ledge right THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February .2$, 1973"< P d~''Ei ht H E M C H I A N AIL Y5un ay, Febr ary 25, 197 p 1 I A Late Hoosier rally edges Ba dgers r . TI S S E By The Associated Press six-point leads several times in the STEM ARTER BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Tough first half before taking a 33-27 defense in the closing minutes and lead at the intermission. two free throws by sophomore Indiana got into early foul trou- Steve Green propelled 10th-ranked ble as senior John Ritter, the Indiana, to a 57-55 Big Ten basket- team's No. 2 scorer, picked up ball victory over Wisconsin yester- four personals in the first six min- day. utes of the game and sat out the The Hoosiers led by nine mid- rest of the half. Downing also way through the final period be- picked up his fourth foul in the fore Wisconsin tied the game atG final period. 55-all onsa basket by Leon Howard Wisconsin closed the gap to three with 2:42 to go. Howard f o u 1 e d points early in the second half be- Green on the play and the 6-foot-7 fore the Hoosiers built the margin Indiana forward sank two f o u I back up to nine with about 11 min- shots for what proved to be the utes to go. winning points. Howard led the Badger come- After that, Indiana made three back that eventually tied the game straight steals without allowing and threatened to send the contest Wisconsin a shot. into an extra period. The Badgers had a chance to tie the game with 24 seconds re- Bucks skin 'Cats maining when Green fouled out, ;COLUMBUS - Ohio State, paced but Marcus McCoy missed t h e by Wardell Jackson and Allen foul shot and sophomore John Las- Hornyak, took a 90-81 Big Ten kowski stole a pass after Wiscon- basketball victory over last place from Greg Wells and Mark Sibley. yesterday. seven times before the Boilermak- ' The Wildcats took a 6-2 lead at the Kendrick scored 22 and Garrett, ers moved out to a 39-35 halftime start, but Jackson and Hornyak playing one of his finest varsity edge. The two teams combined for scored eight consecutive points and games, added 20 to pace the cold 29 turnovers in the half. Bit Garrett and Kendrick re-. sponded with back-to-back jump shots to put Purdue on top to stay. IJUo Stage was aheadf 45-32 by hnailstarting Boilermakers. time. * * * Neither team scored until two' minutes into the game when Iowa Hawks plucked took the first six points. Garrett WEST LAFAYETTE - John Gar- then hit a jumper and two free rett and Frank Kendrick hustled throws to get Purdue moving. for 42 points to lead Purdue to Most of the first half was close, a 74-66 victory over Iowa in a ragged play. The lead changed Big Ten college basketball game l hands five times and it was tied . ejI The only bright spot for Iowa Ill'ni powers in the first half was the play of CH IG -Nk.rs guard Rick Williams who scored 20 CHAMPAIGN - Nick Weather- of his game-high 24 points. spoon banged in 32 points yester-' day to lead Illinois to an 81-71 The Hawkeyes came back in the Big Ten basketball victory over early stages of the second half Michigan State. and tied the score at 43-all. Wil- "The Spoon" outdid State's Mike liams added two free throws to Robinson in a heralded scoring 4 give Iowa its last lead at 45-43. duel. Robinson came into the game leading the conference with a 26.4, average and Weatherspoon was se- - cond with 25.6. Robinson, who hit for 12 points in the first half, finished with 19 while Bill Kilgore took scoring hon- ors for Michigan State with 22 points. Kilgore scored 16 of nis points in the second half to keep Illinois from making the game a oumplete runaway. State held a 6-2 lead in the early. going but Illinois went ahead 12-6. and never trailed. The Illini held a 35-30 halftime edge. Early in the second half, Michigan State came within one point at 43-42 on a basket by Lindsay Hariston but Weatherspoon hit two quick bas- kets .and Nick Conner added ano- ther as Illinois led by seven points most of the game. si rebounued the shot. Wisconsin had one last chance to tie the score after Indiana's Quinn Buckner missed a free throw with 13 seconds left, but a shot ahead of the bozzer was off the mark and Hoosier center Steve Down- ing snared the rebound. Three of the four previous meet- ings between the two teams went into overtime, and this contest was close throughout. Indiana never trailed, building Northwestern here last night. Jackson, a 6-foot-7 junior for- ward, scored 16 points in each half far his best effort of the season. Northwestern scored the final 15 points of the game after the Buck- eye lineup was filled with sub- stitutes. The score was at 88-66 when Ohio State removed its last regular. The Buckeyes led by as much as 28 points in the second half. Nortthwestern had 17 points each Canon TLb 50mm with 1.8 lens and case START YOUR OWN SYSTEM OW Quarry's reg. price $99 50 Save $20.00 off Quarry's reg. low price. SALE PRICE The Canon TLb camera makes it possible to use the same compete complement of 40 interchange- able lenses used with the Canon F-1 and FTb cameras - and obtain the same photographic sharpness, contrast and accuracy. 