Page 10-Sunday, February 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily UNISEX Long and Short Haircuts by Professionals at Dascola Stylists Liberty off State-661-9329 East U. at South U.-662-0354 Arboriand-971-9975 Maple VIIJage-761-2733 BIG TEN ROUNDUP Hawkeyes upset Boilermakers Jequline 's Electrolysis The only medically approved PERMANENT hair removal process. By appointment only 668-7392 Free consultation By The Associated Press IOWA CITY - Kenny Arnold scored 20 points and Steve Krafcisin added 18 to propel Iowa to a 74-39 upset of 12th- rated Purdue yesterday in a Big Ten Conference college basketball game. Iowa put the clamps on Joe Barry Carroll, Purdue's 7-foot-1 center and pulled to within one game of the league- leading Boilermakers. Carroll was limited to seven points - 15 below his average - and did not score in the t second half. Iowa, still playing without All- American guard Ronnie Lester, sent its record to 7-5 in the Big Ten and 16-5 overall. Purdue, which shot only 37.5 per cent from the field, fell to 8-4 and 15- 6. Arnold, who handed out six assists, scored 14 points in the second half and helped Iowa break the game open after the Hawkeyes led 32-27 at halftime. Two straight baskets by Krafcisin and a layup by Steve Waite put the Hawkeyes ahead 50-39 with 11:33 left in the game and freshman Bob Hansen's three-point play after a pass from Ar- nold gave Iowa a 57-43 margin with 9:28 to go. Kevin Boyle's layup gave Iowa its biggest lead - 69-51 - with 3:52 to go. Boyle finished with 12 points and Han- sen had 14. Iinrtois 89, Indiana 68 CHAMPAIGN - Reno Gray poured in 25 points including eight straight in one stretch early in the first half yesterday to lead Illinois to an 89-68 rout of Indiana in a Big Ten basketball' game. Landon Turner, who topped Indiana with 24 points, scored two baskets at the start of the game to give Indiana a 4-2 lead but Gray then scored eight straight to give the Illini a 10-4 lead which they never relinquished. The loss jolted 20th-ranked Indiana's title hopes and left the Hoosiers with a 7-5 record in the Big Ten and 14-7 overall while Illinois climbed to 6-6 in the conference and 16-8 for the season. Illinois, getting excellent scoring from Gray, Mark Smith and Perry Range in the first half, was ahead 41-30. at intermission and then opened a 51-36 lead early in the second half. The Hoosiers came back to cut it to 51-44 on a basket by Turner and two by Ted Kitchel, but the Illini put on another scoring surge and went ahead 68-52 and were never again threatened. During this spurt, Indiana Coach Bobby Knight drew a technical foul and Rob Judson converted both free throws as the Illini went from 61-52 to a 16-point advantage. * Ohio State 71, Michigan State 59 COLUMBUS-Herb Williams' 26 points ignited 13th-ranked Ohio State to a 71-59 college basketball victory over Michigan State last night that gave the Buckeyes a share of the Big Ten Conference lead and their first triumph over the Spartans in eight seasons. The Buckeyes, 16-5 overall, are now 8- 4 in the conference, the same as Purdue, beaten 74-59 at Iowa yesterday. Michigan State, the defending national champion, fell to 11-10 for all games and 5-7 in the Big Ten. JAY VINCENT, despite foul problems, led the Spartans with 27 points. Their defeat marked the first time they had lost to Ohio State since 1972 when they were beaten in Columbus. Minnesota 72,, Northwestern 55 MINNEAPOLIS - Kevin McHale scored 16 points and Darryl Mitchell 75-5 9 added 13 as Minnesota defeated North- western 72-55 in a Big Ten basketball game last night. THE VICTORY raised Minnesota, record to 7-5 and kept the Gophers in a three-way tie for second place with In- diana and Iowa. Purdue and Ohio State are tied for the lead at 8-4. The Gophers, 14-7 overall, scored 12 of the last 16 points in the first half and eight of the first ten in the second half to break open a, low-scoring, poorly- played game. Big Ten.Standings Confernce POSITON OPENING0 FOR 1980481 RESIDENT DIRECTOR FOR ACADEMICS IN THE PILOT PROGRAM/ALICELLOYD HALL DUTIES INCLUDE: -Coordinate administration of Pilot Academic Program --Teach undergraduate course -Coordinate teacher training COMPENSATION: -Apartment and board -$1749 per yearbfor administrative duties (at current rates; subject to revision) -.25 GSTA appointment per term ($1284 al current rates) For more information call David Schoem, Pilot Program Director (764-7521) APPLICATION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 22 Purdue ... .. Ohio State .... Indiana ..... Iowa ....... Minnesota .... MICHIGAN. Illinois..... Michigan State Wisconsin .... Northwestern W 8 8 7 7 7 s 5 4 2 L 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 7 8 10' All W 15 15 14 16 14 13 16 10 12 7 L 4 5 7 5 7 8 1o 11 15 SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y: Wolverine netters catch -1 THIANO'S CO. 514 E Washington : welcomes you t6 SUNDAY BRUNCHES with complimentary champagne from 11:30 to 4:00 v The Michian tennis team, in what coach Brian Eisner called "a tremendous win," upset the University of Georgia Bulldogs 5-4 in the National Indoor Keane Championship in Princeton, New Jersey yesterday. Georgia is the defending Southeastern Conference champions and ranked eleventh nationally. The Wolverines won four of the top five singles matches as Matt Horwitch (6-2, 6-3, 7-6), Michael Leach (6-4, 3-6, 6- 3), Mark Mees (6-2, 6-0) and Jud Shaufler (6-4, 4-6, 7-5) all were victorious. Only John Neinken (0-6, 2-6) and Tom Haney (3-6, 1-6) suffered setbacks. "The key to the match was that we won four of the three-set singles matches," Eisner commented. "That way we only had to win one doubles match." Shaufler's match was particularly important. The Michigan senior blew five match points before finally putting the set away. Winning a doubles match would be no easy task. Eisner called Georgia, "our toughest test in doubles so far this year." Fortunately, the undefeated Wolverine team of Leach and Horwitch came up with an impressive Also, we would like to introduce our new place to you with the same pizza recipe as Thano's Lamplighter. From 4-11 on Sunday nights, our pizzas will be % price and there will also be special beer prices. We wait to serve you starting Sunday, Feb. 3 performacne and were victorious 7-5, 6- 3. Gymnasts beat Indiana It was like driving a manual tran- smission for the first time - frequent stalls mingled between some sur- prisingly expert moments. For while thedMichiganamen's gym- nastics team defeated a less than awesome Indiana squad by nearly ten points, 263.55-254.15, (a significant margin for this sport), the end result was an even mixture of success and disappointment. "The atmosphere was a little flat," said Michigan coach Newt Loken. "But I was very happy about pommel hor- se." The pommel horse team added 42.0 points to the team's total, its largest contribution this season. Much of the credit for this goes to senior Brian Carey, whose free-swinging routine earned him the evening's largest ovation - plus a 9.55 and first place. In fact, all six first place spots went to Wolverines. On floor exercise, captain Jim Varilek continued to stalk a Big Ten title, scoring 9.55 with one of the four judges giving him a 9.7. First on rings was junior Darrell Yee at 9.45. The Michigan vaulting contingent maintained its high scoring streak, tallying 46.3, led by freshman Kevin McKee's 9.5 and junior all-arounder Chris Van Mierlo's 9.45. High bar honors went to Doug Zahour for his 9.45, but sophomore all-arounder Al Berger was close behind at 9.3. Over on parallel bars, Marshall Gar- field quickly adjusted for a mid-routine error, finished his routine with a double back somersault off the bars, and went home with a 9.35 to complete the Wolverine sweep of firsts. Loken was especially pleased to see Garfield successfully land, his double back. About a year ago, the sophomore all-arounder underwent knee surgery, but Loken said he .thinks last night's performance shows Garfield has over- come any "apprehension" of landing on it. Another standout was senior all- arounder Bruce Schurchard.Hisr52.05 total last night is a career high, which Schuchard explains as the result of "doing lots of routines." For the coverage of last. night's hockey game with Michigan Tech see page 9. The primary entry from the disap- pointment column is the Wolverines' score, still seven points short of the 270 needed to put them among the nation's top ten. -LEE KATTERMAN Women gymnasts fourth Michigan pulled a strong fourth yesterday in the Big Ten women's gymnastics championship with a score of 135.00. Top finishers in yesterday's meet was Michigan State (138.35) who narrowly edged Illinois (138.25). Min- nesota finished in third place (137.05). Finishing below Michigan, in order, were Ohio State, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin and Northwestern. In the vaulting, Michigan's Cindy WEDNESDAYS are BEER NIGHTSI EVERYSUNDA Ywe offer a SPECIAL ITALIAN BUFFT ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR OANLY $4.95 Includes: Lasagna-Chicken Cacciatori-Veal-Meatballs- Italian Sausage-Spaghetti or Mostaccioli-Vegetable Minne- stroni, and French Onion Soup. Salad Bar with over 25 items. HOURS 2 p.m. till midnight; BUFFET open till 9p. m. call for other all-you-can-eat specials Mon. through Thurs. BUlldogs Sharon finished fourth (8.975) and DanS Kempthorn tied at sixth (8.85). On the bars, Sara Flom sported a third place (8.75). 