~oekeyand Basketball Squads Both Lose on I i Period Tech Flurry Steady Northwestern Quintet ( s 6-1 Wolverine Defeat Wolverines Despite Cole's 17 P C..s+nt I..By BOB ROMANOFF Road )utelasses oint Effort Special to The Daily EVANSTON - Northwestern's Wildcats combined speed, ball con- trol, hot shooting, and a tight de- fense to send Michigan down to its ninth defeat in ten Big Ten starts last night, 66-56. 3500 fans were present in the 9000 seat McGaw Memorial Hall to watch the Wildcats race to their fifth victory in 11 starts and move within one game of fifth place Indiana in the Big Ten standings. The Wolverines scored the first four points and the last six points of the game but sandwiched be- tween these two scoring bursts the Wildcats had the game well in hand despite scattered uprisings by Michigan. Big Leads There were seven times in the second half when it seemed as if the Wildcats would run the Wol- verines completely off the floor.' From the 16:09 mark to the 6:08 point Northwestern leads fluctu- ated between 14 and 18 points. It was during this period that the Wildcats entertained their -Daily-David Giltrow BY A HAIR-Tom Robinson hits the tape ahead of teammate John Gregg, far left, to win the 60-yd. sprint in last night's open track meet at Yost Field House. His time was :06.3. He also had the best time in the 300-yd. run. fans with a dazzling mixture of1 ball control and speed. They ran! the ball around the outside tot loosen up Michigan's defense and then at the opportune time passed1 off to 6-4 Ken Luggens, 6-1 Ralph Wells, or 5-11 Bill Cacciatore, who would then burst through the de- fense for a driving layup. With just five minutes left in the game Michigan whittled, Northwestern's lead down to only eight points, the smallest it had been since early in the first half, only to again be frustrated by Northwestern's speed patterns as' 6-3 Brad Snyder and Luggens hit for three successive layups to ice the game. Northwestern added to Michi- gan's miseries with its tight man to man defense which forced the Wolverines to attempt most of their' shots from the outside with-, out much success. While Northwestern hit for a sizzling 48.3 per cent average from the floor, for the second successive game, Michigan was forced to settle for 31.4 per cent as they hit on only 22 of 70 shots. To add in- sult to injury the Wildcats took 12 fewer shots than did the Wol- verines. Cole Leads 6-7 sophomore center Tom Cole was the Wolverines standout as he hit for 15 points and grabbed 17 of Michigan's rebounds to lead the team ' in both departments. Sport Editorials For a series of editorials dealing with problems con- fronting college athletics, turn to page four. Captain John Tidwell, Michigan's leading point-getter, remained in his slump as he was continually harried by the Wildcats' scrappy Wells who held him to but 12 points, of which 10 came in the second half. Tidwell was able to hit on only five of 16 shots from the field. The Wildcats displayed a well MICHIGAN Higgs Maentz Cole Hall Tidwell Brown Schoenherr Totals NORTHWESTERN Snyder Lutgens Bone Cacciatore Wells Miller Weislaw Gibbs Potter Radtke Renner Kauber Totals Michigan Northwestern G F P T 3 0-0 4 6 4 0-0 4 8 3 9-14 0 15 2 1-1 1 5 5 2-6 1 12 1 0-1 0 2 4 0-0 2 8 22 12-22 12 56 G F P T 6 1-2 3 13 6 5-8 3 17 0 2-2 5 2 6 2-2 2 14 7 0-3 3 14 0 0-0 2 0 2 0-0 1 4 1 .0-0 0 2 0 0-2 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 o 0-0 1 0 0 0-0 *00 28 10-192266 26 30--56 35 31--66 balanced scoring attack as Lug- gens hit for 17, Wells for 14. Cac- ciatore, who a few weeks ago was given a one week's suspension for an attitude detrimental and since then has been one of the team's standouts, had 14, and Snyder 13. The Wolverines, who had a two- inch height advantage over the Wildcat starters, grabbed only five more rebounds than their op- ponents. As Coach Dave Strack commented after the game, "They were mainly defensive rebounds. We didn't have much offensive re- bounding strength." The dejected coach added, "They had good speed, but could be had," and then studying the shooting statistics sorrowfully walked away. Ten Point Loss M Track Stars Shine inMichigan Open. 4 and then won the 880-yd. run in the fine time of 1:54.2. Canham was all smiles about his two pole vaulters, Rod Denhart and Steve Overton, who tied for first at 13'8" with Jim Robinson, unattached. Both narrowly missed clearing Track Sj BROAD JUMP: 1. Bird (M), 2. Lewis (unat.), 3. Holland (unat.). Distance: 23'8". (Breaks meet rec- ord of 221103]11.) POLE VAULT: 1. (tie) Denhart (M)-Overton (M)-Robinson-(un- at.). Height: 13'8". HIGH JUMP: 1. Johnson (unat.), 2. Ammerman (M unat.), 3. Cebhas (M). Height: 6'4". ' SHOT PUT: 1. LaSpina (Miami), 2. Locke (M), 3. Schmitt (M unat.). Distance: 50'11". 60-YD. DASH: 1. Robinson (M), 2. Lewis (unat.), 3. Hunter (M un- at.). Time: :06.3. (Breaks meet rec- ord of :06.4.) 