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February 15, 1959 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1959-02-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, FEE AI

THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. FI~RR11A

II

FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO.

ils U

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Past

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Telephone NO 8-8014

We Have All Kindsof Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops
We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints'
Also, we have complete glass service for foreign cars.

Spartans Set New Record
With Easy 103-91 Victory
(Continued from Page 1) 1

Green's Basketball Feats
Please State Crowd, Coach

Free Parking in Front of Our Store

WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 73 YEARS

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ter, picked off 21 caroms to show
why he's' leading the Big Ten in
that department. Michigan's M. C.
Burton, Michigan's runner-up un-
til game' time, grabbed 13.
It was a well-balanced scoring
effort by the Spartans that downed
the Wolverines. Pacing the attack,
to the surprise of no one, was
senior co-captain Bob Anderegg
and Green. The former hit on
every variety of shot to reach his
26-point total, while Green faked,
drove and leaped his way to two
less.
More than able supporting roles
were played by Horace Walker and
Lance Olson, who notched 19 and
15 respectively.
Tidwell Stars
Individually for Michigan, it was
a case of the bitter with the sweet.
John Tidwell, who in previous
games had been suffering both
physically and in the point column
from a bruised leg, appeared to
shake off its effects and led all
players with 27 points.
George Lee and Burton almost
duplicated the production of 22
and 10 points they turned in
against MSU in last year's 79-69
loss. Lee dropped in 21 markers
last night, including nine in the
first five minutes, while Burton,
MICHIGAN G F P T
Burton, f......4 3-6 3 11
Lee, f ........ 9 3-4 4 21
Farris, c ..... 2 2-2 5 6
Miller, g ..... 4 0-3 1 8
Tidwell, g ....11 5-7 1 27
Rogers, c ..... 0 0-0 1 0
Robins,g . ... 0 0-0 0 0
Donley,. f.....4 0-0 2 8
Kane, f .......4 2-2 1 10
TOTALS ...38 15-24 18 91
MICH.ST. G F P T
Anderegg, f ..11 4-6 4 26
Walker, f .... 7 5-7 3 19
Green, a .....10 4-7 2 24
Olson, g ..... 7 1-1 4 15
Randg ...... 4 1-1 0 9
Fahs, g ......2 0-2 1 4
Stouffer, g ... 0 0-0 4 0
Gowens, f .... 3 0-1 1 6
TOTALS . . .44 15-25 19 103
Halftime: MSU 47, Michigan 40
Tops in Collegiate
HAIRSTYLING
Tonsorial Queries Invited
The Dascola Barbers
Near Michigan Theater

who appeared to be jinxed by the
Spartans, could hit for only 11.
He had been leading the Confer-
ence with a 24.1 average.
Lee, Burton Slowed
The Wolverine co-captain left
the game for good with seven
minutes remaining after the Spar-
tans had built up an insurmount-
able 85-64 margin. Lee was handi-
capped with four fouls after only
15 minutes had elapsed in the
first half. Burton too, was slowed
down when hesuffered a wrenched
foot just before he left the game.
Heartening to Michigan fans
who like to look into the future
was the play of Lee's and Burton's
substitutes, sophomores Gary Kane
and Rich Donley. With a mini-
mum of varsity experience, the two
tall reserves scored 10 and eight
points respectively in the seven
minutes they played.
Both teams were exceptional
from the floor, State making 45
per cent of its shots while Michi-
gan hit 43 per cent.

JOHN TIDWELL
... points, no victory

By JIM ENAGUH
Special to The Daily
EAST LANSING - Michigan
State's "Jumping Johnny" Green,
a burly 200-pounder, who learned
his basketball in back alleys in-
stead of on high school tourna-
ment floors, showed some 12,500
fans here last night why he's the
"best all-around player" his coach,
Forddy Anderson, ever had.
Green scored 24 points--many
on tip-ins-and pulled down 21
rebounds to win a battle with
Michigan's M. C. Burton, the Big
Ten's leading scorer and rebound-
er going into the contest.
Hard Worker
But despite his heroics as the
MSU leader this year, Green re-
mains a modest, untiring worker
who would rather praise his op-
ponent than talk about himself.
In the locker room after the game,
he quietly tried to shy away from
reporters and autograph-seekers
as his teammates concerned them-
selves with tomorrow night's cru-
cial game, yelling "Northwestern
next, babyI" and "Let's get those
'Cats!'"
"I first played in the alleys and
places like that when I was 10,"
the former Dayton resident sad,
"but I never got a chance to play
high school ball.
"I tried out my sophomore year,
but all those guys had been play-
ing together, so I couldn't see
much future, and quit."
Begins To Develop
After that, his playing was con-
fined to church leagues until he
went into the service. It was there
that he began todevelop.
"Since. then, he's just kept on
progressing amazingly," Anderson
Said. "He's just beginning to reach
his peak now."~
Green said he would like to play
professional basketball for two or
three years, and-later go into busi-
ness. The Detroit Pistons have ter-
ritorial rights on him.
Good Shot, Too
Far improved from the high-

