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March 03, 1965 - Image 6

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The Michigan Daily, 1965-03-03

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PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY. ARCH 198s.1;

PAGE SIX T ~ Y.I <pIE.)N .l lyWflTfAV MU r1a

1Y L'ili Li.7Lrii Aj .lTlt i l I7, 1.70.7

I

Michigan Rolls Over

Wisconsin, 98-7

By GIL SAMBERG
March roared in with about as
much spunk as that little old lady
across the street and Wisconsin
came along just for the ride.
Michigan made their stopover at
Yost Field House pleasant, and
sent them home to the cold north
with a 98-75 loss packed neatly
in their conference bag.
The game was about as exciting
as a cup of warm olive oil.
But 'then Harlan Hatcher did
come into the locker room after
the game to congratulate Coach
Dave Strack on his forty-second
birthday.
And by the way . . In winning,
the Wolverines wrapped up at least
their fourth tie for the Big Ten
basketball title, needing but one
win in their final two games to
make their third outright cham-
pionship official.
After more than two minutes
were gone in the second half many
people were beginning to wonder
when the game was going to start.
Maybe somebody told the Blue

that they were on television, be-
cause at the 17:50 mark Oliver
Darden pushed in a layup followed
13 seconds later by a Cazzie Rus-
sell dunk, and Michigan was off
to a devastating seven and a half
minutes in which they outscored
the Badgers 32-8.
Midway through this attack Jim
Bohen, Wisconsin's 5'10" guard
whom his coach, John Erickson,
calls "the best ballplayer under six
foot in the country," slowed things
up by fouling Darden in the back
court. The normally calm Erick-
son put up a good enough argu-
ment with the officials to earn his
team a technical foul. Russell, who
led all scorers with 24, made his
shot after Darden missed his free
throw.
Russell then took the throw-in
at quarter court, dribbled in paral-
lel to the foul line and without
looking, fired a bullet pass to Bill
Buntin under the boards. The big
center. who scraped up 20 re-
bounds for the night, did justice
to the pass by flying through, a

cluster of Badgers to stuff in a
"Wolverine Special."
Only ten seconds before the
whole ruckus began, Darden and
Tregoning had teamed up to fire
the crowd themselves, as Trigger
took his teammate's full court
heave in mid-air about 18 feet
from the basket and layed the ball
in before he came down. Tregoning
racked up 18 points in the long
contest.
Later in the period Russell re-
peated the long-pass-to-Tregoning
play with an eye fake that wound

Badger guard Paul Morenz into
a sailor's knot in trying to follow
the ball.
Not to be outdone in the passing
department, and obviously eager to
leave at the half, Craig Dill tore
off a defensive rebound and got
it to Jim Myers as he was falling
out of bounds.- Myers, seeing Bun-
tin in the clear about 25 yards
down court, flipped him a lead
pass which the senior caught up to
just as he too was leaving the
court. But before his exit, Buntin
shot the ball back under the

boards to a lonely Cazzie Russell "If Michigan is the BiE
with :03 on the clock for the final representative at the NCA
points of the period. be very proud," said E
"They were tight at the begin- "I'm a Big Ten man all the
ning," said Erickson of Michigan "They certainly have the
after the game," and they will be tial to be much stronger th
until they have the championship wereM ast year at Kansas
clinched." was against us last seaso
Rebounding is as good an in- Cazzie hurt his foot, and v
dicator as any, and the Wolverines the films of it. The Rus
picked up only five more rebounds played tonight was nothi
than the much shorter Badgers in Russell who played agains
the first half. In the second period a year ago
they overpowered their opponents
40-20. Many Happy Rett

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sell we
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t Duke
urns

Russell, Buntin Get All-America Honors;
Cagers Continue To Lead National Poll

Gustafson
Barnes
Zubor
Bohen
Mo ren z

WISCONSIN
G F
1-5 0-1
3-16 4-7
4-11 0-0
5-13 3-5
6-13 3-5

R
10
8
1
3

P T
0 2
2 10
5 8
2 13
2 15

Max Shulman
for Kellogg's
(By the author of Dobie Gillis,
Rally Round the Flag, Boys, etc.)
THE FAMILY THAT WAKES TOGETHER
ACHES TOGETHER

