Sunday, January 23, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine--- out to lunch mort novck The Big Fella returns' .. and the gears start to mesh M1AYBE Johnny Orr is right. Maybe it was too much to ex- pect the Michigan basketball team to win without Ken Brady. Orr maintains that his squad has not been doing that badly. He says that "our team did a real fine job without Brady and Henry Wilmore." And they did, in the games they won. It is difficult to play without a center and while Ernie Johnson and John Lockard have become fine forwards, neither was really at home in the middle. But there were other games when no one did anything. Wilmore's injury put a big dent in the Michigan offense but it shouldn't have stopped it entirely. Yesterday's game proves the point. Wilmore, playing most of the contest at guard, had one of the worst games of his career. He scored only 15 points and got just six rebounds. However the team won anyway. With Brady back at center they quit relying on Wilmore to save them and they went out and played basketball. Brady hauled in 11 rebounds and canned 13 points,, but it was his presence rather than his play that made the differ- ence. Lockard still had to carry the brunt of the inside work but it was obviously easier for him with Brady around. He hauled down 16 rebounds and scored 19 points. He was visibly looser on offense, going so far as to shoot from near the head of the -key. Without Brady he couldn't afford to do this. Someone had to be underneath for the carom and Lockard was the man. But now Brady takes the pressure off and though Lockard had been playing well, he looked even better. Johnson also benefited from Brady's presence. Ernie has been better known for his flailing moves than for his scoring, but now the moves seem to be getting the ball in the basket more consistently. He'll probably be getting even better with k Brady to set picks inside. Actually Brady wasn't even supposed to play, but it's lucky he did. He twisted his foot in practice and there was concern that he would miss the game. But it didn't seem to bother him much at all. Considering that it was only his second game he moved very well. He seems to be re- covering rapidly now and says that, "every day I'm get- ting more wind and my timing is coming back." But even though he wasn't at full strength he made ant amazing difference. Michigan has traditionally been a small team. Two years ago 6-4 Rod Ford was forced to play center because there just wasn't a big man around. Brady changed that last year but his injury this year brought it back. Lockard is a strong 6-5, but he has trouble guarding really big men without fouling. Johnson is 6-8, but not very heavy. So the team missed big Brady.- The Wolverines were in the process of getting eaten up yesterday until Brady entered the game. They were down by nine and weren't looking very good. But as soon as he came in they began to close in. His muscle cleared the way for Johnson to put on his scoring display and made it difficult for the Wildcats to work inside. w But the biggest surprise of the day was Wilmore's poor performance. It was only his first game at guard, but it's hard to believe that he can't play anywhere instantly. Even Orr admitted that "it was as poor a first half as I've seen him play." Wilmore feels that he was a little confused with the switch. "I can't think in two positions," he commented. But he thinks that the problem won't take long to' correct- "I enjoy playing guard, it's my natural position and now I can work on the guard stuff." At times the team showed just what this switch mightj mean. There were some lapses when they let Northwestern steal the ball for easy baskets, but for the most part they looked Impressive. The front line was imposing and the squad had less trouble bringing down the ball against the press. When Wilmore sharpens up his ball handling and learns what he has to do the move will look even better Wayne Gra- biec might be able to loosen up a little and 'get his shot back. And the Wolverines might live up to their potential and win all the games, they should. MICHIGAN UNDEFEATED: Tankers liquidate MSU By CHUCK BLOOM Dan Fishburn and Mark Ander- It may have been close in Cris- son finished one-two in the 1000- ler Arena, but over at Matt Mann yard freestyle while Steve McCar- Pool, it was no contest. The Wol- thy easily won the 200-yard free- verine swimmers t h o r o u g hI y style with a clocking of 1:47.6. trounced the Spartan swim team In the afternoon's closest race, from Michigan State, 82-41. Michigan's Jose Aranha barely Winning all but two of the touched out Ken Winfield of MSU events, Michigan remained unde- in the 50-yard freestyle. Winfield, feated in dual meets this season. ?xtremely fast off the starting Michigan was led by the diving block, had as much as a two- of Joe Crawford who battled length lead in the first 25 yards \ISU's Mike Cook in an exciting before Aranha came on to win. duel. Crawford handily won the Ray McCullough won the 200- one-meter event with Cook sec- yard individual medley over an- ond; and Michigan's Steve Schen- other Wolverine, Don Peterson. thai finishing a strong