3,000 tickets still available for Marquette game go on sale Monday, 8:30 a.m. SPORTS NIT Basketball 'M' vs. Marquette Monday, 8 p.m. Crisler Arena Th Michigan Daily Sunday, March 18, 1984 Page 7 Dayton, Memphis State pull off upsets EAST REGIONAL: Indiana rolls, 75-67 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Steve Alford hit 10 straight free throws in the last 12 minutes Saturday to lead In- diana to a 75-67 victory over Richmond in the second round of the NCAA East Regional basketball tournament. North Carolina will face the Hoosiers, 21-8, in an East Regional semifinal in Atlanta next Thursday. ALFORD, THE nation's second leading free throw shooter at 90.6 per- cent, began his streak with 12:33 left. He converted both ends of a two-shot foul to break a 46-46 tie. He added eight more in almost two minutes to end the Richmond season at 22-10. John Newman hit the tail end of a two-shot foul with 11:37 left to pull the Spiders within one. The teams traded baskets before Alford hit a jumper at the 10:40 mark and Mike Giomi added a baseline shot with 7:55 left to give the Hoosiers a 54-49 edge. Richmond got as close as 56-53 on Bill Flye's layup with 6:03 left, but Cour- tney Witte hit a free throw at 5:47 to ignite a Hoosier pullaway which even- tually boosted the lead to 67-57 on two free throws by Witte with 1:43 left. Alford hit six of 12 from the field and led the Hoosiers with 22 points while center Uwe Blab had 14 before fouling out. Kelvin Johnson led Richmond with 27 points and Newman scored 20. Bill Flye hit 10 for the Spiders. N.C. 77, Temple 66 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Michael Jordan scored 27 points as top-seeded North Carolina shook off a determined Temple effort for a 77-66 victory yesterday in the second round of the NCAA East Regional basketball tournament. Temple's pressure defense forced 15 North Carolina turnovers in the first half while Terrence Stansbury hit eight of 14 shots in the period and had 18 points. With that, the Owls never led by more than one point in the half. ' "THEY WERE very quick. They jumped in the passing lanes and they were putting a lot of pressure on us," Jordan said of Temple's defense. "That's the first time we've faced something like that. I think we corrected that in the second half." The Tar Heels trailed 29-28 when Joe Wolf scored on a tip-in with 33 seconds left. Steve Hale got a layup with four seconds left and gave North Carolina a 32-29 edge at halftime. Sam Perkins ignited. an 8-0 run that gave the Tar Heels a 48-39 lead at the 12:54 mark, their biggest margin to that point. Temple responded with eight straight points - four each by Stansbury and Jim McLoughlin - to pull within 48-47 with 11 minutes left. NORTH CAROLINA'S last run put the Owls out of reach. Matt Doherty scored on a layup, Kenny Smith, who finished with 11 points, got a basket on a goaltending call and Perkins added two free throws with 10:03 left as the Tar Heels led 54-47. Smith added. two free throws with 3:31 remaining for their biggest lead at 69-56. Perkins scored 12 points for the Tar Heels, while center Brad Daugherty added 10. Stansbury cooled off in the second half and finished with 26 points. Granger Hall had 13 and McLoughlin had 10 for the Owls, who close at 26-5. AP Photo Richmond's John Newman takes a rebound away from Indiana's Todd Meier and Uwe Blab during the first half of yesterday's 75-67 Indiana win. MIDEAST REGIONAL: *Wildcats pound BYU Ar Poto Yes, it is possible to shoot over Houston's star center, Akeem Olajuwon. Louisiana Tech's Willie Simmons proves it with this hook shot in yesterday's NCAA Midwest Regional contest which Houston won; 77-69: MID WEST REGIONAL: Tigers boil Purdue BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) ,- Third- ranked Kentucky, taking advantage of steals and turnovers, rode eight early points by Sam Bowie to an 11-point lead as the Wildcats overpowered Brigham Young 93-68 in the second round of the NCAA Mideast Regional basketball tournament yesterday. The victory enables the Wildcats to return to their home floor at Rupp Arena for the regional semifinals next Thursday night against the winner of today's game in Milwaukee between 12th-ranked Tulsa and Louisville. KENTUCKY, 27-4, broke a 4-4 tie with an 11-0 run that included four points each by Bowie and Kenny Walker and three by Jim Master. "We were in trouble from the get-' go," BYU coach Ladell Andersen said. "As powerful as Kentucky is, you can't get down 10 points