T'H'E LVMT A ~r AKA IV ±nz~-A AJ trrr r rctn tom. w:r . v%04ww s 4A..- .a as r. naaaaaata i 7)t1aLI WE 1DNESDAY, MARCHI 4, 1UGI L Winning Fintesse REPLACE KENTUCKY: 'M' Grabs Second Spot By The Associated Press Michigan's Wolverines moved into the runner-up position be- hind all conquering UCLA in the Associated Press major-college basketball poll today. UCLA piled up 398 points on 38 votes for first place and two for second from the 40 regional selec- tors participating in the next-to- last poll of the season. Duke and Oregon State collected the remain- ing first place votes. Michigan switched places with Kentucky's Wildcats. The Wolver- ines had 322 points and Kentucky 300 on a basis of 10 for a first place vote, 9 for second etc. The balloting was based on games through last Saturday. Hoopsiers Hit; UCLA lifted its record to 24-0 tucky was defeated, 67-60, by un- last week by defeating Washing- ranked St. Louis. Kentucky, suf- ton and Washington State. Mich- ifering its second loss in two weeks, igar, beat Illinois for a 19-3 mark now has a season record of 21-4. while Kentucky lost its third game Top-ranked UCLA rolled to their of the campaign, 65-59 to Ala- 25th win of the season Monday as bama, and then whipped Tennes- they whipped California, 87-57. see 42-38. The Wildcats have Neither of these scores were in- won 21. cluded in the Associated Press Duke, Wichita and Oregon State poll. followed Kentucky, holding their In other basketball news, eighth positions in the same order as last ranked Davidson was denied the week. right to play in the National In- However, Davidson's 82-81 set- vitational Tournament by the back by Virginia Military resulted Southern Conference. The confer- in a shuffle in the final four places ence said that it would not be in in the Top Ten. The Wildcats the best interests of the confer- from Davidson, N.C., tumbled into ence for Davidson to enter this the 10th spot while Villanova, De- post-season tournament. Paul and Loyola of Chicago each The Top Ten, with first place climbed one notch, to seventh, votes in parentheses, season rec- eighth and ninth, respectively. ords through Saturday, Feb. 29, Duke, 20-4, downed Wake Forest and points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3- and North Carolina. Wichita, 20-5, 2-1 basis: I E beat Tulsa 98-79 in its only game and Oregon State, 25-3, defeated Oregon twice, 71-68 and 85-71. Villanova turned back Mar- quette and Temple for a 21-3 mark CHICAGOR )-- rarity of two: sophomores landing first teamI berths underlines the 1964 Asso- ciated Press All-Big Ten basket-2 ball team announced yesterday. Rookies Cazzie Russell of Mich-t igan and Dave Schellhase of Purdue made it, along with All-America Gary Bradds of Ohio State, Bill Buntin of Michigan and Rick Lo- possa of Northwestern. Russell, Buntin and Bradds wer& unanimous choices in the voting by Big Ten area AP sportswriters. Schellhase was short by two votes. The speedy Lopossa, at 6-3 the smallest member of the No. 1 team, beat out four others in a close race for the fifth spot. They were Indiana's Van Ars- dale twins, Tom and Dick; sopho- more Lou Hudson of Minnesota and Northwestern's Rich Falk. They, plus Pete Gent of Michigan State, make up the second team. while DePaul beat Louisville and Duquesne and Loyola won over St. Louis and Marshall. DePaul is 20-2 and Loyola 19-5. Davidson, seventh a week ago, defeated The Citadel 91-62 before its loss to Virginia Military in the Southern Conference Tournament In Monday night's action Ken- 1 L Pts. 1. UCL (38)24 0 398 2 . Michigan 19 3 322 3. Kentucky 21 3 300 4. Duke (1) 20 4 273 5. Wichita 20 5 209 6. Oregon State (1) 25 3 203 7. Villanova 21 3 125 9. DePaul 20 2 94 9.' Chicago Loyola 19 5 81 10. Davidson 22 4 44 Other, teams receiving votes, list- ed in alphabetical order: Bradley, Drake, Georgia Tech, Kansas State, Miami (Fla), New Mexico, Ohio State, Providence, San Francisco, Seattle, Texas A & M, Texas West- ern, Utah State, Vanderbilt. Financial Aid Offered To 3 SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN STUDENTS 0 z, WHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP IN ORDER TO COMPLETE THEIR EDUCATION DURING THIS ACADEMIC .5 z 1' F-= YEAR AND WILL THEN COMMENCE WORK. U Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC. A Non-Profit Educational Corporation N 610-611 ENDICOTT BLDG. ST. PAUL 1, MINN. -Daily-Nancy Kevh BILL BUNTIN-Michigan All-Big Ten center shooting over the outstretched arm of Illinois center Skip Thoren (35). Illini Bogie Redmon (33), Jim Vopicka (22), and Don Freeman (15) look on as Buntin takes the short jumper from inside the free throw line. -Daily-Al Blixt REACH THE RAFTERS-Lanky Oliver Darden and Bill Buntin leap high over Indiana's Tom Van- Arsdale as they out tip and out rebound the Hoosiers. Darden stretches his long agile frame in dis- playing the talent that makes him second to Buntin in Michigan rebounding statistics. The Wol- verine sophomore shows Big Ten fans his great springing ability that is ever present when Michigan needs the all important tip in. PETITION NOW for Leag u Une Positions Petitions available in League Undergrad. Office Read Daily Classifieds Interviews through March 7 4 I BILL BUNTIN BOB CANTRELL ----- COACH STRACK - p la~i 'r STEWARDESSES NEEDED BY UNITED AIR LINES Classes Available June thru the Fall Fly the jets from coast to coast, border to bar- :ler, with the country's number one airline. Minimum Qu"lifications: Age: 191/ through 26 years of age. Heights: 5'2" to 5'8": Weight: 105 to 140 lbs. (in proportion to height). Marital Status: Single (may be divorced or widow- ed without dependents). Education: High school graduate with 2 yearshof college or public contact ex- perience desired;' ZIN DELL OLDSMOBI LE Complete body shop service Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 LARRY TREGONING OLIVER DARDEN I NEED IDEAS for BIRTHDAY GIFTS? Can't think of.anything to please Mom or Dad? Need something for the "man who has everything?" Give a MICHIGAN DAILY Subscription-if you care enough to send the Very Best. WHERE ARE YOU GOING THIS VOCATION? I Young scientists and engineers "going places" investi- gate a variety of challenging engineering avenues before selecting one best suited to their goals. And they look for a professional climate with lots of indi- vidual recognition and advancement opportunity. If you are charting your career along this course, let Ling-Temco-Vought be your guide. As one of the nation's most versatile contributors to the aerospace, military electronics and communica- communications design # reliability/maintainability engineering * reconnaissance systems " amplifier and computer systems . microwave components design'* electromagnetic interference control " electronic sys- tems analysis - telemetry and tracking - trajectory analysis - manufacturing r&d * industrial engineering technical administration . . . plus many others. For a closer look at the numerous career directions available with Ling-Temco-Vought, ask your Placement I 11 I a