SUNDAY, MARCH 17,1963 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' "A Plum er a & SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1963 THE MICHTE~AN flATly * ~m. ~ PAGE SEVEN c LUCKY BREAK: Buntin Leads Cage Rise By LLOYD GRAFF ?t The broken ankle of an obscure center from Northern High School in Detroit may, go down as the turning point in Michigan basket- ball history. If you have not yet guessed the name of that pivot man, it is Bill Buntin, the Wolverines' sopho- more center who was named to the All Big Ten first team with the likes of Gary Bradds and Jimmy Rayl. His 534 points broke John Tidwell's record of 520 points for a single season and he also broke M. C. Burton's Big Ten scoring mark of 316 markers with a 329 total. As a junior in high school Bun- tin played against fellows like { Reggie Harding and Bill Chmie- lewski, two other great high school r .. centers. Buntin was outclassed3 in high school, but he may well have a more brilliant career in basket- ball than either Harding or Chmielewski. Lacking Hardin never had the grey , . matter to make the grade in col- -: ...... lege and is presently waiting until he is eligible to play for the Detroit Pistons, who drafted him : after he finished twelfth grade. Chmielewski, after an outstand- ing year at Dayton, being named the top player in last year's NIT tournament, dropped out of school on account of financial problem:,. He played briefly for the Wash- ington Tapers of the ABL before the league collapsed. But now about Bill. He is solidly entrenched in the School of Edu- cation, is lifting Michigan from the cage doldrums, and is making a name for himself which could make him a basketball legend at least in Ann Arbor, if not in the nation. M .* __ Georgia Joins Moore in Football Fix Query By The Associated Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-The state of Georgia joined Southeastern Conference Commissioner Bernie Moore yesterday in investigating a report by the Saturday Eve- ning Post that two prominent officials fixed the 1962 football game between the universities of Georgia and Alabama. Atty. Gen. Eugene Cook said Gov. Carl E. Sanders ordered the Georgia probe and that it is well under way. Cook said he did not know when it will be completed but that he will report to the gov- ernor before releasing any state- ments. Washington Reports And, in Washington the chief counsel for the Senate Investigat- ing committee, Jerome Adlerman, said the committee would investi- gate the reports. "The committee has been in- vestigating reports of gambling in sports for some time," Adlerman said. 'This, the reports on the Georgia-Alabama game, is an in- dividual case which has just come to our attention. We will look into it., Butts Tells The Post, in its March 23 edi- tion due for general distribution Tuesday, says Wally Butts, former athletic director at Georgia, gave vital information to Alabama Coach Paul Bear Bryant prior to Alabama's 35-0 victory over Geor- gia in an SEC game here Sept. 22. 1962. Burnett told the Post he heard Butts give Byrant detailed infor- mation on the Georgia team's of- fensive and defensive patterns over an accidental telephone connection r on Sept. 14-eight days before the Georgia-Alabama game. Butts and Bryant denied the reports immediately, and lawyers for Butts declared they will sue the magazine for libel. A $500,000 libel suit by Bryant is pending in Federal Court against the Post for an earlier article. FBI Inquires In Washington, the Justice De- partment said the FBI has made some preliminary inquiries into the reports, but no active investi- gation is under way. "We are watching the situation but plan no further action at this time," a spokesman said. Moore confirmed the SEC in- quiry after a spokesman for the Georgia Athletic Board said Fri- day night that the board had made a full report to the confer- ence on statements regarding Butts. Resigns Butts, dean of SEC football coaches until his retirement two years ago, quit as athletic direc- tor Feb. 28 "for business and personal reasons." M. Cook Barwick, Atlanta at- torney and athletic board mem- ber, said: "The position of the Georgia Athletic Board is that we do not intend to persecute anyone, nor do we plan to shield anyone. We simply have made an