third. Chris Hansen took the 200-yard Crawford and Cook battled it backstroke. out again in the three-meter div- ing with Crawford winning once MSU's only two wins were in again. But this time it took an ex- the 200-yard butterfly and the cellent final dive to gain the vic- 500-yard freestyle. Winfield again tory, started strong in the butterfly and Michigan took the first event in beat Peterson by a little less than the meet, the 400-yard medley re- a second. lay as the team of Chris Hansen,' In the final event, the 400-yard Stu Isaac, Byron McDonald and freestyle relay, Wolverine relay Tim Norlen posted a winning time teams finished one-two to com- of 3:34.95.. plete the beating. z Wolverines sputter past by AL SHACKELFORD The first shock waves of Ken Brady's return to action hit North- western yesterday afternoon as the Wolverines stumbled through a lousy first half and turned in an 83-79 win over the Wildcats at Chrisler Arena. Brady moved well while playing three-quarters of the game and led Michigan's second half domination of the boards and the inside game. The 6-9 former Flint Central ace combined with enforcers John Lockard and Ernie Johnson for a 31-19 carom advantage in the final stanza and slapped three of Wild- cat Barry Hentz' shots right back in his face. The outstanding play of the Michigan front-line was counter- acted by Henry Wilmore's unsteady debut in the backcourt. Wilmore didn't put any points on the board until the waning minutes of the first half and admitted after" the game that he "felt a little awk- ward" in his new position. "Playing guard is one of the greatest things that has happened to me," added the 6-3 flash. "I'm more of a set up and run it player." Michigan coach Johnny Orr is undecided about whether Wilmore will stay permanently at guard. Wayne Grabiec and Dave Hart the co-captains in the backcourt, turned in strong floor games and combined for ten assists, including a couple of smoking beauties by Grabiec to Johnson in the first half. Orr gave the 5-8 Hart credit for shutting off Wildcat guard Mark Sibley in the second half after the hustling junior had ripped Michi- gan with countless steals and 15-20 foot Jumpers in the first half. Northwestern zoned the Wolver- ines in the first half and forced errors with an aggressive Sibley led defense. Sibley got the Wild- cats off and running offensively with 14 seconds gone, hitting a medium-range jumper over a pick on Grabiec, and later dumped in, two more to boost Northwestern into an early 9-6 lead. Deadeye shooting by Rich Sund and Steve Berg and some offense in the pivot from Hentz shot the Wildcats into a 26-17 lead with about eight minutes left. At this point the Wolverines called time and Wilmore was benched in favor of Hart.I The Wildcats clamped a press on Michigan on and off but the Wolverines brushed it off, thanks mainly to Wilmore's poised dribb- ling. Northwestern got a lot of open shots in the first half and stayed even with Michigan on the boards. Grabiec began to bring Michigan back with a pair of his trademark 25-footers, cutting the gap to 30-25 at the 5:32 mark. Wilmore took the floor again and fired a fast breakdpass to Johnson for two, then scored on a breakaway steal and hit both ends of a one and one to keep Michigan close at the half, 41-39. Brady began to do it in his old Hoo p-de-doQ sports NIGHT EDITORS: CHUCK DRUKIS and JOHN PAPANEK style as the second half opened, shoving in a short one to.knot the score at 41 and floating in a jum- per a minute later. Michigan's big front-men began to deal inside, and Northwestern coach Brad Snyder; tried to muscle up the Wildcats by inserting star- ting center Greg Wells into the lineup with Hentz. The move didn't pay off, as Lockard hit a free throw on a Berg foul inside. Brady stuffed Hentz and Lockard fired in a jumper to give Michigan a 47- 44 lead. Wilmore bgan to stir, much to Northwestern's dismay, and scored 11 of his 15 points in the last 15 minutes of the game. Henry rang the bell from inside at 11:25 to kick the Wolverines into their big- gest lead of the game at 61-50, but the aggressive 'Cats weren't stiff yet. Brady and Lockard' each rattled the glass on goal tend calls and 'Cats. Wells hit one of his infrequent buckets to bring Northwestern to 61-56. But here Wilmore and John- son began to bag the deuces again, and the Wolverines climbed back into leads of ten points and more. The 'Cats mounted another charge in the fading minutes, cut- ting a twelve-point Michigan lead ' to three with a minute left and giving the Wolverine fans visions of their team's near-choke finish in the recent Illinois game. But Rentz came through in the clutch, .q blowing a reverse layup under. pressure from Brady, and the Wolverines ran out the clock. Johnson led Michigan to a rare good afternoon from the floor, hit- ting 10 of 16, while the team shot 46.7 per cent. The Big E continues to develop as an offensive per- former, as he showed some pretty inside moves and again flaunted his astonishing fast-break speed. Lockard drove the scorekeepers wild with 19 points, 16 rebounds and a pair of assists, while Brady added 13 points, and 11 rebounds. Wilmore extended his