'In the all-around, McClain was tenth (33.55), her best score of the season. Teresa Bertoncin, Michigan's highest scorer of the season, who was expected to finish third or fourth in the all- around, dislocated her knee and was unable to place. Currier leads cager* Michigan's women cagers beat Boston University 82-76 in the consolation bout of the Lady Lion" Classic held at Penn State. South Carolina edged Penn State for the tourney title. The top scorer for Michigan was Abby Currier, who tallied 30 points. She connected on 14 out of 16 free throws and grabbed 15 rebounds. Dianne Dietz followed with 23 points and was name "All-Tourney" at the conclusion of the four team, two-day tournament yesterday. At halftime, Michigan narrowly led 41-40, but was behind 72-67 with four minutes left to play. Michigan battled back and Jeanne White tied the score at 72-72 with two free throws. As the play continued, White made a layup to put the Wolverines ahea, 74-72. But the most.exciting play in the final minutes was the steal and layu* executed by Diane Hatch, putting the Wolverines ahead 76-72. The women cagers now sport a 7-16 record this year. State whips wrestlers Blame this one on bad timing. Michigan's wrestling team, straight off its toughest road trip of the season, was soundly thrashed by Michigan State 26- 7 on Friday. Coach Dale Bahr described his grapplers as "very flat" after last week's confrontations with nationally ranked Iowa State, Iowa, and Minnesota. The meet, held in East Lansing, started badly for the Wolverines, and progressed to worse. At one point, it looked as if the Spartans would actually shut out the Blue grapplers, holding an insurmountable 26-0 lead after the 177 lb. match. Michigan's senior co-captain Steve Fraser posted his 26th victory of the season with a major decision over Scott Shephard at 191. Michigan will use the same lineup in today's match with Pittsburgh at 2:00 p.m. in Crisler Arena. The Wolverines currently sport a 8-5-1 dual meet record,and should improve on that today. -K. ANTHONY GLINKE Join the. Arts Page Hobson to sign basketball scholarship with Michigan Downtown 665-3231 °r I- + 114 E. Washington w-- -_i-' FOLD BACK THIS FLAP & SEAL WITH TAPE BY DAVE JOHNSON Michigan took another big step for- ward this weekend in their never- ending search for blue-chip talent. Coach Johnny Orr revealed im- mediately after Michigan's victory over Wisconsin yesterday that Dean Hopson of Ann Arbor Huron High has chosen to play his collegiate ball at Michigan. Hopson, a 6-6 swingman, joins 7-2 center Jon Antonides of Sarnia in selec- ting Michigan. A FIRST team all-stater last year at Albion High School, a Class-B school, Hopson transferred to Huron this fall. He currently sports an 18-point/13- rebound average and as Wolverine assistant coach Bill Frieder suggests, "should be first team all-state again this year." Although Hopson, was unavailable yesterday for comment, Huron coach Harold Simons did express great satisfaction in Hopson's selection. "I think he could play nationally for many of the conferences," said Simons. "And though many other major colleges recruited him, I'm happy he chose the University of Michigan. "I THINK he has some things to add to their program. His greatest assets are his speed, agility and quickness," said Simons. As to why Hopson chose Michigan over a host of other schools, Simons said "geographic location played a major role, along with the supremacy Michigan has academically and of course, their very .fine basketball program.' The addition of Hopson surely makes Michigan's program that much better. a FROM Daily Classifieds Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Mich. 48109 SCORES College Baskethb II Georgia Tech 62, virginia 59 Ohio State 71, Michigan St. 59 Iowa 74, Purdue 59 Illinois 89, Indiana 68 Oregon St. 73,Arizona 63 Colorado 60, Oklahoma 59 Minnesota 72, Northwestern 55 DePaul 65, Dayton 63 Pro Hockey Philadelphia 6, Detroit 5 Boston 5, Chicago 2 Minnesota 5, Pittsburgh 2 Pro Basketball New York 114, Detroit 107 Indiana 131, San Antonio 127 College Hockey (Friday night) Notre Dame 7, Denver I ,minnesota 6, Wisconsin 4 Michigan St. 5, Poland 4 (Saturday night) Minnesota-Duluth 7, Notre Dame 6 Michigan 3, Michigan Tech 2 I F r-1 u EEEI'W AEE= 1Ui