TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ie A i"t" ea*nlwp", ? TUESDY, MRCH 7 196 THE ICIIE'~ANhill PAGE SELVE!N Joyner, Indiana Throttle Cagers, 96-90 * * * * * * Faculty Rules on Illinois Case Special To The Daily CHICAGO-The Big Ten fa- culty representatives reiterated an earlier decision of conference ath- letic directors this weekend, when they ordered Illinois to fire Pete Elliott, Harry Combes, and Howie Braun or show cause why its Big k Ten membership should not be suspended or terminated. The action followed a futile ap- peal by Illinois, President David Henry that the ruling was harsh and excessive. Also declaring seven Illini ath- letes Ineligible for receiving aid from the $21,000 slush fund, the faculty body thus completed Wes- tern Conference deliberations on individual penalties. Five of the players were ruled permanently ineligible, while two received one year suspensions. Seven additional athletes were cleared of charges, because the aid received was in a singlein ci- d e n t, "in relatively s m a II amounts," and was intended as an emergency loan, or was of such nature that the grant would have been legal if administered by the university rather than through the illegal fund. Among the latter group were six unidentified players, and fresh- man basketball standout Randy Crews, Cagers Ineligible Those athletes ruled permanent- ly ineligible were Derek Faison and Robert Stephens, freshman football players, Ron Dunlap and Rich Jones, junioir basketball players, and Cyril Pinder, a junior football player. Dunlap and Jones were both TIE AND LOSS: lcers Lose Title, Boysen, Lee Marttila to Gophers By GRAYLE HOWLETT Acting Associate Sports Editor The Michigan icers journeyed to, Minneapolis to play the last place Gophers in a series tabbed as one with "nothing to lose" for the Wolverines. But in keeping with the other Michigan accomplish- ments this past weekend, the icers managed to lose the Big Ten Title, their grip on second place in the WCHA, and two players, Bob Boysen and Lee Martilla. Friday night, the Gophers and Wolverines battled to a 4-4 tie, with Michigan failing to get even one shot on goal in the overtime period. Saturday night the Wol- verines erupted for eight goals but it looked a little puny when stacked up aaginst Minnesota's ten tallies. WCHA Standings starters on this season's cage squad, while Pinder, in addition to winning the Big Ten indoor crown in the 60-yard dash his sophomore year, had been'expect- ed to spark last fall's football team before being injured. The two given one year suspen- sions were Steve Kuberski, a soph- omorercager, and Oscar Polite, another freshman football player. Marcus Plant, Michigan's facul- ty representative, announced the decisions and noted that there was no Big Ten machinery for appeal- ing the action on individual ath- letes. Henry Statement Illinois has until March 17 to decide whether to fire the three coaches or attempt to show cause. Henry released a statement yes- terday, saying that the Univer- sity's appeal before the faculty representatives was c e n t e r e d around the point "that the infrac- tions of the conference regulations Oshould be regarded in large part as an institutional matter and that the chief penalty should be on the institution itself. "I suggested a period of mem- bership probation during which time the university would be bar- red from post-season games, in- cluding participation in receipts from such games and would be subject to period performance au- dits as the conference might de- termine to assure the conference of the university's ability to meet conference expectations," Henry continued. AP Top Ten 1. UCLA (30) 25-0 300} 2. Louisville 23-3 253? 3. Kansas 20-3 197 4. North Carolina 21-4 178 5. Princeton 23-2 163 6. Western Kentucky 23-2 149 7.IHouston 23-3 125 8. Tennessee 20-5 61 9. Boston College 19-2 52 10. Texas Western 20-5 48 Others receiving votes, listed alphabetically: Dayton, Florida, Gonzaga, Indiana, Marshall, Providence, St. John's of New York, Southern Methodist, Sy- racuse, Toledo, Tulsa, Univer- sity of the Pacific, Utah State, Vanderbilt, Villanova, Washing- ton State, West Virginia and Wyoming. i BOB SULLIVAN hides his head second bucket clinches an 80- Michigan in Saturday's basketball GWisconsini By CLARK NORTON Acting Sports Editor Ted Voight, a 6'8" sophomore substitute averaging a little over