PAGE SIX
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SATURDAY. MARCH 18, 1967
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Bows
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VPI 79, Indiana 70
Dayton 53, Tennessee 52
By The Associated Press
EVANSTON - Virginia Tech
ignited by a late rally upended
Indiana, 79-70, and Dayton sur-
prised Tennessee, 53-52, on three
free throws in the last 24 seconds
in the semifinals of the NCAAi
Mideast Regional basketball tour-
nament last night.
Unheralded Virginia Tech re-
peatedly repulsed Indiana's hard-
trying Hoosiers in a second half
that was hot until Combs pumped
in five baskets in a 12-point spurt,
shoving the Gobblers ahead 68-57
with less than five mnutes left.
Glen Combs, a 20-point shooter
in Virginia Tech's drive to a 12-6
record, came up with a 29-point
performance to wreck the Hoosiers,
who bowed out with a final 17-8
record.
After blowing an early 13-point
lead, Dayton managed to salvage
the victory over Southeastern
Conference champion Tennessee
on single free throws by Bob Hoop-
er, Bill Justus and Glinder Torain.
Torain's toss with five seconds
left proved the winning margin as
Dayton permitted Tennessee star
Ron Widby to drive in unmolested
for a basket with one second left.
Tonal basketball tournament last
night.
North Carolina blew an eight
point lead in the final seven min-
utes of regulation time as its at-
tempt to stall and run out the
clock backfired. But the strategy
worked in the five-minute over-
time period.
The Tar Heels, ' who brought
their record to 25-4, scored 15
points in the, extra period while
attempting only three field goals.
Bob Lewis, who scored only
seven points in regulation time,
made a three-point play to put the
Tar Heels ahead, 66-63, and they
were never headed. Dick Grubar,
who made 12 of 16 foul shots, sank
six of them in the overtime.
Princeton, the Ivy League cham-
pion, rallied behind Joe Heiser to
tie the score 63-all in regulation
time. Heiser's twisting left-handed
hook shot with 17 seconds remain-
ing tied the score and teammate
Bobby Brown pulled down a re-
bound after Grubar missed a shot
with four seconds remaining.
North Carolina, the Atlantic
Coast Conference champion, who
lost to Princeton, 91-81 early in
the season, was led by Grubar and
Larry Miller, with 16 points apiece.
Heiser topped Princeton with 18,
BOB LEWIS
EAST.
N. Carolina 78, Princeton 70 (ovt)
Boston College 63, St. John's 62'
SCOLLEGE PARK, Md.-Fourth-
ranked North Carolina ripped
fifth-ranked Princeton, 78-70, in
overtime and Boston College over-
came a nine-point deficit to nip
St. John's, 63-62, in the semi-
finals of the NCAA Eastern Reg-
Mideast
while Chris Thormforde and Ed ley and Bo
Hummer scored 14 apiece. with 1:03 l
Boston College, which sank 23 for a finals
of 25 free throws in the second ed the jump1
half, went ahead, 61-60, with 55 Houston u
seconds remaining on two foul to 6'81/"1
shots by Willie Wolters. jumper, to cr
Billy Evans, the sophomore play- ing defensev
maker for Boston College, then in shots. Da
intercepted a pass by Carmine Cal- dling, steals
zonetti and was fouled with eight shooting al
seconds left to play. Eight champ
Evans, who led both teams with Jo Jo Whi
seven assists, sank the two free fort to pull
throws to make it 63-60. Calzo- hawks. Hef
netti scored for St. John's as time goals, ones
ran out. Houston's m
- with 5:20 lef
But Kans
Houston zo
poured it on
Houston,l
So. Methodist 83, Louisville 81 the regiona
Houston 66, Kansas 53 time.
LAWRENCE, Kan. - Denny
Holman's layup with four sec- N
onds left climaxed an amazing
rally by underdog Southern Meth-
odist for an 83-81 triumph over(
second - ranked Louisville and 8-6, 4-6, 6
Houston used a zone press to shock Dell (M), 6
third-ranked Kansas, 66-53, in the def. Stewart
NCAA Regional Basketball Tour- (M) def. Su
nament last night. (M), 6-4,10
Chuck Beasley won a jump from Debotton (M
Louisville's Red Holden with eight Tutvin-Sc
seconds left and slapped the ball Stewart (M)
half-court to Holman, who was Watson (Mia
alone for the layup. Louisville's cus (M), 6-3,
den (M) d
desperation shot missed at the ami), 10-8, 6
buzzer after the Missouri Valley
champs had called time out.
