THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 19, 1970 1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 191 1970 r r I i Iowa eyes Big Ten cage crown 4 By AL SHACKELFORD The Iowa Hawkeyes are charg- ing toward their f i r s t outright Big Ten championship since 1956, with only the Rick Mount-ed Pur- due Boilermakers left in serious contention. The two contenders p 1 a y at Purdue February 28 in a game which might very well decide who represents the Big Ten in t h e NCAA championships. An earlier meeting between the two January 3 resulted in a 94-88 win for the Hawkeyes despite a big 53 point night by Mount. The game will mean nothing, however, if Iowa continues to beat everybody in sight. Their 9-0 mark gives them a two game lead on 7-2 Purdue as both teams head into their final five games of the sea- son. Iowa gets Ohio State and Northwestern at home and travels to Purdue, Ohio State and North- western; Purdue faces Iowa and Minnesota at home and p 1 a y s away games at Illinois, Minnesota and Michigan State. Iowa seems to have a decided edge over Purdue in personnel be- cause of its great balance: John Johnson, Fred Brown, Chad Cal- abria and Glenn Vidnovic are all among the top twelve scorers in the conference. The t e a m has been topping 100 with regularity lately and hit a season-high of 119 in its recent victory over Wiscon- sin. Add tough Boardmen Dick Jen- sen and Ben McGilmer to the al- ready potent Hawkeye roster and you can see why Iowa is the lead- ing contender for the Big Ten title. They have good height, the fine shooting to provide f o r a high-powered offense, and that 9-0 record. All these factors make a Hawkeye title likely. Rick Mount, the one-man team and premier Big Ten gunner, probably won't be enough to pull Purdue even with Iowa unless he gets more help from the other Boilermakers. Great as Mount is, he cannot dominate a game like a Lou Alcindor or a Pete Maravich. That Purdue might be getting together as a team, however, was demonstrated in extraordinary 4). The Gophers continue to bur- row through their opposition and have three fine stars in guards Ollie Shannon and Eric Hall and center Larry Mikan. Michigan fans will have the opportunity to see Minnesota's exciting brand of basketball Saturday at the Events fashion last Saturday when they Building as the Gophers invade walked over early-season leader the d e n of the lately-dormant Illinois 83-49; it was a game which Wolverine. must have surprised the hell out of both schools. The Illini came out with a Lilliputian lineup (even# star center Greg Jackson was onI the bench) and, after slowing the game down and staying even for a while, soon fell far behind and never came back. Purdue's awesome victory can- not be completely credited to the dubious strategy of Illinois' coach Harv Schultz; t h e Boilermakers played a fine team g a m e and needed only 28 points from Mount. The always uninteresting battle for the lower positions in t h e standing is being waged by Min- nesota (6-3), Ohio State (6-3), Illinois (5-4), and Wisconsin (5- ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE? ENGINEERING? LABORATORY AND THERAPY? CONSERVATION? INFORMATION SERVICES? ADMINISTRATION? SOCIAL SERVICES? Consult Our Representative at Campus Plate- ment Office on Feb. 26. 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The Bucks have been shooting over sixty per cent from the floor in some games this year and are usually well over fifty. This exceptional shooting should get them third in the Big Ten, If the Wolverines can rip Minnesota Saturday. Illinois, fading fast and an 83- 81 loser to Iowa Tuesday night, and Wisconsin, improving as the season goes on, could give OSU and Minnesota a tussle for third. As for Michigan and the rest of the league, there is little to cele- brate about. The Wolverines are mired in seventh place, just ahead of Michigan State. Who can re- member a worse y e a r for the state's two major college teams? Michigan has Rudy Tomjano- vich, MSU Ralph Simpson, North- western Dale Kelley, and Indiana Ken Johnson and Jim Harris, so, the game with the lower Big Ten teams is just watch the stars and wait for next year. II qI } k{. ;ii:{;?iii:?fi:: ;i:si HARKEN CAMPUS LADIES THE LAW CLUB Requests Your Presence at fife -n ' A Olde Fasioned Ice Cream Mixer" THURS.-FEB. 19 9-11:30 P.M. LAW CLUB LOUNGE Music by tFe Fnky Turkey k?2+ ?::\. . . '.. . . .. +x'5.. . { .. 'f'"".+?? Ys.. . . , .'Y . ........., S.. ..'.!". ::.;X:............" r................. ..1... ......... ;< r I t I >;> r ; ;s; ; r 1 > E'? s :r tii?.: G ,.. ii hiS... o....