PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. 1 APRIL 1965 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIT1R~4flAV~ 1 APR!?. 1O~ JL 11 V AIL k7L[7 A. I 1 171 LULL 1;YUj J NAUU Meet To- Feature Olympic Swimmers Philadelphia Nudges Royals To Make NBA Semifinals By LYNN METZGER I he won four gold medals. Schol- from Indiana. The two swimmers Ten Michigan students will be lander will be entering three have met three previous times al-j Tve ihigano studHens winn.,|events and if he swims the way ready this season with Schmidt traveling to New Haven, Conn., he did in Tokyo will probably coming out on top in all en- this weekend, to join over 300 jtk he iss counters. of the top swimmers and divers take three firsts.ering Gold Medalist the NAAU indoor swimming Roy Saari, from Southern Cali- Kevin Barry, the gold medalI Competition. fornia, is another gold medal winner in butterly events from Over 25 of those swimmers en- Olympic winner entering. He will Australia, is currently a freshman tering the meet competed in the be trying to repeat his perform- at Indiana University and will be 1964 Olympics. Michigan has one ance of last weekend where he competing in the NAAU's. This of those Olympians in Carl Ro- captured three firsts in NCAA will make things even hotter in bie. competition. ; those two events. Robie will prob- Don Schollander, who was vot- Robie may be entering four ably also enter two distance free- ed the world's outstanding ama- events and will be facing stiff E style events, the 500- and the teur athlete of 1964, will be re- competition in each of them. In 1650-yards. In both events he will turning to competition for the first the 100- and 200-yard butterfly have to swim against Sciollander time since the Olympics where he will have to face Fred Schmidt and Saari which will make things tough for the sophomore. Ed Bartsch will be the only swimmer from Michigan defend- ing a title. Last year Bartsch won the 200-yard backstroke. Several :p swimmersawill be out to de- throne him, among them Gary F$ -. ..- ._ _ _ - -- ---- - Dilley of Michigan State, NCAA winner and silver medal winner in the Olympics. Backstroke Backers Two other swimmers from Mich- igan will be enteringhin the back- stroke events. Sophomore Russ Kingery and Wiebeck. Kingery finished fifth in the 200-yard backstroke at the NCAA, and sixth in the 100-yarder. Bill Groft and Bob Hoag will be entering the freestyle sprint events. Groft won the 50-yard freestyle in the Big Tens and came in fourth in the NCAA. He also finished sixth in the 100-yard freestyle in the NCAA. Hoag tied for eighth in the 100-yard free- style in the nationals. More Sophs Paul Scheerer, a sophomore at Michigan, will be competing in the 100- and 200-yard breast- stroke. Scheerer finished first in both events at the Big Ten's. In the NCAA's he finished third in the 100-yarder but was ,only :00.2 behind the winner, Bill Craig of USC. In the 200-yard race he fin- ished fourth with Olympian Tom Tretheway from Indiana finishing first. John Vry, another sophomore at Michigan, will be entering the two individual medley events. Vry finished fourth in the 200- yard and sixth in the 400-yard in the Big Tens. SPORTS SHORTS: By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA (kP) - W i It Chamberlain scored 38 points and starred also on defense to lead Philadelphia to a 119-112 victory last night over Cincinnati as the 76ers won the Eastern semifinals1 playoff of the National Basketball' Association. It was Philadelphia's third win against one defeat in the best- of-five series. The 76ers now meet the champion Boston Celtics for wit nfour runs in the sixth, the the Eastern title in a seven-game last three coming on Tony Ku- series beginning Sunday at Bos- bek's home run. One of Mantle's ton. errors cost a run in the third You may be sure of the fiuest WIEDDIING IINVIFATIION of Ken Johnson and Larry Dierk- er. The Yankees stopped Kansas City 6-3 despite five errors, two by left fielder Mickey Mantle. Johnson pitched five perfect innings before giving up three hits and Chicago's only run in the sixth. Dierker hurled hitless ball for the final two innings. Rusty Staub hit a two-run Hous- ton homer in the fourth. The Yankees came from behind II 'S when you choose from our many albums. Our WEDDING CONSULTANT will be hppy to help you select the proper form mad plan your complete stationzery trousseau. GARY DILLEY DON SCHOLLANDER Michigan will have two divers entering into the competition - Fred Brown on the one meter board and Gregg Shuff on the high tower. All the Big Ten swimmers en- tered in the meet must be unat- tached, so Michigan as an entity will not be able to win anything, because of a conference rule. ~~41, < ':::e We invite you to