PAGE 8IXk THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1964 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. MARCH 10. 1964 tc. .... CHIPS... by Mike Block The Week That Was This was the gretest week that ever was in Michigan sports history. It was the first time Wolverine teams ever won five Big Ten championships in a single winter. And it was the first time any Western Conference team has ever performed this feat-unless you include fencing. In 1952, Illinois took home the trophies in basketball, track, gymnastics, wrestling, and fencing. If you substitute hockey (a sport in which the Illini have never competed in the conference for fenc- ing (in which Michigan hasn't, participated), these are exactly the same crowns which the Wolverines cinched this week. Over the years, these two schools have clearly dominated the Big Ten winter sports scene. Illinois has won or shared three or more winter sports championships in 10 different years, the .first being 1912, and the last 1958. In addition to the quintet of crowns in 1952, they won four in 1951 and garnered three plus a tie in 1935. Michigan has had at least a trio of titles or shares thereof six times, but this is the first time the Blue has ever won more than three. Four of these exceptional years have come in the last five campaigns, 1962 being the only exception. Only one other school has ever won three winter crowns in a year as much as one time, and that was Ohio State in 1950. Incidentally, 1944 was one of the most fabulous years in Wol- verine annals, if sports. of all seasons are considered. In that year, Michigan copped seven conference championships: swimming, wrestl- ing, indoor and outdoor track, baseball, golf, and tennis. They failed to win only football and basketball. Michigan's and Illinois' domination of the Big Ten is also appar- ent when you add up the total number of winter titles won. Since 1902, Illinois has been victorious a total of 74 times,.with nine ties' while the Wolverines have had 59 victories and four draws. The now-departed Chicago has 32 wins and three ties, Ohio State 27 and four, and all the rest have 20 or fewer championships. If the 19 Illini fencing titles and the three Michigan hockey trophies are subtracted from the above totals, the Wolverines have a slight edge, 56 to 55, in the sports in which both schools have always participated. The way Michigan has been going lately, this margin is bound to increase rapidly. So much for numbers. Let's get down to what actually hap- pended this past week. The basketball team, for one, even with last night's loss to Purdue, had a share of the Big Ten crown for the first time since 1948. Ironically, Michigan owes its share of the championship largely to arch-rival Michigan State's dramatic win over Ohio State Saturday night. They enter the NCAA playoffs this Friday against Loyola or Murray State. The hockey team, meanwhile, salted away first place in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association by burying Michigan State, 9-4 and 13-4, over the weekend. In so doing, they tied the Michigan record for most goals in a season, and wound up with a regular season won-lost mark of 21-3, their best campaign ever in this respect. The icers can now look forward to the WCHA playoffs, beginning Thursday at the Coliseum. Down at Columbus, the track team swept past a favored Wis- consin aggregation, 67-48, for its fifth win or draw in an indoor meet in the last six years. Paced by individual champs Des Ryan, Al Ammerman, Kent Bernard, Ted Kelly, and Roger Schmitt, the Wolverines took command from the start, and the Badgers never seriously threatened their lead. There were two meets at Madison, gymnastics and wrestl- Ing, and Michigan squads once again came away with triumphs in these fields of endeavor. The gymnasts, getting phenomenal performances from the tumblers and trampolinists, defeated a much-improved Iowa team 131-112 for their fourth straight conference crown. Captain Arno Lascari, injured elbow and all, and Mike Henderson picked up firsts, while Gary Erwin and Johnny Hamilton tied for that honor on the tramp. The grapplers