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February 09, 1960 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-02-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

T

T19E MICHlIGAv.~N DAIL

MVTncrt Atf --I

. . .., s TUESSDAY & EBR'

ichigan

Fades

in

79-65

Caue

Loss

to

Purdue

iio State Smashes Wisconsin, 106-69;
SU Knocks Illini Out of Big Ten Race'

4

By The Assocated Press
hio State 106, Wisconsin 69
ADISON, Wis. - Ohio State
its string of Big Ten Confer-
basketball victories to eight
ght last night at the expense
risconsin. The score was 106-
phomore Jerry Lucas led the
;eye scoring assault with 26
ts, just what he's averaged in
unnerup role in Big Ten scor-

ing. He got plenty of help from
teammates Larry Siegfried, who
chipped in 22, and Mel Nowell,
who added 18.
* * *
Michigan State 78, Illinois 77
EAST LANSING, Mich.-Mich-
igan State stood off a strong last
minute rally to edge second-place
Illinois 78-77 last night, and prac-
tically kill any Illinois chance of

U

19

l ROAST
CHICKEN
DINNER
POTATOES-VEGETABLE
ROLL and BUTTER - DRESSING
BEVERAGE-- SHERBET

overhauling runaway Ohio State,
leader in the Big Ten basketball
race.
MSU jumped to a 14-3 lead in
the first half before Illinois man-
aged its first field goal after more
than four minutes were gone in
the game.
Indiana 87, Iowa 74
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - In-
diana University turned in its
fourth straight Big Ten basket-
ball victory last night, downing
Iowa 87-74 in spite of foul trouble
that kept towering Walt Bellamy
on the bench over half the game.
Frank Radovich, who moved to
the pivot after Bellamy picked up
four personals, scored 15 points.
Bob Wilkinson moved into the
front line and led all scorers with
19.
19. * * *
Northwestern 66, Minnesota 64
MINNEAPOLIS - Northwest-
ern's heady defense threw Min-
nesota's pattern attack into hope-
less disorder in the second half
last night and the scrambling'
Wildcats swept from13 points be-
hind to a 66-64 basketball victory.

Number Se
PURDUE FG FT
Berkshire, f 2 1-1
Wills, f 4 1-3
Dischinger, c 10 9-10
Orrill, g 5 1-2
Mitchell, g 3 1-1
Conwell, f 3 4-9
McGinley, g 0 0-0
Kehrt, g 4 0-1
Kamman, c 0 0-0
Motsinger, g "0 0-0
TOTALS 31 17-27
MICHIGAN FG FT
Tidwell, f 10 5-6
Farris, f 4 5-5
Brown, c 0 0-2
Miller, g 5 5-8
Hall, g 3 1-3
Higgs, c 1 3-3
Sangster, g 0 0-0
Donley, c 0 0-0
TOTALS 23 19-27
HALFTIME: Michigan
due 27

ven
PF TP
5 5
2 9
2 29
3 11
4 7
1 10
1 0
2 9
0 0
0 0
20 79
PF TP
1 25
5 13
5 0
4 15
2 7
4 5
2 0
0 0
23 65
33, Pur-
,x

Brown, Hall Show Promise
In Seventh Big Ten Defeat

Big Ten Standings

Ohio State .......
Purdue ..........
Illinois .........
Indiana..........
Michigan State ..
Minnesota ......
Iowa ....
Northwestern ....
MICHIGAN ...
Wisconsin........

W
8
5
4
4
5
5
4
4
0

L
0
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
7
7

Pct.
1.000
.625
.571
.571
.555
.555
.500
.500
.000
.060

BY FRED KATZ
Associate sports Editor
Concurrent waves of injuries,
ineligibilities and losses have given
two sophomores the opportunity
to do their part in salvaging
what's left of potentially the worst
basketball season in Michigan his-
tory.
Both Bob Brown and John Hall
have apparently snared jobs as
regulars for Coach Bill Perigo's
down and out crew. And while
they haven't performed miracles,
the Wolverines have been a stead-
ily improving club with their
presence.
Hall, a sophomore guard from
Havana. Ill., made his debut last
night against Purdue. A bout with
mononucleosis had forced him to
withdraw from school after the
first week of last semester.
Perigo labeled Hall's smooth
ball-handling performance as be-
ing "as good as I've ever had from
a guy playing his first college
game. He has a lot of savvy and
gave us a real lift."
Hall adds speed to a Michigan
fast break that has been suffering
from sluggishness most of the
season. He netted seven points
against the Boilermakers, and
more impressive, collected nine
rebounds.
Brown is now a veteran f three
games, having been moved into
the starting center berth last week
against Ohio State immediately
after being declared , :eligible.
The 6'4" Kalamazoo sophomore
has yet to develop an effective
shot, nor has he learned to pace
himself, but his burly frame (210
pounds) allows him to rebound

with anyone. He took game hon-
ors in that department with 13
Saturday night against Illinois.
Perigo warned his players to
expect a lot of running this week
in preparation for their Saturday
afternoon TV contest against
Northwestern.
The Wolverines followed the
same pattern last night as they
did in losing to Illinois, 75-61.
Leading the first 30 minutes of
both games, they suddenly lost all
luster.
"We simply don't have the re-
serve power to go a full game
against fast teams like Purdue
and Illinois," said Perigo. "But I
still don't see why the starters
can't go all the way. We're just
going to have to work harder on
conditioning in practice."

t

-David Giltrow
FUTILE NIGHT-Michigan's John Tidwell loses out on this re-
bound battle to Purdue's Dick Mitchell. The Wolverines also lost
out, blowing an 11-point second half lead.

