Tuesday Wdreh l 61 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine m.,,..~ _a_ __ DO OR DIE IN LOUISVILLE ...... By RICH LERNER basket "I w The Michigan basketball I kneA team began preparations yes- fall," terday for its NCAA tourna- bad g ment battle with the Fighting You're Irish of Notre Dame. a play It took two last gasp baskets for Michigan and Notre Dame to survive the first round of the tourney, to set up a re-match of their 1974 tournament tus- sle. CAMPY RUSSELL and Way-. man Britt led the Wolverines to a 77-68 upset win over the Irish, two years ago. The two teams meet Thursday in Louis- ville, Kentucky at nine o'clock. Tickets are available at the Athletic ticket office. Television coverage will be on WJBK (2). Michigan trailed by as many as 13 points in the second half before coming back to clip Wi- chita State, 74-73 in Denton, Texas, Saturday. Honorable mention All-America Rickey Green swished a jumper from the corner with only six seconds remaining - to provide the margin of victory. Toby Knight's tip-in with two seconds lifted the Fighting Tom Irish past Cincinnati 80-79 at bench Lawrence, Kansas. comeb GREEN SUFFERED his gameV worst shooting night of the year, remain hitting on only three of 16 be-; ley Cl fore canning the game-winner. holding Wichita State held the ball and twenty a one-point lead when Lyn- man b bert "Cheese" Johnson charged from Steve Grote with 18 seconds. eight-p left. The Wolverines called THE time-out, but planned no set, Fernda play before scoring the final and fo to battle Notre Dame t. on the press resulting in a re- as missing so many, that verse layup. His entry into the w one of them had to game woke up Michigan as the Green said. "I got my Wolverines forged a 68-65 lead ame out of my system. with four minutes left after an- allowed one bad game yoff." other Staton field goal. "I just wanted to get every- thing going, put up some shots and start things flowing," Sta- ton said in the jubilant Michi- gan locker room after the game. "The offense was stagnant when I came in. It was my job to get it moving," he said. Sta- ton only played sparingly during the regular season. "I'm just glad the coaches had con- fidence in me in a tight situa- tion." "STATON GAVE us a little more quickness," said Michi- gan coach John Orr. "He real- ly gave us a spark when he came into the game." Michigan outscored WSU 14-1 to move from a 64-54 disadvan- tage to a 68-65 lead. Grote, Green, and Tom Bergen each, hit two field goals in the spurt, as Wichita missed the first end of two one-and-one situations. But the Shockers' Robert El- more swished a turnaround jumper and connected on six straight free throws, the lasts two with 55 seconds left, to put Wichita ahead 73-72. A Britt jump shot with 40 seconds left was off its mark and Bergen fouled Elmore two seconds later. But this time El- more missed the free throw and Johnson rebounded for Wichi- ta. The Shockers stalled 20 sec- onds off the clock before Grote drew the charge from Johnson, setting up Green's winning bas- ket. Rickey Green Staton came off the to spark the Wolverine ack. Staton entered the, with just over 11 minutes ing and Missouri Val- hampion Wichita State g a 60-48 lead. Within seconds, the 6-3 swing- brought the Wolverines a 12-point deficit to an point deficit. FRESHMAN f r o m tale clicked on a jumper; ollowed that with a steal Grote worked the baseline to lead. The 5-7 guard pumped in perfection, leading the Wol- 13 of his 15 points before inter- verine scoring attack with 17' mission, dropping in several points. jumpers from the side of the key. THE WOLVERINES control- The Shockers built their first- led the game's opening tip, half lead playing without the jumping to a 4-0 lead, their services of their big man, 6-9 largest of the night. The Shock- Elmore. The younger brother ers, who brought 2500 fans the of Len Elmore of the ABA In- 300 miles to Denton, were prim- diana Pacers picked up his ed for an upset and played an third foul seven and a half mi- excellent game. utes into the game and sat out Cal Bruton's outstanding play the remainder of the first per- led Wichita to a 41-35 halftime iod. How To Interview For That Job-And Get It! Here is a unique book. It spells out the secret interviewing techniques used by employers and it reveals the dynmics of the interview, the psychology which pervades every Interview. This book not only reveals what to expect In the interview, it demonstrates the techniques necessary to handle the inter- view and explains why those techniques work. You will read and re-read this book. It contains the most powerful material known in successfully handling the inter- view. If you study and apply the basic techniques revealed here you will acquire mastery of the interview, and you will get the job you want. 