Wednesday, February 16 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Papanek clan ignites coup; Weirdbeard hits the road I *A black-clad rider galloped over the lonesome prairie, past broken cow-skulls and cacti, until he reached a buzzard- speckled waterhole. He spat some tobacco juice into the dust and regarded a pile of carrion which was being worked over by a gang of maggots. The -old sports editors . ." he whis- pered sadly, But then, from far over the range, came the sound of many riders. The soli- tary cowpoke turned in the saddle , and squinted into the distance, until he saw eight white-clad hombres approaching. "Must be the new sports editors," he chuckled. Yes, it was: EDITOR. John Papanek, a spaced-out junior from Patchogue, New York, and the "tight" end of the Daily Libels. On learning of his prestigious appointment, John remarked, "Aw, for Chrissakes, call back when I get rid of this hangover!" CXECUTIVE EDITOR Elliott Legow, who hails from the friendly turf of Cleve- land Heights, Ohio. Elliott possesses com- puter-like Intelligence and, asked to rap about his new post, laughed amiably and whirred, "Brppp brppp scuzzz!" ASSOCIATE EDITOR Bill Alterman, who was driven from Silver Spring, Mary- land after seducing a bhewed-up old slip- per. His greatest claim to fame is his single - handed defense of Frontierland during the Apache siege on Disneyland. ASSOCIATE EDITOR Al Shackelford, Saginaw, Michigan's third most-celebrated citizen, immediately after Stevie Wonder and Kid Lavigne. He likes to listen to King Curtis and sleep, and often com- bines the two pursuits. He would like readers to send him money c/o The Mich- igan Daily, 420 Maynard. ASSISTANT EDITOR Sandi Genis is from New Britain, Connecticut and she's a girl! All -her colleagues know Sandi will go far here at the Daily, preferably all the way. ASSISTANT EDITOR Bob Andrews mi- grated here from New York City and is majoring in degeneracy, and doing quite well. He would like to be a doctor some- day, or at least play doctor with someone. CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Randy Phil- lips comes to us from North Miami Beach, Florida and probably won't "contribute" much, ha-ha. He keeps changing his ma- jor so he won't have to graduate, but someday the world will get a good lawyer. And maybe Randy will make a good grave-digger. CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Mike Olin is also from North Miami Beach (!!!) and whiles away the lonely hours making his own clothes and cooking, But don't think Mike is a cupcake: he plays a pretty rough game of whist! "Wanted: young man single and free experienced in love but will accept a young trainee extra extra read all about it playing cards and drinking in the bars one monkey don't stop no show yah yah yah," chanted the new staff in unison. - Diy--''orn Gattnie STRUNG ACROSS PEOPLE'S Plaza, which they helped liberate with their own blood, are the new Senior Sports editors out fot a family outing. Promising better pages, more photographs and free lunche son Friday, the editors got together for this intimate shot of scribe's at play. From left to right, the new hitting order is as follows: Bill "Froggie" Alterman, Al "Sweet Biscuit" Shackle- ford, Sailin' Sandi Genis, Elliot "Iceman" Legow, Randy. "Deadeye" Phillips, John "Da Capo" Papanek,,.Bob "Big Apple" Andrews, and Mike "Sacrifice" Olin. i. Purdue title hopes vanish I By The Associated Press LAFAYETTE - Wisconsin capi- talized in a second half Purdue drought to deal the Boilermakers an 84-65 loss here last night, their .