r' Sunday, !March 16, 1969 SHE MICHIGAN DAILY poo, FIEven F 'Boilermakers, Tar Heels cap ture regional titles Purdue downs Marquette; Mount hits jumper at horn From Wire Service Reports MADISON--Rick Mount's jum- per- at the buzzer gave Purdue a 4 75-73 overtime victory over an underrated Marquette team in the Mideast Regional final yesterday at the University of Wisconsin field house. The Boilermakers appeared to be headed for an easy win as they streaked to a 9-1 lead and in- creased it to 14-3 before the War- riors began their slow comeback. Led by George Thompson and Dean Meminger, the Warriors pecked away at the Purdue lead and were within five, 35-30. at the half. The surge continued and Mar- quette pulled to within one, 40-39, before Herman Gilliam, Purdue's leading rebounder who had been sidelined with a sprained ankle and was not expected to see much action, inspired the Boilermakers back into a six point bulge, 46-40. At that point the Marquette press began to work and the Warriors scored ten of the next twelve points to take the lead, 50-48, for the first time in the game. After that the game turned into a real barnburner, with the teams trading baskets until Marquette gained possession of the ball with about four minutes remaining in the game and leading 60-59. Then little Dean Meminger put on quite a show. With almost no help from his teammates, the little guard froze the ball until only 1:15 remained in the contest, at which point Marquette called time out. When' the time out ended, the Boilermakers immediately fouled Meminger. When Meminger sank both halves of the one and one to give Marquette a three point bulge, things looked bleak for the Big Ten's representative in the NCAA tournament. Things looked bleaker still for the Boilermakers after Mount missed a shot and Thompson pull- ed the rebound down, but the out- look brightened just a little when Meminger missed a free throw and Jerry Johnson, subbing for in- jured center Chuck Bavis, pulled down the rebound. The Boilermakers crept to with- in one point with a little less than 30 seconds remaining in the sec- ond half when George Faerber rebounded a Mount shot for two points. Then Faerber played the hero's role when he stole the ball daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL CUSUMANO from Marquette's Joe Thomas, setting up two foul shots by Larry Weatherford to give Purdue the upperhand, 63-62, with 19 seconds left on the clock, With six seconds left, Memingcr missed a jump shot, but Ric Cobb grabbed the rebound and was foul- ed by Johnson. Cobb made the first free throw but missed the second, tying the cage contest. In the overtime Purdue jumped into a quick four point lead on baskets by Gilliam and Weather- ford; however, Marquette bautled back once again to tie the score. Then the two teams traded bas- kets until Mount's shot proved decisive at the buzzer. By The Associated Press COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Charlie Scott's 20-foot jumper with one second left gave North Carolinaj an 87-85 come-from-behind vic- tory over Davidson yesterday for the NCAA Eastern Regional bas- ketball championship. The basket by Scott, a U.S.- Olympian, was his eighth in the last 10 minutes as he rallied the fourth-ranked Tar Heels to vic- tory for the third consecutive year in the Eastern Regionals. Scott finished with 32 points, 23 in the last half. "Give Charles Scott the ball with eight seconds to play." That, in a nutshell, was the strategy North Carolina Coach Dean Smith used in guiding his! basketball team over Davidson. "We have practiced that play! often," Smith said. "Many timesj in practice Charles will pass thel ball off. This is one time I'm glad he shot." "Charles is my most valuable player and he certainly should be the most valuable player of this tournament," Smith said. Fifth-ranked Davidson, which also lost to North Carolina in last year's tournament, led 85-82 with 2:20 remaining after a driv- ing layup by Doug Cook. Cook was charged with his fifth foul on the play, however, and teammate Jerry Kroll also fouled out with 1:15 remaining. North Carolina controlled the ball the rest of the way, calling time out wtih 13 seconds left to set up the play