THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine _ . Purdue kills Tar Heels; UCLA slips by Drake Mount leads way with 36 By LEE KIRK and PHIL HERTZ Purdue's underdog Boiler- makers scorched the nets with a 24-5 blitz early ip the second half and coasted to a shock- ingly easy 92-65 victory over bridesmaid North Carolina in the first of two NCAA semi- final games played at Louis- ville's Freedom Hall. It marked the third time in as many years that the Tar Heels, who led only once in the entire game, had lost in either .the semi- finals or finals of the NCAA play- offs. Purdue, led as usual by Rick, Mount who had 36 points, com- pletely^ dominated all phases of the game. They controlled both backboards and forced an unbe- lievable 28 turnovers from the normally well - disciplined Tar 4 Heels. The game started slowly with both teams tight and sloppy. Then little Bill Keller popped in three straight field goals to start Purdue rolling and Moupt began to hit and Purdue surged to a 35-24 lead. North Carolina was unable to do anything right during this stretch, and Purdue's all-confer- ence-forward Herman Gilliam was doing a great job on Charlie Scott, North Carolina's All-Ameri- can, holding 'him to just two field goals in the first 18 minutes, and 15 points overall. When Purdue Coach George. King took Mount out for a rest, the Boilermakers faltered and North Carolina began to move. Led by Bill Bunting and Scott the Tar Heels pulled to within four, 39-35, at the half. At the start of the second half, the teams exchanged buckets, and Swhen N orth Carolina's Bunting sank a layup, the score was 44-41, Then Mount, the blond bomber from Lebanon, Ind., burned in six straigh$ points to ignite the fire and Purdue was off to the races. N o r t h C a r o l i n a, troubled throughout the game by cold out- side shooting, went completely cold while the Boilermakers could do no wrong. Mount and Gilliam set George Faerber and Keller up for easy baskets with brilliant passes and Purdue had a 76-54 Bulldogs run with Bruins but late rally falls short * * * ** Michigan nine hit western trail LOUISVILLE, Ky. UR) - Defending champion UCLA, pushed to the limit by upstart Drake, fought off the Bulldogs 85-82 last night and moved to within one step of a record third consecutive national collegiate basketball title. UCLA will play Purdue in, the NCAA championship game Saturday afternoon. Drake, a 13-point underdog, spotted UCLA an early 11-2 advantage, then reboundsed to make a game of it. The Bulldogs, who had to survive a playoff for the Missouri Valley Conference title, finally caught UCLA at 37- 37 just before halftime intermission and fought the Bruins on equal terms for the first 10 , minutes of the' second half. - Drake had two brief leads, at qj 43-42 and 45-44, and had the game tied four times-the last at 59=59. John Vallely of the Bruins broke that with a driving layup and the sportS dead-game Bulldogs had had theira last look-in. NIGHT EDITOR Leading 69-66, UCLA reeled off ELLIOTT BERRY a sring of nine consecutive points --seven of them by Vallely-estab- lished a 78-66 margin and held on from there although Drake puleld UCLA spurted to its 12-point lead to within one point with 10 se- with about four minutes to go, and conds left came charging back. McCarter hit Vallely, a 6-foot-2 backcourt two quick basekts and Willie Wise man, led UCLA's scoring with 29 added another before UCLA could of UCLA, is having a difficult points and 7-foot-i Lew Alcindor put together a field goal and a to as he is surrounded by Drake's added 25. Willie, McaCrter top- free throw. per. As a team UCLA also had ped hard-running Drake with 24. McCarter and Lynn Shackelford the Bulldogs, 85-82. Drake, ranked No. 11 nationally, traded baskets and UCLA's lead was dead-game all the way. The was cut to nine, at 83-74, with King said his bench provided Bulldo s refused to wilt when time running out. the key to the victory. 