Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 9, 1 Grapplers grind Georgia Tech, Wisconsin smashes Ohio State 77 -73 Eastern and Northern Iowa By The Associated Press Sophomore Clarence Sherrod, ranked Illinois bounced cold-,*- MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin's flashy ball-handling guard,hdaked Io98-69 yesterday in- Badgers, reduced to a spoiler role the well-balanced Badger attack a Big Ten Conference basketball By ERIC SIEGEL wrestling at heavyweight, register- a tough boy and to beat a tough in the Big Ten basketball race, with 18 points. Wisconsin's scoring game. ed a fall over Phil DeBerry with boy you've got to be at your best" I dealt Ohio State's title hopes a leader, James Johnson, had 15, The Illinois defense headed by The Wolverine grapplers invad- three seconds remaining in the But despite the drubbings the serious blow yesterday with a and Burington 14. Greg Jackson, stifled the Hawk- d psanti yesterday aferon second period. Wolverines gave their opponants 7h3 viaers' victoryOdroppedw hio State's Dave Sorenson, eyes under the boards. but the Bowen Field House But even when they didn't have EMUs Coach Russ Bush was not Ohio State to a 4-2 conference 24.5 averedathelgame2witsa The game was all er it bleachers as they white-washed their shoulders on the mats, the visibly impressed. record and sent most of the more 24.5 aerage wa held to 12 pon h e ame Ill but oe t Yelo aces ferd itl n Teyr gad"obeve usby the sticky Wisconsin defense. hltm fe lir~i oldit Georgia T e c h 33-0, whipped Yellow Jackets offered little in "They're good," observed Bush, than 11,000 fans home happy, in- His teammate, Jim Cleamons, was a 47-29 lead as owa hit only Northern Iowa 18-11, and walked the way 'of competition, as they who's team bowed to the Wolve- cluding some civil rights demon- high for tle game with 23. seven of 31 floor shots. The Hawk- Over Eastern Michigan 27-6, in were shut out in all b u t three rines 27-6, "but they're nothing strators who attempted to disrupt eyes, however, hit 15 of 18 free their third triple dual meet in matches. special. It's the weakest Michigan the game. Helmeted policemen patrolled throws. ther hid riledulheeoiwmtces four weeks. There were some new faces in team I've seen in a long time, The score was tied three times the game during the final min- The triple triumphs boosted the the Michigan line-up against They're no better than third in in the final four minutes until tes as many protestors joined in Illinois clicked off 20 out of 36 Wolverines' record to 12-1. Georgia Tech, notably Jim Hoddy the Big Ten." reserve guard Keith Burington put the cheers for the Badger upset. f r shots in the firt ackson bg "The competition was only av- at 123, Jay Kall at 145, and Wayne the Badgers ahead to stay with a ging 14 points. He had 20 for the STATISTItCS77 twisting layup, folowed by two iet a e erage,"'commented assistant Coach Wentz at 177. -STATISTICSWildcats tamed game. Rick Bay. "The basic'value of the "We wanted to use as many 1free throws,aking the scre 75- Reserve Denny Pace topped Illi- meets was conditioning. Wrest- men as possible," explained Bay. MICHIGAN 33, GEORGIA TECH ' Wisconsin's t was only the EVANSTON, IlL-Ninth-anked nois with 21 points, 15 in the sec- ling three matches back-to-back But the Wolverines *went with Wsns'svictory wa nytePurdue, behind Rick Mount's 31 ond half. Dave Scholts sat out or two out of three matches is "their best," in the words of Bay, 123-Hoddy (M) dec. speegle, 15-5 second in conference play for the points, remained undefeated inf eSco l a od conditioning for the tourna- in the bout against Northern 130-Hudson (M) pinned Asbury, 3:15 unpredictabl, Badgers. They have Big Ten basketball competition most of the second half as re- ents Bay added. Iowa, and for awhile it looked like 137-Henson (M), forfeit lost