TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 THE M:IGIIIGAN DAILY PACE WV TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 TIlE MICIIII. ~N 1~lEX PA(uW~' WJY'NTtI' r nur. : i.v C, m Big Ten Braces for Ca Spartans, Wildcats Picked as 'Favorites' e Scramble Wolverines Battle Badgers; Search for First Loop Win i I ULLR SKI CLUB MEETING TONIGHT at 7:15 in Room 3C in the Union. HUGO HOHN of Boyne Mountain will give a LECTURE and SHOW MOVIES. .I By HOWARD KOHN Midway through last season, lanky John Benington flapped in- to Yost Fieldhouse locker room to cackle over a green-and-white speckled scheme he'd just hatched. Illinois was playing unbeaten Michigan and Michigan State coach Benington figured that, if his math held up and the Zodiac smiled on share-croppers, he'd let Illinois coach Harry Combes help him win Coach of the Year awards. Benington crowed even louder later on that night when the Il- lini shot Old King Michigan off the roost-plugging the Wolverines with their first loss in 16 home games, 'Party Crasher' Benington's Spartans, led by Stan Washington who could have been the first 26-foot high jumper if he'd set his mind to it, went on Attention all latent penpush- ers! Here's your chance to make a name for yourself and get free press passes. We don't ask for perfection - in fact, we don't even. get ulcers being dis- organized. And we have girls! JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF. to repay Combes by also knocking off Michigan in the season finale -but by that time high school- sized Indiana had cracked the scheme by tripping up both Illinois and MSU. But to show just how scurrilous Benington's. handshake was, a gashouse East Lansing team crashed the season's opening party at Champaign last weekend. It's every man for himself this year in what could be the closest -the Big Ten has come to a Fourth of July sack race since before Jer- ry Lucas., 'Prestidigitator' Cazzie Russell has graduated, Rich Jones has been suspended, Ben McGilmer had a yo-yo for a tutor, Larry Glass had a Harold Stassen for a teacher and Bening- ton had a lot of nerve trying to win the Big Ten in his first sea- son. Jeanne Dixon should have a field day. In a league devoid of any na- tional powerhouses or any fire- eater All-Americans, the word is out on Dame Fate. Sophomores and surprises are in; seniors and stereotypes are out. Already, though, Big Ten ath- letic director Kay Schultz is point- ing to a season finale between Michigan State and Northwestern. Even with loaded dice in the roll, at least one of the two should be near the money on March 11. Pied Race Both were early pre-season favorites, both had spotty pre- season records but both came through with wins in their open- ers. Along with MSU and Northwest- ern, veritable darkhorses Iowa and Illinois could cash in. Michigan, Ohio State and Indiana are long shot favorites and Wisconsin, Pur- due and Minnesota could have real trouble getting off the ground. Shapes of Things ! Michigan State-With Wash- ington and Bill Curtis off to better and higher things, Benington has turned the scoring chores over to ponderous Matt Aitch and soph whiz Lee Lafayette. Aitch, bulky but bruising under the boards, let Loyola (of New Orleans) and Vil- lanova wrap him up somewhere between high and low post and the Spartans were canned. Lafayette, touted as the Big Ten's next superstar, and Aitch, pumped in 24 apiece against Il- linois. John Baily plays smartly at guard, Art Baylor adds rebouding strength despite an early season ankle injury, Steve Rymal is an uncomplaining Joe Dependable, and 5'7" Richie Jordon can do a two-handed stuff. 0 Northwestern- Coach Glass has effectively whiled away two "potential" championships by try- ing to play Walter Alston, leaving an offensive explosion unignited. This year the 'Cats have become back-alley scratchers on defense and have perfected their purring outside shooters. Jerry Burns, everyone's pick as the conference's best guard, means 20-plus points per game. With soph Terry Gam- ber, another guard with exception- al touch, Northwestern has a pow- erful combo from 20 feet out. Jim Cummins comes close to being merely adequate, but Ron Kozlicki and Mike Weaver are slick scorers up front. The 'Cats botched up two in a holiday tour- nament after nudging St. John's but their 95 ppg average is still tops in the ,conference. * Illinois-Even though the slush-fund suspension emptied the extra cartridges out of the Illini ammunition belt, Combes had enough guns to come within two points of the Spartans. The loss of All-America write-in candidate Rich Jones should have cut 25 points off Illinois' average, but soph center Dave Scholz pulled a Unitas and whizzed into the line- up at a 22 ppg clip. Suspended high post man Ron Dunlap may be riding the bench even if the sen- tences are revoked at the Big Ten meeting next week. In addition to Jones and Dun- lap, prize sophomores Steve Ku- berski and Steve' Spanich were axed in the purge. Jim Dawson uses a popping jumper and Preston Pearson scurries at the rate of sound, but Combes needs Jones at forward to keep from stalling, * Iowa-Ralph Miller's Hawk- eyes hit only 17 per cent from the floor in the first half during a home game last year and then went on to win. Miller has his own Palestra in isolationist Iowa City. If the Hawks hadn't been am- nesiacs on the road, they could have expanded the NBA. Chris Pervall and George Peeples are now trying to outrebound Col. Hershey and last year's soph sen- sation, McGilmer, now ineligible, is fighting it out