SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 1966 TH MICIGA A I.aVa.araa T EMIITGAh ni' PAGE SEVEN ': Wildcat Five Cages olverines 9 Comments from the Coaches (Continued from Page 1) er by . .. guess who. Russell had put in a fast 13 points in the 7' hot minutes and 51 seconds it took them to pull even for the first time since they led 6-4 in the opening minutes. But though there was no rela- tive momentum on either side at this point, the Blue couldn't move out with Kentucky's booming jumpers taking a heavy toll. The game was not won on over- whelming speed, nor on unexpect- ed rebounding, but on a shooting slump that has gone back to the Michigan State game. It was only sprprising that the Wolverines could stay as close as they did with their accuracy being so far below that of their conference= winning norm. Still the battle went down to In the first half Michigan got Just what they expected . .. al- most. Kentucky started of f with their "trap" (Rupp's term for a sliding zone) on defense, and set up double picks for Riley and Dampier from the sides on of- fense. The Wolverines went man- to man on defense and figured that their rebounding advantage would take care of itself at both ends of the court. But the ball seemed to have another plan in mind, and it took every unexpect- ed bounce off the rims and off the court.. But the story again was in the shooting from the floor. The Wildcats popped for a hot 51.4 per cent off their screens and a couple of well-run fast breaks. But the Wolverihes struggled at a 35.9, mark as Jim Myers and Clawson were again off their expected games. - Russell did not get into open of his usual spurts in the opening stanza, but kept it steady from the field. In the last five minutes, however, his psuedo-drives toward the basket from around the top of the key caught the Wildcats one man short a couple of times un- derneath. Clawson and Darden were in good position for a pair of cripples. The only thing that mattered for the Blue-on the short end of a 42-32 score by the end of the first half--was whether Clawson and Myers could break out of their shooting slumps and Darden could get some much-needed pow- ed power back on the boards for them. It didn't happen. RAINCOAT CLEANING __SPECIAL Good Until March 15 99c Thrifty Dry Cleaners East Liberty at 5th Ave. Adolph Rupp: I'm very happy because I didn't think we had the size to go against them. Our ball handling paid off. We fooled them a little with our defense but there were still some holes in it. They were scoring some easy baskets underneath because our wing men didn't get under to cover for it. In the time out near the end we set our defense back a little because they were-shooting over us. We moved Jaracz back to block the passing line. There were times that we got careless. Dampier threw one pass that looked like he was trying to pass to me. We felt Western Kentucky's zone disturbed Michigan so we used our trap defense to make them throw it high. We knew if we took them man to man, Cazzie would beat us. Outside of our mistakes-and hell, Yankees throw it away too-we showed a lot of poise. Dave Strack: We were tough as hell in the second half. So were they. I wouldn't say any- thing against them. I'm tremen- dously proud of our effort. Each and every player gave every- thing and something more. There was no better player than Riley was out there tonight. Riley got the critical one. We had the momentum when we went ahead by one in the sec- ond half. We had the momen- tum, but I don't know what hap- pened. We had good shots but couldn't capitalize. They were a great team and didn't succumb. The seven kids that are leaving have done a lot for the Univer- sity, and I'm eternally grateful to them. I was proud of the way our club came back tonight. Anybody know where I can get another Russell-on the streets of Chicago or anywhere? 