I THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUhNAY. MAtE if e - R410 10*eea~aa - ' :e . n Lascari, Larose Star as 'M' Gym Squad .7 11 IN LA 1f1Cfi %V" AV, 111 OS f V 1 Rolls t( By MIKE BLOCK Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's gymnastics team rolled up the highest score ever in a Big Ten meet and coasted to its third straight conference gym cham- pionship here yesterday. Finishing'with an amazing 210/2 point total, the Wolverines more than doubled runner-up Iowa's 83'/z. Minnesota came in third with 62, while Michigan State finished strong to pull into fourth with a 51. Michigan had an unprecedented total of seven first places in nine events, missing out only in the still rings and tumbling. Coach Third Straight Big Ten Title 'I IN Twin Terrors TEAM SCORES MICHIGAN Iowa Minnesota Michigan State Wisconsin Illinois Indiana Ohio State 2101/2 83/2 62 51 34 32 17 14 (Purdue, Northwestern did not enter) FLOOR EXERCISE-i. LAROSE (M) and HENDERSON (M) 93 (tie). 2. Woodward (Ind) 92.5. 4. Hery (Iowa) 92: 5. Moen (Minn) 90. 6. Ross (Iowa) 89.75. 7. SPICER (M) 88.5. 8. Drish (Iowa) 88.25. 9. Holmes (Ill) 86.75. 10. Rohs (MSU) 86.5. TRAMPOLINE-1. SANDERS (M) 92. 2. ERWIN (M) 89.5. '3. Hery (Iowa) 85. 4. HAMILTON (M) 82.25. 5. Gregg (MSU) 81.25. 6. Jarrett (OSU) 80.5. 7. Flood (Ill) 80. 8. Iffland (Ill) 76.75. 9. Bauer (Wis) 75.75. 10. Noble (MSU) 72.5. SIDEHORSE-1. LASCARI (M) 91.25. 2. LAROSE (M) 89.5. 3. Arne- son (Minn) 85. 4. LEVY (M) 84.5. 5. Fritze (Minn) and Galis (Iowa) 78.25 (tie). 7. Wagner (Ill) 615. 8. Zovne (Wis) 59.5. 9. Turchan (MSU) 35.5. 10. George (MSU) 30.5. HIGH BAR.- 1. LASCARI (M) 93.25. 2. LAROSE (M) 93. 3. HYNDS (M) 92. 4. Gailis (Iowa) 91.25. 5. Carman (MSU) 90. 6. Eibrink (Minn) 87.5. 7. Gleason (Minn) 86.75. 8. Hopper (Wis) 83.75. 9. Sauer (OSU) 79.25. 10. Schmidt (Iowa) 61.5. PARALLEL BARS-1. LASCARI (M) 95.5. 2. LAROSE (M) 92.25. 3. HYNDS (M) 92. 4. Carman (MSU) 88.25. 5. Hopper (Wis) 87.75. 6. Bro- deur (MSU) 87.5. 7. Elbrink (Minn) and Schmidt (Iowa) 85.5 (tie). 9. Price (MSU) 83. 10. Woodward (Ind) 81.75. LONGHORSE - 1. LAROSE (M) 92. 2. LASCARI (M) 87.375. 3. Hery (Iowa) 83.75. 4. Holmes (Ill) 82.375. 5. Gleason (Minn) 80.875..6. HYNDS (M) 78. 7. Stebbins (MSU) 77.375. 8. Drish (Iowa) 76.125. 9. Zovne (Wis) 64.75. 10. Gailis (Iowa) 49. STILL RINGS-1. Cooper (MSU) and Hopper (Wis). 95 (tie). 3. LA- ROSE (M) and Gallis (Iowa) 93.25 (tie). 5. Webster (OSU) 90. 6. El- brink (Minn) 88.5. 7. Gleason (Minn) 86.25. 8. Sebben (Iowa) 86. 9. LAS- CARI (M) 85. 10. HYNDS (M) 84.5. TUMBLING-1. Holmes (Ill) 96.25. 2. BOLTON (M) 91.25. 3. Woodward (Ind) 86.75. 4. Sayre (Iowa) 84.25. 5. Giliberto (MSU) 81. 6. Hery (Iowa) 78.5. 7. HENDERSON (M) 77. 8., Moen (Minn) 75.75. 9. Spaulding (Iowa) 75.25. 10. Iffland (Ill) 74. Newt Loken's men also took the first three places in three cate- gories land wound up one-two- four in two others. L-L Come Througs Michigan's "L" boys, Gil La- rose and Arno Lascari, amassed six firsts between them. Lascari was the champ on sidehorse, high bar and parallel bars-in the last event, he successfully defended the crown he won at Columbus last year, this time with a 95.5, the second highest score in the entire meet. Larose entered yesterday's ac- tion with the title in the all- around under his belt, and added a first place in the longhorse vault. He also tied teammate Mike Henderson for the floor exercise honors, and finished second in all three contests in which Lascari was champ. Conversely, Lascari was runner-up in the all-around and longhorse, Larose's high spots. The other Wolverine first was garnered by Fred Sanders on the Trampoline, with Gary Erwin right behind and Johnny Hamil ton in fourth. Senior Jim Hynds piled up thirds in the high bar, p- bars, . and all-around, adding a sixth on the longhorse. Paul Levy performed well on the sidehorse to pick up a fourth. Three in a Row Hal Holmes had the highest score of the meet with a 96.25 to, walk away with the tumbling title for the third consecutive year. His 98.5 mark yesterday was one of his highest totals ever,, and one judge even gave him a per- fect 100. Michigan's Phil Bolton Was run- ner-up with a 91.5, as a result of his 94 