Tuesday, February 27, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Mount, Mates Challenge Cagers Frosh H oopsters Fn By MARK HALPERT Victor Means Pern ce Toledo; ect Season Run, Baby, Run; See Mount Shoot. So goes the two-in-one feature at eight tonight in the University Events Building as the Purdue Boilermakers take on the Michigan Wolverines in what promises to be a highscoring chaotic affair. The scouting report on Purdue is that every one runs. Mount is the key to the offense, with a 30.5 average. "Mount can shoot from every position with great -accuracy," commented as- sistant coach John Orr. He also The Events Building will be formally, dedicated during the half-time of tonight's game. President Robben W. Flemming will speak briefly followed by various other faculty and stu- dent representatives. A half hour concert by the University Band will follow the basketball game. has great leadership, and with him leading the fast break, Mich- igan's only hope appears to be stopping the Purdue forwards and center from getting the ball to Mount. A POS MINNESOT MICHIGAN (24) (10) (31) (30) 1(13) Bill Keller (5'101) Rick Mount (6411) Jerry Johnson (6'10") Herman Gilliam (6'3") Ty Bedford (6'5") G G C F F (24) (44) (20) (33) (40) Jim Pitts (6'3") Ken Maxey (5'9") Bob Sullivan (6'4") Rudy Tomjanovich (6'7") Dennis Stewart (6'6") This Week in Sports Today BASKETBALL-Frosh against Purdue at Events Building, 5:30 p.m. Purdue at Events Building, 8 p.m. (building dedication) Joining Mount in the backcourt. is junior Bill Keller, who is the playmaker on the squad. He's also the third leading scorer (averagingI over 14 ppg) and the ball hawk in Purdue's zone press. Sharing the center duties will be sophomores Jerry Johnson and Chuck Bavis. Johnson at 6'10" is the quicker of the twos and will probably get the starting nod over Bavis who stands 7', because he fits into the fast breaking Boiler- maker style. Both big men haver 4 tendency to get into foul trouble, so you can expect to see a great= deal of both of them. Sophomore Ty Bedford com- pletes the starting lineup. Bed- ford is a real leaper, and is quick in starting the fast break. Purdue generally uses a 2-3 zone defense, but on occasion has switched to a zone press or man- Thursday SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet in Matt Mann Pool, 1 p.m., finals 7:30 p.m. Friday HOCKEY-Colorado College at Colesium, 8 p.m. SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet in Matt Mann Pool, 1 p.m. and finals 7:30 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Meet at East Lansing WRESTLING-Big Ten Meet at Iowa City TRACK-Big Ten Meet at Columbus preliminaries preliminaries By PHIL BROWN terpart, 6'4" Gary Anderson, that Michigan's freshman basketball his teammates will have. squad will be seeking an unde- Ford and Lundstedt, a 6'4" for- feated season tonight when they ward, have provided a good part meet the Toledo frosh in the of the Michigan scoring load so Events Building in a preliminary far this season, averaging 20 and to the varsity clash with Purdue. 19 points, respectively. They have Having won their first two out- also taken down a total of 40 re- Havng onther irs to ot-bounds between them to spark ings, drubbing Ohio State 83-78 thboshefwene ospr and getting by MSU 102-100 in the frosh defense. overtime, the Wolverine yearlings They will be opposed by Lowe are eager to make it three in a ("Butch" to his friends) and Ron row under coach George Pomey. Powers (6'. A product of Detroit Th invading Toledo cagers Catholic Central, Lowe recently come into the contest with a pair scored 34 points in a 77-69 victory of big advantages, and with at over the Western Michigan fresh- Saturday BASKETBALL-Northwestern at Events Building, 1:30 p.m. HOCKEY-Colorado College at Colesium, 8 p.m. SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet in Matt Mann Pool, preliminaries 12 noon, finals 7:30 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Meet at East Lansing WRESTLING-Big Ten Meet at Iowa City TRACK-Big Ten Meet at Columbus least one notable disadvantage. Plus and Minus The plusses are the experience they have gained in the 20 games they have already played this year and a fine 6'3" forward named Harold Lowe. On the minus side of the ledger is the fact that the Rockets have fizzled, winning only nine of their starts while dropping eleven. Add to this a decided height ad- vantage for the Wolverines and the possibility of a third straight Michigan victory looks more than just possible. "We'll go with the same start- ing lineup we used in our last game," reports Pomey. "We hope to play everybody, but that will depend a lot on how the game goes." For Michigan That means that Rod Ford, Mike Rafferty, and Tom Lund- stedt will be starting up front for the Wolverines. Ford will take the! center position where he (at 6'4") will not be able to enjoy the height advantage over his coun- SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DIANA ROMANCHUK men. Steve Shay and Jim Hoffman, both 6', will share backcourt du- ties for the Rockets. Shay shares the team's .