'He also But still. the fantastic Bulldogs singled out Mount, saying, "He stayed alive. Wise put in a shot made some fantastic shots." BULLETIN from the corner, McCarter hit two King hadto admit that he was more baskets and the lead was surprised with the ease of the vic- Hockey's Golden Jet, Bobby down to three, $3-80. The Bull- tory. "We expected North Carolina Hull broke his own all-time dogs then gained possession with to give us a tougher battle mWe single season record for goals 18 seconds to play. alWgys try to run and they made as he tallied number 54 and Dolph Pulliam broke through on the mistake of trying to run with 55 in' last nights' 5-5 tie be- a fast break and the margin was us.a tween Chicago and Boston. The one point with less than 10 Tar Heel Coach Dean Smith Bruins' Bobby Orr also estab- seconds left. admitted that the Boilermaker lished a new NHL record for UCLA put the ball in play and fas ur de enade hmbles ut goals by a defenseman in one Shackelford, fouled at the buzz- of our defense"whicthemyerthe season when he picked up his er, calmly dropped in two free understatement of the year. He 21st- with less than a minute throws while his teammates filed also said that Purdue wass"the remaining in the game. off the court. most fantastic long-range shoot-____ ing club I've ever seen." Temple upsets Tennessee mI By DAVE HANNES "If I had it to do over again I wouldn't have scheduled so many games but we'll just have to do the best we can under t h e circum- stances." The speaker is Wolverine base- ball coach Moby Benedict discus- sing Michigan's prospects on its annual spring trip to Arizona. The club will play a formidable sch- edule of 12 games in just nine days with six single games and three doubleheaders against four of the finest teams in the nation. Benedict's regrets about the trip are due to the fact that his three top pitchers who were expected to return didn't, signing p r o con- tracts and leaving the team with a v e r y unexperienced mound corps. "Certainly our pitching is my biggest worry";' admits the Michi- gan mentor. "I'm afraid that our sophs might run out of gas al- though they all have good arms. "We h a v e three other things' working against us also. First when we play Arizona State (this afternoon) it will be our opening game and their eighteenth. Second the boys have had to practice in- doors where you just can't accom- Home Schedule April 5-Detroit (2) April 8-Bowling Green April 11-Freshmen-Varsity (2) April 12-Freshmen-Varsity (2) April 14-Eastern Michigan April 15--Notre Dame April 19-Michigan State MYay 9-Wisconsin (2) May 10-Northwestern (2) May 13-Western Michigan May 23-Minnesota (2) May 24-Iowa (2) LEW ALCINDOR, super center time finding a teammate to pass1 Al Williams (41), and Don Dra their troubles before defeating# lead. North Carolina never recov-' ered and Purdue expanded their1 lead to as much as 31 points in the waning minutes of the contest. Mount had strong scoring from Keller, who pumped in 20. Faerber, Gilliam, and Frank Kaufman overcame the Tar Heels height' advantage to completely dominate the offensive and defensive back- boards throughout the contest. Gilliam seemed completely recov- ered from an ankle injury that had hobbled him for the past month. Gilliam was all over the floor causing turnovers and setting up Purdue's sharpshooters, and was brilliant on defense. Purdue, the nation's. leading of- fensive team, was supposed to be only average on defense. Yet' it was their ballhawking defense that provided most of the difference in the game. North Carolina's Rusty Clark, who scored 20, and Bunting, who had 19, gave the Boilermakers some problems inside, but their plethora of turnovers kept the Tar Heels from taking full advantage of this. The Boilermakers, alter- nating between a 2-3 zone and a man to man, seemed to have North Carolina perpetually off balance. North Carolina, normally al strong defensive club, was ham- pered by the loss of starting guard Dick Grubar, their best defensive player. His knee injury left Caro Tina with no one capable of guard-' ing Mount, or for that matter' Keller. Roby Benedict plish that much. And third we'll3 be playing all twelve games away from home - a disadvantage that hurt us last year."' Benedict blames mistakes on de-! fense for helping to take the Wol- verines to a dismal 1-9 record on£ their last spring trip, stating "Ev- ery time we made a mistake it seemed to cost us t w o or three runs. As far as this spring tripi goes I'd have to say that because we re not close to being ready ourz pitching will be our main concern. "Our defense may be weak fromI time to time when the, boys won't' react properly or quickly in. cer- tain situations and when our shal- low pitching staff is severely test- ed. I'm not too worried about our hitting though. We'll have some good days and some bad ones at the bat but that will work itself out eventually." In the nine day