PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TNiTR.gnAV. 11t MA'it.L!U IGRK PAGE SIX TUE MTCUTay A /Ca LaIKTD~I''1 ~AFK AAAlunlJOAFf, 15 G 1A1,JUII l1D 5 1 Bradle). By CARL ROBINSON Name five basketball players on Princeton's team. Well, there's Bill Bradley. and...um-... To most people, Princeton, who plays Michigan in the NCAA semi-finals at Portland, Ore., Fri- day night, is a team consisting of Bradley and "four or five other guys." While Bradley, the player of the year, a two time All-American, and an Olympic star, gets all the headlines, the "other five" remain anonymous. The five players are 6'2" jun- ior forward Bob Haarlow, 6'9" sophomore c e n t e r Robinson Brown, 6'2" junior guard Don Coaches Pick UCLA1 "For Title PORTLAND, Ore. (P)-Defend- ing national champion UCLA i, the overwhelming favorite of the coaches gathering for the NCAA basketball championships, but Bill Bradley and his Princeton teammates are the sentimental choice. Strangely, nationally top-rank- ed Michigan received little sup- port in a poll of early arrivals for the National Association of Basketball Coaches convention being held in connection with the weekend championships. Such coaches as Henry Iba of Oklahoma State, Adolph Rupp of Kentucky, Forrest Twogood of Southern California and Guy- Lewis of Houston voted for the UCLA Bruins, seeking to become the fifth team in history to win two successive titles. Doggie Julian of Dartmouth and Ben Carnevale of Navy had second thoughts about it, ane those second thoughts concerned Player of the Year Bradley. "I've seen 'em all," Julian said. "Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas. Bob Cousy, Rudy Larusso - I coached Cousy at Holy Cross - and this boy Bradley is just as good, maybe better, as a college player than any of them. "He's got the rest of. those Princeton kids playing over their heads. He bings them up to his level... "If he's up, they Just might go all the way," 'Others' Seek Revenge on 'M' Gymnasts Move into Regionals I' Rodenbach, 6' sophomore guard Gary Walters, and 6'6" sophomore reserve center Ed Hummer. Rounding out the squad are four seniors-5'10" Bill Kingston 6'6" Don Niemann, 6'1" Don Roth and 6'6" Ken Shank aild two sophomores-6'3" Al Adler and 63" Bill Koch. One Man Team? Said Princeton Coach Bill Van Breda Kolff in an interview with the Associated Press, "A little before mid-season . .. all we did was get the ball to Bill and stand around like a bunch of jerks watching him." The turning point came against Yale in early February. Bradley suffered a thigh injury and be- came a playmaker. "I think the boys realized they would have. to do certain things themselves," Van Breda Kolff continued. "It finally showed in the Harvard game two weeks lat- er when Haarlow, Rodenbach and Brown broke it open." 13-Game Win Streak The Tigers will put their 13- game win streak and their 22-F record on the line Friday night against the Wolverines in a game to be televised on Channel 2, beginning at 7 p.m. (PCT), or 1C p.m. (EST), not 10:30 p.m. (EST) as previously announced by The Daily. The winner will face the win- ner of the UCLA-Wichita game which will start at 9 p.m. (PCT) or midnight (EST) on Friday. The championship game will be played Saturday night and will be televised nationally at 7 p.m (PST) or 10 p.m. (EST). The consolation game begins at 8 p.m. (EST) on Saturday night. Michigan met Princeton earlier this season, and oddly enough i was in the semi-finals of a tour- nament. Michigan scored 14 straight points in a come from behind effort, as they squeaked through for an 80-78 victory. In the finals of that tournament. Grid Mentor A-mos Stagg Dies at 102 STOCKTON, Calif. (AP)-Amos' Alonzo Stagg, famed as an athlete, coach and leader of men for three- quarters of a century, died yes-, terday at 102. The Grand Old Man of the gridiron-he had coached football for 70 years-had been in fragile, health and confined to a rest home several years. Tuesday night' he developed a fever. Death was attributed to uremic poisoning. A star collegiate pitcher and1 an end on Walter Camp's first All< America football team, Stagg turned down professional baseball offers in favor of a coachingj career which didn't end until fail- ing eyesight forced him out when B~y CHUICK VVWLNl I the New York Invitational Tour- ney, they were beaten by St. John's of New York, 75-74. Wolverines Depart The Wolverines will leave to- day at 9 a.m. from Willow Run Airport and will arrive in Port- land at 1:30 p.m. (PST). Coach Dave Strack plans to hold a prac- tice in Portland's