Sfour points per game this season,I In probably the greatest under- statement since General Hershey admitted that the "draft wasn't perfect," Michigan coach Al Ren- frew commented on last week's, action: "Well, the goaltending wasn't too good." Big Ten titles are nice, and sec- ond place might be better than fourth, but it's a cinch the Wol- verines were preparing for the curtain raiser on their second sea- son. Said season is the WCHA playoffs which will decide their representative to the NCAA tour- nament in Syracuse March 16, 17, and 18. Except for the dual injuries, you could chalk off last weekend's loss and tie to the team's "point- ing toward the playoffs." Bob Boy- sen sustained a knee injury and is definitely out for the rest of the year. Martilla wrenched his shoul- der and is expected to miss the first playoff gamee Thursday night, but a deciison on future ac- tion for the Detroit junior will be made in the next few days. "We had a hard weekend up there at Minnesota," Renfrew added, "but I can guarantee you that they will be up this Thursday for that first playoff game.." Wolverines Doomed t Special To The Daily fouled. Russell hit two on a one- BLOOMINGTON - I n d i a n a and-one situation, Michigan lost wrote another chapter to the the ball on a turnover and In- "bornbloser" story of 1967 Mich- diana went back into thfe stall. igan basketball last night with a Then, with 34 seconds left, Joy- 96-90 come-from-behind victory. ner drove through for a layup and The Wolverines rewrote the drew another Wolverine foul. He script of its past few cliffhangers, converted the free throw and Dave, in which they charged from be- Strack's near-miss team rolled hind to fall meagerly short, by over to its eleventh Big Ten loss, controlling the lead for most of in 13 games. the game. The loss clinched last place. They led 58-54 at halftime and "I have no complaints. Indianaj were still ahead 86-85 with less is probably the best and most than five and a half minutes left. consistent team we've played all But the Hoosiers, who remained season and we played well," cap- tied for the Big Ten lead with a suled Strack after the game. 9-4 record, sneaked in front 87-86 Michigan dropped a 98-96 deci- -Daily-Thomas R. Copi on Butch Joyner's jumper with sion to Indiana last Monday at in dismay as Ted Voight's last 5:24 to go and cemented the win Yost Field House. 79 victory for Wisconsin over with six points in the final two "We felt that that the key to game. minutes. stopping Indiana's offense was Indiana coach Lou Watson call- slowing down its fast break. But ed for the stall with 1:59 left and they ran much better than we the Hoosiers maintaining a 91-88 wanted," Strack added. S M ichigan 4margin. Bob Sullivan pushed in a "Michigan showed that it does, layup 15 seconds later on a break- have a good team. We were help-{ away to pull Michigan back with- ed when we pulled down the cru-' which may partially account for in one. cial rebounds and hit on those foul the lack of attendance. The Hoosiers went back into the shots in the last two minutes," "We won't be playing any more stall and Jim Pitts, trying to take explained Watson. games in Cobo Hall," Coach Dave the ball away from Bill Russell, Watson also complimented Vern Strack said after the game. Payne, the flashy little guard! calmly dropped in a four-foot Ironically, the script of the jumper from the side at the buz- game was as dramatic as any the zer last Saturday in Detroit's Co- Wolverines have been involved bo Arena, and brought the Wis- with this season. With twelve sec- consin basketball team an 80-79 onds left, Bob Sullivan banked in, victory over Michigan. a twisting lay-up to nudge Michi- Yet no one was really surprised. gan in front for the first time, Not only because hardly anyone 79-78. was there, but because the Wol- Wisconsin fumbled the ball down verines' ignominious defeat seem- court, but managed to retain pos- ed almost fitting, the epitomy of session and caleld time out with1 an entire season filled with the but two seconds remaining. Voight, frustration, the disappointment, unguarded under the basket, gra- the harsh reality of losing. ciously accepted the in-bounds, It was Alumni Celebration pass and converted his game- Weekend in Detroit, and special' !winning bucket. dressing rooms had been set up to accommodate alums and digni- MICHIGAN taries who wished to change intol8 G F R P T formal attire after the game for Sullivan 4-9 2-2 9 i110 the evening banquet. Di11, a 10-22 3-3 9 3 23 They could have supplied tele- Bankey. g 2-9 1-1 4 3 5 Pitts 4-10 0-2 7 3 8 phone booths. An estimated 3,100 Stewart, f 5-13 0-1 5 3 10 attended the game but the guy Maxey, g 2-8 1-2 2 0 5 who was counting must have had Delzer 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 double vision. It was like the pre- Totals 35-88 9-14 54 19 79, Buntin-Russell era, when you !WISCONSIN could count the fans during time G F R P T Nagle,. 