tuesday, February 23, 1971 Iager By AL SHACKELFORD The Michigan Wolverines, sit- ting all alone atop the Big Ten with an 8-0 record, will face their sternest test of the season ~ght when they battle third- place Indiana at Bloomington. Both teams put winning streaks on the line tonight: Michigan has now won its last nine, Indiana its last four. The teams rank 1-2 in Big Ten offense, with the edge to Michigan at 89.1 to 87. -iichigan blew Minnesota off the floor 108-90 Saturday in one of its most awesome performances of the year. The Wolverines, led by Henry Wilmore and guards Dan Fife and Wayne Grabiec, scorched the cords at a 59 per cent rate in a performance which le the luckless Gophers cring- ing. Wilmore, Michigan's 6-3 A 11- American candidate, came up with THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Mine THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine .... face ke tilt at Indiana daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JOEL GREER a big 33-point Saturday after a series of sub-par efforts. The mo- bile forward punctured Minne- sota's lackluster zone with out- side bombs, then wormed inside in his usual foul-drawing unstopp- able way. Henry will face his sophomore nemesis Geoorge McGinnis for the second time tonight. The two staged a scoring duel in Ann Ar- bor January 17 as McGinnis top- ped Wilmore 37-35 but Michigan won the game 92-81 MccGinnis has been rolling along merrily all season, trading off as the Big Ten scoring leader with first Wilmore and now Iowa's! Fred Brown. Few college players can match his stats of 32 points and 15.8 rebounds a game; few defenders can control his finesse moves and 6-7, 235-pound power. But while Indiana's offensive attack flows from McGinnis' hands, it is also hampered by his sometimes lackadaisical play. Mc- Ginnis' inability to get back on defense in the first Michigan game may have cost his team the game; too many of the 37 points he scored were neutralized by Michigan's quick fast break. The number two man in the Indiana attack is center Joby Wright, who backed up McGinnis with 25 in Indiana's lossto Mich- igan. Wright's tussle with Mich- igan's Ken Brady should provide some fireworks tonight and some answers as to just how much Brady has improved since the first Indiana game. Other important faces in the Hoosier lineup are guards J i m Hars and Ed Daniels, swingman John Ritter, forward Rick Ford and center Steve Downing. Downing appeared only briefly in; Saturday's juicing of the Goph- the first Michigan game and ers were performances worthy of showed little. a Big Ten champion. Indiana's four-game w I n n i n g The continued excellence of the streak is somewhat deceptive, as most of the wins were by only a starting five and the maturation few points. Last Saturday t h e of Harry Hayward as a third Hoosiers squeaked by self-de- guard are factors which should structing Illinois 88-86 in typi- stand Michigan in good stead in cally unimpressive style. ' t l t r Michigan, on the other h a n d, is growing stronger and looking more devastating with every game. The clutch win at West Lafayette against fourth-place Purdue a n d tonights tougie. xod rord will draw the unenviable task of guarding George McGinnis and Brady will battle Wright in the middle. DOLPHINS GET 15TH: Tarheels drop FSU New editors tabbed; prohibition revived GAS CITY, Ind.-The dearly departed senior sports editors last night made official the new appointments for senior editors %for 1971-72. Replacing Eric Siegel as sports editor is Mort Noveck, the greatest authority on lime jello on this campus. Assisting him will be Jim Kevra, executive sports editor; Rick Cornfeld, associate sports editor; Terri Fouchey, contributing sports editor and Betsy Mahon, senior night editor. The common denominator uniting the group is that they all joined the staff as an attempt to escape from boredom. Whether or not they succeeded is moot. Noveck, who has been a night editor for two many years, is a junior economics major from Detroit. During his service as the Daily's head basketball and spring football writer, Michigan achieved unparalleled success in harness racing. He has also saved Associated Press and United Press International from the igno- miny of being without football and basketball correspondents. Kevra, as personable a young lad as ever existed, is a pro- fessional student from Detroit. Although he has never taken a course in Asian Studies, he admitted that someday he would like to. His high point with the Daily was being named head of the golf beat last March. Cornfeld is a junior in American Culture from University City, Mo., and the only non-Detroiter on the staff. His articles