fof Scott. The North Carolina squeezes, by Davidson; Charlie Scott pulls last-second heroics junior from New York City drib- bled to the head of the foul lane and let fly with his one-handed jumper as time expired. North - Carolina, the AtlanticI Coast Conference champions with a 27-3 record, trailed through most of the first half but pulled ahead 47-46 at intermission behind the shooting of Bill Bunting, who made 18 of his 22 points in the opening period. The Wildcats muffed two one- and-one free throw chances in the closing two minutes when the Tar Heels, in a favorable foul situation, deliberately fouled Mike O'Neill. O'Neill missed the first free throw with two minutes re- maining and another with 1:20 left. Scott's jumper after the first miss; tied the score 85-85 with 1:49 to play and Kroll was charg- ed with an offensive foul with 1:15 to play after O'Neill's second miss, giving North Carolina con- trol of the ball for the final shot. Mike Maloy, Davidson's high scoring junior from New York, scored 25 points. Cook tallied 18 before fouling out and Kroll had 16. The Tar Heels were in a bonus free throw situation with 14:26 left to play, but converted only one extra foul toss. The loss snapped a 12-game winning streak for Davidson, while the Tar Heels advanced to the national semifinals for the third consecutive year. North Carolina finished runner-up to UCLA last year. Asked about the possibility of meeting with UCLA, which beat North Carolina last year for the national championship, Smith said, "A funny thing happened to us two years ago. "We just thought about going to the national finals and worry- ing about UCLA so Dayton knock- ed us off. "Last year 1we made it to the finals and you know what hap- pened then. So I am not worry- ing about UCLA, They are not on our schedule. We have to beat the Mideast regionals winner first." Asked if senior Dick Grubar, a starter all season who hurt his leg last week, would be able to play next week, Smith said, "I don't see how he can play," NORTH CAROLINA O F T Bunting 7 3-9 22 Scott 14 4-5 32 Clark , 0.1 16 Fogler '4 0-1 8 Delaney 0 3-4 3 Dedmon 1 0-0 2 G. Tuttle 1 0-0 2. Brown 0 2-2 2 Totals 35 17-22 37 DAVIDSON Cook 7 4-4 18 Kroll 6 4-4 16 Maloy N 10 5-7 25 Moser 2 0-0 4 Huckel 3 11 7 O'Neill 3 4-4 1 Kirley 2 0-0 4 Stelzer 0 1. 1 r Totals 33 19-25 35 North Carolina 47 40 -- 87 Davidson 46 389"-85 Fouled out: North Carolina, Dedmen. Davidson,.Cook, Kroll. Total fouls: North Carolina 13, Dav- idson 21. A--13,16. Mount Wthrfd Faerber Johnson Keller Bedford Gillia Kaufman Thompson Thomas Cobb Memngr Swell Burke Purdue Marquette Fouled out: Total fouls: A-13,025., PURDUE G F 11 4-5 5 3-3 3 2-3 2 0-1 6 5-5 0 0-0 2 3-3 0 0-00 Totals' 29 17-20 T 26 13 8 4 17 0 7 0 75 MARQUETTE 9 10-11 28 5 1-1 11 2 3-8 7 5 2-6 12 2-2 8 3 1-1 7 'totals 27 19-29 73 35 28 12 - 7 30 33 10 - 73 Purdue, Keller. Purdue 21, Marquette 16. -Associated Press WAYNE HiUCKEL (13) of Davidson looks on as North Caro- lina's Charlie Scott takes the ball from Mike Maloy (15) in yesterday's Eastern Championship game. Scott's all-around play proved the deciding factor in the contest, as he scored 32 points and sank the last basket to give the Tar Heels an 87-85 victory. l-, Dean Meminger 4 By The Associated Press # Drake forge way o Louisville Big Lew had scored 17 points take a 25-4 season record and a ter Bulldog ace Willie McCarter '.-Each team then lost and the score stood 68-32. Three 12-game winning streak to Louis- had missed a shot, put the ball in twice - Colorado State minutes earlier two other senior ville for the four-team showdown the asoket and was fouled w i t h bad passes-before Dolt f LOS ANGELES-UCLA's Bruins blitzed and then demolished Santa Clara 90-52 to win the NCAA W e s t e r n Regional Basketball Tournament yesterday and remain %favored to capture a history- making third straight national championship. The 38-point margin of the Bruin victory was the greatest ever in a Western Regional play off final. The largest previous spread was 24 points in 1965 when UCLA beat Brigham Young 100- 76. The Bruins broke the Broncos early and completely, running up an 18-2 advantage with complete donination of both offense and .defense., 0 As player