yesterday, which was equal to Holmes' total Friday. Hender- son again had trouble with his double backflip and his 77 left him with a rather disappointing seventh. The best-performed event of the entire meet was the still rings, where there were draws for both first and third place. Sharing top honors were defending champ Dale Cooper of MSU and the relatively unknown Jim Hopper of Wiscon- sin. Cooper had a 96-95 lead going into the finals, and executed a nearly-perfect routine only to slip and fall in his 01 iount to bring him down' to a 94. Hopper's 95 then enabled him to pull into a deadlock. Ties'Larose Iowa's Glenn Gailis scored a 93.5 to give him an overall 93.25, which was good enough to equal Larose on the rings. Hynds and Lascari barely qualified, finishing 10th and ninth, respectively. Iowa's second place finish was a distinct improvement over its fourth of last year. Gailis, besides his fine showing on the rings, also was fourth in. the high bar and tied Minnesota's Dan Fritze for fifth on the sidehorse. George Hery was third in the longhorse and sixth in tumbling for the Hawk- eyes, and Bill Sayre was fourth in tumbling to round out the ma- jor part of their scoring. Minnesota managed a third- place finish with a small squad, and might have done better if previously undefeated sidehorse man Ton Arneson had been up to par. However, Arneson did come in third, and all-arounders Larry Gleason and Bill Eibrink accumu- lated enough points in the middle places to raise the Gophers from their sixth place standing in 1962. State Slips Michigan State, performing without the services of Captain Jerry George, who inexplicably withdrew himself from the meet, and Manuel Turchan, who dislo- cated a shoulder Friday, still end- ed up fourth, down two notches from a year ago. Besides Cooper's contribution, Bob Carman helped out the Spartans with a fourth on the p-bars and a fifth on the high bar. Thanks to Holmes, once-mighty Illinois was saved from complete humiliation.,Besides his tumbling effort, the Illini captain added a fourth in the vault and a ninth in floor ex to account for 20 of his team's 32 counters. Wisconsin improved consider- ably from its eighth of last year, thanks mainly to Hopper's up- surge and the all-around work of Jerry Zovne. Larose was never better in most of his performances than he was yesterday. From his opening hand- stand in the floor ex to his 2%- spin dismount from the rings, he performed well enough to take top honors in any Big Ten meet which Lascari wasn't in. As it was, La- rose's scores yesterday were high enough to reduce the distance be- tween the scores established by him and Lascari in Friday's pre- liminaries. Tremendous Trio Although the final scores don't show it, the Michigan high bar trio put together a great string of tallies on that event, with Larose, Lascari, and Hynds getting 95, 94, and 94 respectively yesterday. Las- cari, in the three events he top- ped, didn't fall under 90 once in two days of work. In the floor ex Indiana's Jim Woodward had knotted Henderson for first after the preliminaries, but his 92.5 yesterday wasn't good enough to top either Henderson or Larose. Wolverine Barry Spicer had a very respectable 88.5 for the meet, but the higher-than- average scores in the exercise rele- gated him to the seventh slot. The meet gave Loken a good look at some of the competition he'll see again in the NCAA's in Pittsburgh in three weeks. But for the present, he exclaimed, "Won- derful, wasn't it?" and commend- ed the team as a whole for its domination of the tourney, which climaxed a 6-0 dual meet season for the Wolverines. I WIN AT WISCONSIN, 82-80: Wolverines End Successful Cage Season TOM COLU ... a blaze of glory By TOM WEINBERG Special To The Daily MADISON-Showing some long- awaited finesse, Michigan's Wol- verines downed Wisconsin yester- day 82-80 in a fitting climax to the winningest season in 26 years. Michigan displayed veteran pol- ish in staving pff a stretch drive by the Badgers. By stalling every chance they had throughout the last five minutes of the game= and converting on eight of nine at- tempts from the charity stripe in the last six minutes, Michigan managed to stay in front of