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The Institute for Paralegal Training 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19103 (215) 732-6600 PROGRAM APPROVED BY THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION SEASON CLOSES WITH 6-5 LOSS: Almost Shocked Huskies By PAUL CAMPBELL For thi Stu Younger scored on a brought breakaway with seven minutes somewha left in the game to thwart a! son. Tabl strong Michigan comeback and as s e r give Michigan Tech a 6-5 victory , league last night in the Student Ice Michiga Arena.' consisten The :game, coupled with Tech's campaig 4-2 win on Sunday, gave the vseason Huskiesta 10-7 victory in the two overall game, total goals series. Tech advances to the national cham- It looke pionships next week in Denver, might m where it will be a heavy favorite glory tha to successfully defend its NCAA season. A title. a shortha KO he Wolverines, the loss an abrupt halt to a at disappointing sea- bbed before the season i o u s contenders for and national honors, in was plagued by in- rcy throughout t h e gn. They finished the with a lackluster 28-20 record. ed as if the Wolverines ake a final run at the t had eluded them all After Mike Zuke scored anded goal early in the Wolverines ....j Huskies shut the gates to pro- ,,*tect their two goal lead in the }r I anĀ®;overall score. Michigan Tech really put the *jo r 1I game away early on. Aftert SLindskog scored the first goal NIGHT EDITORS: of the game at 5:20 of the open- KATHY HENNEGHAN ing stanza, the Huskies woke up ; JOHN NIEMEYER and carried the play into Mich- '::;>{r:,qtS:} a igan's end. Before the period. was over. Tech had lit the red 4 { s Blue tracksters take Big Ten in door ti*tlez By ERNIE DUNBAR the three-mile. His record is six seconds faster than the previous "I knew we were good, butI I Big Ten best. wasn't sure we had the quality points to win the meet," said Jim Stokes was a pleas ant sur- point to win tahe meet, y prsead the pole vault, with his head track coach Jack Harvey rise inain f1'1 secondperiod, Michigan storm- ed back to score four straightI goals to overcome a 5-1 deficit. First Dan Hoene scored as shorthanded goal of his own at 12:31 of the period. Dave De-: Bol added a power play goal! four minutes later as he whis-1 tled a low drive off the pads of; Tech goalie Bruce Horsch. I Angie Moretto, the alltimeI leading scorer in Michigan history, kept the comeback rolling in the third period. Stealing a pass at the blue line, he found linemate DougI Lindskog streaking into the Huskie zone. Lindskog prompt- ly beat Horsch to bring the Wolverines within one. Kris Manery tied the game at the 9:49 mark as he knocked in a Greg Fox rebound. But it simply wasn't enough, as the R.I.P. FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. M- D. Lindskog (Moretto, Manery) 5:20; 2. MT- Zuke (Mayer, Wilcox) 7:52; 3. MT- Mayer, (Younger Drazenovich) 12:13; 4. MT - Lyle (Dempsey, Zuke) 16:31 PP; 5. MT - Murray (unassisted) 19,,20. SECOND PERIOD SCORINQ 6. MT - Zuke (May- er) 10:10 SH1; 7. Ml - Hoene (unas- sisted) 12:31 SH; 8. M - DeBol (Hughes, Blanzy) PP. THIRD PERIOD light four times. The fourth goal, scored by d e f e n s e m a n Jim Murray, brought Michigan coach Dan Farrell off the bench screaming that Michigan goalie Robbie Moore had been interferred with. After Moore had made the initial save, it appeared he was dragged to the ground by a Michigan Tech player, allowing Murray to score into an unde- fended net. The protest was disallowed, cemen however, and Murray's first goal of the season remained on the books. Another controversial call went against the Wolverines moments into the second per- iod. Dave DeBol appeared to have picked up a rebound and flipped the puck over Horsch's shoulder. But the officials rlled that Horsch had posses- son of the initial shot and that the whistle had blown. The Huskies will join Minne- sota as WCHA representatives in Denver. The Gophers quali- fied by beating Michigan