THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE SEVEN TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1966 TIJESDAY, MARCH 1,1966 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Wolverines Eliminate Iowa in 103-88 Win By HOWARD KOHN Cazzie Russell reached another high point in his collegiate career and Michigan clipped the high- flying Hawkeyes from Iowa last night 103-88. Russells first basket of the game, a soft jumper from the side and the shot that has been the Wolverines' bread-and-butter dish for the past three years, gave the All-American guard 2,000 career points. What does the new record mean to Caz? "It felt great," he said after the game with his famed boyish enthusiasm. "But I hope the highlight of my career is still to come." And with several more records crowding into view, Rus- sell may need a warehouse to store souvenir basketballs. Ralph Miller's "hound-dog Hawks watched Russell and Co. barnst orm through their pressing Big Ten Standings I defense and crush lingering hopes for an evasive Big Ten title. The formula for a third consecutive Michigan championship is now "one 'M' win plus one MSU loss equals title"-a trick that can be turned next Monday night when the Wolverines travel to East Lansing fpr their season finale. Had To Beat Iowa "We knew we had to eliminate Iowa tonight," explained a jubu- lant Dave Strack. "Now it narrows down to a showdown between us and State." "They (Iowa) came here with the idea that they were the best in the conference, and we didn't want them to leave town feeling that way," said Strack with a slight trace of vengeful pride. The Hawkeyes stopped Michigan at the Iowa Fieldhouse last Monday per- petuating a home win streak, but last night the tables turned on Miller. The fast-moving Wolverines pushed aside the weary Hawkeye defense with sharp, accurate pass- ing to move the ball downcourt, and then overpowered them with an impressive 63.6 shooting per- centage from the floor. Miller was forced to let the Hawks drop the press with only a few minutes gone, and he then used it only as a desperation maneuver .in the fading minutes. Kept Iowa from Driving Michigan's defense, meanwhile, kept the driving Iowa cagers out of the lanes and away from the basket. The Wolverines experi- mented with a zone defense but settled on an effective man-to- man strategy. Iowa managed only 11 lay-ups last night, compared to 19 last Monday. "We realized they wanted to drive again, but Ollie (Darden) and Jim (Myers) stopped them MICHIGAN Michigan State Iowa Illinois Minnesota Northwestern Ohio State Wisconsin Indiana Purdue W 10 9 7 7 7 6 4. 4 3 3 L 2 3 5 5 5 6 8 8 9 9 Pct. .833 .750 .583 .583 .583 .500 .333 .333 .250 .250 an opening 14-7 lead, but a pepI talk by Strack and team effort pushed the Wolverines in front., Michigan called timeout and two1 minutes later John Clawson saved l the ball from going out of boundsi and Russell layed it up to make it 15-14. The lead see-sawed for the next1 10 minutes and the Wolverines< ended up only four points ahead1 at halftime.E Michigan outhustled and out-1 rebounded the Hawkeyes by an obvious margin in the second 20c minutes. Darden and Russell dom- inated the boards for a 24-111 second half edge, and Miller's quintet, which trains with thet cross-country team, lagged like] Saturday morning students on of- fense. A three-point play by Gary Olsen pulled them even at 53-53; but Darden shot the Wolverines, ahead on the next play with his own three pointer. Hawkeyes' Dying Gasp Iowa's last threat came with 10 minutes remaining and George Peeples and Denny Pauling sport-, ing four fouls each. The Hawkeyes° held a 75-72 lead when Peeples picked up his fifth and Michigan switched into a zone defense. "With Peeples gone, they had trouble moving underneath," ex- plained the Wolverine coach. But it was Cazzie Russell who ignited the Michigan offense to a roaring come-back with a crowd- pleasing play. The Caz stole the ball under the Iowa basket, flip- ped in a hook and was fouled by Pauling, who left with five per- sonals. The three-point play put Mich- igan at the helm and within two minutes Iowa was floundering 10 points back. And the sophomore subs of Ralph Miller were no match for the Michigan seniors. Raindrops Despite a leaky roof which kept Michigan's waterboys busy wiping off the floor, venerable Yost Field House provided a warm setting for the reversal of last week's misadventure at Iowa City. The Michigan rooters t o o k deep breaths and recouped some of the cheering that has echped through Yost