of the year Lew Al- cindor finished out his come court playing career in Pauley Pavilion, he and his mates had the issue decided before the game was 10 minutes old. With 6%12 minutes to go 'in the first half, the score stood 30-12, the Broncos had turned the ball over 11 times and their top scorer, Bud Ogden, had drawn three fouls. At the half it was 46-25 and the Bruins tallied the first 10 points of the second half against the Santa. Clara club voted third best in the nation by the Asso- ciated Press poll. Opening the second half, Al- cindor, Ken Heitz, John 'Vallely, Curtis Rowe and then Alcindor again connected for UCLA and quashed any comeback hope the West Coast Athletic Conference *champions-might have harbored. Santa Clara hit only nine field goals in the second half and Den- nie Awtrey, the 6-9 center, wound up high man for the Broncos, and their only man in double figures at 14. Vallely and Sidney Wicks epch 'scored 11 for UCLA while reserve guard Bill Sweek had a dozen. Top-ranked UCLA heads for Louisville and a date against Drake on Thursday night with Just two games remaining be- tween the Bruins and their goal of a triple and fifth champion- aship in six years. Coach John Wooden took the 7-foot-112 Alcindor out with 7:52 left in the game to a standing ovation from the UCLA partisans in the crowd of 12,812. the ball on two Dh Pul- starters, Lynn Shackelford a n d Heitz, had come out as their Bruin coach substituted freely. * * * MANHAT'TAN, Kan.-Reserves Gary Odom and Gary Zeller turn- ed the battle for Drake in the final three minutes yesterday, lifting the Bulldogs past Colorado State University 84-77 and into the semifinals of the NCAA bas- ketball tournament. Drake, making its first appear- ance in the NCAA tourney, will next weekend. The Bulldogs finally cracked the stubborn Rams after the two teams had battled neck and neck for 37 minutes in the finals of the Midwest Regional. The game was: televised in the Western U.S. Odom, a 6-foot-8 senior from St. Louis, who was a starter ear- lier in the season but was benched by Coach Maury John to get moie speed in his lineup, made the play that broke it for Drake.I He went up with a rebound af- 2:48 remaining. He also s a n k liam hit a basket wide open un- the free throw giving Drake a 77- derneath with 18 seconds to go, 73 lead. making it 82-75 Drake. Zeller then drove into the key Until Drake's late flurry t h e as soon as Drake got the ball back score had been tied 20 times in and hit a short jump shot for a the game, and the lead had chang- six-point margin, the widest ad- ed hands 17 times. Neither s i d e vantage by either side in t h e had managed more than a four- game. point lead, Drake getting ahead by CSU's Cliff Shegogg hit a long that much seven times and OSU jumper with 1:58 left, but turned :nce. ' around and fouled Zeller who sank McCarter led Drake with 21 his free throw for an 80-75 points and Floyd Kerr matched Drake edge. that for CSU. HELP SGC HELP YOU Vote Yes on these Referenda, shall the Student Government Council expand its Student Discount Store to include a Student Discount Book Store, offering substantial discounts on books and supplies? The funds to start the store would be secured by levying a special assessment of $1.75 per student for the fall, 1969 semester only. The special assessment is,to be collected through the normal University ad- ministered method for collecting SGC dues as part of tuition and fees. -should the language requirement be abolished? ON THE BALLOT MARCH 18AND 19 3 ll Students eligible toavote Kentucky stumbles past Miami, 72-71; Duquesne thumps St. John's in consolations By The Associated Press MADISON - Dan Issel's t w oI free throws with 12 seconds left gave Kentucky a hard fought 72-1 71 victory over Miami of Ohio inI the consolation game of the NCAAI Mideast Regional basketballI tournament yesterday. Employing a deliberate offense in controlling the backboards,+ Miami jumped to .a 14-3 le a d before Mike Pratt' and Larry Steele fueled Kentucky's attack.! The Wildcats moved in front for the first time 28-27 on Phil Argento's . two free throws and1 took a 38-33 advantage into in-' termission. Miami came back on the shoot- ing of Mike Wren, a 