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The Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literatures The Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies and The Department of History of Art ANNOUNCE A SERIES OF LECTURES ON IRAN and NON-IRAN: the Plateau and Its Borders -an Examination of Relationship in the Past (Mini-Course 413: Iranian Art and Archaeology)* LECTURERS: T. CUYLER YOUNG, JR., Curator, West Asian Department, Royal Ontario Museum. LOUIS D. LEVINE, Assistant Curator, West Asian Department, Royal Ontario Museum. EDWARD KEALL, Assistant Curator, West Asian Department, Royal Ontario Museum. LISA GOLOMBEK,rAssistant Curator, West Asian Department, Royal Ontario Museum. SCHEDULE: Feb. 26 INTRODUCTION 3:00 1528 CCL (Priscilla Soucek, Asst. Prof. of History of Art, U of Mich. Prehistoric Greater Mesopotamic 4:00 1528 CCL Patterns of Interaction between Mountains and Lowlands. IT" Cuyler Young, Jr.) Feb. 27 Assyria and Urartu: 3:00 1528 CCL The Iranian Factor (Louis D. Levine) Mesopotamia and the Rise of a 4:00 1528 CCL Middle Iranian Culture (Edward Keall) Feb. 28 Iran and Turan in the 15th 3:00 1528 CCL Century A.D. (Lisa Golombek) SEMINAR 4:00 1528 CCL *For those wishing to get credit for the mini-course., registra- tion, information and materials available in 3074 Freze Bldg. Big Ten 'Standings Minnesota Indiana Purdue Illinois MICHIGAN Ohio State Iowa Michigan State Wisconsin Northwestern W L Pct. 8 2 .800 9 3 .750 8 3 .727 6 4 .600 6 S .545 6 5 .545 4 7 .363 3 8 .272 3 8 .272 1 9 .100 MATINEE TODAY! 2:30 at POWER CENTER A Delightfcl Dance Concert Presented by U of' M Dancers FEATURING: AFRICAN BALLET JAZZ MODERN Tickets on sale 1 :30 at Power Adults: $2; Children: $1 sponsored by U of M Dept. of Phys. Ed. i AP Photo BILL SCHAEFFER of St. John's (in white) finds Peter Crotty's body in the way of a potential rebound during yesterday's contest with Notre Dame. So he decided to surmount the obstacle by going over it. All in vain, as the Fighting Irish upset St. John's 75-71. Crotty had no comment after the game, but sources close to the team said that he preferred the positions reversed. Yesterday's results Minnesota 98, MICHIGAN 80 Indiana 57, Wisconsin 55 Illinois 81, Michigan State 71 Purdue 74, Iowa 66 Ohio State 90, Northwestern 81 IRISH UPSET ST. JOHN'S SYLVIA WYNTER Prof. of Literature, University of the West Indies, Jamaica In RESIDENCE at the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MARCH 12-APRIL 5 Public Events-Lectures and Discussions March 14, 3 p.m. Modern Language Bldg. Auditorium 3 "Rastafarians in Jamaica: Religious Community and Political Action" March 14, 8 p.m. Angell Hall Room 2235 (first mini-course lecture) "Cultural 'Dualism': Theory as Ideology or Critical Consciousness in the Commodity Form Society" March 16, noon Luncheon and Discussion at the International Center March 21, 12:30 noon Luncheon and Discussion at Trotter House "The Utilization of Black Cultural Resources in the Struggle for Liberation" March 21, 8 p.m. Angell Hall Room 2235 (second mini-course lecture) "Nigger Minstrel/Nigger Monster, Noble Savage/Indio Bruto: Western Humanism, Plantation America, and the Role of the Stereotype" March 27, 7 p.m. South Quad Lounge Informal evening discussion March 28, 3 p.m. 4001 C.C. Little Bldg. Lecture "Black and Brown Women" for the course "Introduction to Women's Studies" March 28, 8 p.m. Angell Hall Room 2235 (third mini-course lecture) "Elite 'Mass, Settler Native: The Colonization of Consciousness in Commodity Form Society" March 30, noon Luncheon and Discussion at the International Center April 4, 8 p.m. Angell Hall Room 2235 (fourth mini-course lecture) "Babylon Zion: Culture and Counter-culture in the Catacombs of Marginality" SYLVIA WYNTER: Born in Holguin, Oriente, Cuba of Jamaican parents. Attended elementary and sec- ondary schools in Jamaica, West Indies. Studied at London University and University of Madrid, Pre- sented papers "C.L.R. James and the Castaway