four Big Ten games, and have last night with a 97-84 victory ves took over and total only 10 ma eMichigan would need everything 145-Kall (M) dec. Goldstein, 9-2 an over all 8-9 record, including over Northwestern points. Illinois used 1players Mic2 gan s stiffest competion . h152-sanger (M) dec. Saville, 10-0I victories over Kansas, Kentucky. was against Northern Iowa, but it ad, 160-Reilly (M) dec. Harten, 7-0 and Marquette. Ohio State is 12-4 The visiting Boilermakers moved Iowa never came within' 15 even against the Panthers the fi- After Tim Cech decisioned Joe 167-Quinn (M) dec. Ward, 13-0 for the season to a 49-30 halftime lead and were nal score wasn't a true indication Wilson, 6-0, Lou Hudson lost a 177-Wentz (M) dec. Puryear, 7-1 u ' half. The Hawkeyes led 10-6 at of the Wolverines superiority. The close 5-4 decision to Mark Reil- I Hwt.--Rawls (M) pinned neBerry, 3:57 -wThe victory was the sixth the outset of the game. Two field score was 18-6 going into the final and. -The match see-sawed as straight in Big Ten play for Pur- goals by Jodie Harrison put Illi- match, which Michigan forfeited. Geoff Henson won his bout by a MICHIGAN 18, NORTHERN IOWA 11 % "4)" COdue, which now holds a two-game nois on top 12-11 and the draw- "We knew they (the Panthers) 3-2 score, and Mike Rubin dropped lead over Ohio State and Illinois. away started had fine heavyweight," explain- a hard-fought.5-4 decision to tie 123-Cech (M) dec. Wilson, 6-0 Herm Gilliam added 20 for Pur- yythe meet -at 6-a. 130-Reland(NI) dec. Hudson, 4 due while .Northwestern was top- GJohn Johnson with 139 points ed By"adwwolhaebe ±eme a.uLL13-esn()dcSohmn,3- op and Glenn Vidnovic with 18 head- giving away too much weight." But Wolverines Lane Headrick, 145-Neighbors (NI) dec. M. Rubin, 5-4 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ped by Don Adams with 20 points. ed the Hawks Chiin l Yil Td th dHa-warks.M et Y un xa..4,:...,, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -2Huson8 Teas.ri ..it .. . .n....,.,I(!a6ieRatl 'm L in n 12Harck()dr *ug - * n 2.TxsAlirn6 i i p A JIM MEREDITH (42) of Washington State steals the ball from Steve Patterson of UCLA in yesterdays game. The Bruins over- power.ed their way to a 108-80 victory to continue this years un- beaten string. Michigan, who h a s no regular heavyweight, used Jesse Rawls in that slot in their other two bouts. But the. Wolverines didn't give anything away in their first bout against Georgia Tech, as the Yel- low Jackets spent most of their time trying to keep their should- ers off the mats. They weren't always successful, though, as Lou Hudson pinned his man at 3:15 to give the Wolver- ines an 8-0 lead after the first two bouts,- and'I Jesse Rawls, aaries newy, .orwumnn ana Pete Cornell blasted their Pan- thers in the successive bouts to take an 18-6 lead before the team forfeited the final match. Against Eastern, Cech dropped the opening match, 5-2, but Lou Hudson recorded his second fall of the afternoon at 5:40 to give the Wolverines a lead which they never relinquished. Commenting on Cech's loss, Bay said, "He's been ill and missed a lot of practice. He was wrestling .a iaaanti V . ~ a, J4 160-Reilly (M) dec. Guyer, 3-2 167-Quinn (M) dec. Bellock, 5-0 177-Cornell (M) dec. Masher, 8-0 IHwt..-Osboe (NI), forfeit MICHIGAN 27, EASTERN MICHIGAN 6 123-Yamamoto (E) dec. Cech, 5-2 130-Hudson (M) pinned Al-Jumelli, 5:40 137-Henson (M), forfeit 144-Viverette (E) dec. M. Rubin, 3-2 35--Sanger (M) dec. Ash, 4-2 160-Reilly (M) dec. Cox, 2-0; 167-Quinn (M) dec. Weede, 10-0 177-Cornell (M) pinned Thomas, 5:48 Hwt.