PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, 9 FEBRI PAGE SIX THE MIChIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, 9 FEBR UARY 1965 .6 By LLOYD GRAF Michigan used a claw defense to fluster and fru status-seeking Iowa tee night, 81-66, denying thei first place in the Big Ten Michigan remains in fi a 6-0 record.- The game was won ins Defense. F Wolverines held Iowa scoreless and med the ba ng zone racked up 19 points themselves if he want astrate a near the end of the first half. For the Yost b am last eight miiutes and fourteen sec- H r bid for onds Michigan vacumm-packed After ti- the Iowa five in a zone that would the lead t [rst with have kept coffee fresh. As Coach it, but a sc Dave Strack said after the game eye team "defense won it and I'm afraid they were a furious you'd have to say it was ours."'yever got 1 as the Chris Pervall popped a jumper but the sI for two of his 16 points at 11:13 St. Johnsd l of the first half and Iowa was not until theh igs to see its score change until 2:59 game whe L pct when Dennis Pauling hit for his The pla 1.000 only field goal of the game. The handedlyk .813 score .went from 20-15, Iowa, to with 26 p .813 713 34-20, Michigan, Cazzie Russell obstrusives .667 accounting for six of \the points Jones xwhc .333 with stuff shots. On one of them stringer o .3 he took off from the free throw team, Carv 167 line and floated like a whooping a senior 000 crane up to the basket, then ram- only averag Clips Hawkeye Wings, 8I- flurry of brute Big Ten basketbal Standi all through the hoop as But sometime in the last two ed to put a hole through years he has become a ballplayer. boards underneath. A sportswriter in the press box who Haunting Ghost has watched him play all season he Wolverines assumed predicts "Gerry Jones will be a they never relinquished , superstar by his senior year. The rapping, hustling Hawk- boy has the natural moves to be never let them forget great and Ralph Miller will make in a ball game. Iowa , him great." closer than eight points, Jones Outplays Caz pecter of Nebraska and | If Gerry Jones didn't look like didn't let Michigan relax a superstar last night he fared last two minutes of the well against old teammate Caz n the team led 73-61. Russell. Jones outscored him by yer who almost single- seven, blocked three of his shots kept Iowa in the game, and outrebounded Cazzie 11-5. points was a thin, un- I It was his best game of the sophomore named Gerry ' season offensively," said Miller af- o used to be a second terwards. He played it before his n Cazzie's high school father and old coach who led an ver of Chicago. Even as aggregation which included Caz- with Cazzie gone Jones ged seven points a game. ___- E.I)I Lea- zie's family up from Chicago. still could not outrebound stubborn But if the game was a reunion 'Iowa. The Hawkeyes picked off 45 for Russell and Jones it was also to Michigan's 42. It was a dif- an emergence for one Craig Dill ferent story from the free throw who was thrown into the melee line as Iowa hit a poor 50 per cent when Bill Buntin got into foul while Michigan notched 17 of 24. trouble and Larry Tregoning got The Wolverines hit at 47.7 clip tired. Dill didn't just get lost in from the field to the Hawks' 45 the action, he carved out 11 points per cent. for himself making 7 out of 8 from "We made more bad passes to- the free throw line, night than we've made in the last Toward the end of the game eight weeks." said the crew-cutted Michigan had a team in the game Miller, in his freshman year at of Buntin, Oliver Darden, George Iowa after coming from Wichita. Pomey, Russell and Dill which He wasn't making excuses when meant a total of 33 feet of basket- .he said it, he was lauding Michi- ball players, or 6'7" a man, the ' gan's defense. tallest combination that Strack "You've got to praise George has ever used in a game situation. Pomey for his defensive work out Michigan may have been taller there. He was all over the court than a tribe of Watusis, but it keeping them off balance," said Strack with the hoarseness that reflected a rugged game. 1 iBut it wasn't just Pomey who W L MICHIGAN 6 0 Illinois 5 1 Minnesota 5 l Iowa 5 2 Indiana 4 2 Northwestern. 