*rst defeat in the 4-year history of Mackey Arena. Wisconsin outscored Purdue 33- 10 in the second half as the Boiler- makers went slightly over six min- utes without scoring a point. From a 55-51 Purdue lead with 1 :24 to play, Wisconsin outgunned t Boilermakers, 264, duripg the next 11 minutes. The score was tied 10 times and changed hands 12 times before Wis- consin surged ahead of Purdue in the final period. Purdue held a 39-37 halftime margin. . Seven-point losses to New Mexico Site in the 1967-68 season and to Michigan last year had been Pur- due's poorest home performances in the arena's history before last night.. Purdue's second half shooting from the field of 27 per cent gave Big Ten Standings W L Pct. Ohio State 7 2 .778 Minnes6ta 7 2 .779 MICHIGAN 6 2 .750 daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: FRANK LONGO them 33 per cent for the game, while Wisconsin had a 52 per cent average from the field. Kim Hughes led all scorers with 17 points for Wisconsin and four other Badgers ;were in double figures. Purdue and Wisconsin are now both 34 in the Big Ten and overall Wisconsin is 10-7 and Purdue 9-8. * * * Hawke yes hit IOWA CITY-Iowa reeled off nine straight points early in overtime yesterday to score an 87-84 over- time Big Ten Conference basket- ball victory over Illinois. Iowa, 9-10, had a chance for a victory in regulation time, but Kevin Kunnert hit only one of two free throws for a 76-76 tie with nine seconds to play. Rick Williams with 32 points, 20 in the second half and overtime, led Iowa. The Hawkeyes shot 49.3 per cent from the field compared to 44.1 for Illinois. Illinois led through the entire first half, once leading by nine points, and held a 39-34 halftime edge. Iowa tied the game in the first two minutes of the second half at 41-all and gained the lead for the first time at 53-51 with 13:28 left. The lead see-sawed from there un- til the end of the game. Iowa moved to 3-6 in the confer- ence got 15 points from Neil Fegen- bak, 14 from Gary Lusk and 12 from Jim Collins. Jim Krelle had 25 to lead Illinois and sophomore center Bill Morris added 24. The Illini fell to 11-6 over-all and 2-5 in the Big Ten. Wildcats whom p MANHATTAN--Kansas State got Kansas in deep foul trouble early in the second .half, then pulled away for a 7866 victory to move FOR E S Wittenberg 54, Heidelberg 52 Hiram 89, John Carroll 79 Wooster 73, Denison 63 Wichita St. 88, Chicago Loyola 64 Rhode Is. Coll. 124, Bridgewater St. 90 Auburn 91, Georgia Tech 77 Newberry 81, Wofford 67 Eastern Michigan 93, Oakland 88 Kenyon 80, Oberline 60 Holy Cross 84, Dartmouth 83 NE Louisian St. 106, Lamar Tech 103 Texas Tech 80, Rice 76 Texas 90, Baylor 70 Kansas St.78, Kansas 66 Massachusetts 112, Boston U. 9 Boston College 70, St. John's 66 Howard 84, Maryland-East Shore 81 Kentucky 101, Indiana 99 into second place in the Big Eight basketball race last night. Kansas frontliners Wilson Bar- row, Randy Canfield and Neal Mask all picked up their fourth personals in the first seven min- utes of the second half. With the Jayhawk inside game weakened, the Wildcats picked on the weakness with success. Reserve center David Hall came off the bench to lead the charge inside with 20 points. Kansas' foul trouble also allowed K-State to forge a 49-36 edge in rebounding. The Wildcats led 31-30 at the half, but with the Jayhawk foul woes K-State quickly moved into an eight-point advantage, 51-43, and put the game on ice 74-62 with 1:16 left. Sharpshooting B u d Stallworth paced the Jayhawks with 25 points. The victory gave the Wildcats a 6-2 record, and 12-8 over-all. Kan- sas dropped to 9-12 on the season and 5-4 in the conference. Loyola shocked CHICAGO - Terry Benton and Vince Smith combined for 46 points, including 31 in the final half, to lead the Wichita State Shockers to a convincing 88-64 in- tersectional victory over Chicago Loyola in the opener of a Chicago Stadium college basketball dou- bleheader last night This Week in Sports FRIDAY WRESTLING-Wisconsin at Crisler Arena, 7:30 p.m. HOCKEY--Wisconsin at