SATURDAY, 13 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN SATURDAY, 13 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN +P M1a M4ii1 FI.Y T 4iT Michigan Rolls On, Grounds Flyers, 98-71 Buntin Paves Way with 26 Points UCLA Mauls Brigham Young (Continued from Page 1) game, all five Wolverine starter: were on the bench and CoacY Dave Strack sat back and calmly watched as the substitutes wrap. ped things up. Craig Dill, scoring eight points and Jim Myers wit' five led the second unit. Strack was satisfied with th, win. "We shot well, and I would have to say that our rebounding and ball-handling were good it the last 30 minutes." Commenting on Vanderbilt Strack said "They can hurt yoi in a lot of ways." He then added that the Commodores are simila- to Illinois, and compare favorable with Big Ten's best. Vanderbilt, winner of the Southeastern Conference cham. pionship, relies on Clyde Lee, < 6'9" center, whom Strack com- pared to Skip Thoren of Illinois. Comparing Lee to Finkel, Strac' said "Finkel is a big strong boy a good rebounder, but Lee ha: the mobility and speed that Fin- kel may lack." Find Range Early The Wolverines found the rang( early in the game, jumped to 8 4-0 lead and stretched it to 44- 27 at halftime. Buntin started i out an an ominous note as he opened the scoring with a tip- in and Tregoning notched a lay- up before the Flyers could gel off the ground. Before Dayton knew what hac, hit them, Darden had two free throws, Pomey a swisher and free throw, Russell a bank shot and the score was up to 11-6. Cazzie Shows 'Em Papp's long set was followed by two more examples of wh's Russell was named a unanimou- All - America - two 20-footers. When Papp clicked again, the Wolverine lead was down to five. Two consecutive tips by Dar- den and another Russell jumper stretched it 21-13, and after a time out the Flyers cut it to 23- 18. But when Pomey, Buntin and Darden all connected on jump shots, the Wolverine lead was nev- er less than nine for the rest of the way. With the score 34-25, Michigan began a streak which did not end until ten straight points had been chalked up on the left-side of the large colorful scoreboard of the University of Kentucky. A capacity crowd of 11,600 jammed the field house, but more than half had' gone home before the Wolverines had wrapped up the game. Buntin's six points, sparked the Blue during the scoring spree, but it was the defensive work and passing of Russell that led to the scoring opportunities. Three times, the 6'5" junior notched assists, once on a beautiful fast-break in which he faked a pass to Darden, then fired directly to Tregoning who glided up the bucket and laid' it up smoothly. A basket by Rapp with :09 re- maining in the half resulted in the? lead dropping to 17 where it re- mained when the teams left the court. Hit 54 Per Cent Michigan's domination of the opening stanza was evident from the statistics, as the Wolverines hit a phenomonal 54 per cent of their shots (20 of 37) while Day- ton was held to 12 of 36 for .333G Despite the ominous presence OLIVER DARDEN GETS ALL of Finkel, the Wolverines outre- best-rebounding. Darden grabb bounded Dayton 24-14 in the first points in last night's victory over] half and held the giant to 12 for the entire game. Paving the way ern drawl. "There's no doubt that for the Wolverines in the rebound-ci tonight's game has taken some- ing department was Buntin with thing out of us, but we sure do 11, Darden and Russell with nine hope to be ready for Michigan." By The Associated Press PROVO, Utah-UCLA's great one-two punch of Gail Goodrich and Keith Erickson rallied the Bruins after a shaky start last night and carried them to a 100- 76 victory over Brigham Young in the NCAA Western regional basketball semifinals. UCLA, the defending national champion, meets San Francisco, 91-67 victor over Oklahoma City in the other semifinal last night, for the regional title tonight. The championship game will pit the same teams as last year. UCLA beat San Francisco then 76-72. Always There The second-ranked Bruins had help at different times from Good- rich and Erickson-always when it was needed. Erickson provided the spark that broke an early-game scoring drought and started UCLA to its surprisingly easy victory over ninth - ranked Brigham Young. All-America Goodrich took over when Erickson faltered in the sec- ond half. Both men turned in their best scoring nights of the season, Erickson had 28 points-six bet- ter than his previous high. Good- rich dunked 40 points, besting his earlier season high of 36. San Francisco all but shut out Oklahoma City from close in. The Chiefs had to rely on long out- side shots for most of their points. In the first half, for example. they got 13 field goals - all but two from more than 20 feet out. When Johnson left the gam' with about five minutes remain- ing and the victory assured, the San Francisco rooting section sa- luted him, "Ollie Johnson beat Oklahoma." The Dons' defensive trio of Johnson, Joe Ellis and Erwin Mueller dominated the b a c k. boards. The Dons got 59 rebounds to their oppenents' 45. * , , in the second half giving them a lead that stood up the rest of the way. SMU, dominating the boards in the early going, had a 35-25 lead before the Wichita spurt. That gave the Shockers a 37-35 lead that was threatened continuously but never overcome. Wichita led 43-41 at the half. The Missouri Valley Conference champions, now 20-7 for the sea- son, abandoned the fast break for a time-consuming stall with a Wichita Wins 57-56 lead and 10 minutes re- maining. From that point on they MANHATITAN, Kan.-Wichita's merely waited for the good shots Shockers sparked by agile Kelly and forced SMU to foul. Pete scurried and scrambled* Peter cu rrten td sramb-ed Oklahoma State's cautious Cow- around Southern Methodist 86-81 boys frustrated Houston 75-60 and last night and advanced to the boy edfru toated f nus o pposite the finals of the NCAA Midwest re- moved into the finals opposite the gional basketball championship. Wichita Wheatshockers tonight. Oklahoma State, 19-6, played Big Gene Johnson provided the Houston, 19-8, in the second fire power for methodical Okla- game of the semifinal double homa. State thoroughly demoral- header for the right to meet the izing and disorganizing the swift Shockers in tonight's final. The Cougars. winner today wins a spot in the The 6-foot-7, 220 pound center, national semifinal at Portland, popped in 25 points --- many of Ore. them from outside - as the Big The Shockers parlayed their Eight champions grabbed an early fast breaks, hustle and full court 8-3 lead and held the upper hand press into a 12-0 scoring spree late the rest of the way. - BRADLEY GETS 27: Providence, Princeton Male Eastern Finals By The Associated Press COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Fourt ranked Providence whipped thir ranked St. Joseph's 81-73 in ove time and Bill Bradley led Prince ton to a 66-48 upset over Nor Carolina State in the NCAA Eas ern regional basketball champio ships last night. Providence Friars had inflict the only other loss suffered St. Joseph's earlier in the regul season and they proved it was n a fluke, although poor foul shoo ing in the closing seconds of re ulation time almost cost Prov dence its victory. Jim Walker sank a 20-foot jum shot with 45 seconds left to tie t score 61-61, but missed a fr throw when he was fouled on t play. Dexter Westbrook miss two more free throws for Prov dence with 37 seconds remainir and Billy Oakes grabbed the r bound for St. Joseph's. The Hawks called time out twi as they tried for a last shot, b Charles McKenna's jumper, fro the foul line as the buzzer sound hit the front of the rim and fell the floor. Providence, an at-large ent with a 24-1 record, exploded kDiarnondr-nei Rained Out special To The Daily PHOENIX - Michigan's gam with Grand Canyon College ye terday was called because of w grounds, the third time this we ! a baseball game has been call for this reason. The Wolverines end their roa trip today with two games, o with Grand Canyon and the oth with Arizona State College (Fla staff) immediately afterwards. This is the first time in ov a decade that a Michigan tr west has been interrupted so e tensively. Seven years ago one the games was rained out, how ever. The diamondmen have compil a dismal 1-5 record this sprin winning their. first game and th falling prey to Arizona State Un versity and the University Arizona. LOOK FOR . . The Addvz a a a a The March issue .The World " 100 America " Electronic M . Tho Thanfra the overtime period as Walker h and Jim Benedict scored eight h- points each. Benedict connected. d- on 11 of 17 shots from