SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN SUNDAY, FEBRVAItY Ii, 1968 TIlE MiCHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVE? Cagers,' By BILL LEVIS Michigan's Blue basketball ma- chine sputtered again yesterday as the Wolverines lost a three point half-time lead before being completely run off the court by Iowa 99-86 in the Events Building. The Hawkeyes scored 12 straight; points in little over two minutes early in the second half after the Wolverines had taken a seven point lead on Ken Maxey's driv- ing layup. Senior Sam Williams, who sat out much of the first stanza aft- er picking up his third personal foul, led Iowa's rrally with two layups~ and a jumper from the corner to give, the Hawkeyes a five point bulge. "We got frustrated and couldn't shake it," said a disgruntled Mich- Attack Sputters Again Gymnasts Dump Bucks As .Jacobs, Rapper Star q A SUNDAYrSPECIAL- A F bruary 1,1 N A FIPESIDE FOLKSING with RfAR lAIITC I 7t 'roan nnarh Tvavo Ctra,,k aftar the i to in nnint.c urith mnrp than 11 igan coac.ave 6Lra mILertL neo uU poUint wiL In U eLna ii game. "We were seven points up minutes left on the clock. and we had a couple of good Michigan was able to pull with- breaks. But we fumbled the ball in three with five minutes left out of bounds twice. but the Hawkeyes were not to be Play Badly denied their fifth Big Ten vic- "We began missing two footers tory as they outscored the Wol- and they were sinking 25 foot verines 18-8 the rest of the way. shots. It got to us and we started Old Times to play bad basketball." Iowa coach Ralph Miller con- tributed the outburst to "a change we made in our offense at half time. We thought we had a condi- tioning edge over Michigan so we sped up the attack." And the Hawkeyes with their faster offense were never to be headed. With the Wolverines ap- pearing listless throughout much of the rest of the game, Iowa methodically increased their lead1 "We reverted to old times those last ten minutes," bemoaned Strack. "We began doing things we hadn't been doing for a month. We made mistakes we hadn't been making like silly passes. "We just went from good to bad to mediocre." Michigan was a completely dif- ferent ball club in the first half. For the first twenty minutes, the Wolverines were dominating play, .miners own previous best by two seconds. It was a pool record. Ken Wiebeck, who was sup- posed to have a stomach ache, won the 100-yard freestyle in :48.3. It was his most impressive making only eight turnovers compared to the Hawkeyes' 11. Special To The Daily Iowa tried to full court press COLUMBUS - Thursday, the Michigan but the Wolverines re- gymnasts came up with their fused to be intimidated as Jim highest score of the season in a Pitts and especially Maxey sped tension - packed meeting with through it with little trouble. Michigan State. Michigan was particularly ten- Yesterday, the pressure was acious on defense. Pitts, guarding gone when the Wolverines met Williams, held the Big Ten's sec- Ohio State, and the score showed ond leading scorer to eight points it. in the first half. Against the Spartans the score The Wolverines were also get- was 188.6-187.05. ting good scoring from Pitts, for- Against the Buckeyes the score ward Rudy Tomjanovich and Bob was 185.2-178.0. Sullivan who started his first This low score was the result game at center. The trio hit for of the Wolverines' weakest event, 34 poinlts. which earlier seemed to have Nifty Passing been steadying its efforts. Mich- Sulvnws sciaigan's leading sidehorse perform- Sullivan was especially proving er, Jim Deboo, produced a solid himself a fine playmaker. The Jim s oo, proud sid junior, who had been alternating Jensen, however, slipped to a very at forward and guard earlier in J nen o.v.,Mik pe to r, v hr the season, set up numerous bas- poor 7.0. Mike Carpenter, the kets with nifty passing along with Wolverines' last entrant, placed scoring 13 points in the first half. even lower. Michigan's Dave Jacobs finally "I thought Bob played as wellI brought himself up to proper as he has ever played for Michi- hformand achieved an outstand- gan," observed Strack. "He passed ing 9.65 on the trampoline. Soph- and scored well." omore George Huntzicker fol- Sullivan ended up the game as lowed closely with a 9.35. the Wolverines' second leading put forth by sophomore Ron Rap- scorer with 21 points. Tomjano- Another outstanding effort was vich, who hit for 10 in the first per on the parallel bars. He im- half, ended the afternoon with 22. proved on his highest score for A 1 LOSE 80-43: Hoosiers Top Swi the year with a 9.5. Junior Dick 0%000 n I