TUESDAY 'FEBRUARY 28, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~ ~ . - -www~ TUESDKY, FEBRUARY 28, 1967 ut a e W n.a. PAGE SEVEI1 N Hoosiers Win 29 for Dill But Last Bid Fails By CLARK NORTON Acting Sports Editor Sometimes cliches would be wel- come. Like the oldest of them all, "In this league, any team can beat any other on a given night." But just when it might seem appropriate, a pass goes awry and another loss has to be chalked up for Michigan's error-prone bas- ketball team. This defeat-the fifth in a row -was to conference front-runner Indiana last night in Yost Field House, 98-96. The Hoosiers are now 8-3, while the Wolverines are 2-9. Ironies abounded. The two teams have done a complete about-face from last year, wheni Michigan won its third straight Big Ten title and Indiana languished in the cellar. Cazzie Returns 'Incognito' But one of the major reasons for Wolverine pre-eminence in past - seasons stepped onto the court only in street clothes, to ac- cept the Chicago Tribune's silver basketball trophy for being voted Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten last year. Cazzie Lee Russell was the cen- ter of attention. But he was near- ly upstaged by a late surge led by Craig Dill and Jim Pitts which almost brought the Wolverines back from a 13-point deficit with seven minutes to go to an upset victory. With a minute and a half left and the Hoosiers clinging to a five-point edge, Dill sank both ends of a one-and-one opportuni- ty at the charity stripe, and Pitts followed seconds later with one out of two. Jumper for Joyner The Hoosiers managed to break high scorer Butch Joyner open under the basket for two of his game-high 33 points, but Pitts countered with a tip-in of a miss- ed Dill jumper, and moved Mich- igan within two points, 96-94, with less than a minute to play. Joyner, finding himself alone in the corner soon after, faked a jumper, hesitated, then nonchal- antly shrugged his shoulders and popped in a 15-footer, as if he had nothing better to do. "That shot took a lot of guts, or some- thing," Michigan Coach Dave Strack shook his head after the game. "But it sure hurt." Dill tipped in a missed Ken Maxey layup with 24 seconds left, however, and Maxey managed to set himself in the path of an oncoming Joyner, eliciting an of- fensive foul on the Hoosier for- ward and presenting the Wolver- ines with the ball with nine sec- -Daily-Tho CRAIG DILL KNEELS IN FRUSTRATION after droppi with seconds left in yesterday's tragic 98-96 loss to Indi Wolverines, with Dill scoring 29 points, chopped a Hoosier lead down to two in the last six minutes of t but were unable to send it into overtime. 98-96 Purdue Stops Iowa-; MSU Win wins By The Associated Press IOWA CITY - Purdue rallied from behind in the last half for a 78-75 victory last night that sniff- ed out Iowa's flickering Big Ten basketball hopes. The setback put. the Hawkeyes in a two-way tie with Purdue for fifth place with a 6-6 record. Iowa had been tied for second. Down 34-31 shortly after the start of the second half, the Boil- ermakers' Roger Blalock came up with a three-point play to tie it, and a minute later Purdue moved ahead 38-36, never to trail after that. T h e Boilermakers expanded masR.Copi their lead to 70-59 with 3:53 to ng a pass go. Iowa cut it to 72-67 and a pair iana. The of free throws by Gerry Jones 14-point chopped the deficit to 76-73 with the game, 30 seconds left. .However, Blalock's basket with nine seconds remaining put it red a start- away for Purdue. Strack, led Jones and Williams shared scor- ounds with ing honors with 24, while Herman Gilliam topped Purdue with 18 y hard to- and Blalock had 17. d d. "But we t shot the 19th at Home (almost 52 EAST LANSING - Michigan e) and just State defeated Ohio State 74-63 aybe every- last night for its 19th straight Big .or me,. al- Ten basketball victory at home. fair to the T h e Spartans outrebounded r the breaks OSU 30-13 in the first half and way again." 58-32 for the game. main three MSU held a 30-28 halftime lead t this year. after leading most of the first r, the 1966- half. Ohio State led just once on .e to take a a driving layup by Bill Hosket to make it 14-13. 