PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AIARM 25, 196 7 i~~iGE six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1967 UCLA, Dayton Roll to One-Sided Victories t LOUISVILLE. Ky. UI)--Lew Al- cindor, an intimidating tower, and daring, darting Mike Warren took unbeaten UCLA to a 73-58 tri- umph over seventh-ranked Hous- ton after deft Don May casually tossed in 34 points and led Day- ton to a stunning 76-62 upset of fourth-ranked North Carolina in last night's semifinals of the NCAA -basketball championships. Alcindor and Warren were the key figures in a first-half burst that put the top-ranked Bi'uins ahead to stay. Houston, aced by the individual heroics of All-America Elvin Hay- es, had a 19-18 lead before UCLA got started. Then, as Houston Coach Guy Lewis nervously chewed on a white towel, UCLA ran off 10 straight points, outscored the Cougars 17-3 Lynn Shackleford led the Bruins in one stretch, took a 35-22 lead with 22 points while Alcindor fin- and was ahead to stay. ished with 19. Hayes had 25 for The Bruins, 29-0 for the season Houston. and bidding to become only the But it was the intimidating fourth unbeaten major - college presence of the towering Alcindor team in NCAA history, had a 39- under the Cougar boards, his re- 28 halftime lead, bounding, and his blocking of That put the Cougars out of it shots that forced Houston out of and they never were back in the its pattern.. ball game again. Warren, swift backcourt man,, was the perfect complement. The only junior on UCLA's sophomore - dominated starting' five, Warren was the key to the Bruins' fast break and disturbing full-court press, and served as floor general. May, a 6'4" forward, scored 19 of his points in the first half of the opener and led the Flyers to a 29-23 halftime lead that stood up the rest of the way. His faintly quizzical, not quite worried expression never changed as North Carolina flashed to a 9-2 lead in the first four minutes. The Flyers missed five of their first six shots before May brought them back. He hit eight of Day- ton's next 11 points for a 13-13 tie, and put them ahead to stay. with a long jump shot, making North Carolina never got closer it 15-13. than six points. That was at 36- North Carolina, taking a 26-4 30 and May quickly hit four points record into the game, threatened from the field to put it out of only once more, at 24-22, but May reach. quickly tossed in four Flyer points. For Dayton, now 25-5, it was the The North Carolina challenge was easiest victory of the tournament. done. In three previous games, two were May, a junior, rebounded, stole won in overtime and one by one the ball, sometimes played the point. post, sometimes brought the ball Rusty Clark led North Carolina down against the press. with 19 points and Larry Miller Through it all, he never seemed had 13. Glinder Torain had 14 for to hurry, never seemed to worry, Dayton. Just casually, almost lacadasically dominated the game. Scores Matmen 3rd, Tankers 5th in NCAA's Porter Drops 5-4 Decision; Fehrs, Kamman Make Final Robie Splashes to First; Records Flooded Even when he wasn't in on the play, he was the man to watch. As an illustration, he once cleared a rebound to start a Day- ton fast break, then slowly fol- lowed the play. The fast break1 failed and May trotted down the middle of the court, took a pass and calmly tossed in a layup.- The first half told the story. *1 NBA PLAYOFFS Philadelphia 121, Cincinnati 106 NCAA SEMI-FINALS Dayton 76, North Carolina 62 UCLA 73, Houston 58 EXHIBITION BASEBALL Pittsburgh 1, Baltimore 0 Minnesota 6, New York (A) 5 By RUSS RAJOKOVICK Special To The Daily KENT, Ohio-"In a meet this size, we'll always win some we don't expect to win and lose some we don't expect to lose," predicted assistant wrestling coach Rick Bay offhandedly. And before last night's quar- ter-final matches in the NCAA wrestling tournament were con- cluded, defending heavyweight champion Dave Porter of Mich- igan was pushed to the sidelines and untouted Pete Cornell of Lone Wolf Prof. Marcus Plant, Michigan faculty representative to the Big Ten, told The Daily yes- terday that 'Michigan cast the dissenting vote in last Satur- day's recommended dismissal of three Illinois coaches. The vote, eight to one in favor of dis- missal (with Illinois abstain- ing), was one of the few non- unanimous decisions in confer- ence history. Michigan sprang into the spot- light with an; upset over another defending champion. Cornell wasthen pinned in the semi-finals by Mike Gallego of Fresno State in 3:36; but Mich- igan, which dropped to third be- hind Michigan State and Oklaho- ma in team totals after leading following the opening night, did 4M' Nine Clip Cochise, 7=1 SpecialTo The Daily TUCSON - Michigan combined solid hitting and sharp pitching to defeat Cochise College yester- day, 7-1, upping their record to 5-4 in Arizona. Wolverine righthander Dave Renkiewicz turned in a fine three- hitter, walking only two and shut- ting out Cochise for six and two- thirds innings. Michigan jumped off to an early first inning lead when Glenn Red- mon singled sharply to center. Bud Forsythe followed with a sin- gle to right, and Redmon scamp- ered home with the initial tally when Jim Hosler grounded into a double play. In the second, the Wolverines again got on the scoreboard when