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February 09, 1972 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-09

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

Wednesday; February 9, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

oilers,
BuC s
By The Associated Press
IOWA CITY-Rick Williams and
Gary Lusk teamed for 45 points
last night to lift Iowa to an 80-67
Big Ten Conference upset basket-
ball victory over sixth - ranked
Ohio State.
Williams tossed in 23 points,'
while reserve Lusk added 22. The
victory ended a four-game Iowa
losing streak and left Ohio State -
locked in a tie with Minnesota' for
first. coasted
Iowa trailed 44-42 at halftimeeJoty
but the Buckeyes hit a cool 25.7 Toby
per cent from the field in the sec- chipped
ond half as Iowa rallied to take bounds.
the lead. Lead
Allan Hornyak, the conference's was Ji
leading scorer, had 23 to top the Minnes
Buckeyes. -Luke Witte added 12 could n
and Wardell Jackson 10. Ohio State
fell 14-4 overall.
EAST
Gophers dumped trailed
BLOOMINGTON - Indiana Uni- with fo
versity musceled its way to a 19- came
point halftime lead last night and the Illi

Gophers,
ill stumble

Page Seven
CZECHS STOP FINNS:
U. S. skater grabs gold

dai l
;ports
NIGHT EDITOR:
CHUCK BLOOM

mate Bill Kilgore added 21 while
Nick Weatherspoon led Illinois
with 22.

I

Big Ten Standings

Goo State
*~finesoti
MICHIGAN
Purdue
Michigan State
Illinois.
Wisconsin
Indiana
Iowa
Northwestern

W
6
6
5
3
3
2
2
2
2
2

L
2
2
2
2
4
3
3
4
5
6

Pet.
.750
.750
.714
.600
.428
.400
.400
.333
.285
.250

Ten ba
Al S
late in
a six-p
remain
free thi
15-foot
had mi
That
lead a
consecu
seconds
In o
MSU h
floor,e
lead.
Mike
in a ro
and fin
ing 21

d to a 61-42 victory over Min-
at Assembly Hall.
Wright led the IU attack
23 points. Steve Downing
d in 12 and added 19 re-
ing scorer for the Gophers
im Brewer with 10 points.
ota's big man Clyde Turner
manage only seven.
* * *
tans sparkle
T LANSING-Michigan State
Illinois by one point 71-70
our minutes remaining, but
on like trailblazers to upset
ni 89-79 last night in a Big
isketball game.
Smith came off the bench
the game and gave MSU
oint lead with tvo minutes
ing as he converted two
brows and followed with a
jump shot after Illinois
ssed at its end of the court.
gave the Spartans an 81-75'
nd they followed with six
utive points in the waningI
fs.
ne span of the first half
it on 12 of 13 shots from the
enroute to a 44-38 halftime
Robinson hit seven shots
ow in that first half flurry
nished with 29 points, includ-
before intermission. Team-

BUCKS BOMB BRAVES:
Lakers smash Knicks

Wildcats romp
LAFAYETTE - Northwestern
dropped in seven of "eight free
throws in the final 59 seconds to
defeat Purdue, 73-67, here last
night and spoil the Boilermakers
chances to take over the lead in
the Big Ten basketball race.
While the Wildcats were hitting
free throws, the Boilermakers
managed only two field goals in
the last four minutes in a game
that was tied'13 times and the lead
changed hands 15 times.
A Purdue win would have put
them in the lead in the Big Ten
with a 4-1 record, rather than their
present 3-2 mark.
Purdue's William Franklin, the
Big Ten scoring and rebounding
leader, led all players with 26
points and 18 rebounds. Rick Sund
was high man for the Wildcats
with 19 points.

