" S!U AY, "JA'NUARY 30, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN gYINnAY. JANUARY 20. 1966 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN gers Survive Scare To Nip Badgers By RICK STERN Special To The Daily MADISON-Gutsy Oliver Dar- den, shoveling 20-footers into the bucket like an undertaker, dug stubborn Wisconsin's grave here yesterday, then buried the Bad- gers himself as he propelled Michigan's Wolverines to their tightest victory of the season, a 69-67 thriller. The victory was the fifth with- out a loss for the first place Blue, and the 19th in their last 20 Big Ten games. Michigan went into the contest averaging89.7 points per game but cold shooting combined with a fantastic Wisconsin rebounding effort resultedin a low scoring struggle which wasn't decided un- til the final second of play. * Michigan Trails Early Wisconsin led briefly at the out- set, but after the first five min- utes of play, Michigan never trailed. The Wolverines saw an early 11 point margin whittled down to four by the halftime, and even further thereafter as Ken Gus- Il ini Tickets Tickets go on sale tomorrow for the Illinois basketball game. 511 E. Hoover is the Athletic Ticket Office and the office opens at 8 a.m. The Illini have only lost once in Big Ten play and are third in the conference. Game time is 8 p.m. Tuesday. tafon's hot hand gave Wisconsin a 51-51 tie with ten minutes re- maining With 3:47 left the Wolverine lead was 61-59 and it was at this point that 6'7" Darden took the reigns, scoring six of Michigan's last eight points. First, his long jump shot made it 63-59. Oh '0' 'T'en seconds later the lead was down to two again but once agair Darden's aim was sharp, this time on a cord-rippling set shot fron 22 feet. .i Up 66-63 with the ball and the clock both on their side the Wol- verines went into their most suc- cessful stalling effort of the sea -son, holding the Spaulding citrus for 90 crucial seconds.1 When they finally took a shot it was with 0:46 showing on the1 clock. And it was Darden again, smashing in a lay-up and getting fouled in the process. Beat the Clock The three Darden shots virtually clinched the victory. Wisconsin had enough time for two more baskets but not three. With seven seconds left and the score 68-67, John Clawson sunk the first of a one on one free throw situation. The second was no good but the Badgers' Mike Carlin only had time to frantically dribble the ball into the Wiscon- sin half of the court before the buzzer sounded. Said Wisconsin's Johnny Erick- son after the game, "I didn't even. think Darden was going to shoot those shots, let alone make them. Michigan is a spunky, courageousl team. I looked at Dave (Strack)I sitting on the bench and he didn't even flinch." Darden gave his version in the plane on the way home. "I had the shots and I thought I could hit 'em. They were good percent- age shots and I was open. The pressure gets to you but when you have been playing for as long as I have, there is no reason to succumb to it. It shouldn't interfer with your shooting." Darden, hitting just over fifty per cent of his 17 shots, was the only Wolverine anywhere near the fifty mark. For the most part, the Blue were as cold as the fifteen below zero Madison weather. In the second half Darden put in six of nine field goal attempts, while the rest of the team was hitting four of 25 for a not-so- torrid 16 per cent. A fellow by the name of Russell, after hitting six of nine in the first half, made only one of 12 shots in the last 20 minutes, though putting through 5 clutch free throws to finish with 21 points, three more than Darden. Jim Myers with 11 and John Clawson with 10 carried what re- mained of the Michigan attack. Wisconsin's lift in the game was provided by a pair of jump- ing forwards, Joe Franklin and Ken Barnes, who combined for 25 rebounds. Overall the Badgers outrebounded their taller invad- ers by a 55-43 margin. Michigan Coach Dave Strack pointed to Wisconsin's rebounding attack as the significant factor in the game. "They rebounded much better than we had antici- pated. They fought like hell and went at the