investiga- tion of the report that was given to us. Coach Butts resigned. I do not know of any forcing." SEC Investigates Moore said the SEC started an inquiry when the matter came to his attention. "Upon completion of the inves- tigation," Moore declared, "the findings will be referred to the SEC executive committee, which directs policy when the confer- ence is not in session. "The Southeastern Conference has had an outstanding athletic program since the formation of the conference and it will not be interrupted or destroyed by the article carried in the Post." Story The Post article, entitled "The Story of a College Football Fix," involves in Bryant and Butts, two of the most successful coaches in modern football. It carries the byline of Frank Grahm Jr., a freelance writer. It says: "Before t h e University ofE Georgia played the University of Alabama Sept. 22, Butts gave Butts and Bryant both said they Bryant Georgia's plays, defensive had turned the matter over to patterns and all the significant their lawyers. secrets Georgia's football team In a statement in Atlanta, Butts possessed." said the article "contains highly 'Bama Favorite insulting and utterly false charges Various betting lines showed against me. I categorically and Alabama was favored by 14 to 17 emphatically deny it." points, the article said. Alabama, national champions the year be- Ex *ii*i* fore, won by 35 points. Bryant issued a statement at, a news conference in Birmingham Friday. At no time, he said, "has Mr. Butts said anything to me Detroit 11, Philadelphia 10 (11 inn) which helped or affected the play Cleveland 12, Chicago (N) 7 Los Angeles (A) 12, Houston 8 of the Alabama football team San Francisco 8, Boston 3 against Georgia. The .Alabama Pittsburgh 12, Cincinnati 3 players won the game last fall. Los Angeles (N) 7, Washington 5 The charge against Mr. Butts of (12 inn) Minnesota 3, Milwaukee 0 collusion in the game is complete- Kansas City 3, New York (N) 2 ly false." . New York (A) 5, St. Louis 4 - I -. THE MICHIGAN UNION Creative, Arts Festival Ii -- NORMAN MAILER author of "The Naked and the Dead" March 25th TIC at Union desk . . KETS ON SALE . $1.50-$1.25 1' ' Peg Leg Buntin sat out his senior year at Northern with a fractured ankle. He had to satisfy his love of basketball by being a student manager. He used to put on a little shooting exhibition on one leg at half-time. Most scouts missed Buntin as a jnior, and ofcourse he drew no attention his senior year. So after his graduation Bill took a job and linited his playing to games at BrewsterCenter in Detroit, a hot- bed k for roughouse basketball, where Buntin learned how to util- ize his weight under the boards. Coach Dave Strack got a tip about Buntin and went out to see him at Brewster.yHe induced Bill to enroll at Michigan after seeing him play. Caution Strack was very cautious about praising Buntin too much at the beginning of the season, choosing instead to surprise the unsuspect- ingBig Ten. "He's good but we don't know how good, yet," he said repeatedly. But Buntin couldn't stay hid- den for long. His first important st was against burly Paul Silas of Creighton, who led the nation in rebounding last year and aver- agedd close to 20 points per game. Poor Paul was humbled as Buntin got 25 points and snagged 22 rebounds while Silas hit 13 points and managed just 12 rebounds. People wondered if it was just a fluke, and Strack again said, "Bill's got more tough tests com- Ing up. People still kept wondering as Bill pumped in more and more points and pulled down rebounds by the score. Many another play- er had excelled in non-conference games and then been a dud in the Big Ten.