wrapped up their second straight Big Ten title despite the loss of NCAA champ Rick Bay. Again Iowa was the number one contender, but the Wolverines outdistanced them 56-41. Featherweight Ralph Bahna and 147-pounder Lee Detrick garnered individual trophies. Up at Minneapolis, the swimmers didn't win, but they did put up a strong performance against Indiana's powerhouse. The Hoosiers took it, 2231-171%, but the Wolverines came about 40 points closer to them than in 1963, easily subduing third place Ohio State. Sopho- mores Bill Farley and Rich Walls scored firsts for the Blue, and bolstered by this year's talent-laden freshman team, the Wol- verines have every chance to bypass the Hoosiers in 1965. So there you have it-a week that saw Michigan's .great athletic tradition become a little bit greater. Funny how those high academic standards frighten all the good athletes away. Stun (Continued from P Co-Champion Hoopmen Cagers Eye NCAA; No TV Coverage Set age 1) Eddy said. "But my team played a great game." Besides shooting 53 per cent for the whole game, the Boiler- makers only lost the rebounding battle, 43-39. And in the second half they actually outfought the Wolverines on the boards, 20-11. Most Wins Michigan finished the regular season with a 20-4 mark, its larg- est number of victories in history. The Wolverines and the Buckeyes are co-champions of the Big Ten with 11-3 records. Michigan plays the winner of the Loyola-Murray State game Friday night in Min- neapolis in the semi-finals of the Mideast regional. Russell ledaboth teams in scor- ing with 27 and pushed his total point output for 24 games to 593, the largest total in Wolverine his- tory. Buntin was second highest scorer for the Wolverines with 19 points, boosting his season total to 534 points. .For the first 10 minutes of the first half it was a close ball game with both teams being held to a maximum lead of four points throughout the half. Buntin scored quickly for Michigan with a sweepinghook. Russell stole the ball before Purdue had a chance to shoot and Cantrell hit on a 25-foot jumper from the left of the free throw line.hThis 4-0 lead was the largest the Wolverines were to have all evening. After Buntin's lay-up at 10:20 that put the Wolverinesabehind, 21-19, Michigan couldn't score for almost three minutes. Purdue was on top by ten points, 31-21, when Darden's j u m p e r, Russell's jumper, and two free throws by Russell cut the Purdue lead to 41-38. But Garland's shot as the buzzer sounded dropped in for a basket and Purdue led 43-38 at the intermission. Purdue enlarged its lead to eight points but Michigan finally moved ahead with half the period gone. Behind 55-50, Darden hit on a jump shot and Russell shoveled a pass into Buntin under the boards which was quickly turned irto a lay-up. For the rest of the game both teams were within a point or two of each other except when the Boilermakers grabbed a five-point lead with 7:40 to go. The Wolver- ines cut this down to a tie only to lose in the fatal last two minutes of the game. Spoilermakers Schellhase, I Jones, f Brown, c Purkhiser, g Garland, g Gramms Totals Tregoning Darden, f Buntin, c Cantrell, g Russell, g Herner Pomey Totals Attendance: PURDUE MICHIGAN PURDUE G F R PT 11-17 3-5 12 3 25 5-1l 1-2 9 4 11 0-2 3-4 6 2 3 11-16 4-4 3 2 26 6-16 4-4 4 2 16 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 33-62 15-19 39 13 81 MICHIGAN G F R PT 4-8 0-0 8 0 8 7-12 0-0 7 3 14 8-25 3-3 13 2 19 3-7 1-1' 1 2 7 11-23 5-6 9 4 27 0-2 0-2 1 2 0 2-4 0-0 2 0 4 35-81 9-13 43 13 79 By TOM WEINBERG Nobody knows if the NCAA regional games at Minneapolis this week will be on television for the Michigan fans. The Sports Network and Bill Flemming are definitely planning to telecast both the action on Friday nigtht and Saturday night, but it is still uncertain as to whether or not the Detroit outlet NCAA Tickets Ticket manager. Don Weir has announced that an un- known quantity of tickets for the NCAA regional basketball tournament at Minneapolis this Friday and Saturday will be available today. For further in- formation, call the ticket office, NO 2-3238, in the afternoon. The prices