boards with a fren- zy." Scoring-wise, the Badgers re- ceived a 14 point first half ef- Track Season Opens at MU By BOB McFARLAND vision earlier in the day, perform- Special To The Daily ed well against a hoard of compet- itors. Appearing in their first col- KALAMAZOO - The Wolverine legiate meet, the frosh managed cindermen were not in peak con- to take four first places - each dition yesterday as they encoun- winning mark breaking a novice tered tough competition in the record for the Western Michigan Western Michigan Open, but they Open. put on a respectable showing by winning two first places. Colleges represented at the meett included Loyola, Northwestern,t Notre Dame, Western Michigan,E Eastern Michigan, Central Mich- igan, Bowling Green and Cornell College. The Southern California 1 Striders also had two competitorsf entered in the meet. No pointz totals were kept. Notre Dame's Bill Hurd astound-t ed the crowd with a tremendous performance in the 60-yard dash. Running far ahead of Michigan's Carl Ward who placed second, Hurd snapped the fieldhouse and meet records in the time of six seconds flat. The sophomore, who ran a 6.1 sixty earlier in the day, turned in one of the country's top times this year with his sensa- tional mark. Willie Brown, a Mich- igan senior, finished behind Ward. Strong Shot Men The Wolverines' greatest success of the evening came in the shot put as Michigan cindermen took four of the first five places. The quartetuwas led byaJack Harvey who pushed the ball 55' /". He was followed by Steve Leuchtman in second, Paul D'Eramo in fourth and Bob Thomas in fifth. Roy Woodton appeared to be back in his top form of two years ago as he cracked the meet record in the high hurdles with a 7.4 second performance. A Wolverine sophomore, Woody Fox, placed third. Shot-putter Bob Johnson heav- ed the iron ball 49'11%", more than three and a half feet far- ther than his closestcompetitor and better the old mark by 3'9". Also cracking a frosh record, Gary Knickerbocker cleared the bar at 6'6" to take the high jump. The 600-yard run was won by fresh- man Ron Kutchinski in the record time of 1:12.4. 2. Turchek (Un); 3. Canamare (M); 4. Seeley (WMU). Height-i5' (win- ner determined by least number of attempts; new meet record). BROAD JUMP-1. Holland (Un); 2. Norris (M); 3. Rochow (CMU). Distance-24'2x/2". SHOT PUT-1. Harvey (M); 2. Leuchtman (M); 3. Witteman (L). Distance-55' "1. 60-YD. HIGH HURDLES-1. Wood- ton (M); 2. Lemon (WMU); 3. Fox (M). Time-:07.4 (new meet rec- ord). SHUTTLE HURDLE RELAY - 1. Western Michigan (Mizinski, Strat- ton, LeMan, Leek); 2. Central Mich- igan; 3. Notre Dame (new meet record). MILE RUN-1. Nelson (WMU); 2. Drennan (DTC); 3. Frost (WMU). Time-4:15.4. 34-MILE RUN1. Coffey (ND); 2. Pack (WMU); 3. Kelly (M). Time --3:20.9 (new meet record). 60-YD. DASH-1. Hurd (ND); 2. Ward (M); 3. Brown (M). Time- :06. 600-YD. RUN-1. Mason (HTC); 2. Bernard (AATC); 3. Vondrasek (CMU). Time-1:11.3 (new meet rec- ord). 300-YD. DASH-1. Williams (BG) and Grasley (HTC) tie; 2. Gottlieb (WMU). Time-:31.4 (new meet rec- ord). 1000-YD. RUN-1. Dean (ND); 2. Farrel (ND); 3. Morales (M). Time -2:09.2 (new meet record). 880-YD .RUN r-1. Stephenson (WMU); 2. Kearney (M); 3. Vick- ers (HTC). Time-1:54.9 (new meet record). TWO-MILE RUN - 1. Mazilla (WMU); 2. Jaeger(DTC); 3. Bish- op (Un). Time-9:10.1 (new meet record). 60-YD. LOW HURDLES - 1. Le- Mon (WMU); 2. Smith (CMU); 3. Woodton (M). Time-:06.9 (new meet record). HIGH JUMP-1. Broderick (ND); 2. Jim Littlejohn (Un) and Alonzo Littlejohn (Un) tie. Distance - 6'8" (tied meet record). ONE MILE RELAY-1. Ann Ar- bor Track Club (Askew, Burnley, Wade, Bernard). 