I The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 11, 1978-Page 9- CONLIN, OTTO PA CE VICTOR Y omen By ELISA FRYE The women's basketball team broke a six-game losing streak here last night as they roared past visiting Wayne State, 66-45. Michigan was boosted by a 25-8 scoring spurt at the end of the first half, and it never lost the momentum. Jean- ne Otto and co-captain Terri Conlin paced the Wolverines. Otto had four steals, which she converted into lay- ups, during that time. The Wolverines faced Wayne State, and lost to them, 69-65, during the Motor City Tournament over the winter break. Coach Gloria Soluk, who formerly coached at Wayne State, felt the win was particularly important. "We felt we should have won the last game," she comfmented. "I'm proud we could come back after the loss." SCORES cagers t Soluk employed a full court zone press for the first half and concentrated on a man-to-man press in the second stanza. "We didn't press last time (in the Motor City Tournament) and the full court press made a difference." The play in the. second half was con- siderably slower as both coaches went to their benches more often. Michigan shot a weak 26.8% from the field while Wayne State trailed with 17%. Conlin led the pack with 17 points on an 8-14 shooting performance from the )p Tartai field. The outstanding senior also led both teams in rebounds with 11. Freshwoman center Abby Currier and guard Denise Cameron backed up Conlin with 12 points apiece. Karen Gilhooley and sophomore guard Otto both tallied eight points. The bench made their contributions also, since Otto, Mary Donovan and Deb Allor forced numerous turnovers on the press. Coach Soluk was impressed by the play of Abby Currier, Conlin and Otto. "Otto was remarkable," she said and went on to praise Conlin. "She plays rC hhmd r!%o L basketball the way I like it. You have to give yourself up to play zone, give it all you've got." Opposing coach Linda Maskowski also attributed Michigan's upset to the use of the zone press. "They pressed today and they didn't press before. We were playing man to man and (after halftime) we worked on a different press-breaker, but by then they were already pulling it off. "We had our opportunities, but we didn't take advantage." The women travel to Purdue on Friday and Indiana on Saturday. r' Borderline schools' officials protest NCAA restructuring College Basketball Cincinnati 66, St. Louis 55 Princeton 70, Seton Hall 58 Rutgers 79,William and Mary 71 NBA Philadelphia 95, Houston 80 Washington 123,Kansas City 115 NHL New York Islanders 7s Colorado 4 New York Rangers 3, Boston 2 By The Associated Press ATLANTA - Fred Jacoby, commis- sioner of the Mid-American Confer- ence, yesterday labeled as "a pure lockout" a proposal before the National Collegiate Athletic Association Conven- tion to restructure its top division in football. "All logic points to maintaining what we have now," he said, "and remove ourselves from becoming a junior NFL. Puck/n9 out of my mind .. . about the icers By BOB MILLER TEM: Icers mired in costly losing streak. T The figure has reached four games if you want to count the "non- game" with the Moscow bnyamo. More importantly, the Wolverines have dropped four straight league games which has enabled three other WCHA teams to pass them in the standings. The losses aren't disastrous-at least not at this point. If you recall, the icers were involved in a seven game drought last year causing them to plummet from third to sixth place. To make matters worse, Wisconsin's top ranked team was the Wol- verines next opponent. The Badgers swept the series although Michigan shook off its slump and proceeded to win a school record-tying 12 straight games. The important factor is that last year's squad did rebound. If the current team has any designs on making a return trip to the NCAA's, they will have to do something about their recent poor play beginning this weekend at Minnesota. The Gophers are one of the teams that moved ahead of Michigan (Wisconsin and Michigan Tech are the others). But Minnesota is only one point in front of the Wolverines and the Huskies are two. It is imperative for the Maize and Blue to have a successful weekend in Minneapolis or else their season for all practical reasons will be over. It would be pure optimism to use last season's precedent as a spring-, board of hope for a victory binge this year. However, it is interesting that the parallels between the past two years are so sharp, they look like they were drawn with a razor blade; Last year though, the Wolverines needed outside help to get as far in the league playoffs as they did. This time around however, the icers will ned more than outside help to straighten out their season.' ITEM: Those HUGE basketball banners at Crisler. If you saw the halftime festivities at the Michigan-Minnesota basketball game, either in person or on television, then you probably saw the presenta- tion of the banners commemorating the Wolverines' cage championship seasons. Weren't they nice? There were supposed to be similar banners hanging from the rafters at Yost for the hockey team. In fact, they were supposed to be ready in time to welcome back all the fans at the first game of the season. That was almost three months ago. Since they haven't materialized as of yet, perhaps it could be arranged to fly the basketball banners at Yost until the hockey pennants are ready ... anything to cover the dingy end walls at the ice arena. ITEM: Rudy Varvari's debut in goal. As the heir apparent to Michigan's netminding chores, hockey fans will like what they see. Coach Dan Farrell was smart to give the freshman goalie his first start against Wisconsin at Madison. Knowing