jumping sophomore who confined
himself mostly to rebounding,
Green is now a good outside shoot-
er even though he does not get
too many chances.
He hit a couple of long shots
against Michigan and his fine 47
per cent (10 of 21) field goal per-
centage was brought down by dif-
ficult tip-in attempts.
Undoubtedly he is the biggest
crowd-pleaser State has ever had.
NRO ..TC Cage
'T eam.Loses
Michigan's Naval ROTC bas-
ketball team was eliminated from
the national NROTC tournament
by Ohio State, 70-65 in overtime,
at the I-M Building yesterday.
Michigan made only one of four
free throw attempts in the last 20
seconds of regulation, but the one
enabled Michigan to get a 61-61
tie. Ohio State dominated in the
overtime to win the area playoff.
John Walker paced Michigan with
25 points. Ohio State moves on to
the Ninth Naval District playoff
at Northwestern next week.
I-M SCORES
RESIDENCE HALL "A"
Alen-Rumsey 33, Chicago 22
Cooley 43, Taylor 31
Williams 57, Huber 29
Lloyd 59, Scott 24
Gomberg 30, Van Tyne 28 (overtime)
Hinsdale 29, Winchell 14
Reeves 39, Hayden 35
' RESIDENCE HALL "B"
Allen-Rumsey 29, Kelsey 23
Llo5'd 29, Cooley 23
Scott 28, Hayden 25
Greene 24, Wenley 18
Michigan 24, Gomberg 21
Williams 21, Chicago 20,
Reeves 43, Winchell 25
Van Tyne 30, Strauss It
FRATERNITY "A"
Alpha Epsilon Pi 18, Phi Kappa Sigma
15
Delta Upsilon over Lambda Chi Alpha.
forfeit
Theta Delta Chi over Triangle, forft
Alpha Phi Alpha over Phi Epsilon Pi,
forfeit

i,

Purdue,Indiana. Win,
Keep Title Hopes A live

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SH U LTON New York * Toronto

By The Associated Press
EVANSTON-Jake Eison's bas-
ket in the final second of overtime
carried Purdue to a 65-63 uphill
victory over Northwestern yester-
day to keep -alive Boilermaker
hopes in the Big Ten cage race.
The Wildcats led throughout
most of the first 40 minutes, but
Purdue managed a 57-57 tie at
the end of regulation play. Eison
scored 16 points and Willie Mer-
riweather 26 for Purdue, Joe Ruk-
lick 17 and Willie Jones 16 for
Northwestern.
MINNEAPOLIS - Huge Walt
Bellamy drove Indiana to a 62-57
victory over Minnesota last night
and kept the Hoosiers in hot pur-
suit of Michigan State in the Big
Ten basketball race.
The 6'11" sophomore pitched in
13 second-half points to rescue
Indiana from a shaky start. The
Hoosiers trailed, 26-23, at half-
time, after seeing their fast break
boomerang repeatedly in the face
of mechanical errors.
MADISON--Iowa cut off a de-
termined second-half bid by Wis-
consin last night to defeat the
Badgers, 94-84, in a Big Ten bas-
ketball game.

Michig
IndiaH
Purdue
Iowa
MICH)

BIG TEN STANDINGS
W L
gan State 7 2
ia 6 3
xe 5 4
5 4
IGAN 44

Minnesota
Northwestern
Ohio State
Illinois
Wisconsin

4 5
4 5
4 5
4 5
1 7

The Hawkeyes took command
midway in the first half, but were
hard-pressed by the Badgers all
the way. Dave Gunther led Iowa
with 23 points, but Jim Biggs of
Wisconsin scored 29 and Rick Mur-
ray 24.

Pet.
.778
.667
.556
.556
.500
.444
.444
.444
.444
.125

320 South State

NO 3-1991

THE QUARRY

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SHULTON PRODUCTS

LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS
Michigan State 103, Michigan 91
Indiana 62, Minnesota 57
Purdue 65 Northwestern 63 (ovt.)
Iowa 94, Wisconsin 84
Co1ege Soe
COLLEGE "SCORES
N. Carolina State 53, Maryland 37
Southern Methodist 60, Rice 57
NYU 80, Army 66
N. Carolina 76, Loyola (Chi.) 57
LaSalle 72, Duquesne 65
St. Bonaventure 85, Detroit 64
Kansas State 60, Oklahoma State 49
West Virginia 64, Richmond 62
Oklahoma 65, Iowa State 50
Baylor 60, Texas 58
Louisville 68, Marquette 55
Kansas 63, Nebraska 55
St. Louis 64, Drake 46
Vanderbilt 76, Tennessee 60
Texas Christian 76, Arkansas 71
Kentucky 71, Notre Dame 52
Duke 64, Navy'63
COLLEGE HOCKEY

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