14 seconds left and the Buf- faloes lost the ball again seconds later on a traveling call. McKee, who kept the Bobcats rolling in the second half with 15 points, finished with 21, one more than McDivitt. Ken Kowall added 18 and Canine 12. Hill,,a 6-foot-6 top pro prospect, bogged down with only three points in the first half, but broke loose for 15 after the intermission to finish with 18. Ohio, 17-8, led 42-40 at the half, but Hill and Mitchell put West SCORES College Basketball NIT Ohio U.-82, West Texas State 80 Tennessee 67, Rutgers 51 NCAA Small College Maryland State 93, Cent. Wash. 87 E. New Mexico 75, Elizabeth City, N.C. 72 NATA Amer. International 53, Ashland 51 Kent. Wesleyan 75, Southwest Mo. 71 NCAA Hockey Cornell 4, Michigan Tech 3 PRO SCORESI Exhibition Baseball Detroit 4, Philadelphia 2 Minnesota 1, Atlanta 0 Chica go (A) 9, Los Angeles 3 Montreal 3, Washington 1 New York (N) 16, St. Louis 6 Cleveland 4, seattle 2 San Francisco 13, California 1 San Diego 8, Oakland 4 Boston 7, Pittsburgh 4 Cincinnati 5, Houston 2 Baltimore 5, New York (A) 2 I NBA Baltimore 130, Cincinnati 128 ABAI Dallas 123, New York 106 New Orleans 139, Houston 116 r a .. } i i 'r } winugers o(-7 3na Darrage of free throws last night in the nightcap of a first-round double- header in the National Invitation Basketball Tournament. Croft, a mobile 6-foot-i pivot man, pumped in 17 of his total 21 points in the first half as the Greacen made it 51-46, but then the Vols hit 14 of their last 16 points from the free throw line and scored the last 10 points of the game. Jim England hit six of the free throws and finished with 19 points. Injuries hurt Purdue, UCLA, as regional playoff finals. start lead' INI NIT: IOhio slins by WTS, 82-80. NEW YORK (P)-Gerry McKee, Texas aheadd early in the second Volunteers took a 35-28 lead. It Greg McDivitt and John Canine half and the lead continued back was Croft's two baskets that put slipped Ohio University by West and forth as neither team could the Southeast Conference runner- Texas State 82-80 last night in a pull more than five points ahead up ahead to stay, 15-12. see - saw, rapid - fire basketball in the contest. Rutgers, 21-4, got within 48-44 game in the first round of the Rutgemidway-through ithiecnd4hal4 National Invitation Tournament. Vols romp 67-51 onteay hrogh the s cond half Canine's two free throws, in a but a free throw by Bill Justus one-and-one situation with 2:24 NEW YORK () - Tennessee and Croft's basket ended Rutgers' remaining, put Ohio ahead 79-78 pulled ahead early on the scoring last hope of keeping alive its 16- after 19 lead changes and 14 ties of Bob Croft and then polished tae o eing al t i u nf4A-.1uha,,r,,game winning streak. By The Associated Press Purdue, led by the high-scoring Rick Mount, and Marquette clash this afternoon in the final of the NCAA Mideast Regional Basket- ball Tournament at the University of Wisconsin. . George King, Purdue coach, said his club will have to play without Chuck Bavis, a 7-foot center from Geneva, Indiana. Bavis suffered a shoulder separa- tion in the Miami game. In the far west,,it's one down and three to go for UCLA in its bid for a record third straight NCAA basketball championship.- But the second game could be the toughest for the defending cham- pions. If the Bruins don't get by once- beaten Santa Clara in today's re- gional final there won't be any third or fourth games for the na- tion's No. 1 team. It depends on the condition of Lew Alcindor, the 7-foot-I 12 three-time All American cepter who twisted his right ankle against New Mexico State. The early report was that t h e injury wasn't serious, but Coach Johnny Wooden said he was awaiting a late examination to de- termine Lew's exact condition. In the Eastern Regional, Coach Dean Smith of North Carolina gives the psychological advantage to Davidson in today's NCAA game. Lefty Driesell, coach of David- son, thinks the, winner will be "the team with the most vine- gar," Coaches Maury John of Drake and Jim Williams of Colorado State University do not agree with with the labels placed on their basketball teams, which collide this afternoon for a berth in the NCAA tournament. finals. Drake, soaring along with an 11-game winning streak and 24-4 for the season, has been tabbed a run-aid-shoot team, while Color- ado State has been cast as a ball- control club. TODAY'S NCAA PAIRINGS East Regional At College Park, Md. North Carolina, 26-3, No. 4, vs. Davidson, 27-2, No. 5, 2:15 p.m. Mideast Regional At Madison, Wis. Purdue, 21-4, No. 6, vs. Mar' quette, 24-4, No. 14, 4:15 p.m. Midwest Regional At Manhattan, Kan. Drake, 24-4, No. 11, vs. Colo- rado State U., 18-6, unranked, 4:15 p.m. Far West Regional At Los Angeles UCLA, 26-1, No. 1, vs. Santa Clara, 27-1, No. 3, 6:15 p.m. WOLVERINE TRACKMAN Gary Gold begins his kick in the last lap of his portion of the two-mile relay. Michigan is defending its title in this event this weekend at the NCAA Indoor Cham- pionships in Detroit. CASH'S IN: Carmpbell sparks Tiger victory LAKELAND, Fla.-Rookie Dave Campbell knocked in what proved to be the winning run yesterday as the Detroit Tigers topped Phil- adelphia 4-2 in exhibition base- ball. Campbell singled in first base- man Norm Cash for the Bengal's second run in the sixth inning. . Detroit added another in the eighth as Cash walked and came all the way home 'when Phillie's centerfielder Ron Stone misjudged Willie Horton's fly. * * * * PHOhNIX, Ariz. - The San Francisco Giants whacked the ex- perimental lively baseball for 15 hits, including two homers by Bobby Bonds, in a '13-1 Cactus League victory over the California Angels yesterday. The ball was used at the request of Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who watched the game. It is slightly larger and has a larger, all-rubber core compared with the corkg and rubber core of the regulation ball. It won't be used in the regular season. Bonds homered in the first af- ter leadoff man Willie Mays sin- gled;. and again ',In the second, scoring Cesar Guiterrez ahead of him. t* * WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - The Montreal Expos sent Ted Williams and his winless Wash- ington Senators down to their eighth straight defeat yesterday, scoring a 3-1 victory with help from rookie Juan Rios' tie-break- ing single in the sixth inning. With the score tied 1-1, John ONLY CHANCE TO SEE THE BEATLES UNRELEASED FILM: Magical Mystery Tour Sunday, March 16:1, 2:30,4,5:30 Monday, March 17 7, 8:30,10 Natural Science Auditorium (N.U. & State) Bocabella led off the sixth with a double and raced home on the single by Rios, who had replaced Maury Wills at shortstop. Jim "Mudcat" Grant made his first appearance for the Expos and pitched t h r e e scoreless innings. BONUS DAYS. from 12 Noon-5 P.M. at i T- NEWMAN CENTERdic u t r ods 331 Thompsonic Sat. & Sun., Mar..15-16 1235 S. University only 10 A.M.-6 P.M. 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