\fednesday, February 24, 197' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page )even Hoosiers put the hurt on Michigan, 88-79 By MORT NOVECK Down 46-39 at the half, Mich- Special To The Daily igan made a comeback attempt as BLOOMINGTON - Michigan the second period opened. But they suffered its first setback of the couldn't get any closer than six. Big Ten campaign last night, 88- Twice they came close, but each 79, as a fired up Indiana team time the Hoosiers took the mo- shoved them out from under the mentum back. The second time basket and blew them off the Indiana ran its lead up to 13 be- court, avenging an earlier defeat fore Michigan got another point. in Ann Arbor. And they led the rest of the way' The loss dropped Michigan into by about ten points. second place in the conference byeaboteint with an 8-1 mark. Ohio State is The Wolverines got an unex- one-half game out in front at 9-1 pected break when George McGin-1 while Indiana sports a 7-2 record. nis picked up his fourth foul with The Hoosiers won the game un- 17 minutes left. However the lossI der the boards as they out-re- of the team's leading scorer didn't bounded Michigan 68-42. Not only faze the Hoosiers as Downing1 did they stop the Wolverines with- picked up the slack. out a second shot on many occa- Two Michigan players also spentj sions, they were able to convert time on the bench in foul trouble. on many of their own missed at- In fact, the game was almost over tempts, before it really got going as Henry1 Steve Downing did most of the Wilmore and Ken Brady each1 damage as he grabbed off 17 picked up three fouls early in the1 caroms and popped in 28 points contest, and spent part of the first while playing virtually the entire half on the bench.1 game. His scoring was an unex- The only thing that kept thei pected obstacle for Michigan as he I game close in the half was thei averages under nine per game. Wolverines shooting, or rather thei "They deserved to win," Mich- igan Coach John Orr commented You can't after the game. "They were ag- gressive and determined. They beat gtCIGAN us on the boards and on the great Wilmore 9-20 8-9 10 26 play of Downing." Ford 9-20 2-5 4 20 Indiana Coach Lou Watson also Brady 3-7 2-4 6 8 felt that the game was won on the a Fife 3-9 0-1 3 6 boards as he commented, "The Hayward 3-8 3-4 2 9 big thing tonight was that we sent Lockard 0-1 1-2 3 1 three guys crashing to the offen- Nicksic 0-0 0-0 0 sive board. We were getting she,. Hart 0-1 0-0 0 sn dnJohnson 0-0 0-0 1 0 second and third shot and theyI TEAM 9 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: AL SHACKELFORD 1 I 1 Et I the Wolverines went after the man with the ball, he just passed it off underneath to McGinnis or Down- ing who were standing there wait- ing. Orr felt that they were violat- ing the three second rule without being detected by the officials. "My biggest complaint," he said, "was that Downing was in the lane longer than three seconds at least a dozen times and they never call- ed it. But I'd do the same thing if I had their size." Though down throughout the second half, the Wolverines kept fighting. "We're still proud of our guys," Orr said. "We never gave up. We'll be back on Saturday." Hoosiers poor marksmanship. The Wolverines hit 46 per cent of their shots while Indiana sank only 36 per cent. Unfortunately, t h e advantage didn't hold up as the two teams finished less than one per cent apart. Michigan's scoring was below par and less balanced than usual. Lately all five staters have been hitting in double figures. Last night, only two, Wilmore and Rod Ford managed the feat. Wilmore finished with 26 and Ford wound up with 20 after being unusually cold in the opening stages. The Wolverine guards were ef- fectively neutralized by the Hoos- iers' zone defense as Wayne Gra- biec got only nine points and Dan Fife six. Grabiec took only seven' shots as the team had trouble get- ting him the ball through the zone. Orr