Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, February 2, 1972 f Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY El I----------------- PIZZA 769-3400 I WE HONOR ALL COMPETITORS COUPONS OMEGA PIZZA- THE BETTER PIZZA PEOPLE GOOD ANY TIME Frosh edge Chips * in overtime,1O1-98 A new natural foods restaurant: Naked Lunch food as natural as life inexpensive, carefully prepared. LUNCH SERVED FROM 11:00-2:30 P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY 331 Thompson, 761-1154 By GEORGE HASTINGS Special To The Daily MT. PLEASANT - Clutch shoot- ing in an overtime period broke the heart of a game Central Mich- igan squad and gave the Michigan freshman basketball team a 101-98 win in the first close contest the' frosh have engaged in this year. Three long jump shots by Campy Russell were followed by two clutch plays by Joe Johnson in the overtime period to give the Wolverines the nod after 45 min- utes of intensely fought basketball. After Russell's shot, the Wolver- ines still trailed 96-95, but Johnson then hit two foul shots and fired a perfect pass to Bill Ayler for a then put the game away by put- ting an offensive rebound back in, making a last-second Chippewa basket meaningless. Actually, the overtime heroics nearly didn't come about as Cen- tral Michigan's Matt Means missed a free throw with no time showing on the clock at the end of the second half. The foul shot was set up when Russell missed a last second shot and C. J. Kupec fouled Means attempting to get the re- bound. Although Russell and Johnson dominated the scoring with 40 and 27 points respectively, Wolverine coach Dick Honig termed the win an example of "a great team ef- bucket to give the Wolverines their fort," crediing all seven of his winning margin. Doug Ashworth players who saw action. Honig e - - also had great praise for the Chip- pewa squad, which played Mich-, A Personalized CUSTOM IMPRINT ON: T-SHIRTS SWEAT SHIRTS JERSEYS While-You-Wait Many colors from which to choose U of M Students, Faculty and Staff GET LOST >Big Ten Standings I BAHAMAS- 8 DAYS 7 NIGHTS March 5 to 12 $159.00 HAWAII- Waikiki Beach 8 DAYS 7 NIGHTS March 4 to 11 $269.00 ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: 0 Round trip non-stop jet W L MICHIGAN 5 1 Minnesota 5 1 Ohio State 5 1 Purdue 2 1 Wisconsin 2 2 Michigan State 2 3 Illinois 1 2 Iowa 1 4 Northwestern 1 5 Indiana 0 4 Yesterday's Results Ohio State 82, Iowa 77 Pet. .833 .833 .833 .667 .500 .400 .333 .200 .167 .000 igan on even terms in a game which saw both teams take large leads only to have them whittled away. The early going was fairly even with Matt Means doing a good job of defending on Russell and Mich- igan led only 20-19 after ten minutes. At that point, Russell and John- son went on a tear, stretching the margin to 34-29 in the next four and a half minutes, but the Chip- pewas came charging back right as the Michigan shooters went cold to narrow the gap to 46-44 at the half with Dean Eisler netting most of his 15 first-half points in the last five minutes of the period. The Chips were just as hot when they came out after the intermis- sion, scoring the first eight points and then blazing to a 64-53 lead. However, the outside shooting of Russell and John Kantner, along with the strong rebounding .f Rus- sell and Ashworth carried the Wol- verines back into the game and the contest see-sawed back and forth in the final minutes until the wild end of the second half. The game was played before a wildly excited crowd of 3,000 plus in little Finch Field House. Honig was most gratified by the performance of his team in their first pressure situation. Russell, Kantner, Kupec and Johnson were all forced to play much of the sec- ond half and overtime period with four fouls on each. The resulting lack of aggressive- ness of Michigan's defense in the final minutes allowed the Chip- newas to get many uncontested baskets inside. The Wolverines