SAPPORO, Japan OP)-Dianne
Holum of Northbrook, Ill., flashed
to an Olympic record in the wo-
men's 1,500-meter speed skating
sprint last night and gave the
United States its first gold medal
of the 11th, Winter Olympic
Games.,
The 20-year-old Miss Holum,
the teen-age darling of the U.S.
team in the 1968 Games when she
won a silver and a bronze, took
the lead about midway in the
race, in which the old Olympic
mark was broken five times.
Miss Holum smashed the 1968
mark of 2 minutes, 22.40 seconds
held by Finland's Kaija Mustonen
with a clocking of 2:20.85.
Stien, Baas-Kaiser of Holland,
the world record holder, was sec-
ond In 2:21-05, and another
Dutch girl, Atje Keulen-Deelstra,
was third in 2:22.05.
Miss Holum, a 20-year-old stu-
dent who spends part of each
year training in Holland; won a
silver and a bronze at the 1968
games in Grenoble.
She said after her victory here:
"Everybody told me that the
1,000 meters was my best dis-
tance, but I knew I could win
this race. I thought it all out care-
fulyand I remember every detail
of it from start to finish."
The American girl said the op-
ponent she feared most was Rus-
sia's Nina Statkevich, who was
paired with her. But Miss Holum
outskated the Russian by 2.5 sec-
onds.

In other Olympic action, Czech-
oslovakia's high - powered hoc-
key team rebounded from its
stunning Monday night loss to the
United States with a 7-1 triumph
over Finland yesterday that
vaulted the Czechs to the .top of
the Class A standings.
Three goals in each of the last
two periods by the Czechs, ranked
second only to the defending
champion Soviet Union, sealed'
their victory over the fourth-rated
Finns.
It was their second victory:in
three Class A games, giving them
four points, one ahead of Russia
and Sweden. The United States
and Finland have two apiece and
Poland, winless in two games, is
last.
The Russians and Swedes, how-
ever, have a chance to regain
shores of the top spot today.
Sweden plays Poland, then the
Soviet Union takes on the United
States.
A day after that, the Yanks,
ranked fifth, play Finland. "I
only wish it was reversed," U.S.
Coach Murray Williamson said of
the schedule.
The Americans will be count-
ing heavily on goalie Mike Cur-
ran, the hero of their 5-1 upset
over the Czechs. He turned aside
all but one of the 52 shots un-
leashed by'them. "I haven't seen

while," Williamson said of Cur-
ran's performance.
Magnar Solberg of Norway, a
policeman who celebrated his 30th
birthday five days agoj, ucCess-
fhilly defended his Olympic$ ,Atle
and gold medal in the 20 kilo-
meters individual biathlon race
Wednesday with a time of 1 hour,
15 minutes, 15.5 seconds including
a two-minute penalty.
Twenty - seven - year - old
Hansjorg Knauthe of east Ger-
many won the silver medal in
1:16.07.6, including a. one min-
ute penalty for.. one. miss at the
target.
Galina Koulakova of the Soviet
Union won the women's five-kF-
lometer cross country race last
night and became the third mul-
tiple gold medal winner of the
games.

-Associated Press
NICK WEATHERSPOON (12) of Illinois is jarred heavily by
Michigan State's Brian Breslin. Breslin picked up a foul for his
fine effort, but it mattered little as the Spartans conquered the
Fighting Illini, 89-79.

y

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;

WINTER OLYMPICS
SAPPORO '72
s"} v"N." :,;",: "v." ;:^" :: o ,J. . " ^J J

Yesterday's Results
Indiana 61, Minnesota 42
Michigan State 89, Illinois 79
Iowa 80, Ohio State 67
Northwestern 73, Purdue 67

