PAGE SMX THE MICHIGAN DAILY CTTRT"AAr TVIM' lTTA Dr t*A fn^^ PAGE SIX THE MICIJIGANI DAILY ~' Y!~TU~ A ~ ~ - ~ UA, FEBJPR 'ARY20, 1966 i Cagers' Victory Cushions Big Ten Lead Spartans Defeat Scrambles Race Four Wolverines Break 20-Point Mark By The Associated Press MADISON - Wisconsin edged second-place Michigan State 78-77 yesterday and dropped the Spar- tans two games behind front run- ning Michigan in the Big Ten basketball race. The Badgers, now 3-6 in the conference, iced it with free throws in the remaining minute after protecting a 44-41 halftime lead. The score was 76-75 with 14 seconds left when Ken Gustafson sank two free throws that put the Badgers out of reach. Stan Wash- ington hit a jump shot with four seconds to go for the Spartans to narrow the gap to a single point, but the clock ran out with Wiscon- sin in possession of the ball. Two reserves, Paul Morenz and Gymnasts Outmusele Minnesota By KEN ALLEN Michigan had trouble yesterday -trouble keeping the spectators from becoming bored. By posting a 191-174 victory the team man- aged to overcome the minor diffi- culty presented by Minnesota, and remain undefeated. The gymnasts started the rout with a one-two-three sweep of the floor exercise-Chip Fuller 9.3, Phip Fuller 9.25, Wayne Miller 9.15. From there it was all down- hill with Minnesota taking only one first place. Michigan on the other hand had a series of consistently superb performances highlighted by two double winners-Chip Fuller with a 9.3 in floor exercise and 9.4 in the vaulting event; and senior Rich Blanton with a 9.35 on the parallel bars and 9.4 on the rings. Beat State While Michigan was toying with Minnesota, Michigan State, cu- rently tied for first place with Michigan, was not idle. They took on Michigan's opponent of yester- day, Illinois, and bested them with a record Big Ten dual meet score of 192.85. This leads to specula- tion on the outcome of next Sat- urday's meet at East Lansing. Both Michigan and Michigan State are 6-0 in dual meet com- petition ,and their meeting next Saturday is the final encounter for both teams before the Big Ten championship meet. Michigan will go into the meet with the single goal of turning out one of their consistently high q u a 1i t y performances against Michigan State. The Spartans have been somewhat erratic as shown by their 178-point perform- ance against Iowa Friday. It should be a great meet. Minnesota Meet FLOOR EXERCISES --1. C. Fuller (M) 9.3; 2. P. Fuller (M); 3. Miller (M3; 4. Mondala (Minn); 5. Naftalin (Minn). SIDE HORSE-1. Hoecherl (Minn) 9.5; 2. Geddes (M); 3. Baessler (M); 4. Vanden Broek (M); 5. Noer (Minn). TRAMPOLINE-., Miller (M) 9.7; 2. Conant (M); 3. Cooley (M); 4. Davis (M); 5. Naftalin (Minn). HIGH BAR-1. Cashman (M) 9.3; 2. Arfstrong (Minn); 3. Vanden Broek (M); 4. Paris (M); 5. Welter (Minn)' VAULTING-1. C. Fuller (M) 9.4; 2. Miller (M); 3. P. Fuller (M); 4. Naftalin (Minn); 5. Nelson (Mnn). PARALLEL BARS - 1. Blanton (M) 9.35; 2. Hinrichs (Minn); 3. Vander Voort (M); 4. Williams (M); 5. Nelson (Minn). RINGS-i. Blanton (M) 9.4; 2. Chlvers (M); 3. Vander Voort (M); 4. Duke (M); 5. Armstronb (Minn). Illinois Meet FLOOR EXERCISE-1. C. Fuller (M) 9.35; 2. P. Fuller (M); 3. Shaw (Il); 4. Miller (M); 5. Bauer (Il). SIDE HORSE-1. Baessler (M) 9.45; 2. Geddes (M); 3. Silhan (Ill); 4. Eliason (11); 5. Broome (Ill). TRAMPOLINE-i. Miller (M) 9.7; 2. Rollo (Ill); 3. Shaw (Ill); 4. Con ant (M); 5. Brown (Ill). HIGH BAR-1. Silhan (Ill) 9.6; 2. Weber (I); 3. Brown (1Il); 4. VanderVoort (M); 5. Cashman (M). LONG HORSE-1. Shaw (Ill) 9.45; 2. Calhoun (Ill); 3. C. Fuller (M); 4. Miller (M); 5. P. Fuller (M). PARALLEL BARS-i1. Williams (M) 9.4; 2. VanderVoort (M); 3. Rollo (111); 4. Brown (111); 5. Duke (M)., RINGS-i. Blanton (M) 9.5; 2. Chilvers (M); 3. VanderVoort (M); 4. Silhan (11); 5. Duke (M). wanted PAID SUBJECTS with ACNE for study of treatment Involves treatment of one side of face for a 4-8 week period with the object of finding out how valuable several time-hon- ored treatments really are. If comparison shows treatment to be effective, we will then treat the other side and you will have Dave Roberts, provided the Badg- ers with the winning touch. Rob- erts collected 16 points. Morenz added 14. Washington was the game's top scorer with 28 points. Illini Best