PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1967 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAiLY SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1987 Iowa Corners Battered Cagers in Finale, 83-76 * Princeton Roars To NCAA Victory Indian Rolls ti BLOOMINGTON - - clinched its first NCAA b a ;o 's Hawks Outlast Late Rally 4 By The Associated Press BLACKSBURG, Va. - Fifth- ranked Princeton punctured West Virginia's zone defense on the out- side shooting of Joe Heiser and defeated the Mountaineers 68-57 yesterday in the opening round of the NCAA tournament's Eastern regional playoff. Princeton took control after eight and a half minutes of the opening half after leading 18-17. In the next eight minutes, the Mountaineers stormed ahead and vaulted into a 29-21 halftime lead. Heiser and John Haarlow led a Princeton surge that brought the Tigers to a 49-37 advantage mid- way in the second half and they were never headed. Heiser scored 26 .points and Haarlow had 18 for Princeton. Ron Williams scored 21 and Carl Head 20 for West Virginia. * * * Lew-CLA CarriesOn LOS ANGELES - The UCLA Bruins, sparged by Lew Alcindor's 26 points, raced to a perfect reg- ular season record by crushing Southern California 83-55 yester- day. In gaining their 26th win of the year, the Bruins became the sixth team in major clolege history to post a perfect mark for the reg- ular season. Alcindor, the 7'1%" sophomore from New York, was the dominant force for the potent Bruins, but was given strong support by Mike Warren and Bill Sweek. Southern California, playing a zone defense and, predictably, a stall offense, trailed only 14-11 after 11:50 of the first half. But then the Bruins' full-court press and aggressive play took charge. QUOTATIONS FROM CHAIRMAN MAO TSE-TUNG "The little red book with the plastic cover,"- a best seller around the world -imported under U.S. Govern- ment License direct from Pe- king-in English or in Chinese. Please send 60c each plus 15c handling, or 3 for $2.00. (Write for discount schedule on quantity orders) CHINA BOOKS & PERIODICALS 2929 Twenty-fourth Street, San Francisco, Calif. 94110 Free catalog-BOO0imported titles from China in English Indiana asketball I JOE HEISER SCORES, COLLEGE HOCKEY WCHA Playoffs North Dakota 3, Denver 2 ECAC Consolation Boston College 6, St. Lawrence 4 Michigan state 2, Michigan Tech 1 COLLEGE BASKETBALL UCLA 83, Southern California 55 Ripon 66, Cornell 62 North Carolina 82, Duke 73 Kansas 74, Kansas State 56 NIT Providence 77, Memphis State 68 New Mexico 66, Syracuse 64 Marquette 64, Tulsa 60 Rutgers 78, Utah State 76 NCAA REGIONALS PrincetonN68, West Virginia 57 St. John's, 57, Temple 53 Virginia Tech 82, Toledo 76 Boston College 48, Connecticut 42 Houston 59, New Mexico State 58 Dayton 69, Western Kentucky 67 (ovt) I tournament berth since 1958 yes- terday with a late surge that beat Purdue 95-82. It also gave the Hoosiers a share of the Big Ten title. Michigan State tied Indiana's final 10-4 Big Ten mark but the Hossiers automatically get the NCAA spot because they have been longer out of the tourney. Purdue, the Hoosiers' intra- state rival, did its best to derail their tourney train. Indiana piled up a 30-15 lead in the first half but had to bench 6-8 Bill DeHeer with three per- sonal fouls for the last eight min- utes. Purdue surged back to trail only 4 1-40 at the half and went ahead at 71-70 with 6:20 left in the game. Jack Johnson sank a fielder that put Indiana back in front and the Hoosiers won going away with Bill Russell contributing 8 points in the last four minutes. -Daily-Bernie Baker DENNIS BANKEY (32) outjumps Iowa's Gerry Jones to push in a tip.;in in Michigan's 83-76 loss yesterday. Craig Dill (4) and Bankey played their final game in a Wolverine uniform. Sunday, March 12 7:00 P.M. "P. T. FORSYTH ON THE GREATNESS OF CHRIST" a series on Conversations