WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9,1966 Blue F( By RICK STERN Michigan's Wolverines relaxed yesterday for the first time since before the season began and the last time until it ends. The cagers shot free throws and jump shots for half an hour after hearing Tom Jorgensen and Jim Skala give a combined scouting report on tough Western Ken- tucky. Coach Dave Strack sent them home at five o'clock, an hour earlier than usual. Yesterday was the day for the coaches to work and worry. They worried over numerous decisions of strategy based on information gathered by Skala and Jorgensen, ' who were in Kent, Ohio, at the Loyola-Western Kentucky game. They worked on just about every- thing under .the Athletic Building roof-from defenses to ticket dis- tribution. Most important, they mapped the :plan, of action for Friday; night's battle. Only Players But coaches aren't allowed to play. Today the players begin the big push. They will work for nearly three hours - running, scrimmaging, shooting - on edge, alert, trying to get ready for a team most of them hadn't. even heard of till a couple of weeks ago. Tomorrow they leave for Iowa City. Earlier yesterday Strack took time out to sit back at his desk and talk over the Big Ten season. "The opener at Columbus (won y by, Michigan 83-78) was a key game. We'd lost four in the pre- season competition but we had been pointing toward the Big Ten and we had to show right off the bat that we could do a job .. . THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN r )rget Loss, Pre "I felt we really matured at Columbus and then the next week at Northwestern, where we had to come from way behind. North- western had a tough team and Fred Taylor really had Ohio State up for us .. . "I'd have to agree that the Big Ten may have been better overall The telephone rang and when Strack returned, the Michigan State game was the topic of con- versation. "I don't think that our loss to State will have any effect on the way we play Friday. This is the third time in a row that we've lost the last game of the Big Ten season after clinching the cham- pionship. Two years ago we played our best game of the season to beat Loyola after losing to Purdue. Last year we beat Dayton . . . "We didn't play too badly but we sure could have done better. We were careless and I just hope 24-Game Statistics G F R P Pts. Ave. Russell 291-555 165-202 202 52 747 31.1 Clawson 152-299 76-101 179 89 380 15.8 Myers 139-297 43-57 194 55 321 13.3 Darden 126-262 59-95 217 88 311 13.5 Dill 63-136 27-37 42 56 153 6.3 Th'pson 57-146 35-45 94 49 .149 6.7 Bankey 39-79 18-33 47 48 96 4.1 Brown 9-30 13-20 23 12 31 2.1 Pitts 8-22 7-8 17 12 23 1.7 T sllotson 5-11 1-2 14 5 11 1.2 Deizer 2-4 2-4 5 3 6 1.0 Slebodnik 1-3 0-0 2 0 2 0.5 Fritz 1-1 0-0 9 0 2 2.0 Michigan Totals 893-1845 446-6141187 459 2232 93.0 Opponents' Totals 784-1719 433-591 1026 466 2002 83.3 II are for it doesn't happen again this sea-1 son... "In the second half we had a chance to get back into the game but we couldn't get a basket for! two minutes. We just weren'tJ shooting well at all .. . "I was quite pleased with John{ Thompson's play. I thought he handled the ball well and played' his best game to date. Hopefully he's completely over his ankle injury .." Daily Up in East Lansing a smiling' and unusually loquacious John Bennington toothed out a few comments for the Daily. "I con- sidered Jim Myers the key to the game. He's the one who runs their offense. If they can't get the ball to him they're stopped. I put Bill Curtis on him and he did the job ... "Russell?-I don't care if he got 58 as long aswehwon. Sureghe scores a lot but the other guys aren't even shooting enough to get on their game."~ .The Wolverines did manage to set one record in losing to State. They concluded the Big Ten cam- paign with a scoring average of 94.9 points per game, an even two MNCAA points higher than the record which they set last year. Miss Record Unfortunately, they missed out on establishing a Big Ten record for highest team shooting per- centage. They needed to hit ata .498 clip to beat Ohio State's old season mark set in 1960, but shot only .388 misisng the record by .09. General admission tickets are still on sale for both regional games at $4.00 for a set of two. Reserved seats were sold out yes- terday. Thursday, March 10, Friday, March I1 LONDON GRAFICA ARTS presents can exhibition or igna lithograpghs, 11 HAIRSTYLING TO PLEASE -CONTINENTALS -COLLEGIATE -RAZOR CUTS TRY! U of M Barbers N. University-Near Kresge's 4* etchings, Lvood;cuts Daumier Corinth Renoir Carzou Dufy Ronault Chagall Maillol Toulouse-Lautrec Cassatt Picasso Van Dongen and many others moderately priced Bell Tower Motel, Room 202.. 010 ,m'-9 .m. I I DAVE STRACK last season--there weren't as many great sophomores this year to re- place standouts like Bill Buntin and the Van Arsdale twins .. Bad Teams Better "But in a way the league was tougher this year because the second division teams were strong- er. Teams at the bottom knocked off contenders time and again and when you're in first you've got to be pleased as long as it doesn't happen to you ..:. WE ARE THE GREATEST: Robed Hilltopper Prexy Leads Cage Celebration Pa ie en C UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN 4th-semester level or higher in French LIVE IN A FRENCH CO-OP IN OXFORD HOUSING NEXT YEAR French-speaking directress and native resident assistants APPLY BY MARCH 9 at RomanceLnguges Dertment Office 2076 Frieze Bldg. - BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (P)- It's unusual for a college president to address an assemblage of stu- dents while standing in his bath- robe. But that's what Kelly Thompson, president of Western Kentucky State College, did Mon- M1 day night. He responded to the chants of several hundred students who marched, to his home after un- ranked Western's 105-86 basket- ball victory over No. 4 Chicago Loyola in the NCAA Mid-east regionals at Kent, Ohio. Cassius Thompson "We are the greatest," Thomp- son said. "We have a big job to do, but we can do it." Then Thompson excused the school's women students from their dormitory curfew so they could ' be among well wishers greeting the Hilltoppers on their arrival at City-County Airport. So many students and towns- people gathered at the small air- port-state police estimated 5,000, with 1,500 cars-that the team's plane couldn't taxi in to the ter-- minal. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: RICK STERN After three tries, it taxied to the end of the runway and radioed for help. Police escorted the team bus to the aircraft, but when it drove back to the terminal even it couldn't make its way through the throng. Students were on top, in front of; behind, on either side of the bus. All the time they chanted, "We're number one." Or "We want Michigan." Or "We want Ken- tucky." Meet Michigan The Hilltoppers play Big Ten champion Michigan Friday in the Mideast, semifinals at Iowa City, Iowa, the winner to, play the winner of Friday's game between No. 1-ranked Kentucky and Day- ton on Saturday night. 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