THE MICHIGAN DAIUY Page Seven THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven PURDUE WINS, 85-84 Cagers dr By GEORGE HASTINGS game-tying bucket with less than Special To The Daily 10 .seconds left in regulation time. WEST LAFAYETTE-The Mich- Then the Boilers watched as Joe igan Wolverines' lack of depth, Johnson missed a last-second shot lack of height, and the nemesis of in the extra period that still would a Big Ten road contest finally have won it for Michigan. caught up with them last night as The roof had really fallen in for they dropped a heart-stopping, the Wolverines with three minutes heartbreaking 85-84 overtime game to go. Despite the loss of Grote on to Purdue before a bloodthirsty fouls after only five minutes of the horde of more than -13,000 at second half and with Russell on Mackey Arena. the bench for seven minutes of the Michigan led by as many as 14 second stanza with four personals, points, and still led by 12 with Michigan was still hanging on, and less than five mnutes to go in the led 74-65. contest, but when three Wolverine starters, Steve Grote, Campy Rus- But then everything really be- sell and Wayman Britt fouled out, gan to go wrong. Russell drew his the Boilermakers came on in the fifth personal foul and exited at final minutes to, overwhelm the 2:34, then Britt got the heave-ho at Michigan reserves and score the 2:00. Still, two clutch free throws &c/-oei /? Our iiiiime The agony of defeat.. . ..for Orr and the Blue by Jim Ecker - WEST LAFAYETTE HOPE JOHNNY ORR has a strong heart, for last night's ballgame was enough to break the strongest. The way this Big Ten season is going, Johnny Orr is going to need all the strength he can muster. The Wolverines did it to their coach again last night, in a nerve-gangling, heart-rendingtovertime defeat at the hands of Fred Schaus' never-say-die Purdue Boilermakers. Immediately following the game, not one stunned Wolverine could muster any comments for the press. In the long tunnel leading from the playing court to the Wolverines' dressing room, the stunned and dejected Michigan ballplayers trudged slowly to their dressing quarters. Campy Russell was the last Wolverine to make it into the refuge of the Maize and Blue's shelter. He wandered slowly down the hall, aimlessly looking at the ceiling, and tapping the concrete wall with his right index finger. He was speechless.* Assistant coach Jim Dutcher trudged by. A reporter offered his condolences with a "tough break, coach." Dutcher did not reply. After a short regrouping session with his shellshocked troops, Coach Orr emerged from the sullen Michigan locker room. The query "How's your heart, coach?" drew no response as the forlorn Wolverine mentor drifted away. After a brief respite with his own thoughts, Orr finally shared his innermost emotions. "We're very proud of them for hanging in there the way they did," praised Orr. "I'm sincerely sorry for them. They played their hearts out." It is difficult to analyze what exactly led to the Wolverines' bitterly disappointing overtime defeat. "We had all sorts of problems getting here," revealed Orr. "We rode the bus five hours to get here today." Michigan's original plans called for an early Sunday after- noon Detroit Metro departure for the game, but fog cancelled their projected time schedule and necessitated the lengthy bus ride this morning. Michigan's head man also pointed to the horrendous foul trouble which plagued his Wolverines last night. "But I thought we overcame those things well," complimented Orr. "I can't say enough about our kids. I thought they played admirably. I guarantee-that they (Purdue) never would have caught us if we'd had our players. Don't you think so?" Orr asked the ever-growing throng of curious reporters. ' "But our guys were also In trouble," retorted a local scribe. "If you don't feel that way, then get the hell out of here," blasted the normally sedate Michigan coach. "I don't have to talk to you."I Inside the Michigan locker room, some ten minutes after the final buzzer had sounded Michigan's death last night, the frustrated Wolverine ballplayers had regrouped enough to bare their anguish. "We played our hearts out. Everybody did," offered the fatigued C. J. Kupec. "We played