THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, F] THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, F I) WILLIAM LEWI S Badgers Hand Illini First Big Ten Loss a//t/aerco /ori .an] Oi1. Forsythe Gallery 2101YNickels Arcade Monday thru Friday: 10 to 4 Saturdays: 10 to 1 MADISON, Wis. (MP)-Wisconsin's erratic basketball team upset fourth-ranked Illinois 84-77 Mon- day night in a Big Ten confer- ence clash, using a zone defense to hold off the Illini inethe first half and a stall to preserve their edge late in the game. The loss was the first for the Illini in seven conference starts and only the third victory for seventh-place Wisconsin in seven starts. Push Fast Break Wisconsin pushed its fast break offense in high gear early in the first half and kept it going until it held a 40-30 advantage with two minutes remaining in the period. The Badgers went into a stall that limited scoring to two more points for each side until Ken Siebel hit a jump shot making it 44-32 as the halftime horn sound- ed. The Badgers repeated their ball control maneuver, but with four minutes left in the game Illinois had cut the Wisconsin margin to 76-73. For a full minute the Bad- gers kept the ball away from the frustrated Illini and then Jack Brens went in for a layup and added a free throw, pushing Wis- consin ahead 79-73. Leads Scoring Illinois' Bill Small, who led the game's scoring with 29 points, nit two field goals for the Illini's final points. Wisconsins 5'11" guard Mike O'Melia, offset the effort with four free throws, the last two in the final three seconds. Siebel led the Wisconsin scoring with 26 points even though he fouled out with almost seven mm- utes remaining. Jack Brens added 25. Illinois now has a 14-3 mark for the season and Wisconsin is 10-7 over-all. * * * Hoosiers Roll BLOOMINGTON, Ind (JP)-In- diana's Jimmy Rayl hit 32 points and the Hoosiers snapped a three- game basketball losing streak in the Big Ten with an 89-77 victory over Minnesota Monday night. Dick Van Arsdale, one of In- diana's identical twin sophomores, added 20 points, and driving Tom Bolyard added 17. Tom McGrann scored 21 points and Eric Magdanz 19 for the Gophers in their third defeat of eight conference games. Indiana stands 4-3. Closer than Score The game was considerably closer than the final score. in- diana led by only 3 points, 78-75, with a little over two minutes to play. The Hoosiers made five of six free throws in the next .nin- ute, four of them by Rayl. Each team made 30 field goals. Indiana led 47-41 at the half after a Minnesota rally cut into a 10-point deficit. The Gophers tied the score at 51-51, but Indiana's Steve Redenbaugh made two free throws and Minnesota never caught up again. Minnesota got its 30 baskets in 81 shots for 37 per cent, Indiana needed only 74 attempts for 40.5. DESPITE MSU FLOP: 3M' Track Future Still Bright N, Bi Ten Illinois Ohio State Minnesota MICHIGAN Iowa Indiana Wisconsin Michigan State Northwestern Purdue Standings WV L Pct. s 1 .8 5 2 .714 5 3 .625 4 3 .571 4 3 *571. 4 3 .571 3 4 .429 3 5 .375 2 5 .286 1 S .111 i " Petitioning for All-Campus SPRING ELECTIONS is open:. Student Government Council Class Officers Board in Control of Student Publications Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics Union Board of Directorsf --2 graduates --4 undergraduates{ Petitions will be available in S. G. C. offices in the Student Activities Building until Thursday, February 21, 1963. For further information, contact Tom Brown, Exe- cutive Vice-President, S. G. C. (NO 3-0553, or NO 5- 0983). By DAVE GOOD Saturday's flop in the Michigan State Relays was the worst thing that happened to Michigan track coach since Dave Raimey quit the team last December, but Coach Don Canham still isn't ready to concede Wisconsin its second straight indoor championship. "Wisconsin is the team to beat," Canham pointedhout yesterday. "And we're the only team that xnas a chance at them-not a very good chance, but a chance." After watching his team man- age a scant two second places- by Dave Romain in the 600-yd. run and by Dave Hayes, Ted Kelly, Dorr Casto and Charlie Aquino in the two-mile relay-Canham punctuated his description of Sa- turday's meet with words like "lousy" and "disgusting." Time Running Out It was supposed to be a tuneup for the Big Ten meet at Madison, only two-and-a-half week from now, but it wasn't. "We're a pretty solid track team-not as good as we've been in the past, but we can score a lot of points in a lot of events," Canham commented. If Michigan wins it, Canham thinks it will be depth that turns the trick. He has only one Big Ten in- dividual champion (Aquino, who won the indoor 1000-yd. run and the outdoor 660-yd run) returning from last year's team, which fin- ished second to Wisconsin indoors Take a good trimming and like its! M-DEH BARBERS