felt that the poor Michigan shooting was due to Indian's fine play. "We didn't shoot well, but this was due to Indiana's aggres- siveness," he commented. The Hoosiers forced the Wol- verines to take poor shots on many occasions and forced them into turnovers on others. Indiana, on the other hand, could push close tothe basket be- fore letting the ball fly. Michigan seemed unable to halt their attack. They started off in a man to man defense but were forced into a zone because of fouls. If Brady tried to shove back under the boards, he was called for a violation, so the Hoosiers were free to drive their way in for easy shots. The zone didn't seem to help. If Big Ten Standings W L 9 1 vin 'em all! IN McGinnis Wright Downing Ritter Harris Wilson Daniels Memering TOTALS SCORING: MICHIGAN Indiana NDIANA 13-29 4-17 14-19 2-7 4-13 1-2 0-1 0-3 TEAM 38-91 Ohio State MICHIGAN Indiana Purdue Illinois Iowa Michigan State Wisconsin Minnesota Northwestern 7-8 15 1-1 13 0-4 17 0-0 4 1-2 7 0-0 2 2-3 0 1-1 4 6 12-19 68 33 9 28 4 0 2 2 1 88 8 7 6 4 3 3 2 3 1 2 3 5 6 6 7 7 8 Pet. .900 .888 .777 .667 .444 .333 .333 .222 .300 .111 -Associated Press INDIANA'S STAR forward George McGinnis eyes the hoop, oblivious to Dan Fife's defensive efforts, and prepares to ram home another two points. McGinnis was the main factor in Indiana's 88-79 up- set of Michigan last night, scoring 33 points and hauling down 15 rebounds. Guard Jim "Bubbles" Harris (30) added nine points to the Hoosier cause. TAKES BIG TEN LEAD: Yesterday's Results Indiana 88, MICHIGAN 79 Ohio State 80, Iowa 71 Wisconsin 88, Illinois 84 Minnesota 81, Northwestern 79 I didn't get any fast breaks." 39 40 -- 79 46 42 - 88 TOTALS 31-63 17-26 43 79 Ohio State drops Iowa Rockets roll over Knicks; Lakers keelhaul Bullets By The Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State, playing w'i t h o u t injured Jim Cleamons, took over the Big Ten Conference basketball lead last night with an 80-71 triumph over Iowa. The victory, the Buckeyes' ninth in 10 league games, shot them one-half game ahead of Michigan, an 88-70 loser at Indiana. Mich- igan, 8-1, entertains Ohio State Saturday. Cleamons, who has been averag- $g 18 points, was ruled out for he season yesterday with a hair- line wrist fracture. He suffered it against Northwestern Saturday night. The Buckeyes, beating Iowa for the second time this season, won the game at the free throw line, gpey hit 20-24 foul shots while Me Hawkeyes made 11-15. Both sides had 30 goals. Kevin Kunnert, a 6-foot-11 sophomore reserve, scored a game- high 28 points for Iowa. Fred Brown added 24 for the Hawkeyes. Al Homyak had 23 and Luke Witte 22 for Ohio State. Badgers wallop MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin center Glen Richgels, a doubtful starter because of flu, scored a career high of 23 points last night, pacing the Badgers to an 88-84 ig Ten basketball victory over Illinois. It snapped Wisconsin's six-game losing streak. Illinois has lost four in a row. Richgels scored 13 points in the first half, and left the game or ouls late in the game. Wisconsin Ted 45-39 at intermission. Wisconsin's Clarence Sh'rrod was benched briefly with a ,prain- ed wrist, but had scoring 'onors with 29 points. High for Illinois were Rick Howat and Nick Wea- terspoon with 19 each. Wolverrnles creep up in AP poll By The Associated Press Michigan climbed to 12th place in this week's Associated Press pol as UCLA maintained its dominance over the rest of college basketball. The mighty Bruins hold a sligh 4-point advantage over second place Marquette and lead the War riors 24 to 13 in first-place votes. Marquette will put its 33-game winning streak on the line tumor row night when it faces tough Ford ham in New York. * S o u t h e r n California whic] matches UCLA's 20-1 mark an will meet the Bruins in a climatic March 13 showdown, was agair number three in the voting. 