early." The Cougars, 20-11, never were able to get within seven points the rest of the way, and the Wildcats turned it into a rout with runs of 8-0 and 9-0 early in the second half, the latter creating a 61-35 lead with 12:32 remaining. "I THINK they really want it, I think they're really hungry," Coach Joe B. Hall said of his Wildcats' quest for the school's sixth national championship. It was the sixth victory in a row and the 11th in 12 outings for the Wildcats, who hope to use their home floor as a springboard to the ninth Final Four ap- pearance in the school's rich basketball history Kentucky has won five national championships. Walker led the balanced scoring with 19 points, Bowie had 16, Melvin Turpin 15' Master 13 and reserve Winston Ben- nett 11. Devin Durrant, the nation's third leading scorer entering tournament play, tallied 28 for the Cougars and Jim Usevitch added 10. Maryland 102, West Va. 77 BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - Ben Coleman scored 19 points and Herman Veal and Len Bias 18 added each as 11th-ranked Maryland crushed West Virginia 102-77 yesterday in the second round of the NCAA Mideast Regional basketball tournament. Maryland's eighth consecutive vic- tory came just after third-ranked Ken- tucky overpowered Brigham Young 93- 68 as both teams advanced to the regional semifinals on Kentucky's home floor next Thursday night. MARYLAND will meet the winner of today's clash between sixth-ranked Illinois and Villanova. Maryland, 24-7, shot a sizzling 70 per- cent in the first half to build a 55-39 haltime lead and relentlessly added to the margin in the second half in the first meeting between the two neighborhing state universities since 1971. West Virginia, 20-12, which had upset No. 17 Oregon State in the first round, led by four points in the early going, but the Terps took the lead for good at 12-11 on a basket by Coleman. Veal and Adrian Branch each had four points in an 8-0 run that stretched the advantage to 27-16 just over eight minutes into the game, and the Moun- taineers never got closer than eight points the rest of the way. Maryland also had an 8-0 run early in the second half that produced a 63-41 lead and the Terps were in front 85-60 with 6:53 remaining when reserves began flooding the floor. AP Photo UTEP's Paul Cunningham battles for the ball with Richie Adams (31) and John Flowers of UNLV. Jerry Tarkanian's Rebels won the game 73-60. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Keith Lee hit-with deadly accuracy for 29 points and dominated the boards in leading No. 16 Memphis state to a 66-48 rout over No. 10 Purdue last night in a second round NCAA Midwest Regional basketball game. In the Midwest semifinals next Friday in St. Louis, the Tigers, 26-6 will take on No. 5 Houston. It will be the third straight year Memphis State has made the final 16. TO THE DELIGHT of the capacity crowd of 11,200, the- taller Tigers dominated the boards and kept the Big Ten co-champion Boilermakers from getting the ball inside with a zone defense. Memphis State, the Metro Conferen- ce tournament champions, set the tem- po with a run-and-shoot game and a full court pressure defense. Lee, a 6-foot-10 junior who became the No. 3 scorer in Memphis State history with his first field goal Satur- day, made seven of eight tries from the field and five-of-five from the freethrow line for 19 points in the first half when Memphis State led 37-22., THE TIGERS OPENED the second half by scoring three straight field goals, two by Baskerville Holmes. to grab their largest margin, 41-22. Purdue cut its deficit to 53-42 on Ricky Hall's three-point play with 7:02 remaining. But Boilermaker Coach Gene Keady drew a technical foul for disputing a call and Lee made both free throws. Lee added two more baskets and the Tigers were one their way again for their fifth straight victory. Guard Andre Turner was the only other Tiger in double figures with 10 points. Purdue, which finished at 22-7, got 14 points from Jim Rowinski and 12 from Steve Reid.' Houston 77, La. Tech 69 MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Sophomore guard Alvin Franklin scored 21 points POETRY READING with ALICE FULTON and KEITH TAYLOR Monday, March 19th, 8 p.m. