ySPORTS Tuesday, March 24, 1981 ge 8 SEMIFINAL WINNERS v The Michigan Daily Y Syracuse vs. Tulsa in NIT finals NEW YORK - Dan Schayes scored 'ee points in the closing moments to cure a 70-63 victory for the Syracuse Oangemen over the Purdue Boiler- takers last night in an NIT semi-final ame at Madison Square Garden. SCHAYES, LAUGHING on the way to DIRECT FUGHTS " MIDWEST 0 FLORIDA *"WEST EAST COAST 'AIRNET is a unique service which locates empty seats . on private charter aircraft To learn more about this practical travel alternative, Call: 1-800-482-9279 the foul line, connected on one of his free throw attempts with less than 25 seconds remaining to put the Orangemen ahead to stay. Purdue, behind the offensive rebounding of junior Mike Scearce, rallied to tie Syracuse in the latter stages of the second half. Scearce, who averaged six points during the season, connected for 18 points in the losing cause. Poor outside shooting by the Boiler-= makers (38 percent) plagued the Big Ten representatives and enabled Syracuse to open a five-point halftime bulge, 37-32. Bothered by Syracuse's quickness, the Boilermakers couldn't connect on their perimeter shots. But the Boilermakers whittled away at the lead, cutting the Orangemen's lead to one point, 54-53, with less than seven minutes remaining. Brian Walker then connected on both of his free throw attempts to pull Purdue to a tie at 55 with five minutes left. The final outcome left Purdue with a 20-11 record on the season. The Boiler- makers had advanced to the semifinals by beating Rhode Island (84-58), Dayton (50-46), and Duke (81-69). The Orangemen advance to the finals Wed- nesday night and Purdue marked the fourth team to fall to Syracuse (21-11), Marquette (88-81), Holy Cross (77-57), and Michigan (91-76). Tulsa 89, W. Va. 87 NEW YORK (AP) - Paul Pressey scored 20 points, 11 down the stretch, to pace Tulsa to a 89-87 victory over West Virginia in the semifinals of the National Invitation Tournament last night. Pressey was held scoreless in the fir- st 12:10 of the second half but his basket at 7:50 cut the West Virginia lead to 72- 69. The 6-foot-5 swingman scored again to make it 78-77 and his three-point play with 4:25 remaining in the game gave the Golden Hurricanes an 80-78 lead and also fouled out West Virginia captain Greg Nance. DIEGO MCCOY, a 6-2 sophomore guard whose previous career high was 18 points, scored 30 for West Virginia to keep them in the lead most of the game. His last basket with 15 seconds to go, cut Tulsa's lead to 89-87, then Tulsa's David Brown missed two free throws with eight seconds remaining to cost the Mountaineers a final chance to send the game into overtime. But Greg Jones, West Virginia's leading scorer during the regular season, missed a 20-footer at the buzzer to preserve Tulsa's triumph. After leading 44-40 at halftime, West Virginia went on an 11-5 run to take a 59- 53 lead, then a basket by McCoy with 10 minutes to go gave the Mountaineers their largest lead, 70-63. GREG STEWART scored 19 points and Mike Anderson 15 for Tulsa, while Nance followed McCoy for the Moun- taineers with 22. There were six lead changes in the early minutes of the game, then a 13-2 run helped West Virginia to a 21-11 lead with 13:03 to go. But a three-point play by Pressey sparked a seven-point run by Tulsa that shaved the margin to 21-18 less than a minute later. Mike Anderson, a 6-foot guard, scored 10 of Tulsa's next 20 poin- ts to give the Golden Hurricanes a 38-37 lead at 4:32, but West Virginia respon- ded with seven straight points before Ty Nilsson's basket for Tulsa left the Mountaineers with their 44-40 lead at halftime. Despite the victory, Tulsa was out- shot 61 percent to 47 by the Moun- taineers, but West Virginia had its problems at the free throw line, hitting only 62 percent from the line while the Golden Hurricanes hit 74 per cent of its free throws. West Virginia outrebound Tulsa 36-33. Y tiR 4 4 4 d "§ =5 r Yi 4 0 m M V 9 ti b l SPEIIV1S ElM 11 BASEBALL March 24 Glassboro State, at Florida International" March 24 at Miami March 25, Trenton State, at Miami March 26 Bowling Green, at Florida In- ternational March 27 Glassboro State, at Florida International March 27 at Miami March 28 at Florida International March 28 at Miami GOLF March 24-28 GAC Intercollegiate, at Kissimmee, Florida MEN'S TRACK March 28 LSU °nvitational, at Baton Rouge ~ MEN'S TENNIS March 24 Florida State March 26-29 Wichita Team Tourney, at Wichita WOMEN'S TENNIS March 28 Miami of Ohio MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCHOOL Clerkship Guidance W.H.O. LISTED Ph.D., D.O., D.P.M.