14-28 9-9 10 2 37 outs. Franklin, f 4-12 4-6 20 3 12 It was listed as a home game but Mitchell 0-0 0-0 0 0 01 there was no home-court advan- Sweeney, g 4-8 0-0 3 1 8 tage. Cavernous Cobo Hall cruelly Caliet, 1-10-07100 magnified the paucity of patrons Voigt 1-2 0-0 0 1 2 rather than disguise it. The game Johnson, c 7-13 2-5 9 .2 16l was regionally televised and took MICHIGAN 38 41-791 place during spring vacation. WISCONSIN 45 35-80 1 who's only flickered in recent games, for what he called "his best performance of the year." Payne plunked in 23 points to go along with high scorer Joyner's 27. Dave McClellan paced Mich- igan with 20. Both coaches pointed to Craig Dill's inability to connect'from the outside as detrimental to the over- all Wolverine attack. "Our defense bothered him." said Watson glee- fully. Dill was limited to 18 points. The game was tied nine times, although Indiana at one time built up a 37-26 lead in the middle of the first half. A Wolverine flurry pulled Michigan back into contention and it hung there un- til the Hoosiers sprung the trap. Michigan closes the season against Iowa at Yost Field House Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Michigan State Stuns Gophersj r Big Ten Standings I i Sullivan McClellan Dill Pitts B~anker= Stewart Mavey Totals Joyner Johnson Deheer Payne Russell Schrump Schneider Stenheiz Pfaff Totals MICHIGAN INDIANA o Cellar MICHIGAN G F R P T 7-13 3-4 3 4 17 9-14 2-2 9 2 20 5-24 8-9 12 2 18 7-15 4-9 9 3 18 2-6 0-0 7 4 4 2-5 4-4 0 2 3 2-3 1-2 3 2 5 34-80 22-30 50 19 90 INDIANA G F R P T 12-22 3-3 10 3 27 3-7 3-3 6 4 9 5-9 2-4 15 5 12 9-22 5-5 2 2 23 5-14 4-5 4 4 14 1-1 0-0 1 0 2 2-4 0-0 0 2 4 2-5 1-2 6 2 3 0-2 0-0 1 0 0 39-8R 18-22 49 21 96 54 36--90 58 38-96 1 I '7 1 { By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS - M i c h i g a n State remained in a first-place tie with Indiana in the Big Ten basketball race, the Spartans shak- ing off Minnesota in the final 3 1,a minutes to defeat the Goph- ers 67-59. Matthew Aitch broke a 50-50 tie with a three-point play for the Spartans with 3:34 remain- ing, and Lee Lafayette dunked the ball a half minutel ater to propel MSU into a 55-50 lead. * * * W L Pet. Indiania 9 4 .692 Michigan State 9 4 .692 Iowa 7 5 .583 Wisconsin 7 5 .583 Northwestern 7 6 .538 Purdue 7 6 .538 Illinois 6 7 .462 Ohio State 6 8 .429 Minnesota 4 10 .286 MICHIGAN 2 11 .154 Yesterday's Results Indiana 96, MICHIGAN 90 Illinois 100, Ohio State 79 Michigan State 67, Minnesota 59 Purdue 89, Northwestern 80 RESIDENCE HALL RESULTS Class A Gomberg 44, Huber 41 Class 8 Scott 50, Allen Rumse" 42 SWIMMING Championship Wenley 96, Lloyd 96 (tie) WATER POLO 1st Chicago 75 2nd Taylor 65 North Dakota Denver Michigan Tech MICHIGAN Michigan State Duluth Colorado Coll. Minnesota 16 11 14 11 8 9 5 5 6 5 7 6 11 14 13 17 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 .727 .668 .659 .639 .425 .391 .278 .239 Cats Are Dead LAFAYETTE - Purdue killed Northwestern's Big Ten basketball championship hopes by beating the Wildcats 89-80 last night. Northwestern led most of the first half and had a 43-41 edge at the intermission, but the Boiler- makers went ahead at 45-43 and' led the rest of the way. North- western came from 10 points back at 62-52 to threaten at 75-74, but a layup by Denny Brady start- ed Purdue on its way again. LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, March 7, 12:00 Noon Subjeot: "CONTEMPORARY GERMANY-ARE THE NAZIS COMING BACK?" Speaker: Gerlinde Erbing (Germany) Graduate Student in Social Psychology For reservations, call 662-5529 Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center I The Group Accepted b US. Arm for South Pacific Tour This Summer MUSKET'67 'Ole poter s yi PENS SAT. THIS SOLD WEDNESDAY -OUTi: LY D IA fN EL S H u,. T ubote / ninhly "t T . rrln M pn All cnhn Rn r y ffir-v T