across from HILL AUDITORIUM in basement of Michigan Pharmacy and then upset the Badgers for the outdoor championship. Gaps to Fill When Raimey, the senior half- back, made the decision to forego track for professional football, that left Canham with big holes in the broadjump, sprints and low hur- dles. Michigan had already assumed the underdog's role when gradua- tion claimed Ergas Leps, Bennie McRae, Rod Denhart and Steve Williams-all former Big Ten champions at their specialities. One area of encouragement for Canham lies with junior sprinters. CIncinnati Again Tops Cage Poll By The Associated Press The unblemished -Bearcats of Cincinnati, who barged into the record books with their 37th straigth victory, captured all but two of the first place votes in the weekly Associated Press college basketball poll Monday and held onto their No. 1 ranking for the 11th consecutive week. Upstate rival Ohio State was the only newcomer in the top ten, as the first five places remained in- tact. Wichita, Cinnati's next oppo- nent, fell out of the elite class. Behind Cincinnati in the voting by 42 members of AP's special panel of sports writers and broad- casters were Loyola of Chicago, Duke, Illinois and Arizona State, in the same top five spots. Loyola and Duke got the two first place votes that escaped Cin- cinnati. Ken Burnley and Mac Hunter, the muscle-pull twins of last sea- son. Burnley, whom Canham origin- ally recruited as a quarter-miler, turned in a flashy :06.2 in a 60-yd dash heat for the second straight week Saturday. Plays it Safe Canham is still taking no chances with the Detroit Mumford product, though, and is limiting Burnley to only two heats, the number he will have to run in the Big Ten meet. That's why he pulled Burnley from the 60 finals at the Michigan Relays two weeks ago and then had him float through the finals in last place at Michigan State. Hunter, whom Canham called as good as any sprinter he had ever seen after watching himrace as a freshman, is known to Big Ten track fans only for his fifth- place finish in last season's 60-yd. run indoors. This season he has avoided the pulled muscles that crippled him last year, and Canham has been working him in with 440 legs on the mile relay team. He plans to try Hunter in a 300 against Penn State here this Friday. Bernard Top Prospect Kent Bernard, the sophomore quarter-miler from the West In- dies, also has provided the team with a lift. Canham thinks he can be the best Michigan 440 man in a decade, and so far Bernard hasn't let him down. Saturday he stumbled but still anchored the mile relay wit a strong :48.6 clocking that picked up over five yards on Michigan State's John Parker, one of the favorites in the conference meet. Canham's latest juggling act will be to move Romain, who ran what Canham called an exceptional 600 Saturday, onto the mile relay along with Bernard and Hunter. The other will be either Aquino, the team captain, or Carter Reese, a senior from Watertown, S. Dak., who Canham thinks looks better than at any time since he ran third in the Big Ten indoor 300 as a sophomore. Get on Stick The field events have constitut- ed Canham's major area of con- cern so far. Canham thinks his trio of shotputters-George Puce, Ernst Soudek and Roger Schmitt -could be the best group he has ever had if they can perform up to their potential. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Cincinnati (40) 19 Chicago Loyola (1) 20 Duke (1) 17 Illinois 14 Arizona State 18 Mississippi State 16 Colorado 13 Stanford 13 Ohio State 14 Georgia Tech 17 0 0 2 2 2 4 4 5 3 3 118 362 324 302 230 148 116 78 64 58 ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS & PHYSICISTS: If space is your future, your career is with Hughes IN ASTROSPACE IN AEROSPACE IN TERRASPACE IN HYDROSPACE As far back as 1890, Jules Verne visualized excursion trains-to the moon. Today-73 years later - Hughes offers you the opportunity to play an important part in man's actual conquest of space. Help us soft-land the SURVEYOR on the moon -- or work with us on exciting advanced projects such as: TFX(N)-Guided missile system MMRBM-Mobile Mid-Range Ballistic Missile (integration, Assembly & Checkout) SYNCOM-Communications satellite BAMBI ARPAT ANTI-MISSILE DEFENSE PLASMA PHYSICS & ION PROPULSION ADVANCED FIXEDARRAY RADAR SYSTEMS LASER & MASER RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT NUCLEONICS & MOBOT* SYSTEMS SOLID STATE MATERIALS & DEVICES DATA PROCESSING & COMMAND-CONTROL Inning Football? Bump Elliott is currently pondering a proposition which might make the spring football game more interesting to watch this year. Instead of watching 60 minutes of dull intrasquad football, we may get to watch 12 innings of dull intrasquad football. Not that there's anything here against intrasquad games, but they are designed for coaches to learn from