1. UCLA 24 20-1 712 2. Marquette 13 21-0 688 So. California 20-1 594 j 4. Pennsylvania 22-0 507 5. Kansas 1 20-i 489 6. Jacksonville 20-2 376 7. South Carolina 16-4 282 8. Duquesne 19-2 250 9. Western Kentucky 18-A 242 The Badgers and Richgels out-' reboundedhtaller Illinoisr25-32 in the first half, and improved the board advantage in the second half. Gophers burrow EVANSTON, Ill.-Eric Hill and, Ollie Shannon scored 23 points but the Minnesota Gophers needed a flurry of free throws in the final minute to defeat Northwestern 81-79 last night in a Big Ten bas- ketball game. Northwestern blew a five-point lead in the first half but hald a 34-33 halftime advantage. The Wildcats didn't trail in the second half until Hill put the Gophers ahead 74-73 with less than two I minutes left after Shannon, Tom l Masterson and Jim Brewer all had fouled out.I The game then see-sawed , ith Minnesota finally taking the lead for good on a pair of free ,hrows by Bob Murphy. A pair of free throws by Gerry Pyle and two more by Corky Taylor with 10 seconds left clinched the outcome. Mark Sibley led Northwestern with 19 points. The loss dumped Northwestern into the Big Ten basement with a 1-8 record. Min- nesota is now 3-7 in conference play. Northwestern did a great de- fensive job on big Gopher forward Jim Brewer in limiting him to 13 points. Brewer damaged Michigan last Saturday at Ann Arbor with 28 points. -Associated Press Look skipper, no hair Philadelphia Phillies' manager Frank Lucchesi checks the bald head of rookie pitcher Luis Peraza yesterday before a clubhouse meeting preceeding yesterday's first day of practice. The Phillies, in the past, have clamped down on their players' long hair. Spring training this week "swings into high gear," as the wags say. Oakland star bopped again; NCAA maple sites named By The Associated Press * SAN FRANCISCO - Warren Wells, star receiver for the Oakland Raiders, was fined $360 yesterday, given a 30-day suspended jail sen- tence and placed on probation for one year for drunken driving. Municipal Court Judge Albert Wollenberg Jr. imposed sentence after Wells' attorney, Stanley Golde, pleaded no contest to the charge. The football star's probation in a 1969 attempted rape case was re-. voked last Wednesday and he was ordered to an Alameda County re- habilitation center for 60 days for diagnostic tests. *KANSAS CITY - The National Collegiate Athletic Association announced Tuesday that West Virginia University, St. John's University, University of Pennsylvania, University of Houston and Utah State Uni- versity have been selected as locations for first round competition in the 1971 NCAA basketball championship. 0 ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS - The Minnesota North Stars dealt center Tommy Williams to the California Golden Seals yesterday for center Ted Hampson just a few hours after announcing a three-player National Hockey League trade with the Chicago Black Hawks. Chicago sent left wing Doug Mohns and farmhand center Terry Caffrey to the North Stars for center Danny O'Shea. Williams, 30, had been dropped from the North Stars Feb. 4 for what was termed insubordination to Coach Jack Gordon. The North Stars also will send a player to be named at the end of the season for the 34-year-old Hampson, who has 10 goals and 20 assists this season. By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Calvin Murphy and Elvin Hayes shot the San Diego Rockets from 15 points down to a 126-109 victory over the New York Knicks in National Basketball Association game last night. The Rockets, winning for the seventh time in eight games and beating the Knicks for the first time in two years, dug themselves a hole when New York scored the last 12 points of the first quarter for a 25-13 lead. That deficit stretched to 51-36 before Murphy and Hayes took over. With Murphy scoring 14 points in the second quarter and Hayes nine, the Rockets closed the gap to 67-63 at the half, caught up at 73-73 and went ahead 91-86 after three