PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1966 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3,1966 QCK C KS< M' Tour of South Hits Duke Toiight 0 L . In the sixth trade engineered during this year's baseball meet- ings, the California Angels traded pitcher DEAN CHANCE, 1964 Cy Young Award winner, to the Min- nesota Twins yesterday for first baseman DON MINCHER, out- fielder JIMMIE HALL, and pitch- er PETE CIMINO. The Angels wi ll c -d the Twine n minor real shot -at a major league job. He was 2-5 with a 2.91 ERA. Pro football's meetings produced some news too, but of the long green variety. Commissioner PETE ROZELLE .announced that the winning and losing shares for the upcoming Super Bowl would be $15,000 and $7,500, respectively. By HOWARD KOHN for cheery incentives to Blue Devil Special to the Daily teams. The frenzied-red basketball sign DURHAM, N.C. - Splashed' has replaced the football banners against the walls of the stone which were rewritten Saturday by brick overpass which divides the Saturday with wash-away paint. men's college from the women's For the new slogan, heavy duty here at Duke is a friendly, freshly exterior paint has been used. Blue painted banner: "ALL THE WAY Devil fans want it to stay there IN THE NCAA." awhile. win also senu Ln as a xx Not only that, but there will be league player. 52 winning shares and 52 losing! Chance had posted a 20-9 rec- shares. (That's right, folks.) In ord and a 1.65 earned run average addition to 43 player shares, open- to gain the '64 award, but has ing the door for partial shares to neve appoachd tht heghtinjured' or waived men, there will never approached that height be nine extra shares for the six again. Last year his record was coaches, trainer, equipment man- 12-17. Hall and Mincher are both dis- tinct long-ball threats, hitting 20 and 14 homers, respectively, in 1966.' But Hall's batting average was only .239, while Mincher, pla- tooned last year, hit just .251. Cimino, meanwhile, appeared in ager, and miscellaneous personnel. Other minor details, like future scheduling and the mechanics of the common draft, were also dis- cussed. Dates were not announced, but inter-league games planned include Houston-Dallas, San Di- ego-Los Angeles, and Oakland- The overpass, built in traditionalE Gothic style with sandy-coloredy Broadcastc Tonight's Michigan-Duke bas- ketball game will be broadcast over radio stations WAAM and WUOM. The WAAM (1600 AM) broadcast will begin at 8:15, while the WUOM (91.7 FM) coverage will start at 8:00. rocks from the Duke Quarry, isr also the traditional bulletin board I Too Far South for CK ... "You're in basketball country," explained Dick Miller, Sports Edi- ort of the Duke Chronicle. "You can't believe the number of guys that tried to join the sports staff During the winter just so they could travel with the team." Basketball is king-a monarch without any heirs-at Duke. No- body has anything against football but ticket director H. M. Lewis ex- pects a capacity crowd of 9,000 (more than at most grid games) for the 8:15 game with'Michigan pect (Vic) Bubas to get us i ithe Senior forward Bob (Bobo) UCLA," says Miller. Riedy is Duke's third returning In six of his seven years at starter from last year. Called "the Duke, Bubas has put the Devils in most underrated player on the the top ten at the polls: and in team" by Bubas, Reidy is a strong three of those seasons he's taken rebounder with a solid outside them to the NCAA flnals. He has shot. yet to win the college "World Duke also lost All-American for- Series," coming closest with a sec- ward Jack Marin in addition to ond to UCLA in 1964, but his Vacendak ,to a bachelor's degree. teams have maintained a percent- age .058 better than Johnney Wooden's Bruins in the past five years. In fact, in major college action since 1960, the Blue Devils (.834) are the nation's only team playing4 .800 basketball. With that statistic as their cri- terion, Miller and his cohorts have christened the Atlantic Coast Con- ference "the best basketball league south of the NBA and Duke the best team in the ACC." Their proudest moments, which they keep repeating to anyone who will i\ listen, were Duke's twin upsets over "that prep school out west " All but forgotten-except by Bubas-is Duke's overtime victory over Michigan during the 19651 Christmas vacation-when the Blue Devils were ranked No. 1 and BOB REIDY the Wolverines No. 3. Given that Michigan has five Iain's ieplacemnent is 6'6" Jog new starters this year and that Kennedy whose best shot is a left Duke is a 25 point favorite (ac- handed picture play hook from the cording to local bookies), Bubas corner. still stresses that the Devils can't At guard, taking Vacendak's nlann ie Vr" Wai riT i" ..tr% ..1 35 games last season in his first 'San Francisco. 