-star" billing with Lowe, doing most of the playmak- ing work. They will be matched with Rex Emerick and Dan Fife in the Michigan backcourt. Emerick, 6'1", got the nod to start against Michigan State after putting in a fine performance as a substitute against the Buckeyes. ROD FORD A 6'3" hustler from Clarkston, offense with 44 points in two Fife makes the Michigan team games. The Toledo contest will be the go. Daring and aggressive on de- yearlings' final appearance of the fense, he also leads the freshman season. - -- One-on-One,||||||||||| Jim Pitts has drawn the impos- Successful Offense sible one-on-one assignment of HERMAN GI IAM Michigan will probably use a' guarding Mount. He realizes he 1-3-1 zone offense andl a man-to- can allow Mount neither the out- Maxey's harrassing tactics will be man-defense. The offense with side shot nor the drive. If Pitts is an attempt to keep Mount from Maxey at the top, Pitts under- unable to handle Mount, head getting the ball and leading the neath and Sullivan, Stewart and coach Dave Strack may switch to fast break. Tomjanovick in the middle has Maxey. "Pitts will try tso be tenaci- Junior Herm Gilliam, the sec- been sucessful in bringing home ous, but Maxey will be harrassing," ondc leading scorer on the. Purdue three victories in Michigan's last commented Strack. equad, has a fine ability of hitting sx games, after a horrendous 0-5 Mount, an agile 6'4", 177-pound the offensive and defensive boards. league start. guard, will enjoy a slight height He is extremely quick, and can The league-leading Boilermakers advantage on Pitts and a much lead the fast break himself, if aethe leaueea igTBoilermakers greateradvantageon Maxey, but Mount is coveredm ar the hottet Big Ten teambwhu has hardly helped Michigan this BIG TEN ACTION: season, may just pop up at the right moment to give a Michigan ,B. a spoiler's roll. ceyes as Big Ten Standings 'CLOTLUMBTS -P) Ohio State { The Bucks n bOsting their REGISTER TO VOTE NOW thru MARCH 1 ANN ARBOR CITY HALL Vote QUENON for Council pulled away from stubborn Illi- 4 nois early in the second half last night and posted a 95-75 victory that kept the Buckeyes in the thick of the Big Ten basketball scramble. Ohio State, leading by only 40-39 at halftime, exploded for 55 points in the second half that turned a close contest into a rout. I l u , uu lg ~ll league record to 8-4, moved with- in percentage points of co-leaders Purdue and Iowa, who have 7-3 records. Steve Howell led the Ohio State attack with 26' points but he got good support from Dave Sorenson who canned 21 points. The Illini, who entered the game still nursing hopes for a league title, fell out of contention with a 6-5 mark. Dave Scholz topped the losers with 25,points and teammate Mike Price chipped in 23. Ohio State fired a torrid 63 per cent from the field in posting its 15th victory in 22 starts. Illinois, which shot a poor 37 per cent, dropped to a 10-11 over-all record. Purdue Iowa Ohio State Illinois Northwestern Wisconsin Michigan State Indiana MICHIGAN Minnesota W L Pet 7 3 .700 7 3 .700 8 4 .667 6 5 .545 6 5 .545 5 5 .500 5 5 .500 3 7 .300 3 8 .273 3 8 .273 "Hold It Charlie" Charles Froeming executes an "L" cross during his excellent routine in last Saturday's victory over Illinois. This weekend, the gymnasts hope to overtake Iowa in the Big Ten championship. ANN ARBOR REGISTRATION TODAY! thru FEB. 27 RIDES LEAVING at 10:10, 3:10, 4:10 from GLASS DISPLAY CASE in FISHBOWL VOICE-SDS GENERAL MEETING I Tuesday, Room 3-G, Union 8:00 P.M. SGC endorsements Student Rental Union County Welfare-FPFP New Politics Convention Report Regional SDJ Conference Report and Programs Repression of Black Radicals 1 it I NBA Standings Eastern Division I a W L Pct]I Philadelphia 51 17 .750 xBosten 45 22 .672 New York 36 33 .522 Baltimore 31 38 .449 Cincinnati 31 38 .449 Detroit 30 39 .435 Western Division St. Louis 48 23 .676 Los Angeles 40 27 .597 San Francisco 41 29 .586 Chicago - 24 44 .353 Seattle 20 48 .294 xSan Diego 15 54 .217 x-Late game not included. Yesterday's Results Boston at SanDiego, inc. 'Today's Games St. Louis at New York San Francisco at Philadelphia Cincinnati at Los Angeles Be- hind 5Y2 15 20% 21 6 22 J 26Y2 32 Yesterday's Results Ohio State 95, Illinois 75 Today's Games Purdue at MICHIGAN (8 p.m.) Michigan State at Iowa Minnesota at Wisconsin Indiana at Northwestern +i 17 CAN YOU SPEAK IN HOUSES AND DORMS ON WAR RESEARCH? 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