periods. Then, when New York pulled within 103-102, San Diego rattled off eight points in a row, four by Murphy, then another string of 14, five by Murphy and four by Hayes. Murphy and Hayes finished with 29 points each and Hayes also held Knicks' center Willis Reed to a meager nine points, none in the second half. Dave Debusschere and Dick Barnett had 24 points apiece for the Knicks. * * * Baltimore bumped BALTIMORE - The Los Angeles Lakers, down by as many as nine points in the second quarter, caught Baltimore early in the third period and went on for a 114-107 National Basketball Association victory last night. The Bullets lost Eddie Miles, a 6-5 swingman with a torn achilles tendon in his right leg. He will be lost for the season. Gail Goodrich led scoring with 29 points, and Jerry West had 26 for the Lakers. Wes Unseld scored 28 points and had 23 rebounds to lead the Bullets, who led 61-54 at halftime. * * E 76ers succeed PHILADELPHIA - Billy Cun- ningham's 35 points helped the Philadelphia 76ers come from be- hind in the final period last night to defeat the Portland TrailBlazes 119-113 in a National Basketball Association game. Cunningham's twisting lay-up with 6:07 remaining in the game gave the 76ers a 105-104 lead. Phil- adelphia never trailed after that and boosted their margin in the Atlantic Division to 'our games over Boston in the scrap for the division's second playoff spot. Cunningham collected 13 field goals and nine free throws for his 35, but was outscored by the Trail Blazers' Geoff Petrie, who tallied 43. It equalled his career high. The 76ers led by as much as 15 points twice in the second period, but Portland, with Petrie scoring 14 of his points, rallied to lead at halftime 57-56. * * * Bruins bomb BUFFALO, N.Y. - Veteran Johnny Bucyk rifled his 350th ca- reer National Hockey League goal last night, keying a four-goal sec- ond period that carried the Boston Bruins to a 6-3 victory over the Buffalo Sabres. ' Bucyk's 38th of the season touched off a flurry of scores by the Bruins that broke open a tight game. After Bucyk connected, Phil Esposito scored his 51st of the sea- son and Ken Hodge added his 37th for the Bruins. Colonels chicken in PITTSBURGH - Darel Carrier of the Kentucky Colonets hit 3 three-point goals within a minute to tie Pittsburgh in the closing sec- onds, but a jumpshot by the Con- dors' John Brisker won the game 133-130. Carrier's flurry came when the Colonels were down 128-124. With the game then tied 130-130 with nine seconds remaining, Brisker hit from the outside and temmate Skeeter Swift iced the game hitting one of three from the foul line. Squires squelch Pros MEMPHIS - Rookie Charlie Scott gunned in 33 points as the Virginia Squires raced to a 106-97 American Basketball Association victory over the Memphis Pros last night. Scott flipped in 17 points in the first half as the Squires jumped ahead by as much as 11 at one time. They led Memphis 55-45 at the halfway mark. Professional League Standings NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L Pct. GB New York 43 26 .624 - Philadelphia 40 29 .581 3 Boston 36 33 .322 7 Buffalo 19 51 .271 24!j Central Division Baltimore 37 30 .554 - Cincinnati 26 41 .388'11 Atlanta 25 42 .373 12 Cleveland 12 58 .171 264 Western Conference Midwest Division Pittsburgh 28 39 .416 17% West Division Utah 44 20 .688 - Indiana 42 21 .667 1',, Memphis 36 31 .537 9 Denver 23 40 .365 201 Texas 20 44 .313 24 Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 133, Kentucky 130 Virrginia 106, Memphis 97 Denver at Utah, Inc. Only games scheduled. Today's Games Pittsburgh at New York Virginia at Carolina Memphis at Kentucky Denver at Floridians Indiana at Texas * *** NHL East Division W L T Pts. GF GA Milwaukee Chicago Phoenix Detroit Pacific Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Seattle Portland 57 11 .842 42 25 .627 41 27 .603 39 26 .600 Division 41 25 .622 35 35 .500 32 38 .457 30 37 .448 23 44 .340 14Y2 16 16% 