six THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23,1964 SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 22 1Q~fl " ""."++" a.+.} a vv<.amv.s NRls ,as7VV v Visconsin Defeats Michigan, 88-82, in Overtime (olverines Doomed to Big Ten Cellar s Offense Falters in Extra Period OLYMPIC GAMES: U.S. Skater Leads, icers Win, 6-3 By DAVE LYON Associate Sports Editor Michigan's last hope for avoid- ing the Big Ten basketball base- mentvanished last night when Wisconsin outlasted the Wolver- ines, 88-82, in a loosely-played overtime struggle. The fast-breaking Badgers, in winning their third straight Con- ference game against eight losses, saddled Michigan with its 11th defeat in as many league contests. Coach Bill Perigo's club can manage a ninth-place tie, pro- vided Wisconsin drops its last three games and Michigan beats Michigan State, Illinois and Iowa. It seems improbable that this combination of circumstances will happen. It has been a long time since a Wisconsin cage team last won three games in succession. And never before had Michigan lost as many as 11 Conference outings in a row. The previous mark was 10, set 42 years ago. This record-breaking defeat fol- lowed the usual pattern of Michi- gan losses this season. The early lead (39-28 late in the first half) was gradually overcome as Michi- gan's thin forces tired from the fast-breaking tactics of the op- position. When guard Marty Gharrity canned a 25-footer with 4:10 left, the Badgers assumed a 75-71 lead. But somehow the home team found enough energy to score four points while holding their op- ponents to none in the closing minutes, and when Terry Miller sank two free throws with 1:32 left, the game was sent into over- time. John Tidwell, who had scored 12 straight Michigan points previ- New Record ous to Miller's free shots, resumed his scoring with a free throw to open the five-minute overtime. Then Michigan went into a 2%- minute scoring lapse that proved costly. Wisconsin scoring balance paid off well in the overtime, as five playersshared the Badgers' 13 points in the extra session. Two - point contributions from Gharrity, Jack Ulwelling, and Bob Barneson gave the Badgers an 81-76 edge. Miller then scored, but Wisconsin's Frank Burks slipped in for an easy layup at 1:36. With little more than a minute left, Jon Hall netted two free throws. Then came the fatal blow. Tidwell stole the ball in the Wisconsin backcourt, but none of the four hurried Michigan shots that followed found the mark. Hall missed two attempts, Tidwell and Charlie Higgs one each. Wisconsin finally got possession and reserve Bob Powers put the game out of reach with two free tosses. Many factors working in concert contributed to Michigan's latest defeat in a long series. The loss of Lovell Farris on MIacKay Wins Tournament- NEW YORK W) - Barry Mac- Kay outblasted Dick Savitt, 6-2. 2-6, 10-12, 6-1, 6-4 yesterday and won the National Indoor Tennis Championship. It was strictly a battle of big' services and MacKay, a former. Michigan great, held the edge, especially in the last two sets when Savitt, a part-time player these days, appeared to wilt. Thisdwas MacKay's second big victory over Savitt in the last eight days. A week ago Sunday, he whipped Savitt in the final of the Buffalo Indoor Tournament. Each of these power hitters smashed over ace after ace and in the end, MacKay had 23 and Savitt 28. "Looking for a Good Haircut" * 11 1Haircutters * No Waiting Trf THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre fouls with 10:17 left in the game seriously impaired Michigan's re- bounding and scoring effective- ness: In one of his finest games as a collegian, Farris bucketed 28 points (the night's individual high), pulled in 14 rebounds, and authoritatively dominated play under both boards. With Farris gone, Michigan's at- tack, centered around Tidwell, was more easily defensed by the visitors. Wisconsin came out run- ning in the second half, and its fast