-Rawls (M) dec. Christmas, 17-4 li ii lll'I i ......._........... _. __ - E r ... .,_.._3 II 'SUMMER LUES FESTIVAL NOW INTERVIEWING FOR CENTRAL COMMITTEE Georgia 90, Vanderbilt 83 Missouri 73, Oklahoma State 52 New Mexico 79 Arizona 74 Valdosta State 95, La Grange College 84 Auburn 81, Florida 80 (overtime) Marquette 82, Eastern Michigan 58 Louisville 78, North Texas 75 Boston College 105, Fordham 70 North Carolina 100 Florida State 82 North Carolina State 66, Virginia 62 South Carolina 82, Dluke 62 New Mexico State 63, Northern Illinois 59 Penn State 61, Navy 57, Texas A&M 90, Rice 82 Niagara 78 Providence 55 Tulsa 94, Bradley 80 Illinois 98, Iowa 69 Wake Forest 79, Virginia 'Tech ,1 St. John's, N.Y. 65, Army 43 Tennessee 80 Mississippi State 50 Lamar Tech 93, Trinith 92 (overtime) Minnesota 89, Indiana 83 Notre Dame 79, Detroit 72 Purdue 97, Northwestern 84 Wisconsin 77, Ohio State 73 Kent State 78 Marshall 61 Fairmont 77, Glenville 59 Kansas 66, Oklahoma 59 (overtime) St. Joseph's, Pa. 92, Hofstra 78 Princeton 67, Cornell 57 Yale 54 Dartmouth 51 Western Michigan 97, Ohio U. 89 Harvard 76, Brown 63 Creighton 103, Portland 66 LSU 81, Alabama 75 LaSalle 74, Villanova 67 PRO HOCKEY Los Angeles 4 Pittsburgh 2 Dtot3, Chicago 1 Moreal 6, MInnesota 3 Ladies' and' Children's Hairstyling a Specialty . Appointments if needed * Open 6 days * No Waiting DASCOLA BARBERS Maple Village or Campus Gophers growl SETS NEW RECORD: BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Minne- sota's Al Nuness hit eight points in the closing minutes to cut off a II late Indiana rally and give the CLA clobb r WS Gophers a 89-83 Big Ten basket- ball victory yesterday afternoon, Minnesota led by 14 early in LOS ANGELES - The unde- Jeff Hogan's three goals enab- the second half but the Hoosiers feated top-rated UCLA Bruins ex- led the Seminoies to ially and tie whittled the margin to 83-81 with ploded to a 108-80 Pacific-8 Con- the score at 23-all midway. in the less than two minutes remaining: ference basketball victory over the first half. But then the T a r ' Nuness then swished his second Washington State Cougars yester- Heels outscored FSU 13-2 over straight 20-footer and followed day. the next six minutes. with another field goal and two The Bruin's offense was led by Charlie Scott scored 23 points, free throws before Indiana could John Vallely with 3 points, Lynn Bill Bunting 22 and Rusty Clark score a layup with five seconds Shackelford with 15 and Curtis 13 for North Carolina. remaining. Rowe and Kenny Heitz with 14 . The Tr Heels took their 17th Indiana's Kenny Johnson had;apiece victory of the season against a 25 of his game-high 30 points in' single defeat. the second half. Joe Cooke scored Ted Wireman and Ritk Erick- Florida State's Dave Cowens ledI 23 for the Hoosiers. Nuness was son led Washington State with 17 the Seminoles with 14. high for the Gophers with 23 fol- and 13 points respectively.* * lowed by Leroy Gardner's 20. The Cougars were deadlocked Kentucky clobbers Minnesota and Indiana now with UCLA at 14-14 after five have identical 3-4 records in con- minutes of play. But Washington LEXINGTON, Ky. - Fourth- ference play. State's zone defense couldn't stop UT,108=80 ranked Kentucky overcame a shaky start and overpowered Mis- sissippi 104-68 last night. The victory was Kentucky's.10th #!without a. loss in Southeastern Conference play. Kentucky pulled away from an 11;-1 tie with 14:35 left and the game soon was out of reach. At halftime it was 46-30. Dan ssel led Kentucky with 26 [points while Mike Pratt had 22, Mike Casey 18 and Phil Argento Ken Turner had the hot hand for Mississippi with 25 points. b * Illinois kills CHAMPAIGN, Ill, - Te the Bruins. Shackelford and Vallely led a nth- Bruin surge while the Cougars were more than seveni minutes without a field goal to give UCLA .40-22 lead. Kantsa 'srei g Wolverines By KEITH WOOD . Special to the Daily Big Ten Standings ASSISTANT CHAIRMAN SECRETARY TREASURER PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN w& ENTERTAINMENT CHAIRMAN sign up for interview at UAC offices 3rd floor League by Saturday, Feb. 15th Purdue Illinois