SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN THE MtCIttC~AN flAIIV PA(U~ ~ L ilk"- OCI V &Ll\ +t_, Golden Paces Ii By HOWARD KOHN and North Carolina for Da e feint play to the beat of Dixiei Special To The Daily Stick's mistake-prone cagers. drums. For the slightly inebriat- DURHAM--Bang' went Duke Evens Record ed, it was a feeling of compau- Indoor Stadium last night. For Duke Coach Vic Bubas and ionsnip to watch side-step, arm A slim-striped Dixieland band his nationally ranked Blue Devils flourishing "you 11 pull his arm blasted out a "tear-em-up give- -knocked off the night before by he'll get to a referee." em-hell" rebel song. Mini-skirted the upstart VPI Gobblers 85-71--- For both Strack and Bubas. it cheerleaders exploded with a jerk. the bludgeoning evened their rec- was cj.aring the bench to checkj 'ukeI Svishing the soft jumper, driv- ing in under the basket and s1ip- ping niioothly into position, Gol- den drew compliments from both sides. "I was very much impressed with him," praised Strack. "He did a wonderful job coming off the 11 in9675 oening tip and ran past Bubas' foot jump shots," he explained. h-'sitating Devils to an early 10-4 Bubas was certain that "confi- lead, but Verga's breakaway lay- dence was the thing tonight." rhe ups narrowed it to 10-9 and Reidy Blue Devils had been "awfully ;ut Duke ahead with a jumper tight" in their shocking loss to with 6:38 gone. Virginia Tech. The Wolverines, impatient to The Duke mentor now has five rip through Duke's zone defense, days to prepare his basketball ra n into foul trouble midway powerhouse for UCLA Friday. through the half and Strack sub- Bubas is conceding nothing to s iiuted freely. the respected Bruins, and insists Ken Maxey replaced Bankey, "We'll have to be shown. C. A. Adams went in for Dill, and SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR- D .ve McClellan subbed for Ste- S wart. BILL LEVIS .. .._ MUSKET '67 IT BELONGS IN YOUR MIND #9 Rabid Blue Devil fans yelled, "go ord at 1-1. on second and t.,ird stringers. A'- bench." to hell VPI, Michigan, and UCLA." Duke's machine-gun riddlers together 28 players saw action. Golden teamed with fast-break- Even the official used a gun I flashed through Michigan's bat,- Greatest Game of my Life' ing All-America Bob Verga to pull instead of a buzzer. tle fatigued man-to-man defense For sophomore guard Dave Gol- the Wolverines out of position time And, shot down by Duke's fired in rapid succession. den. subbing for starter Ron Wen- after time. up Blue.Devils, Michigan was bur- It was Everett Dirksen debating delio. it was ihe "greatest ane . . . ied in the historic ivy-covered with Elmer Fudd, the U.S. Selec- of my hie." scoring with 17 points, one b. hind Indoor Stadium, which echoed and tive Service going to court with Bubas sent in Golden after Wen- shorward Bo eiys 1. re-echoed the raucous sound of a Mvlario Savio, Cassius Clay meet- deain r ad again proved ineffecr ual flashy forward Bob Reidys 18.t 96-75 Duke victory ing Car Ward. in grduated Steve Vaceaks Michigan actually grabbed the The loss, second in a row, for For the independent fan, after Ispot, and the 6' 19-year-old ou'i'p- the Wolverines, finished a two- the first 15 minutes, it was, pleas- ed th'ough a game-leading 25 game sweep through Tennessee ant viewing, topsy-turvy, fake and 1 oints. HOUSTON TOMORROW: Cagers Host Huge Cougars By DOUG HELLER "Bloody nose lane" strikes again! Or should it be "Bloody nose lane the second"? At any rate, Michigan fans shouldn't get their hopes up too high, because this passle of foot- ball-tackle sized, physically de- moralizing basketball p 1 a y i n g monster is not colored Blue, but instead comes from Houston, sixth ranked in preseason press polls, and the Wolversines' first home opponent at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Yost Field House. Tickets will be on sale tomorrow at the Athletic ticket office, adjacent to the IM Building. Cougar All-American Leader of the visiting Cougars is, junior All-America center El- vin Hayes, a 6'8", 235-pounder. Hayes, who Lou Mohs, general manager of the Los Angeles Lak- ers, has called a better pro pros- peet than Lew Alcindor, was 11th in the nation in scoring as a sophomore last year, with a 27.2 point per game average, and also 10th in field goal percentage and fifth in rebounding. The other two players guaran- teed of starting berths against the Maize and Blue are an almost Cazzie-sized guard, 6'5", 210- * * * Cougars Win, 86-75 1MN4AkOLIS rw)-Michgan's next opponent, Houston, shook off underdog Minnesota in the final eight minutes to score an 86-75 win over the Gophers in a non- conference basketball game yes- terday. The inexperienced Gophers nev- ei led but pressed the Cougars un- til Melvin Bell hit a three-point play and Don Chaney followed with five quick points. That ex- panded a 69-66 edge to ,77-66 with five minutes to play. Bell scored 24 points and Chan- ey 23 for Houston. Elvin Hayes, 6-8 center, added 18 in a face- off with Minnesota's 6-7 center, Tom Kondla. Paul Presthus and Kondla; who fouled out with 9:41 to go, paced the Gophers with 17 points apiece. 