Wednesday, February 11, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Paoe Seven old shooting cagers overtaken, 78-73 .ith deviA j ____ ___ diicip/e Bill Cusumano_ Since I am basically extremely lazy and due for retirement at The Daily (which should gladden the hearts of thousands, including me) I am taking the easy way out on columns. Therefore, today I will give this space over to Mr. Charles Fogelman, who on Monday afternoon kindly gave me the following letter. Mr. Fogelman, it's all yours. Mr. Cusumano: It should be enough to identify oneself as a fan in order to comment on your recent columns. But since so many people at Michigan shout their inexpertise so loudly, I'd rather establish my own credentials first. I grew up in New York city, in Madison Square Garden, and therefore am more provincial than most people, especially about basketball, since that sport has long' been claimed (I think rightly) by my home town as its special child, even as its lifeblood. When I was an undergraduate at New York University, I was a cheerleader for about three years, and captain for half that time. I think I was the only cheer- leader in NCAA history to be evicted from a game while having a technical foul called on him. Most. of my time during the forty or so games that I participated in as a cheerleader at Madison Square Garden during that period was taken up with yelling, heckling, and drumbeating. We usually had about three. men and six women on our squad, and a trumpeter or two in the stands. We did not have a band. I think your analysis of the situation here is basically good, though occasionally a bit shallow. Most commendable is the extent of your concern. While it is true that coordination be- tween band and girls would be nice, more important would be the band not working against the girls, as they did at least three times, for example, during the Northwestern game (I see the girls as basically guiltless here, but definitely at fault in other areas), I'd suggest that what they need is a bass drum behind them, manned by someone with endless enthusiasm, a sense of rhythm, and a knowledge of basketball and crowds. The band is fine for an occasional chorus of "The Victors," the Alma Mater (by the way, where has it been at basketball games?), and the National Anthem; they're probably too sym- phonic to be used frequently. A trumpeter's charge would prob- ably be nice sometimes as well. While coordinated band-girl routines are admittedly nice and eye-pleasing, they should cer- tainly not be used at times-out, which are usually high peaks of momentum' or deep valleys of falling behind for the team. Nothing does more harm to a team's cause in the stands when it is ggining momentum than to have a long drawn-out cheer keeping the stands' enthusiasm in check. A simple rhythmic cheer works best in these situations. Routines should be left to pregame or halftime displays. In line with simplicity and rhythm, the girls should have a basic repertoire of perhaps two or three offensive, one or two defensive, one rallying from behind, one staving off the op- position and one momentum maintaining cheers, all of which should be made to be well known to the stands. The cheer- leaders should cue in the band, they should be in charge; "The Victors" is a ready-made rallying point, and should be used 4 sparingly for best effectiveness. An occasional new cheer should, of course, be tested out, and any cheer (or song-we have many) should willingly be dropped if it is ineffective. This year's girls themselves certainly have .spirit, and, in some sense, class. They .are not, however, special enough to look at, and this can be a female cheerleader's most singular and effective attribute. This is not to say that they are unattractive, 'which they by no means are. Pom-poms and occasional flowing hair are their only successful attempts at flair. Their skirts (culottes are fine for acrobats; they do not, however, allow for sufficient diversion should certainly be shorter, (historically, cheerleaders have been much higher up the thigh than the general body politic-ours are certainly not), and maybe the uniform design as a whole should be redone. A blue M on a field of maize across their derrieres might be an idea. They need as well to be better heard. Here megaphones, or men, or more microphones like Miss Loken wears would serve well. Neverthe- less, your observation that the brunt of the yelling burden should be on the crowd is good, and we are certainly frequently at fault. It is, however, a pipe dream to expect the crowd to react at all times. Cheerleaders must always be shouting and banter- ing, except when that