By The Associated Press third period before New York's'
NEW.YORK-Gail Goodrich and Jerry Lucas tied the score at 76
Jerry West, Los Angeles' dynamic with 1:49 left. Then Lucas followed
backcourt duo, combined for 69 with a driving layup and Walt
points last night, propelling the Frazer put in a shot off a rebound
Lakers to their seventh straight for an 80-76 lead.
National Basketball Association But a foul shot by Wilt Chain-
victory, a 107-102 decision over the berlain and a jumper by Jim Mc-
New York Knicks. Millian cut the gap to 80-79 at the
Goodrich finished with a game- end of the quarter.
high 36 points. He connected on The Lakers moved in front to'
9-of-11 field goals and 5-of-7 free stay. 81-80, on a tap by Chamber-
throws for 23 points to lead the lain in the opening moments of
Lakers to a 56-51 lead in a see-saw the fourth period. Los Angeles built
first half. its lead to 91-82. the largest of
Goodrich hit for 13 points in the the gametand then put down a
first period when the Lakers gain- late New York uprising.
ed a 33-31 advantage in a period Bill Bradley led the Knicks with
during which the lead changed 26 points. Lucas scored 25 and
hands 20 times and the score was Frazier added 23.,
tied twice. !
New York had the biggest bulge, Bnives scalped
31-27 with 2:20 remaining. But BUFFALO, N.Y.-Kareem Abdul
West, who wound up with 33 points, Jabbar scored 31 points and grab-
dropped in the last six on a pair bed 20 rebounds to lead a come-
of driving layups and two free bedr2m-b ehi nd st0 Ml a ukeecvm-
throws to put Los Angeles ahead. from-behinth12608aMilwaukee vic-
In the second quarter, there were too t Buffalo asscin
seven ties and two lead changes. National Basketball Association
A late surge, spurred by seven game last night.
Goodrich points, helped the Lakers The Braves led the entire first
Goodichpoitsheled he ar half by as much as 12 points but
break a 47 deadlock and gain ahe bucksmgainedthe iead arl
56-49 lead before the Knicks' Dave thrBucks gaqaethe lead eard
DeBusschere sank a jumper at the ithesArdnqsarer whenaak
fina buzer.Lucius Allen sparked the attack.
Bob Landridge scored 12 of his 25
The Lakers led for most of the points in the third quarter for Mil-
waukee, which led 87-75 at the end
f of the third period.
SERookie Fred Hilton scored 20
i!IS C, 4s 1 points to pace the Buffalo :assault
in the first half and finished the
game with 30 points. Bob Kauff-

I

The Bulls, winning for the 42nd
time, had four starters in doublel
figures with Jerry Sloan getting
20 points and Bobby Weiss adding
16.
Chicago shot a sizzling 63 per
cent in racing to a 32-18 first quar-
ter lead as Walker pumped in 18
points.
The Bulls' balanced attack help-
ed Chicago to a 62-44 halftime edge
before Cleveland rallied behind
Rick Roberson. and Austin Carr
in the third quarter.
Cleveland, outscoring the Bulls
15-5, moved to within nine points
with 6:18 remaining in the third
period. Love then hit on eight of
-62 floor shots to send the Bulls
into a comfortable 91-68 lead.
Carr led Cleveland with 19
points and Roberson had 17.
Stars stumped
DALLAS-The Dallas Chaparrals
blitzed the Utah Stars in the sec-
ond and third quarters, but had to
overcome a fourth quarter slump
to beat the Stars 102-99 in an
American Basketball Association
game last night.
The Stars took a 31-19 first quar-
ter lead and extended the margin
to 16 points-midway in the second
period.
But the Chaps, led by Donny
Freeman and Rich Jones, out-
scored Utah 22-8 for the rest of
the quarter.
With Freeman again leading the
way, the Chaps continued the
bombardment in the third quarter,
scoring 11 straight points in one
stretch to take an 85-76 lead ,tinto
the fourth quarter.
Utah, paced by 10 points from
Willy Wise,, closed to within one
point with less than a minute left.
Steve Jones hit a pair of free
throws with two seconds left to
ice the victory.
Freeman and Rich Jones paced
Dallas scoring with. 32 . and 18
points, respectively, while Wise
hit 25 and Zelmo Beaty scored 19
points for Utah.

TODAY'S EVENTS
Ice hockey, Class A, United
States vs. Soviet Union.
Men's 50 - kilometer c r o ss
country.
Women's 500 - meter speed
skating; ice hockey, Class B;
Norway vs. Japan.
Men's skiing, giant slalom;
second run.
Ice hockey, Class A, Soviet
U n i o n vs. Poland; Class B,
Switzerland vs. Yugoslavia.
THURSDAY MORNING
Ice hockey, Class A U.S. vs.
Finland, Czechoslovakia vs.
Sweden. Men's luge doubles,
first two runs.
For the Student Body:
SALE
" Jeans
" Bells
" Flares
V2 off
CHECKMATE.
State Street at Liberty

better goaltending

BEET EMIDRASHE
LECTURE SERIES - MINI COURSES

NEJAC TV RENTALS
662-5671

SERIES I: JEWS & ARABS
Minority Groups in the Middle East

* ;..