are $3.00 and $1.50. of the Sports Network, WJBK-TV, channel 2, will be able to clear the air time necessary to carry part or all of the action from Minneapolis. A spokesman for the station said yesterday that it was doubtful that the station would be able to clear the time. He said that there were no plans as yet on the cover- age. If channel 2 declines to telecast the tournament, any other Detroit station is eligible to pick it up. However, a spokesman for WWJ- TV, channel 4, also said that his station had no plans for the cov- erage. The Wolverines meet the win- ner of tonight's Loyola-Murray State game on Friday night. The Loyola game is part of a first- round doubleheader at North- western's McGaw Hall. The other game features at-large represent- ative, Louisville, against the Mid- American Conference champions. The Mideast winner will then advance to Kansas City the next weekend, March 20-21, along with the winners from the East, Mid- west and Far West. The Far West winner, expected to be UCLA, will meet the Mid- west champ, probably Wichita, on Friday night, while the Mideast titlist will be paired against the champions of the East, probably Duke. The two Friday night winners face each other Saturday night for the national crown. That game, and the semi-finals are slated to be televised nationally on the ABC network. Summing up, all Michigan has to do is win a couple games this weekend, then take a couple more the next weekend. _a 4-. I Big Ten Standings I FINAL Conference All Games W L Pct. WV L 7,650. 45 38-81 38 41-79 MICHIGAN Ohio state Minnesota Michigan State Purdue Northwestern Illinois Indiana Iowa Wisconsin 11 3 11 3 10 4 8 6 8 6 6 8 6 8 5 9 3 11 2 12 .786 .786 .714 .571 .571 .429 .429 .357 .214 .143 20 '4 16 8 17 7 14 10 12 12 9 12 13 11 9 15 8 15 8 16 I Scores l COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA Regionals Villanova 77, Providence 66 Princeton 86, VMI 60 Creighton 89, Oklahoma City 78 Connecticut 53, Temple 48 Texas Western 68, Texas A & M 62 OTHER SCORES Kansas State 74, Iowa State 69 Colorado 89, Nebraska 73 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Purdue 81, Michigan 79 Illinois 90, Iowa 67 Indiana 76, Northwestern 68 Nuttall Sets Federation Mark BOB PURKHISER .. clutch shooting Select Russell To Look Team The sophomore wonder, Cazzie Russell, can add one more feather in his already cluddered hat of national recognition. This time it's an All-American berth on the Look Magazine team. Russell was an unequivocal choice on this team, as he and Ohio State's Gary Bradds were the only two players to be selected by unanimous vote of the writers who selected the 10-man squad. Bill Buntin was placed on 'the NCAA District 4 all-star team. In addition to Russell and Bradds, Bill Bradley of Prince- ton, Mel Counts of Oregon State, North Carolina's Billy Cunning- ham, UCLA's Walt Hazzard, Bud Koper of Oklahoma City, Jeff Mullins of Duke, Cotton Nash of Kentucky, and Dave Stallworth of Wichita were named to the mag- azine's all-star team. 4 14 I By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE - Cliff Nuttall, lanky Michigan hurdler, set a U.S. Track and Field Federation record last night, when he skimmed thej 50-yard high hurdles in 6.1 sec- onds at the 13th Milwaukee Jour- nal Indoor Games. Nuttall's time bettered the US- TFF record of 6.3 seconds by Wis- consin's Steve Muller In 1963. In victory, Nuttall got revenge over another Badger, Ted Dakin, who narrowly defeated him in the Big Ten Indoor Meet last Saturday. Nuttall's clocking was, however, :00.2 off the American record set by Hayes Jones in 1961. In the high jump, Wolverine sophomore Bob Densham scored an upset victory over a strong field, including 7-footer Joe Faust. Densham leaped 6'8" and was awarded first place on the basis of fewer misses. Both Faust and Indiana's Cornelius Miller also jumped 6'8". Michigan's Big Ten Indoor champion, Al Ammerman, failed to place. Another Michigan sophomore, Dorie Reid, performed well, with. a third place finish in the 50-yard dash. Bob Moreland of Michigan State won the event in the USTFF record of 5.2 seconds. DUKE THIRD: Michigan Places