six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I L)SU Cagers ,ucas, Siegfried Lead .uckeyes to 76-54 W in Trounce NYU In NCAA Semi-Finals World's Record Broken By Hayes Jones in Dash SAN FRANCISCO (P) - Ohio State's Buckeyes, paced by All- America Jerry Lucas and unsung Larry Siegfried, won their way into the finals of the NCAA bas- ketball championships last night with a convincing 76-54 triumph over New York University. The Big Ten champions play the winner of theCaion-i- cinnati semifinal in the title game tonight. A crowd of 14,500 jammed the Cow Palace and watched the Ohio State fast break offense grab an 8-0 lead in the first 21/2 minutes. Only once were the Buckeyes threatened-late in the first half when the margin was cut to two points. Lucas Scores 19 But the 6-8 sophomore Lucas paced Ohio State in a first half spurt to a 37-28 halftime advan- tage. With 61/ minutes in the game left, the Violets of NYU were 19 points behind and virtu- ally in rout. Lucas scored 19 poinlts. His average is 27. Siegfried, the play-maker of this year's club, after being the team's high scorer a year ago, also had 19. Ohio State poured it on in the last part of the second half. They dominated the boards and won easily, 96-54. Leading scorer for the losers was 5-8 Russ Cunnnigham, who hit four field goals and six free throws for 14. Lucas built his 19 on nine field goals and a free throw. He hit from the outside and on tip ins in showing his variety of shots. Siegfried scored seven field goals and five free throws. Bench Strength Ohio State proved its strength when it brought Dick Furry off the bench in the second half and he promptly scored 10 points. The victory was the Buckeyes 24th against three losses and NYU's fourth defeat in 26 games. The youthful Buckeyes left three sophomores in their lineup. Sieg- fried early in the week drew praise from Coach Fred Taylor for the "good of the team." He referred to the playmaker role in which Larry didn't do as much shooting as last year. But tonight he was hitting baskets as well as directing the attack. Field goals by John Havlicek, Joe Roberts and Lucas plus free throws by Lucas and Roberts Bradley Plays Providence In -NIT Fials NEW YORK (P)-The Bradley Braves and Chet Walker, quickly recovering from their drugged- drink scare of Thursday night, will meet the unseeded but enthusiastic Providence Friars today in the final game of the National Invi- tational Basketball Tournament. Prior to the televised final (NBC-TV, 4 P.M., EST), their semifinal victims, St. Bonaventure and Utah State, will decide third place in the tournament. Walker, Bradley's 6'6" sopho- more center, became ill after drinking a glass of orange juice mysteriously delivered to his ho- tel room before Thursday night's 82-71 semifinal victory over St. Bonaventure. He said it tasted queer. The juice was brought to Walk- er's room by a young man posing as a bellboy, who told him it had been ordered by Osborn. The coach denied he had sent it. An- other glass of juice, untouched by Walker's roommate Al Saunders, was sent to a police labgoratory for analysis. No trace of drugs or poison was found. Walker had become nauseated before games at other times and the doctor said the scare over the possibility that the drink had been drugged probably made his condition worse. He was able to play only 23 minutes against St. Bonaventure but scored 27 points, high for his team. swept Ohio State to its early 8-0 lead. It was 17-7 before NYU be- gan narrowing the margin. Al Barden's field goal started a comeback by Sanders that brought the Violets up to 24-26 as Cun- ningham droppea a 20-footer. Then Lucas and Siegfried took over in building the 9-point half- time advantage. O Coach Disatisfied OSU Coach Fred Taylor was anything but satisfied with his team's performance. "I don't believe we played our best game," the youthful coach commented in the dressing room. "NYU, of course, is a better ball club than they showed. We didn't run as well as we can." "We can't afford to give the ball away tonight as much as we did last night." Taylor credited his All America sophomore Jerry Lucas with play- ing "a heck of a defensive game" and he had praise for Tom Sand- ers, the 6-6 jumping jack of the losers. "That kid (Sanders) has the best moves as a rebounder I've seen," Taylor added. CLEVELAND P)- - Hayes Jones of Eastern Michigan romped over the 50-yard high hurdles in 