Memorial Coli- seum, site of the tournament, shortly after arrival. The team will then rest until gametime. The top-ranked Wolverines are led in scoring by Cazzie Russell with 638 points for an average of 25.5. Bill Buntin is second with 528 points for a 20.3 average. Russell needs only 33 points in the next two games to break the Michigan scoring record of 670 points that he set last year. The tourney will mark the fin- al appearance in Maize and Blue for Michigan's five seniors, two time All-American great Bill Bun- tin, team captain Larry Tregon- ing, George Pomey, Tom Ludwig, and Charlie Adams. Basketball Briefs Larry Tregoning and George Pomey, two Wolverine seniors, have been named to the second squad of. the Big Ten's All-Aca-1 demic Basketball Team. * * * Michigan Athletic Director Fritz Crisler announced yesterday that the Wolverines basketball team will play Duke in Cobo Arena next December 21. Michigan played Wichita in Detroit this season and the game was a sell- out. The average Michigan gymnast stands a good nine inches shorter than Bill Buntin, but despite the he-ght difference, they both have, their sights focused on the same plaguing the Wolverines all sea-, son. "We've been having Phil and! Chip Fuller spend extra time on their vaulting routines," Loken explains. "It's the one we've got to vin." thpm i go hts fnrnCu V11r th1C )uomc Triple Trouble Chip and Phil will have a strong The common goal is the NCAA challenge from Rich Williams and championship, and gymnastics is Frank Schmitz. one sport where being short proves Schmitz, however, will be trouble no problem. However, the Salukis in more places than the vaulting of Southern Illinois will be a prob- lem .o b competition, The Michigan tramp- oline trio of Gary Erwin, Fred At 7:30 tomorrow night, the Sanders, and John Hamilton, Wolverine gym men will meet the which normally has as much Salukis in Iowa City for the Mid- trouble taking one-two-three as east regional championship. Craig Dill does stuffing, will find; But while the Michigan cagers Mr. Schmitz a worthy competitor. are only a step away from the Erwin is the world champion, finals, the gymnasts have two but Schmitz is the guy who took teams to deal with first. If they second. beat Southern, the Wolverines will advance to the inter-regionals the Mike Henderson, the national following week and probably face champ in floor exercise, willhalso Penn State. get a chance to tangle with The victor of that clash moves Schmitz, who scored a 9.55 in the on to the finals which will also be a two-team meet. But right now, the gymnasts are only concerned with getting G U past Southern Illinois and if they succeed, it will probably be in 802 ZMi typical Wolverine cager style. "The contest should be decided by only a point or two," says NO LUNCHEON coach Newt Loken. (Sounds famil- iar, doesn't it?) "The team that By student hits 90 per cent of its routines will win." vA... event against Michigan State. "They'll have the battle of a life time," is the way Loken puts it. Even Strength Loken figures most of the other events to be fairly even. The Salukis' Bill Wolf scored a 9.4 on the rings against the Spartans and will obviously prove a real challenge to Cliff Chilvers. On the side horse Loken hopes Art Baessler and Chris Vanden Broek will offset Southern's Mike Boegler. Michigan is swinging with Gary Vander Voort and Alex Frecska on the high bar and Ken Williams will aid Vander Voort in an effort to win points on the parallel bars. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR BUD WILKINSON aA A r 4 HOUSE onroe TH IS F R IDAY decision to participate -Daily-Kamalakar Rao MICHIGAN'S BILL BUNTIN GOES high in the air to block an attempted shot of Henry Finkel of Dayton. Buntin, who scored 26 points in both of the NCAA regional games, ends a brilliant collegiate career in the finals, this weekend. Loken has the utmost respect for Southern Illinois, a school that is considered a "small college" in basketball, but is strictly big time in gymnastics. The Salukis are the defending national champions and have a string of 30 straight dual meet victories. SI Topped MSU The Wolverines have already seen Southern Illinois once this year when, the Salukis were the We invite you HEAD FOR GREENER FAIRWAYS: Golfers Go South for Tourney on the picketline at Chrysler Corp. Main Offices, Detroit, Friday afternoon as part of a nationwide protest against investments in South America. ACT AGAINST APARTHEID Cars leaving SAB for Detroit at 1 P.M. Friday night 6 P.M. Guild Cost Dinner-Invited Speaker