also were both- ered considerably by a Central Michigan man-to-man press and committed numerous turnovers, helping the Chippewas' cause. For the Wolverines Russell and Johnson were backed up in scoring by Ayler and Ashworth with ten points apiece. Russell and Ash- worth also pulled down 19 ard 15 rebounds. For the Chips, Eisler had 27and center Danny Round- field had 20. -Associated Press TORONTO DEFENSEMAN Rick Ley goes low to block a shot by Detroit's Mickey Redmond (20) in a game won last night by the Red Wings, 4-0. Nick Libett is also parked by the net in front of Maple Leaf goalie Jacques Plante (1). The win pushes the Wings into sole possession of fourth place. TAKE FOURTH PLACE: Red ings stomp Leafs, - Fraternity--Sorority-Clubs w HO Individuals-Teams Welt imprint Frat/Sorority 'WHAT Crest-Club Names-Team Names- S -Numbers-Your Name-Novelties-etc. on T=Shirts-SweatShirts-Jerseys Come to Follett's Michigan Bookstore- H OWm -Select from "nDegs nd ol*s HOW Pick the Color and Style of the Garment --Watch while we make it for you. AT F OLLETT'S M HG B K R STATE STREET AT N. UNIVERSITY * ANN ARBOR w 662-6594 I transportation * Open bar and meal service en route " Accommodations for seven (7) nights at: Freeport: Freeport Inn Hawaii: Hole Maki For Details Call: Owen Perlman-663-2044 Larry Kaufman-764-7692 Steven Eder-763-2790 Carol Kou-663-8227 or Steven Zacks-Studentours 483-4850 For the Student Body: LEVI'S Denim Be/ls X8.O\ CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty By The Associated Press DETROIT - Goals by Alex Del- vecchio and Mickey Redmond led Detroit to a 4-0 National Hockey League victory over Toronto last night, sending the Maple Leafs to their eighth consecutive loss and giving the Red Wings sole posses- sion of fourth place in the East Division.' Red Berenson scored a pair of insurance goals six seconds apart in the last minutes, one on an empty net, as Detroit broke the fourth place tie with Toronto be- fore a record home crowd of 15,- 922. Delvecchio's goal, his 12th, came at 4:41 of the second period when he jammed the puck to the left of goalie Jacques Plante on a perfect rlt J xm F L LS..S11A l e OUJlU !loll L .&I.J fl I.W CU 4U LAUL I M Jt1fl 11A 11aU finished with 22 points, including mid-court rather than from its eight of New York's last 16. end of the court. * * * NBA Commissioner Walter Ken- Cavs, Braves split nedy upheld the protest, and the BUFFALO, N.Y. - Rookie Aus- game was picked up from that tin Carr fired in 12 of his 19 point. Rick Roberson took the ball points in the third quarter, spark- out at mid-court and tossed it to ing a Cleveland spurt that carried Bobby Smith, whose 35-foot shot the Cavaliers to 104-99 victory hit the rim and bounded into the over the Buffalo Braves in a Na- hands of Buffalo's Elmore Smith tional Basketball Association game as the game ended. last night. In the regulation game, Carr The teams also completed a sus- broke a 69-69 tie with a shot from pended game of Dec. 3 and Buf- the left side, triggering a decisive falo won it 91-90. eight-point Cleveland burst. OSU climbs to first place tie 0' DeBusschere had left the game The suspended game, which re- early in the first period to enter quired only four seconds to com- a hospital for x-rays of the pinky plete, was played after the regu- finger on his left hand, injured lation game. Cleveland had lodged when he rapped it against ahe a protest after the original game, backboard while driving for a C' ot claiming it should have been al- HP~g r'o+,nv~rl in the c rn.i hnl ir lowed to tr. hrowg hth bll in fvrm 1. I Montreal 3, St. Detroit 4, Toro pass from Al Karlander in front of the net. He also assisted on 1' E S Redmond's goal at 4:28 of the third period. It was the Wing cap- - . tain's 750th regular season career assist. Louis 1 Detroit goalie Al Smith recorded nto0 p Join the Daily Sports Staff NBA /win r r es P Boston 15, Bltimore 108 !Seattle 