< 73 Shula resigns as Colt's coach, Takes position with Dolphins By The Associated Press * BALTIMORE - The Baltimore Colts announced last night "with deep regret" the resignation of head coach Don Shula to become part owner, vice-president and head coach of the Miami Dolphins replacing George Wilson who was fired earlier in the day. A spokesman for the Baltimore team gave no indication who Shula's successor will be, but said he hoped "to be able to announce Don's successor at an early date." Shula said "the availability of immediate and substantial interest in the Miami Dolphin football team" prompted his decision to leave the Colts. He said his seven years with the Baltimore team were happy ones, although there were "a few bitter defeats" as well as "some great victories and some great moments." Shula said his move to the Dolphins "is a tremendous oppor- tunity for me to continue to coach and also to become active in ownership-something I've always wanted to do." Shula, 40, posted a 71-23-4 record in a seven-year career with' the Colts, being named National Football League coach of the year three times. Wilson, hired when the Dolphins came into evistence in 1966, had a 15-39-2 record and was 3-10-1 in 1969. * *- * ~* $ CLEVELAND-Gary-haired Don Miller, last of Notre Dame's famed Four Horsemen to be enshrined in football's Hall of Fame, pro- nounced himself "tickled" and "just delighted" after the announce- ment yesterday. Miller, who averaged more than six yards per carry in three seasons as coach Knute Rockne's workhorse right halfback during the 1920s. was among eight former college stars named to The Hall. -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Iowa cagers in action 10 0I By RICKEY CORNFELD Although the Wolverine base- ball team has been practicing for two weeks - pitchers and catch- ers have been working out for a month - the situation on the team is anything but definite. Seven positions are up for grabs, according to Moby Bene- dict, coach of the team. Only the catching positionhas been nailed down. Tom Lunstedt, called a 'very fine ball player" by Benedict, will be the starting catcher. Benedict believes that the new freshman eligibility rule will be a definite help to the team. There are no seniors and only six jun- iors on the 31-man roster. The pitching situation is al- most as indefinite as that of the rest of the team. Jim Burton, a1 left-handed junior, will be a sure starter. After Burton, possible starters are Peter Helt, a fresh- man lefty, and Gene Lanthorn, a sophomore right-hander. The freshman players to look for, and those Benedict is count- ing most on are pitchers Helt and right-hander Mickey Elwood, in- fielders Pat Sullivan and Jim Kocoloski and outfielder Tom Kettinger. "Conceivably five or six fresh- men could be of h e lp to the team," Benedict said. Benedict will look first, of course, at the juniors, infielders Mark Carrow and Mike Rafferty and outfielders Mike Bowen. Dan Fife will join the team af- ter the basketball season and will be used in the outfield or, maybe, on the mound. But nothing will be decided for sure until after the team travels to Arizona for the spring trip on March 2 1. Benedict wants to see how the players do in game con- ditions. During the trip the Wolverines play Arizona and Arizona State, two excellent teams which have the benefit of warm weather for Practice. Michigan has to practice in Yost Field House. "We won't be adequately pre- pared," admitted Benedict. "But I! don't care if we lose 10 games in a rowin Arizona; if we win the Big Ten. We're going down for the purpose of spring training. "But I don't minimize the im- portance of winning." And win-, ning is something Benedict is op- timistic about. "I'm looking forward to t h i s season more than any other," he said. "We've got young enthusias- tic kids, and they're talented too. "If things go right, we could walk off with everything." Billboard LACK EXPERIENCE IBatsmen face hopeful season MOM" The Quarry helps keep Ann Arbor eautiful There will be a fraternity swimming .and diving meet to-y night at 7:30 at Matt-Mann Pool. Yost Field House will be clos- ed to intramural participants Saturday, February 21 and Sun- day, February 22. 1V I '.9 I III I 4 ;l I While the supply lasts, Quarry offers Mohawk's exciting woodback boar bristle brush assortment for ladies and men. Contemporary brown American hardwood brushes tufted with stiff 100% white pure boar bristle in 3 of our most popular styles: Professional, half round, and club. Regularprice $.50 £1qnnf" I U - i 1