Gophers CHAMPAIGN - Don Freeman pumped in a career high of 37 points in pacing Illinois to a 100- 89 victory over Minnesota yester- day and kept the Illini's Big Ten basketball title chances alive. The Illini rallied from an early deficit to win. Coupled with Michigan State's 78-77 upset loss to Wisconsin, the triumph pulled the Illini into a second-place tie with the Spartans at 6-3 each. The defeat moved Minnesota, which had been tied with Illinois for third place, from contention with a 5-4 mark. Freeman, held scoreless in the first nine minutes, wound up with 14 field goals and nine free throws as he topped his previous varsity single game high of 35 points. Iowa Defeats OSU COLUMBUS - Denny Pauling dropped in six key points in the final 90 seconds yesterday as Iowa won a Big Ten road game for the first time this season by shading Ohio State 86-80. The Hawkeyes held a 64-52 ad- vantage with 12 minutes left. With leading scorer George Peeples on the bench with four personal fouls, Iowa went into a stalling game. ' The visitors never gave up the lead although Ohio State trailed 76-75 with 2:06 left. That's when Pauling registered two baskets and two free throws to preserve Iowa's victory. Wildcats Nip Hoosiers BLOOMINGTON - Substitute Jim Cummins stole the ball for a tie-breaking layup and then drop- ped two free throws to give North- western an 83-82 victory over In- diana yesterday. Indiana, led by Vern Payne with 31 points, outshot the Wildcats from the field, but Northwestern won on 21 of 26 free throws to Indiana's 6 of 11. Jim Burns led the Wildcats with 26 points. Northwestern came from 11 points behind at 30-19 to lead 49-46 at halftime, but Payne and Gary Grieger led the Hoosiers back to seven-point leads at 66-59 and 75-68. The Hoosiers went into a posses- sion game on a 79-74 lead with 3:27 to play. Northwestern caught up at 79-79 with 2:12 to play and set the stage for Cummins' last- minute scoring. (Continued from Page 1) points. In another span lasting less than a minute and a half, he added six more. After the game. it was easy to understand why Schellhase stated that RussellI must have had at least 40 points too. Chances are that the sell-out crowd will remember the Cazzie dunk that put Michigan over the 100 mark or the Cazzie assist on the preceding play when he did half a pirouette and shoveled the ball around his man to an open Oliver Darden. All one remembers about Schellhase's play is the number of points he accounted for. Of course, one of the primary reasons for the difference in point Russell did everything but hold totals is the difference in attempts. hands with Schellhase and when Russell took only 19 cracks at the the Purdue forward tried to break hoop while Schellhase tried 42 open, he looked like Ray Berry, times. running a down-and-out pattern. Full Speed Ahead "When anyone puts his nose in Purdue coach George King ex- your face, it bothers you," saidI plained that the high total was not normal. "A few games ago we House Reco Schellhase. Tomorrow, the Wolverines wili forsake the quest for new marks for the books as they travel to Iowa for a game that effects a much more important record - their Big Ten standing. rds 'Schelled' 4 4 1 1 I c t f S t I DAVE SCHELLHASE AT COLUMBUS: Tankers Survive OSU Storm By GRETCHEN TWIETMEYER Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Michigan's swim- ming hopes for a dazzling spec- tacle in their last dual meet of the seasonwere deflated like a punctured inner tube after yes- terday's contest with Ohio State. Though winning 65-58, and break- ing three Buckeye pool records, the meet was, as Bill Groft put it, "discouraging.". The Ohio State Natatorium, a pint-sized, echo-chambered version of Matt Mann Pool, reverberated with shouts of "Go Bucks," but the enthusiastic atmosphere failed to spark the Wolverines. Disbe- lief was the dominating emotion. "I sure didn't think they'd do that well-or us that lousy," said team captain Rich Walls. Fortune Tellers The first disappointment came with the loss of the first event and prognosticated a bad outcome for the meet. But Carl Robie and Bill Farley made the difference. "If it hadn't been for them," Coach Gus Stager commented grimly, "we'd have lost the whole meet." leers Salvage Robie took first in three events -the 200-yard