1 The Wolverines will arrive at 12:30 this afternoon at Willow Run Airport. the last minutes before the game might have been conceded. Michi- gan stayed five to six points off Kentucky's pace but stayed there too long. The last 3:26 of the game were spent in a lot of rough scrambling. A couple of missed foul shots by Thompson and Clawson blunted the final Blue assault, and Pat Riley was, as ever, on the prowl A at the corners. Though Darden was the roaring rebounder for most of the half the crazy ball was back to its old tricks in the. final seconds, and Kentucky got possession and chance to use their slick stall to end the contest. Hilitoppers Avenge Defeat RUSSELL'S ERA . .'64-'66 Texas Western, Duke Move To NCAA Semifinal Round The Story MICHIGAN Brown Thompson Bankey Russell Clawson Myers Dill Darden Totals G F R P T 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 2-6 2-4 3 2 6 1-1 0-0 0 1 2 10-25 9-9 11 2 29 5414 1-2 5 3 11 5-19 0-0 11 3 10 1-3 0-0 0 0 2 8-16 1-3 12 5 17 32-8513-18 46 17 77 KENTUCKY IOWA CITY VP)-Western Ken- tucky's balanced attack riddled. Dayton 82-68 for third place in the NCAA Mideast Regional Bas- ketball Tournament last night. The victory avenged an earlier 77-57 Dayton victory over the Hilltoppers who finished up with a 25-3 record. Western Kentucky played as though still rankled by a last sec- ond defeat by Michigan, 80-78, in Friday night's first round. Western Kentucky took com- mand over the Flyers after the lead changed, hands 10 times with- in the first 10 minutes. The steady shooting of Clem Haskins and Steve Cunningham, who scored 20 points each, and Wayne Chapman, who contribut- rder Your Subscription Today 764-0558 TV RENTALS ed 18 soon sped the Hilltoppers to a 15-point lead wtih less than two minutes in the half remaining. Dayton's 6-foot-11 Henry Fink- el scored 31 points before he foul- ed out with 1:47 remaining. The towering Flyer star piled up 36 points against Kentucky Friday night and his two-night total of 67 established an Iowa Fieldhouse record for Mideast Regional play inl four tourneys since 1954. OUR FAMOUS UNIVERSITY MODEL SHIRT IS NOW AVAILABLE IN "BRITISH BLUE" CHAMBRAY Our exclusive model shir--with tapered body, soft-roll buiton-down collar, flapped pocket and deep back pleat-is now available in a hand- some new shade which we call "British Blue"- a deep, clear color that is exceedingly effective with a wide variety of suitings. In coffon chain- bray, 14-162 neck sizes, 32-35 sleeve lengths, $7. University Shop. THE UNIVERSITY SHOP SAKS FIFTH AVNUE 332 South State Street, Ann Arbor Yale-Princeton-Harvard-University of Michigan.-Stanford -New York-White Plains'Springfield Garden City-Washington-Ft. Lauderdale -Chicago.-Skokie -Detroit-everly Hitls-Poenix Lowest Rates, Student-Specials By The Associated Press RALEIGH, N.C. - Duke's Blue Devils raced to a 16-point first half lead, but had to come from behind in the closing minutes to defeat Syracuse 91-81 last night and win the NCAA Eastern Regional bas- ketball playoffs. A capacity crowd of 12,400 in Reynolds Coliseum saw Duke charge back after Syracuse went ahead 74-72 with 5:43 to play. Jack. Marin, with 22 points, and Bob Verga, with 21, were the top scorers as Duke snapped back late in the game to seal the victory and earn a berth in the National semi- finals at College Park, Md., next Friday., Duke swept into a 19-8 lead in the first six minutes of play as Steve Vacendak scored n i n e points. He finished with 19 for the night and his ball handling was a big factor in the Blue Devil victory. Verga~ sank a goal with 9:25 left in the first half to send Duke into a 16 point lead, 29-13. Duke got rolling again and held a 44-37 edge at halftime. Syracuse, unable to penetrate the tight Duke zone defense in the first half, came back strong after intermission behind George Hick- er, Richard Dean and Jim Boe- heim. Hicker scored 17 points, Dean 16 and Boeheim 15. Syracuse All-America Dave Birg was held to 10 points. Syracuse tied the score at 53-53 on a long shot by Dick Cornwall. Marin sank a goal for Duke, but Hicker tied it 55-55, then Vaughn Harper put the Orangemen ahead on a three-point play, 58-55. Duke then stormed home behind Marin, Verga and Vacendak. *i * * *LUBBOCK, Tex.