2 4 Ohio'.State 4 Purdue I 5 Wisconsin 1 5 Michigan State 0 6 I i / .L S. i JOL t,./ V v F ast Service-o ron khakis- AND DONE THE WAY YOU LIKE THEM ! - { Khakis are a major item in every student's wardrobe. Some like them washed and others prefer to hove them dry-. cleaned. Whatever your preference may be, we'd like to make one point--Greene's can do them, exactly the way you like them . . . either way. FAST SERVICE ON SH IRTS, TOO! By The Associated Press Michigan was ranked number one by the Associated Press for the second-straight week in the college basketball poll, collecting 23 first place votes and 346 points. The Wolverines, currently sport- ing a 14-2 record, were not sched- uled last week. They lead second place UCLA by 37 points. Placing three teams among the top ten, the Big Ten Conference was well represented. Illinois re- SuPport the Annual Kiwanis Sale Feb. 11,12,13 Nat'l. Guardj Armory-All proceeds to those in need regardless of race, color or creed. AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University-663-7 151 threw Iowa's renowned "pressure basketball" back into the Hawk- placed San Francisco in the num- eye's faces. The entire Michigan ber-ten spot in the rankings while defense harassed the Iowa 1-3-1 Indiana, with a 13-2 mark, drop- offense ito errors. The Iowa stra- ped from seventh to eighth in the tegy was to pass the ball around poll. The Hoosiers whipped Loyola until it could get the ball to Per- of Chicago in last week's action by vall at the high post or George a score of 109-82. Peepels in the low. The Michigan Top Six Win zone smothered those two so ef- There were no changes in the fectively that the burden shifted first six positions with Michigan to Jones on the outside. and UCLA being followed by St. As one spectator said to Jones' Joseph's, Pa., Providence, David- father after the game, "Gerry son and Duke. couldn't do it all by himself out Vanderbilt, t h e Southeastern there." His father didn't answer, Conference pace-setter, advanced but somebody standing near him two notches to seventh by down- replied. "No, but he tried." ing Tulane last. week, 85-67, to boost its record to 15-2. Wichita dropped from eighth to ninth in the rankings. The Shock- MICHIGAN ers won their fifteenth game G F R PT against three setbacks turning Tregoning 4-8 1-3 2 3 9 bak t Lus,7-6.Darden 5-11 2-3 7, 5 12 back St. Louis, 72-64. Buntin 9-16 1-1 12 5 19 St. Joseph's barely. managed to{ Russell 8-16 3-3 5 3 19 nip out Providence for the third- Pomey 3-6 3-6 3 0 9 place spot. The Hawks garnered Myers 1-5 7-8 3 212 276 points and three first-place Thompson 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 votes to the Friars' 265. St. TOTALS 32-67 17-24 42 21 81 Joseph's -has a 19-1 mark with its IOWA only setback at the hands of Pro- Jones 1-23 4 5 vidence. Last week the Hawks de- Olson 2-5 1-4 5 2 5 feated Georgetown. D.C., 80-72, reeples 5-10 3-7 10 5 13 and Wake Forest, 117-91. Rodgers 2-7 0-0 5 3 4 Pervall 6-12 4-8 7 3 16 Still Undefeated Pauling 1-3 0-0 0 2 2 Providence remains the nation's TOTALS 27-60 12-24445 17 66 only undefeated major college IOWA 32 34-66 team. The Friars at 16-0 whipped DePaul 72-70 and Niagara 74-55. Davidson continued to roll 1Boston Coach along, edging Virginia Military 84-78 and smashing George Wash- 1 ington 119-83. Davidson now has Pr ise 8 e an 18-1 mark. The Top Ten, figured on a 10-9-8-7- BOSTON ()- Olympian, All- 6-5-4-3-2-1- basis, with first place votes American; Rhodes Scholar Bill in parentheses, won - lost records Bradley of Princeton can play through Saturday, Feb. 6, and total basketball. But what does Red points:!Aebcthnofim 1.MICHIGAN (23) 13-2 346 Auerbach think of him? 2. UCLA (5) 16-2 309 Considered a pretty fair judge 3. St. Joseph's, Pa. (3) 19-1 276 of talent, the boss of the Boston t4. Providence ('7) 16-04 265 Celtics says: 5. Davidson 18( )0 "Make the NBA? Are you kid- 6. Duke 13-2 108 .Vanderbit 15-. ding? Bradley could go right in 8. Indiana 13-2 100 i and be one of the better ones. It 9. Wichita 14-3 99 would be just a question of how 10. Illinois 12-3 36 great he would be,' not would he Other teams receiving votes, listed al -grahewudbntolde phabetically: Brigham Young, Connecti- make it? cut, Iowa, Miami of Ohio, Minnesota, "He's got fantastic hands, good New Mexico, North Carolina State, vision and he's not hungry. He's Oklahoma State, Penn State, St. John's, really an All-Ameica boy, no kid- N.Y., San Francisco, Tennessee, Vii- a an lanova.- ding. V i -Dally-Kamalakar Rao CAZZIE RUSSELL AND GERRY JONES, former high school teammates, go up against each other in last night's 81-66 Michi- gan victory over Iowa. Cazzie tied with Bill Buntin for team scoring honors with 19 each, but Jones led everyone with 26. COLLEGE ROUNDUP Indiana Stops State; Mlini Batter Buekeves A on the campus 9 1213 So. University 0 516 E. Liberty By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON-Indiana beat Michigan State 112-94 last night in spite of some fancy shooting by the Spartans' Marcus Sanders and Stan Washington. The victory kept the Hoosiers' alive in the Big Ten basketball! race at 4-2 and gave them a 14-2 season record. Michigan State was pushed deeper into the conference cellar at 0-6. Sanders scored 32 points, hit- ting 14 of 23 shots froip the field, including 9 of 12 in the second half, and 4 of 9 free throws. Wash- ington, who did not start but got into the game early, hit 12 of 18 and 4 of 6 for 28 points. Indiana hit 49 of 87 shots. Michigan State made good 40 of 75 but never could catch up after falling 12-2 behind in the first 21/2 DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. NEW CAR DEALER Triumph-Volvo- Fiat-Checker HERB ESTES AUTOMART 319 W. Huron 665-3688' _ _ _ minutes. Indiana had a 58-46 half= time advantage. Dick VanArsdale led the Hoosiers with 23 points. Brother Tom, and Steve Redenbaugh scored 20. * * * Illini Win COLUMBUS-Illinois broke open a tight basketball game with 12 straight points in the second half last night to down Ohio State, 86- 71, and remain in contention- for the Big Ten title. The Illini were trailing 49-48 when senior guard Tal Brody and center Skip Thoren sparked a drive that put them safely in front 60-49 with 10 minutes to play. Thoren led all scorers with 27 points and Brody finished with 24. Don Freeman had 20 for the visitors. The victory was the fifth in six conference starts for the Il- lini. Their season record is 13-3. Ohio State, paced by Ron Sepic's 19 points, dropped to 2-4 in the conference and 8-8 for the season. Illinois led by as much as 15 points in the first half, when it shot 61 per cent from the field. SCOUES Indiana 112, Michigan State 94 Illinois 86, Ohio State 71 Notre Dame 94, Butler 72 Bradley 85, Cincinnati 69 Detroit 78, Chicago Loyola 76 Davidson 103, West Virginia 80 Toledo 74, Portland 65 Miami, o., 97, Xavier 68 Duquesne 75, Wichita 72 Kansas 71, Missouri 60 Vanderbilt 96, LSU 85 Kentucky 74, Miss. State 56 4 I RESEARCH TEST AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORIES OF THE NAVY Representatives of five civilian research, test and development laboratories of the Navy located in Washington, D. C., Maryland and Virginia will visit on February 22, 1965, to interview candidates for degrees in engineering, mathematics, and physical science. Opportunities for career employment on projects of world-wide importance. Special provisions for continuing graduate work. PUNCHED TAPE IS T00 SLOW FOR US. 4 . Punched tape used to be considered "speedy"-and fast enough to collect and store business data sent over corn- munications lines. can be transmitted ... up to 2400 "bits" per second. So fast that magnetic com- puter tape must be used to keep pace with the new system. and national defense. It serves to explain why GT&E is one of America's foremost companies in terms of dollar sales, rev- enues, and diversity of products. { A r _ . 1 II