SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FAGS SEVEN _. IHGNDIY ~'~~1v~ A L7uL UL' V A;, IN Texas Western mins Title 'NIT TOURNEY: Brigham Young Mauls NYU COLLEGE PARK, Md. (M'-In- spired Texas Western, led by the gymnastic efforts of little Bobby Joe Hill, toppled top-ranked Kentucky 72-65 last night and captured the National collegiate basketball championship t h a t Kentucky Coach Adolph Rupp wanted to add to his collection of four ethers. Duke won the game for third place, beating Utah 79-77. Hill, a 5-foot-10 bacKcourt man, scored 20 points, most of them in clutch situationsr and many of spectacular drtving lay, ups that brought to mind the hey day of Bob Cousy. Poised Team In the end, it was Texas West- ern's vaunted defense and surpris- ing poise that won the big one.' Kentucky, on the other hand, noted for its finesse and discipline under the legendary coaching of Rupp, was kept off balance throughout and was guilty of a shocking number of lapses, mis- takes, bad passes and mental errors. Texas Western, once a little mining school just across the bor- der from Mexico, was making its first appearance ever in the na- tional final under young Coach Don HIaskixns but didn't let the pressure bother it a bit. iree Throws Provide Edge The Miners, calmly dropped in 28 of 34 free throws and that- along with the rebounding of their strong front line-was the difference. Kentucky led only once, and that was 1-0. A moment later big Dave Latin jammed in a field goal and made it a three-pointer when he con- verted the following four shots. The Miners never trailed after that. The turning point came early in the second half after Kentucky had closed to within one point at 46-45. The Miners replied with six straight points-four of them on free throws--for a 52-45 lead that never was seriously chal- lenged. Believe 5'6"?! Willie Worsley, a 5'6" sopho- more substitute who was a sur- prise starter and proved to be a perfect running mate for Hill, hit on three of three foul shots in the important sti eak. The closest Kentucky get after that was 54- 51, but a set shot by Hill, a jump- er by Orston Artis and a Lattin stuff-tip made it 60-51 with 6:40 left, and the Miners had it in the bag. Kentucky simply could do no right. The Wildcats, whose only other loss in 29 games was a meaningless 69.62 upset by Ten- nessee, was able to hit on only 27 of 70 field goal attempts--a dis- mal 38.6 per cent. Tenacious Disturbing Texas Western was good on 22 of 49 from the floor and comple- mented the performarice with a tenacious, disturbing man-to-man defense that occasionally develop- ed into a full court press. That press was best demonstrat- ed in the early going when within a 1! -second span Hill twice swiped the ball in the Kentucky back- court and went ii for easv layups. Duke Stops Utah In the consolation game, Duke's Blue Devils held off a closing ral- ly by Utah and beat the Utes 79-77, despite a record breaking scoring total by Utah's Jerry Chambers. Chambers, an underrated 6- foot-4 senior, scored 32 points in Utah's losing cause, giving him a total of 143 and breaking the old NCAA four-game tournament rec- ord of 141 held by Clyde Lovel- lette. Heavy Favorite Duke, ranked second in the na- tion and a heavy favorite over unranked Utah, almost blew a late 11-point lead. Chambers set the stage for the high drama when he closed the gap to one-point 78-77 with a short jumper with 37 seconds left. Seconds later he grabbed a re- bound, and Utah moved down to attempt the winning field goal. Psyched Out But Ute substitute Ben Black drew a foul and went to the line on a one-and-one situation with seven seconds to go. Duke imme- diately called time out. Again he went to the foul line-and again Duke called time out. By the time the second time out was over, Black was so nervous he wiped his sweaty palms on the referee's jersey, then missed the shot. NEW YORK (A') - Jim Jimas took over for ace Dick Nemelka and sparked a spurt at the start of the second half that carried Brigham Young .to a 97-84 basket- ball victory over New York Uni- versity yesterday in the finals of the National Invitation Tourna- ment. The title is the second for the Cougars, whose 1951 team won the NIT in its first appearance. NYU was seeking its first crown in eight appearances, but could get only its second runner-up finish. Villanova won third place by defeating Army 76-65 behind theI 29-point performance of Bill Mel-' chionni. Jimas came into the game for Nemelka, who has averaged 24 points a game, when the six-foot guard drew his fourth personal with 1:45 left in the first half. The 6-1 sub started the second half and scored the Cougars' first point on a free throw. He then passed to Craig Raymond for a layup and scored himself on a jump shot, taking Brigham Young from a five-point halftime ad- vantage to a 53-45 lead. Runaway With Raymond dominating the boards and Jeff Congdon passing brilliantly, the Cougars went on from there to make a runaway of the contest. The top-seeded West- erners led by 17 points late in the second half. Stan McKenzie kept NYU on the scoreboard, getting 19 of the Violets' last 23 points. However, the best he could do was get the Violets to within 10 points, 82-72, with 5:21 remaining. The 6-foot-11 Raymond scored 21 points, hitting on 10 of 14 shots from the field. He also grabbed 18 rebounds and kept NYU from get- ting too close to the basket. 