well. Everybody did. It's a real shame."f' Kupec withstood all 45 minutes of the physically and emo- tionally draining ballgame. Overmatched in height against the Boilermakers towering center, John Garrett, Kupec more than held his own. An assortment of foul-line jumpers, drives to the hoop and layups following loose balls gave Kupec a season high total of 26 points. Freshman guard Steve Grote was not as fortunate as his junior co-captain. The "Cincinnati Kid" ran into foul trou- ble early, rode the pines for a while, and finally was elimi- ! nated early in the second half. "I got screwed, man. I only made two fouls," protested Grote. "I felt they were out to get me. "I had heard that on the road you get screwed. Now I be- lieve it." A few minutes later, after most of his teammates had dress- ed, Campy Russell was still fumbling at his locker. He didn't seem ready to leave the scene of this crime.t "I think we're the best," emphasized Campy. "We're not 4-0, but we didn't get the breaks." Asked for a prediction on the Michigan-Purdue rematch in Ann Arbor on February 23, Campy responded, "I don't know. We're just going to win, or at least try to. That's all I can say." And really, there isn't much more to add. The Wolverines lost a ballgame that was rightfully theirs. It's a real shame. op OT thriller at 1:38 by Johnson seemed to have iced the contest, as the Blue led 77-69. SECONDS later, Purdue's great forward Frank Kendrick tipped in an offensive rebound, and John- son lost a dribble. Hendrick hit a pair of foul shots, and the Boil- ers' Bruce Parkinson stole an in- bounds pass and his teammate, John Garrett, hit another bucket. Jake Whitten, Michigan's little- used eighth man, connected on a pressure pair of free throws and it was Michigan, 79-75, with 42 sec- onds left. Then Parkinson hit an- other layup and was fouled. His foul shot missed, theblessed Boil- ers snagged the rebound and Gar- rett tied it to send the game into overtime. In the extra period, the patch- work Michigan lineup played Pur- due evenly, and held the ball in the final minute before taking and missing the ill-fated last shot. In the last few seconds, Johnson tried desperately to get it to Kupec, the hero of Saturday's thrilling win over Michigan State, but the Boil- ermakers sagged all' over C. J., and Johnson's own 20-footer was just off the mark. THE FIRST half had started off the way most games have at Pur- Blue fouls out MICHIGAN i 1 ', E E; i dlaily sports NIGHT EDITOR: MARC FELDMAN, due this year, with the Boilers turning the ball over time and again. However, the Wolverines were cold at the outset. and after six minutes it was only 8-8. At that point, Michigan got the fast break going and went on a 10-2 streak to open an 18-10 bulge. But with 6-11 Garrett and Ken- drick going to the hoop, Purdue came back to tie the score at 26-26 as the Riveter pair combined for 21 straight Purdue points. From there, the Wolverines edged slight- ly ahead, and by halftime had opened a 40-35 advantage. Kupec, from the perimeter, and Russell from underneath did most of the first-half Michigan damage as each had 12 points, while Gar-f rett's 15 and Kendrick's 11 led Purdue. Grote, who had spent most of the first half on the pines with three personals, sparked a quick Michigan rally after the intermis- sion before his untimely exit. The Wolverines dashed out to a 57-43 margin, and then began to slow the game down. Playing without Russell, the Wol- verines held the margin stable for a period of ten minutes before the desperation Boilermaker press did them in. KUPEC, WHO played the whole game and made 11 of 19 shots, led the Wolverines with 26 points and 12 rebounds. Russell, although he spent much time on the bench, also canned 26." For the home team, the leaders were Garrett with 28 points and Kendrick with 20, before they also fouled out near the end of the overtime period. The key to the Wolverines' de- feat was the loss of their key per- formers on fouls. Michigan had only used seven players in its first three Big Ten games, and when ,SECOND IN CUP they had to go beyond those seven, it was curtains for the Maize and Blue. Michigan coach John Orr com- mented after the game -hat "no way would they have caught us if we'd had our first team