The 6'3" Holman was the domi-
nant figure of the game with 30
points, five steals and deft pass-
ing. TAP
Louisville had an eight-point
bulge at 77-69 with 5:47 left when
SMU started its comeback.
Butch Beard, Louisville's fabu-
lous sophomore, made a spectac-I
ular shot back over his head for FEATUR
an 81-77 lead, but goals by Beas-FISHER,
EICOo
Ice ShowCORD,
Oe
n
b Jones tied it 81-all
eft. Louisville worked
shot but Beasley forc-
ball with Holden.
used long, high passes
Hayes, a tremendous
rack the Kansas press-
with stuffers and close
on Chaney's ball-han-
s, and deadly outside
so killed off the Big
pions.
ite made a strong ef-
l it off for the Jay-
fired in three straight
after a steal, to cut
margin to four, 55-51
ft in the game.
as couldn't crack the
ne and the Cougars
down the stretch.
now 25-3, will be in
1t finals for the first
nien Lose
SINGLES
ami) def. Fishback (M),
4; Tutvin (Miami) def.
-1, 6-4; Schadd (Miami)
1 (M), 6-2, 7-5; Marcus
llaway (Miami), 6-1, 6-3;
Miami; def. Teaguarden
0-$8; Page (Miami) def.
M), 6-4, 6-4.
DOUBLES
hadd (Miami) def. Dell-
), 5-7, 6-1, 6-3; Fillol-
ami) def. Fishback-Mar-
3, 6-3; Debotton-Teaguar-
def. Tate-Sullaway (Mi-
6-2.
° nt
Regional
FAR WEST
Pacific 72, Texas Western 63
UCLA vs. Wyoming (inc)
CORVALLIS, Ore. - University
of Pacific, mixing muscle and
sharp shooting, defeated defend-
ing national champion Texas
Western 72-63 last night in the
first game of the NCAA Far West
Regional Basketball Tournament.
Bob Krulish, 6'6" senior, led
Pacific with 24 points, getting 15
of those in the second half. Keith
Swagerty, 6'8" and 235 pounds,
scored 19 points for the winners.
He s:eraged 20 per game during
the season.
Pacific led 36-33 at halftime
and built that lead to 60-50. Then
Texas Western closed the gap to
66-61.
A quick basket by Krulish and
Bob Foley's free throw sparked
another Pacific spurt which put
the game out of reach.
438 W. Huron
663-2033
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* PANASONIC
BY MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC
IN SUNNY TUCSON:
3JN ine Opens in Twin Bill
By GRAYLE HOWLETT
Acting
Associate Sports Editor
Special To The Daily
TUCSON - The University of
Arizona must be the hardest place
in the world to go to school. Not
from an academic standpoint, but
because of all the diversions it
offers its students.
Nestled among the Catalina and
Tucson mountains, the campus
has a flavor of spring vacation all
year around. Yesterday when the
Wolverine baseball team opened
up their first outdoor drills, the
temperature clung at the 82-de-
gree mark all day. One student
called it "a typical Tucson winter
day," and said that she "couldn't
Bllboard
Semifinals and finals in the
Michigan State Paddleball Tour-
nament are scheduled for to-
day at the Sports Building, be-'
ginning at 10:15 a.m. Earl Badg-
er meets Jim Swift and Paul
Laurence meets John Leavitt in
the singles. Lynn Beekman-Bill
Altenhoff face Swift-Jack Rash-
leigh and Jack Bauman-Dennis
Alix face Rod Grambeau-Harry
Detweiler In the doubles.
remember what rain' felt like."
It's the type of campus where
the Bermuda-shorted students all
seem to be carrying around tennis
rackets, golf clubs, bows-and-ar-
rows, soccer balls-everything ex-
cept books.
Every student, as if by prerequ-
isite, sports a bronze tan. And it's
a cinch that no booking is done
while the sun is out.
'No Vacation'
The University of Arizona blends
a little bit of the old with the new.