23 for McKenzie McKenzie was the Violets' high scorer with 27 points while Steve Kramer added 20 for Brigham Young. The Cougars, runners-up in the Western Athletic Conference, fin- ished the season with a 20-5 rec- ord. NYU, which had won eight of nine games going into the final, finished at 18-10. CAUSE OF ALL THE TROUBLE FERNDALE KING:o In Class A Finals Habs Increase Lead; Leafs Trim Hawks By The Associated Press Larose broke a 1-1 tie at 3:43 MONTREAL - Second period of the second period, batting his goals by Claude Larose, Claude own rebound past Ranger goalie Provost and Bobby Rousseau car- Cesare Maniago into the left-hand ried the Montreal Canadiens toa corner of the net. 6-2 victory over the New York Provost scored his second goal Rangers last night. of the game and 18th of the sea- The triumph enabled the Cana- son at 11:55 when his pass from diens to increase their National behind the net hit a Ranger de- Hockey League lead to three points fender and slithered past Man- over the second-place Chicago iago. Black Hawks, who were beaten by Rousseau, converting passes from Toronto. Henri Richard and Dave Balon, put Montreal in front 4-1 just 64 sec- onds later. NOBODY TOOK ANY PICTURES of. Texas Western this sea- son. The Miners, unknown and unheralded for most of the season made the photographers and Adolph Rupp sorry last night stopping Kentucky and Pat Riley, 72-65. Here Riley clicks on his accurate jump shot against Dayton in the regionals last weekend. Riley led the Wildcats in defeat last night, scoring 19 points. COLD'-ELLIOTT: Special To The Daily EASTLANSING-Five overtime free throws, four of them by Dwight Dunlap, gave Ferndale a 65-60 triumph over Ann Arbor in the Michigan Class A high school basketball championship game played here last night.. Ann Arbor, sparked by sharp shooting Earle Higgins had come from six points down late in the game to tie the score on Tim Wadham's 25-foot jump shot with less than a minute to play. But Dunlap hit four free throws in the first minute of the over- time, putting the Eagles into the dominating position. He also con- nected on a jumper with 10 sec- onds left for the final five point margin. Dunlap finished as the game's leading scorer with 31 points, closely followed by Hig- gins with 30. The difference, though, lay in SCORES Exhibition Baseball New York (n) 8, Cincinnati 7 (13 innings) Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 Detroit 3, Bosto'n 2 Minnesota 12, washington 8 Kansas City 6, St. Louis 4 Chicago (a) 6, New York (a) 4 California 4, San Francisco 1 Los Angeles 8, Houston 3 Baltimore 6, Atlanta 3 NBA Boston 126, New York 113 St. Louis 115, Detroit 112 Philadelphia 127, Cincinnati 121 NHL Montreal 6, New York 2 Toronto 4, Chicago 2 College Hockey NCAA Tournament Championship Michigan State 6, Clarkson 1 Third Place Denver 4, Boston U. 3 Illinois State High School Tournament Championship Thornton 74, Galesburg 60 Third Place Beleville 72, Decatur 40 Do you want Professional Academic Counselors? DAN OKRENT DOES! Vote SCOPE SGC Elections-Wednesday Ferndale's superior 54 per cent shooting mark from the field. Ann Arbor shot only 44 per cent. For Ferndale it was the second Class A championship in the last four years. Ferndale had beaten top rated East Detroit Friday to enter the championship contest. Ann Arbor, in the state finals for the first time since 1917, finished the season with a 20-3 record, same as Ferndale. The Class B title went to Grand Rapids East Christian which stop- ped River Rouge 76-66. L'Anse beat Flint Holy Redeemer 89-70 for Class C honors and Covert stop- ped Trout Creek for its second consecutive Class D title. TV RENTALS Lowest Rates, Student-Specials HI-FI STUDIO 1319 S. Univ NO 3-7242 MONDAY NIGHT-MARCH 21 8:00 P.M.-Multipurpose Rio., UGLI UNIVERSITY LECTURE. "IS A CREATIVE JEWISH CULTURE POSSIBLE IN AMERICA?" LEO W. SCHWARZ Editor (The Jewish Caravan, et. al.); former Director of Jewish Displaced Persons Operations in Germany; publisher (Psychiatry and -Religious Experience, Human Values in Jewish Literature, et. al.); author; lecturer (U.S., Canada, England, France, Germany, Israel, Rhodesia, South Africa); presently Visiting Professor of Judaic Studies at the Univer- sity of Iowa. Sponso red by The Univ~ersity of Michigan, Office of Religionis Affairs I IIL U Griders Scrimmage i0Wn By DAVE WEIR Despite a frigid wind blowing in from the north, the intrasquad football scrimmage went through as scheduled yesterday on Ferry Field.. The gridders had practiced dur- ing the week as platoons working on their' specialized duties, and yesterday's scrimmage was their first organized contact work. Head coach Bump Elliott sub- stituted freely into the lineups, giving just about every player on the 90-member spring roster a chance to see action. The