butterfly, the 500- yard freestyle and the 1000-yard freestyle-setting pool records in: both freestyle events. Farley was second to Robie in the 500 and won the 200-yard freestyle. The Buckeyes soundly trounc-I ed Michigan in the diving events, with NAAU platform champ Chuck Knorr copping both wins and for- mer NCAA champ Randy Larson taking second and third at both one- and three-meters. Bruce Brown of Michigan placed second in the three-meter contest. Blind Umps However, some members of the team said they'd never seen worse judging in their lives. "Even Ron- ny's down on the judges," agreed diving coach Dick Kimball, refer- ring to OSU diving coach Ronald O'Brian. The diving events left Michi- gan behind by a sobering 14 points but from then on the gap slowly narrowed. After Robie's 200-yard butterfly, Bill Groft and Bog Hoag took first and third in the 100-yard free- style, repeating the pattern of 8-3 Victory Big Ten Standings 1 their 50-yard freestyle win. Thent Russ Kingery beat all-stroke ace Bob Hopper in the backstroke and Rees Orland took third, cuttingf Ohio's lead to three points. At this stage, there were onlyt three events left, and the tankers needed top honors in all three. Coming Through And they got them. Robie and Farley took one-two in the 500- yard freestyle, and Paul Scheerer won the breaststroke with John Vry holding third. In the last event, the 400-yard freestyle re-t lay, John Salassa, Rich Walls, Bill Groft and Bob Hoag clinched the meet by setting a pool record. But for all the fine finish, itI was a disappointed team that left the Ohio State Natatorium. "We didn't do anything we wanted to," commented Paul Scheerer. "We came in very confident and left very deflated," said Stager. Which means that the team just might be working very hard for the next two weeks before the Big Ten meet. 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY-1. OSU (Michaels, Deviamng, Fritz, Geig- er); 2. Michigan. Time-3:41.8. 1000-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Robie (M); 2. Donaldson (OSU); 3. Wil- liams (M). Time-10:33.5 (pool rec- ord). ONE-METER DIVING-1. Knorr (OSU); 2. B. Brown (M); 3. Larson (OSU). Points-317.4. 200-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Farley (M); 2. J. Betzhold (OSU); 3. Grelle (OSU). Time-i1:48.0, 50-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Groft (M); 2. B. Betzhold (OSU); 3. Hoag (M). Time-:22.2. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. Hopper (OSU); 2. Mathis (OSU); 3. Orland (M). Time-2:02.6. THREE-METER DIVING-1. Knorr (OSU); 2. Larson (OSU); 3. B. Brown (M). Points-351.3. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY - 1. Robie (M); 2. D. Gable (OSU); 3. T. Gable (OSU). Time-2:00.8. 100-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Groft (M); 2. Lakin (OSU); 3. Hoag (M). Time- :48.3. 200-YD. BACKSTROKE-1. King- ery (M); 2. Mathis (OSU); 3. Orland (M4). Time-2:02.7. 500-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Robie (M); 2. Farley (M); 3. Donaldson (OSU). Time-4:55.0 (pool record). 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE - 1. Scheerer (M); 2. DeVlaming (OSU); 3. Vry (M). Time-2:16.9. 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Michigan (Salassa, Walls, Groft, Hoag); 2. OSU. Time-3:12.8 (pool record). decided to switch to a slow, de-' liberate offense," he said. "Dave went right with us even though it might cost him the scoring title. Why one game he only had 15 shots! But once we were out of this game, the team decided to pull out the throttle and let Dave go." Schellhase had plenty of time to go because the Boilermakers were out of the game almost as soon as it started. Russell on Schellhase With Michigan ahead by nine at 11:21 left in the first half, Dave Strack pulled Jim Myers and put Craig Dill in at center. This meant that Russell was assigned to cover Schellhase, and he met his task with uncommon diligence. When Myers came back in five minutes later, the lead was 18 points and Schellhase had scored two points during that time. WeZld 166 EE id" RI AI TI ErI N1 Nore/cd Continental1O1' Darden Clawson Myers Russell Thompson Bankey Dill Brown Pitts Tillotson Delzer Fritz Slebodnik Totals MICHIGAN G F R P T 6-17 1-2 9 3 21 10-18 7-7 9 5 27 10-17 2-2 14 3 22 12-19 4-7 7 1 28 0-4 4-6 4 3 4 1-3 0-1 3 3 2 2-7 1-1 8 2 5 1-3 1-2 0 1 3 4-5 1-1 2 0 9 1-1 1-1 1 9 3 0-0 2-4 2 1 2 1-1 0-0 0 0 2 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 52-96 24-34 63 22 128 Schelihase Jameson Grams Ebersdoff Brady O'Neill Suerth Johnson Trudeau Conrad Totals TAPEI * 100% TRANSISTI CORDLES ON-THE-S RECORDI PLAYBAC PRICED TO FIT YOUR BUDGET NEW L( RECORDER rORIZED S FOR POT AND, KJ Iv 4 )W PRICE . . 