in there." ADDING TO the Wolverines' woes was the fact that the Boiler- maker team simply had bigger players than theirs, with the refs + calling a tight game. The smaller Wolverines' attempt to guard Gar- rett, Kendrick and 6-10 Tom Shef- fler resulted in too many fouls and kept the remaining Michigan play- ers from playing much defense in the game's crucial closing minutes. Lionel Worrell, Chuck Rogers, Whitten, Bill Ayler and even Lloyd Schinnerer found their way into the Maize and Blue lineup late in the contest. Considering their lack of experience, they didn't do that poorly, but before the berserk Purdue crowd, the Michigan subs simply wilted under the pressure. The Wolverines had been forced to spend seven hours Sunday wait- ing at the airport, and then en- dured a five-hour bus ride to get to West Lafayette. After the fiasco of the final minutes at Mackey last night they wished they'd never MICHIGAN'S Joe Johnson a made it. control during last night's 85 Sp'-artans shoot u Hawuke yes, 95-86. AP Photo End Boilermaker John Garrett watch helplessly as another ball sails out of 5-84 overtime victory for Purdue. Russell Grote Kupec Johnson Britt Worrell Rogers Whitten Ayler Schinnerer TEAM Totals Nichols Kendrick Garrett Luke Parkinson Steele Rose Scheffler McCarter TEAM Totals MICHIGAN Purdue A--13,5$3 FG 9-16 2-2 11-19 .2-6 3-14 3-8 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 FT 8-9 2-2 4-5 4-4 1-2 0-0 0-0 2-2 1-2 4-0 R 6 1 12 6 1 3 0 1 0 7 41 1 F 5 S 4 5 5 2 1 2 2 31 31-68 22-26 TP 26 6 26 8 7 6 2 2 1 0 84 TP 2 20 28 3 13 2 12 S 0 PURDUE FG FT R 1-3 0-0 3 6-20 8-11 12 12-24 4-9 12 1-5 1-2 2 5-9 3-7 5 0-2 2-2 0 4-12 4-4 7 2-4 1-2 6 0-0 0-0 1 8 31-79 23-37 62 40 39 ~35 44 F 5 5 3 4 Q 5 2 24 85 5-84 6-85 By The Associated Press State ahead 82-79.' EAST LANSING - Senior guard LaPrince narrowed the gap to Mike Robinson and junior center 82-81 on a 18-foot jumper, but Lindsay H a i r s t o n made some Hairston made two more free clutch shots late in the game to throws to ignite a string of nine turn back an Iowa rally, as the straight points to give the Spar- Spartans took a 95-86 Big Ten tans a comfortable 89-82 lead. basketball victory last night. Robinson finished with 29 points, Iowa's Candy LaPrince, who had while Hairston had 19. 32 points for the night,' scored four The Spartans held a 12-point of Iowa's six straight points that lead, 50-38, in the first half, before put the Hawkeyes briefly into a taking a halftime margin of 52-42. 79-78 lead with 5:12 to play. Hairston then hit two free throws after Iowa's Jim Cowens fouled Wild out and Robinson hit a jumper TUSCALOOSA-Sophomore Leon from the foul line to put Michigan Douglas scored 24 points and grab- _ bed 11 rebounds to help Alabama remain in a tie for the Southeast- ern Conference lead with a 81-77: victory over Kentucky yesterday. The Wildcats jumped out to an early 5-0 leaddand led by as 'many Slo ps as 11 points during the first half. Al^abama trimmed the difference to 44-39 at the half, then took onlyI two minutes in the second half to two runs. The top nine women take the lead. earn team points, with nine ooints They were never seriously threat- for first, eight for second, and ened after that, leading by nine so on. The men earn points for points with two minutes left. the first 18 spots, with 18 for C h a r I e s Cleveland and Ray first, etc. There were about 30 Odums each had 16 points for Ala-; women skiers and twice as many bama and Charlees Russell hit1 I a i f I i f Women By DEBORAH J. LEWIS The Michigan w o m e n ' s ski team took second place in Satur- day's Governor's Cup slalom be- hind the strong third place fin- ish of Mary Czbulski. Winner Rondi Wuerfel of MSU crossed the line with a time of 88.57 sec- onds, followed by runner-up Pat Tunney of Northern Michigan in 88.73 a n d Czbulski in 89.53 seconds. Powerful NMU turned in a solid performance to pick up 17 points and first place. Mich- igan's 10 points enabled the wo- men to ski off with the runner- up trophy. In addition to Czbulski's third, the team scored with an eighth place finish by Deb J. Lewis and a ninth from Deb D. Lewis. MSU FINISHED third, with all of its nine points accounted for by Wuerfel. Lake Superior State COLLEGE BASKETBALL Vanderbilt 