Second To UCLA in Final Poll In the 500-yard run, Michigan's Dan Hughes placed fourth. Wis- consin's Elzie Higginbottom, Big Ten Indoor 440-yard champion, won the event in 58.1, breaking Hockey Tickets There are still plenty of tickets left for the WCHA hockey playoffs to be held at the Coliseum Thursday and Friday nights. The prices are $1.00 for card holders and stu- dents, $1.50 for general admis- sion, and $2.00 for reserved seats. the old USTFF record of 58.6, held by Dave Mills of Purdue. Wisconsin's Al Montalbano won the 600-yard run in the time of 1,11.5. Montalbano, who finished second to Michigan's Kent Ber- nard in the Big Ten Indoor Meet, seemed to benefit from Bernard's absence. Roger Kerr, Iowa's de- fending USTFF champion, nipped former Illinois ace George Kerr at the wire for second place. Brian Sternberg of the Univer- sity of Washington, who set an in- door record of 16'312",; in winning the pole vault in Milwaukee last season, was the Games honorary referee. Welcome 11 to Continental Hairstyling "Your Hair Problems Are Our Care !" TIs Week i Sports THURSDAY HOCKEY-Michigan Tech at Coliseum, 8 p.m. (WCHA playoffs) FRIDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan vs. Loyola-Murray State winner, at Minneapolis (NCAA regional) HOCKEY-Michigan Tech at Coliseum, 8 p.m. (WCHA playoffs) SATURDAY BASKETBALL-NCAA Regional at Minneapolis "Science With Christian Concern" Lecturer: HAROLD K. SCH I LLI NG Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School Pennsylvania State University Lecture IV in series of five on "DOING THE TRUTH" FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Wednesday, March 11 7:30 p.m. Admission Free Visit , By The Associated Press Michigan ended up the season just one notch behind unbeaten UCLA in the final Associated Press college basketball poll of the 1964 season. UCLA's Bruins are the first team from the West Coast to fin- ish on top since the powerful San Francisco Dons in 1956. UCLA collected 34 first place votes and 392 points in the final voting by a special regional panel of 40 writers and broadcasters. The Wolverines wound up sec- ond with 341 points. The Cincinnati Bearcats, last year's No. 1 team, did not receive a single vote in this season's final balloting. They had a 17-9 won- lost record. UCLA completed its regular season last week by defeating I California and Southern Califor- nia for a 26-0 mark. The Bruins There were only two changes in the next-to-last and the final standings. Kentucky, beaten by St. Louis in its final regular sea- son start, dropped to fourth be- hind Duke. The Blue Devils dis- posed of North Carolina State, North Carolina and Wake Forest The Dascola Barbers (near Michigan Theatre) or The U of M Barbers (North U. near Kresge's) If generation The Campus Inter-Arts Magazine will be. on sale I in winning the Atlantic Conference tournament. Coast PETITION FOR W L Pts. 1. UCLA (34) 26 0 392 2. Michigan (1) 20 4 341 3. Duke 23 4 300 4. Kentucky 21 4 258 5. Wichita 22 5 258 6. Oregon State (1) 25 3 190 7. Villanova 22 3 124 8. Chicago Loyola 20 5 120 9. DePaul 21 3 72 10. Davidson 22 4 44 Other teams receiving votes: Ari- zona State, Bradley, Bowling Green, Creighton, Drake, Kansas State, Miami (Fla), Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio State, Ohio University, Provi- dence, San Francisco, Seattle, Texas A & M, Texas Western, Vanderbilt. MUSKET CENTRAL COMMITTEE Assistant General Chm. Costumes Publicity Properties Tr Ti Pr reasurer Sets ickets and Ushers Co-ordinating Artist rograms Secretary from March 4-March 15 pick up petitions at Union main desk anytime- sign up for interview MARCH 12 Featuring Carl Oglesby F. H. Bergman Lynn Coffin I WISE OWLS...- do all their banking at Ann Arbor Bank. Three campus offices serve your entire banking needs including Specialcheck account, especially prac- tical for students. Why not stop in today and open your Specialcheck account? ELECTION YEAR IS HERE! --41w.:!9 I ANN ARBOR BANK SEVEN FULL SERVICE OFFICES: Main at Huron I E. Liberty near Maynard / Packard at Brockman / S. University at E. 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