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe as No. 5 Houston gained the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball semi- finals yesterday with a 77-69 victory over Louisiana Tech. Houston, winner of 13 of its last 14 games and gunning for its third straight Final Four appearance, got 16 points apiece from All-America Akeem Olajuwon and Michael Young and 14 from freshman Ricky Winslow. THE COUGARS pulled away after Louisiana Tech reduced the lead to 54- 50 with 7:32 remaining. Olajuwon then returned to the game after sitting out three minutes because of foul trouble and the Cougars went on an 11-2 spurt. Winslow hit for seven points, in- cluding two slam dunks, during the run, to put Houston ahead 65-52 with 4:24 remaining. With over three minutes remaining, the Southwest Conference champions grabbed a 14-point advantage and put the game out of reach, even though Olajuwon was to foul out with 2:55 left. KARL MALONE, Tech's 6-9 center, was contained by Houston's zone defen- se in the first half, scoring only four points, but wound up with 18 points. Rennie Baily also had 18 and Willie Simmons put in 12. * Louisiana Tech, which had upset Fresno State in the first round in its fir- st NCAA competition ever, had its eight-game winning streak snapped to finish at 26-7. Houston led 34-27 at halftime as Olajuwon piled up 11 points and 10 rebounds in the first half. Z INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5M A.. of br" 761"700 DAILY 1:00 P.M. SHOWS MON. THRU FRI. $2.00 SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. 11 ACADEMY AWARD NOMIN. TERMS OF ENDEARMENT FIMON.10 0 900 9:25 (PG) "HILARIOUS" NY. Times WOODY ALLEN'S BROADWAY DANNY ROSE (PG) FRI.MON 1:00,7:20,29:35 SAT., SUN. 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:35 WEST REGIONAL: UNLY tops UTEP HAPPENINGS (Continued from Page 3) Miscellaneous Eclipse -Workshop in jazz, 7 p.m., Assembly Hall, Union. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. CRLT - Workshop, "The Feedback Lecture," 2:30 p.m. to register call 4 763-2396. CEW - "Refreshing Student Skills," "Reading Effectiveness & Study Skills," "Academic Writing," registration required, call 763-1353, 350 S. MThayer. HRD - Written Communications Seminar, Prof. Mary Bromage, 9 a.m., Rm. 130 A &B. Tau Beta Pi - Tutoring lower level science, math, engineering, 7-11 p.m., Rm. 307 UGLI, and 8-10 p.m., Rm. 2332, Bursley. Marketing Club - Showing of the Clio Awards, 5 p.m., Hale Aud. arkGreek Week - Mr. Greek Week Contest, 7 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Minicourse on* VYunnlavia "The Croatian Crisis of the 1970s and the Evolution of the i 1 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Ed Cat- chings scored 14 points and Richie Adams and Danny Tarkanian added 13 each Saturday as 13th-ranked Nevada- Las Vegas defeated cold-shooting No. 9 Texas-El Paso 73-60 in the second round of the NCAA West Regionals yesterday. UNLV, now 29-5, outscored the Western Athletic Conference Mines 16-6 to forge a 44-32 lead with 13:21 left in the game. The Runnin' Rebels increased their lead to as much as 18 points late in the game. UTEP, 27-4, was led byguard Luster Goodwin's 16 points and 15 from forward Fred Reynolds. UTEP SHOT only 30 percent in the first half, converting only seven of 23 shots, as UNLV displayed an aggressive man-to-man defense. Still, a three-point play by Reynolds left the Miners down only 29-26 at halftime. But it was the Rebels' show in the second half to the delight of many of the 8,110 in attendance at the University of Utah Special Events Center. Catchings scored UNLV's first four points of the period as the Rebels even- tually built the 44-32 advantage on two free throws by John Flowers. The Rebels, of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, kept up the pressure thereafter, and the closest UTEP came was at the 3:45 mark on a basket by Reynolds that cut it to 62-50. For the game, UTEP managed just 44 percent from the field, hitting 22 of 50 shots. UNLV scored just one more field goal, but the Rebels were accurate from the free throw line, converting 27 of 35. Da-ton 89, Oklahoma 85 SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) - Roosevelt Chapman, Dayton's all-time scoring leader, had a career-high 41 points as the Flyers added Oklahoma to its list of tournament victims, which also includes Louisiana State. Chap- man scored 10 points on free throws in the final 4:47 as Dayton forged an 11- point lead and survived an Oklahoma rally, to win 89-85. All-American Wayman Tisdale, only a sophomore, scored 36 points and becameOklahoma's all-time scoring leader, surpassing Alvan Adams' 1,707 points from 1972-75. STUDENT DISCOUNTS ao BICYCLE JIM'S PUB F -In 0/- s; . ------rn--rn--rn--- --------------