disapoint- ing shooting through another game with six of 18 from the floor; but is still moving on a bum knee. "The difference between a great player and a good player is quick- ness," commented Orr, "and Henry still doesn't have his quickness [back." -Associated Press THE BIG E, known to friends and sports fans across the nation as Ernie Johnson, rips the ball off the boards, whilst eluding the grasps of Northwestern's Rick Sund (42) and Kevin Kachen (blond hair). Old Ern' played his heart out, leading the Wolver- ines with 22 points. Campy blazes away, frosh burn Tartars Wilmore Johnson Lockard Grabiec Hart Brady Team TOTALS Ashbaugh Sund Wells Kachan Sibley Hentz Berg Douglass Shoger Team TOTALS MICHIGAN fga fg fta ft 18-6 4-3 16-10 5-2 17-7 7-5 8-3 3-1 7-3 1-1 9-6 2-1 75-35 22-13 NORTH WESTERN fga fg fta ft 6-3 0-0 11-5 2-0 7-4 3-1 3-1 3-1 14-8 4-2 22-9 3-1 9-4 0-0 3-2 2-2 1-0 0-0 r p4 tot 6 4 15 9 0 22 16 3 19 11 2 13 9 56 15 83 r pf 2 1 4 2 6 4 4 0 3 2 8 2 5 4 2 4 0 0 tot 6 10 9 3 18 19 6 0 Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale (JAN. 21st-JAN. 31st) Sheep Skin Afghan Coats................. $85.00- $60.00 . Sheep 'Skin Afghan Coats (infants).........45.00 28.00 Hand Woven, hand embroidered Blouses, Dresses and Men's Shirts ........19.75 15.75 Embroidered Dresses.................. 22.00 15.00 Turkish Real Leather Coats... ........82.50 60.00 Turkish Real Leather Pants (female) 80.00 50.00 Turkish Jewelry and Puzzle Rings ..............20% OFF S Turkish Rug Bags. ......... .........12.50 8.50 ALL OTHER MERCHANDISE-25% OFF TURKISH GIFT SHOP 802 S. STATE ST. (between Hill & Packard) By MICHAEL OLIN Michigan's frosh maplemen, led by a? 38-point performance from Campy Russell, trounced a hope- lessly outclassed Wayne State squad yesterday, 108-63. The Wolverines dominated all aspects of the game en route to their seventh victory without a loss. The Tartars, whose tallest play- er is 6-3, were unable to shoot ef- fectively from the outside over the outstretched arms of the Wolver- ines, and were stifled inside as Michigan's man-to-man defense prevented their attempts to drive. Consequently, Wayne State was held to a poor 33 per cent, shoot- ing from 'the floor. The :Wolverines shot a sizzling 32 per cent as the Tartars were unable to handle Michigan on either a man-to-man or zone basis. Scoring first on an -inside drive by guard Joe Johnson, Michigan pulled out to a qui k 12-3 lead after only 3:19 in the first half. The Wolverines continued the bar- rage as they stretched it out to 32-11 with 10:37 left. 'At this point, Coach Dick Honig started to pull his starters. Honig later commented, "It's necessary for. the first unit to. play at least ten minutes together in each half no matter what the score is. They have to have that much game to- gether." The Wolverines continued to in- 'crease their lead as Russell sizzled inside the key on pinpoint passes from Johnson and guard John Kantner. Russell finished the half with 26 points and the Wolverines went into the locker room on top 60-31. The second half proceeded in much the same way as the first Tartars sauced MICHIGAN with the Wolverines manhandling the Tartars on the boards. The hot hand shifted away from Rus- sell somewhat as Kantner, shoot- ing 62 per cent from the field go- ng into yesterday's game, started to hit from the outside. With nine minutes left to play and Michigan up by 91-50, Honig again began filtering in his sub- stitutes as the Wolverines coasted home for the victory. Coach Honig, who said he "didn't expect the game to be too tough," was concerned that the team would come out in the sec- ond half and "play around." He admitted his concern was un- founded as the squad "ran real well." ' - 76-36 17-7 43 19 79 44-83 38-79 SCORE BY PERIODS MICHIGAN 39 Northwestern 41 I Why Buy Papers When Y ou Can Write'Your Own I Ashworth Johnson Kantner Ayler McParlan Wolff Russell Rahn Kupec Tel TOTALS fga fg fta ft r pf1 3-4 0-0 10 1 7-14 3-4 2 2 '7-10 0-0 2 0 5-8 0-0 6 0 1-2 1-2 2 2 4-6 0-0 5 2 1723 4-6 11 2 0-1 - 0-0 0 1 6-13 0-0 12 2 10 50-81 8-12 60 12 tot 6 !17 S14 10 3 8 38 12 108 Writing is no mystic art. It's something you can learn with individualized attention. Professors who know their fields often can't teach the writing skills you need. . That's where we come in. We're a team df successful graduate students who are also professional writers. For less than it would cost you to buy a paper, we can teach you to write your own. Each private lesson is geared to your writing prob- lems-not a textbook. We'll go over your old papers and talk about your. new assign- ments. We're students like you, so call 769-4897 after 7 p.m. WRITE YOUR OWN WAYNE STATE Evans Green Runert Brenon McKalpain Bertoni Skiragas Smith Mixon Fixpatrick Team TOTALS MICHIGAN Wayne State fga fg fta ft r pf tot 3-5 2-2 1 1 8 9-20 1-2 13 0 19 1-6 0-1 2 0 2 0-2 0-0 o0 0 0 2-6 1-1 0 1 5 5-15 1-3 3 1 11 2-7 0-0 1 2 41 1-9 2-3 7 0 4 1-5 0-0 2 2 21 4-10 0-0 1 0 s 7 28-85 7-12 37 7 63 60 48-108 31 32- 63 ice. EVOLUTION NOW A LECTURE ON HUMAN POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENT BY DR. JEAN HOUSTON author of Varieties of Psychedelic Experience I .