TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1965 THE MICHIGAN DA TLY FACE SEVEN Wolverine Cagers Face Rued Winter Sch e ule x By DAN OKRENT blend the veterans (of which As the cold winds blow inthere are eight) and the sopho- mores into a better team than we the north and herds of Michigan Ia st r.A victory onS students flock to the traditionalj warmth of Yost Fieldhouse, a new basketball season will begin. The schedule-makers, however, have tried their best to give the Big Ten champions a bitter winter. As befits a team with number- two national rankings from both wire service polls, the 1966 Wol- verines will be faced with a bevy of potential champions as they go through their pre-Big Ten warm- up throughout the month of De- cember. Beginning Tomorrow Beginning with tomorrow night's' clash with the 17th-ranked Ten- nessee Volunteers, the Blue will, urday, and his wish will material- ize in BG's second start of the year. The following Monday. Michigan will play host to the Ball State Cardinals, perennial early season visitors from Muncie, Ind. But af- ter that, the vacation (one can hardly call it that, what with the point-scrimping Tennessee* squad) will be over, and the team will migrate to the heart of the Great Plains to play the tough Shockers from Wichita State on the 8th. Kelly Pete Returning All - American Kelly Pete will be the principal starter heavy duty under the boards is 6'7" Mike Lewis, a soph with im- pressive credentials (17.4 RB's and 22.4 points for each of his frosh matches). After Duke, Michigan will pass through Indianapolis, Ind., en route to the Coast and the Dec. 28-31 Far West Classic. Scheduled to meet usually-stubborn Butler on the 22nd, Michigan still shouldn't have too much trouble, as the Indianas are notably lack- ing in experience, with only one starter returning. Spending the holidays in Port- land, Ore., the boys in Blue will see three days of action in their quest for the tournament crown. Expected to present the greatest opposition will be the Indians from Stanford, the only note- worthy team in a field which also includes Oregon, Oregon State, Utah State, Washington State, Air Force, and Arizona State. But you can't count them out, either. In a year such as this, with a schedule such as Michigan's, a team has to be a potential na- tional power to get any "note" at all. This Week in Sports WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan vs. Tennessee at Yost Field House, 8 p.m. MICHIGAN HEAD COACH DAVE STRACK Basketball Tickets Tomorrow is a big day for Michigan basketball. Not only will it mark the season opener against Tennessee, but it might break some sort of unofficial basketball ticket sales record. No less than six different admissions will be on the block. They are as follows: 1) Tennessee tickets: There are still plenty left and they will be on sale today and tomorrow at the athletic ticket office at State and Hoover. The cost is one buck with presentation of your identification,.card. 2) Bowling Green tickets and 3) Ball State tickets: The ducats for the next two home games, Bowling Green on Saturday and Ball State on Monday, will go on sale tomorrow. Purchase procedures will be the same as for Tennessee. 4) Duke tickets. The Wolverines will face Duke at Cobo Hall Dec. 21, and the sale of tickets starts tomorrow. The prices are $5, $4, and $3. Also, $2 tickets will be sold for $1 to University students and faculty. They will be on sale at the Matt Mann Pool lobby which is adjacent to the ticket office. 5) San Francisco tickets. A very limited number of tickets for Michigan's Dec. 11 date with the Dons at the Chicago Sta- dium are now on sale at the ticket office. 6) Season tickets. The fan who doesn't like to get to the game early to find a good seat (the doors at Yost open two hours prior to starting time) might be interested in spending $25 for a season pass. They too are now on sale at the ticket office which is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. FRIDAY HOCKEY-Michigan vs. Waterloo Lutheran at Coliseum, 8 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Midwest Open at Chicago SATURDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan vs. Bowling Green at Yost Field House, 1:30 p.m. HOCKEY-Michigan vs. Waterloo Lutheran at Coliseum at 8 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Midwest Open at Chicago