full well the pressure Wisconsin's fans could put on Varvari (not to mention the Badgers' themselves) it almost seemed a heartless things to do. But now Varvari has been exposed to it-a starting assignment, a road game, an important league game-and he can only benefit from it. Besides, Varvari played extremely well in the first half of the game, then succumbed to inexperience and a pourous defense before losing 8-2. Keep in mind that the score was only 4-1 with only 12 minutes left to go in the game. ITEM: Blue Line Luncheons. Whenever a sporting event takes place, it goes without saying that there will be some kind of media function beforehand. Translated, that means food, and wherever there is (free) food, sportwriters can't be far behind. Seriously, the Blue Line Luncheons are an opportunity to see what goes on before a hockey series hits the ice. Although the one in Wisconsin drew 350 people, the Michigan version features better food. "IF WE WERE in a business, we would call it antitrust," Jacoby said at a news conference on the eve of the 72nd NCAA Convention. R "Are we headed toward a monopo- ly?" he asked. "Are we headed toward an airplane conference?" Jacoby and Bob Murphy, athletic di- rector at San Jose State University, said the proposal before the convention would virtually kill several conferences currently ranked Division I - the Mid- American, Missouri Valley, Southland, Pacific Coast Athletic Association and another league which competes in Divi- sion I only in basketball, the Sun Belt. MURPHY POINTED OUT that San Jose could meet the criteria to remain in Division I, but it would be difficult. "I represent a conference (PCAA) that will be decimated if it passes." The proposal, sponsored by the powerful NCAA Council, could reduce the number of Division I schools in football to 79. Currently the list includes AP Top Tweny 145 schools. AMONG OTHER requirements, each school would have to sponsor at least eight sports on the Division I level, would have to have averaged more than 17,000 paid home attendance in at least one of the last four years and would have to have a stadium with a mini- mum seating capacity of 30,000. If it passes, Murphy said, "We will find ourselves locked into second-class citizenship." "Call it intimidation or a hammer over our head," Jacoby said. "Sometimes you have to stand up and fight." Both cited revenue, the bowls and limitations on coaching staffs and gran- ts-in-aid as triggering the move by most larger powers to restructure the divi- sion. "If you subdivide in football now, who's to say basketball might not be next," Jacoby said. "It's making a lot of money now." UP Top Twenty Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Michigan center Joel Thompson leaps high for one of his patented slam dunks as Minnesota forward Dave Winey and center Mychal Thompson look on helplessly. Michigan handed Minnesota its second Big Ten loss in as many games, last Sunday. LIGHT L 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Kentucky (46) North Carolina Arkansas Marquette Notre Dame Indiana State UCLA Syracuse Louisville Kansas Nevada-Las Vegas (tie) DAILY LIBELS Michigan State Holy Cross Providence Virginia North Carolina State Georgetown, D.C. Indiana Cincinnati DePaul 11-0 12-1 13-0 10-1 7-2 10-0 11-1 11-1 11-2 11-2 14-1 12-0 10-1 9-1 11-1 8-1 10-1 10-2 8-2 8-3 11-1 920 737 693 594 522 480 465 342 325 167 156 156 145 131 116 64 60. 56 55 39 20 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 15. 15. 18. 19. 20. Kentucky (39) North Carolina Arkansas (2) Marquette UCLA Notre Dame Indiana St. (1) Louisville Syracuse Kansas (tie) DAILY LIBELS Michigan St. Georgetown Indiana Holy Cross (tie) Providence (tie) New Mexico (tie) Nebraska North Carolina St. Cincinnati Texas 10-0 12-1 12-0 9-1 11-1 7-2 10-0 9-2 11-1 11-2 12-0 10-1 10-2 8-2 9-1 10-1 9-2 12-1 10-1 8-3 10-2 417 336 279 273 211 187 154 139 107 48 48 25 10 14 13 10 f10 10 9 8 6 Our 8th Year e Now at 2 Locations Beaver College and Cornell University MONTESSOR Teacher Training L UI Prog ram APPROVED BY THE AMERICAN MONTESSORI SOCIETY Summer Academic Program from June 28 to August 16, 1978, to be followed by a nine month internship. AERCO/thaca Program conducted on the campus of Cornell University and AERCO/Phila. Program conducted on the campus of Beaver College. For information and brochure, call or write registrar. AERCO Montessori Teacher Training Program 1400 E. Willow Grove Ave., Phila., PA 19118 Phone: (215)AD3-0141-42 or (914)472-0038 C C C C C C a 0 C C C C C C C a a a Q C! Announcing Winter Series a Mass Commuiation srown Gag eries The Howard R. Marsh Center for the Study of Journalistic Performance will again sponsor a series of Wednesday brown bag sessions to explore aspects of mass communication. All are open to the public. Each will be 12:10 to 1:10 p.m. in 2040 F, LSA Building. BALKAN FOLKDANCE WORKSHOP led by MARTIN KOENIG Jan. 13, 14, 15, 1978 Sponsored by the University of Michigan Folk Dance Club, Ann Arbor, Mich. FRIDAY: Film/Culture Session .. .. .................. 4 14 Jan. 11 Jan. 25 Feb. 8 Feb. 22 "The Italian Newsman and His Values," Pro- fessor William E. Porter, Department of Journalism "A Year Lateand a Million Short: Case Study in Educational Television," James Ettema, doctoral student in mass communication program "The Newspaper Ombudsman," Robert May- nard, former Washington Post ombudsman and visiting Marsh professor "Problems of the Woman Journalist," Nancy Hicks, former Washington correspondent for the Neaw Vries T andnv i si tinn AAnrskinrofacnr - m.I-. . °x Friday Night Dance Party & Workshop .. 8 p.m.-midnight . & am-------tA . . ...L. 1 A Itn .m-19 OAI 1 '1 F I "%rg"v% IL V WAMAW wm