TUE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. DECEMBER 9.1962 ng L ose; Four Others Tie SWC, BIG EIGHT: Two Loops Agree on Letter of Intent DALLAS (P - The Southwest Conference announced yesterday it had reached an agreement with the IBig Eight Conference under which there will be a mutual recognition of letters of intent in order to better control recruiting of football players. Under this agreement an athlete signing at one of the 16 schools of the two conferences would be ineligible to transfer to another without loss of his freshmani and sophomore years of competition. The agreement was reached by telephone between the Southwest Conference, meeting here, and the Big Eight, meeting in Kansas City. The date on which athletes may be signed was set as the first Tuesday preceding Feb. 15. Next year, when the agreement goes into effect, the date will be Feb. 12. Compromise The Big Eight had preferred March 1 but compromised with the Southwest Conference, which had a Feb. 1 date. Ohio State Tumbles West Virginia, 76-69 Howard Grubbs, executive sec- retary of the Southwest Confer- ence, said the agreement was in the interest of both athlete and the school. It will slash the time the school has to spend tn recruiting, remove arguments that might arise over a school in one conference taking an athlete from a school in the other conference, and therefore cutdon on the competition for Helps the Boy It helps the boy, Grubbs pointed out, because it removes the pres- sure. The athlete no longer will be courted over a period of months and can apply himself to his stud- ies in high school. The boy will sign what is termed a pre-enrollment application, with no fnancial aid mentined Wen eligibility he then will be given financial aid. The two conferences agreed there would be no limit on the number of pre-enrollment appli- cations. The Southwest had been in the opening period, then Dean COLUMBUS (A') - Unbeaten Prentice notched 'his 180th NHL Ohio State slapped on a tenacious goal Itt 9:55 of the second period, defense and got its offense roll- Bucyk scored just before the ing amn the second half to hand end of the middle session and lift- third ranked West Virginia its ed a 30-footer past Marcel Paille first defeat 76-69 last night. -subbing for injured New York It was the Bucks' fourth goalie Gump Worsley-at 6:37 of straight. Worsley, injured in a game with sThe Buckeye defense repeatedly Chicago last week-end, is expected stolenthners'lan rkeu tek to be out of the line-up for at Mountainers'h crk fas break. least another 10 days. Rod WTorn hord 24mpons Bucyk also started the play on fod Ws Viiadeflec numerou the tying goal, feeding Guy Gen- driin dayus deflected nd he dron whose 25-foot effort bounced Bukdfnecnegdo hm along the ice and glanced off the Nearly Even skate of McKenny who had been The teams battled on nearly the particular object of fan deni- even terms in the first half with sion earlier in the game, the score being tied six times and Colts Score Three Late TD'si Overcome Redskins, 34-21 pleted for 367 yds. were a new personal high for him in seven seasons. Flanker back Jimmy Orr caught three of the touchdown passes from ranges of 11, 59, and 23 yds. Dick Bielski snagged another of 11 yds. Connects Snead started off with a bang by connecting with Leroy Jack- son, a rookie from Western Illi- nois, scoring his first pro touch- down, on an yd play. Snead of touchdowns on passes of 17 and 2Snead completed 18 of his 33 tosses for 351 yds. Shinnick's ball hawking came to the fore late in the third quarter when the Colts were trailing 21- 14. He recovered a fumble by Jackson on the Redskin 31, in- tercepted and ran back one pass to the Washington 25 and broke up a tying touchdown threat by intercepting another on his 9. It took the Colts oi'ly 9 plays to travel the ,91 yds. for the clinching touchdown after Shin- nick's second interception. Goal Tending The game offered three unusual incidents. Twice the Dedskins vio- lated the rules by kicking a loose ball and R. C. Owens, the kan- garoo Colt, jumped up- to knock down an attempted Washington field goal as the ball was about to go over the crossbar. changing