with the books. Gerry Jones, Sam Williams, and Tom Chapman have, however, sparked seven straight victories. " Ohio State-Fred Taylor has been alternating a string of sopho- mores with junior Bill Hosket and senior Ron Sepic. In nine games, Taylor has had as many starters. Joe Sadelfield, eighth man on the team until Taylor put him in the lineup over vacation, returned the surprise by swishing 16 points in the Bucks' opener. Even with Hosket, Ohio State has strictly a hit-and-miss offense. Soph Jeff Miller struck for 20 ppg in his first five starts and then tailspinned for the next three. Indiana - Branch McCracken steped out just in time to let Lou EINO HENDRICKSON Watson take credit for the Hoos- iers' worst season in a decade last year. Returnees Vern Payne and Butch Joyner, give Watson a nu- cleus. Payne is a 5'10" wizard with a one-handed jumper and Joynerl is a top cornerman. Even so, the remainder of the team is staffed with non-entities like Irv Inniger. 0 Wisconsin-In step with the rest of the conference, John Hen- drickson has assembled a senior- less team, but the Badgers still do an about face when the com- pany matches too fast. Senior Tom Schoeneck has the only permanent job on the team -he plays whenever the Badgers are 15 ahead or behind. Soph Chuck Nagle, with a deadly corner shot, has been Hendrickson's most consisten scorer. Purdue-Until scandal-studded, All-America-starred Rick Mount becomes eligible next year, Boiler- maker coach George King will play unlikely men such as Hank Suerth. King's recruiting maneuvers to coax Mount into enrolling got him and Purdue in hot water with the NCAA, but he has only cold show- ers to expect from conference foes now that Dave Schellhase has graduated. Guards Henry Ebers- hoff and Dennis Brady help keep King placated. 0 Minesota-"A coach can show1 a player a lot, but he can't make All-Americas out of anyone," soliloquized Coach John Kundla before the season. Kundla couldn't win when All-America Lou Hudson cracked his elbow last year, and he has as much chance of win- ning the Big Ten with Hudson and Archie Clark in the pros as Castro has of winning the Nobel peace prize. Kundla talks of spirit and en- thusiasm but says little about players. Tom Kundla is a respect- able pivotman, but Wayne Barry may be the worst starter in the Big Ten. By HOWARD KOHN Dairyland's John Erickson has two of the Big Ten's tallest cen- ters in T1" Eino Hendrickson and 6'9" Tom Schoeneck, but he's de- cided both are short enough to ride the bench in tonight's Mich- igan-Wisconsin game at Madison. Schoeneck, a senior, has been a reserve for three years; and Hend- rickson, a sophomore, bungled his T h e Michigan - Wisconsin basketball game tonight will be broadcast on radio stations WAAM and WUOM-FM begin- ning at 8:15. chance with an inept showing in the Los Angeles Classic. Michigan's defending champions, decimated by Northwestern Satur- day, are seeking, their first Big Ten victory. They dumped the Indiana,.,,Nips' Cold 3Minn. BLOOMINGTON (AP) - Fast- breaking Indiana defeated Minne- sota 83-68 last night and evened its Big Ten basketball record at 1-1. Minnesota never led and was even only at 2-2. The Hoosiers built up an advantage and were in front 42-33 at-the half. Minne- sota came closest at 44-39 early in the second half, but Indiana coasted in. Badgers, 98-88, in a rare exhibi- tion match set up during the Classic. Ted Voight, a 6'8" soph who r e p1 a c e d Hendrickson because Erickson wanted "someone with more speed and better moves in the lineup," will start tonight. He started and played in Wisconsin's 79-76 squeaker over Purdue and scored zero points. Outside of Voigt, Erickson hasl one of the smallest quints in the conference. Soph Chuck Nagle, who's been pacing the Badgers with an 18.2 ppg average, is the next biggest man under the boards at 6'5" Junior Joe Franklin, the other forward, however, has been the most aggressive rebounder with nearly 11 per game. Even with changes at both guard positions, Wisconsin will be without a senior in tonight's line- up. Junior Jim McCallum has taken over for junior Mike Carlin and sophomore Tom Mitchell has moved ahead of junior Bob John- son. Hit-and-Run Carlin hit for 22 points against the Wolverines in LA but could 3 manage only two against a shoddy Boilermaker squad. With limited backboard strength' and only scattered outside shoot- ing, the Badgers play a reckless hit-and-run game punctuated by offensive spurts. In seven years at Madison, Erickson has mined only two win- ning season's out of his Dairyland denizens. Michigan's lifetime rec- ord against the Badgers is 38-32. RAYTHEON ] TS CAMPUS INTERVIEWS. January 15 Openings for BS, MS, and PhD Candidates in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICS For work in RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT DESIGN MANUFACTURING Sign up for interviews through your Placement Office, or write Manager of Colege Relations, Raytheon Company, 141 Spring Street, Lexington, Massachusetts 02173. SCORES !1 a, Vanderbilt 54, Oklahoma State 38 Florida 78, Mississippi 63 W. Kentucky 63, E. Tennessee 61 Oklahoma 99, Nebraska 87 Wilberforce 109, Bluefield State 78 Ilardin-Simmons 87, E. New Mexico 75 No. Texas State 80, Wichita State 68 No. MICHIGAN 22. Sullivan (6'4") 40 Stewart (6'6") 4 Dill (6'10") 32 Bankey (6'1") 24 Pitts (6'3") WISCONSIN 11 Nagle (6'5") 25 Franklin (6'4") 41 Volgt (6'8") 34 McCallum (6'3") 14 Mitchell (6'2") F F C G G No. F F C G G RA'YTH EON EXCELLENCE IN ELECTRONICS An Equal Opportunity Employer it 4 ;-Wa