SPORTS SHORTS: Dartmouth Wins Cup; McGuire To Coach NY OLIVER DARDEN STRETCHES FOR A REBOUND CRAIG DILL JIM MYERS CAZZIE RUSSELL HITS FOR TWO MORE This is the cartridge that holds the tape that feeds the recorder that handles like a camera and sounds like a million dollars ] %% 2 Y r / The new . r, ",rr: A/ore/co- Carry-Corder'15O' is here!... What in the world could add more to your fun-at home or away, than this really fun-to-use, professional quality, transistor candid recorder. Features tiny snap-in cartridges that load in a second and play for an hour.... unbelievably simple one-button control... wonderfulsound and cordless convenience. Uses ordinary flashlight batteries and weighs only three pounds. Comes complete with fitted over-the-shoulder carrying case, broad- Gat aua vnmi m -nhn.rp4,..izcfart .tn - tm Awa.# run the national gamut, facing third - rated Duke, 11th - ranked San Francisco, the Shockers of Wichita, who occupy the 20th spot and gave Michigan a whopper of a battle in Detroit last year before succumbing to a Cazzie Russell jumper at the final buzzer, and possibly, by virtue of the draw, AAWU runner-up (and one of those often anonymous and ig- nominious teams relegated' to "others receiving votes") Stanford in the Far West Classic during the holiday break. And that's in only ten pre-Big Ten games. Perhaps a hint to the outcome of the whole season will come to- morrow night at Yost, when Mich- igan hits the hardwoods against Ray Mears' Tennesseeans. Differ- ent from traditional season open- ers in that it is not the typical' try-out game against some small liberal arts college in Ohio or In- diana, Wednesday's battle will be against the team some are picking as the heir-apparent to Vander- bilt's Southeastern C o n f e r e nce crown. Rugged Vols The Vols, spearheaded by 6'4" Ron Widby, last year's SEC soph- of-the-year and a defensive spe- cialist with a 14 point average to boot, are noted for the defensive- type ball that Mears teaches with startling expertise. Yielding but 55.6 points per game, the '64-'65 Volunteers were tops in the nation defensively. This Saturday, the Blue will be getting their try-out game, albeit a little late. Led into Ann Arbor by 6'2" Nick Aloi and towering soph Walt Diotkowski, 6'8", the Falcons of Bowling Green deserve more than casual mention solely on the basis of their second-place finish in the'Mid-American Con- ference, steadily improving as a potential entry to the ranks of basketball's "major college" leagues. Coach's Objective Coach Warren Scholler states his prime objective as "hoping to back from last year's Missouri Val- ley champs. Making it to the semi- finals before being scuttled by champion-to-be UCLA 108-89, last year's Kansans are still slated to be one of the top fives in the na- tion, chiefly due to the presence of the wondrous Mr. Pete. Pete, who at 6'1" hardly foists an imposing presence on opposing giants, averaged 18 points per match last year, and Coach Gary Thompson can count on an equally good-if not better--performance this season. Also scheduled to add impetus to the Wichita attack is 6'3" Jamie Thompson, a converted forward who clicked for 20ppg in the last half of the '64-'65 season. To Chicago On the 11th will be a third match of "national interest," as Michigan migrates to Chicago to meet San Francisco in mammoth Chicago Stadium. The choice to repeat as kings of the West Coast Athletic Conference, the Dons, buoyed by the return of All-West Coast guard-forward Joe Ellis and 6'8" forward-center Erwin Muel- ler, will serve as a trying warmup for. the biggest December match of all, the battle against the Blue Devils of Duke on the 21st at De- troit's Cobo Hall. The only team to rate in the.Top Ten at the end of each of the last five campaigns, the Blue Devils, 20-5 last year, are neck-and-neck with Michigan on one of the pre- season polls, and are a strong fifth in the other. The three leading scorers from last year's squad are back to make Coach Vic Bubas' dreams pleasant, and to ruin Dave Strack's. Heads Returnees Heading the returning troops will be 6' Bob Verga, a playmak- ing and shot-making guard with a '64-'65 average of 21.4 ppg. Also back are Steve Vacendak (6'1", 16.2 ppg) and Jack Marin, a 6'6" senior who tallied 19.1 ppg last year, along with over 10 rebounds per outing. Also counted on for By The Associated Press NEW