By The Associated Press
Bill Bradley of Princeton an
Cazzie Russell of Michigan dom
mate the 1965 college basketba
All-America team announced yes
terday by the Associated Press.
They finished one-two in th
voting by 216 sports writers an
broadcasters.
Senior Bill Buntin added mor
honors for the Wolverines as h
was chosen for the second tear
along with two other Big Te
players.
Named to the first team wit
Russell and Bradley were Ric
Barry of Miami of Florida, UCLA
Gail Goodrich, Fred Hetzelo
Davidson, and the late Wayn
Estes of Utah State.
Estes, who met a tragic acc
dental death on Feb. 8, is the fir
player to be named an All-Americ
posthumously.
Minnesota Tickets
Tickets .for Saturday's Mich-
igan-Minnesota clash will go
on sale this morning at 8 a.m.
They will be available at the
ticket window of the Athletic
Administration Building for the
price of $1.
On the second team with Bun
tin is Dave Stallworth of Wichita
a 1964 All-America who playe
only half the season becauseo
his January graduation. Roundin
off the team are Clyde Leeo
Vanderbilt, Purdue's Dave Schel
hase, and Skip Thoren of Illinoi
Completing t h e All- Americ
third team are Bill Cunningham
NorthsCarolina, A. W. Daviso
Tennessee, Keith Erickson o
UCLA, John Austin of Boston Col

-Daily-Jim Lines
BADGER KEN BARNES goes up for a shot only to have the ball
slapped back at him by Bill Buntin. Last night, big Bill celebrated
his selection to the All-American team and Dave Strack's birth-
day by scoring 20 points and pulling down an equal number of
rebounds.

PREPARING FOR NCAA MEET:
Gymnasts Seek Individual Big

Roberts 1-6 3-5 5 1 5
Sweeney 5-6 6-0 1 0 10
lege, and Providence's Jim Walker. Saturday, Feb. 27 and total points: Schoeneck -2 2- 3 3 1 6
Russell, the only underclassman 1. MICHIGAN (31) 19-2 399 Aslkson 1-1 0-0 0 0 2
d on the first team, and Bradley 2. UCLA (4) 22-2 362 Gardner 0-0 2-2 0 2 2
- 3. St. Joseph's, Pa. (5) 24-1 321 TOTALS 28-76 19-30 37 16 75
ail were far out in front in the voting. 5. Providence (1) 20-1 236 MCIA
_ Bradley received 197 first team 5. Vanderbilt 20-3 203MICHIGAN
votes and four second team votes 6. Minnesota 17-4 146 Tregoning 8-1 2F R P 1Tz
for 993 points, on the basis of five 7. Davidson 24-2 136 Darden 5-9 0-1 11 4 10
hkefor 18-4 Buntin 6-19 8-10 20 1 20
fra first and two for a second. 9. vllano 19-4 67 Rsel1-822832
d Russell tallied 964 points on 186 10. Brigham Young 19-5 46 PRussell 1 8 8 3 2
firsts and 17 seconds. Other teams receiving votes, listed Dili 2-4 0-2 4 1 4
re Oliver Darden, Michigan's jun- alphabetically: Connecticut, Creighton, Thompson 1-2 2-2 1 3 4
e ior forward, received one vote in Drake, Eastern Kentucky, Illinois, In- Myers 1-6 2-2 9 2 4
diana Kansas, Kansas State, Miami of Clawson 1-4 0-0 1 2 2
m, the annual balloting. aloria,,Kn KsasteM icey
11 teanul aloin.!FoidMiami of Ohio, New Mexico, Bankey 0-1 0-0 1 0 0
n iTNorth Carolina, North Carolina State, Ludwig 0-0 4-4 1 1 4
Still on TopIOklahoma State, Penn State, Princeton, TOTALS 39-86 20-27 64 21 98
h Led by All-America teammates St John's of New York, San Francisco, Wisconsin 31 44 75
kCazeRseladBlButnTennessee, West Virginia, Wichita. Michigan 40 58 98
k Cazzie Russell and Bill Buntin, - ---
's the Michigan Wolverines con- ' ::::
of tinued to lead the Associated
ne Press' weekly poll with 31 first:
place votes and 399 total points.
i- Although Michigan increased its
st points, UCLA, with four first place
ca votes, retained the second spot and
gained ground on Michigan in its
attempt to finish as the number
one team for the second consecu-
tive year.
The Bruins trail Michigan by 37
points now, whereas they were 41 4
behind last week.
St. Joseph's and Providence re- Foam Soft
mained stable in the third and'.
fourth positions.
In fifth place, Vanderbilt, the
winner of Southeastern Confer-
ence championship, had their
a, highest ranking of the season,
d moving up from ninth.
Minnesota took over the sixth
g spot, moving up from last week's
of eighth place, and Duke, suffering
two losses, dropped from fifth to
s eighth.
Villanova and Brigham Young
ca finish off this week's top ten, re
placing Indiana and New Mexico,
both of whom lost twice last week".1
Of The Top Ten with first-lace votes int "
l- parentheses, won-lost records through
A classic moccasin :ii
T t~l 10now so soft and comfortable
S10 T itles koyu
>=you'll hardly know you '
n Ohio State, he slumped to a sec- Combining soft
e. ond and two thirds, before closing soft kidskin leather and a
out the season with three straight silky-soft foam lining in the
e wins. The last triumph was an exlusive Unimoc Construction
n upset over Iowa's Gailis and soph-
at omore Ken Gordon whom Loken to make the most comfortable
n considers "two of the best in the sport shoe you ever wore.
e Big Ten."
e- Two Ring Circus.
m Up on the rings, Cliff Chilversz
and Rich Blanton are both given
e a chance for the winner's circle
Chilvers, a sophomore from Ionia,.
e. came to Michigan as an all-
d around man and was switched ex-
e clusively to rings. Like Baessler, NAVY BLUE KID'
s he has been improving nearly RED KID
ll every meet. In the final meet of
s the year, he lost to Gailis by BONE KID
d only half a point and Loken is
it hopeful the outcome can be re-
versed next time. 5
The Wolverines will really have
r their work cut out for them on
e the high bar. In last year's meetU F
n Curzi took first; Gailis second, and Unimoc Loamy
d Roethlisberger fourth. Arno 199
- High Bar Men$
- The top Wolverines this year are
Alex Frecska, Gary Vander Voort.?
- and John Cashman. None of them
- have beaten the troublesome trio
n yet this season. but Loken him-
t self almost turns somersaults over CAMPUS MAT'
- Frecska's new inverted giant trick.
, Vander Voort will also be Mich- 619 E. LIBERTY NO 2-0266
- igan's top threat on parallel bars,
- another event where Roethlisberg- .
er, Curzi, and Gailis will be pro- ;4444444 s. *::.f,.: -:.:.....
- viding their monotonously strong
t competition.
g Vaulting appears to be Michi-
gan's weakest link with the floor
t ex men probably carrying the load.
- The best of the opposition? Who
else. Defending champ Roethlis-
berger, Curzi, and Gailis. S
I 1W

