01 Page 14-Thursday, January 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily a 9rt n 1 r w~ Free Pregnancy Testing. Immediate Results Confidential Counseling .yComplete Birth Control Clinic Medicaid o Blue Cross (313) 941-1810 Ann Arbor and Downriver area, (313) 559-0590 Southfield area Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. vlu INDIANA, PURDUE NEXT ON AGENDA: Surprising cagers face roadblock By ALAN FANGER Johnny Orr's Christmas list was pret- ty straightforward: a few wins here, a few more there (New Orleans), con- tinued improvement from Ike Person, steady play from Marty Bodnar and Mike McGee, a healthier Paul Heuer- man. It was nothing Santa Claus couldn't handle. And in keeping with the spirit of the holiday season, most of Orr's wishes were answered. His Michigan cagers entered the new decade with a 7-2 non- conference record, a surprise to many who had downgraded the Wolverines from the very beginning. TO FURTHER enhance the cause for Help Develop Tomorrow's Energy Business Today! 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AN R Storage Company American Natural Service Company Great Lakes Gas Transmission Company Michigan Consolidated Gas Company Michigan Wisconsin Pipe Line Company ONE WOODWARD AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226 An Equal Opportunity Emplover M/F celebration, Orr's cagers slipped by Minnesota and Iowa in two conference games at Crisler Arena last week. The sweep placed the Wolverines atop the Big Ten along with Wisconsin and Ohio State. More importantly, it gave them added confidence going into a three- game road trip which begins tonight in Bloomington against the 19th-ranked Indiana Hoosiers (7-4). Although Michigan is fighting a 13- year losing jinx in Hoosierland, it may benefit from an unbelievable rash of in- juries which have befallen Bobby Knight's crew. Star forward Mike Woodson has already been lost for the season with a back injury, while guard Randy Wittman and forwards Steve Bouchie and Ted Kitchel are sitting out with various ailments. "This is a tough trip for any team," said assistant coach gill Frieder in reference to Michigan's trip to Indiana, followed by an invasion of ninth-ranked Purdue on Saturday. "We're playing extremely well. We're going in with a great mental attitude. We're just really ready to go. The fact that we're playing well gives us some hope," said Frieder. A GREAT DEAL of hope was provided by junior center Paul Heuer-, man, whose duplicate 12-point efforts against Minnesota and Iowa earned him the Big Ten player of the week citation. Both Orr and Frieder believe the Wolverines will have to be at nothing less than their best against the Hoosiers, despite their injuries. Indiana is 0-2 in the conference, having lost heartbreakers on the road to Ohio State, 59-58, and Wisconsin, 52-50. "The fact that they're 0-2 means nothing," said Frieder. "They'll have fire in their eyes. We'll have to have as good a shot selection as we did against Minnesota and Iowa." HERE, THEN, is a brief recap of basketball action which took place during the holiday break: Western Michigan, December 22 - By game's end, Orr concededthat the Broncos were a better team than anyone was willing to admit. Nonetheless, they couldn't run with the Wolverines, who fast-breaked Western almost back to Kalamazoo. McGee led all scorers with 29 points, as the Wolverines gradually expanded a 34-26 halftime lead and cruised to an 83-64 victory. The Broncos hit on 55 per cent of their shots,. but the Michigan zone held them to 55 attempts. Mississippi, December 28 - The Rebels,,who were 5-4 against mediocre opposition coming into the Sugar Bowl tournament, held off a late Michigan surge to hand the Wolverines their second defeat of the season, 71-66. The two-man team of Elston Turner and John Stroud combined for 51 points as the Rebels shot the lights out of the Louisiana Superdome, hitting nearly 68 per cent from the floor. Johnny Johnson led Michigan with 16 points, while Thad Garner chipped in 15. IN THE consolation game, Michigan nipped Tulane, 72-71. Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the tournament was the attendance, or lack thereof. A- two-night total of only 8,000 fans made the cavernous stadium seem like "a mausoleum," according to one Michigan spokesman. Minnesota, January 3 - The worry of the coaching staff prior to this Big Ten opener was the Gophers' substantial size advantage. Early in the game, coach Jim Dutcher played a front line of 6-10 Gary Holmes, 6-11 Kevin McHale, and 7-2 Randy Breuer. Despite what seemed to be a trees vs. bushes predicament, the Blue cagers hung onto a precariously small lead in the last five minutes to win, 71-67. The 3 OT LOSS TO TECH lcers 2nd in GLIT surprising Wolverine defense turner the trick again, as it held the shar, pshooting McHale to a meager 11shots. McGee paced all scorers with 23 points, while Breuer, a freshman center, had" 17 for the Gophers. Iowa, January 5 - The Hawkeyes in- vaded Crisler with an undefeated. record and a number nine ranking. Iowa's condition wasn't ideal, however, as guard Ronnie Lester sat the game- out with a knee injury. The Hawkeye* thus lost a good deal of quickness and mobility outside, and their attempt to compensate for Lester's absence resulted in a weaker rebounding team. After trailing 39-34 through one half, Michigan controlled the tempo and the boards in the final twenty minutes. The Wolverines were leading 66-65 when. guard Keith Smith hit both ends of a one-and-one situation with only three seconds showing on the clock, icing the victory. McGee once again toppe* Michigan, pouring 25 points through the nets. Forward Vince Brookins equalled. that total for the Hawkeyes. r OFF CAMPUS COLLEGE WORK STUDY POSITIONS NOW AVAILABLE " " " " " " S Receptionist Art Instructor Cross Country Ski Instructor Youth Supervisor Recreation Assistant Teacher Aide Youth Counselor Coder * Counselor Aide " Planning Intern " Kennel Worker " Research Ass't * Exercise Consultant * Health Care Researcher * Gymnastics Instructor * Recycling Station Ass't By MARK BOROWSKI The almost-finished Joe Louis Arena opened the doors to host the 15th annual Great Lakes Invitational Tournament (GLIT) over the holiday break, and the record setting crowds that turned out for the two day event were greeted by a mammoth stairway, upfinished refreshment stands with cold hot dogs, and a lot of dust. But all was not lost for the fans as ,Michigan, Michigan Tech, Wisconsin, and Michigan State provided some of -the most exciting hockey to be seen in years by Detroit spectators.. The largest crowd ever to watch a college hockey game witnessed Michigan Tech edge the Wolverines 5-4 in the third overtime period to claim its fourth consecutive GLIT champion- ship. It was the ninth straight time that Tech has beaten Michigan. Tech squeezed jby Wisconsin 1-0 and Michigan clobbered Michigan State 7-4 in the first round on Dec. 28 to gain en- try into the finals. With the Bulldogs leading 4-1 and only seven minutes to play, many of the 17,642 fans started to head for the exits. Thirty-two seconds later Blue defen- seman John Blum let a slapshot go that sailed past Tech goalie Frank Krieber to bring the Wolverines to within two goals. The never-say-die Michigan team scored again less than two minutes later when GLIT MVP Murray Eaves slapped in a rebound off the pads of Krieber, and suddenly, the Wolverines were back in the game. Krieber and his defensemen stymied several Michigan efforts to tie the game. Then, with six seconds left in regulation time, a Huskie was sent to the penalty box fok interference, and Tech was forced to play one man short. Michigan coach Dan Farrell pulled his goalie and lined up six attacker outside Tech's blue line. Senior Dan Lerg won the face-off for Michigan,'nand Bruno Baseotto hurried the puck into the Huskies' end. He then dumped off in the direction of Eaves, who dove and swung his stick at the puck, knocking it past a sprawled Krieber with only one second left to tie. the score. The Huskies finally broke the, deadlock at 2:28 of the third 10-minut. overtime period, as Mel Pearsor knocked in his own rebound. But the loss was not all that disap-K pointing to Farrell. "As long as you play good, that's what is important. I thought we played very well; not'many teams can come back when down by* three goals," he said. Wisconsin destroyed the Spartans 10- 4 in the consolation game. 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