5.9 seconds for a world record last night in the 20th Knights of Columbus Games as he defeated Lee Calhoun, 1956 Olympic victor, for the seventh straight time. Jones' mark erased the six-sec- ond record set by Harrison Dillard of Cleveland in 1953 at Philadel- phia and tied twice since-once by Rod Perry of Penn State and once by Calhoun. Dillard, who saw his record go out of the books, presented the winner's medal to Jones. Calhoun was second in the lightning-fast heat, a yard off the pace. Willie May of the Chicago Track Club was third, Steve Dormach of Notre Dame fourth. Yale's great two-mile relay team came up with the fastest time ever recorded on a 12-lap indoor track, 7:34.8, not far off the world record of 7:33.9 set by Seton Hall on an 11-lap oval in 1942 at New York. Manhattan was second, and Michigan third. James Stack, run- ning second for Yale, came from SAME STORY - Hayes Jones (above) won his seventh indoor race in the hurdles against 1956 Olympic champ Lee Calhoun (right). The Eastern Michigan ace also set another world record en route to victory. He won by a yard. third place on the next to last of his laps to open up a 15-yard lead, Ed Slowik make it 30 yards, and Tom Carroll's great anchor opened the gap to 50 yards. George Kerr, fine middle-dis-, tance star, anchored Illionois to victory in the university mile relay in 3:20.8, more than two seconds off the meet record. Yale was sec- ond and Michigan third, as both, were timed in 3:22. Central Michigan ripped more than 21/2 seconds off the College Division two-mile relay event with a sparkling 3:21.1 as Dave Myers anchored with a 49.5 quarter. Cen- tral State of Wilberforce, Ohio, was second in 3:24.2, followed by Loyola, Buffalo State and Wayne State. Bragg Wins Don Bragg of Philadelphia's Shanahan Catholic Club breezed to a 15 feet, 5-inch victory in the pole vault as expected, breaking Bob Gutowski's meet record by an inch. Bragg failed in three at-. tempts to set a world mark at 16 feet. Gutowski, of the Marines, did not compete, and Mel Schwartz of the Marines finished second at 15 feet. Laszlo Tabori of the Santa Clara Valley Youth Center won the two- mile by 50 yards over Max Truex of the Air Force, after they had stayed within a step of each other for three-quarters of the way. Tabori did it in 8:51.6, as he won the event for the third time in a row. ,,Olympic Bound? Jim Beatty of the Santa Clara Valley Youth Center, grooming for the Olympics, won the mile run by 20 yards over Ed Moran of the New York Athletic Club in 4:07.1. Great Britain's Brian Hewson, who set the pace through seven laps, wound up third. Jim Bowers, the Big Ten champ from Illinois was fourth and Doug Carroll of Eastern Michigan flfth. TOM OSTERLAND * leads qualifiers NCAA TOURNAMENT: Denver Icers Win; Face Tech in Finals Michigan Man Leads NCAA Tramp Event Special to The Daily Michigans Tom Osterland has placed first in rebound tumbling after the first day of the NTCAA gymnastics tournament being held at Penn State. Osterland placed second earlier this season in the Big Ten cham- pionships. He currently is in first with 92.5 points, seven ahead of second place Jim McCurdy of Iowa. Another 'M' gymnast, Rich Montpetit, placed ninth in the all- around competition in a field of 34. In addition, he also qualified for the finals today in the parallel bars event. Ten men are qualified in each of the preliminary events for today's finals when the team champion- ship will be determined. Defending champion Penn State is leading in the team scores after the first day with 22 points. Mich- igan, with Osterland and Mont- petit's performances, is now in sixth place with two points. Warriors Win; Even Playoffs With Celtics PHILADELPHIA (MP)-Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain unleashed both his fists and his famous dunk shot last night in leading the Phila- delphia Warriors to a 115-110 vic- tory over the Boston Celtics, even- ing at one game apiece the best of seven National Basketball Assn. Eastern Division Finals. The T1", 250-lb. Chamberlain scored 29 points and did his usual tremendous rebounding job but the big excitement for a record 12,581 fans was when he squared off In a fight with 220-lb. Tom Hein- sohn. The fisticuffs, nearly precipitat- ing a free-for-all, errupted in the second quarter after the two play- ers banged into each other. Cham- berlain, who has been urged many. times by Warriors' Coach