see these most beautif ul acd com plete Wedding Invitation, Aun noiucevien ts aind matching Accessories. As a to/zen of our good wishes, we have for you a lovely and use- f ul Gift Register to record your gifts and thank. you notes, and a Personalized wedding napkin FREE with each invitation. A "timely" reminder: Invitations should be mailed not more than 3 weeks nor less than 2 weeks before your wedding. Be sure to allow yourself lots of time to plan and address your guest list. ATTENTION STUDENTS Why slave at the typewriter doing those term papers? Have them typed for you by experts. Your papers will have a neat and at- tractive appearance. Many satisfied students, in the past, have availed themselves of our service. Why don't you? Vandy's Coach Considered To Fill Purdue Vacancy Chamberlain, still hurting from' a tender pancreas, was never bet- ter. He was a demon under the backboards, grabbing 26 rebounds, and blocked 10 Royals field goal attempts as they arched toward the basket. Two other blocks were called goal tending., Even though the 7-foot-1 "big dipper" sparkled, the victory was a team effort with Hal Greer col- lecting 23 points, Chet Walker 20 and Lucious Jackson 16. Jerry Lucas, Cincinnati's dead- eye outside shot, was high for the losers with 35 points. Oscar Rob- ertson, a unanimous NBA All- Star choice, still seemed to be hurting from a sore right ankle but scored with 24. It was the first victory at home for either club in the playoff series. Philadelphia had won twice before at Cincinnati and had lost at home to the Royals last week. Cincinnati started off poorly, unable to find the basket. In the first eight minutes, the Royals made only three of 21 field goal attempts and were down 19-10. But Cincinnanti streaked midway in the second period and tied it at1 44 on Lucas' foul throw.I Chamberlain then hit for two of his 10 free throws and also stuffed in a two-pointer to put the 76ers ahead to stay. Their biggest leaidl was 17 points on two occasions- 89-72 at the end of the third period andh105-88 shortly befor the end. Baseball Roundup Denny McClain stopped Mil- waukee on three hits through the first seven innings, leading De- troit to a 4-2 triumph. The Braves scored on Felipe Alou's two run homer off McClain in the sixth. The Chicago White Sox lost their five-game winning streak yesterday while the New York Yankees escaped their four-game losing streak. Houston defeated the White Sox 4-1 behind the three-hit pitching Tommy Davis and Maury Wills each rapped two hits in the Los Angeles Dodgers' 7-3 victory over St. Louis. Davis also drove in two runs while raising his spring av- erage to .424. Wills increased his to .488. Minnesota knocked off Balti- more 5-1 as Harmon Killebrew hammered his first homer of the exhibition baseball season. The homer was a three-run blast in the third. Killebrew drove in a first inning run with a single. Philadelphia jumped on Jim Maloney and walloped Cincinnati 10-1. Maloney pitched eight in- nings, giving up all of the Phillies' runs. Tony Gonzales, Richie Allen and Tony Taylor each knocked in two runs. Ed Bailey batted in three runs, two with a second-inning homer, in San Francisco's 6-3 victory over Boston. In a night game, the Washing- ton Senators whitewashed the New York Mets, 6-0. a By The Associated Piess week before Lindgren broke it. ' ; , i i I i ;; ' Bring your (minimum rough drafts 20 pages) to NASHVILLE, Tenn.-Roy Skin- ner, coach of Vanderbilt's South- CHICAGO - Basketball Coach eastern C o n f e r e n c e champion George Ireland of Chicago Loyola basketball team, is under consid- t o I d the, University's annual eration for the coaching job at awards banquet last night that Purdue, the Nashville Tennessean Chicago Stadium will be the site reported yesterday. next year of the finals of the Guy Mackey, Purdue athletic NCAA basketball tournament. director, was quoted as saying Skinner had been "contacted in-' directly" and "we hope to have an LOS ANGELES - Donna -de announcement concerning o u r1 Varona, who has been breaking all new coach within the next two manner of records in swimming weeks." since she was a sprite of 13, is about to call it quits in the ama- Ray Eddy, Purdue coach, re teur ranks at the ripe old age signed March 10. Skinner was unavailable for of 17. comment. But he recently told an The blue eyed Santa Clara, alumni meeting in Atlanta he was Calif., youngster, a double gold in no way seeking the Purdue job. medal winner for the United "But should they contact me and States in the 1964 Olympic if the offer is really good, yes, Games, is due here today to an- I'm interested." nounce formally a new profes- Skinner, who brought the Com- sional career. 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