5m :.:::::t: Lee Lafayette and John Bailey paced the Spartans with 17 points' each. Matt Aitch added 10. ird * * Dawson-Lifts Illini ....... CHAMPAIGN - Jim Dawson's and fra- four baskets in the opening 4 /2 champion- minutes of the second half broke t 7:30 to- a 32-32 intermission tie and sent Pool. Also, Illinois to an 84-71 Big Ten bas- rnity, res- ketball victory over Minnesota last ndependent night. ships will Dawson's splurge put the Illini orts Build- ahead 57-47, and the Gophers never came within seven points of closing the gap. Dawson totalled 31 points for the game, 22 in the EDITOR last half, as the Illini boosted K their Big Ten record to 5-6 and Minnesota slipped to 4-8. is Cagers' Surge Toledo Dumps Freshmen, 79-70 By JOEL BLOCK Freshman forward Rudy Tom- janovich scored 22 points and pull- ed down 20 rebounds before foul- ing out but it was not enough as the Toledo frosh swept to a 79-70 victory last, night. The contest, a preliminary to last night's varsity game with In- diana, was muddled by 41 turn- overs, and over 100 missed shots. The Wolverines started off the game hot and had a 12-4 lead early in the first half. But as a result of several misplays, the Rockets came back to lead by a point with less than a minute left in the half, It took a long pass from Bill Fraumann to Steve Fishman and the ensuing layup to give Michigan a 32-31 halftime fifth foul and the Wolverines never lead, got any closer than five points. No Mean Task A loose Wolverine defense per- mitted Toledo to gain a quick 40-34 margin and Michigan found it hard to score, missing two breakaway layups within a minute of each other early in the period. The Rocket lead wavered from three to seven points throughout' the second stanza but the fresh- man Wolverines seemed always a step or a jump behind their Toledo counterparts. With 4:20 left on the Yost Field House clock, Tomjanovich was whistled for a charging foul as he reached over a Toledo defender to flip in a field goal. It was his MICHIGAN FROSH Tomjanovich Fraunmann Lawson Henry Bloodworth Fishman Dobson Totals Mu men Geistler Hess Miller Smith Sonseri Jaros Totals MICHIGANI TOLEDO hL G F R 10-20 2-4 20 3-13 5-7 14 2-6 1-1 3 2-13 3-4 7 5-9 2-2 3 4-11 0-0 1 1-3 3-5 4 27-7516-23 52 P T 5 22 2 11 2 5 3 7 2 12 28 425 20 70 TOLEDO G F R P T 6-18 4-6 8 1 16 5-il 3-6 6 2 13. 4-14 0-0 17 2 S 9-14 5-7 8. 4 21 5-14 4-6 7 3 14 3-7 1-2 1 3 7 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 31-7817-2748 16 79 FROSH 32 38-70 31 48-7f CAZZIE RUSSELL onds to play and a two-point gap to overcome. For Want of a Pass ... Strack called for a time out, instructing the players to "feed Dill and go from there." But after Bankey had taken the in-bounds pass from Maxey, he shot an er- rant pass into the Michigan cen- ter, who let it slip over his shoul- ders to an awaiting Vernon Payne. The slick-shooting Hoosier guard bounced about the court to mon- opolize the remaining time. "Any one of those guys should have shot for the basket when Dill was boxed up at the end," an autograph-hounded Russell grimaced. "And some of them could have done without those long shots the whole game. But if Dill had played last year like he did tonight, we would have ripped ev- erybody." Dill poured in 29 points, on a variety of hooks, jumpers, and tip- ins, although forward Dave Mc- MICHIGAN Clellan, who "has secu ing job," according to the team again in reb 14. "We played awfully night," Strack groane ran into a team tha eyes out of the basket per cent for the gam couldn't pull it off. Me thing's evening up fc though it doesn't seem team. Maybe next year will start coming our v But first there re games to be played ou And to escape the cella 67 Wolverines may hav few old cliches to heart BilIboa The residence hall ternity swimmingc ships will be held a night in Matt Mannl the professional frate idence hall, and in basketball champions take place in the Sp ing at the same time. SPORTS NIGHT E . JOEL BLOC] Fails Who's the Man Behind the4c Canadian Nickel ? Announces a Real Live CONTEST{ For the best cartoon of Ann Arbor's Grafter Supreme FIELDING F. RAALF Just look at these neat prizes YOU can win: 1st PRIZE: $20 worth of groceries 2nd PRIZE: $10 worth of groceries 3rd PRIZE: $5 worth of groceries BOOBY PRIZE: One free popsicle each day of the semester All entries must be submitted to the Garg office on or before Feb. 28th. Winners will be announced by carrier pigeon. 