Stucco-buildings dot the campus
amid multi-storied' modern build-
ings. Like the area itself, the Uni-
versity has grown to include some
25,000 students. And you can meet
them on any given day on the
tennis courts or on the practice
fields.'
. But to the Univeristy of Mich-
igan baseball team, it's no vaca-
tion.
"Let's get one thing straight,'
Michigan coach Moby Benedict
commentd, "These aren't spring
training games. We don't play
them like exhibitions. They are
part of our schedule, and are reg-
ular-season games. We plan to
work hard down here."
The Wolverines open up an 11-
game road stand here in the land
of the sun with a morning-after-
noon double-header against little
Chapman College and Santa Clara
University, both California schools.
Chapman, the small - college
power on the West Coast last sea-
son, takes on the Michigan nine,
which is still trying to adjust to
the sun, at 9 a.m. today (Tucson
(time). Then the Wolverines re-
turn to meet nationally-ranked
Santa Clara at 3:30.
Young Team
The Wolverines then play six of
their remaining nine g a m e s
against perennial college baseball
power Arizona, including a trip-
ending double-header on March 25.
Michigan's main problem will be
rounding a relatively young team
into a cohesive playing unit. Also
getting a long look will be the
planned shift of former third-
baseman Keith Spicer to the out-
field and hard-hitting Les Tanona
from the outfield to third base.
In addition, the Wolverines are
pitted against the University of
Albuquerque on Tuesday and Co-
chise College next Friday.
NCAA HOCKEY SEMIFINALS
Boston U. 4, Michigan State 2
NAIA SEMIFINALS
St. Benedict's 73, Morris Harvey 70
Oklahoma Baptist 78, Central Wash-
ington 68
NCAA COLLEGE DIVISION
Championship
Winston-Salem 77, Southwest Missouri
State 74
Consolation
Kentucky Wesleyan 112, Illinois St. 73
NBA
Los Angeles 135, Baltimore 133
Chicago 120, San Francisco 117
EXHIBITION BASEBALL
Washington 3, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 7, Boston 5
Philadelphia 5, Houston 2
St. Louis 10, Pittsburgh 5
Detroit 7, Chicago (A) 3
San Francisco 7, California 2
Chicago (N) 9, Cleveland 3
Los Angeles (N) 4, New York (A) 2
New York (N) 5, Baltimore 3
Minnesota 4, Kansas City 3
!©
At Coliseumf
The Ann Arbor Figure Skating
Club will present its annual show,
Melody on Ice, at the Coliseum
today and tomorrow.
Adding to the glamour of this
year's events will be the presence
of two renowned skaters; John
Misha Petkevich and Janet Lynn,
who were both alternates to the
United States squad in the recent
world championships.
Petkevich finished fourth at the
trials for the U.S. team in the
senior mien's division, while Lynn
placed in an identical spot in the
senior women's bracket. They are
rated as strong contenders in the
competition for slots on next
year's Winter Olympics unit.
Tonight's performance is sched-
uled to begin at 7:30 p.m., with
another show slated for tomorrow
afternoon at 3:00 p.m.
Now . a quality -
PANASONIC TAPE, RECORDER
for only $29.95
Model RQ 13 recorder is compact and ideal for parties or studies. This
2-speed, 2-track, capstan drive unit records at 1 /s and 33/i.p.s. Records
and plays up to 2 hours per tape. Comes complete with batteries and re-
mote control mike.
4
S. State at N. University
761-2011
West Stadium at Liberty
665-0621
t
c
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WORSHIP
441/el
Meet the Editor-
ROGER RAPOPORT
Postponed to April 2
_
Despite
fiendish torture
dynamic BiC Duo
writes first time,
every time!
BIc's rugged pair of
stick pens wins again
in unending war
against ball-point
skip, clog and smear.
Despite horrible
punishment by mad
scientists, sic still
writes first time, every
time. And no wonder.
Bic's "Dyamite" Ball
is the hardest metal
made, encased in a
solid brass nose cone.
Will not skip, clog
or smear no matter
what devilish abuse
is devised for them
by sadistic students.
Get the dynamic
BIc Duo at your
campus store now.
WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP.
MILFORD, CONN.
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
Southern Baptist Convention
113 1 Church St.
761-0441
Rev. Tom Bloxam
9:45 a.m,-Sunday School.