break, instituted this year by new coach John Erickson, resulted in easy layups and wore out the Wolverines. Michigan's shooting eye thus lost its focus in the second half while Wisconsin's improved from a first-half .333 to a second-half .595. Farris and Tidwell accounted for 31 of Michigan's first 39 points, Farris converting a rebound with two minutes left in the half to give Michigan its largest lead, 39-28. From there Wolverine fortunes went more or less downhill. Wisconsin seized its first lead at 62-61, shortly after Farris fouled out. The Cleveland senior received a sustained ovation from the small Yost Field House gathering of 2,000. Tidwell's ensuing heroics pre- vented another Michigan collapse, and with some scoring support f from teammates, Michigan could have decided the issue in its favor within regulation time. COLLEGE SCORES Big Ten Northwestern 71, MSU 6 Indiana 92, Ilinois 78 Iowa 78, Purdue 68 SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. (R) - Carol Heiss of Ozone Park, N.Y., virtually clinched the women's figure skating championship and the rugged U. S. ice hockey team. smashed Sweden, 6-3, yesterday in the eighth Winter Olympics. Miss Heiss, 20-year-old New York University student, complet- ed the compulsory figure phase of the figure skating competition with a commanding lead over her nearest rival, SioukJe Dijkstra of Holland. She is regarded as a cinch to capture the crown with her free, skating performance today. A carpenter from Warroad, Minn.,, Roger Christian, scored three goals - hockey's "hat trick" -as the American team kept pace with the defending champion Rus- sians. The Soviet team beat Czechoslovakia 8-5 in its opening game of the championship round robin. Meanwhile Russia and the com- bined German team won gold medals and France's Jean Vuarnet scored a surprise upset in the men's downhill yesterday in the eighth Winter Olympic Games. Vuarnet, a dark horse, raced down the two-mile hill in break- neck speed to capture the down- hil trace in 2:06 seconds. Georg Thoma, a stocky letter carrier from Germany's Black For- est, won the Nordic combined ski- ing event by adding a brilliant 15- kilometer cross-country race to' U - ENGINEERING NOTICE The Martin Company representative will visit the campus on March 1, 2, 3 to discuss opportunities for graduates of the School of Engineering. Contact your Placement Officer for ap- pointment and further details. THE MARTIN COMPANY BALTIMORE 3, MARYLAND Missiles - Electronic Systems - Nuclear Applications - Advanced Space Programs Designers and Manufacturers his excellent jumping perform- ance Sunday. The Combined is judged on both events. Klara Guseva, a 22 year old Russian school teacher, won the women's 5,000-meter speed skat- ing title. Vuarnet's victory in the down- hill came as a shock to skiing ex- perts. Adrien Duvillard was re- garded as France's best downhill skier but Karl Schranz, the Aus- I r i a n sensation, ,Roger Staub, Swiss winner of Sunday's Giant Slalom, were heavily favored. Want Your Raincoat Made Water-repellent FREE? During February We will apply the famous "crgvenette" process to your plain raincoat (no pile or quilted linings) for the price of cleaning and pressing only. Gold Bond Cleaners 515 E. William I WISCONSIN G Hughbanks ..10 Clow ........ 4 Burks ....... 4 Barneson .... 1 Gharrity .....11 Ulwellingc ... 6 Young ...... 1 Powers ..... 0 Biggs ........ 0 TOTALS ...37 MICHIGAN G Tidwell ......10 Farris. Brown .. .... 3 M~iler .*,.....w Hall ..... 2 Schoenherr .. 0 Meyer ,..,... 1 Riggs.........0 TOTALS ...32 F 3-4 0-0 1-9 2-2 4-6 1-1 0-0 2-2 1-1 14-19 F 7-10 6-4 0-0 2-2 3-4 0-0 0-0 0-1 18-25 P 5 3 3 4 2 1 0 0 0 18 P 2 5 3 3 1 0 1. 17 T 23 8 9 4 26 13 2 2 1 88 T 27 28 6 12 7 0 2- 82 Others Georgia Tech 69. Fla. 55 (ovi.) Vanderbilt 80, Georgia 75 Auburn 72, Tennessee 63 Western ich . 76, Loyola (11.) 