PAGE SIR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1966 .1~I r aawra . rwsafca..a X .rw[laV'Vii. l. r is7 V V v This Vacation in Sports TOMORROW SWIMMING-Western Conference Meet at Iowa City HOCKEY-Michigan State at Michigan, Coliseum, 8 p.m. FRIDAY SWIMMING-Western Conference Meet at Iowa City WRESTLING-Western Conference Meet at Champaign TRACK-Western Conference Meet at East Lansing GYMNASTICS-Western Conference Meet at Bloomington SATURDAY, BASKETBALL-Northwestern at Yost Field House, 4 p.m. SWIMMING-Western Conference Meet at Iowa City WRESTLING-Western Conference Meet at Champaign TRACK-Western Conference Meet at East Lansing GYMNASTICS-Western Conference Meet at Bloomington MONDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan at Michigan State Gage By CHUCK VETZNER Acting Sports Editor Michigan State coach John Benington would like to play Michigan once and not play any- one else; Northwestern coach Larry Glass would probably like to play anybody else but Michigan, and Iowa coach Ralph Miller would like to play Michigan any- rs Sho L i March down to your, .bookstore today / for this important new PENGUIN MUST THE BOMB SPREAD? 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PE NGUIN OSINC SCOFES] COLLEGE BASKETBALL Penn 56, Princeton 48 Holy Cross 63, St. John's (NY) 60 Harvard 64, Dartmouth 62 Connecticut 96, Rhode Island 74 Cornell 84, Columbia 73 Nebraska 79, Kansas State 69 St. Bonaventure 65, Kent State 56 Eastern Michigan 71, Wayne State 59 Villanova 91, Seton Hall 67 Yale 77, Brown 64{ Georgetown (DC) 86, Canasius 69 DePaul 101, Steubenville 67 Houston 103, New Orleans Loyola 77 Wichita 87, Southern Illinois 80 NBA Detroit 122, Baltimore 110 Cincinnati 102, Philadelphia 100 f San Francisco 114, New York 112 time . . . providing the game is in Iowa City. Dave Strack of Michigan? Heck, he doesn't care who, where or when his Wolverines play . providing they win. And winning in grand fashion is exactly what they are doing. The Michigan blitzing offense has been sweeping through the Big Ten at an average of better than 96 points a game. With two games to go, and a one game lead on the Spartans, the Wolverines are maintaining the quiet confidence of a team that has gone through the pressure before. Say Good-byes Saturday, they will host North- western as the squad bids adieu to Yost for the season. The game which will be televised regionally (channel 2 in Detroit) begins at 4 p.m. Then on Monday, the Wolver- ines journey to East Lansing to play before a sell-out crowd. Un- less MSU loses to Indiana on Saturday, the Wolverine contest will be for the NCAA tournament bid. A Michigan win over the ot for Wildcats would clinch a tie for thef title, but conference rules stipulate! that in the case of a dead heat, the invitation goes to the team which has been waiting patiently for the longer time. Michigan hasn't missed a tour- ney in two years, but the general: feeling in Ann Arbor is that a: third one would be nice too. Mon- day's win over Iowa gave evidence: that the Wolverines might haveJ their way. Hawkeye coach Ralph! Miller said his team played as well as they had all year, but they still, finished 15 points behind. Change in Scenery A week ago, Iowa pulled out a victory at their home court and plainly played superior basketball. Aside from the change in scenery,' the differences were a fantastic Wolverine shooting percentage of 63.6, and improved board and de-! fensive play. At halftime, the rebounding sta- tistics were equal, but when the game was over, Michigan was' ahead by 13. Defense was the big problem inthe first encounter as Iowa consistently moved in for easy baskets at close range. This time the Hawks sensed something was up because even at the be- ginning of the game they started taking some long jumpers, longer7 than shots they passed up in the first clash. ' Michigan started out in a zone: but quickly switched to a man-to- man which was used until late in the second half when John Claw-3 son picked up his fourth foul. "We decided to start with the press and the zone," explained assistant Jim Skala, "and if we fell behind, a we would switch. "The main thing was that our players weren't losing their men. I Tournament Bid 9 We looked at the films and they saw how Iowa was, getting loose. We preach, 'be a man-and-a-half on defense,' but in the first game sometimes we looked like half a man." The erratic Wildcats will give the Wolverines another chance to test their he-man defensive styles and rebounding prowess. Center Jim Pitts doesn't like to shoot, but