Dick Ulhman beat out a bunt, stole second, advanced to third on a fielder's choice, and scored while Cochise was running down Chuck Schmidt who was attempting to steal second. In the third Michigan pushed two more runs across on Hosler's run-producing single and Keith Spicer's RBI double. Michigan put the game 'out of reach in the fifth with a three run barrage. The big blow in that frame was Andy Fisher's triple to right which plated Keith Spicer and Ulhman. Back on the winning trail, the' Wolverines will try to break the jinx Arizona has held over them in their first four meetings, when they face the Wildcats in a day- night doubleheader today. The Line Score Cochise Col. 000 000 1 1 3 2 Michigan 112 030 X 7 9 1 Dykeman and Titone; Renkie- wicz and Kraft. WP-Renkie- wicz. LP-Dykeman.. advance 123-pound Bob Fehrs and 152-pound Jim Kamman. Porter, Michigan's "paragon of the pin," lost a 5-4 decision to Dominick Carrollo of Adams State in a match marred by careless maneuvering and blatant stalling. Cornell smashed 167-pound Dave Reinbolt of Ohio State to the mat in 29 seconds in the quar- terfinals for the fastest pin of the tournament to date. Fehrs, three-time Big Ten cham- pion, powered past two opponents and now meets rival and jinx Mike Caruso of Lehigh in today's finals. Caruso has defeated Fehrs twice before in the NCAA finals. Kamman reached the finals for the first time in his career, aptly shrieking "I'm as happy as hell," and faces Jim Wells of Oklahoma today. Five Wolverines will also be fighting' in today's consolation rounds. Besides Porter and Cor- nell, Fred Stehman, Geoff Hen- son and Burt Merical qualified with only one tourney loss each. Porter's defeat was marked by a six-minute stall by his opponent. A 'careless maneuver on the part of the Michigan heavyweight al- lowed Carullo to gain a takedown and a two-point advantage in the first round, and, judiciously skip-1 ping for the sidelines whenever Porter approached him, the Adams State unknown managed to main-I tain his edge. By the time the referee finally invoked a one-point stalling pen- alty in the final seconds, it was too late. Michigan State, qualifying fourI men for the finals today, leads with a team total of 54 points. Oklahoma, pre-tourney co-favor- ites with Michigan State, placed three men in the finals, and has amassed 44 points. Golfers Holed Up in Seventh Special To The Daily MIAMI-Michigan golfers were unable to improve their seventh- place team standing in yesterday's third-round action of the Miami Invitational Tournament. The Wolverines trail Ohio State and Rollins--tied for fifth with team totals of 897-by four strokes. Two bright spots in Michigan's showing were Rod Sumpter's blistering 70 and John Schroed- er's 74. Schroeder holds down sec- ond place in the individual stand- ings, just one shot behind Florida's Bob Melnyk. The tournament winds up with an 18-hole finale today. By DOUG HELLER Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-Records fell like spring rain in last night's NCAA swimming championships here. New marks were set in four of the six events completed. Stanford, with 172 points, held a precarious one-point lead over West Coast rival Southern Cal. The 200-yard freestyle, 100-yard breaststroke, 400-yard individual medley, and 400-yard freestyle re- lay records were all broken as the pace established by Thursday's as- sault on the books continued. Greg Buckingham of Stanford upset favored' Don Schollander of; Yale in the process of erasing DAVE PORTER Schollander's mark in the 200- Team Totals yard freestyle. His time of 1:41.46 broke all existing records for the Michigan State 54 (4) event. Oklahoma 44 (3) Time Waits for No One MICHIGAN 39 (2) Ken Merten of SMU won the Iowa State 35 (2) 100-yard breaststroke in a recordj Portland State 29 (2) time of 0:58.54. Paul Scheerer of Oklahoma State 25 (1) Michigan, who matched his 1966 Lehigh 24 (1) winning time, finished in fifth (No. of finalists in parentheses) place. Michigan State's Gary Dilley was upset in the 100-yard back. stroke by Charlie Hickcox of In-' diana. The wining time was :53.17. Dick Roth, swimming for Stan- ford, took the 400-yard individual medley in a time of 4:12.11, wiping out all previous marks. The first three teams finishing in the 400-yard freestyle relay all surpassed the old record. Stan- ford, winning in the amazing time of 3:05.0, was followed closely by Yale and Southern Cal. Michigan, finishing seventh, won its con- solation heat. Team Totals Carl Robie gave the Wolverine effort a big boost with his vic- tory in the 200-yard butterly. His time, 1:52.59, was one of the few that did not break a record. Teammate Tom Aruso took fourth in the event. The Stanford coach, despite his team's 23-point lead over third- place Indiana expressed an opin- ion that his team could fall quick- ly from the number one position today. Indiana could pick up as many as 40 points in the three- meter diving competition and should be a strong contender for the team title. Michigan State's varsity pool was sold out for yesterday's ac- tion, although Spartan supporters were outnumbered by a strong contingent from Ann Arbor cheer- ing for Wolverine swimmers. r, \ ' ( 1z . . ..