is clearly functional. A crowd should always be heckling, only part of the time cheering in an organ- ized fashion. Which brings me to a final point of consideration, namely we in the stands. As you were quite right in saying, we should be made more accessible to the cheerleaders, and the floor to us. In any crowd there will be addicts, actives, passives, hangers- on, dates, and, as you so very aptly put it, "fat cats". (In New . York there were usually bookies, celebrity voyeurs, or University Administrators, though some of the latter were, in their own way, loyal, devoted, and addicted fans). It's not clear to me why the Events Building has so many who are so frequently passive, but I don't think it's because we think ourselves too sophisticated. More can be attributed to the lack of a winner than you seem to imply. I suspect, though, I don't know, that people here have had too few models to learn the art of fandom- from, and maybe it's because of this that many fans are often self-conscious about yelling, especially when they don't know whether they're yelling the right thing. They should know in- stinctively that anything is the right thing at a basketball game. But how can they, when football has always been King here? And how can they know to follow cheerleaders when they're. so used to seeing performers who expect applause and not decibels? (I think, however, that men have an important function on a cheerleading squad, to add volume and strength to the sexuality and the rhythm of the girls). The above is an incomplete attempt at analysing and recommending from that analysis, much as you tried to do in your columns. There is clearly room for improvement; I hope we can get off both our collective and individual asses, for nothing garnishes (old sense), the exploits of a fiery team better than a fired-lip crowd. Oh, and another thing-at Madison Square Garden they served beer. Yours, Charles Fogelman Teaching Fellow in Psychology I appreciate Mr. Fogelman's letter, as I like any letter that agrees with me even the slightest. He is know- ledgeable in the field and what is more important, he cares. He offered his help to the cheerleaders at the begin- ning of the season and I think they could help themselves by listening to the expert advice he has to offer. He was raised in, and worked in, the toughest fan area in tha nauntr to nlt-w%. O r Vrntlr fln ra m . "l.t 4 - By ERIC SIEGEL Special To The Daily EVANSVILLE - The Wolverine cagers played like they didn't want to win last night, and they didn't, bowing to the Evansville Purple Aces 78-73 in a non-conference, basketball game at Roberts Arena. The Wolverines, who shot a meager 36.9 per cent for the eve- ning and turned the ball over to the Purple Aces a total of 16 times during the game, went into the half trailing 40-35. The Wolver- i ines couldn't even hit their free{ throw attempts, collecting only of 22 free bees compared to 18 23 by the Purple Aces. 11 of Although the Wolverines domi- nated the boards in that first stanza, outrebounding their foes by a margin of 39-28, they were able to get off only one more shot than the Purple Aces, as they re- peatedly had the ball stolen by the swift Evansville guards. In the second half, the story was even more discouraging, as Aces High the Wolverines outboarded the Purple Aces 28-14 but managed two less shots at the basket. Once again, the Wolverines were hurt by turnovers. Evansville's 6-3 sophomore guard Don Buse was the main culprit, stealing the ball from the sluggish Maize and Blue nine times during the game. Buse, who vanguarded the Aces pressing man-to-man, was also Evansville high scorer during the game with 20 points. Buse's total matched that compiled by the Wolverines' Rudy Tomjano- vich. Tomjanovich's total was 10 below his average. The 6-7 for- ward could never quite find the range during the night, hitting on only 8 of 23 from the floor. Tomjanovich was not alone in! his poor shooting though. Dan Fife hit only 4 of 15 from the field.! Bird Carter could manage just 6 for 18, and Rick Bloodworth hit only 1 of 7. In fact, the only Wolverines who didn't leave their shooting daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JERRY CLARKE eyes back in Ann Arbor were Wayne Grabiec and Bill Frau- mann. Fraumann, who was play- ing in place of the injured Rod- ney Ford, made good on all his five shots from the field and also aided the Wolverines with 16 re- bounds, and Grabiec dumped in 6 of 7 from the field to total 12 points. In fact, it was Grabiec and braumann who gave the Wolver- ines their only bright moments of the evening after the Purple Aces increased their 40 to 35 