Page Eight 4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 20, 19711 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 20, 1 97~'i fullcourt Kupec's basket Russell and Hairston trips (Continued from Page 1) for a hugging session. But on Spar- tan mentor Gus Ganakas, it pro- duced one of the longest faces seen recently in ICrisler. From Orr's point of view, it was "just one hell of a game." For Ganakas, it was "a real shame that a team that has worked as hard and come as far as we have has to lose like this." But for hero Kupec it was "a up . ..0 . recover from publicity By JIM ECKER YESTERDAY'S BALLGAME produced an instant hero in burly C.J. Kupec. The mobile 6-8 center's well-timed jumper capped an exhilarating afternoon during which 11,734 Crisler Arena patrons received abundant recompense for missing out on the televised Battle of South Bend. But this piece doesn't concern Kupec, his shot, or Notre Dame's stunning victory. The subject here is "Lindsay and Campy." Three years ago, a couple of guys named Hairston and Russell graduated from high school. Between them, they had amassed a plethora of All-Everything honors, raving press notices, an avalanche of college scholarship offers, and legions of admirers. There was some talk the two talented ballplayers might just skip college ball and take their prolific skills to the pros. But once all the brouhaha and hysterical speculation had ended, Hairston had enrolled at Michigan State and Russell at Michigan. Both waltzed through their rookie campaigns as freshmen stifled from a lack of varsity-level competition. In their initial collegiate showdown that year, Russell's crew outlasted Hairston's playmates in a wild shoot-out at Jennison Fieldhouse which left the state's basket- ball fans panting anxiously for the '72-73 season to begin. With Hairston and Russell playing varsity ball, Michigan State and Michigan both saw themselves blessed with magnetic drawing cards and solid hopes for winning ballclubs. But it wasn't to be. Russell anguished through an excru- ciating sophomore year during whichhedandHenry Wilmore never got it together as an effective working combination. The Wolverines started strong, but rapidly floundered, sput- tered and died, finishing a bitterly disappointing 6-8 in the Big Ten. Up in East Lansing, Hairston experienced trouble making a drastic overhaul in his game. He was suddenly no longer a cat-quick center dominating plodding high school pivotman. MSU Coach Gus Ganakas employed the towering Detroit -Ket- tering product at forward with Bill Kilgore in the middle. Hairston found the matchups tougher, his opponents faster, and the ball further from the hoop. Also, with in- cumbent conference scoring champion and prolific shooter Mike Robinson around, the old hardcourt dilemna of playing with, only one basketball took its toll on Hairston's output. By any standards, he did not shine. What a difference a year makes. Hairston currently leads the Big Ten in rebounding and averages a solid 15.5 points per game. Russell is the recognized leader of this Michigan team which has confounded the "experts" by capturing national recognition and seriously contending for the conference crown. Yesterday's ballgame wasn't one of Campy's best efforts, although it is a testimony to his individual brilliance that an "off" day can produce 27 points, 10 rebounds and 8 assists. "His timing wasn't good in the first half," pinpointed Mich- igan Coach John Orr. "He wasn't jumping well or getting good . arc on the ball. But he did some fantastic things in the second half, didn't he?" gushed Orr. That he did. The Wolverines looked for Russell in the second stanza, and Russell responded to the pressure and responsibility. Moving with more confidence and authority, the junior co-captain drilled in a series of lengthy jumpers, grabbed some big rebounds, and passed effectively. In one memorable combination, Russell skied high for a defensive carom, spied Wayman Britt dashing downcourt, and fired a three-quarter-court bullet to the streaking Britt for an un- molested lay-in. In all, Russell canned 22 of Michigan's 45 pressure-packed second half points before fouling out with 14 seconds remaining. Hairston played a more consistent game, both in scorig and in rebounding. Of the eight Spartans employed by Coach Ganakas' revolving substitution system, only Hairston