Neil Johnston to swing back at his many tormentors, charged after Heinsohn. The two stood toe-to- toe and slugged it out before play- ers from both teams, the officials and police restored order. Chamberlain, with 12 points in the first period, got the Warriors off in front and, except for an early change of leads and a dead- lock at 41 in the second quarter, Philadelphia led all the way. The Warriors, who finished sec- ond in regular season play and earned the right to meet the Celtics in the Eastern Finals with a pre- liminary playoff victory over Syra- cuse, led at every postr-31-27 at the end of the first quarter, 83-53 at the half, 90-85 at the three- quarter mark. Chamberlain received scoring help from Paul Arizin, who led both teams with 30 points. Hein- sohn's 28, including his first seven tries from the field topped the Boston scoring. The Celtics obviously felt the effect of a poor night by the vet- eran Bob Cousy who managed only six field goals on 27 tries. BOSTON (A) - Denver had to pull all stops for a 6-4 victory over Boston University last night in their semi-final game of the 13th NCAA Hockey Tournament. Paul Josephson sparked the Pioneers with two goals and an assist. Denver, the pre-tourney favorite, meets Michigan Tech in an all- western final tonight. BU clashes State Semi-Finals CLASS A Lansing Sexton 62, Grand Rapids South 50 Pontiac Central 66, Detroit Aust 59 (overtime) CLASS B Grand Rapids Godwin Heights 74, Ludington 73 (overtime) Detroit Holy Redeemer 72, Flint Bendle 54 CLASS C Grand Rapids Lee 61, Detroit St. Thomas 55 Banger 54, Gwinn 49 CLASS D Bath 53, Flint Hoover 45 Baraga 53, Bridgman 51 with St. Lawrence in the afternoon consolation test at the arena. A crowd of 4.904 howled in glee as senior center Bob Marquis from Montreal scored twice to keep BU deadlocked with Denver 2-2 at the end of the first period. They watched BU sophomore goalie Barry Urbanski make 18 of his sensational 39 saves in the secondperiod but the Pioneers broke through. It was Josephson, junior center from Birch Hills, Sask., who put the Pioneers in front to stay, 3-2, at 14:40 of the middle session'when College Ice Mentors Suggest Denver for NCAA Title Site he lifted a 15 foot blast over Ur- banski's shoulder into the left corner. Josephson had taken John Mac- millan's faceoff pass. Bill Masterson and Martin Howe each contributed two assists to the Denver cause. Dave Macleod and Bill McCor- mick tallied for BU in the third period to close to 5-4 but Conrad Colie of Regina, Sask., got the in- surance tally. Exhibition Baseball Detroit 7, St. Louis 6 Milwaukee 7, New York 4 Cleveland 11, Boston 6 Philadelphia 1, Cincinnatti 0 Chicago (N) 5, San Francisco 2 Los Angeles vs Pittsburgh (rain) Baltimore vs Washington (rain) Chicago (A) vs Kansas City (rain) BOSTON (P) - The American College Hockey Coaches Assn. yes- terday recommended the Univer- sity of Denver as the site for the 1961 NCAA Tournament and a change in format of the cham- pionships. The Association moved to in- sure an east vs west final for fu- ture tournaments. It recommended that In the first round next year an eastern team face another east- ern club while two western teams would be pitted against each other. The coaches also appointed a' five-man committee to study the problem of the heavy percentage of Canadian players on some American college hockey teams. The committee is headed by Murray Murdoch of Yale and in- cludes Tony Frasca of Michigan State, George Menard of St. Law- rence, Jim Fullerton of Brown and Minnesota's John Mariucci. Their study will consider the amateur rating of some Canadians who possibly are being paid for playing north of the border. The lout of 20 that didnt get smoked Daily Classifieds Bring Results H e U nifo r - One look at her and you know she's an officer in the United States Army. Her uniform gives it away-and she doesn't mind a bit! Because it's her passport to prestige .., the distinctive sign of a Th e zExlusive Executive Model- -.- young executive in the Women's Army Corps. Wherever she goes- Tailored To Fit The Finest and it might be anywhere from Heidelbcrg to Honolulu!-she knows that uniform will bring respect and recognition. /. F "V Nave a WORLD o/FI NI rtave with lITA -' \L , a Unbehvabe tow Co u.. pt. $675 T here's a lot of satisfaction in pointing out something good to a friend. 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