he is leading the Big Ten in re- bounding with better than 15 per game. Taking most of the shots is guard Jim Burns, who specializes in driving the base line. First Meetingj In the first meeting of the year between these two clubs, Michigan trailed through much of the con- test until a spurt pushed them ahead in the second half. At times this season, NU has played superb- ly and other times they have been atrocious. After winning their first game of the year against Purdue, the Wildcats dropped five straight, won five straight, and finally lost theirbmost recent out- ing. At their best they lost to fifth-rated Vanderbilt by one point. One note of consistency is their performance against Michigan. They haven't beaten the Wolver- ines since Cazzie Russell started playing, and with Cazzie and six other seniors (Dan Brown, John Thompson, John Clawson, Van Tillotson, Jim Myers, and Captain Oliver Darden) playing their last game at home, they don't intend to change the tradition. Traditional Style Michigan State, also has ideas on changing tradition. Theirs against Michigan. Like the Wild- cats, the Spartans' success against the Wolverines has been on vaca- tion for the past few seasons. probability, the Spartans will get MSU, however, has not been er- at least a piece of the pie if they ratic this year and is only one win Monday. game behind Michigan. Cocky The defensive-minded Spartans r coach Benington stated earlier this are guided by Stan Washington, a year that he would rather play springy 6' 3" forward who uses Michigan for the title in a one his jumping ability to block shots game showdown than go through and snare rebounds. The offensive the rigorous season and risk losses mainspring is Matt Aitch (sounds to inferior teams. like the eighth letter of the al- It looks like Benington will get phabet) who has filled the long his cake and be able to eat it too, vacant gap of a big center. For- although Michigan would like to ward Bill Curtis had to fill in last shove it down his throat. In all season. Cazzie, Player of the Year, Heads Al-AMerican Team By The Associated Press Dampier and Bing tied for third NEW YORK- Michigan's Caz- in the Player of the Year ballot- zie Russell, two-time All-America ing. Each received 12 votes. Jim from Chicago, was named college Walker of Providence was fifth basketball's Player of the Year by with 11 votes and Dick Snyder of the Associated Press yesterday. Davidson sixth with eight. The 6'6" senior, runner-up to Schellhase received two votes. Princeton's Bill Bradley for the while John Beasley of Texas A&1, 1965 Player of the Year honor, Steve Vacendak and Jack Marin won the 1960 title by a 58-13 mar- of Duke and Mike Warren of gin over Clyde Lee of Vanderbilt UCLA received one each. in voting by 214 sports writers Walker, Snyder and Marin were and broadcasters. named to the All-America second The balloting was conducted in team along with Bob Verga of conjunction with the voting for Duke and Matt Guokas of St. the 1966 All-America team. Joseph's of Pennsylvania. Russell and Lee also were one- Pat Riley and Thad Jaracz of two in the voting for the All- Kentucky, Bob Lewis of- North America. Rounding out the first Carolina, Walt Wesley of Kansas team were Dave Schellhase of and Henry Finkel of Dayton made Purdue, Louis Dampier of Ken- the third team. tucky's unbeaten Wildcats and Big Ten players Don Freeman Dave Bing of Syracuse. . of Illinois, Lou Hudson and Archie Oliver Darden of Michigan, 6'7" Clark of Minnesota, and Stan senior forward from Detroit, re- Washington of Michigan State ceived honorable mention in the were among those receiving hon- balloting. orable mention. A 01963 VOLKSWAGEN Of AMERWCA, INC.' i IN BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP: Trackmen Out To Foil Spartan Hopes I I Get the bug in Europe. Pick up your Volkswagen in Europe and save a bundle on import costs and European travel expenses. Your local VW dealer handles everything. purchase, delivery, insurance, licensing, the works. Just tell him where you want it delivered: France, Italy, Great Britain, Ireland, Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland or The Netherlands. ------------------------------------ Howard Cooper Volkswagen, Inc. 2575 S. State St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104i Please send me your free illustrated brochure and price list. A' o zed nr 8 Namet t -t !Address, S City -Zone-Stte_____ -- Ask for: By BOB McFARLAND The final countdown is near- ing completion, and although it is for nothing as dramatic as a space