79 95 PURDUE G F ft 23-42 11-12 12 1-4 1-1 7 1-4 1-2 5 3-12 5-5 2 2-9 1-2 1 2-3 5-6 4 1-1 0-0 1 1-3 0-0 1 1-3 0-2 4 0-0 0-0 0 35-8124-30 43 P T 4 57 5 3 2 3 5 11 3 5 4 9 0 2 1 2 1 2 0 0 25 94 W L Pct. MICHIGAN 8 1 .889 Michigan State 6 3 .667 Illinois 6 3 .667 Minnesota 5 4 .556 Iowa 5 4 .556 Northwestern 4 5 .444 Wisconsin 3 6 .333 Ohio State 3 6 .333 Indiana 3 6 .333 Purdue 2 7 .222 Yesterday's Results Michigan 128, Purdue 94 Wisconsin 78, Michigan St. 77 Northwestern 83, Indiana 82 Illinois 100, Minnesota 89 Iowa 86, Ohio State 80 Monday's Games Michigan at Iowa Illinois at Michigan State, Indiana at Purdue Ohio State at Minnesota Wisconsin at Northwestern SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Vanderbilt 89, Florida 86 Texas Tech 117, Texas 86 NYU 100, St. Francis (NY) 75 West Virginia 99, Syracuse 95 (ovt) Cincinnati 88, Tulsa 75 Boston College 94, Navy 78 Duke 74, Maryland 69 Penn State 90, Colgate 70 Dayton 75, Miami (Ohio) 60 Oregon 79, UCLA 72 Bradley 54, Notre Dame 44 Kansas State 68, Colorado 52 St. John's (NY) 74, Fordham 72 (ovt) Detroit 88, John Carroll 56 Nebraska 71, Missouri 53 Columbia 62, Princeton 59 Oklahoma 80, Iowa State,78 Providence 77, Seton Hall 57 W. Michigan 66, Bowling Green 63 NBA New York 124, Cincinnati 113 NHL Montreal 5, Chicago 2 New York 3, Toronto 1 Boston 5, Detroit 1 318 S. State On The Campus 761-2011 2215 W. Stadiurri Near Liberty 665-0621 TERMS INVITED To Split Series with Duluth Special To The Daily DULUTH-The Michigan Icers journeyed North to forget their current problems and fatten up on the lowly Bulldogs of Duluth, but they got the "cold shoulder" on Friday night dropping their fifth straight to UMD 7-6. Last night, however, they were able to put everything together, and crushed the stubbcrn Bulldogs 8-3 with a five goal third period blitz. The win not only snapped the Blue's loss skein but elevated them back to the .500 mark with a conference mark of 8-8. The Icers, possibly remembering the third period lapse on Friday night which allowed the Bulldogs to pull out the contest after trail- ing by two goals going into the last stanza, bombed the UMD nets for five goals, getting three of them in a span of two minutes. Michigan offensive punch was shared evenly as seven different men rattled the nets, Hank Brand being the only repeater as he tal- lied once in the second period and again in the Blue's last period splurge. Mike Marttila kept a hot stick as he led off the Michigan scoring in the third period to compliment his three goal hat trick on Friday night. After battling on even terms for the first period, the Wolverines broke a 1-1 tie when Ron Ullyot and Brand netted the Blue a 3-1 lead. Keith Christianson got one of them back when a fired a cor- ner shot past Herman to bring the 'Bulldogs within one at 16:21 of the second period. Then came the last stanza. The split left the Bulldogs still mired in last place with a possible chance to climb out of the cellar in next week's series with seventh- place Colorado College, while Michigan and Michigan State will battle it out for fifth place next weekend. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD KOHN * MICHIGAN MEN IN EUROPE HAVE IT MADE- WHEN THEY BUY, RENT OR LEASE A CAR IN EUROPE FROM CTE Write-Phone for Free Car Guide-Low Rate Student Plan CAR -TOURS IN EUROPE, Inc. 555 Fifth Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10017 0 PL 1-3550 Campus Rep. Richard Rogers, P.O. Box 112, Ann Arbor CALL ANYTIME-662-5676 1 4 ae b I :I1 I I - MM~rI WATCH for the GRAND OPENING P of the NEWEST and FINEST CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT OPENING SOON IN 311 S. MAIN ST.-ANN ARBOR -~~~~~~- -I---- -- " --- ,I X CO-OP OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, FEB. 20th 2:30-3:30 P.M. Learn more about co-ops at Pickerill House, 923 S. Forest 3:30-4:30 P.M. 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