2. Huron Track Club. 3. Michigan. Time--3:9.6. TV RENTALS LOWEST RATES STUDENT SPECIALS HI F STUDIO 1319 S. Univ. NO 3-7242 fort from Dennis Sweeney, a 6'1" performance. "Gee, did we scrap guard who could probably play in there! I've never been prouder for University High and not look of a team. We gave our finest out of place. effort and did everything but In the second half it was an- win. other basketball mutant who car- Trailing early in the game 24- ried the Badgers. Ken Gustafson 16, Erickson called a time out and who wears horn-rimmed glasses changed his defense, deciding to and might major in library sci- alternate between man-to-man ence, hit on tons of driving lay- and zone strategy. Whenever Wis- ups and scored 15 points while consin scored a basket, they doing it. would drop back into a "one three $Twice within a minute, Wiscon- one" zone. At other times they sin gained a tie, first at 47.47 used the strict man to man. and then at 51-51 and both times MICHIGAN it was Gustafson's hustling drive G F R P T shots that brought the Badgers Darden f 9 0-1 8 3 18 Clawson f 4 2-4 8 4 10 back. Myers e 5 1-1 I6 2 11 Badger Coach Erickson coin- Russell g 7 7- 9 1 21 bined strategy with exhortation Bankey g 1 1-1 2 0 3 and nearly made both work for Thompson 1 1-2 3 3 him. The generally soft-spoken Totals 2813-1869 15 69 court professor was up off the WISCONSIN bench nearly every time his team G F R P T had the ball, kneeling at the side Franklin f 5 3-6 13 4 13 Gustafson f 7 4-4 2 3 18 of the court and clenching his Zubor c 1 0-0 8 0 2 fist. Carlin g 2 1-1 5 5 5 Erickson appeared frustrated Barnes g 4 0-1 1 2 8 after the game, but was none- Sweeney 7 3-3 6 3 17 theless enthused by his team's Totals 28 11-15 55 iS 67, THE STRAIGHT STUFF THAT'S WHAT YOU'LL GET MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY AT 11:15 P.M. When WALLY GABLER and STAN KEMP REPORT THE LATEST SPORT S- PRESENTED BY TICE'S MENSWEAR WCBN-650 NOW SERVING UNIVERSITY TO}WERS I \ OLIVER DARDEN PUTS IN Michigan's win clinching basket, a lay-up with 46 seconds left against Wisconsin. Darden's clutch shot gave Michigan a five point lead which was too big for a determined Badger comeback. The final score was 69-67. Wis- ncnsin's Ken Gustafsnn tries in vain to stow Darden. CVlllll5 irken "UbL'Qzibull 1XIC3 111 va BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Spartans Roll Over Distance Man Dean of Notre Dame put on a tremendous effort in the 1000-yard run, tearing off a 1:52 half mile enroute to a 2:09.2 meet record. Michigan freshmen provided W ildca s some of the highlights of the meet, competing unattached in the open divisions. Tom Kearne, half to take a 44-30 lead and fin- Wolverine freshman, roared from ished with 37 of 74. Purdue got a behind to a second place finish miserable 24 of 81 from the field in the half mile run. Kearney's I. ..,3nn nn _im.: 1:,ti 155.9 bettered the nld meet By The Associated Press EVANSTON - Flashing a bal- anced scoring attack, Michigan State took command in the first half and rolled to a 77-68 Big Ten basketball victory over Northwest- ern last night. The triumph was the fifth in six conference games for the Spar- tans who still trail undefeated Michigan by one-half game. Aitch to the Attack Matt' Aitch spearheaded MSU's attack In the early going and had 18 points before fouling out with 7:11 to play.' MSU scoring honors, however,, went to Stan Washington with 22 and Northwestern's Jim Burns also had 22. The loss was the fourth in five conference ,games for North- western. Gophers Swamp Purdue LAFAYETTE - Minnesota caught Purdue cold and shot 50 per cent over the Boilermakers' zone defense to win 91-75 in a Big Ten basketball game yester- day. Purdue hit only one of its first 12 shots and never got close except for a 23-23 threat with 7:26 to play in the first half. Dave Schellhase of Purdue, the nation's leading scorer, dropped only six of 20 from the field but hit 16 of 17 free throws for a game high total of 28 points, compared with his average of 32.1. Clark Paces Offense Archie Clark hit 10 of 13 and seven of nine to lead the Gophers with 27 points, and outside shoot- er Wes Martins connected on nine of 11 for 18. Lou Hudson, still hampered by a cast on his in- jured arm, added 10. Minnesota connected on 55.3 per cent of its shots in the first i but made 27 of 30 free throws. 