the Coliseum, 8 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL-at Northwestern I 'I We have the BESTF REPAIRS and SERVICE around-TRY US SPORTS CAR SERVICE OF ANN ARBOR, ;I. 4705 Washtenaw (next to Ypsi-Ann drive in) 1 I IwNw-rv F, T-W-F- -8-; M and Th 8-9 TRACK-at Michigan State .r Mchican State 4 4 urdue 3 4 Indiana 3 4 Wisconsin 3 4 Iowa 3 6 Illinois 2 5 Northwestern 2 7 Yesterday's Results owa 37, Illindis, 84, ot. isconsin 84 ,Purdue 65 .500 .429 .429 .429 .333 .286 .222 IProfessional League Standings NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 43 19 .894 New York 37 23 .617 Philadelphia 23 38 .377 Buffalo 17 44 .279 Central Division Baltimore 25 34 .424 Atlanta 23 38 .378 Cicinnati 18 41 .305 veland 17 45 .274 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division I Milwaukee Chicago Phoenix Detroit 50 13 34 18 38 25 22 40 Pacific Division .794 .710 .603 .355 Los Angeles 50 8 E den State 38 24. S. ttle 37 25 Houston 24 38 Portland 15 48. Yesterday's Games Baltimore 113, Houston 98 Atlanta 113, Detroit 105 Golden State 103, Buffalo 100 Cincinnati at Los Angeles, Inc. Boston at Portland, inc. Today's Games tuston at New York Cleveland at Philadelphia Baltimore at Atlanta Los Angeles at Phoenix Boston at Seattle ABA East Division W L Netucky 47 12. inia 37 25 New York 28 32 Floridians 23 37. .862 .613 .597 .387 .238 Pet .797 .597 .467 .383 19% 25% 3 6% 9 5- 12 27% 14 15 28 37% GB 11% 19 24 Carolina 24 37 Pittsburgh 21 38 West Division Utah 41 20 Indiana 35 26 Dallas 30 34 Denver 24 36 Memphis 23 36 Yesterday's Games Dallas 115, Virginia 111 Carolina 126, Pittsburgh 113 Kentucky 101, Indiana 99 Floridians at Denver, inc. Utah at Memphis, inc. Today's Games Utah at New York .393 .357 .672 .574 .469 .400 .390 6 12% 16 16Y2 S Vi i{t 1 I l t t 1 1 7 i1 r fi } I, i. i Boston New York Montreal Detroit Toronto Buffalo Vancouver Chicago Minnesota California St. Louis NHL East Division WL T 40 8 9 35 11 9 31 13 11 24 23 9 23 24 11 11 32 14 15 34 5 West Division 38 13 6 30 18 9 18 29 11 19 31 8 Pts 89 79 73 51 57 36 35 82 65 47 46 26 26 Pittsburgh at Kentucky GF GA 234 126 238 127 211 147 181 176 182 179 151 214 136 192 190 115 153 128 158 216 158 191 135 1M 139 185 145 228 ENGINEERS, WE'RE HIRING! Consider these facts about TI's Equipment Group when looking for a career. DIVERSIFICATION-We are industry lead- ers in many fields. Your career can take shape in Radar-- Electro Optics - Guid- ance Control - Communication - Com- puter Design and others areas. The choice is yours. STATE OF THE ART TECHNOLOGY-Stay current by working in systems develop- ment that is in the fore-front of Electro Mechanical Design or fabrication. This is the key to your long range success and security. JOB STABILITY-Yes, because we have set a new growth goal-to reach $3 billion in annual sales in the decade of the Seven- ties. This growth will provide endless ad- vancement opportunities for engineers who have a desire for responsibility in an innovative, enthusiastic growth corpora- tion where the atmosphere is informal but highly competitive, demanding and professional. See us at your Placement Office. We will be on your campus inter- viewing February 15 & 16 Evaluate yourself the potential of a career with TI. If the schedule is full or you cannot interview on campus, send a resume to: R. Y. HENSLEE CORPORATE STAFFING TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED P. 0. BOX 5474, MS/67 DALLAS TEXAS 75222 Philadelphia 17 29 10 44 Pittsburgh 16 31 9 41 Los Angeles 15 37 7 37 Yesterday's Games Boston 6, California 3 Chicago 3, St. Louis 1 New York at Vancouver, inc. Today's Games California at Montreal Toronto at Pittsburgh Detroit at Minnesota Philadelphia at Chicago St. Louis at Los Angeles U' CITY-WIDE MEETING Human Rights Party TONIGHT ~TONIGHT I Ii I I