5-10 sopho- more guard, and crept to within two points, 58-56. Issel, who had been on t h e bench during this span; returned and immediately sent Kentucky out in front again with a long one- hander as the game evolved into a contest between Issel and Wren. Issel finished with 36 points while Wren had 22, all in the se- cond half. COLLEGE PARK, Md. - One free-throw by Moe Barr and two by Jarrett Durham in the final five seconds gave Duquesne a 75- 72 victory over St. John's in the consolation game of the NCAA Eastern Regional basketball tour- nament yesterday. Duquesne, which lost to North Carolina in the semifinals, over- came a seven-point deficit to de- feat St. John's. ..The Dukes, who finished 21-5, led 72-66 befoi'e St. John's ral- lied with six straight points - the last two on free-throws by B ill for third place in the NCAA Wes- tern Regional Basketball Tourna- ment. New Mexico State built a 12-I point lead latein the first half and held a 29-23 advantage at theI a 64-56 loss to Colorado State in Thursday's semifinals, got 24 points from Gordon Tope and 12 from Dudley Mitchell yesterday. to make the difference. Cliff Meely led the Buffaloes Paultz with 13 seconds remaining I midway point, with 26 points, although he miss- -to tie it. Jimmy Collins' 16 points paced ed nearly 13 minutes of the game Barr sank his first foul shot the Aggies for the opening 20 because of foul troubles. and missed the second, but Du- minutes. quesne controlled the rebound and The Coach, Phil Johnson set up Ronnie Peret was high for t h e Durham was immediately foul- a defense with the 6-foot-2 Thig- Aggies with 21 points. ed, and hit the clinchers. pen playing against Collins man- Colorado trailed only in t h e Durham led Duquesne with 24 to-man and the other four Wild- very early moments, but broke a points, and Bill Zopf had 23. cats in a rotating zone. 10-10 tie on Mitchell's field goal Paultz had 24 for St. John's, * * * and led the rest of the way. It which finished with a 23-6 re- MANHATTAN, Ken. - Color- was last close at 25-20, and the cord. ado, getting vastly improved play Buffs quickly widened that mar- * * * out of its guards, overwhelmed gin to 37-21 by outscoring the LOS ANGELES - Senior guard Texas A&M, 97-82, to claim third Aggies 12-1 in -the next four min- Justus Thigpen sparked a second place yesterday in the NCAA Mid- utes. half comeback offensively and de- west Regional Basketball tourna- Colorado's -biggest lead was 21 fensively for the Weber S t a t e ment. Wildcats to beat New Mexico Colorado, whose guards manag- points, several times in the second State 58-56 yesterday afternoon ed to produce only four points in half. LAST FULL WEEK FREE GERMAN MEASLES VACCINE For Women Students CLINIC OPEN AT HEALTH SERVICE IMMUNIZATION ROOM Monday thru Thursday, March 17 tb 20 6:15-9:30 P.M. Saturday, March 22 11:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M. No Appointments Necessary Er 1 f SUNDAY, MARCH 16 i i 3 P.M.-ELECTION OF OFFICERS followed by OPEN EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING (All Welcome) 6 P.M.-DELI HOUSE 6:30 P.M.-"THE FUTURE OF MIDDLE EAST JEWERY" A Beir Midrash Seminar, led by JOSEPH BEN-DAK and DR. ROBERT LAPIN i Ravi Shankar MARCH 26 HILLEL FOUNDATION 663-4129 1429 hill St. SOUTH QUADRANGLE HAS ESTABLISHED THE POSITION OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING CHAIRMAN FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1969-1910 SCOPE OF THE POSITION: To inspire, coordinate, and administrate a full range of educational programs for the residents of South Quad. Included are speaker programs, visiting faculty and distin- guished guests, cultural events, coordination of classes held in the Quad, assistance to house programs, exhibits, chairing Educational Committee, administration of Quad educational fund. The position is to be as free-ranging as possible to encourage creativity. Approximately twenty hours of work per week will be required. COMPENSATION: Full room and board in a two room apartment plus a fifty dollar Honarium from the residents of S0ud Quadrangle. If married, spouse will receive board. i ' ''_ _ _ ___ _ _ --- - - I SGC HILL AUD. 'I II ...I U . ..s ... '.. I I I 1111 a 11 I II