for three seasons into a cre- scendo of encouraging, if not rabid, exclamations. And the Iowa players felt the difference. They weren't quick to admit it, of course, but a disap- pointed Chris Pervall growled in reply to a question on the differ- ence, "Michigan won, what the hell else do you want me to say?" Miller, who harboured some per- sonal opinions about the game, re- fused a press conference after they game. An angry rebuff was his only remark as he left for his Midwestern haven where the games seem to end on a different note. Iowa has won ten out of ten games at home, including six in the Big Ten, but has scraped out only one victory on the road in the conference. Last night's loss eliminated their last chance at the crown. "They seemed to have trouble concentrating on the game," re- flected one Iowa fan who made the journey to Ann Arbor. "Last week they seemed to do everything perfectly." Whatever it was, the Hawkeyes never revealed that checking defense designed to run the opponent into the floor. On offense, the Hawks were re- spectable, hitting over 50 per cent on their field goal attempts and nearly 70 per cent from the charity stripe. Notwithstanding Russell's per- formance, Strack was quick to point out that "Everyone on the team was a hero tonight. All five starters came through with the crucial plays when we needed them." It was Myers' turn to lead the SCORES- COLLEGE BASKETBALL Oklahon state 68. Missouri 51 Miami (Fla) 112, Florida State 90 Tennessee 58, Georgia Tech 47 Western Michigan 82, Notre Dame 76 W. Kentucky 81, Middle Tennessee 47 Vanderbilt 97, Tulane 72 Alabama 99, Mississippi 66 Creighton 86, Utah State 79 Louisiana State 86, Florida 73 Penn State 80, Syracuse 79 E. Kentucky 75, E. Tennessee 69 Billboard' .... . *... *..... .... ... *. .. %f. . ..f.**V::::.. Tickets for this Thursday's first-round hockey playoff game between Michigan and Michigan State may be purchased begin- ning tomorrow at the ticket of- fice, State and Hoover. The price is the same as for regular sea- son games, and the ticket office hours remain the same, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Join The Daily Sports Staff supporting cast last night as he turned in a 23-point effort, 17 in the second half, plus six rebounds. Darden tossed in 20' points for one of his better games and Claw- son added his average of 17 per contest. Cazzie fell eight total pointsI (less than 1 ppg) behind Dave Schellhase in the race for the conference scoring championship, despite his 31 points. Russell, however, moved within range of his own team record for season scoring and the Big Ten career field goal record. He al- ready has scored more points in his collegiate career than any Wolverine in history. And last night's final basket was a stuff by the guy who's still looking for more "highlights." McGilmer Olsen Peeples Ilauling Ilemall W hite Breedlove Agnew Totals MICHIGAN IOWA SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DALE SIELAFF Last Night's Games Michigan 103, Iowa 88 Michigan State 98, Ohio St. 79 Minnesota 96, Indiana 90. Illinois 98, Purdue 81 Wisconsin 90, Northwestern 62 Saturday's Games Northwestern at Michigan Purdue at Wisconsin Iowa at Illinois Michigan State at Indiana Minnesota at Ohio State Darden Clawson Myers Russell Thomnpsoni Sankey Dill Totals MICHIGAN G F 9-13 2-3 6-8 5-5 9-15 5-6 14-23 3-5 0-0 4-4 3-4 0-1 1-3 0-1 42-66 19-25 I P T 9 5 20 8 4 17 6 3 23 9 4 31 3 0 2 42 20 103 10WA G F r P'T 1-20 5-5 7 2 27 9-15 4-6 6 3 2'Z 4-7 2-4 10 5 to 2-4 1-2 2' 5 5 6-13 6-9 1 4 18 1-3 0-0 0 2 2 1-4 0-0 1 0 2 1-2 -0 0 0 2 35-68 18-26 29 21 88 46 57-103 42 46- 88 CAZZIE RUSSELL WAS THE BIG MAN again for the Wolverines last night in their 103-88 win over Iowa. Caz hit for 31 points, strengthening his position in the two man Big Ten scoring race with Purdue's Dave Schellhase. this time," said StracK. Darden was particularly out- standing in his second half per- formance guarding Ben McGilmer -the Detroit Northwestern pro- duct who traded cars for corn. McGilmer's 21 points in the first 20 minutes kept Iowa within strik- ing distance at intermission 46-42. Darden, however, put on a strong show to limit his former high school opponent to six points in the second half. McGilmer had sparked Iowa to BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Spartans Stay Close wi'th 98-79 Romp By The Associated Press COLUMBUS - Michigan State kept its hopes glowing for a Big Ten basketball crown by rac- ing to an easy 98-79 victory over * inept Ohio State. The Spartans, boosting their league record to 9-3, stayed one game Pack of Michigan. StanhWashington and Bill Cur tis, with 26 and 20 points respec- tively, paced the aggressive Spar- tan offense. Michigan State led throughout, building a huge 17-point lead by halftime and pushing the advant- age to as many as 32 points in the middle of the second half., Al Peters topped the losers with 18 points while teammate Bob Dove hit 15 and Bill Hosket 13. Matthew Aitch, MSU's muscular 6-foot-7 junior, drilled in 14 points and helped the winners control the backboards. Ohio State fell to a 4-8 confer- ence record and .10-12 over-all while_ Michigan State was winning Gophers Win, 96-90 BLOOMINGTON - Minnesota hit 62.5 per cent of its shot from the field and defeated Indiana 96-90 in a Big Ten basketball game last night. Archie Clark, Lou Hudson and Tom Kondla led the hot-shooting Gophers. Clark scored 31 points, Hudson hit for 24, and Kondla pitched in 22. Sophomore Vern Payne topped Indiana with 28 points, and Butch Joyner added 23. Minnesota trailed 43-41 with 18:05 to play but outscored In- diana 30-10 in the next nine min- utes to lead 71-53. The Hoosiers pulled back within three points at 85-82 on a three-point play, by Payne with 2:27 left, but the Gophers controlled the game the rest of the way. Minnesota led most of the first half and was in front 41-36 at halftime, but Indiana tied the score on five points by Max Walk- 43-41 on a shot by Payne. * * * Badgers Leave Cellar MADISON - Wisconsin routed Northwestern 90-62 to escape the Big Ten basketball cellar. The Badgers outhustled and outshot the Wildcats, hitting 36 of 84 field goal tries for 42.8 per cent. Northwestern could hit only Illini Roll, 98-81 CHAMPAIGN - Illinois pulled away from Purdue in the second half last night to gain a 98-81 victory over the Boilermakers in a Big Ten conference basketball game. The two teams were tied at halftime, 39-39, after exchanging MISERY IS NOT WATCHING TV THIS TERM NEJAC TV RENTALS has Zenith 19" All-Channel portables for only $10 per month FREE Service and Delivery 662-5671 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS PIIYSICISTS MATHEMATICIANS Technical representatives of The MITRE Corporation will be conducting intervieWs on campus MARCH 2 MITRE is chief technical advisor and systems engineer to the Air Force Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command. In this capacity, we design and develop such global, computer-based systems as the NORAD Combat Operations Center and the Back-Up Interceptor Control System. Other com- mitments: development of a future air traffic control system and supporting the Defense Communications Agency in the develop- ment of the National Military Command System. For the young systems engineer, this is uniquely rewarding work. You associate with the top men in your field. You work in an atmosphere that allows you to extend your capabilities profession- ally and academically. At MITRE, men trained in single disciplines are encouraged to grow beyond their original fields of interest. Systems designers learn to work from an increasingly broad base. You may work in such diverse areas as information theory, com- puter design, display techniques and propagation. You may analyze. You may synthesize. You may deal with systems or in- dividual components. At thehighest levels, you may have to con- sider political, economic and social factors ... as well as the avail- able. and predictable technology. Requirements: M.S., or Ph.D. in these disciplines - electronics, physics, mathematics. MITRE is located in pleasant, suburban Boston and also has facilities in Washington, D. C., Colorado Springs and Florida. If an interview will be inconvenient, inquiries may be directed in confidence to College Relations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporation, Box 208, Dept. 'No. CNA ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEW THROUGH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE. THE MITRE 21 of 73 floor shots for a chilly' the lead several times in the first 27.3 per cent. half. The Wildcats, who whipped Wis- consin a week ago on their home floor 76-65, led the first 10 min- utes, but Badger captain Ken Barnes popped in a basket to thrust his teammates ahead 19-18 and they never trailed again. A pair of sophomores, Joe Franklin and Mike Carlin, topped Wisconsin with 16 points apiece. The Badgers had five players in double figures, while Northwestern was led by Ron Kozlicki with 16. I -.. . Illinois took the lead at 58-57 with 11:35 to go in the second half and never relinquished it after, that. Purdue's Dave Schellhase gar- nered 38 points to lead all scorers. The Illini's Rich Jones, a 6-foot-7 sophomore forward, scored 30 to lead his team. Don Freeman had 26 for Illinois despite sitting out 14 minutes of the second half with four fouls. i t i jim mmmm-- '---m'"---- - - - - - -3- - mm m m m m m mmm mmm U Iww w w es ww w w w w w w w ww w w w w w s w ' U i its 16th- of the season against six er in the first 58 seconds of the N setbacks. second half and went ahead at i T ED-| I I ll Scheliha Hed PHOTO INTERPRETERS : Russe ,SchellaseHead * To develop new interpretation rules, procedures, techniques, u : tools, and equipment. '8li eaHere's an opportunity to use the training received in the a S armed forces as well as your college education. HRB-Singer-the I I acknowledged leader in airborne reconnaissance systems-is pres- By The Associated Press The remainder of the team is ently engaged in research study programs to develop new recon- * hitting close to 20 points per man. t naissance and interpretation techniques for military and commer- I Cazzie Russell of Michigan was On the second team, also com- I cial customers. Enthusiastic and alert people are needed to con- elected to the AP All-Big Ten duct original research or studies which will improve the quantity u team for the third straight season, posed of all seniors, are Oliver or speed of data extraction. Openings are available at the Rome, heading this year's all-senior Darden of Michigan, G e o r g e s New York or State College, Pennsylvania facilities. I Peeples of Iowa, Michigan State's I Personnel will also be considered for part-time or during Bill Curtis, and Northwestern's I vacation periods-especially those who are interested in employ- I Purdue's Dave Schellhase also Jim Pitts, the leading rebounder ment after graduation. I was elected unanimously, and also in the league with better than a U Benefits for full-time employment include tuition refund * for the'third straight year. 15 average. : plan, ,liberal employee benefit provisions, and exceptional vaca- * I i I JoiingRusella~n Scellase Also on the second squad is the * tion policy. U Joining RussellandSh h Alsoonther Gophers' Lou Hudson, dropping- In enddescriptiveresume to Personnel Manager, HRB-Singer, W'ere Don Freeman, who set anGpesLo Huon, drp i Inc., P. 0. Box 60, Science Park, State College, Pennsylvania all-time Illinois socring record, from his first team spot of a year i aal-timedIlinoisfferrig recordn* 16801.U Stan Washington of Michigan ago. Hudson suffered a broken I State, and Archie Clark of Min- wrist in theearly part of the sea- H RB-SINGER, INC. son, and was sidelined for nal -I G R nesotab se month, came ck strong to A SUBSIDIARY OF THE SINGER COMPANY ,This years squad is relativelygarmnth, bsecndamhnrbrl small, with Russell and Schellhase garner second-team honors, barely I an equal opportunity employer ' being the tallest at 6-5 and 6-4misgaista brh"mmm m"m"""mmmmmmm"m"m"mmm"'"m' THE GREAT WHITE FATHER "SAYS: A few short weeks left to eat at the old Red's before the bulldozer de- molishes the era and begins anew. Enjoy the early hours: Open 6:30 ANM. till 12:57 A.M. except Sundays when we open at 8:30 A.M.-(Charlie Brown's mother won't let him get up any earlier). - - - -. - - I R-0 An Equal Opportunity Employer I led Pioneer in the design and development of command and control systems, MITRE was chartered in 1958 to serve only the United State Government. An independent corporation, MITRE is tech- nical advisor and systems engineer for the Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command, and also serves the Department of Defense, and the Federal Aviation Agency. I A K*4 2 respectively. Both are averaging x over 30 points in their race for the league scoring crown, currently held by Schellhase. mm mm m mm m mm mm nmm mmmm TODAY!! I E ..* - E 1 F U I E I K I DII~iK F E I xI F c ~l E.'iliIIK FL AORPC 1 1K 45: RESEARCH TEST AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORIES OF THE NAVY Representatives of five civilian research, test and development laboratories of the Navy located in Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia will visit on March 16, 1966 to interview candidates for degrees in engineering, mathematics and physical science. Opportunities for career employment on projects of world-wide importance Special provisions for continuing graduate work David Taylor Model Basin Naval Oceanographic Offic r u I \MArin-. I knr+nrN lavr'al cnrr ihnra e atorv