I Richards also performed excel- olaying cuitor, banjo & autohorp lently, gaining a 9.25. of the Jensen showed his capabilities PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER on the high bar by swinging to 4B R WU E a 9.45, his best -performance of 3 43' Woshtenaw the season. Mike Sasich was EVRYONE IS WELCOME 7:30 P.M. right on his heels with a 9.4. THERE IS STILL TIME TO HAVE A MONOGRAMMED CIRCLE PIN engraved for your f0 t Pierced Earrings fir. n lops and Post Styles to Match Y P.uFis fromz3.50 Pierced earrings from 5,00 ENGRAVED FREE A vailable in sterling, gold-filled, and fourteen karat solid gold. arcade jewelry shop 16 nickels arcade BLOOMINGTON-The Wolver- ine swimming team showed tre- mendous improvement yesterday against Indiana, in a case where the difference in scoring didn't1 show in the slightest, because of the overwhelming strength of the Hoosiers. Well, maybe the slightest. The score was 83-40, Indiana in Ann! Arbor while this time in Blooming- ton it was 80-43. 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY-1. In- diana (Hickcox, McKenzie, Barou- sky, Bateman); 2. Michigan. Time: 3:37.1. 1000-YD. FREESTYLE-1. South- ward (1); 2. Perez (I); 3. Bisbee (M). Time: 0:14.8. 200-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Bello (M); 2. Burrell (I); 3. Windle (I). Time: 1:43,5 (pool record). ONE-METER DIVING-1. Nino de Rivera (I); 2. Young (I); 3. Brown (M): Points: 282.4. 50-YD. FREESTYLE-i. Bateman (I); 2. Wiebeck (M); Kircher (M). Time: 21.9. 400-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY- 1. Utley (I); 2.,Kinkead (M); 3. Ware (II). Time: 4:18.4: Yesterday the meet was in the Hoosiers pool, where they have never lost, and this month there was no Indiana team flu epidemic, like there was in January. Amidst some unbelievable times for Indiana, Michigan's Juan Bello swam the 200-yard freestyle in 1:43.5 again taking over the best time in the nation for the sea- son from the Hoosiers' Bill Burell, who was second. Bello beat his. THREE-METER DIVING-1. Hen- ry (I); 2. Hanfeld (I); 3. Meaden (M). Points: 308.35. 100-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Wiebeck (M); 2. Bateman (I); 3. Bello (M). Time: 48.3. 200-YD. BACKSTROKE-1. Hick- cox (I); 2. Dorney (M); 3. Mertz (M). Time: 1:59.9. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY-1. Arusoo (M); 2. Berry (1); 3. Bisbee (M), Time: 1:58.4. 200-YD. BREASTROKE-1. Pero- ski (I); 2. McKenzie (I); 3. Robert- son (M). Time: 2:14.5. 800-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY-1. Indiana (Wirdle, Southward, Hick- cox, Perez);e . Michigan. Time: 7:10:'5 (pool record). performance this year. "Automatic" Tom Arusoo, who is undefeated this year, kept up his record by winning the 200- yard butterfly in 1:58.3 for the other Wolverine win. An experiment agreed on by both teams to substitute the 400- yard Individual Medley and 800- yard freestyle relay for the 200- IM and 400-relay backfired on Michigan as' Indiana won both. In fact, they set a pool record in the 800. The two diving events, which only went to the Hoosiers 10-8 in Ann Arbor, were swept, 16-2, by Indiana in their home pool. SCORES Wisconsin 95, Indiana 83 Purdue 89, Minnesota 62 Ohio State 90, Michigan State 62 Northwestern 78, Illinois 71 Kansas 75, Colorado 72 St. Bonaventure 70, Providence 56 Southern California 49, Oregon State 47 New Mexico 64, Texas-El Paso 58 Georgia 61, Tennessee 43 Kentucky 92, Mississippi St. 84 Vanderbilt 90, Mississippi 72 Houston 107, Centenany 56 Chicago Loyola 81, New Mexico State 75 Columbia 103, Harvard 70 NHL Detroit 1, Boston 1, tie Pittsburgh 2, New York 2, tie Montreal 6, Chicago 4 Philadelphia 2, St. Louis I NHA Baltimore 114, Detroit 109 New York 115, Philadelphia 97 St. Louis 108, Chicago 107 Williams, an all Big Ten pick last season, lead all the scorers with 24, clicking for 16 in the de- cisive second half. Guard Chad Calabria, who came off the bench early in the game, hit for 23. Most of his two pointers came from the free throw line. The other top scorer for the Hawkeyes was string bean Glenn Vidnovic, who played his first game only last Wednesday night against Purdue. The sophomore, who hit for 17 points in, his var- sity debut, scored 18 in his second outing. MICHIGAN FLOOR EXERCISE-l. Huntzicker (M), 9.35; 2. Jensen (M), 9.0; 3. Howard (OSU), 8.65; 4. Tie, Rodney (M) and Sexton (OSU), 8:15. SIDE HORSE-1. Deboo (M), 9.10; 2. Trott (OSU), 8.75; 3. Baker (OSU); 4. Jensen (M), 7.0. RINGS-1. Froening (M), 9.25; 2. Jensen (M), 8.95; 3. Perkins (OSU), 8.8; 4. Tie, Kenney (M) and Trott (OSU), 8.75. TRAMPOLINE - 1. Jacobs (M), 9.65; 