the Badgers throughout the second half. Bill Buntin wasted no time in crowning himself king of Michi- gan scorers as he made his fourth and record-cracking point on a sweeping 11-foot hook shot after only three minutes in the game had elapsed. Buntin's 17 points for the day gave him a total of 534 for the year, 329 of which were in Big Ten action. Both figures eclipse the old marks held by John Tid- well and M. C. Burton respective- ly. Zone Shocks Coach Dave Strack shocked Wis- consin with a zone defense at the start of the game to the extent that the Badgers blew 17 of their first 18 attempts from the floor, and Michigan jumped off to a 13- 4 lead before Wisconsin's leading scorer, Ken Siebel, moved into for- ward and warmed up to hit six shots in four minutes. His streak brought the Badgers within three points, 23-20, with 10:22 to go in the first half. Michigan played a speedy first half, scoring on four of seven three-on-two and two-on-one breakaways. John Harris bowed out of his last game in his third straight performance of 20 points or more, collecting 21, including hitting his first four jump shots. Cole Stars Captain Tom Cole played per- haps his finest half of the year in the second frame when he led both teams with 16 points, 19 re- bounds and five steals. He pulled practically everything off the boards in addition to sinking three jump shots, a lay-up and eight straight free shots. Michigan commanded the be- ginning of the game by virtue of Harris' jump shots and a variety of moves by Buntin, and stretched the lead to 10 at 20-10 before Sie- bel and Jack Brens of the Badgers tightened things up. The score was knotted at 23'apiece when the visiting Wolves put on a spurt to lead 29-23. Wisconsin narrowed the gap with shots by Siebel and Brens and went ahead 37-26 with 2:56 to go in the half. The last few minutes of the half saw vigorous action with the home team going in front by as much as three, 41-38, but the Wolverines coming back to take a 46-45 edge at intermission on one of Doug Herner's five long jump shots. Hit .457 in Half At halftime, Michigan's leaders were Harris and Buntin with 13 points each, and six and nine re- bounds, respectively. Siebel made 16 points and pulled down 11 re- bounds for the Badgers in the first 20 minutes. Michigan hit at a .457 clip while Wisconsin managed .396. When the second half opened, Cole fired up, hitting eight points in six minutes and putting Michi- gan on top to stay. They led 63- 53 with 13:22 to go in the game, and from that point on slowed down to a pace which would en- able them to win, not to score a maximum of points. Badgers Foul Out Foul trouble was to play a dom- inant role in the fall of the Badgers as their two top scorers, Siebel and Brens each collected two quickies in the second half to raise their totals of four. They both felt the guillotine strike when Brens fouled out with 10:22 and Siebel charged Herner with 6:27 to go. From their 10-point deficit, the Badgers were able to cut it to Happy Finale MICHIGAN G F R PT Cole, t 5-14 8-10 21 4 18 Harris, f 10-23 1-5 11 3 21 Buntin, c 6-15 5-9 14 3 17 Cantrel, g 6-12 0-0 2 1 12 Herner, g 5-10 4-4 0 2 14 Tregoning, .i 0-2 0-0 1 0 0 Totals 32-7618-2860 13 82 WISCONSIN G F R P T Gwyn, f 4-16 1-ill 39 Richter, f-c 1-5 0-1 4 1 2 Brens, c 9-23 1-1 12 5 19 Siebel, g 9-20 6-9 18 5 24 O'Melia, g 1-3 0-2 1 1 2 Bearden, g 3-12 0-0 2 2 6 Grams, c 5-8 0-0 2 0 10 Ostrom, f 1-3 0-2 2 1 2 Johnson, f 2-3 2-2 1 1 6 Totals 35-93 10-18 58 19 80 Halftime Score: Michigan 46, Wis- consin 45.4 two at 72-70 on a jumper. by little Mike O'Melia with 6:09 to go. Herner hit on a jump shot and Wisconsin brought the ball down, trailing by four. Substitute Lon Ostrom went up for a shot and was hit by Cole. Ostrom blew both shots and Michigan brought the ball back, only to have Big Bill Buntin get hooked by Mike O'Melia who by a defensive botch was guarding the center to whom he gave up nearly a foot. 