00- -.. o.-.-- .s He's late, he's late- for a very important date with his financial future. For White Hares, as with the rest of us, time has a way of slipping by un- noticed. Notice it now. Begin today to think positively about your financial future. A good life insurance policy pro- vides one o the sturdiest foundations for anyone's financial planning. And Provident Mutual's trained profes- sionals can design programs specifi- cally for college men and women, spe- cifically for you. Time's a-wasting. Stop by our office, or give us a call today. Remem- ber, life insurance costs less, does more for you if you get it while you're pound junior Don Chaney, a de-' fensive specialist, and- co-captain Leary Lentz, a 6'6", 210-pound senior forward. Happy Problems Now comes the fun for Houston coach Guy Lewis. He can go with experience, playing senior Don Kruse, a 6'8", 230-pounder at cen- ter, switching Hayes to forward, supposedly his more natural po- sition. In addition, relatively small (he's 6'2", 175 pounds) co- captain Gary Grider can hold down the other guard position be- cause of his playmaking abiilty. The only trouble with this align- ment iQ where does it leave sopho- more Melvin Bell, a 6'7", 235- pound sophomore forward whof averaged 24.2 points as a fresh- man? Then what happens to 6'9", 235-pound soph Ken Spain, a for- ward-center, who was the number one freshman rebounder and num- ber two scorer? ' On the bench, Houston is also "hurting" for size with 6'7", 220- pounder Andrew Benson, Theodis Lee at 6'7" and 200 pounds, and at 6'6", 215 pounds, Bob Hayward. CRAIG DILL Likes Last Year's Record G TEN 7FA1VORJ With almost everybody back ; E ' 11 from last year, and due to the in- crease in experience, one would normally expect that everybody in S Houston would be hoping for a national championship. But all coach Lewis wants is a repetition Geo of last year's 23-6 record. duplicate tomorrow of what the y New York Times labeled as a very By The Associated Press nervously played basketball game 1 EAST LANSING - Soi:homore between Houston and Dayton in Lee Lafayette hit 23 points and Madison Square Garden last year. lifted Michigan State to a 63-51 This game seemed highly unusual, victory over Miami of Ohio in a since the Cougar team, far from battle of defense-minded basket- never being away from home be- ball squads last night, fore, in fact has two-thirds of the Lafayette, who led all scorers, team coming from out of state. also was tops in rebounding with1 Altogether, the Wolverines ap- 13. pear up against it once again due The Redskins proved a matchi to the schedule formulated several for MSU for 35 minutes, leading years ago. For this game, the best 18-17, before the Spartans grab- thing to do would be to wear stilts bed the lead and then hit 11 or elevator sneakers. straight points to stretch it to Especially the guards. 31-22 by halftime. DON CHANEY 'Picture Play' -___--_-_-_-_ A burning shotgun pass by Max y to Bob Sullivan set up the ; most impressive "picture play" of the short season. Sullivan took the ball going away from the basket: Christmas Gifts and hooked in an over the head. shot to pull Michigan even, 23-23. 6 P« from Fiom :hen on the crusading Blue Devils pressured the Wolverines into an ever increasing rate of << r+: mistakes to charge into a super- loud 51-37 halftime lead. Tn an undisputed show of back-°t board strength, the Mike Lewis- ! eidy c1nabo elbowed Duke to a 33-14 advantage in rebounds by the first half buzzer. M Rebounding Weak " 4NCNl Strack emphasized that Mich-.. again a major factor. The key to igan's lack of rebounding was . °isSs°, , z.>flAIOVGV 1 the game was Duke's rebounding late in the second half. , t°"°"z°°You'll be thrilled with our wonderful "What we need most is patience. W h wempy ane ost is tkince 35gift ideas for everyone on your list' --- '. Everythng is realistically priced to I r ...> x ,I° ' ! afit your budget. Come innow TES WI cawhile the selections are greatest' 0A Victories Ie EVANSTON-Jim Burns snap- led a 45-all tie early in the second half with his first basket of the game and sent Northwestern spin- ning to a 93-67 opening basket- ball victory over Ohio University last night. 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