THE MICHIGAN DAILY O BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS: Pistons in Semi-Finals Basketball Championships Get Top Billing at I-M Open House Elect the TEAM with the PLATFOR 4.i CINCINNATI (M-)-The Detroit Pistons won the National basket- ball Association Western Division semi-final playoff last night by beating the Cincinnati Royals, 112- 111, despite / a desparate last- minute rally. The Pistons will now meet the Los Angeles Lakers In a best-of- seven playoff. Detroit won the best-of-five playoff, 3-1., The hero of yesterday's game was Don Ohl who went all the way and led all scorers with 33 points. Detroit Takes Lead Detroit took the 'lead halfway through the first period and Cin- cinnati was never quite able to catch up. In the third period, the Royals twice came within four points but were unable to close the gap fur- ~ther. The Royals made their 'last and greatest effort after Wayne Embry was ousted for a deliberate foul with 1:50 leftrin the game. Ray' Scott, whom he fouled, hit the free throw to make It 106-101. Then Bob Boozer was fouled and hit the free throw. Bob Perry and Oscar Robertson matched baskets and Jack Twyman intercepted a Detroit pass. His lay-up shot with 1:19 left made it 108-106. After a Detroit time-out, Gene. Shue was fouled and made two of three free throws. Twyman scored again with 1:01 left and Ohl came right back with a lump shot from1 the left corner.t Both Teams Missl After Robertson was fouled and hit a free throw, both teams miss- ed several baskets as the final minute ticked away. Twyman fin- ally grabbed a rebound and drop- ped it in with :03 left to make the score 112-111. Shue' had 21 points and Bailey Howell made 20 for Detroit. Cin- cinnati's leading scorer was Rob- ertson with 32, while Twyman made 22 and Arlen Bockhorn 20. * * * SYRACUSE (JP) - Johnny Kerr limited Wilt Chamberlain to 29 points as Syracuse beat Philadel- phia 106-99 and evened their East- ern Division NBA semifinal play- off series at two games each last night.. The best of five series shifts to Philadelphia for the final game tomorrow night. The winner meets Eastern Chanmpion Boston in a best of seven series to determine the finalist in the National as- ketball Association playoffs. Kerr Stars The 6-footll Kerr turned in one of his, finest performances in the defensive job on Chamberlain, the Warrior's 7-foot-1 giant who averaged more than 50 points a game during the regular season. He held Wilt to 19 points through the first 46 minutes, with Cham- berlain hitting 10 in the last two minutes as the Warriors made a last-gasp bid to pull it out. In addition, Kerr contributed 271 points and pulled in 22 rebounds, high for the game. Nats Start Early The Nats broke the game open late in the first quarter, out- scoring the Warriors 8-1 in one span and taking a 26-19 lead. Phil- adelphia didn't lead again.' The Nats led by as much as 16 through the second period and Rules Re-Emphasized Big 10 Commissioner Bill Reed yesterday re-emphasized the conference rule of strict legislation which has been in effect three years. Big 10 rules say all competi- tion. must be completed in four years after matriculation ex- cept for outstanding cases of hardship which are treated in- dividually.' As for any NCAA legislation, Reed only reiterated their rules. had a 58-48 halftime lead. In the third period Kerr popped in 12 points as Syracuse maintained its lead. Warriors Pull Up The Warriors closed up in the final period, pulling to within four points when Guy Rogers hit a layup with 41 seconds left. But Larry Costello hit a couple of free throws and Joe Roberts scored on a three-point play to wrap it up for the Nats. Tom Meschary had 23 points for Philadelphia, while Syracuse had seven men in double figures, led by Kerr and Paul Arizin, who contributed 21. By PETE DiLORENZI I-M Open House is here! Tonight, starting at 6:30, an an- ticipated 5,000 spectators will be on hand at the I-M Building to witness top-notch competition ex- hibitions and clinics in such var- ied sports as swimming, diving, t e n n i s, volleyball, badminton, weightlifting, squash, handball, paddleball, codeball, wrestling, ju- do, boxing, and gymnastics. But, as usual, basketball will be the main-attraction, with the fea- ture game of the evening being a battle between Phi Epsilon Kappa and Tau Epsilon Rho. PEK boasts such stars as DeLyle Condre of Utah and Billy McDade, while TER has Michigan football, bask- etball, and tennis star Scott Maentz. Diving Championships Other fans, who wish to see some swimming, may drop in at the I-M Pool anytime after 6:30 and stay until 10:00. While there, they will be treated to the all- campus diving competition, two rough-and-tumble water polo matches, two entire swim meets, and a clowning exhibition by the Michigan Varsity Divers. Tennis Exhibition Upstairs at one end of the bask- etball court, the Michigan Tennis Team will be giving a tennis ex- hibition, which will be followed by a volleyball game between an all-star faculty team and an Ann Arbor team. The badminton team will follow the volleyballers, and they will be followed, in turn, by a weight lifting exhibition. World Champion Performs It is quite possible that the top event of the entire evening will take place on the squash courts, where Hashim Khan, seven-time world champion from Pakistan, will put on an exhibition and fol- low with a clinic. Another of the many champions at the building will be state sin- gles and doubles handball cham- pion John Scopis. A