Culture of the Caribbean" and "C.L.R. James and the Cultural Revolution" (the latter at the University of Michigan.) Has written a novel The Hills of Heb- ron. Currently working on a critical study of fiction The Novel in the Third World and a biography of Bustamante, a populist leader and National Hero of Jamaica. Marylarn By The Associated Press COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Mary- land's Tom McMillen and John Lucas combined for 43 points to Mace the Terrapins to a 96-68 col- lege basketball victory over Duke yesterday. The victory assured the Terps of third-pace in the Atlantic Coast Conference. McMillen sank 14 of his 22 points in the first 20 minutes of play. Bob Fleischer kept Duke c 1 o s e, hiting on all six of his shots in the first 10 minutes. With 11:24 to go in the first half, Maryland trailed 21-20, but by the time Fleischer left the game a minute later, Maryland shot ahead to a 24-21 edge and kept the lead for the rest of the game. Irish smiling UNIONDALE, N.Y. - Notre Dame, led by John Shumate's 31 "points, handed St. John's of New York its third loss in four games yesterday, 76-71, taking advantage of key Redmen turnovers. 1I Idecks Duke,9 Notre Dame's Dwight Clay broke New Mexico State University. a 69-all tie with 3:06 remaining Center Ronnie Robinson led on a driving layup and then with Memphis with 16 points and collect- 1:34 to go he made it 73-69 when ed his 1,000th career rebound as, Ed Searcy of St. John's was cal- the Tigers pushed to a 12-1 MVC led for goaltending. record and earned a bid to the Bill Schaeffer hit a jumper to regional playoffs of the NCAA. pull the Redmen within two, but NSU cut a 10-point deficit to two Shumate made two free throws points at the intermission by fast- with 14 seconds remaining after he breaking for four straight layups, was deliberately fouled after a then built a three-point lead with floor-length pass by St. John's was five minutes to go in the final intercepted by the Irish's G a r y period. Novak. But the Tigers clawed back when * * * State hit a cold shooting spell. IWest Westfall and guard Larry Warriors edge Finch convertedone-and-onefree NEW YORK - Larry McNeill throw situations in the last minute hit six points in the final 47 se- to give Memphis State the game. conds as fifth-ranked Marquette * * * outlasted Fordham 63-57 to win its Kermit: 20-20 11th straight game yesterday in Madison Square Garden. FT. MYER, Va.-American Uni- Fordham gave the Warriors a vised hs colegeitbasetollfaree scaredas Walt Douglas' basketscut yesteday by bco ming te scaree the Marquette lead to 56-5 w yesterday by becoming the sevnth w47 seconds remaining. But c- player in major collegiate basket-' Neill, high man in the game wih ball history to average 20 points 17 points, hit four straight f r e e and 20 rebounds a game. throws to fatten Marquette's ad- Washington needed 39 points go- vantage to 60-55 with 25 seconds to'ing into the game with Georgetown, play. D.C.,to join the 20-20 group, but Ken Moriarity hit a two-pointer he tallied 40 in leading American for Fordham to make it 60-57 with t a 90-68 victory. 10 seconds left on the clock, but In the game, Georgetown got Mik sMills hit on a three-point the first score, but American ral- Mike Mills hit lnatrep iedwnt0pitsadwn no play with three seconds left to put the halfwith 0 poi2tspntwenant i o46-26. American never let George- town get closer than 17 points Tigers growl throughout the second half. LAS CRUCES, N.M.-Fourteenth- Other players who have earned a ranked Memphis State captured 20-20 college basketball career the MissouriwValleyConference I average are Bill Russell, Elgin basketball crown yesterday with aBaylor, Julius Erving, Artis Gil- come-from-behind 54-53 victory over more, Paul Silas and Walter Duke.,. ii SGC ELECTIO WHO MAY VOTE? All students (graduate students and undergraduates) may vote. WHO MAY RUN? Any regularly enrolled student on the Ann Arbor cam- pus of the U. of M. This includes graduate and undergraduate stu- dents from all schools and colleges. HOW DOES ONE BECOME A CANDIDATE? Candidates must file a state- ment of candidacy and a $5.00 returnable filing fee by March 1, (Thursday). Candidates must also submit a platform and 2 wallet- size photographs by March 2 at 3:00. CAMPAIGNING is governed by the Election Code. PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATES can obtain further information and copies of the Statement of Candidacy, Election Code, and the SGC Constitution at the SGC Offices, 3X Michigan Union, or call 763-3241. ELECTION SCHEDULE: