I PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY8,1967 Shoot Down Illinois I M SPORTLIGHT By DAVE WEIR I' COMBINE MOTHER'S TRICKS WITH THOSE OF THE GREEK GODS AT THANOSTP LACE IN THE LOBBY OF THE BELL TOWER MOTEL FEATURING "MOTHER GREEK" SPECIALS r: 'rf :' of the way, controlling the boards Purdue Boils Hawaii 36-28. Both teams were hot with some LAFAYETTE-Purdue defeated Hawaii 93-64 last night and made fancy shooting. Iowa dropped in the Rainbows' mainland basket- 38 of 65 tries for 59 per cent and ball tour a total failure with nine the Illini hit at a 61 per cent clip losses in nine games. with 38 baskets in 62 attempts. The Boilermakers were cold at The Hawkeyes moved ahead as !the start and led only 17-13 with much as 15 points in the first half 9:16 left in the first half, but they :ran the score to 31-15 in the next but Illinoi snarrowed the gap to four minutes and made it 45-28 53-42 at intermission and with at the half. 3:38 left in the second half closed Purdue played without Roger to within three points at 89-86 Blalock, who was withheld from before the Hawks moved out of action because of a bone bruise. trouble. Substitute Jon Reynolds was high Gerry Jones contributed 23 with 18 points. points for the Hawkeyes and Tom Lewis Lilly, with 17 points, was Chapman added 1 as the Illinoi the only Hawaii player in double dropped to a 3-3 mark in the con- figures and the only starter who ference. didn't foul out. This Week in Sports FRIDAY Gymnastics-Eastern Michigan at IM Building, 3:30 p.m.? Hockey-Michigan State at Coliseum, 8 p.m. SATURDAY Basketball-Michigan at Northwestern Hockey-Michigan at Michigan State Swimming-Indiana at Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 p.m. Track-Michigan at Michigan State Relaysl Wrestling-Toledo at Yost Fieldhouse, 3:30 p.m.p Northwestern Indiana Iowa Michigan State Illinois Ohio.State Wisconsin Purdue MICHIGAN Minnesota W 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 L 1 1 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 5 Pet. .800 .800 .600 .600 .500 .500 .400 .400 .333 167 I YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Iowa 96, Illinois 89 Purdue 93, Hawaii 64 SATURDAY'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Northwestern Michigan State at Purdue Iowa at Ohio State Illinois at Minnesota Wisconsin at Iniana 0 QUICK KtC1 K If" Happily Ever After The other day after my one o'clock class, I sped down State Street to that hulking superstructure which fills up the entire first block of Hoover Street-the craggy IM Building. I wanted to play basketball. I raced up the front steps, carefully avoiding strategically located mounds of snow. Reaching the top of the steps, I wrenched open one of the big wooden doors. That is, I almost wrenched open one of the big wooden doors. You see, I happened to pick the wrong door-the the one they keep chained. (Scratch one dribbling arm.) Once inside, I skipped up the stairs to the second floor locker room, where that guy in the cage exchanges basketballs for ID cards. You can usually get a 25-cent locker, but there were none left this time. "Oh well," thought I, "I'll play in street clothes." Back down the stairs I went, hopping, skipping, dribbling (one- handed), right through the doors and out onto the basketball court... and right into tennis practice. One hour later, the tennis team left. Would you believe . .. can you imagine having a WHOLE basketball court all to yourself? Well I did-for 30 seconds. And then they came . . . hordes of bull-shouldered, red-faced Michigan men, conditioned by years of battling beneath the boards. They swarmed over the entire gym and took up every conceivable spot around every one of the 14 hoops. I stood dumbfounded in the middle of the floor, watching them run, jump, hook, pix, and jostle. By some tacit agreement they ar- ranged themselves into groups of 10, according to weight, and commenced their distorted version of Cazzie's trade. I must have been awfully conspicuous, standing there in the middel of the floor, clutching my basketball and gaping at the 14 brutal brawls surrounding me. Sudden~ly, a 275-hound behemuth lumbered over and addressed me in his high-pitched voice-"Hey you, squirt . .. with the long hair and the specs . : . and the basketball." "Who, me?" "wnna nlay? We don't have a ball. Big Ten Standings I ! 