have made the lives of readers of the Sporting News and St. Louis Post- Dispatch brighter. It is perhaps significant that the hockey team started going downhill when Cornfeld took over as head of the hockey beat. Fouchey, a junior majoring in sociology, has been the head feature writer and will continue to punch the typewriter keys until her fingers get skinned. She won second prize in the Daily's *'annual sports feature writing competition a year ago. The contest was then discontinued.a Mahon (pronounced, "Mahon") is also a junior majoring in sociology. She became a night editor in September and is current- ly head of the gymnastics beat. She unabashedly admits to living with another member of the sports staff. Noveck, who was unavailable for comment last night, said, "Since I joined the Daily, I've had one overriding ambition and now I've achieved it. I finally got my very own Daily parking sticker." Friday's game between Yeshiva University and Dropsy Col- lege had to be suspended when the sun set ahead of schedule. Harris led the Hoosiers in scor- ing last year with an 18.2 mark but has passed the offensive torch too McGinnis and fallen into a scoring doldrums. Daniels, a 6-4 prodouct of Savannah, Georgia, lends depth to the backcourt along with Ritter and sophomore Boot- sie White. Coach Lou Watson had high hopes for 6-8 soph Steve Down- ing when the war began but an inquiry nailed Downing to the bench for much of the early sea- son. The injury has hampered his progress and prevented him fromJ adding much to the attack; By The Associated Press; CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - Eighth- ranked North Carolina used a tough zone defense and revived rebounding last night to erase a first half Florida State lead and! drop the Seminoles 70-61 in an intersectional basketball game. The Tarheels, 18-1 overall, fell! behind by as many as nine points, 21-12 midway in the first half, mainly on the shooting of ESU's Ron King, who scored 21 points. Trailing 35-34 at the half, North Carolina's Bill Chamberlain scor- ed the first two buckets of the second half to put the Tar Heels ahead to stay with 16% minutes left to play. * * * Jacksonville jives JACKSONVILLE - The h i g h - scoring Jacksonville Dolphins made East Carolina their 15th straight victim in a 127-69 romp last night. The nation's highest scoring team, Jacksonville fattened i t s .s Scores average as it posted its 33rd straight home victory. Pembroke Burrows led the Jack- sonville scoring with 27 points. Artis Gilmore and Harold Fox had 25 each. Gilmore also boosted his nation- leading rebounding by grabbing 28. He also blocked 13 shots. Al Faber was high scorer for East Carolina with 22 points.d -ualy-Mort N Oveck Michigan's 6-9 center, Ken Brady (15), takes a jumper during the Michigan Invitational in which the Wolverines defeated Harvard, 100-73. Brady has been a key factor in the team's surge for the Big Ten title. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Western Kentucky 94, Eastern Ken- tucky 93, o.t. Jacksonville 127, East Carolina 69 Slippery Rock 103, Grove City 79 Tennessee 88, LSU 67 Florida 85, Mississippi 68 Virginia Tech 86, Ohio U. 80 Kentucky 101, Alabama 74 North Carolina 70, Florida St. 61 Morehead 70, Middle Tennessee 55 Lehigh 84, Gettysburg 68 SW Louisiana 25, NW Louisiana 21 Defiance 86, Heidelberg 76 N. Carolina State 97, Virginia 77 Thiel 69, Geneva 68 Bowling Green 92, Loyola of Chi- cago 78 South Carolina 88, Houston 71 t . *0 NBA Standings NBA Eastern 'Conference Atlantic Division Pacific Division Los Angeles 40 25 .615 -; San Francisco 35 34 .507 7 San Diego 31 38 .449 11 Sate337.411Portland 23 43 .348 17/ Yesterday's Results -Daily-Denny Gainer San Francisco 109, Buffalo 91 Only game scheduled. SHOWN VEGETATING after a vigorous game of euchre, the new senior sports staff mugs it up Today's Games for ace photographer Denny Gainer. Gainer is not seen in the picture because he had to work Los Angeles at Baltimore the camera. Offended, he left the film in his pocket which was then picked by photo editor San Francisco at Milwaukeeth caeaOfeddhelfth fimihipoktwhc wathn ikdbyhtodtr San Diego at New York Jim Judkis who didn't want to have to retake t he picture himself. From left to right the new Portlandat Philadelphia editors are Mort Noveck, Betsy Mahon, Rick Cornfeld, Jim Kevra, and Terri Fouchey. Onlyg s New York Philadelphia Boston ,Buffalo Ce] Baltimore Cincinnati' Atlanta Cleveland W L Pct. 43 25 .632 39 29 .574 36 33 .522 19 51 .272 rntral Division 37 29 26 41 25 42 12 58 .561 .388 .373 .171 GB 4 712 25 11i 12t% 27 14 15!,2, 16 ~ki £chAu44 #h'untaht! 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