never left the court. The 6-7, 186-pound thin man grabbed 15 of 'Michigan State's 38 rebounds yesterday, felled 9 of 13 floor shots, dropped - ,of 6 charity tosses, and proved the 'focal point of the Spartans' ballgame. According to Orr, "Lindsay Hairston is one of the finest post men a r o u n d, anywhere." C.J. Kupec, who battled UCLA's Bill Walton just three weeks ago, came out of the Michigan State affair impressed with the Spartan pivot- man's abilities. Ganakas attributes Hairston's improved play to maturity. "He's more confident this year," he noted. "Also, he's got a lot more experience this year. That's important." For, Hairston, it's confidence and experience. For Russell, it's a chrystalized team position combined with added respon- sibilities. For both, this basketball season has returned a daily sports NIGHT EDITORS: MARC FELDMAN CLARKE COGSDILL MS life. But the Spartans kept out- hustling Michigan and their fast breaks gradually produced an 11- point, 70-59 MSU lead with less than seven minutes left. At that point, though, the Mich- igan defense finally began to jell and halted the Spartan charge. Meanwhile, Campy really began to smoke and started drilling in jump- shot after 20-foot jumpshot. The Wolverines outscored the Spartans shot I'll remember as long as I standoff. The Spartans' team speed 12-2 in a two-minute stretch to live." and quickness along with their make the game close and set the . run-and-shoot style of play brought stage for the final three-minute DESPITE THE storybook finish, Michigan out of its normal game. scramble. the game was not one of the best Only Joe Johnson, who did a su- Russell was the game's leading Michigan has played this year. perb job on Mike Robinson, the scorer, hitting 27, 22 of them in "We weren't really ready," Orr Big Ten's leading scorer for the the second stanza, and added eight admitted. The contest see-sawed last two years, was playing strong assists. Kupec finished with 20, back and forth throughout and had defense. Russell looked completely shooting a phenomenal nine-for-12, the game been a few seconds uninspired. mostly from the outside. Steve longer or shorter the verdict might Only a Michigan zone press in Grote chipped in 14, and Britt, who have been different. the last five minutes of the half had a big role in the Michigan The first half was a virtual saved the Wolverines and turned comeback, added 13. k'or MS TT_-l - rst.n.score.7A, y Kupec Klincher MICHIGAN a 33-26 Spartan margin into a 39-371 Michigan halftime lead. THE BEGINNING of the second half saw a change in the game as both Russell and Robinson, the teams' big guns, finally came to For MSU, Hairston scored 23, grabbed 15 rebounds, blocked sev- eral shots, and generally made a strong showing. Robinson poured in 17 in the second half to finish with 21. Russell Britt Kupec Johnson Grote Worrell Rogers TEAM Totals Breslin Furlow Hairston Robinson Glover Davis McGill Wilson TEAM Totals FiG FT R F TP 9-21 9-12 10 5 27 6-11 1-2 8 3 13 9-12 2-2 9 3 20 3-12 0-0 3 5 6 6-15 2-4 3 1 14 1-3 0-0 0 0 2 1-3 0-1 1 1 2 10 35-79 14-21 44 18 84 i E a Mat machine' erupts; blanks Indiana, 39-0 MICHIGAN FG 1-4 4-10 9-13 9-14 6-10 3-5 2-3 2-2 STATE FT R 2-2 1 0-0 5 5-6 15 3-6 4 0-0 2 0-0 2 0-2 1 0-0 0 6- a F TP 5 4 2 8 3 23 2 21 3 12 1 6 S 4 1 4 21 82 45-84 45-82 36-61 10-16 38 Doily Photo by STUART HOLLANDER JUMPING SPARTAN Edgar Wilson (33) plays the tough defense against Wolverine Chuck Rogers (53) in the first half of yesterday's come-from-behind Michigan victory over the feisty farmers, 84-82. IHGSCORE BY PERIODS39 MICHIGAN 39 MSU 37 A-11,734 Icers By BRIAN-DEMINGi Special To The Daily MADISON-Two injuries in the opening period provided the im- petus to turn the scoring around and spell doom for the Michigan' hockey team as the Wisconsin Badgers came from a two-goal t deficit to beat the Wolverines 6-3 F here last night. i With the Maize and Blue up 3-1 t with 3:44 left in the opening per- g iod, goalieeRobbie Moore was car-V ried off the ice with a minor con- t cussion. Apparently Badger Don DePrez, after being shoved into l the crease, inadvertently knocked r N Tan11Ike i By BILL CRANE The Michigan swim team re- discovered "winning" yesterday afternoon, defeating Michigan State 66-57 in a Big Ten dual meet at Matt Mann Pool. Mich- igan State never really threaten- ed even though Michigan Coach Gus