4 IM: A Rock ,. f FEBRUARY 1-28 The World SCOPE: INTERNATIONAL Mixers, Teas, Dinners The World ACTION: INTERNATIONAL Speakers, Receptions Sponsored by The World ACCENT: INTERNATIONAL Exhibits UNION-LEAGUE Et a V& ASK ABOUT OUR IMPORTS ! r J A C CLEM HASKINS, WESTERN KENTUCKY basketball star, ap- parently has been lost for the season after receiving a wrist in- jury ina game against Murray State Monday night. Haskins, who scored seven points in an overtime to lead the Hilltoppers to a 88-79 victory, fell on the wrist under the basket after going for a layup. 4 They are made in Japan. Would you believe? as Can beer be too cold? A Maybe we shouldn't care how cold people drink beer ... just so they drink ours. (After all, we're in business!) But we do care. We go to such fuss and expense brewing all that taste into Budweiser, we want our cus- tomers to get it all out. And this is a fact: chilling beer to near-freezing tem- peratures hides both taste and aroma. 40* is just right. To make it easy for you, we've asked all the bartenders to serve Buds at 40°. Also, every refrigerator is designed to cool Bud at 40*. Of course, if you're on a picnic or something and the Bud's on ice and nobody brought a thermometer ... oh, well. Things can't always be perfect. Budweiser. , KING OF BEERS ANHEUSERTBUSCH, INC. * ST. LOUIS NEWARK * LOS ANGELES 9 TAMPA * HOUSTON th DETE manage Wcoachhas So I got into a game. They made me the guard. My job was announced he is sending utility to throw the ball in from out-of-bounds. My teammates handled man BRIAN WATSON back to the the rest. There was Biff, a former Olympic shot-putter; Ozzie, minors and recalling right winger who turned out to be Ollie's big brother; and two hot-shots FLOYD SMITH to the National cousins named Knock-out and Elbow. Hockey League club. backwards or on my head. I threw it underhand, overhand and three- Squarters. Sometimes I bounce- JB passedt. Once I even tried a shot- -Iput-pass, but the other team inter [ cepted. 5 But we were winning, and we %###EENhad tremendous team spirit. After every basket, we all patted each other on the back. When the other The ostcompeteteam had the ball, I ran around e in~ CO~n eteand waved my arms, hoping they'd collection of Stainless blow their' respective cools. Finally, when it became evident SSteel and China patterns that we had the contest wrapped ..> 1up, Ozzie gave me a chance to are auaitale ut shoot. We called a timeout and the OHN LEI Y SHOP. made up a plan. I was to pass the -sdeball ine as usual to Elbow, who would toss it right back to me in urprse maneuver. Then my team maetesd ol. or esin o h JFN B._E DY "flying wedge" and I would drive had temenous tam sirit.Afte in for an easy lay-up. 601 and 607 E. Liberty St Everything worked perfectly. I NO 8-6779 Ann Arbor was all alone at the free-throw line. r kept going. . .. ~ ~***.~ ~.;:up, tney told me what had iuap- ____________- pened. The_____________________ete_ The flying wedge had turned into a giant rebounding act-sort of like the two jaws of a vice- with me in the middle. S aeAfter I turned in the basketball, Ssta derd hmep.was to take a the JOHN LEID SHOP. ball inas usal t.Elbo, wh A I A IIIIA NOW shower. a I a6Iable fr FALL '67 HOUSING SCHOLARSHIPS* offered by INTER HOUSE ASSEMBLY See your House President or pick up an application in 1511 SAB (offer not good where prohibited by regulation- i.e.-only good in residence halls) AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 663-8300 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union U r- THEODORE BIKEL speaks at HILLEL DELI HOUSE and leads a discussion on JEWISH CONCERNS ti Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results I I I