shot, the count means almost as much to a group of athletes down at Yost Field House. They have been waiting for this weekend to arrive ever since Sep- tember, when it seemed like the first dual meet was an eternity away. The grueling workouts, long practices, experimentation and just plain sweat became awfully fa- maliar to the squad. But the countless number of hours spent in preparation will show their results Friday and Sat- urday, some in the span of six seconds, others stretched over nine minutes, as the Wolverine cinder- House in East Big Ten Indoor' ships. Spring Football Yesterday, the Michigan thin- clads went through a light work- out, with a relaxed atmosphere prevailing. Shot putter Jack Har- vey and Bob Gerometta, who spe- cializes in the 440, tossed a pig- skin around, while a few of their teammates jogged laps on the cin- ders. Call it the calm before the storm, because come Friday, every Wolverine will be expected to make the supreme effort. As assistent coach Dave Martin explained, "We've got a pretty good team, but we're not a great team. Michigan State is going to be real rough to beat, especially Lansing for the Track Champion- men journey to Jenison Field1 with all the points they're going to get in the hurdles. If we're going to do anything this week- end, it's going to take a top- notch performance from every man." Martin pointed to Wisconsin as another prime contender for the conference laurels. "Of the two though, you'd have to give the edge to State," he continued. "We rate as a darkhorse at best." The hurdles equal power when connected with the Spartan track team. Every other team is going to start at a marked disadvantage because of Michigan State su- premacy in this event. Barring' virtual disaster, the MSU foursome of Gene Washington; Clinton Jones, Bob Steele, and Fred Mc- Koy should take at least three of 3300 Clipper Mill Road Baltimore, Md. 21211 JIM WESTERMAN BILL WALTER DON COWARD PLEASE PHONE, FOR APPOINTMENT- 761-3200 16 I .,. ,, ::- .'ma'r., 'Y " 6 ., . ,, , +},t . e ..t~e 'Vj4/ . . rf.... {$ S C {L t ,. i McGREGOR'S L.P.G. JACKET (Let's Play Golf) is the biggest boon for golfers since the handicap Let it rain, let the winds blow . . . just wear it and keep swinging. Sunny? 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CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLtCATIONS.- the top five places in the high hurdles and low hurdles. Harvey in the Shot Martin pointed to Wolverine junior Jack Harvey as Michigan's most likely candidate for first place. Harvey owns the best toss in the Big Ten for 1966, a 58' plus heave of two weeks ago. An- other Michigan putter, Steve Leuchtman, stands an excellent chance of placing. The field events could help the Wolverines make up some lost ground. Besides the shot put, Michigan exhibits strength in both the high jump and the pole vault. Sophomore Rick Hunt has consist- ently cleared the bar at 6'6" all season, while Bob Densham ap- pears to be back in top form, also jumping 6'6" last week. Wolver- ine captain George Canamare must be rated a threat in the pole vault on the-'basis of his 15'9" journey into the clouds last spring. Turning to the sprints, more Spartan names clutter the list of the conference best. Jim Summers is their leading dash man, with Jim Garrett close behind. Garrett has only run a' :06.4 this .season, but he is notorious for turning in surprises in the championships. A young man from Illinois, Cyril Pinder,rmay steal some points away from MSU here, though. The sophomore, who also high jumps and throws the shot, has a :06.1 timing to his credit. Michigan entries in the 60-yard dash, include Dorie Reid, Willie Brown, and Carl Ward all with a :06.3 clocking. Distance Threats Northwestern's Craig Boydston ranks number one in the distance events. He has broken 4:10 in the mile twice this year. The defend- ing champion in the mile, Spar- tan Keith Coates, has been un- impressive thus far. With a 9:13.7 recorded in the two-mile last week, Wolverine sen- ior Ted Benedict is a good bet to add points to the Michigan ledger in that department. Badger Bar- ney Peterson will have to contend with Wolverine Elmo Morales to take the 880-yard run. Iowa must be given the nod in the mile relay. The Hawkeyes, With three returnees from last year's record-breaking unit, turn- ed in a 3:14.9 last week. It will be an uphill battle for the Wolverines, but they've made the climb before, and can't be counted out until the last tape snaps. 4 * . h REGISTRATION & PETITIONING for SGC ELECTIONS .. v J....yc. if 1, I