1E --1 THE MEN OF SIGMA NU ANNOUNCE THAT THEY HAVE SUCCESSFULLY DEFENDED THEIR HONOR WITH A SMASHING VICTORY OVER CHI PHI- 27-21 (per couple) Sullivan, f McClellan, f Dill, e Pitts, g Bankey, g Stewart, f Maxey, g Totals Joyner, f Johnson, f DeHeer, c Payne, g Russell, g Schneider, f Pfaff, g Schrumpe, c Turpen, g Totals MICHIGAN INDIANA G F R 2-5 0-2 5 6-9 7-9 14 12-25 5-6 10 4-11 12-13 12 4-7 1-1 2 2-8 0-0 1 5-9 1-1 0 35-74 26-32 47 P T 2 4 3 19 3 29 2 20 4 9 1 4 4 11 19 96 I LIE'w i I I! INDIANA G F R.P 12-18 9-9 11 2 5-9 0-0 6 5 6-15 3-5 14 4 8-16 2-5 1 2 7-14 2-3 4 2 1-4 2-2 2 4 1-3 _0-0 1 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 3 40-79 18-24 43 22 T 33 10 15 18 16 4 2 0 0 98 46 50-96 49 49-98 where yoube In as good a spot 4I an original contribu. as you are today? tion to your area of Well-informed? JI JIinterest. In an Up on things? environment like Intimately this, there's no acquainted with the O telling how far state of the art in your field of study? Or will you (through no fault of your own) be dangerously close to the brink of obsolescence ? Could happen. Often does. Which is one good reason to consider a career at MITRE. MITRE is pioneering in the design and engineering of complex informati8n, sensor, command, control and com- munications systems for the United States Government. Our assignments include such prominent electronic systems as the NORAD Combat Operations Center, the Back. up Interceptor Command System for SAGE, and the National Military Command System (NMCS). These projects represent the most important systems challenges of our time, and require the most advanced thinking on a broad range of scientific problems and the technologies needed to solve them. As a member of the MITRE team, you'll be working in an atmosphere of scientific inquiry, alongside colleagues of outstanding reputation, with the opportunity to make you can go. But this much is certain. You'll not be over- looked, and you can't be overtaken. Salary? Benefits? They're competitive, of course. More- over, we have an excellent Educational Assistance and Staff Scholar Program. (Many MITRE employees presently attend nearby educational institutions includ- ing Harvard, Boston University, Boston College, Brandeis, Northeastern, MIT, and Tufts.) Depending on your interests, qualifications and current openings, you may start in one of the following, or other, departments: System Planning and Engineering Air and Missile Defense Systems System Design Systems Analysis Air Traffic Systems Tactical Systems Strategic Systems Range Instrumentation Information Sciences Computer & Display Technology Communications Electronic Warfare Radar Design and Technology Information Processing Surveillance and Warning Systems Applied Mathematics -- U y 'Sis °ot",ARE CC o I WED., MARCH 1 6:00 P.M.-Opening Reception and Banquet: Speaker: Jack H. Vaughn, Director, The Peace Corps (Michigan Union Ballroom) THURS., MARCH 2 10:00 a.m.-TOPIC SESSION: The Right of Free Expression Arthur Miller, playwright Mike Wallace, TV commentator Arnold Gingrich, Publisher, Esquire (Rackham Lecture Hall) 2:00 P.M.-TOPIC SESSION: The Political Picture Today Senator Philip A. Hart Congressman Gerald R. Ford 6:00 P.M.-All Sports Banquet Honoring Michigan Athletic Greats STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF DRDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE EVENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY SESQUICENTENNIAL ALUMNI CELEBRATION FRI., MARCH 3 10:00 A.M.-TOPIC SESSION: American Enterprise-What Lies Ahead Lynn Townsend, Chairman, Chrysler Corp. Donald C. Cook, President, American Electric Co. H. Bruce Palmer, President, National Industrial Conf. Board (Rackham Lecture Hall) 10:00 A.M.-TOPIC SESSION: The Law and Public Order Richard A. Wasserstrom, Dean, Tuskegee Institute Judge John R. Brown, U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit Hobart Taylor, Director, Export-Import Bank of Washington (Rackham Ampitheatre) 2:30 P.M.-TOPIC DISCUSSION Michigan in Orbit-A Discussion of the Future of the Apollo Space Program Joseph F. Shea, Manager Apollo Space Program General Edward H. White, Sr., father of late Astronaut White 6:00 P.M.-Awards Banquet Honoring recipients of the Sesquicentennial Award It'almost seems a shame to put a Volkswagen engine in it. The Karmann Ghia isn't designed for the masses. Nor is it built like a mass-production car. Fenders, hoods and door frames still get hand- welded, hand-shaped and hand-smoothed.. Convertible tops are still padded by hand. The Ghia's paint job is even four coats deep in hand work. So here you've got this' gorgeous hunk of car, but when you get right down to basics, it's still a Volkswagen. Chassis, transmission and suspension are all Volkswagen. And so is the engine. In fact, the Ghia's power comes from the very same air-cooled motor that pushed our regular ALL TOPIC SESSIONS ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FREE OF CHARGE I