64 Wake Forest 89, Villanava 70 Oklahoma 50, Nebraska 49 Kentucky 75, Alabama 55 Mlississippi St. 70, Tulane 66 Houston 63, Bradley 58 Cincinnati 85, North Texas State 54 I --Daily-Dave Giltrow ANOTHER REBOUND -- Michigan forward Lovell Farris (34) grabs one of his 14 rebounds in action against Wisconsin last night. Although Farris fouled out with 10 minutes to go in regu- lation time he still led all scores with 28 points, 19 of them in the first half. Wisconsin squelched Miehigan's hopes of escaping the cellar with an 88-82 victory in overtime. 'I Eim®) FHAOUL RAMATI Israeli Consulate, Chicago speaking on "Patterns of Stress and Stability in the Middle East" 4:15 Wed., Feb. 24 3rd floor Conference, Mich. Union 0 '1ilili AND DICK MASLOWSKI I F A -.- 'U k' ENGINEERS ANl SCIENTISTh REIPRESENTATIVES.OF NORTH AME RICAN AVIATION,.INC. !ILI7CONDUCT ON:CAMPTJ~ITERIAEWS FEBRUARY 25 & 26 -I Visit your placement office now, for all the facts about a future with North American Aviation'.Inc. C- Nuclear power at the Atomics International Division IConoga Park, Coiifornfa' I Atomics International, located in the San' Fernando Valley of Southern California, is a leader in the development and manufacture of nuclear reactors for power, research, and mobile systems. Two proven AI power reac- tor concepts are now under construction. Atomics International is building a Sodium Electronics & electro- mechanics at the Autonetics Divisior- (Downey. Colfornol Autonetics, a leader in the field of electronics, is engaged in research, development, and manufacture of Computers, Inertial Guid- ance, Armament Control and Flight Control Systems. Autonetics designed and built the inertial navigation system for the USS Nau- tilus and Skate; the first, completely auto-' Graphite Reactor for the Consumers Public 'Power District of Nebraska and an Organic Power Reactor at Piqua, Ohio. AI also is engaged in extensive research activities to develop improved materials for fuel ele- gents and reactor components.' 'mattc Ianding system ±t supersonic missiles and aircraft; the first, general purpose, all- transistor, digital computer. It is now at work on the inertial navigation system for the first nuclear-powered Polaris-carrying subma- rines and the guidance and control systems for the Minuteman and GAM-77 missiles.- They're transmission engineers with Michigan Bell Telephone Company in Detroit. Burnell graduated from Western Michigan in 1951 with a B.S. in Physics, spent four years in the Navy, then joined the telephone company. His present work is with carrier systems, as they relate to Direct Distance Dialing facilities.. Dick got his B.S.E.E. degree from Michigan in 1956 and came straight to Michigan Bell. He is currently engineering and adrinistering a program to utilize new, transistorized re- peater (amplifier) equipment. Both men are well qualified to answer a question you might well be asking yourself: "What's in telephone company engineering for me?" SAYS DICK: "There's ,an interesting day's work for you every day. You really have to use your engi- neering training and you're always working with new developments. Every time Bell Lab- oratories designs a new and more efficient piece of equipment, you are challenged to in- corporate it in our system effectively and economically. For example, I have been work- ing on projects utilizing a newly developed voice frequency amplifier. It's a plug-in type -transistorized-and consumes only two watts, so it has lots of advantages. But I have to figure out where and how it can be used in our sprawling network to provide new and improved service. Technological developments like this really put spice in the job." SAYS BURNELL: "Training helps, too-and you get the best. Through an interdepartmental training pro- gram, you learn how company-wide operations dovetail. You also get a broad background by rotation of assignments. I'm now working with carrier systems, but previously worked on repeater (amplifier) projects as Pick is doing now. 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