1 1:00 a.m.-Morning Worship.
6:30 p.m.-Training Union.
7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN, CHURCH
Phone 662-4466
1432 Washtenow Ave.
Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G.
Brown, John W. Woser, Harold S. Horan
SUNDAY
Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 noon.
Presbyterian Campus Center located at the
Church.
Noonday Devotion Monday-Thursday, 12:30-
1 :00-Pick-up lunch 75c, available before
or following.
CANTERBURY HOUSE
330 Maynard
11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon by
Len Chandler.
During Lent there will be a service of Holy
Communion at 7 a.m. each week day. {
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon.
11:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon.
7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer-Special music.
During Holy Week, Holy Communion at 7 a.m.
and 10:15,a.m.
NORTH SIDE EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
(North Campus)
1679 Broadway
9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Holy Com-
munion.
ST. CLARE'S EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
2309 Packard
8:00 a.m.-Holy Comunion.
9:15 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon.
S11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon.
WESLEY FOUNDATION AND
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
Phone 662-4536
Hoover Rupert, Minister
Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Associate Campus Minister
SUNDAY
9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services. Dr.
Rupert: "Encounter with.Death."
6:00 p.m.-Fellowship Supper, Pine Room.
6:45 p.m.-Worship and Program, Wesley
Lounge, "The Church at the Campus."
WEDNESDAY
7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel.
7:30 a.m.-Fellowship Breakfast, Pine Room.
Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
AND CHAPEL
National Lutheran Council
Hill St. at Forest Ave.
Dr. H. O. Yoder, Pastor
SUNDAY
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Services,
7:00 p.m.-Discussion.
HOLY THURSDAY
7:15 p.m.-Service with Holy Communion.
GOOD FRIDAY
12:45-1:45 p.m.-Service.
7:15 p.m.--The Service of Tenebrae.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 So. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6159
Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, Armin C. Bizer,
W C. Wright
9:30 and 10:45 a m.-Worship Services.
9:30 and 10:45 o.m.-Church School.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m.-Bible'Study.
Transportation furnished for all
NO 2-2 756.
services-Call
HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA
Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf.
Rev. Charles Johnson
761 -6749
9:30 a.m.-U. Fellowship Coffee Presession.
9:45 a.m.-U. Fellowship Bible Study.
11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.-Rev. Gordon Any
derson, Board of Home Missions, Baptist
General Conference.
8:30 p.m.-Refreshments in an announced
home.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
' 1511 Washtenaw Ave.
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:45/and 11:15 o.m.-Services.
Sunday at 11:15 a.m.-Bible Study.
Sunday at 6:00 p m.--Gamma Delta.
Holy Week Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-The
Tenebrae Service with Holy Communion.
Maundy Thursday at 7:30 p.m.-Holy Com-
munion Service.
Good Friday at 7.25 a.m.-Matins Communion
ServiceF
GoodrFriday at :00 p.m. - Good Friday
Service.
GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
663-0589
Dr. Raymond H Saxe. Pastor
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. Stadium at Edgewood
Across from Ann Arbor High
Roy V. Palmer, Minister
SUNDAY
10:00 am.-Bible School.
1 1:00 a m.-Regular Worship.
6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship.
*
k
ALDERSGATE STUDENT
FELLOWSHIP and THE ANN ARBOR
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
1951 Newport Road
David E. Jefford, Pastor
Barry L. Ross, Assistant Pastor
Onva K. Boshears, Jr., Minister to Students
Larry J. Streck, President. Student
Fellowship
HOLY WEEK WORSHIP
Palm Sunday, March 19-
9:45 a.m.-Coffee Hour-.-Discussion.
11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship.
7:00 p.m.-Vespers.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
512 E. Huron
James H. Middleton, Minister
Cleo Boyd, Associate Minister
Ronald Tipton, Campus Minister
SUNDAY
9:45 a m.-Church School Hour.
11.00 a .n-Church Worship.
Morning Services-8:30 and 11:00 a.m.
9:45 a m.-Sund6v School.
6:00 p.m.-Troinin Hour-Classes for
ages.
7:00 p.m.-Gospel Services.
all
Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
If it's Bible you wont, come to Grace Bible-
Cundomental, Pre-Mllenial, Biblical.
III
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