two teams, following tradition, were distinguishable only by their blue and white jerseys.t' , Blue Lettermen Returning lettermen dominated the Blue squad, while sophomores- to-be and non-lettermen carried the brunt of the load for the Whites. No score was kept, but both teams crossed thej goal line frenquently. One of the primary objectives, besides accruing an over-all eval- uation of the team, was recording various plays and players on film for future reference for the coach- es. This was frustrated, however, by a mulfunctioning photograph- ing system. No Amps "We weren't able to get any current due to an unknown elec- trical failure in the apparatus," explained Elliott. But, notwithstanding the cold or the camera breakdo vn, the coach- es did. have a chance to see the gridders under semi-game condi- tions. The fulcrum of the entire scriamage, as usual, was the quar- terbacking. Dicke Vidmer, who shared signal- calling duties with Wally Gabler' last fall, took turns with fresh- man Bob Kieta yesterday for the Blue squad. Freshman Dennis Brown and sophomore J o h n Thomas quarterbacked for the Whites. Volk Sits Out Rick Volk, the other contender for the field general spot, did not participate in the scrimmage. "He isn't ready for any contact work yet," commented Elliott. "We don't want to take any chances on his knee " Asked about the improvement of the contenders, Elliott said, "It's hard to tell this early, but every body seems to be coming along fine. We are just giving the guys a chance at the job and we'll see what happens." According to, Elliott, the cold weather reduced the effectiveness of the practice session. "Every- thing was coming along fine through Thursday, u n t i l the weather changed. It's hard to evaluate the various performances out there today because it was the first time the boys had to handle the ball in cold weather." Some of the bright spots of the scrimmage were a few long passes and several good runs. Brown hit. Don Rice on a bomb for one' touchdown. Fullback Tim RadiganI made several beautiful runs off tackle after taking pitchouts on the old Detwiler patterns. Minutes later, John Rowser ran around left end for a nice gain,j but fumbled when he was tackled. Obviously disturbed by his miscue, Rowser brc ke into the open oA the next play and grabbed a bullet pass from Kieta. Jolly Tony Mason, offensive line coach, kept things lively with his irrepressible wit, by jumping in and out of the huddles and keep- ing up a steady stream of chatter. When a quarterback fumbled the hike, Mason shrieked, "Way to move the ball! That's the way to move it!" When several would-be tacklers failed to stop a single runner, Mason offered comfort, "Way to almost make the stop, boys . . . keep slowing him down." Probably the best sound of the day was that final whistle which sent the team to the locker room, and away from the cold. * * * TORONTO-George Armstrong and Frank Mahovlich triggered a three-goal burst in the opening period, leading the Toronto Ma- ple Leafs to a 4-2 victory over Chicago last night that dampened the Black Hawks' National Hockey League title hopes. The loss ended a three-game Chicago winning streak and drop- ped the second place Hawks three points behind league-leading Mon- treal, which beat New York 6-2. The Hawks have six games to play, one less than the Canadiens. Third place Toronto, now six points behind the Hawks, shot to a 4-0 lead before the visitors broke through veteran goalie Johnny Bower in the second period on Red Hay's goal. The 41-year-old Bower, making his first start in two weeks after a series of injuries, thwarted Bobby Hull's bid to add to his season record of 53 goals. Y::. ":i{: :.1± ..ti ":ti ::1. JOINT JUDICIARY COUNCIL PETITIONING-MARCH 14 to MARCH 21 FIVE ONE-YEAR TERMS ONE HALF-YEAR TERM CLOSES MONDAY AT 5 1011 SAB-OFFICE OF STUDENT ORGS. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: RICK STERN u I LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO The University is in the process of expanding rapidly, and we invite applications from qualified faculty members, civil servants and others for the followng positions: Assistant and Associate Professors of ECONOMICS Assistant and Associate Professor of GEOGRAPHY Asistant Professor of POLITICAL SCIENCE Associate Professor of SOCIOLOGY Lecturer and Associate Professor of ENGLISH Please write to me, enclosing a personal data sheet and the names of three references. W. G. TAMBLYN, PRESIDENT m I - AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO ALL GRADUATING SENIORS The walls of ivy will soon be replaced by less familiar ones; equally exciting, challenging, and self rewarding. For many years you have been preparing for this major step that leads from College to Career. NOW THE TIME HAS COME TO CONCENTRATE AND ACT; TO FIND THE JOB YOU WANT. With competition for career- launching jobs increasing at a rapid pace, A PROFESSIONALLY PREPARED RESUME IS ESSENTIAL IN OPENING THE BEST DOORS! Your resume, when written by a Professional Writer, will pinpoint Ynur Asets nnl nrAnt them in a ceanr naitive wav. It will save I I