1,U The Gophers had a 63-43 edge record but was a second behind in rebounds, Dennis Dvoracek the time of WMU's Stephenson. leading with 17. In the pole vault, five men went The victory pulled Minnesota over the bar at 15 feet but all even in the Big Ten at 2-2. Pur- failed to top 15'6". The places due dropped to 1-4 in the con- were awarded on the fewest num- ference. ber of misses. George Canamare, * * *the Michigan captain, tied for OSU Outshoots Texans third in the event. OSU More Medal Winners COLUMBUS-Ohio State even- O t h e r Wolverine cindermen ed its season record at 7-7 yester- earning medals were Brian Kelly dy itsdeangerdadi7-7eStr-with a third place in the three- day by defeating the Hardin-Sim- quarter mile and Elmer Morales mons Cowboys 72-64 in a non- with a third in the 1000-yard run. conference game.s The Michigan freshmen, run- Rh n Sepic sank 26 points to lead ning unattached in the novice di- the Buckeyes while teammate Bill ________unattachedinthenovicedi ir F- I Big Ten Standings W L Pet. MICHIGAN 5 0 1.000 Michigan State 5 1 .867 Illinois 3 1 .750 Iowa 3 2 .600 Minnesota 2 2 .500 Wisconsin 1 3 .250 Ohio State 1 3 .250 Indiana 1 3 .250 Northwestern 1 4 .200 Purdue 1 4 .200 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Michigan 69, Wisconsin 67 Minnesota 91, Purdue 75 Michigan State 77, Northwester 68 Ohio State 72, Hardin-Simmons 64 l Here's the shortest line between ra aton and a 'g-laces' career. Your name: It's the one you sign on at your placement office for an interview with IBM February 16-17 Hosket picked 23 of Ohio State's rebounds off the boards. The Cowboys, now 12-5 for the season, hung on throughout the ragged see-saw game, but lack of depth and personal fouls made the difference. Dearth of Help The Texans had only nine men on the bench, and with 6:44 left in the game, had lost lthree to fouls. Dick Nagy and Charlie Dish- man finished for the Cowboys with four personals each. The Cowboys racked up 27 per- sonal fouls while the Bucks had 16. 4 SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Duke 84, N. Carolina State 77 Louisville 103, Bradley 71 Loyola (Chi) 76, Kansas State 70 Clemson 71, Maryland 66 Kentucky 115, Auburn 78 Dayton 79, St. Joseph's (Pa) 76 Michigan State 77, Northwestern 68 Providence 80, Niagara 67 Iowa State 69, Oklahoma State 56 Vanderbilt 98, Louisiana State 66 Wichita 87, Tulsa 72 NBA Cincinnati 116, St. Louis 115 Boston 119, New York 107 NHL Detroit 4, chicago 4 (tie) UNIVERSITY STUDENT, STAFF & FACULTY 30-Day Group Flight to Europe JET DEPARTS NEW YORK JULY 18th JET RETURNS FROM LONDON AUG. 15th CallLes. Thurston Call Fred Cohen 663-5718 JU0 761-0463 19, ,-- Now for very low prices, you can learn to ski from professionals only 5 minutes from campus! SNOWBIRD SKI SCHOOL at TEE & SKI * EXCELLENT INSTRUCTORS-all former national Junior competitors 0 INEXPENSIVE LESSONS and RENTALS 0 MIDWEST'S BEST INSTRUCTION HILL o NIGHT SKIING 0 ARTIFICIAL SNOW-MAKING EQUIPMENT ---.---.---.------.--------- -.. . =1 si4.= I~ .I.. ~ L J...... ~ L L RP Want growth-with a difference? Career excitement-with stability? New frontiers in all technologies-with the leader in the nation's fastest-growing major industry? IBM can offer you extraordinary growth opportunities in Research, Development, Manufacturing, Programing and Administration-throughout its network of labs, plants and technical centers. If you want the facts about these careers, you'll want to talk to the IBM intArviewAr. put your ideas to work and earn superior rewards. In a growth company like IBM, responsibility and advancement come rapidly. In fact, during the next five years IBM expects to appoint approximately 6,000 new managers. A wide range of training and education programs will help you meet the challenge of growth. So visit your placement office now for a line on IBM. Sign on it for your interview. If for any reason you can't arrange an s +a .:a . ..eifV-,,,YtAA,.C IBM is going places. Why not come along? Whatever your area of study, ask us how you might use your particular talents at IBM. Job opportunities at IBM lie in eight major career fields: (1) Research and Development, (2) Engineering, (3) Manufacturing, (4) Finance and Administration, (5) Marketing, (6) Field Engineering, (7) Systems Engineering, (8) Programing. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. U