hands on nine occasions. The Mountaineers, however, pull- ed to their biggest lead just be- fore the halftime buzzer, 37-34. BLOOMINGTON (A') - Iowa State's Cyclones upset the 8th- ranked Indiana University basket- bal team lst nigh fo50r the sec- Jim Rayl of Indiana, No. 2 scored in the Big Ten last year and averaging 32 points in his first two games this season, hit only two fielders in eight shots and sat out most of the second half. He added seven of eight free throws for an 11-point total. Share Honors Iowa State had a balanced at- tack, with 6'5" Gary Kleven scor- ing 16 and 6*3" Vince Brewer and 6'8" Rich Froisted getting 13 apiece. Indiana jumped into a 9-2 lead,. with sophomore 'Dick VanArsdale getting six of the points. He f in- ished high for the Hoosiers with 14. Iowa State led 30-28 at the half. The Hoosiers caught up at 3 1-31 but a Kleven fielder put the Cy- clones ahead to stay. * * * MADISON (A)-Wisconsin found the going easy in its first home basketball game of the 1962-63 season yesterday and set down Texas Western 73-59. The Badgers, sixth ranked in the nation, showed flashes of the form that carried them to a sec- ond place finish in the Big Ten last season. -Defensive Trouble The Miners, beaten Friday night by Marquette 77-65 in the first game of their Wisconsin in- vasion, had trouble defending against Wisconsin's fast break. Four Badgers shot in double fig- ures, led by 6'8" Jack Brens with 19 points. Noland Richardson top- ped Texas Western with 18. Wis- consin had a shooting percentage of .508 to the Miners' .325. . * * * EAST LANSING (A)-Michigan State cracked Kansas' defenses for 15 straight points last night and then hustled its way to an 81-62 victory, its first of the sea- son. Pete Gent led the Spartan scoy- ing with 22 points, 14 of them coming in the first half. Marcus Sanders added 20 points. Kansas' All-American prospect Nolen Ellison scored 16 points. CINCINNATI (A') - Elgin Bay- lor and Jerry West divided eight points in overtime last night leading Los Angeles' Lakers in a 131-128 come-from-behind Nation- al Basketball Association victory over Cincinnati. The Royals frittered away a 16- point second half lead, mostly in the last two minutes after defen- sive ace Wayne Embry fouled out. Rudy Larusso scored seven points and Baylor two sparking the final rally that tied it 118-all in regulation play. Under Protest Cincinnati protested a decision that nullified Oscar Robertson's field goal attempt with four sec- ond left in regular play. That would have given them a two- point edge. The basket was scotch- ed a ruling teammate Hub Reed had called for time-out previously. Robertson headed both squads with 42 points. Baylor's 33 were tops for the Lakers. * * * NEW YORK (A') -- The New York Knickerbockers defeated the Detroit Pistons 87-78 in a Nation- al Basketball Association game yesterday by rallying to outscore the Pistons 38-28 in the second half of the low scoring game in Madison Square Garden. The victory, the first the Knicks have been able to score over the Pistons in four meetings this season, provided New York with a three-game winning string. Early Lead The Pistons, ahead 35-27 at the end of the first period and by 50-49 at halftime, scored only nine field goals in the second half. They got 16 points in the third quarter and only 12 in the With 5:24 remaining in the first half, Michigan State scored 11 straight points to go ahead 40- 29 at halftime. They increased the lead to 19 points to 57-38 with 12:25 remaining in the second half. For the rest of the game it was all Michigan State. The turning point in the game came jate in the first half. State's Gent and Tom Douglas stole two consecutive passes to lead the Spartans to their halftime margin. fourth stanza. The missing frequently, points in each of periods. Knicks, also managed 19 the last two Shue-In Gene Shue, an ex-Piston, paced the Knick scorers with 20 points while Don Ohl, who had 23 for Detroit, was the game's high scorer. The Knicks scored 34 baskets in 94 shots while the Pistons got 28 field goals in 84 attempts. Tight defenses, ball hawking and fouling, mixed with poor ball- handling, helped