in Theology conducted by Dr. Ernest T. Campbell Dinner 6:00 (50c) Presbyterian Campus Center, 1432 Washtenaw All students welcome MSU Salvages Tie I EAST LANSING - Michigan' State moved into a tie withaIn- diana for the Big Ten basketball title yesterday by leading all the way to easily overpower North- western, 79-66. Senior Matthew Aitch, 6'7" cen- ter from St. Louis, Mo., celebrated his last college game by leading the Spartans with 21 points. Heywood Edwards, ordinarily a reserve, scored 18 points for Mich- igan State. Jim Burns was tops for Northwestern with 22. The on- ly other Wildcat scooter in doubleI figures was Ron Kozlicki with 14. The closest Northwestern came to closing the gap was when the Wildcats trailed by only three points' midway in the first half. Badgers Slap Illini MADISON-Wisconsin whipped Illinois 102-92 yesterday as soph- omore Chuck Nagle sank 29 points for a season's total of 463 to break a school record that had stood since 1905. With 13 seconds left in the game, the 6'5" Nagle drove under the basket hit a layup and con- verted a free throw for a three- point play. It broke, by one point, the 1905 record of Chris Stein- metz. Illini sophomore Dave Scholz, hit 28 and finished Big Ten play with 306, edging Nagle by two points for the highest conference output by a first year player this season. By HOWARD KOHN Michigan's 1966-67 basketball season, damned to ignominity, ended in the shades of Yost Field House yesterday with an 83-76 season finale loss to Iowa. "It's really not fair to old Yost Field House to lose the last game there," sorrowed Michigan coach Dave Strack in his post-game epitaphing. (Theoretically, at least, the All-Events Building is scheduled to be ready for next season.) "It's the first time in five years that we've won here," noted Iowa coach Ralph Miller. It was the first time in six years that Michigan finished in last place. "Next year, we'll have to re- trench and recover," said Strack. "At this late stage in the sea- son, I'm glad to get any kind of victory," said Miller. "Everybody did a pretty goodf job. Everyone's been doing a pret- ty good job all year, but 'pretty3 good' just isn't good enough," summed up Strack. Craig Dill, a second-team Big Ten selection from a second-class team, ended up second best toj destiny again yesterday. Iowa had rolled into a comman- ding 82-67 lead with 11 consecu- tive points in the fading minutes of the game. But a sophomore spurt of eight points in 54 seconds, led by Bob Sullivan and Ken Maxey, shot the Wolverines back into contention 82-75 with 22 sec- onds left. Hawkeye hack Huston Breed-1 love elbowed Dill in fierce struggle1 fort a rebound and referee Jim Steiner whistled foul number five. Breedlove angrily slammed the ball to the floor and Steiner added a technical. Dill went to the line knowingf that Breedlove had given the Wol-. verines a game-saving chance for five points if . .. if he could onlyE plop in three free throws and if someone could then go in for a field goal. Up went his first try . . . and down same his arms . . . tired and dejected . . . as tired and dejected as, Strack, who quietly reflected on the play, "I °almost thought we had a chance with our best free throw man at the line. It seemed like we might pull it out. I've seen other teams win games like that with half a minute left. "But I wasn't really confidentl that we'd win. I just thought that maybe we had a chance.", Dill, who finished with a team- leading 20 points, connected on the second free toss; but he had forfeited his right for the third shot. Seconds later, Gerry Jones picked up a loose ball and co-cap- tain Dill retired from college bas- ketball "Dill gave us as good leadership as he could," credited Strack. "I1 just wish we could switch the1 won-lost record around."I Big Ten Standings Final 1 CRAIG DILL Dennis Bankey, the other