- Stanford 172 Southern Cal 171 Indiana 149 UCLA 106 -p 4 Looking for an interesting summer? WHY NOT JOIN THE STAFF OF A CANADIAN CAMP! Camp Winnebagoe, a Modern co-educational camp near Perry Sound, Ontario, requires counselors. Mr. W. Bertran Danson, director, will be at the Summer Placement Office, Student Activities Building, ALL DAY MONDAY, MARCH 27th, to meet with interested students. i it E i {G t k C f MICHIGAN 104-- Yale 88 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: Southern Methodist Q6 Michigan State 65 HOWARD KOHN HUNGRY? AWAY FROM HOME? YOU ARE INVITED TO AN EASTER DINNER (85c) p ~lI Q March 26-6 P.M. I at the PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Q A glimpse of "Michigan Through the Years" BAKED HAM FOLK SINGING Reservations needed: 662-3580 or 665-6575 (conclude by 8:30) Q ALL STUDENTS WELCOME ... of course we make TRANSPORTATION LOANS .. but wouldn't you rather have an AUTO LOAN (the rates are lower) \NN ABU3()R BA\NK . East Liberty Street Near Maynard " South University at East University " Medical Center ~forest at Ann) - Plymouth Raat HuronParkay ^An( 5 \Ioie Omfjes servinkg A NN ARBOR l)YEXTER MB FADSCPIORA L.E E MEMBER * FEDERAL DEPOSIT itURANCE COkPORATHON * FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM t; f -SCW-.-- . UNION-LEAGUE European Travel S800 P.M. Tuesday, March 28 } Rom 3 R & S Unio I ~ snln WORSHIP Sol Y N(UPERSCOPE.t I It AMERICA'S FIRST CHOICE IN TAPE RECORDERS PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Southern Baptist Convention 1 131 Church St. 761-0441 Rev. Tom Bloxam 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School. 11:00 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. Waser, Harold S. Horon SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 noon. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard 11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon by Len Chandler. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 1 1:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 4:30 p.m...-Family Service. 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 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 9:15 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. 11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron James H. Middleton, Minister Cleo Boyd, Associate Minister Ronald Tipton, Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:30 and 11 :00,a.m.-Worship Service. 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 6:30 a.m.-Sunrise Easter Service, Chapel,; followed by Fellowship Breakfast in Pine. Room. 8:30, 10:00 and 11:30 a.m.-Worship Serv- ices. Dr. Rupert: "Encounter With Life." 6:00 p.m.-Fellowship Supper, Pine Room. 7:00 p m.-Program, Wesley Lounge. "The Problem and the Power of the Resurrec- tion" with Gene Ransom and Bart Beavin. TUESDAY 5:00 p.m.-Church Related Vocations Group, Green Room. Discussion on "What Does a Christian Do?" followed by dinner in Pine Room. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. FRIDAY 6:30 p.m.-Winter Retreat. Meet at Wesley to go to High Scope Camp. Dr. Harrell Beck, guest speaker. Call for information and reservation for weekend. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at Forest Ave. Dr. H. O. Yoder, Pastor EASTER SUNDAY 6:30 a.m.-Matins Service. 8:00 a.m.-Breakfast. I1:00 a.m.-Chief Festival Service. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 So. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6159 Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, Armin C. Bier, W C. Wright 9:30 and 10:45 a m.--Worship Services. 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.--Church School. { WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study. Transportationfurnished for all NO 2-2756. HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf. Rev. Charles 'ohnson 761 -6749 9:30 a.m.-U. Fellowship Coffee Presession. 9.:45 a.m.-U. Fellowship Bible Study. 11:00 a.m. - "An Honest Doubter Faces Reality" 7:00 p.m.-"Resurrection-So What? ! UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Ave. (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 7:00 a.m.-Easter Sunrise Service, with Holy Communion. Sermon by the Rev. Donald Mossman of the Concordia College faculty. Sunday at 8:15 a.m.--Fellowship Breakfast, sponsored by Gamma Delta. Sunday at 9:45 and 11 :15 a.m.--Easter Fes- tival Services, with sermon by the Rev. Al- fred Scheips, "When Easter Brings Great Joy." Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.-Review of new book on "How To Understand Sex," by Wayne Anderson, Dr. Paul Gikas, Assoc. Prof. in Medical School, reviewer. Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Devotion. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State and Huron Streets 663-0589 Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor Morning Services-8:30 and 11:00 a.m. 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School. 6:00 .p.m.-Troining Hour-Classes for all naes. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Roy V. Palmer, Minister SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible -School. 11:00 a m.--Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. 4 services-Call 4) I I1 I You're on the go with a SONY TC907 TAPE RECORDER I I for only $49.5O ALDERSGATE STUDENT FELLOWSHIP and THE ANN ARBOR AENSAK, PANASONIC, CON ; , l I . . . .. 1 4 " .t .I ..I. Ir_. t_,.. _ __._I_. _._ - i I II 11 I