YORK--Unbeaten Dart- mouth, the Ivy League champion, was named winner of the Lambert Trophy yesterday as the East's outstanding major college football team. Princeton was second and Syra- cuse third in the voting by a com- mittee of sports writers, sports- casters and Lambert Trophy trus- tees. It was the first time that Dart- mouth has captured the trophy in the 30 years of its existence. Princeton was the last Ivy League team to win it undisputedly in 1951. Yale, another Ivy League team, and Navy tied for the award in 1960. The Indians finished with a 9-0 record, including a 28-14 con- quest of Princeton that gave them the league title. Princeton wound up with a 8-1 record while Syra- cuse was 7-3. Dartmouth piled up 271 points and yielded only 71. Its other vic- tims were New Hampshire, Holy Cross, Penn, Brown, Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Cornell. In the balloting for the trophy, Dartmouth collected 119 points on 11 votes for first place and one for second. Princeton had 103 Points and Syracuse 102. Navy, Penn State, Army, Boston' Col- lege, Colgate, Harvard and Massa- chusetts rounded out the top 10. * * * NEW YORK-Dick McGuire, a long-time National Basketball As- sociation backcourt star and for- mer coach of the Detroit Pistons, was named coach of the New York Knickerbockers, replacing Harry Gallatin, last night. Gallatin, who played with Mc- Guire on Knickerbocker teams during the 1950's, replaced Eddie Donavan as the Knicks coach last Jan. 3 when Donavan was named general manager. MeGuire, who coached the Pis- tons for four seasons, takes over immediately and will handle the Knicks against St. Louis in Madi- son Square Garden tonight. * * * This is the way that the major post-season bowl games shape up: Rose Bowl-Michigan State, 10- 0, vs. UCLA, 7-1-1. Cotton Bowl-Arkansas, 10-0, vs. LSU, 7-3. Sugar Bowl-Missouri, 7-2-1, vs. Florida, 6-2. Orange Bowl-Nebraska, 9-0, vs. Alabama, 7-1-1. Gator Bowl-Georgia Tech, 6-2- 1, vs. Texas Tech, 8-2. Bluebonnet Bowl-Tennessee, 5- 1-2, vs. Tulsa, 7-2. FORT LAUDERDALE - The California Angels signed Lew Burdette, veteran National League pitcher released by Philadelphia two months ago, to a 1966 base- ball contract yesterday. The 39-year-old right-hander, signed as a free agent by the American League club, will rejoin Fred Haney, the Angels general manager who was his field man- ager at Milwaukee from 1956 to 1959. California Manager Bill Rigney said, "I think Lew can be an as- set to the Angels. Being new to the American League might give him a new lease on life. I certain- ly think he can be a,steadying in- fluence on our young pitchers." Amaz-ed Fn See Alindor; Beat Bruns Lew Alcindor, highly rated 7'1% " 'freshman, scored 31 points Satur- day night against the UCLA var- sity to lead the frosh to a 75-60 victory. The UCLA varsity is rank- ed first in the nation by both the AP and UPI pollsg. The two-time collegiate chain- pions were as stunned as the 12,051 fans who inaugurated the new Pauley Pavilion and saluted Bruin coach Johnny Wooden. The towering Alcindor, a former prep star from Power Memorial High School in New York, proved every bit as good as advertised. Scoring 12 points in the first half, he boosted the freshman to a 36-31 lead, then saved his real drive for the final 20 minutes. His shots were short jumpers and a variety of dazzling tip-ins. The huge center also dominated the game on defense, blocking shots and forcing the varsity to shoot almost entirely from the outside. In his spare time, he grab- bed 21 rebounds. The talent-laden freshmen also made use of Lucius Allen, another high school All-American from Kansas City, Kan., who scored 16 points. Lynn Schackelford scored third highest for the frosh with 14 points. On the varsity, Mike Lynn top- ped the scorers with 12 points, Doug McIntosh added 10 and sophomore guard Don Saffer got nine, all in the second half. The Uclans open their season at home, starting with two Big Ten opponents, Ohio State on Friday and Illinois on Saturday. II U QkVA~oflsoteonn~~l ~ca/77' Sportswear by PantinoG Pa1y: r~~tip&..: U for girls who are.. recommends our Sanitone dryclean rnlg We know and respect fine fabrics and take painstaking care in cleaning them. We use only the Sanitone drycleaning process with the ex- I TUDC-NT BOOK SCRV11Cc 1215 S. 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