121, Chicago 103 Cleveland 104, Buffalo 99 Buffalo 91, Cleveland 90 completion of suspended game of Dec. 3 New York 115, Detroit 106 I i FAST SERVICE on Dry (leaning IN BY 9 OUT BY 5 his third shutout of the season. Pistons knicked By The Associated Press N E W Y O R K - Bill Bradley COLUMBUS - Allan Hornyak's scored a season high of 29 points clutch shooting in the final min- as the New York Knicks overcame utes carried ninth - ranked Ohio a 40-point performance by De- State to an 82-77 Big Ten basket- troit's Bob Lanier and handed the ball victory over Iowa and a share Pistons their sixth straight Na- of the conference lead last night. tional Basketball Association set- Hornyak, who scored a season- Bradley, who had engaged In a high 37 points, hit nine points in Brad match with Detroit's Cur- the last 21/2 minutes to help the pushingmacwihDtotsCr Buckeyes overcome a 74-73 Iowa tis Rowe in the second period, was leady the key man when the Knicks evo forged ahead to stay 94-91 with The victory earned Ohio Statef eight straight points in the fourth a share of the Big Ten lead with period after having trailed 82-69 Minnesota and Michigan. All have in the third quarter. He scored six 5-1 conference records. points in the decisive spurt and Iowa upset the Buckeyes with Dave DeBusschere added.two free a full court press in the second throws. half after trailing by as much as ________________ 13 points in the first period. 1 a1 1 week ago. He scored 17 points and had 14 rebounds. * * - Cornhuskers crunch COLUMBIA, Mo. - Sluggish Missouri, the nation's 15th-ranked basketball team, fought off in- spired Kansas for a 64-60 Big Eight victory last night. The Tigers, now 15-2 over-all and 4-1 in the league, had to come from behind each half and used free throws and John Brown's shooting after intermission to pull it out. * * * Missouri mauls LINCOLN, Neb. - Nebraska out- lasted Kansas State 61-60 last night to regain first place in the Big Eight Conference basketball race before a crowd of 8,000. The Wildcats pulled away late in the first half, scoring eight straight points to take a 36-30 in- termission advantage. l 1213 So. University-663-3016 ,l 'i/iw /, 11 III Man Adapting to the Small Planet seminar series DAVID GATES Director of U. M. Biological Station Energy Flow Through Ecosystems and Balance with the Environment Iowa, now 1-4 in the league and 7-8 over-all, went ahead by three points several times in the second half before Hornyak took com- mand with his shooting. Luke Witte, Ohio State's 7-foot' center, made his first start since being hospitalized at Minnesota a r Thursday, Feb. 3,1:30 P.M., UGLI Multipurpose Room sponsored by ECOLOGY CENTER & COMMUNITY ORGANIC GARDEN PARTICIPATE in Student Government4 L.S.A. Student Government is interviewing now for: 2 seats executive council 4 seats judiciary 1 Administrative Vice President other positions also available SIGN UP 3M MICHIGAN UNION BY 5:00, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4 i L I Al U: ,1 II I IL ak Hillel Foundation and Center for Russian and East European Studies PRESENT A SERIES OF LECTURES By DR. SHLOMO AVINERI Professor of Political Theory and Chairman, Dept. of Political Science The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Author, The Social and Political Thought of Karl Marx and Marx on Colonialism and Modernization) > i lmmmmmmm N A* UAC-DAYSTAR Presents I I - a [l = I "A meticulous and highly proficient musician." Montreal Star "A resounding artistic triumph .. Billboard I . ..... ... . .... ... . ... ............. . ..... .. ... U U Mail to: MUSKET, Michigan Union, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 E (Please enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope) f E I Name Phone-_--------- AdI THURSDAY, FEB. 3: 4 p.m.-"Moses Hess-Zionist, Communist, Intellectual" RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM SAT., FEB. 12 :: .. z in I in