-M.D. Program LIVE IN THE U.S.A. ENGLISH INSTRUCTION Proven Student Service 100 LoSalle St. New York, N.Y. 10027 (212) 865-4949 ' ~AP photo UNIVERSITY OF TULSA'S Greg Stewart (33) takes to the air for a shot during first period action in a semifinal National Invitation Tournament game against West Virginia University at New York's Madison Square Gar- den Monday night. 24 Rouvndup ROWING The Michigan crew team is sporting a new look thanks to the acquisition of an Olympic rowing boat from the University of Pennsylvania. Six thousand dollars was raised to procure the boat from Penn. The first meet of the spring is April 4, when the men travel to Wayne State to compete against Ohio State, Wyandotte, and the host, Wayne State. The same day, the women's team will be in Grand Valley to face the likes of Notre Dame and Grand Valley. The following week the men and women will be in South Bend, tangling with Purdue, Notre Dame and Wayne State. Michigan's pride is at stake here - for two years they were overwhelmed by Purdue. Consequently, Purdue refused to compete against Michigan last year, claiming the Wolverine crew team was far too inferior to its own. FRISBEE Anyone interested in seeing one of the most exciting events around should make plans to attend "the big frisbee fling," April 11, at the CCRB and Palmer Field. The Michigan frisbee club plays host to MSU, Ferris State, Hope College, and Grand Valley. "Guts" and "ultimate frisbee" will, be featured in the tournament. SAILING The Michigan sailing club traveled to Annapolis this past weekend to participate in the Trux Umsted Memorial Regata. Twenty-one schools com- peted in the regatta, ranging from Stanford in the West to Boston University in the East. With only two hours of practice going into the regatta and faced with ad-, verse weather conditions, Michigan battled to finish tenth overall. Tufts won the regatta with 245 points followed by the Naval Academy and Boston University. LACROSSE With the score tied 1-1, the Michigan lacrosse club scored 11 straight goals, overpowering the Southern Ohio Lax Club, 15-4, in Cincinnati. Matt Dawe led the scoring with two goals and four assists followed by Al Clavell who contributed two goals and two assists. Jay Jehle and Ed Anderson chipped in with three goals apiece, while Bill Kalbfleish added one goal and two assists. The Club Sports Roundup, which will appear in the Daily each Tuesday, relates briefly the activities of Michigan's club sports teams during the previous week. This week's information was compiled by; Daily sports writer Alan Goldstein. S .6I Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan Ir .--- -----.. W RITE Y OU R AD HE R E! ----------- . I I mu muunm mm RT ORA EE nunm r.n mm ui - i I - ; I --- -------.--CP AND MAIL TODAY --------.--- I USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST - Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Ptese" indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 wherethisad rs to run. 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 for rent for sale 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 help wanted 3b42 5.10 14.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 roomma 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 et. 7 words per line (Each line of space used counts as 7 words). Hyphenoted words over 5 characters counts as two words-This includes telephone numbers. . - .. t ! _ ft. . TYl. MS L .. (ll LESpotRsAC goes on vacation IM SCORES. SUNDAY Volleyball Independent Hat 15-15, ECC Blues 10-3:' Boogie Oogies 15-9-15, Arbory Pirates 0-15-8 Powerhouse '80 14-15-15, The Bump Functions 16-128 China I 15-815, Midshipmen 'A' 1-15-3 Fraternity Theta Delta Chi 15-15, Theta Xi 0-0 (forfeit) sigma Alpha Mu 15-14-15, Chi Psi 4-16-7 Theta Chi 15-7-15, Delta Upsilon 8-15-11 Sigma Nu 15-15, Kappa Sigma 9-10 Alpha Sigma Phi 15-15, Delta Tau Delta 0-0 (forfeit) Chi Phi 15-15, Zeta Beta Tau 0-0 (forfeit) B' Sigma Alpha Mu 16-15, Chi Phi 144So Sigma Alpha Epsilon 15-15, Evans Scholars 0-0 (for. feit) Delta Upsilon 4-15-15, Theta Chi 15-6-4 Sigma Chi 15-15, Sigma Nu9-12 Women's - Thronson III 15-9-15, Beer Buddies 9-15-12 Generics 15-15, AFROTC 12-2 Ms. Trails 15-15, Bartlett's Best 4-10 Graduate+ Demons 7-15-2, Korean Students 15-7-1 ;' DSD'D' 15-6-15,DSD'E' 11-15-8 MBA Red 10-15-15, Embolic Disaster:15-12-9 Nolo COntendere 15-15, MBA Blue 6-7 HSRI Sled Dummies 15-15, Phi Delta Phi 6-7 MBA Crimson 15-15, Mercator's Raiders 13-4 STEAK & A LE of Plymouth Is r Wo i-,r MCnn