- HERE'S HOW
4-MAN APT. / VALUES to $3
FOR $18. The
FOR 3 MEN are sold. Noth
"vu inu .

U
)

z

By CHUCK VETZNER
The radio blared and an upbeat
tempo bounced through the air of
the gymnastics room.
The Michigan team was prepar-
ing for the Big Ten meet at
Champaign, but at a side wall
was " a chalk board urging the
squad to try to hit 100 per cent
against Indiana and to get pre-
pared for Southern Illinois.
The memo was an old one.
Last Thursday, a foot of snow
had been dumped on the Indiana
roads and the Hoosiers never
made it to Ann Arbor. The can-
cellation, however, gave the Wol-
verines :their fifth straight confer-
ence crown.
This year the title was decided
on the basis of dual meets and
the gymnasts didn't lose a one.
New Set-Up:
The new set-up means that the
Big Ten get-together on March
5 and 6 will only be used to de-
termine individual winners.
The NCAA winner will also be
chosen in a new way. A net-
work of regionals and inter-re-
gionals a la NCAA basketball will
precede a finals match between
the last two clubs still in conten-
tion.

A separate series of eliminations
will be used to choose the indi-
vidual winners. In the Western
Conference meet, the top 10 quali-
fiers in each event will continue
in competition for the solo titl-
ists. As Big Ten champ, Michigan
has already earned the right to
compete for the team crown.
Pondering Title
And it is the team crown that
the Wolverines are thinking about.
On March 19, they take on South-
ern Illinois in the regionals, and
the sign that reminded the men
to be in top form for that match
was on their mind.
Naturally each member of the
squad would like to win at the
conference meet, but it serves as
a means to a goal rather than
just an end result.
Coach Newt Loken had a twin-
kle in his eye when he explained,
"The boys are all working on
routines with a little extra trick
they haven't used before. The new
routines will help them this week-
end, but also make us tougher to
beat for the NCAA's."
Loken, a man with a deep ap-
preciation for a well-turned
phrase, also sees an emotioral
value in the contest at Illinois'

Any man who says morning is the
best time of day is either a liar or
a meadow lark.
Mind you, I'm not saying all
mornings are hideous. Some can
be beautiful. It depends entirely
on what happens at breakfast.
When breakfast is a tranquil
interlude, a serene half hour in
which one can replenish the soul
as one stokes the corpus, then
I'll sing hvmns to the sun as
loudly as the next man. But what
if breakfast goes like the scene
described below?
"Good morning," says the
Typical American Father, and sits
down at the breakfast table with
his Loyal Wife and three sturdy