Ohio State Iowa MICHIGAN Indiana Mich. State Minnesota Newstrn. Wisconsin W L G0 4 3 4 2 3 3 3 4 3 4 3 4 3 4 .2 5 2 5 " Pet. 1.000 .667 .667 .500 .429 .429 .429 .429 .286 .286 GB 2 2 3 312 3'A 3'I 312 4'1> 41 . Tar Heels stick FSU GREENSBORO, N.C. - North 'arolina's second-ranked T ar Heels exploded late in the first half and went on to defeat Flor- ida State 100-82 before a sellout crowd of 8,743 on the neutral Greensboro Coliseum Court I a s t night. E i j MASS MEETING FOR ORGANIZERS TUES., FEB. 11, 8 P.M., DINING ROOM 4, S. QUAD, 600 E. MADISON. RENT STRIKE. ALL TENANTS ARE URGED' TENANTS UNION-763-31 ENDORSED BY: LAWYER'S CLUB BOARD OF DIRECTORS STUDENT GOV. COUNCIL GRAD ASSEMBLY ENGINEERING COUNCIL CITIZENS FOR NEW POLITICS NEW DEMOCRATIC COALITION LAWYER'S GUILD BLACK LAW STUDENTS' ALLIANCE TO STRIKE AND JOIN THE 02, 1532 SAB RADICAL CAUCUS SOCIAL WORK STUDENT UNION NEW UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE LAW STUDENTS CVIL RIGHTS RESEARCH COMMITTEE YOUNG DEMOCRATS STUDENT HOUSING ADVISORY BOARD NORTHWOOD-TERRACE ASSOC. PANHEL EAST LANSING - A new world's record highlighted the 46th annual Michigan State re- lays last night. Before 5600 fans Bill Wehrwein of Michigan State set a new American indoor record in the 600-yard run with a time of 1:09.0. clipping .2 of a second off the old record. Since the event is not run outdoors Wehr time is effectively a new world's record. In all, five meet records were set with Kansas setting three of them. The Kansas distance med- ley relay team set a new meet and new fieldhouse record with a tie of 9:49.8. Michigan finished fifth in 10:03.4. Roger Kathol of Kansas trim- med seconds off the old record in. the 1000 yard run with a 2:10.4. Steve Wilhelm of Kansas com- pletely demolished the shot-put record with a toss of 62'7". The old mark was 60'13/%". Teammate Karl Salb tossed the shot a dis- tance of 62.3 and finished second. Kansas dominated the meet taking 6 firsts in the 20 events meet. Jim Ryun won the mile in 4:06.2. He played follow the lead- er until the last lap and then passed the leaders as if they were standing still. Ryun eventually won by about, 30 yards. Michigan was very impressive, especially in-"the field events. Ira Russell place fourth in the long jump laping a distance of 238'2". Ron Shortt placed fifth in the ns in relays; tmp ressize pole vault with a vault of 15'6". Gary Knickerbocker took a 'first place inzthe high jump leaping 6'8". the Wolverines 1-2 finish in the triple jump with Warren Bechard taking first and Bob Wedge taking second. Bechard's winning distance was 47'3". Larry Midlam took another first for Michigan in the 70 yard high hurdles, nosing out Kansas' Bob Byers by a tenth of a se- cond in :08.5. -tech do wn'Ic -= The Michigan Icers came closer to victory over Michigan Tech in the second game of that series Saturday, but were still thwarted, 3-2. Tech opened the scoring in the first period as Heines beat Wol- verine goalie Jim Keough 'at the 12:02 mark. With one second re- maining in that period, however, Michigan countered the Tech j edge -as Doug Galbraith scored a power-play goal Michigan added to their pro- duction in the second period at Barney Pashak bulged the Tech net at the 18:20 mark. 0 *1 The Wolverine lead was lived, however, as the Tech scored twice in the closing utes of the third period on; from Moffat and Desjard. short Icers min- goals The Jewish Community Centers of Chicago Offer Summer Employment Opportunities in Social Work Oriented DAY and COUNTRY CAMPS DAY CAMPS-located throughout Chicago POSITIONS: Counselors-Male' only Specialists Supervisory Staff CAMP CHI-located 50 miles North of Madison and the University, of Wisconsin POSITIONS: Counselors-Male -Female (must be Juniors or over) SUPERVISORY STAFF SPECIALISTS Waterfront Campcraft Arts & Crafts DRIVERS NURSES COOKS ,1 iii-_ll_ ,: _