Stager juggled his swimmers in an attempt to look at some relatively inexperienced people. THE VICTORY came after a tough meet with Stanford Fri- day evening and now the tankers look forward to a long-awaited day off-their first since Christ- mas. bow to Ba dge rs By CARY FOTIASl The ,Michigan wrestling program' celebrated its 50th anniversary yes- terday as the Wolverine matmen blanked a young Indiana squad 39-0 at. Crisler Arena.' Dave Curby registered the only oin of the day, flattening Hoosier' Bob Pell with 35 seconds remaining in their meet-ending 190-pound con- test. Curby was leading Pell 16-0 when he finally put him away. Jim Brown got the Wolverines off on the right track at 118 pounds by gaining a superior decision over Indiana's John Hobbs. The Akron, Ohio junior led only 3-0 after thel first two periods, but turned it on in the final stanza to win 17-1. Rich Valley, who had missed Michigan's last two dual meets with an injury, made his return to the lineup at 126 a success by downing Craig Mann, 3-0. Bill Davids, 1973 Big Ten cham- pion at 126, bested Hoosier Marty Hutsell 6-1 in their 134-lb. match. Bill I hk f llowed with an 8-3 by reversing his Indiana opponent midway through the final period enroute to a 5-2 decision. Rob Huizenga accounted for Michigan's third superior decision of the afternoon, racking up a 10- 0 first period edge and generally doing what he wanted in an 18-2 triumph. Heavyweight Gary Ernst won by forfeit because Forrest Gray, his scheduled opponent, was sidelined by a shoulder separation suffered in the Hoosiers' 22-19 victory over Western Michigan Friday night. The shutout was the second of the year for Michigan and left the Wolverines with a 3-0 conference mark. Gymnasts beat SIU Moore in the head with a stick.. Starting goaltender Dick Perk- ins of Wisconsin left the game a few minutes before, reportedly with an ankle injury after giv- ing up three goals. These two injuries seemed to urn the game around as the, Badgers came back with four goals n the second period and one in the hird while replacement Badger' goalie Mike Dibble shut out the Wolverines for the remainder of the night. "It wasn't nearly the game of ast night," coach Dan Farrell re-1 marked, adding, however, that he EW FACES SHINE battei Individual standouts for Mich- igan yesterday included some new faces. Rob Bauman won the 200 yard individual medley and also placed second in the 200 yard butterfly. Brad Brockway placed second in the 200 yard breaststroke and Mark Anderson turned in a stellar victory in the 500 yard freestyle. Norm Semchyshen turned in a fine time in the 200 yard free- style. A tired Tom Szuba won the 200 yard backstroke, and was replaced by some of his team- mates in other events.' DICK QUINT turned in a clutch performance for coach ' was satisfied with the split. Michigan was first to get on the scoreboard as Gary Morrison spot- ted a rebound and slapped it past Perkins for the score at 4:45 in the initial period. Coach Bob Johnson's Badgers tied it up at 6:25 when Dean Tala- fous skated around and through the shorthanded Michigan defense and shoved the puck into the twines behind Moore.! The Maize and Blue respondedj at 9:50 on a power play. Pat, Hughes, the speedy freshman forward, put on a superb display of stickhandling, skated the puck Dick Kimball's diving team. Af- ter winning both diving events Friday 'night against Stanford with some superior dives, Quint won the three meter event yes- terday. He quipped that after "putting those dives together I got kind of excited." The team goes against Purdue next Friday evening at Matt ,Mann Pool. 400 YD MEDLEY - (M) Hansen, Bauer, Bauman, Stevens, 3:38.24. 1000 YD FREESTYLE - (M) Bauer, J., 10:07.68. 200 YD FREESTYLE - (M) Semehy- shen, 1:46.54. 50 YD FREESTYLE - (MSU) Hensen, :21.61. 200 YD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - (M) Bauman, 2:02.33. ONE METER DIVE - (MSU) Cook. 200 YD BUTTERFLY - (MSU) Brad- ford, 2:02.26. 100 YD FREESTYLE-(MSU) Wright, 47.72. 200 YD BACKSTROKE - (M) Szuba, s1:57.11. 500 YD FREESTYLE - (M) Anderson, 4:56.11. THREE METER DIVE - (M) Quint. 200 YD BACKSTROKE - (MSU) Holmes, 2:15.36. 