'I Tennessee Opener Marked Biy Abnormnality, Potentiality By RICK STERN DURHAM In Tennessee everything is done with a flair. The food in the motels is as fancy and eye-catching as the orange-and-white uniforms worn by the home-team Volunteers. Michigan's starting team was disposed of briefly by the home- team announcer, then the lights were dimmed as Tennessee's starting lineup ran through a 20-foot t-shaped edifice. The game was held up five minutes while the structure was removed. Two interesting calls by the officials were probably the high- lights on the sloppy first half of the ball game. With only a min- ute gone Dennis Bankey sank a lay-up and was fouled and knocked down on the play. Trainer Jim Hunt looked him over, but the referee made the diagnosis, deciding that Bankey had to be removed from the game, or he would be charged with a time out. So Coach Dave Strack, somewhat surprised, sent in Ken Maxey, who made the free throw and came out ten seconds later. Actually Strack could have afforded a time out because ten min- utes later when Jim Pitts motioned for time to the officials, they didn't seem to see him. Nontheless, the players walked over to the side of the court and huddled. Each referee thought the other had seen the time out call, but since neither had, it could not be charged as a time out to the Wolverines. The game showed clearly that Strack has a problem or two to worry about, like just who his starters are. Neither center Craig Dill nor forwards Dennis Stewart and Bob Sullivan showed as much as Strack would have liked to see, and Clarence Adams, Dave McClellan, and Maxey all had opportunities. If Strack decides that Maxey is worthy of a starting spot, then guard Jim Pitts might get Sullivan's forward position. Pitts was easily the smoothest Michigan man on the court, prompting several local observers to comment on his sure quick-handedness. Maxey was the crowd-pleaser, though, scurrying around the court like a mouse on pep pills. And the Yost fans should find him a favorite. Bankey hit on two layups and a free throw in the first five minutes of play, and didn't shoot again all night. In the freshman game last week he made five-of-five field goal attempts, which means he hasn't missed a shot all season. Though the loss was none-too-impressive, there was a feeling on the team that a potential to do better was there. During the first half it seemed at several points that Michigan was, about to break the game open, but each time a careless mistake erased the momentum. Enough for basketball and on to more pressing issues of the time. At the University of Tennessee there has erupted a crisis with the administration similar to the one at Michigan. The main issues are a bit less complex, however. In the UT Daily Beacon the lead editorial Thursday protested the fact that a gate in front of a driveway, used by students to walk to classes, had been suddenly locked for no apparent reason by the administration. A petition had been circulated and turned in to the Dean of Students. Said the Beacon, "The whole problem centers around an apparent lack of communication . . . Colonel Whitehead, Director of Safety and Security, said the gates remained locked because he thought they had already been unlocked. to 0 S MIKE LEWIS Engineering seniors: visit the Lockheed suite at the Jack Tar Hotel in San Francisco, December 27-30 or call Lockheed. collect (408) 743- 2801. Spending this Christmas holiday in the San Francisco area?... then look in on Lockheed at the Jack Tar Hotel. Lockheed's profes- sional employment team will be conducting interviews that can .set you on the path to a fascinating, high-paying job at Lockheed. They'll be happy to tell you about new-product development, product diversifica- tion, company-conducted research, company-paid tuition programs, proximity to universities and research centers ... as well as Agena, Polaris, Poseidon, Deep Submersibles LO CKH EED and much, much more. An equal oppor- MISSILES & SPACE COMPANY tunity employer. A GROUPOMON OP LOCKH990PRCRACOORO tonight. And that with a student body of 6,800. 'Bue Klan vs UCLANS? Ithe opinion of many true- BluDevil rooters however, the season doesn't really begin until next weekend's two-game stand at Los Angeles. Southern sym- pathizers have already dubbed this Duke-UCLA series a preliminary to next March's NCAA showdown. (Yesterday's top story in Dur- ham was Mike Lynn's arrest.), To everyone in Durham, Duke's presence in the national cham- pionship playoffs is a forgone con- elusion. "It's just that you ex- get overconfident. pac Xsun VY Ueiiw "Michigan has a team good bed in all of last year's games. enough to beat us if we're caught He averaged only two shots from looking ahead to UCLA," he ex- the floor per game but is a fancy plains. ball handler and a stout-hearted Expected to ignite the dynamite Not in the starting line-up but are spark plugs Bob Verga and No ntesatn ieu u Mie Leis.k gexpected to see more than limited Mike Lewis. action are soph guard Dave Golden Captain of the team, veteran and senior forwards Jim Liccardo All-American eighth-highest scoier and Tim Kolodziej. in Duke history and Bubas' avor-Unlike the deliberate style of ite protege, the 6' Verga averaged Tennesee, Duke plays a wide-open, 18.5 points per game from nis fast break game by having its cat- guard position last year. A whip- like guards spit goals from the lash jump shot from 15 to 20 feetI outside and its big front court out is his forte. men work the boards. On defense, , Verga is the remaining half of it sticks to the zone and tries to the "V for Victory" duo which led keep the inside lanes closed. last year's flashing attack. Steve Interestingly enough, none of Vacendak, the other man in the the 14 players on the Duke varsity back court has graduated. were born in North Carolina and Pivotman Lewis, only a junior, only one attended high school was the leading rebounder on last here. year's platoon and could rate as "You'd never know it though," second best to Lew Alcindor hinthe says Riedy of Allentown, Penn- country. Bubas' adjective for him! sylvania. "This team has really is "tenacious." got that southern spirit." 0 INTEARWOAVEN AmWILD' SA AVAILABLE AT State Street on the Campus " ---*' "' ' " ".. . We respect the University's right to lock whatever gates it wants to lock ... the point is the college students were treated as children .... 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