82, Tennessee 63 Marshall 66, Stetson 58 Gettysburg 86, Franklin & Marshall 71 Va. Commonwealth 82, Centenary 79 Mississippi 83, Florida 73 Oklahoma 71, Iowa St. 69 OT Alabama 81, Kentucky 77 LSU 90, Georgia 83 Austin Peay 80, E. Tenn 67 Cincinnati 109, N. E. Illinois 73 LIU 86, Bentley 74 Virginia St. 92, Morgan St. 79 Ithaca 71, Lock Haven 53 Rider 77, Dickinson 46 Auburn 87, Mississippi St. 81 Sam Houstonn 87, Howard Payne 71 Midwestern 74, Trinity 72 "This Week in Sports". Ann Arbor's only weekly call-in sports show Tuesdays, 7-8 p.m., on WCBN-FM 89.5 TONIGHT'S GUEST: JOHN MENGELT of the Detroit Pistons 761-3500 excel o: was fourth and Ferris State Col- lege fifth, followed by Central Michigan, Western Michigan, and Notre Dame. The Governor's Cup, run on Thunder Mountain's Whiteface, is the only meet of the season in which all of Michigan's skiing colleges participate. NMU and Michigan Tech race in the strong NCAA league, while the other teams p r e s e n t Saturday are members of the Midwest Col- legiate Ski Association. A SLALOM course consists of alternating pairs of red and blue poles, which form gates through which the racer must pass. Since there are a number of possible ways through a course, the racer must determine the fastest line of travel from start to finish. The course is reset after every skier has made one run, because ice and ruts quickly form in the turns. Individual finishes are ranked by fastest combined times for I men. Michigan's men had a raugh day and were only able to finish fifth o v e r a 11. Gary Edwards placed twelfth, with Rick Revn- olds thirteenth, to pick up the team's 17 points. Dave Perkins, Jim Sempere, and Pete Daukss were the other racers. FOUR MICHIGAN skiers raced as individuals, but were not eligible to be counted for team points. Among this contingent, Jim Elder took tenth place. NMU again won the team trophy, followed by Michigan Tech, MSU, CMU, Michigan, Grand Rapids Junior College, WMU, and Ferris, with Lake Su- perior State and Notre Dame tied for ninth. for 13. Big Ten Standing PHI SIGMA KAPPA National Fraternity is reestablishing its chapter on the University of Michigan campus. National Representatives will bein MICHIGAN UNION ROOM 4010 (F.C.C. Office) TUESDAY, JAN. 22 thru THURSDAY, JANE 24, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.. (or call 662-0385) Purdue MICHIGAN Indiapa Wisconsin Michigan State Ohio State Iowa Illinois Northwestern Minnesota W 5 3 3 2 3 1 1 1 1 0 L 0 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 3 Pct. 1.000 .750 .750 .667 .600 .333 .250 .250 .200 .000 Last night's results Purdue 85, MICHIGAN 84 (OT) Michigan State 95, Iowa 86 We Style Hair.; We Don't Just Cut It! appointments available Dascola Barbers Arborland--97 1-9975 Maple Vilage--761 -2733 East Liberty--668-9329 East University-662-0354 i GAGNON SHINES: M' tumblers impress Loken The Michigan MM A GRADUATE PROGRAM IN MANAGEMENT of the RACKHAM GRADUATE SCHOOL of THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN The MASTER OF MANAGEMENT Degree Program is offered during the evening hours by a resident faculty in Dearborn for those with degrees in areas other than business administration but having aspirations for pro- fessional careers in the management of business and other organizations. INTERVIEWING CANDIDATES CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT OFFICE By MICHAEL WILSON Michigan's gymnasts are improving. With their solid triumph over Southern Illinois last Saturday, the Maize and Blue tumblers have reinforced coach Newt Loken's characteristic optimism. "We've been getting good support from our all- around men,' Loken enthused yesterday, referring specifically to Joe Neuenswander and team cap- tain Monty Falb. "This team can qualify 27 or bet- ter, which will put us consistently in the 160-162 non was tremendous!" "We're taking one meet at a time," Loken em- phasized when asked to discuss his team's pros- pects. "I don't like to predict too far into the future." Nevertheless, Michigan's gymnastics genius fore- sees some difficult barriers in his team's path to a championship-especially Iowa. "They beat us in the Windy City tournament in December," Loken explained, noting that "while . IIII ..,. .r. a ice, .. III