the floor and finished as high scorer with th 22 oints. st- Bradley, a Rhodes scholar, gave n- North Carolina State a lesson in the finer points of basketball as ed he scoredn27 points and led byPrinceton in the opening contest. ar Bradley, two-time All-America not and this season's college Player of t- the Year, played the complete g- game after a slow start and led vi- Princeton to its 12th victory in a row in a mild upset. mp He scored 27 points, grabbed 14 he rebounds and fed teammates for ee eight more baskets. He scored an he unusual four-point play near the ed end of the uneven contest when a vi.. State player was charged with a rg deliberate foul and Bradley sank e- a field goal. Bradley's first field goal and ice his two free throws tied the score ut at 10-10 and the Tigers were on om the way. ed Princeton was on top 27-16 at to halftime and led by at least nine points the rest of the way. ry Larry Worsley led State with in 14 points. Princeton connected on 26 of 55 shots compared with State's 17 j of 66. The Tigers also had a de- cided edge in rebounds, 55-38. SCORES NCAA TOURNAMENTS Mideast Regional semifinals MICHIGAN 98, Dayton 71 Vanderbilt 83, DePaul 78 (ovt) me Far West Regional Semifinals e- UCLA 100, Brigham Young 76 San Francisco 91, Oklahoma City 67 et Eastern Regional semifinals ek Princeton 66, No. Carolina State 48 ed Providence 81, St. Joseph's 73 (ovt) Midwest Regional Semifinals Wichita 86, southern Methodist 81 iad Oklahoma State 75, Houston 60 ne NBA er Cincinnati 118, Boston 108 er NCAA Small College Championship g- Evansville 85, so. Illinois 82 (ovt) er ip o- For the best in w- PAPERBACK BOOKS ied Browse at eng FOLLETT'S ni- State Street at N.U. of WRAPPED UP in what he does ed 9 stray shots and put in 17 Dayton. - each and Tregoning seven, Vanderbilt's triumph over De- Paul was a thriller all the way. The Commodores, supported by an exuberant throng of Nashville rooters, saw an eight-point lead melt into nothing against Ray Meyer's fired-up Demons, then triumphed in an overtime on the sharp-shooting of their captain, Ed Miller. Miller's two free throws with 20 seconds left gave Vander- bilt an 80-78 lead which they padded as DePaul fouled vainly. "We're very happy to have the opportunity to play the number one team in the nation," was the way in which Vanderbilt coach Roy Skinner looked forward to his team's meeting with the Wolver- in~s. "I've never seen a team that strong. This is the first time I personally have seen them play this season. They look like they outweigh us by 500 pounds," said Skinner, speaking in a low South- Bring on andy DAYTON Sullivan Cassidy Fin kel Papp Klaus Wannamacher Warrell Johnston Hrcka Inderrieben Sananich Totals M Tregoning Darden Buntin Russell Pomey Myers Thompson Clawson Ludwig Brown Bankey Dill Totals G 6-14 4-15 11-18 7-16 1-3 2-4 1-3 1-2 0-0 o-0 0-0 33-75 F R P T 1-1 3 2 13 2-2 8 4 10 0-2 12 4 22 1-1 4 0 15 0-0 0 1 2 0-0 2 2 4 0-0 0 2 2 0-0 1 0 2 0-0 00 0 1-1 0 0 1 0-0 0 0 0 5-7 30 15 71 SIGN UP NOW! N.C.A.A. BASKETBALL TOURNEY-TOUR "Only ONE Plane-108 Seats" ROUND TRIP AIR-Detroit Metropolitian to Portland, Oregon, Via Super-G Constellation ' 3 Nights Sheraton Portland Motor Inn All Transfers and Luggage Handling ' Free Tranquilizers Complete Pockage $149.00 AIR ONLY $134.00 (Full Refund If. . Leave Thursday, March 18-Return Sunday, March 21 Sponsored by UNIVERSITY SERVICES ASSOCIATION 320 E. Madison, Apartment No. 12 Cy Fruchter-Agent-NO 3-0607 LET'S GO BLUE! ICHIGAN G F R 6-10 0-0 7 7-12 3-3 9 12-21 2-5 11 5-14 4-4 9 4-7 3-3 4 1-2 3-4 4 1-2 0-0 2 1-6 1-1 4 0-3 0-0 3 0-1 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 4-9 0-1 1 41-87 16-21 56 P T 1 12 0 17- 1 26 2 14 1 11 0 5 12 0 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 2 8 8 98 DAYTON 27 44-71 MICHIGAN 44 54-98 AT TH ES E F-INE STORES COMING SUNDAY explores of the Wobblies an Drawings Music nf Rartnlt Rrarht INDIANA Fort Wayne, Baber's Jewelry Store Lafayette, Harry Gaunt Orange Blossom Jewelers Mishawaka, Wills Jewelry Store Muncie, Harry Gaunt Jewelers South Bend, Jacobs Jewelers South Bend, Van Horne & Co MICHIGAN Adrian, Berndt's Jewelry Albion, Tuchtenhagen's Jewelers Allegan, Paul R. McFarland, Jeweler Alpena, Kennedy's Jewelers Ann Arbor, Schlanderer & Sons Battle Creek, Roy S. 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