Howard D. Johnson's
2452 E. Stadium Blvd.

Fouls Spell Downfall of Wolverines;
Visitors' Rally Erases 11-Point Lead

By FRED KATZ
Associate Sports Editor
Michigan proved once again last
night that it's good for a scare,
but little else.
The Wolverines saw a second-
half 11-point lead crumble quickly
under a late Purdue onslaught and
absorbed their seventh straight
Big Ten basketball loss of the sea-
son, 79-65. They stand 3-14 in
overall competition.
While aggressive Michigan was
playing the Boilermakers better
than even in the first three-quar-

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ters of the game, it was also col-
lecting a bevy of personal fouls
that eventually spelled its doom.
Orown, Farris Out
Center Bob Brown was whistled
to the sidelines with seven min-
utes remaining. Lovell Farris, who
led all players with 17 rebounds,
followed Brown to the showers
two and one-half minutes later
with Michigan trailing only 63-61.
Any hope for control of the
boards againstdthe lofty visitors
disappeared and Purdue added to
its lead virtually at will. It scored
14 points in the last four minutes,
while the Wolverines were getting
only four.
The fast accumulation of fouls
by Brown and Farris enabled Pur-
due's great sophomore center,
Terry Dischinger, to break loose
in the second half after the Michi-
gan pair had combined to hold
him to two field goals and four
free throws in the initial stanza.
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The 6'6" Dischinger finished
with 29, three above his season's
average, to pace all scorers and
gain a measure of personal satis-
faction against Michigan's John
Tidwell who netted 25. Tidwell
outscored Dischinger, 28-26, in the
first meeting between their re-
spective clubs, which Purdue won
more handily, 83-63.
Michigan broke out fast on one
of Tidwell's 10 field goals and
never fell behind until seven min-
utes remained in the contest.
With the aid of the slick floor-
manship of newcomer John Hall,
Terry Miller's timely outside
shooting, and the board work of
Brown and Farris, the Wolverines
shrugged off repeated Purdue bids
to break a 27-27 deadlock near
the intermission and add six quick
points.
Michigan continued to sparkle
and pushed its lead to a high of
41-30 with only two and one-half
minutes elapsed in the second
half.
lPLTForgesAhead
But the all-underclassmen Boil-
ermakers (three sophomores, two
juniors) nibbled constantly at the
lead, at the same time gradually
wearing down the tiring Wol-
verines. Purdue switched to a full-
court press and in nine minutes
transformed its 11-point deficit
to a 55-53 lead.
Michigan managed to tie four
times but was never to regain its
lost margin.
Comparison of rebound totals
in the first and second halves in-
dicates just how heavily Michi-.
gan suffered via the foul route.
The first half was a stalemate,
each side gathering 29 caroms.
When the Wolverines' big men
were forced to yield the boards,
Purdue stepped in to grab 33 more
while Michigan was getting only
14.

4

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Dick Petzold discusses time charges for a customer's telephone installation with an administrative assistant.
How to avoid a "dead end" career:
read Dick Petzold's story

I-M SCORES
Owen House 45, Beantowners 25
Wesleyans 39, A.S.C.E. 26
Morays 57, P.D.P. 'B' 27
High Q's 32, Newman 29
Rockets 43,. Hawaiians 34
Sweepers 39, Evans 27
Drifters 38. Zips 18
Actuaries 36, Cooley 34
Hard Core 47, Nakamura 15
G.OE 47, Buckeyes 35
Hey Lover..
Let's go to
CHESTER ROBERTS
for the
FUNNIEST
VALENTINES
in town !
TWO STORES:

While a senior at the University of Mary.
land, accounting major Richard G.
Petzold made some definite decisions
about his future. "I wanted to work for
an established company," he says, "but I
didn't want to get lost in a 'dead end' job."
Dick joined the Chesapeake and Po-
tomac Telephone Company in Washing-
ton, D. C., right after graduating in June,
1956. Following three months of orien-
tation, he became a supervisor in Reve-
nue Accounting, where he continued
training in a productive capacity, with 15
people reporting to him. Mere, he sug-
gested a number of methods improve.
ments which were adopted.
Far from a "dead end" career, Dick's

ing a Customer Opinion Survey for four
Bell System companies...
* to Disbursements Accounting, for
IBM-equipment training and, later on,
the supervision of Payroll Deduction
procedures...
* to Personnel Relations, where he co-
ordinated a special, four-company "ab-
sentee" study and presented findings to
an important, top-level conference ...
* to Disbursements Accounting again,
where he is now Supervisor, Labor and
Material, with an administrative assistant
and 10 clerks under his guidance.
"The telephone company brings out
the best in you," says Dick. "I've devel-

4

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