State 9-8 in their two game series. After tying 2-2 on Saturday, Minnesota nipped the Spartans 7-6 in an amazing triple over- time marathon at East Lansing. Boston University and Brown, will represent the East in the championships. Britt Rob inson Hubbard Green Grote Baxter Hardy Thompson Staton Bergen Team Totals M WIC Johnson Gray Elmore Bruton tTrogele Brent Kalocinski Yoder McCullough Ford Team Totals 2 SHalftime S Michigan 35 Att. -9,8& FG FT R F Pts 2-8 0-0 5 2 4 4-7 2-2 4 3 10 6-12 3-5 9 5 15 4.17 2-3 7 3 10 7-10 3-4 4 3 17 3-6 0-0 0 4 6 0-3 0-0 3 0 0 1-1 0-0 1 0 2 3-5 0-0 0 2 6 2-5 0.0 1 4 4 7 32-74 10-14 41 26 74 HITA STATE FG FT R F Pts 5-9 2-4 7 3 12 5-13 0-0 7 3 10 5-10 8-10 7 4 18 6-13 3-4 3 2 15 1-4 3-4 4 2 5 3-5 0-0 3 1 6 1-3 0-0 3 2 2 2-2 1-2 3 0 5 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0.0 0 0 0 4 28-59 17-24 41 17 73 ocore: Wichita St. 41, 84 MICHIGAN as he reflected on the beginning of the season. But as the Michigan track team slowly began to roll over opponents, and break at least one indoor record a meet, the' feeling was that this team had a definite shot at its first Big Ten indoor track title in twelve' years. THE FEELINGS were accur- ate as the thinclads combined four first place finishes with a display of powerful team depth, en route to wrapping up the con- ference title with 62 points. Wis- consin took second with 501. Michigan's outstanding per- formance came from Dave Furst, who won the half-mile in a Big Ten record time of 1:48.6. Furst's time is the fastest indoorI half-mile in the world this year. "We knew he'd run a good one," said Harvey, "but we had no idea he'd run that fast." Just to prove his Big Ten per- formance was no fluke, Furst ran a 1:48.3 on the board track at the NCAA chamnionshins March 12-13. His anchor leg gave Michigan a second olace finish in the two-mile relny. THE WOLVERINES' r'har Big Ten chamnrions were Mikc M-- G'lire, who set a cronf-rence record with his time of 13720.7 in WCHA Stond'n s winning leap of 16'6". Dave Williams shared the 600; title with Dick Moss of Wiscon- sin. Both were clocked in 1:10.1. MICHIGAN'S mile relay unit of Harlen Huckleby, James Grace, Jeff McLeod and Wil- liams combined for the title with a time of 3.15.8. This group went on to place third in the NCAA's behind Ten- nessee and Kansas. As a team Michigan tied for tenth in the NCAA meet at Cobo Arena. Several observers at the meet were critical of the Wolverines' overall performances, but Coach Harvey feels his team put in a r e s p e c t a b 1 e performance. "People don't realize that we were the only school to score in the both the mile and two- mile relays, with totally dif- ferent personnel." -TONIGHT-Tuesday, March 16th DR. STRANGELOVE, OR HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB (Stanley Kubrick, 1964) AUD. A, 7 only Dr. Stranqelove (Peter Sellers). an ex-Nazi adviser to the President of the U.S., advises him on the impending de- struction of the world in this hilarious Cold War black comedv on sexual insecurity and nuclear deterence. Winner of 60 international awards. George C. Scott, Sterlinq Hay- den, Slim Pickens, Keenan Wynn. CRY, DR. CHICAGO (George Manupelli, 1970) AUD. A, 9 only Another film in the Dr. Chicaqo series. See listings for March 5th. The scene now shifts to a mansion somewhere with Dr. Chicoago still searching. A fitting and dramatic climax to the Dr. Chicaqo films. Short: FIVE ASSORTED FILMS-experimental animations by Manupeli. In ANGELL HALL $1.25 SINGLE SHOW. $2.00 DOUBLE FEATURE EXHIBITION AND SALE OF ORIGINAL ORIENTAL ART Uof M UNION GALLERY Tues., March 16, 10-6 Wed., March 17, 10-6 - TONIGHT ONLY!- LUT HEALISON i SCORING: 9. M - D. Lindskog (Moretto) 6:28 10. M - Manery (Fox, D. Lindskog) 9:49; 11. MT - Younger (Letzgus, Jessie) 12:37. SAVES BY PERIOD Aoore (M) 9 8 9 26 Horsch (MT) 10 21 9 40 Giyc~e Come and See What We've Done With Our Bar n $8f 1' S o9RE W 657eR A 4 SH/R c.\ t FINAL WCHA Michigan Tech MSU Minnesota MICHIGAN Notre' Dime Colorado College Wisconsin Denver MiN-WDktfh North Dikota STANDINGS W L T Pts 25 7 0 50 20 12 0 40 18 13 1 37 17 15 0 34 15 15 2 32 s 1 15 1 31 11 19 2 24 12 20 0 24 12 20 0" 24 12 20 0 24 JUDAIC STUDIES PROGRAM COFFEE HOUR Students interested in the Program in playing tunes from his New Album 'NIGHT LIFE' as well as his usual funky blues favorites. TUESDAY, MARCH 16th ,ONIWAWM r/.ai'n( "A al - sa