halftime lead to 54-47 with just 13:39 left in the game. The Wolverines out- scored Evansville 18 to 6 to takea 65-60 lead with 6:11 remaining. Grabiec hit on three field goals during that spurt while Fraumann added three points of his own. Henry Fife Carter Fraumann Tom janovich Bloodworth Hayward Grabiec Buse MICHIGAN fg 0 4 6 8 t $ 6 Totals 31I EVANSVILLE ft 2-3 2-6 1-3 2-4 4-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 11-22 t 2 10 13 12 20 2 2 12 73 r' 3 6 13 16 16 3 1 4 62 Weimer 8 2-4 18 14 Mcissic 4 2-4 10 6 Welmeyer 6 2-3 14 4 Clayton 2 0-0 4 2 Owens 4 0-0 8 3 Moore 0 2-2 2 0 Guth 0 2-2 2 0 Totals 30 18-23 78 43 Michigan 35 38-73 Evansville 40 38-78 Fouled out-Michigan, Fife. ITotal fouls-Michigan 15, Evansville i 16. Turnovers-Evansville 12, Michigan 26. 6 8-8 20 14C SCORING RECORD SET: Iowa rolls over W N ~~dbhT5) " By The Associated Press IOWA CITY, Iowa - Iowa ran its Big Ten Conference basketball record to 7-0 and set a school scoring record by beating a hot- shooting Wisconsin team 119-100 here last night. It was the Hawkeyes' ninth straight win and the ninth straight game in which they shot better than 50 per cent from the field. The loss dropped the Badgers to 3-4 in conference play. The Hawks used a shifting zone defense to hold down fouls in the first half while forcing 15 Badger turnovers. But Wisconsin hit 58 per cent of its first-half shots to keep the game close before Iowa caught fire, spurted to a 58-44 halftime advantage and coasted home. Clarence Sherrod of Wisconsin led all scorers with 35 points. John Johnson* and Chad Calabria shared scoring honors for Iowa with 29 each. Glenn Vidnovic add- ed 24 and Ben McGilmer 20 for the Hawks. Al Henry hit 22 points for Wis- consin and pulled down 13 re- bounds, as well as blocking nu- merous Hawkeye shots. Lloyd Adams hit 20 points andsgrabbed 10 rebounds for the Badgers. Records mount LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's All-American 'Rick Mount broke the school's all-time career scor- ing record last night in leading the Boilermakers to a 98-80 Big Ten basketball victory over In- diana. Mount scored 41 points, pushing his three year total to 2,093. The old mark was Dave Schell- hase's 2,074. Mount, who hit 16 of 28 from the field and 9 of 10 free throw attempts, broke the record with 24 points in the first half. Purdue scored nine straight points to take a 20-11 lead with eight minutes left in the first half and never was threatened. The Big Ten defending champions led 43-34 at halftime. Jim Harris and Rick Ford each scored 19 points to lead Indiana, now 1-6 in conference play and 5-12 overall. Purdue is 6-2 in the Big Ten and 13-5 overall. OSU burns EAST LANSING - Ohio State had the second best shooting per- centage in Big Ten history as the Buckeyes blasted the Michigan State, University Spartans 89-66 at East Lansing last night in a coneference basketball game. The Buckeyes hit the first 11 shots from the floor in the second half and posted a .685 game mark as they scored on 37 of 54 shots. The best percentage ever was .723 for Minnesota in a 1960 game against Iowa. MSU's coach Gus Ganakas said "it was all wrapped up in the shooting tonight. Ohio State has a real poised club, with five great shooters." Ohio State exploded to lead Michigan State at the half, 40-30. The closest MSU came after the Buckeyes' second half spurt was 15 points. Jim Cleamons led Ohio State with 29 points, while Michigan I (I1 1But the Wolverines' spurt was short lived, as the Maize and Blue State sophomore Ralph Simpson quickly reverted to their earlier paced the Spartans with 20 points. form, missing several shots from * * * the floor and turning the ball over a couple of times. The Purple Louisville wins !Aces, who themselves hit only 35 WICHITA - Louisville battled back in the second half to defeat Wichita State 91-84 in a bruising, aggressive Missouri Valley Confer- ence basketball game last night. The important victory for the Cardinals kept them close on the heels of Drake in the conference race. Louisville is 9-1 in the Val- ley and 14-4 overall. Mike Lawhon, Louisville's lead- ing free throw shooter, tossed in 10 straight in the second half. Big Ten r Standings per cent of their field goals, put everything together for the next couple of minutes and roared back into a 71-65 lead with Just a little over two minutes left in the game. The Wolverines narrowed that lead by only one point at the final gun, but not for want of oppor- tunity. With 59 seconds left to play, ,. Carter scored on the fast break to make the score 73-71 and the Wol- verines got the ball right back again when Evansville was called for