400 YD FREESTYLE RELAY - (MSU) Hensen, Disoway, Hall, wright, 3:16.25. Reserves trip State By JOHN KAHLER around to the left of the goal,s and beat Perkins with his shot. Michigan repeated at 13:34 whenI Rob Palmer niade. a backhanded] pass to Don Dufek who pushed it home fromn five feet out. But that was the last time Mich-, igan lit the red light. Despite be- ing outshot 22-18 for the remain-] der of the game, Wisconsin took] over the scoring. Two goals by Dave Arundel andj a goal apiece by Dave Pay and Billie Reay (son of the coach of the Chicago Black Hawks) sent Wisconsin to the locker room after the end of the second period with a 5-3 lead. "Bowling Green doesn't shoot the puck the way these guys do," remarked Butch Wagner about his first experience against a WC{A' team. . Wagner, however, came back in the third period and held the' Badgers to a single goal in actiont that was marred by numerous roughing penalties. "They played our kind of game," commented defenseman Tom Lind- skog a f t e r the hard-checking Badgers beat the Blue dekers and sent the squad home with a split. I I i verd bcn ictn wBb uorILss, adld-special To The Daily verdict over Bob Morriss and de- CARBONDALE-Michigafn's gym- fending NCAA 150-yomnd champion, nasts enjoyed a fine afternoon Jerry Hubbard made the team yesterday- as t h e y outtumbled score 17-0 by drubbing Dan Wiley, Southern Illinois 160.1 to 156.45 in 13-2. a dual meet. The next two matches were the Jean Gagnon, who had a career day's closest. Dan Brink scored a high of 52.02 in the all-around, crucial takedown with 20 seconds starred for the Michigan team. to go in the second period and went Gagnon, along with teammate J.P. on to defeat Jerome Stewart, 4-2. Bouchard, captured first place in John Ryan, a graduate of Detroit the floor exercise with 9.05 points. Catholic Central, t h e n broke a The rings seem to have the out- 2-2 deadlock with Ken Kalcevich standing scorers this year as Mich- igan garnered 27.35 points. The Hoosiers goosed Salukis' Jack Laurie copped first place with a spectacular 9.4 while 118-Jim Brown (M) sup. dec.' John Michigan's J o e Neuenswander 1Hobbs (i), 17-1 (9.3) and captain Monty Falb (9.25) 126-Rich valley (M) dec. Craig pae eodadtid Mann (1), 3-0. placed second and third. 134-Bill Davids (M) dec. Marty Hut- As usual, Michigan dominated sell (I), 6-1. vaulting in finishing first, second, 142-Bill Schuck (M) dec. Bob Morris and third. Pierre LeClerc came in 150-Jerry Hubbard (M) sup. dec. Dan first (9.2) followed by Gagnon Wiley (1), 13-2. (9.05) and Rich Bigras (9.0). 158-Dan Brink (M) dee. Jerome In the high bars, Gagnon cap- Stewart (I), 4-2.tared first and teammates Bob 167-John Ryan (M) dec. Ken Kal-tue fisan tam tsBo cevich ( y), 5-2. Darden and Cary Culbertson tied 177-Rob Huizenga (M) sup. dec. for second. Mike Sheehan (1), 18-2. Jerry Poynton and LeClerc each 190-Dave Curby (M) pinned Bob Peil placed second in thepommel horse (1), 7:25.(yacdpseondis te pommely. Hwt,-Gary, Ernst (M) won by forfeit.° and parallel bars respectively. measure of the "old" Michigan basketball. days when Lindsay and Campy dominated SOUTH BEND 01) - G u a r d Dwight Clay hit from the right corner with 28 seconds remain- ing, capping a surge of 12 straight points and leading No. 2-ranked Notre Dame to a 71-70 victory over top-ranked UCLA yesterday in a college basketball showdown, ending the Bruins' record winning streak at 88 games. Notre Dame trailed 70-59 with' 3:30 remaining in the game, but began their string on two quick baskets by junior center John Shumate, the second coming af- ter he stole an in-bounds pass. Freshman Adrian Dantley then stole another UCLA pass and went half the length of the court for a layup. Gary Brokaw, who led Notre Dame with 25 points, then con- verted two straight short jump- ers around a pair of UCLA er- rors, making it 70-69 with 1:10 left. UCLA forward Keith Wilkes then dumped in a layup with 45 seconds remaining, but was call- ed for walking and the basket was disallowed. topples UCLA Dekers' disaster, FIRST PERIODI SCORING: 1. Michigan - Morrison (Fox Moretto) 4:45; 2. Wisconsin - Tal- afous (Arundel, Taft), ppg., 6:25; 3. Michigan - Hughes (T. Lindskog, Far-1 dig), ppg., 9:50; 4.. Michigan - Dufek (Palmer, Paris) 13:34. SECOND PERIOD 5. Wisconsin - Arundel (Olmstead) 2:41; 6. Wisconsin - Pay (Alley, Tala-l fous) 4:50; 7. Wisconsin - Reay (Olm- stead, Taft) 10:29; 8. Wisconsin - Arun- del (Talafous, Alley) ppg. 15:20. THIRD PERIOD 9. Wisconsin - Pay (Talafous, Eng- blom), ppg., 5:23. DAYDREAMS WANTED! U-M Prof wants detailed