co- captain, and Marc Delzer, the other senior, scored 10 and seven points, respectively. For the first time in his three years on the varsity, Delzer started. Delzer plopped in his first field goal of the season with 12:31 left in the first half on a fadeaway jumper near the basket. Michigan led only once in the game , 28-27, when Dennis Ste- wart stepped over two sprawled- out HAwkeyes at the key and pop- ped through a lay-up with 5:02 to go in the half. Strack switched to a 1-2-2 zone in the second half to box out super-shot Sam Williams, who had fired through 20 points in a first- half barrage, but the scrappy Hawk guards ,slipped through for strategy-defeating dog shots. Michigan did hold Williams to eight poinits in the second half. "Dave McClellan did a good job of bothering him in the corner," praised Strack. "But we made the same critical mistakes that we've been making every game-the bad passes, the fumbled rebounds, the f oolish shots. "I wish that I could wipe some things that I don't like right off the the history books.' MICHIGAN G F R PT .1 *1 Indiana Michigan State Iowa Wisconsin Northwestern Purdue Illinois Ohio State Minnesota MICHIGAN W L 10 4 10 4. 9 5 8 .6 7 7 7 7 6 8 6 8 5 9 2 12 Pet. .714 .714 ,.643, .571 .500 .500 .429 .429 .357 .143 4" ______________________ , Yesterday's Results Iowa 83, MICHIGAN 76 Wisconsin 102, Illinois 92 Indiana 95, Purdue 82 Michigan St. 79, Northwestern 66 Why become an engineer at Garrett-AiResearch? You'll have to work harder and use more of your knowledge than engineers at most other companies. CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS ANNOUNCES EXAMINATIONS FOR HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS' CERTIFICATES Examination: Sat., April 29, 1967 Filing Deadline: Wed., April 5, 1967 NOON, C.S.T. TITLES OF EXAMINATIONS Art (7-12), Accounting, Business Training, English, Mathematics, Physical Education (MEN, WOMEN, Gr. 4-8), Biology, General Science, Geography, History, Li- brary Science (7-12), Auto Shop, Drafting, Electric Shop, Machine Shop, Wood Shop, Industrial Arts (7-12). FOR INFORMATION: Board of Examiners Chicago Public Schools-Room624 228 N. LaSalle Street-Chicago, Illinois 60601 or: Director of Teacher Recruitment, Room 1005 Chicago Public Schools or: Placement Office Pitts. g McClellan, f Dili, c Delzer, g Bankey, g Stewart, f Sullivan, f Edwards, c Maundreil Maxey Totals Jones, f Williams, f Breedlove, e White, g Chapman, g Philips, g Norman, g Agnew, f McGrath .Perkins Gottschalk Technical foul Totals MICHIGAN IOlW A 3-9 3-3 4 4 9 3-6 0-1 5 0 6 8-21 4-7 10 5 20 3-8 1-3 5 3 7 4-8 2-2 3 4 10 4-7 2-2 3 4 10 3-3 1-2 2 1 7 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-1 0-0 _0 0 0 3-7 1-1 1 0 7 31-70 14-2138 21 76 IOWA G. F ItP T 6-15 7-8 16 2 19 10-7 8-11 7 3 28 0-1 1-2 1 5 1 6-9 2-2 3 0 14 5-12 7-7 8 2 17 0-320-1 2 3 0 0-1 0-0 '0 3 0 1-5 0-1 2 1 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1-2 0-0 2 1 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 I 1 29-6525-3243 20 83 39 ,37--76 41 "42-83 Cliff's Notes can keep you from falling behind and failing to under- stand classic litera- ture. Forulius Caesar, * and all of Shake- speare's plays, Cliff's Notes give you a corn- * plete explanation and summary of every scene - in language you can understand. Don't worry about your literature grades - let Cliff's Notes help you improve them. OVER 125 TITLES covering frequently assigned :plays and novels.' at your bookseller [orwritefor Ifree title list y « Jl G ESAf If you're our kind of engineer, you have some very definite ideas about your career. For example: You've worked hard to get a good education. Now you want to put it to work in the best way possible. You will never be satisfied with run-of-the-mill assignments. You demand exciting, challenging projects. 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