traveling. But then Buse stole the ball off Bloodworth, and a few seconds later John Wellemeyer scored twoa of his most important points of the evening to give the Purple Aces a 75-71 lead. In .the next few seconds, the Wolverines missed half a dozen shots and committed a pair of fouls to stifle any thoughts they had of a last second comeback. -Daly--Sara Krulwich BILL FRAUMANN (35), Michigan center, passes off to a team- mate in one of the Wolverine's contests earlier in the season. Fraumann was an integral part of the team last night, as he ably filled In for the injured Rod Ford, grabbing, 16 rebounds and scoring 12 points. .... ~EI JUST ARRIVED ! Copies of "IN THE COUNRTY OF THE YOUNG" By PROFESSOR JOHN W. ALDRIDGE W L Pct. Iowa 7 0 1.000 Purdue 6 2 .750 Illinois 5 2 .714 Minnesota 5 3 .625 Ohio State 5 3 .625 Wisconsin 3 4 .429 MICHIGAN 3 5 .375 Michigan State 2 6 .286 Indiana 1 6 .143 Northwestern 1 7 .125 Yesterday's Results Evansville 78, MICHIGAN 73 Purdue 98, Indiana 80 Ohio State 89, Michigan State 6 Iowa 119, Wisconsin 100 Buy at FOLLETT'S State St. at N. Univ. L- .. .t:.(~ %' f :' 66 Scores College Basketball Results Notre Dame 90, St. John's, N.Y. 76 Florida State 98, Florida Southern 74 Army 85, Coast Guard 34 NYU 85, Lehigh 72 George Washington 98, Richmond 85 Massachusetts 83, Holy Cross 66 Arkansas 76, Baylor 76 Texas A&M 79; Texas 70 Dayton 64, St. Louis 61 Rice 66, Southern Methodist 63 Texas Tech 75, Texas Christian 60 Louisville 91, Wichita State 84 W. Mch. 94, Loyola of Chicago 93 Colgate 97, St. Lawrence 94 Northern Iowa 83, Central Missouri 74 Midland 72, Nebraska Concordia 70 Trinity 76, George Williams 67 Peru 89, Doane 87 U on" Summer Camp Positions Camp Tamarack (Fresh Air Society of Detroit) has positions available for counselors; specialists in water- front, arts and crafts, nature-camp- craft, tripping, dramatics, dance and music; unit and assistant unit supervisors; caseworker; nur ses; physicians; and truck-bus drivers. Also staff needed for Marionette Theatre, program for emotionally disturbed boys, and northerntout- post camps. Main camps located at Brighton and Ortonville, Mich. W.S.U. credit courses offered in ed. psych up to four hours. Marvin Berman interviewing on February 11 at Summer Placement Office. ........3W'Gk .t M.t+... kmJ {:.. n'"... is....«".....tiY :v- .w .+. r THURSDAY 12:00 NOON (Rm. No. 2, South Side Basemen THIS WEEK: "WOMENS LIBERATION AS THE UNIVERSIT Free and Open to Ev Bring your lunch; Buy your lunch; or OFFICE OF STUDEN OFFICE OF R MICHIGAN UNION t Cafeteria) SSUE4s IT AFFECTS lY" 'eryone r just come talk IT ORGANIZATIONS, 1011 S.A.B. RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS, 2282 S.A.B. o.°r{:?/. fi::: 'A' T."Y :AWAVt-.AS'AV:.AS y=:'{". Wr .:rY:","",y; :.r:. W 3YS"P;W"WAAAAAVVAA 'x, *. : ~v..:tiAVA.A±,J~flA.AA....t : $:..+.. :e !. i,". t.avAVAVA. A.:D v " %. v"t. i:'~.; Professional Standings NBA East Division W L6Pct. GB! New York 49 12 .803 - Milwaukee 42 19 .689 --7 Baltimore 37 23 .617 11Y Philadelphia 31 30 .508 18 Boston 25 34 .424 23 Cincinnati 27 37 .422 23% Detroit 23 39 .371 26% - West Division Atlanta 35 27 .565 - Los Angeles 32 27 .542 1 Phoenix 29 33 .467 6 Chicago 27 36 .429 8/ San Francisco 25 34 .424 8% Seattle 24 37 .393 10% San Diego 19 37 .339 13 Yesterday's Results Cincinnati 117, Detroit 115 Milwaukee 139, Philadelphia 131 Phoenix 122, Boston 117 Baltimore at Los Angeles, inc. Atlanta vs. San Francisco at Oakland, inc. Today's Ganes Detroit vs. Cincinnati at Omaha Boston at New York' Phoenix at Milwaukee Atlanta at San Diego Los Angeles at San Francisco Baltimore at Seattle NHL East Division W L T Pt. GFGA New York 30 10 10 70 179 113 Boston 28 12 12 68 199 156 Montreal 28 12 12 68 177 Detroit 26 16 8 60 150 Chicago 25 18 7 57 153 Toronto 21 21 8 50 150 West Division St. Louis 24 19 7 55 150 Philadelphia 13 21 18 44 136 Pittsburgh 17 25 8 42 122 Oakland 14 30 8 36 112 Minnesota 10 25 15 35 142 Los Angeles 9 36 5 23 108 Yesterday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Games Toronto at Montreal Pittsburgh at Chicago Boston at St. Louis New York at Los Angeles Minnesota at Oakland ABA East Division W L Pct. G Indiana 41 12 .774 - Kentucky 30 22 .577 1 Carolina 24 28 .462 L New York 26 32 .448 1 Pittsburgh 19 33 .365 2 Miami 14 39 .264 2' West Division New Orleans 30 22 .577 - Denver 30 25 .545 Dallas 27 25 .519 Washington 27 26 .509 Los Angeles 24 27 .462 Yesterday's' Games Washington 137, Los Angeles 123 New Orleans 97, Carolina 84 13 133 115 149 122 157 162 172 175 194 r STUCK WITH AN APARTMENT TO SUBLET FOR THIS SUMMER? 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