SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5,;1969 THE M A .AUTG A 1N ZDA A N.V Ina 04 im O"'WilmLy SUNDAY -j , DECMBE 5,1L' T 1111VII1VAHT UbATE PAGE SE~VE1N J " M' Routs Outclassed Falcons (Continued from Page 1) lastic over the defensive play of his boys. "We set out to do two things: we wanted to run and we wanted to dominate them defen- sively. They kept the pressure on Bowling Green right to the end when the defense got a little lethargic." One other interesting facet of the contest was Michigan's ex- cellent passing which apparently is being motivated by Russell. The new trend in super stars is to be unselfish and not score so many points yourself. Jerry Lucas said he liked pass- ing more than scoring, and Bill Bradley gave his sub-peer group plenty of chances to prevent him from being a one man show. Cazzie Dazzling Yesterday, Cazzie, who passes fancier than either of those two, was more impressive throwing the ball than shooting it. His team- mates decided to do the same thing, and for a while it looked as though Russell and Dill were hav- ing a contest to see who could make the best assist. Cazzie might have won the bat- tle on one play with four minutes left in the first half. He grabbed a defensive rebound and began dribbling down court despite hounding from the Falcons: With a touch of Carl Ward he changed directions three times and finally headed for the left corner. Suddenly he sent a pass to Dill who was open under the basket. Craig's deft underhand flip with his back to the basket added two more points to the Michigan side of the scoreboard. Indian Imitations But the outstanding Cazzism was breaking up a BG two-on-one fast break. Russell, the one, stood on the free throw line and looked like he was doing a tribal war dance while standing barefoot on a bed of hot coals. The Falcon players, apparently fearing the All-American had suddenly cracked from the pub- licity, refused to come near him. Instead they took their chances on a long jump shot which missed. "Cazzie is the greatest," Scholler said bluntly. Russell's feats, which are rap- idly becoming a local unit of meas- ure, will be on display again to- morrow night wlen the Wolver- ines host Ball State at 8 p.m. This will be the last home game of the semester and could be another good chance for the fans with a killer instinct to whoop it up. Bowling 'Em Over MICHIGAN You can sell all of your TEXTBOOKS for CASH anytime at State St. at North University -Daily-::Kamalakar Rao AND HE'S NOT BAD ON defense either! Here Craig Dill moves with Bowling Green's Nick Aloi, bending his giant frame in order to keep on the level with Aloi. Dill sizzled yesterday, dropping in 21 points on nine field goals and three free throws, not to mention nine rebounds., Darden Clawson bill Russell Thompson Myers Banke Pitts Tillotson Dezer Brown Slebondnik Totals BO' Mimms Piatkowski Dixon Aloi Hendrix Rincells Hodak Van Poppel Behm Williams Rose Rychener Totals G F R P T 5-9 0-1 8 5 10 8-12 6-7 10 1 22 9-14 3-5 9 1 21 9-16 4-7 11 2 22 3-14 0-0 3 1 6 3-7 0-0 9 3 6 3-5 0-0 2 0 6 1-3 2-6 2 1 4 2-5 0-1 5 0 4 1-2 0-0 1 0 2 2-5 1-2 3 3 5 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 46-92 16-29 70 17 108 OWLING GREEN G F R 6-16 0-2 9 10-29 4-6 9 3-9 1-2 11 1-9 2-2 9 2-3 2-2 6 0-3 0-0 0 2-4 3-5 3 4-11 0-0 4 0-1 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 1-1 0-0 0 29-86 12-19 53 PT 3 12 5 24 2 7 3 4 0 6 1 0 4 7 3 S 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 23 70 -Daily-Jim Lines EVEN IF YOU'RE "ONLY" 6'7", you can still do it, as Oliver Darden shows Craig Dill (6'10") and Al Dixon (6'9"). But the Wolverines had more than just "stuff" yesterday. They hit on 46 field goals and 16 free throws, in stomping Bowling Green 108-70. ONE MORE GAME Six Michigan Gridders To Play in Holiday Tilts OUR MICHIGAN 58 50-108 BOWLING GREEN 32 38- 70 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BOB McFARLAND INSTANT M L NE S yours with YELLO- BOLE Six of Michigan's senior football players will have another oppor- tunity to play on the gridiron as amateurs before turning pro. Tom Mack, Bill Yearby, Wally Gabler, Charlie Kines, S t e v e Smith, and Tom Cecchini have been invited to play in post-sea- son classics during the holidays. Mack and Yearby, tackles signed by the Los Angeles Rams and the New York Jets, respectively, will represent the Wolverines in the East-West Shrine game on Dec. 31 in San Francisco. From San Francisco, Mack will travel to Hawaii to participate in the Hula Bowl. Meanwhile, the team's leading scorer, quarterback Gabler and tackle Kines, drafted by the Chi- cago Bears, will wear the colors of the North in the Blue-Gray game at Montgomery, Ala., on Christmas Day. Also on Christmas Day, team captain Cecchini and end Smith, drafted by Houston and San Fran- cisco, will play for the Yanks in the annual North-South encounter at Miami, Fla. Three of the six, Mack, Yearby and Cecchini, were listed on the Big Ten All-Star team this year after three years on the Wolverine varsity. HERRINGBONE CHESTERFIELD FUNCTIONS BOTH AS TOPCOAT AND OVERCOAT Our good-looking Chesterfield coat has a self-fabric liner to be zipped out in milder weather. Meticu- lously tailored to our exacting specifications on our own trim, shaped model, it is cut to the slightly shorter length currently favored by college men. In two-tone grey or a charcoal-and-olive wool herring- bone, it is available in 38-42 short, 36-44 regular, 38-44 long, 40-42 extra-long sizes, $85. 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