-WMillie Cager hit the deciding goal with 32 sec- onds remaining in the second over- time period, lifting Texas Western past Kansas 81-80 last night in the final of the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball playoffs. The victory shot the third-rank- ed Miners into the national semi- finals next weekend at College Park, Md. Cager's two-pointer offset a last-minute scoring spree by Kan- sas' Roger Lopes, who pumped in three field goals and a free throw in the final 56 seconds after the Miners had opened a six-point lead. The Jayhawks, ranked No. 4 na- tionally, had what would have been a winning 25-footer by Jo Jo White with one second to go in the first overtime disallowed. An official ruled White stepped out of NCAA REGIONALS First Place Kentucky 84, Michigan 77 (Mideast) Duke 91, Syracuse 81 (East) Texas Western 81, Kansas 80 (2 ovt) (Midwest) Utah 70, Oregon State 64 (west) Consolation W. Kentucky 82, Dayton 68 (Mideast) St. Joseph's 92, Davidson 76 (East) So. Methodist 89, Cincinnati 84 (Midwest) Houston 102, Pacific 91 (West) NIT TOURNAMENT Boston College 96, Louisville 93 (ovt) Army 71, Manhattan 66 San Francisco 89, Penn State 77 Vilianova 63, St. John's 61 NBA Philadelphia 134, New York 126 St. Louis 114, Cincinnati 113 NHL , Montreal 4, Detroit 1 Toronto 6, Boston 0 Chicago 4, New York 2 bounds before getting off the shot. Kansas struck for five straight points in the final minute of regu- lation play to earn a 69-69 stand- off. The first overtime ended in a 71-71 tie, but Cager snapped the deadlock with a tip-in in the first minute of the second extra period and Texas Western led thereafter. Bobby Joe Hill, Texas Western's 5-foot-9 playmaker, led the Miners to their 25th victory in 26 games with 22 points. David Lattin add- ed 15 for the Miners. Walt Wesley, Kansas' 6-foot-11 pivotman, took game honors, with 24, while White had 19 and Lopes 17 for the Jayhawks, 23-4 on the season. HI-Fl STUDIO 1319 S. Univ NO 3 7242 Dampier Kron Conley Riley Jaracs Porter Totals KENTUCKY MICHIGAN G F R 6-12 3-4 6 6-14 2-5 9 6-11 2-6 8 13-27 3-4 5 6-8 0-0 7 0-0 0-0 0 37-72 10-19 421 PT 3 15 4 14 4 14 2 29 2 12 0 0 15 84 I 11 42 42--84 32 45-77 r e- .......... APRIL 1966 GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS on sale i NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD KOHN Join The Daily Sports Staff STUDENT StudentGovernnent Council and Graduate Student Council invite you to PETITION FOR POSITIONS on the Student Advisory Committee on Presidential Selection, which will study future University needs and suggest names of candidates to the Regents. Graduates and undergraduates are eligible, and details may be obtained at the SGC Offices, 1545 SAB, or the GSC Offices, 2543 SAB. Deadline for petitioning is Monday, March 14 in FISHBOIWL alIso . z. AT MUSIC SCHOOL Mon., Mar. 14; Tues., Mar. 15; Wed., Mar. 16 SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMITTE announces the Opening of Petitioning f or INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CONFERENCE COMMITTEE Information and Petitions available through March 25 IN THE SESQUICENTENNIAL OFFICE ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF THE MICHIGAN UNION ,:I --...--.- i .---_ It frugs, fishes, cha cha's, bossa nova's, monkeys, merengues, even twists without a wrinkle. An Arrow Decton will look just as fresh on the last dance as it did on the first. Decton is Arrow's blend of 65% Dacron and 35% cotton that frustrates wrinkles. A wash-and-wear that needs only a little touching up. Available in solid or stripe styles. Neat tabber snap collar (as shown) or classic button down. $6.95. Bold New Breed by i. {. 1 ' :1 Registration for candidacy for the USNSA National Student Congress will remain open until 5:00 Tuesday, *5 a e s3r - £ - program schedule THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Tune in the Philharmonic each Sunday at 2:00 p.m., (WUOM-FM, 91.7 on your dial), brought to you through special arrangements between the University of Mich- igan, Ann Arbor Federal and the Liberty Music Shop. The current program schedule is: Sunday, March 13 KOSTELANETZ, Conducting; HIRAOKA, Xylophonist Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice; Debussy: Afternoon of a Faun; Hovhaness: Fantasy on Japanese Woodprints; Respighi: Pines of Rome X0 I ik\\\ ;', '! ' I 11