I

FEB. 9-8:30-
THE BEDOUINS
AN ARAB MINORITY IN ISRAEL & JORDAN
PROF. MOSHE SHARON
(Hebrew University, Jerusalem)
Administrator of BEDOVIN AFFAIRS FOR THE
ISRAELI ARMY. . .
FEB. 10-8:30-
JEWS & ARABS: The Political
and Economic Statu's of Jews
Under Islam
DR. ABRAHAM L. UDOVITCH
(Prof. of Near-Eastern History
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY)
Hillel Foundation
1429 KILL

In a long

Texas 80 Texas A&M 71
East. Mich. 109, Buffalo 96
k:SMU 74, Rice 65
f Allegheny 87, John Carroll 80
Aquinas 87, Northwood 85, overtime
f W. Va. St. 87, Salem 81
Fairmont 46, Wheeling 44
Northeastern 82, Bates 53
Seton Hall 89, Biscayne 84
Brown 69, Greek Nationals 62
Assumption 115, Brandeis 87
st. John's 86, Notre Dame 75
Rhode Is. 93, Holy Cross 86
Baldwin-Wallace 84, Youngstown
-Associated Press St. 69
NEW YORK KNICKS forward Jerry Lucas finds himself squeezed Providence 69, Canisius 64
between two big Los Angeles Lakers, John Trapp (31) and Wilt Conn. 77, New Hamp..65
Chamberlain (13), as the three go up for a rebound in action Davidson 79, Furman 75
Wesleyan 82, Trinity 61
last night in New York. The Lakers came out on top in the Ohio U. 108, McMurray 65
contest, 107-102. LIU 76, Geo. Washington 72
ELvabeth City 94, Va. St. 88
....................................................;".:. Manhattan 78 utgers 77
,, . """"'" "" :::Marshall 82, Sanford 79
* TCU 85, Texas Tech 81
Professional League Standings

man had 20 for the Braves. Allen
scored 20 for Milwaukee.
The loss was the 12th in a row
at home for the Braves.
Bulls rampage
CHICAGO -;Chicago's rugged
forwards. Bob Love and Chet
Walker, shattered Cleveland's de-
fense for 56 points last night, pow-
ering the Bulls past the hapless
* Cavaliers 114-90 in a National Bas-
ketball Association contest.
The loss was the sixth in a row
for Cleveland, which has dropped
three straight to Chicago this sea-
son.
Love was top scorer with 30 and
Walker had 26.

I

7

Ad

'A

NBA
EASTERN, CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct
Boston 41 18.695
New York 34 23 .596
Philadelphia 23 34 .404
Buffalo 16 40 .285
Central Division
Baltimore 24 30 .444
Atlanta 21 35 .375
Cincinnati 18 37 .327
Cleveland 17 42 .288

Oakland, inc.
Milwaukee 126, Buffalo 108
Seattle 127, Houston 119

Michigan Union Billiards

GB
6
17
23% 1
4
69
9Y2

Boston
New York
Montreal
Detroit
Toronto
Vancouver
Buffalo

NHL,
East Division
W L T1
37 8 8
32 11 9
29 13 10
23 23 8
21 22 11
15 30 5
11 30 13
West Division
36 11 5
27 18 9
17 27 11
18 28 8
16 26 9
15 33 7
13 30 9

. Milwaukee
Chicago
Phoenix
Detroit

STERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
47 12 .796
42 17 .711
35 25 .583
20 37 .351
Pacific Division
s 48 7 .872
ate 34 23 .596
34 25 .576
21 37 .362
13 46 .220

Pt's
82
73
68
54
53
35
35
77
63
45
44
41
37
35

GIF
212
222
196
174
151
126
144
179
141
152
149
125
136
120

GA
119
121
139
171
175
169
201

FREE INSTRUCTIONS Thurs., Feb. 17th 7-9 P.M.

PLAY POOL
Half Price
THURSDAY

- Chicago
5 Minnesota
12 California
26 St. Louis
Philadelphia
- Los Angeles
15 Pittsburgh
16

98
125
205
179
159
208
171 ii I

Ladies play free
first two hours
Wednesday

U

Los Angele
Golden Sta
Seattle
Houston
Portland

5

Yesterday's Results
Los Angeles 107, New York 102
Chicago 114, Cleveland 90
Philadelphia at Phoenix, inc.
Baltimore vs. Golden State at

28 . Yesterday's Results
37 Toronto 2, St. Louis 1
Philadelphia at Vancouver, inc.
Tonight's Games
Pittsburgh at Toronto
Chicago at New York
Philadelphia at California
Los Angeles at Minnesota

Avoid A
Februarv

Slump
/'\ sCome to the

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