2. Huntzicker (M), 9.35; 3. Mendelson (OSU), 9.2; 4. Sexton (OSU), 9.1. VAULTING - 1. Tie, Huntzieker (M) and Jensen (M), 9.5; 3. Trott (OSU), 9.4; 4. Howard (OSU), 9.25. PARALLEL BARS-1. Rapper (M), 9.5; 2. Richards (M), 9.25; 3. Trott (OSU), 7.75; 4. Howard (OSU), 8.55. HIGH BAR-1. Jensen (M), 9.45; 2. Sasich, (M), 9.4; 3. Howard (OSU), 8.75; 4. Trott (OSU), 8.7. Ryun Sets Jenison Mark; 1M' Relay Team Takes First Tomjanovich,I Stewart, f Sullivan, c Maxey, g Pitts, g Edwards, f Fraumann, c McClellan, g Bloodworth, g Henry, g Totals ' J Williams, f Breedlove, f Jensen, c Norman, g McGrath, g Vidnovic Calabria, g Agnew, f Totals Michigan Iowa Crowd 10,670 FG FT R f 10-25 2-3 18 5-19 2-4 8 9-14 3-3 9 4-6 1-3 2 6-18 4-6 9 0-1 0-0 1 0-0 0- 0 2-3 0-0 2 1-1 0-1 2 0-0 0-0 0 37-87 12-20 52 F T 3 22 3 12 3 21 493 2 16 0 0 1 0 1 4 1 2 0 0 '18 86 TRW is success by association Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Jim Ryun gave it class, and Bob Steinhoff put on the show, but all in all the 1968 edition of the Michigan State Relays, held last night, wasf just another track meet. Ryun turned the slow Jenison Field House dirt track in 4:03.4, three-tenths of a second better than his own mark set last sea- son, in one of four meet record performances. Steinhoff, also of Kansas, soared to 16 feet, erasing Bill Barrett of Eastern Michigan's meet mark of 15'-5" Western Michigan Universi- ty's shuttle hurdle relay team tied the American record for that event with a 28.7 clocking. The Michigan two-mile relay Wolverines team easily won their race in bocker's se 7:36.8 without the services of high jump junior Ron Kutschinski. The and defen quartet winning effort followed a Ted Down third-place finish in the Madison I cleared 6' Square Garden Invitational Fri- make 6'10 day night, awardedf Also of special interest to the misses. IOWA FG l 11-18 3-3 6-11 2-10 3-5 6-13 9-16 0-7 40-781 FT 2-2 2-2 2-3 1-1 0-0 6-7 5-8 1-1 19-24 R P T 4 4 24 8 1 8 13 2 14 3 2 5 1 2 6 7 5 18 3 2 23 5 0 1 49 18 99 47 39-86 44 55-99 JIM RYUN was Gary Knicker- cond-place finish in the p. Both Knickerbocker nding national champ ing of Miami of Ohio 8" but neither could 0" and Downing was first place with less UNION-LEAGUE MASS MEETING UNION-LEAGUE WEEKEND TUESDAY, FEB. 13 8:00 P.M. Rooms 3R & S in the Union V. ADMIN. TRAINEE COLLEGE GRADUATE WE ARE tOOKING FOR THE IMAGINATIVE BUSINESS OR LIBERAL ARTS GicADU'ATF WHO WANTS THE CHALLENGE OF A CAREER IN PROFESSIONAL ADMINISTRATION DEAL- ING WITH PERSONNEL. SALARY ADMINISTRATION. EX- PENSE, AND PROCESSING CONTROLS. IF YOU ARE A RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATE OR A GRAD RETURNING FROM MILITARY SERVICE AND ARE INTER- ESTED IN A SALARIED TRAINING PROGRAM, PLEASE CALL MR. BALES OR MR. PFAFF THE TRAVELERS 961-8240-Are Code 313 We Are an Equal Opportunity Employer M and F From Los Angeles to Houston to Washington, from Space Systems to Ocean Systems to Information Systems, young people are making things happen at TRW. MEN OF MICHIGAN: Neec I PHAM KHAC RAU Former South Vietnamese Ambassador to the U.S. will speak at 7:30 P.M., Monday, Feb. 12 in Room 3-D of the we say mo GO ? r? Take a look around any TRW location. The young faces outnumber the old by a good margin. The vast majority of scientists and engineers you'll meet are under thirty, or forty at least. Why? Because we depend on young ideas, new ideas, fresh ideas. That's why we' need you. What kind of a place is TRW? Ask around. Talk to your professors and faculty advisors, or your friends who are already working with TRW. Most of our professional employees applied to TRW on the recommendation of friends. Here are some of the disciplines where new graduates may find career oppor- tunities at TRW:, Computer Sciences/Analytical Research / Aerosciences / Informa- tion Systems / Digital Systems / Com- munications Systems/Reliability/ Guidance & Control / Sensor Systems / Microelectronics / Electric Power / Space Vehicle Design / Antenna Sys- tems Design and Analysis/ Mechani- cal Engineering / Product Assurance/ Integration& Test/ Systems Engineer- ing / Circuit Design/ Electronic Coun- termeasures & Electronic Intelligence Systems If you'll be receiving your degree (Ph.D., MS or BS) in Engineering or Science this year, check with your Placement Director and talk with us while we're on campus. If you can't make it at that time and ,would like to be considered for openings in the Los Angelesuarea, Houston or Washington, send your resume to:,W. D. Mclvers, College Relations, TRW, One Space Park, Redondo Beach, California 90278. 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