- Warning Buntin warned the Big Ten in his first league game that he was no pre-season phenomenon who was destined for the minors. He tallied 33 points against North- ,western and then struck for 34 In the Iowa game. The third test was Ohio State and All-American %arY Bradds. Bradds won the duel in Colum- bus as Buntin fouled out with eight minutes left after notching 15 points while Bradds scored 33. In the second head-to-head battle between the two talented pivot men Bradds also dominated, net- ting 34 markers to Buntin's 21. Looking back on the season, only Bradds showed a clear cut FALCON IS"NEW KING OF THE MOUNTAINS" IN TOUGHEST 2,500MILE MONTE CARLO RALLYE -Daily-Bruce Taylor SNARES ANOTHER-Promising center Bill Buntin shows the form he used to control the backboards this past season in action against Wisconsin. Buntin lead bounds with a total of 216. advantage over Buntin in overall play. Top Effort Perhaps Buntin's top effort of the season was against Indiana at Yost Field House. With Dick Van- Arsdale playing him man-to-man Bill repeatedly drove around him on the baseline for lay-ups to get 36 points in all as Michigan won a 90-86 thriller. In discussing his season, Buntin said, "There were no easy fellows that I played against. Jack Brens of Wisconsin and Bradds were the best shooters and Burwell was the best jumper." Another Gimp Bill sustained a leg injury at the midpoint of the season against Detroit which slowed him some- what, particularly against Michi- gan State when he was held to five points. With a sound limb Buntin nowiconfidently looks ahead to next season. "I think we've got a chance for the Big Ten title next year," said Buntin. "Our sophomores and jun- iors will be more experienced and the boys coming up will help us a lot." Buntin thinks that his greatest need for improvement is on de- fense. "You have to hold your opponent down or your own points the Big Ten conference in re- don't mean much," he remarked. Currently Buntin is living the life of a student. He is not going out for baseball like he did last year. His long range plans are to teach while coaching basketball on the side, but he has cther more immediate objectives. "I'm look- ing toward the Olympics," he said. "I'd really love to play on the Olympic team." Buntin would also like to play pro basketball if "the right offer comes along." The chances are good that offer will come if Bill Buntin maintain or improve uponi season's superb performance. the can this 9 I Special edition Falcon V-8 "Sprint" defeats the world's best in final 490-mile test section on icy Alpine cliff roads ... then outperforms every sedan on famous Monaco circuit! Falcon picked the world's roughest winter ordeal to reveal an astonishing new brand of total per- formance. Four days and three nights through an inferno of ice, snow, freezing fog, endless curves -2,500 miles against an implacable time schedule, designed to try a car's reliability, road-holding and performance to the ultimate. Experts said a. first-time car couldn't hope to finish-and two thirds of the 296 competitors did drop out. But Falcon not only placed first and second in its class, it defeated every car, regardless of class, on the brutal Chambery-Monte Carlo final leg, set best time among all finishers in all of the six special test sections-and showed its heels to every sedan in the dramatic three-lap elimination on Monaco's famous round-the-houses course. You couldn't get better proof of total performance anywhere! *You can read the dramatic report of the world's most rugged winter Rallye in Sports Illustrated's February 4 issue. And you can get the full story of this and Ford's other total performance accom- plishments from your Ford Dealer. Dominic Dascola Litt. '36 Invites You To U-M Barbers (Near Kresge's) or Dascola Barbers 'I MILKMAID LIPSTICKS ' C l'WV 150 plus tax The exclusive moisturing formula contains real cream, has ? wonderful consistency, gives a clear, clean outline, an allur- ing, lustrous fill-in. Sixteen magnificent colors range from ' FALCONS TOOK CURVES LIKE THESE-hundreds upon hundreds of them-and proved that road- holding is not a European monopoly. In fact, Sports Illustrated magazine called them "the new kings of the mountains" and quoted a London newspaper as declaring, "The Falcons are part of a power and performance plan that will shake up motoring in every country of the world." *rJFK *z 5 I10 milers INk WAI KIhf TFAM DEEP SNOW on the Col de Turini special section didn't even slow the "Sprint." And sure-footed Falcon also amazed the Rallye experts by its traction on glare ice. "LACETS" is French for zigzags like these. BEST OF ALL "TOURING" CATEGORY CARS in 'the three-lap it means "bootlaces", but to Rallye drivers Monaco circuit was the Falcon piloted by Swedish ice expert Bo it means an ultimate test of steering, Ljungfeldt. It was surpassed by only three cars, all of them two-