more like Kellogg's Rice Krispies."
"That's right, just think about
oursellfl" shrieks Sturdy Sister.
"It doesn't matter that I want
Raisin Bran!"
"No!" roars Sturdy Brother.
"I want Sugar Pops!"
"I want Raisin Bran!" screams
Sturdy Sister.
° want Sugar Pops!" hollers
Sturdy Brother.
"Iswant to go to a foster home!"
thunders Fat Baby, smashing his
,bowl.
And Father, snarling, lurches
off to work where he makes two
billion dollars' worth of mistakes.
And Brother and Sister slink off
to school where they flunk every-

old Huff Gymnasium-a woode
floor version of Yost Field Hous
Motto Does It
The coach guided his men to th
title with the motto of "Five i
'65." But Loken admitted tha
the team has had a little letdow
since the victory over Iowa. H
hopes the Big Ten meet will re
juvenate them and "keep ther
fired up for the next month."
The most likely win is on th
trampoline where the Blue bounc
ers have the top trio in the leagu(
Gary Erwin has won every kin
of championship imaginable whil
John Hamilton and Fred, Sander
are only short jumps behind. A
three are Big Ten champions a
Sanders won the title in 1963 an
Erwin and Hamilton tied fori
last year.
Three in Free?
Michigan also has a chance fo
a sweep in free exercise wher
defending champ John Henderso
and Chip and Phil Fuller finishe
one-two-three in every meet ex
cept Wisconsin where Fred Roeth
lisberger grabbed the top spot.
In all the other events Roeth
lisberger will be joined by Mich
igan State's Jim Curzi, Iowa's Glei
Gailis, and a Michigan specialis
in a battle for the title. In ap
pearances a g a i n s t Michigan
Roethlisberger and Gailis scor
ed 33 points, and Curzi, hamp
ered by a bad leg, still had 30.
On the side horse, the Wolver
ines hopes will rest with Ar
Baessler who has been making
great improvements of late.
After an opening win agains
SCORES
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Minnesota 78, Iowa 70
Illinois 93, Northwestern 70
Providence 102, Massachusetts 75
Missouri 84, Nebraska 66
Bradley 102, North Texas 77
NBA
Los Angeles 126, Philadelphia 117
Cincinnati 121, San Francisco 105
St. Louis 99, New York 98

children: Sturdy Brother, Sturdy
Sister, and Fat Baby.
"Good morning," says Loyal
Wifg. "Dear, will you pick up a
few things while you're down-
town? We need a new washer,
dryer, ironer, refrigerator, freez-
er, TV set, phonograph, radio,
lawn mower, leaf mulcher, hedge
trimmer, cake mixer, shoe shiner,
and particle accelerator."
"Good morning," says Sturdy
Brother. "Hey, Dad, me and the
guys are building a clubhouse.
Can I have the doors off your
car?"
"Good morning," says Sturdy
Sister. "Can I have a thousand
dollars for new textbooks? I
traded my old ones for an au-
thenticated paring from Ringo's
thumbnail."
"Good morning," says Fat
Baby. "Can I have the mailman?"
"We'll talk about it later,"
says Typical American Father
with a wintry smile at his depend-
ents. "What kind of cereal are
we having?"
"I'm glad you asked that ques-
tion," says Loyal Wife. "Yester-
day when I was at the market, I
said to myself, What would ev-
eryone like for breakfast?' and
here it is-a nice big box of Kel-
logg's Corn Flakes."
"But I don't feel like Kellogg's
Corn Flakes this morning," says
Typical American Father. "I feel

thing. And Mother skulks to her
room where she sobs until dusk.
And Baby dissolves the works of
A. A. Milne in the bathinette.
* * *
Tragic? Alas, yes. Correctable?
Huzzah, yes, yes, and yes again!
The next morping instead of
placing a single box of Kellogg's
cereal on the table, Mother
brings out a spanking new Kel-
logg's Variety Pack' ten fresh
and cheery boxes of Kellogg's
cereals, each containing one gen-
erous individual serving. And
what a Variety in the Variety
Pack! There's a choice of seven
different Kellogg's favorites-
Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Spe-
cial K, Sugar Pops, Sugar Frosted
Flakes, Raisin Bran and Sugar
Smacks.
And Dad and Mom and the
Sturdy kiddies each have a per-
sonal serving of his personal fa-
vorite and then sit back in sweet
content and exchange lingering
smiles of love. And then, full of
new hope and vitality, they all go
out in the world and I am proud
to report, they all fare well. By
nightfall Dad is president of his
company, Mom is elected Den
Mother of the entire world,
Brother and Sister are both
named valedictorians and Baby
is drafted.
Cc; 1965 Max Shuiman

I

* * *

P.S. A note as to how you like
(or dislike) these columns will
help determine our plans for
them. Write Kellogg Com-
pany, Dept. TET; Battle Creek,
Michigan.
@1965 by KelIogg company

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