Welcome Students It's a Michigan tradition to have your hair styled by our tonsorial experts. Headquarters for B.M.O.C.'s "HAIRCUTTERS" U-MBARBERS Near Kresge's By BOB CARNEY With yesterday's rain-snow com- bination making it pretty difficult to locate golf balls, Coach Bert Katzenmeyer's crew will leave for Miami tomorrow to prepare for their season opener there next week. The Wolverine linksmen will compete in the Coral Gables In- vitational Tournament to be held on March 25-27. Over 25 teams, including Ohio State, Northwest- ern, and Michigan State from the Big Ten, will take part in the tourney, with defending champion Miami emerging as the favorite. If the Wolverines are to finish very high in the standings, their preparation next week will have to be exceptional. "We've been hurt badly by the weather," says Katzenmeyer, "and I'm sure it will show down there." Fifth Last Year The linksmen gained a respect- able fifth-place finish in the tournament last year, but the spring thaw had allowed consider- ably more outdoor practice than it has this year. Tuesday was the first day the linksmen were able to take to the outdoors, and even then, they got in "just a few swings." "With fourteen to fifteen inches of frost in the ground, we've had to remain indoors all spring, while last year we were outside for a week," says Katzenmeyer. "We've been too confined." While the weather has hindered practice,it hasn't affected Kat- zenmeyer's choice of a starting lineup, which "pretty well jelled in the fall." Passink Captain Heading the list of Wolverines who'll make the trip south is Pete Passink, this year's captain. Passink replaces last season's cap- tain, Gary Mouw, who graduated, along with another starter, Tom Clark. Katzenmeyer will take four other lettermen, who like Passink, made the trip to Miami last spring. Bill Newton, Michigan's top per- former in the tournament last" year, is joined by junior Chuck West and seniors Frosty Evashev- ski and Mark Yahn. Two Newcomers Rounding off the seven-man squad are two newcomers, sopho- more Bob Barkley and junior Jim Evashevski, Frosty's brother. In light of last spring's trip to Miami, the linksmen await some fierce competition. In two dual meets with the Hurricanes, pre- ceding the 1964 tournament, the Wolverines tied one and lost an- other. Fortunately, Miami's Paul Dosjardins, who won both of his dual meet matches, and carded a 65 in leading the tournament field, has graduated. Other teams to watch this year are Florida State-funnerup last year-and Florida. "It'll be a fast field," says Kat- guests of Michigan State. South- ern beat the Spartans by 15 zenmeyer, "Those southern teams points, whereas Michigan downed will be well conditioned." its neighbors by only ten points. Only Action Loken expects the key event to ,The Coral Gables tourney is the be valuting, a spot that has been only action the linksmen will se -- -- - -- before the winter semester ends. - --- On April 29, the Wolverines will again head south, this time for N the Southern Intercollegiate Meet in Athens, Georgia. Then, on May 8, they meet Mchigan State, Indiana, Ohio State, Pur- due, and Notre Dame in a hexa- gonal meet at Lansing.J E Their final action before the Big Ten meet on May 21-22, will1 available be here in Ann Arbor, when they meet the Spartans in a dual meet.N P NG SEATS on the PAN AM to EUROPE, beginning Monday, March 22 .Y.-LON DON-N.Y. INSTANT SILENCE For information write: Academic Aids, Box 969 Berkeley, California 94701 LEAVE June 2 $315 RETURN August 17 I CALL: Jim Podell after March 22 s .w. I he was 98 years old. A Trip To Europe For Less Than $1OO Switzerland - The International Travel 'Establishment will locate job opportunities in Europe for anyone who likes the idea of a fun-filled, low cost trip to Europe. Jobs are available in all fields throughout Europe. Interested students should send $2 to Search Dept., ITE, 68 Herrengasse,- Vadur, Liechtenstein (Switzerland) for a complete, do-it- yourself prospectus which includes the key to getting a job in Europe, the largest European job selection available, instructions, money saving tips and conclusive information making a trip to Europe (including transportation) possible for less than $100. "Foreign Car spoken here" MIDAS has l ' k A i MUFFLERS and PIPES for most Foreign Cars * MGA " MGA Miniatures Sprite * TR-3 * Opel " Fiat 1 100 and 1200 (mufflers only) )AD 665-9169 SCORES NHL Boston 2, Chicago1 NUA New York 119, Boston 114 Baltimore 117, Los Ange'es 106 S". 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