trip Michigan will play Arizona State, Arizona, Southern Illinois, and Wyoming, four teams that will provide tough competition for Coach Benedict's club. The Wolverines will p 1 a y five games each with the Arizona nines and single contests with the other two, Arizona State, which has pro- vided the Oakland Athletics with such stars as Reggie Jackson, Rick Monday, and Sal Bando, recently defeated the expansion Seattle Pi- lots of the American League 5-4, and ranks with Arizona's Wild- cats as one of the two best teams in the Southwest. Wyoming had a losing season last year but returns 15 lettermen to what should be a greatly improved club. Southern Illinois might be the best team t h a t the Wolverines face this season. Last year the Sa- lukis came one out from winning the national title before bowing to Southern California in the final game of the NCAA World Series 4-3. Cheered on by the presence of its four lovely batgirls, Southern , Illinois boasts the return of 13 of 16 lettermen, three of whom were All-Americans, In summing up the Wolverines chances on the twelve games Ben- edict says, "We'll certainly' have some problems, especially with our sophomore pitchers, but the boys- will gain some real good exper- lence. We'll be a lot better team when we get home than we are now. SCOR ES Exhibition Baseball Scores Boston 5. Detroit 4 Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 7 New York (A) 4, Minnesota 2 Atlanta 5, Kansas City 3 (10 inn.) Houston 10, Montreal 7 Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 0 Chicago (N) 9, Oakland 2 San Francisco 8, San Diego 5 California 4, Cleveland 1 Only games scheduled. N H L Montreal 5, Pittsburgh 3 Boston 5, Chicago 5 Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 2 NORTH CAROLINA FG FT Reb. Ass. PF Bunting 7-13 5-7 7 2 2 Scott8 6-19 4-6 6 6 3 C Ak7-9 '6-1 9 1 2 Fogler 1-4 0-0 2 1 2 G. Tuttle 2-4 0-1 3 1 3 Delany 0-2 0-0 1 2 '4 Dedman 0-1 0-1 4 2 2 Brown - 1-4 0-0 1 0 0 Gipple 0-3 0-0 1 0 0 Chadwick 1-2 0-0 2 0 0 R. Tuttle 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Egglston 0-0 0-0 ' 0. 0 0 Totals 26-62 15-25 37 15 18 T 19 16 20 2 0 2 0 0 65 By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Temple ran off 10 straight points behind Joe Cromer and John Baum late in the second half and upended favored Tennessee 63-58 last night in the semifinals of the National Invitation Basketball Tournament. Boston College, biding its time, beat underdog Army 73-61 in the opener of the Madison Square Garden doubleheader. Temple, which won the first NIT in 1938 in its" only appearance in the final, and has been frustrated in six other trips to New York, and BC, reaching the final for the first time in three tries, meet for the championship Saturday afternoon on national television. Tennesee and Army will play for third place. With Bobby Croft and Rudy Kinard of Tennessee waging a scoring duel against Cromer and teammate Eddie Mast, Tennessee pulled ahead 49-44 after nine lead changes in the see-saw second half. Then Cromer hit for five straight points for a 49-all tie. Bill Strunk put the Owls ahead and Baum completed the string with another five for a 54-49 spread with 1:45 remaining. Tony Brocchi's two free throws with 62 seconds to play gave Temple a decisive 59-53 lead over the pressing Vols as the Owls ran their record to 21-8. I F' M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of /4 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, moyonnoise, onions, pickles and ketchup ALL THIS FOR ONLY 49c @JILING' PEEDY ©SCRVI West of Arborland JUMBOY DINE Put Some Sunshine in Yo Life U T TI IS WEEK 1 PURDUE tilliam 3-11 0-0 Faerber 3-3 2-24 Johnson 2-5 1-3 Mount' 14-28 8-9 Keller 9-19' 2-3 Kaufman 0-1 2-3 io Weatherford 3-6 1-1 Bedford , 3-3 9-0 Taylor 1-1 0-1 Longfellow 0-1 0-0 Reasoner 0-0 0-0 Young 0-0 0-0 Totals 38-78 16-22 North Carolina Purdue 8 9 S 4 '.5 6 0; 5 3 2 0 0 51 7 0 6i 0' 3 3 0 4 51 3 0 361 5. 3 20 1 4 6 0 0 2 0' 1 0 0. 0 0 17 20, 92 35 30 -65 39 53=-92 rl Ur STEAK and SHAKE I Old leid'elber 71 1 'S 3I .% 1 ,1 L* C 0 f 7 ! Char-broiled Rib-eye Steak and Eggs Potatoes and Toast $1.60. Char-broiled Hamburger Steak Potatoes, Salad, Bread and Butter' $1.40 LI Il' 3I N ' ian Zt. 668-9713 1313 S. UNIVERSITY I r ' ILI Open:- Mon., Wed., and Thurs. 4 P M.-2 A.M. Open; Fri., Sat., Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tues.) 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