Lose in final second Buffs nip Hawks 60-59 By GARY MURRELL Steve Rowe's last-second free throw gave the Colorado Buffaloes a 60-59 victory over KU and a one-half game lead in the Big Eight Basketball race Tuesday night. The game-winning free throw resulted when KU's Rodger Bohnenstiehl, 6-6 forward, fouled Rowe in an attempt to prevent him from making a last-second field goal. BEHIND PRACTICALLY the whole game, KU kept fighting back until it tied the Buffs, 59-59, with 2:11 left in the game. The Jayhawks then held the ball until Bohnenstiehl was called for traveling with less than a minute to play. At one point in the second half, KU fell behind by seven, 53-46. With Ron Franz and Bohnen-stiehl hitting consistently from long range, the Jayhawks closed the gap. The ball changed hands several times. KU got position once again with 54 seconds left, but Bohnenstichl, in a desperation attempt to retrieve the ball, was called for travelling. Terrell asks equal billing with Cassius HOUSTON — (UPI)— Ernie Terrell is mad enough to fight. He's also mad enough not to fight It doesn't make sense, but that's the way the heavyweight ranks have been lately. Terrell, the World Boxing Association heavyweight champion, issued an ultimatum yesterday to the promoters of his title fight with Cassius Clay Feb. 6: "Either give me equal billing by Friday or I'm packing my bags and leaving." Terrell is angry about Clay's picture appearing on all the posters and signs advertising the fight and because Clay's name is carried in bigger type on some of the posters and mail order ticket envelopes. "My impression is that Cassius Clay is coming to the Dome just to sign autographs," Terrell said. "My name looks like the fine print on an insurance policy," he said. "How come he let Clay get 50 per cent of the revenue and he only took 20 per cent?" asked Bill Giles, director of publicity for the Astrodome. Giles said however, that the promoters would try to replace the posters with new ones which will have the names of the two fighters in the same size print. He was not sure whether or not to continue to carry Clay's picture. MOLIS' RECORDS NEW YORK — (UPI) — Wayne Molis, a rookie with the New York Knickerbockers, holds the single basketball scoring records at two schools, Lewis College and Chicago Teacher's College. He set each record against the other team, scoring 41 points for Chicago against Lewis and 38 for Lewis against Chicago. THE BUFFS took over and moved in for what proved to be the winning point. Pat Frink led a balanced Colorado attack with 14 points. Bob Bauers and Pete Tate contributed 12 and 13 respectively. Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 18, 1967 Franz with 17 and Bohnen-stiehl with 16 led KU scoring. The Jays were plagued late with heavy fouling. In fact, Phil Harmon and Vernon Vanoy fouled out in the last five minutes. way tie for second place among KU, K-State and Nebraska, all sporting 2-1 records. Colorado's victory throws the Big Eight standings into a three- Saturday the Jayhawkers face Iowa State, 2-2, currently ranked fifth in the league. This will close out first semester for the Jayhawkers. 6 'Pop Quiz Rally' set by sports car buffs By RICH LOVETT The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will hold its monthly car rally Feb. 4. Its creators have named it the Pop Quiz Rally because the participants will drive over a predetermined course guided only by a sheet of 50 questions. Since the entrants do not know the route in advance, answers to the questions are supposed to provide clues where to go, said Robert Entriken, San Francisco, Calif., senior and rally master for the coming event. FOR EXAMPLE, suppose one of the teams, according to its interpretations of the clues, is traveling down Massachusetts Street and the next question reads, "What is playing at the Varsity Theatre?" If the answer is, "How the West Was Won," the team knows it should turn west at the next opportunity, he said. Another question might read, "To make this turn, take the answer you got to question five multiply by two, divide by today's date, add Jack Benny's age, and then turn left on the street number you come out with." To make the course even more challenging, the contest will also involve a scavenger hunt. Items on the scavenger list will supposedly be easily found along the rally route. THE JAYHAWK SPORTS CAR Club, according to Entriken, is composed "not only of people who own sports cars, but people who don't own one but have interest in them and who like to drive good machines. Even someone with a clunker can join." The club holds two basic types of sports car rallies, Entriken said. The more sophisticated type, called a time-speed-distance (TSD) rally, is the kind used by the Sports Car Club of America for its state and regional events. The Jayhawk Club also holds gimmick rallies, such as the Feb. 4 event, in which rules are made up by the rallymaster and "can be almost anything imaginable." One of the club's most popular and successful gimmick rallies has been the Braille Rally, which will be held this May for the fourth time. "The rally is divided into two classes. The totally blind children and their drivers make up one class, the almost blind and their drivers make up the second. Sheets of instructions written in Braille go to the blind navigators, and instructions printed in very large type go to the others. ENTRIKEN EXPLAINS, "THE Braille Rally is the most simplified kind possible. Members of the club go to the Kansas School for the Blind in Kansas City, Kan., and get a grade school or junior high student to act as navigator for each car. "The children tell the drivers where to go and what to look for. The rest is up to the drivers. The Braille Rally's destination is always a picnic for the kids," Entriken said. BESIDES GIMMICK RALLIES, the club also holds many TSD's, to which the more experienced teams come prepared with slide rules, stopwatches, maps and other tools. In such a TSD each car's speedometer is checked for accuracy, is given a mileage check and the navigator is given a sheet of instructions. Then the actual run is begun, the object being to travel a certain route, taking a set length of time to do it and to cover a prescribed number of miles. Points are awarded or taken away according to each car's success, and trophies are awarded. KU team in Golden Gloves The Golden Gloves Boxing Tournament in Kansas City rolls around once again on Feb. 8-11, and again this year KU will send several boxers. Former Stanford University boxer Rudy Oberzan works out with a group of four or five boxes five evenings a week at the wrestling room in New Robinson Gymnasium. Oberzan stated that anyone else interested in joining the KU team can contact him. Workouts are from 5-7:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The weight divisions in both the open and novice brackets this year are 112, 118, 129, 132, 139, 147, 156, 165, 178 and heavyweight. Oberzan replaced Wesley Walker as coach of the Lawrence contingent this year and also plans to compete in the featherweight division. He lettered for three years as a lightweight at Stanford and was captain of the Indian boxing team his senior year. The new coach was unbeaten as a college boxer. When something is better, word gets around. That's why more people every year use our moving and storage services. You'll like them, too. Call for free estimate. LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 Mass. VI 3-0171 "Happiness Is" FOOD Overseas child support centers and people in many lands need the surplus food we raise in this country. The sophomore class, through the Council of Churches, can supply these people with the food they desperately need. We ask you to put U.S. postage stamps in the stamp containers provided to your living group. One dollar worth of stamps will provide 300 pounds of food. Please help.