'M' Begins Stall Buntin swished two shots to in- crease the margin to siv, 76-70; but Ostrom blindly tipped in one of Gwyn's misses dropping it back to four. Michigan then began the stall with 4:36 to go and didn't score for over a minute when Cole went to pick up a pass and got there at the same time as Pat Richter. Richter was charged with blocking and the 6'7' captain scor- ed his last two points in a Mich- igan uniform on free throws with 3:17 remaining. Wisconsin hurriedly fired two shots before Gwyn hit on a short jumper with three minutes left. Herner and Cantrell broke up the full-court press with the screening help of Buntin and dribbled in a weave for 40 secondsbefore calling time out. When the teams returned to the floor, the visiting Wolverines went into a stall which crushed the Badgers. Finally in one of the many frantic efforts, Don Hearden caught Herner in the neck with 1:26 to go. Herner blithely swish- ed two free shots again putting Michigan up by six. Harris Hits Buntin came down on Johnson's attempt at the basket and the 6'5" junior substitute dropped in both from the line. Michigan again eas- ily went through the press and got the ball into B. J. Harris who drew a foul from Johnson. Harris' free throw came high off the rim and Cole grabbed the loose ball. The Wolves worked it into high-scorer Harris who put in a lay-up to bring it back to six, 82-76 with :41 left on the clock. Grams threw in a Rayl-type 30- footer and then the Wolves lost the ball on a travelling violation with just seconds to go. Wisconsin brought the ball down and with three seconds left, Herner nicked O'Melia going for the ball. After a time out, O'Melia missed his free throw. The ball came off the rim and Johnson got the rebound by default, tipping it in as the Strack- men stood idly by waiting for the buzzer which sounded just as Johnson's shot came down. Only Two Attempts Bill Buntin took only two shots in tle second half, being fouled on both attempts and making only four free tosses in the final 20 minutes. Buntin was not even close to bottled up, -but the bet- ter shots were to be had by Cole and the guards who stung Wiscon- sin with three more scores on fast breaks in the second half. The officiating, as usual, was met with extreme disgust of the 7,835 Wisconsin partisans, partio- ularly when Siebel was condemned for charging (his third foul) and reaching in (his fourth), and when a jump ball was called after a brief fracus over a rebound pe- tween Buntin and Ostrom with 3:54 to go in the game. NCAA BERTH: 1111,4i In; Buceks Out' CHAMPAIGN MP)-Illinois put down a late Iowa rally for a 73- 69 triumph and earned the Big Ten berth in the NCAA basketball championships as Ohio State dropped an 87-85 decision at In- diana in overtime yesterday, Illinois and Ohio State both finished with 11-3 records to share the conference championship. The Illini, however, got the NCAA bid because Ohio State represented the conference last year. Illinois led the Hawkeyes by as .many as 15 points, 46-31, just be- fore halftime. Iowa, however, whit- tled the margin to only one point, 66-65,. with 4:52 left and trailed only 69-67 with little more than two minutes to play. Ohio Loses The Buckeyes, shooting for their fourth straight Big Ten title, lost a 10 point lead late in the last half and then fell in overtime as starters Gary Bradds, Doug Mc- Donald and Dick Reasbeck fouled out. Senior Tom Boylard, closing out his career for the Hoosiers, led the Indiana surge that finally tied the game at 79-79 with 6:23 left in the game, scoring 13 of the 19 points that brought the home team from a 71-60 deficit. Bolyard wound up with 29 points, second to Bradds' 32 for game honors. Big Ten Standings FINAL W L Pct. Illinois 11 3 .786 Ohio State 11 3 .786 Indiana 9 5 .643 MICHIGAN 8 6 .571 Minnesota 8 6 .571 Wisconsin 7 7z.500 Northwestern 6 8 A444 Iowa 5 9 .357 Michigan State 3 11 .214 Purdue 2 12 .143 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Michigan 82, Wisconsin 86 Indiana 87, Ohio State 85 Illinois 73, Iowa 69 Northwestern 100, Michigan State 83 A NEW SERVICE at GOLD BOND CLEANERS 515 E. William COI N-OP TYPE CLEANING BY THE POUND Professional Cleaning and Spotting, Garments Returned on Hangers WILL YOU BE IN EUROPE TRAVELLING OR STUDYING? Get information on programs,, travel tips, and first hand accounts ea ue 7,'afe/ Payel Thurs., March 14. Education and Culture Committee . .7. 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