and not for spectators to enjoy. The new idea being considered has been espoused quite loudly by Lee Wilson of Detroit, who more than incidentally is a per- sonal friend of Bump. Wilson's thought is that the clock is a foreign idea to sport and should be removed. He would arrange football games by innings, twelve of them. If you find baseball dull and the idea of innings revolting, Wilson says you can call- them ends, twelfths, parts, or things if you like. His idea is not to pattern it after baseball, but rather to just give each of .the football teams an equal chance at the ball. For Instance: Michigan leads Illinois 8-7 and each has had the ball eleven times in the game. Then Michigan intercepts a pass and successfully runs out the clock. Under Wilson's system Pete would have had another chance to win the game. Saves Agony... You might be interested to know that the actual Illinois Michi- gan game last fall would have ended on an Illini fumble on the kick- off following Michigan's winning touchdown. It might have been disheartening to Pete, but Bump would have been saved from 13 minutes of fourth quarter agony, Since Wilson concocted the idea, he has kept busy charting num- erous football games and pestering coaches and sports editors to join his parade. He almost got a trial run in the Detroit Lion exhibition season, but Buddy Parker of the Pittsburgh Steelers wouldn't go along. So now he's working on Bump. Wilson was. first heard of here when he sent a published ar- ticle of his which included as one of the diagrams the Michigan- Duke game of 1961. The Wolverines won that one 28-14, but Duke made it hectic in the second half. Wilson's chart showed that the Blue Devils would have had two more chances at the ball in inning football, so we were against it and maybe Bump would have been, too. Football by innings will probably be a longer, game, although Michigan's two victories last year would have happened quicker. There is a suspicion that the use! of the forward pass might become quite minimal. There is no better example of this than Woody Hayes. He only throws the ball now when the clock dictates that he has to get within fullback range in a hurry. Hayes-Type Football... Someone commented last year that Hayes' idea of football was about as interesting as watching grass grow and this might be a criticism of Wilson's plan. Consider the risk involved in throwing a forward pass-if it's intercepted, you've lost one of your twelve opportunities to score. Under the clock, there might be plenty of time to come back. On the credit side, Michigan State might score the first four times it has the ball; then you could fumble seven times quickly and save a monotonous afternoon. Bump isn't at all sold on the idea, but he is entertaining thoughts of giving it a whirl in the spring game. He isl currently talking it over with Fritz Crisler and a decision should come be- fore long. It's an ideal time to try such experiments, since there is no importance involved on who wins the game and Bump might welcome a longer period to examine his warriors. A personal thought is that one of the more exciting elements of a football game is the speed with which play occurs. In fadt, the closer it gets to the speed of hockey, the better. It probably won't be well received, but let's try it anyway. Maybe if the idea really smells, we can start a drive to put the clock in baseball. It all makes for good copy. Others receiving votes, alpha- betically: Auburn, Bradley, Ca- nisus, Holy Cross, Idaho, Ken- tucky, LaSalle, Memphis State, Miami, Fla., NYU, North Carolina, Oklahoma State, Oregon State, Providence, -St. Joseph's, St. Louis, Seattle, Texas, UCLA, Wake For- est, West Virginia, Wichita. OUR HAIR CUTTING and STYLING METHODS, will please you. Try us! --Tonsorcial queries invited- THE DASCOLA BARBERS near the Michigan Theatre I I Scores I Oklahoma State 54, Kansas 53 South Georgia 66, Young Harris 61 Furman 91, VMI 85 Detroit 61, Iona 58 Xavier (Ohio) 59, Miami (Ohio) 57 Indiana 89, Minnesota 77 Wisconsin 84, Illinois 77 Iowa State 75, Nebraska 54 Auburn 88, Florida 59 Wichita 73, Drake 49 Mississippi State 56, Kentucky 52 Mississippi 85, Tennessee 78 Memphis state 76, Louisville 55 Georgetown 92, Villa Madonna 72 Colorado 71, Oklahoma 60 BE SWEET TO YOUR SWEETHEART - GIVE py e S gee tS a WIN YOU R V A LENTIN E with a S gorgeous red Heart tilled with Russell Stover . B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. Candidates Members of our staff will conduct CAMPUS INTERVIEWS February 18 and 19, 1963 Find out more about the wide range of activities, educational programs and relocation allowances offered by Hughes. For Interview appointment or informational literature consult your College Placement Director. Or write; College Placement Off/ce. 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