8 11 11% 18Y2 -Associated Press IOWA SOPHOMORE SAM WILLIAMS rips off a rebound as Ohio State center Luke Witte (32) rears away. Witte played an outstanding board game and scored 22 points last night as Ohio State conquered Iowa 80-71 to vault into the Big Ten lead. CLEAMONS OUT: tBuck snaps wsC ris t Ohio State's Big Ten champion- i veteran on the young Ohio State ship hopes suffered a crucial blow squad and his leadership held the yesterday when X-rays confirmed team together. a hairline fracture in the wrist of The Buckeye captain was ranked, Buckeye captain Jim Cleamons. as the Big Ten's outstanding play- The startling news comes only er by nine of the conference's ten four days prior to the impending coaches in a pre-season poll. showdown at Ann Arbor between Ohio State and Michigan. Cleamons injured his wrist in E fall during the first half of Satur- day's game with Northwestern, which the Buckeyes won 84-72. "We might be able to fix his wrist so he could play," com- mented Ohio State coach Fred Tay- lor, "but that's not right. I'm more interested in Jim's future." Yesterday's Results Los Angeles 114, Baltimore 107 Milwaukee 118, San Francisco 107 San Diego 126, New York 109 Philadelphia 119, Portland 113 Today's Games Los Angeles at Boston New York at Cincinnati San Francisco at Detroit San Diego at Milwaukee Cleveland at Seattle Portland at Atlanta ABA East Division W L Pct. G Virginla 45 21 .683 - Kentucky 35 32 .522 V New York , 31 35 .470 1 Carolina 28 37 .431 1 Floridians 28 40 .412 1 oston~ok New York Montreal Toronto Detroit Buffalo Vancouver Chicago St. Louis Philadelphi Minnesota Pittsburgh Los Angele California 42 107 36 14 10 29 17 12 31 25 4 18 32 8 16 34 11 18 36 6 West Division 39 15 6 25 18 15 Ia 22 27 10 20 27 13 19°27 14 es 17 29 11 17 40 3 82 190 138 70 211 160 66 209 170 44 163 219 43 159 234 42 160 213 84 221 147 65 159 149 54 158 174 53 145 180 52 171 173 45 169 220 37 147 218 GB !0Y 14 161 18 Yesterday's Results Boston 6, Buffalo 3 Today's Games Montreal at California Philadelphia at New York St. Louis at Pittsburgh Los Angeles at Minnesota Only games scheduled. SURVIVAL OF FITTEST Kansas, Irish truck to wins s.......s a..u ....... .... ....... s... i .. .. From Wire Service Reports ference tilt last night, Drake wal- Kansas, leading the Big Eight loped Wichita State 83-76. The conference by a comfortable mar- Bulldogs ran their MVC mark tol gin, waltzed to a 61-48 slowdown 7-5 With the win. win over arch-rival Kansas State Star forward Jeff Halliburton last night at Manhattan. led Drake with 21 points. T h e eThe Jayhawks overcame the loss rest of the balanced attack was: of star Dave Robisch to fouls and Leon Huff with 14, Tom Bush and began pulling away early in the Bobby Jones, 13 each. second half. Kansas forward Bud Terry Benton had 23 points and 96-89. Eastern is priming for ano- ther appearance in the small col- lege division of the NCAA tour- nament come March. Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL East. Mich. 96, No. Michigan 89 Kans EU Kansas state 48 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for pub- lication. For more information, phone 764-9270. 7 91X x --n V + RtTAm 2or - Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer," 229 W. Engin., 4 p.m. Physics Lecture: L. Jones, "Cosmic Ray Experiments on the Nature of Strong Interactions above 100 GeV," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. Anthropology Lecture: T. Turner, U of Chicago, "The Fire of the Jaguar: The Covariation of Myth and Social Structure Among the Ge of Central Brazil," 1035 Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Speech Dept. Performance: OThetBird of Dawning Singeth All Night Long." and "In The Gloaming, Oh My Darl- ing," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 4:10 p.m. Public Debate: Topic, the SST; con- tenders, FASST and ENACT, Hutchings Hall, 7:30 p.m. Graduate Assembly Mtg.: W. Conf Rm., 4th floor Rackham. 7:30 p.m.