keep the score ~down. * * * SYRACUSE (A') - Lee Shaffer scored 28 points, most in the second half, as the second-place Syracuse Nationals defeated first- place Boston 102-97 Saturday night and cut the Celtics lead to three games in the National Bas- ketball Association's Eastern Di- vision. The Nats had to battle back from a' cold second quarter in which they connected on only three of 22 field goal attempts and wound up with only 10 poInts. They trailed at the half, 57-34. Narrow Deficit The Nats closed the gap in the third quarter, pulling within two points 75-73 on a basket by Johnny Kerr as the session ended. Early in the fourth quarter, Shaffer put Syracuse ahead for the first time since the opening stanza when he scored on a layup. However, it. wasn't until only 5%Y minutes remained that the Nats moved out front to stay, 90- 89, on a basket by Paul Neumann. Tom Heinsohn was high scorer for Boston with 20 points. Roal ini O eme Kniks Nats 1 Vtorious e) limiting it to 22 in football plus three junior college transfers and three regular transfers. No 'Hiding Out'- The t~vo conferences agreed that there would have to be a 72-hour period from the signing date before an institution or the alumni of the institution could pay the ex- penses of the athlete to visit the campus. This is to prevent a school "hidin out" an athlete. geen must be filed within one week after it is signed. If the boy gets a notice within two weeks that it has not been filed, he becomes eligible to sign at another school. Failure of a boy to pass the en- trance examination at one of the schools will obviate the agreement. He can then go to another school without loss of eligibility. KANSAS CITY (A')- An inter- conference letter of intent for high school athletes was agreed upon by the Big Eight and South- west Conferences yesterday and hailed as a forerunner of similar agreements involving all the na- tion's major athletic conferences. The agreemnent covers only oot- ball. The two conferences agreed on Feb. 12, 1963 as the signing date for all high school athletes in both leagues. The SWC has had a letter of intent for several years, the Big Eight since October. Can't Jump Once an athlete signifies his In- tention of enr-olling at a school, he cannot then change his mind and jump to another school In either conference, without a stiff penalty. If he does, he won't be eligible for two years and then will have only two years of foot- ball eligibility. The faculty of men of both the Big Eight and SWC approved the agreement, first of its kind in the nation, at their quarterly meet- ings which ended yesterday in Kansas City and Dallas. They had met several times in recent months to work out the agreement. Griffith TKOs Fernanez LAS VEGAS (P--Emile Griffith of New York retained his World Welterweight title last night with a wild and controversial technical knockout over Jorge Fernandez of Argentina in the ninth round. Fernandez was given five min- utes to rest after a blow to the mid-section or below felled him. But he could not continue. A tremendous boo went up when5 the decision for the technical knockout was announced and Fer- nandez was still in anguish as police climbed into the ring to quiet the turbulence. Griffith was ahead oni points at the time of the blow which brought the fight to its unexpected end- ing. The time of the knockouts was one minute, 34 seconds. SCORES. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Wisconsin 73, Texas Western 59 Miamni (0) 67, Marshall 48 Michigan Tech 85, Moorhead St. 68 No. Michigan 71, Kentucky St. 54 St. Bonaventure 75, Ohio U. 60 Virginia Tech 77, Win. & Mary 71 (ovt) Iowa at. 63, IndIana 55 Michigan State 81, Kansas 62 Columbia 67, Williams 63 (ovt) No. Carolina 75, So. Carolina 65 Duke 92, Maryland 56 01110 St. 76, Wvest Virginia 69 Cincinnati 86, Geo. Washington 59 Wake Forest 66, 1j.C. State 58 Clemson 93, Georgia 73 Bradley 87, Butler, 81 Princeton 71, Army 54 Penn State 67, Syracuse 54 St. Loui 9, Kansas tte 575 Wichita 79, Purdue 59 Cooado 69 Northwestern 64 COLLEGE HOCKEY (WCHA) Denver 4, Michigan Tech 2 Michigan State 6, North Dakota 5 fT- -' . A V 2I /ss fo favr f-f, gare tO ?'