300-YD. DASH: 1. Reese (M), 2. McClure (East York T.C.), 3. Chal- fant (M). Time: 32.1. SPECIAL 300-YD. DASH: 1. Rob- inson (M), 2. Patterson (E.Y.T.C.), 3. Malone (unat.). Time: 31.3. 440-YD. DASH: 1. Cercone (M), 2. Gibson (M), 3. Bettis (Bowling Green). Time: 51.1. (Breaks meet record of :51.3.) 600-YD. RUN: 1. Parker (unat.), i1 14', a Big-Ten-caliber performance in an event which Canham figured would be much weaker for the Wolverines. He also ran down a list of fine performances by his team's mid- dle - distance runners, especially Dave Martin and Jim Wyman. unmary 2. Geist (M), 3. Hornbeck (M). Time: 1:12.9. 880-YD. RUN: 1. Leps (M), 2. Mar- tin (M), 3. Casto (M unat.). Time: 1:54.2. (Breaks meet record of 1:56.7.) 1.000-YD. RUN: 1. Martin (M), 2. Schafer (M), 3. Aquino (M).' Time: 2:14.2. (Breaks meet record of 2:17.5.) MILE-RUN: 1. Hayes (M unat.), 2. Carrigan (unat.), 3. Ring (unat.). Time: 4:43.2. TWO-MILE RUN: 1. Wyman (M), 2. Kitt (Dayton A.C.), 3. Atkins (E.Y.T.C.). Time: 9:22.2. (Breaks meet record of 9:34.7.) 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES: 1. McRae. (M), 2. Malzahn (unat.), 3. Wil- liams (M). Time: :08.0. (Breaks meet record of :08.1.) 56-YD. LOW HURDLES: 1. McRae (M), 2. Cephas (M), 3. Barham (un- at.). Time: :07,4. (Ties meet and varsity record.) MILE RELAY: 1. Michigan (Horn- beck, Cephas, Reese, Leps), 2. E.Y.T.C., 3. B. G. Time: 3:24.4. Big Ten Ohio State Purdue Iowa Indiana Minnesota Northwestern Illinois Wisconsin Mich. State Michigan Standings Big Ten All Games W L W L 12 0 22 0 9 2 15 5 8 2 16 4 5 5 12 8 6 6 8 13 5 6 9 10 4 6 8 12 2 8 5 15 2 10 6 16 1 9 5 15 i JOHN TIDWELL ..hits 12 in loss DISCHINGER'S 52 SETS RECORD: Conference Powerhouses Roll On By The Associated Press Ohio State's Buckeyes won their 22nd straight this year, whipping Wisconsin 97-74. The Buckeyes extended collegi- ate basketball's longest current win streak to 27 games with a strong team effort. Four starters, playing less than 27 minutes of the one-sided contest, scored 14 points or more. Captain Larry Siegfried was the leader with 19. John Havlicek add- ed 18, Mel Howell 15 and Jerry Lucas, double-teamed by the Badgers most of the way, hit 14. The other Buckeye regular, Rich- ie Hoyt, added 8. While a storm howled outside, the Buckeyes warmed up the crowd of 13,398 by breakintg into a 12-0 lead, which Wisconsin could never threaten. Lucas scored only three points in the first half, but took almost complete charge of the defensive rebounds by grabbing 14 off the boards. He had a total of 23 for the game, high this season for the nation's No. 1 rebounder. Total rebounds were 53 for Ohio State, 42 for Wisconsin. ** * Purdue 85, Michigan State 74 LAFAYETTE-Terry Dischinger of Purdue cracked the Big Ten one game scoring record last night with a 52-point blast that tumbled /1/ Michigan State's basketball team1 85-74. Dischinger hit 19 field goals and, 14 of 15 free throws to better the1 48-point performance of Ohio State's Jerry Lucas against Mich- igan State two weeks ago. The 6-foot-7 Olympic player wasn't pulling a circus stunt. He began pouring in points because Purdue needed them badly - be- hind 57-55 with about 11 minutes to play. Dischinger made the next fielder and 20 of Purdue's next 28 points. ,The Boilermakers, strengthen- ing their second-place Big Ten standing with a 9-2 mark, had considerable difficulty with the Michigan State team which had won only two conference starts.. They were tied 44-44 at the half. * * * Iowa 61, Minnesota 43 MINNEAPOLIS - Resourceful Iowa reduced Minnesota's offense to tanglefoot confusion last night and turned loose Don Nelson for 30 points in a 61-43 Big Ten bas- ketball romp. It hoisted the Hawkeyes con- ference record to 8-2 and kept flickering their feeble hopes for a share of the conference title. With a superbly disciplined man-to-man defense that smoth- ered all but Bob Griggas, Iowa shut out Minnesota over one five minute stretch in the first half and yielded only five points over one 10-minute run. Nelson, maneuvering smoothly under the baskets, teamed with Matt Szykowny to shoot Iowa into a 19-9 lead with 12 minutes gone. :Nelson and the Iowa defense gave the fumbling Gophers no chance to recover thereafter. * * * Indiana 93, Illinois 82 BLOOMINGTON-Indiana Uni- versity's Hoosiers , gave Coach Branch McCracken his 400th bas- ketball victory of a 28-year career yesterday by beating Illinois 93- 82. Indiana, not having one of its better years, just pulled even in the Big Ten race with a 5-5 mark; Illinois was left 4-6 by its fourth straight conference defeat.. Senior John Wessels of Illinois won scoring honors with 28 points .but Indiana had Bolyard and Walt Bellamy with 22 apiece and Gary Long with 21. AMERICAN SOCIALISM VERSUS SOVIET CAPITALISM: WHICH WILL SURVIVE? Presented by the International Committee of Union Student Offices f tltE IitiOAITADS ref )/ I'm telling you if you want the best sandwich in town, visit the CAFE PROMETHEAN for lunch. 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