former Mich- igan student who was an all-cam- pus champ when here, Scopis will bring with him a group of Detroit playersw ho will put on an exhibi- tion and clinic. Paddleball'match- es and an exhibition in the rela- tively unknown sport of codeball will dot the paddleball courts. The freshman wrestling team will put on an exhibition on the wrestling mats, where there will also be an exhibition by the Judo Club. There will also be all-cam- pus boxing matches in the boxing room., Traditionally many fans turn out to watch the 'A' basketball championship. The basketball championships which will be fea- tured tonight, are equivalent in importance to the I-M program with the other two major I-M sports, baseball and football. Both the 'A' and 'B' fraternity and Residence Hall's champion- ship will be played tonight in ad- dition to the featured Independent game. MARK PERLOW - President JEFF RUBENSTEI N -Vice Presider JIM LI PTON -Treasurer SHARI E McCUE -Secretary For L.S.&A. Senior Officers d THUNDER ON THE LEFT ...AND' THE RIGHT ~ CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS (Min. age 19 & completion of at least 1 year of college) GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS . . comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sister and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Middle Atlantic States and Canada. INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concerning summer employment as Head Counselors, Group Leaders, Specialties, General Counselors. Write, Phone, or Call in Person Association of Private Camps - Dept. C Maxwell M. Alexander, Executive Director 55 West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N.Y. Re-Elect MICHAEL OLINICK Incumbent ' I f, !, f .., f :" i- t U, Elect MICHAEL HARRAH Hopeful a -1 Classified Advertising Number Is Now NO 2-4786 Duquesne Whips Bradley In NIT Tournament Upset I FOR UNION BOARD OF DIRECTORS V v t NEW'Y ORK ()--Duquesne held' on for an 88-85 upset victory over Bradley last night and gained the semifinals of the 25th annual Na- tional Invitation Basketball Tour- nament at Madison Square Gar- den. St. John's of New York met Holy Cross in the second game, -with the winner matched against Duquesne in tomorrow night's semifinal. The other semifinal pairs Loyola of Chicago against Dayton. Somerset Stars Sophomore Willy Somerset key- ed a thrilling secjnd half for Du- quesne's tenacious Dukes, who at one point led by as many as 14 points but did not put it away until the closing moments. Somerset, a muscular'5-10.flash, scored 20 of his 28 points in the second half and time and again broke the back of a Bradley rally: He and his sharpshooting team- mates actually clinched at the foul line. In the second half the Dukes hit a spectacular 20 for 2 free throws. Walker Keeps Game Close With two time All-America Chet Walker putting on a one man show that carried Bradley to withir three points, 86-83, with 1:04 re- naining, the game that had once appeared a Duquesne runaway be- ,came a cliffhanger. But the two teams took turns losing the ball in the next few seconds and with just 10 seconds left Mike Rice zeroed in two foul shots and the Dukes were home. Walker followed up with a bask- et just before the buzzer, giving him a total of 36 points, 25 1 the second half. Duquesne's Paul Benec, counting mostly on low tra jectory one-handers, helped the Dukes to a 46-37 lead at intermis sion with 15 points and had 21 6l -told. Duquesne, which scored a 73-72 victory at Bradley two weeks age, now has a record of 22-5. Brad- ley's Missouri Conference co- champions, finished at 21-7. Last night's winners meet :in tomorrow's semifinals, which also match Loyola of Chicago agains Dayton.; St. John's, patiently working fox the good shots, broke it open be- hind limber Leroy 'Ellis in th second half. The fast and grace- ful 6-10 pivot scored almost at will as the Redmen rambled aftex intermission.,He also monopolized the boards. Ellis had 29 points, 21 in the second half, and nabbed 11 re. bounds. Holy Cross' quick-shooting Jack Foley was ably contained by Willie Hall until St. John's had i safely put away. Foley is Outstanding Foley was virtually the entire n4 Crusader offense in the second - half and totaled 35 points. For St. John's it was a work- man-like victory. The Redmen displayed all-around skills but mostly it was their ability to count on their openings that proved the difference. They took charge early, had a 39-31 lead fat the half and Holy Cross was able to make it respect- able only with a too-late spree WRITE-IN Lawrence MEYER No. 1 for SGC %I I ATTENTION, ALL STUDENTS AT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN! WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO THIS SUMMER? You may wi yo A SUMMER JOB leading to a LIFETIME CAREER in the field of your choice , , ,y{ t {, t .R t .. .. , , ,. }... { FOR ALL YOUR FORMAL NEEDS! Q TUXEDO'S QI WHITE DINNER JACKETS WEDDI NGS - PROMS - DANCES "SPECIAL STUDENT RATES" RUSSELL'S TUXEDO RENTAL SERVICE Enter Viceroy's Career Opportunity Contest now! Jobs in: law "* advertising" TV radio " banking. architecture marketing 1230 Packard NO 5-4549 Jobs in aviation heavy industry * electronics engineering" import-export r.. ,.. ": ? ; ' % '.i'?', ":i$::i:ii ii=i f is'i?' c'ii r ii; " ' '?;i ., ' {?:'::ti%". :: {}:::: " '.":: {; is::v %{%:j{q:;.:}'i:":":a':;:}4f'::C:':tv :1 ':YjC'':Ii::i%. '>; Jobs in: petroleum 9 tobacco * publishing * insurance 1. 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