de- scriptions of daydreams of es- cape, revenge, love, success, or whatever you daydream. For use in professional papers and book. Anonymous submissions accept- ed. ~qI UCLA superstar Bill Walton then tried a short jumper from the side of the basket, missing for only the third time in 15 attempts during the game. Tips by UCLA forward Pete Trgovich and Dave Meyers failed and Shumate got the rebound as the clock ran out. Walton, whose playing status was in doubt until only moments before the game because of a back injury that had kept him out of three games, scored 12 points in each half, leading the Bruins with 24 points. Wilkes, struggling much of the game against the burly Notre Dame front. line, still managed 18 points. Shumate, held to eight points in the first half, finished with 24 for the Irish. Clay, the hero of the game, wound up with only sevenhpoints,hitting only two of five shots from the floor.' * * * Riveters romp WEST LAFAYETTE OP)-Pur- due's one-two punch of Frank Kendrick and John Garrett- .._ picked up 19 points, 10 coming in the first half. Garrett fouled out with 3:30 to play. The victory gives Purdue a 4-0 conference record and sets up Monday's showdown battle at West Lafayette with fellow un- beaten Michigan. * * * Gophers gouged COLUMBUS (1P) - Minnesota made 21 straight free throws yes- terday, but Bill Andreas' 24 points paced Ohio State to an 81-77 Big Ten basketball victory over the Gophers., Ohio State had six more field goals than Minnesota. However, the oGphers stayed in contention with their 21-for-21 at the charity line. * * * Badgers blast By BRIAN DEMING Special To The Daily MADISON-Before an excited crowd of 9,173, the Wisconsin Badgers smashed Illinois 101-75 under the antique rafters of the Tc'nnCin MPHH use here ve- Inept passing and the inability to dribble the ball through the press led to countless Illini turnovers, to the delight of the local par- tisans. * * * Iowa humbled IOWA CITY (P)-Indiana used an Iowa scoring drought and some late free throw shooting to edge the Hawkeyes. 55-51 in Big Ten basketball action last night. The Hoosiers rallied from a 48- 42 deficit by holding Iowa to three points during the final six minutes, 47 seconds of the con- test. ,. Big Ten Standings Park West Galleries ANNOUNCES AN artauction SUNDAY, JANUARY 20 AT 2 P.M. exhibit starting at 1 p.m. at HOLIDAY INN WEST 2900 Jackson Road-Ann Arbor, Michigan LITHOGRAPHS 0 ETCHINGS 0 SERIGRAPHS * DRAWINGS " PAINTINGS " WATERCOLORS " POSTERS, etc. Featuring hand signed graphics pulled from editions limited to from 10 to 300, ARTISTS REPRESENTED INCLUDE: Albers 4 Appel * Anuskiewicz 0 Braque 0 Boulanger * Buffet " Calder . Cezanne 0 Chagall40 Doli 0 Friedloender *Gat " Giacometti 0 Goya " Hwang 0 Jonsem @ Lautrec * Liberman " Lindner Nieman 0 Marini 0 Max 0 Matisse * Miro " Picasso " Reuben " Renoir " Silva 0 Vasarely " and many others. Catalogues available during preview. (All art absolutely guaran- teed to be genuine as described.) W L Pct. 4 0 1.000 The Michigan Varsity Reserve: basketball team stretched its rec- ord to 6 and 0 by defeating the Michigan State reserves 72-61 in ran encounter yesterday at Crisler L Arena. The win did not come eas- I- f ily-MSU gave the V.R.'s their toughest game of the year. . State roared out to an 11-4 lead ithe early going. The Baby Blue! rolled back, but it was obvious that the Wolverines were not mov- 1 ing the ball on offense as well as, they have in the past. They man-: aged to catch up, though, and led 28-27 at the half. Scott Mason and Kent Storey, Daydream questionnaire avail- able for those who wish full participation. WRITE TO- Dr. John Hartman C-7264 University Hospital. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Park West Galleries - --- -- ---- ____ __ _ r __. ._ . _..__ Purdue MICHIGAN Indiana Wisconsin Michigan State Iowa Ohio State Illinois 24151 Telegraph Road Between 9 10 Mile 'Rds. Southfield, Mich.(313) 354-2343 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC FACULTY CHAMBER CONCERTS 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 0 1 2 2 2 3 FOURTH PROGRAM EVA LIKOVA, soprano; ROSEMARY RUSSELL, mezzo-soprano; PERCY KALT, violin; RO- BERT COURTE, viola; JEROME JELINEX, cello; NELSON HAUENSTEIN, flute; JOHN MOH- LER, clarinet; ARNO MARIOTTI,coboe; MARILYN MASON, harpsichord; JOHN KOLLEN, piano; THOMAS HILBISH, conductor.