ROCK IT UP! Destroy All Monsters THE CRAYON KILLERS THE COUNTDOWN BAND 9:30 p.m. Saturday, February 23-$4 VFW Hall-314 E. Liberty Ann Arbor's weirdest Rock & Roll Nightclub YOU CAN HAVE A BAD HORSE, BUT YOU VE GOTTA HAVE AGOOD PAIR OF BOOTS. Page 12-Friday, February 22, 1980-The Michigan Daily 'FORGOT TEN' SMI§T Cagers dum Since the days of the wild west, peoplehave relied on Frye boots as old friends. That's because all Frye boots are carefully bench- crafted of the finest leathers. We've been making them that way for more than 100 years now. Our styles may change, but our quality and craftsmanship remain the same. The best. By ALAN FANGER It was just a matter of maintaining a good attitude, said Mark Bodnar and Keith Smith. It was practicing as hard as the starters (sometimes harder), observing the action with keen eyes, and preparing for entry into the game at any time. These two seemingly forgotten guards proved they were definitely prepared for entry last night when Michigan met Purdue at Crisler Arena. They combined for 22 points, 20 of them in the second half, to lead the Wolverines to a stunning 75-64 upset of the 15th-ranked Boilermakers before 11,538 wild and crazy fans. The win boosted Michigan's Big Ten mark to 8-7, and kept alive the Wolverines' hopes for a post-season tournament bid. Purdue, now 9-6 in the conference, dropped to third place. "We really moved and hustled, par- ticularly in the second half," said Michigan coach Johnny Orr after the game. "It's just a great win for us." AFTER TRAILING 35-29 throught he first 20 minutes, the Wolverines came racing out of the gate early in the second half to take the lead for good. Then Mark Bodnar, Smith, and Johnny Johnson helped them hang on to a precious lead with some clutch free- throw shooting in the final ten minutes. The heroics of Mark Bodnar and Smith were accomplished without the s fl d n ENTIRE STOCK 10% OFF MAST'S Campus Store 619 E. Liberty 662-0266 ~~ou n lier $e9o on v inr'v we've create n I Ve.etrng5 L BATTLING A DISTINCT size disadvanta man muscles up a shot over 7-1 Purdue p last night's 75-64 win at Crisler Arena MICHIGAN McGee.......... Garner.......... Heuerman ....... Bodnar, Marty Johnson ......... Smith, Keith....... Garris.......... Person ......... James.......... Lozier........... Bodnar. Mark ..... Team Rebounds ... Totals........... 23 37 30 27 30 19 9 6 1 6 12 FG/A FT/A R 5/14 2/4 5 4/6 1/1 9 4/7 2/2 3 2/7 0/1 7 4/8 6/6 5 4/4 5/8 3 2/5 0/0 1 0/2 0/0 1 0/0 0/0 0 0/0 0/0 0 2/4 5/7 0 7 A 3 2 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 Pts. 12 9 10 4 14 13 4 0 0 0 9 n t t f r v E E 7 7 F ( 27/57 21/29 45 12 75 o!n 444 .Ppqd OLYMPIC ROUNDUP: Heiden sm( H SPARKS SURGE iC Boilermaker ervices of forward Mike McGee, and good portion of the half on the bench with a minimal amount of assistance with four personals, before fouling out' rom center Paul Heuerman. McGee with 1:31 remaining. drew his fourth foul of the game with 11 Smith actually entered the game by minutes to play; Heuerman also spent a accident. Johnson crashed to the floor following a collision under the boards' with 19:16 left in the contest, and the 6- him. Almost immediately, Smith charged up the Michigan fast break. Following a three-point play by Thad Garner which closed the Purdue gap tok 37-35, Smith took a pass which Garner ha intercepted and drove in for a uncontested layup, tying the score at 37- 37. He then made a steal of the full court press and fed Marty Bodnar, whose 10-foot jump shot gave the Wolverines a 39-37 advantage. - The Wolverines expanded their lead to 47-40 when Mark Bodnar replaced his brother in the lineup. Michigan then went into what Mark Bodnar called See more sports page 11 "our delay offense," a patient attack designed to minimize turnovers and draw fouls. "WE WERE JUST going to pass it and go away," Orr explained. "We just tried to hold the ball. We were fortunate ~ to get a few lay-ins." The lay-ins by Smith and Mark- Bodnar rather easily in the wani? minutes. Smith said, "They weren't paying attention to me, and I just happened to get loose." Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER Purdue managed to narrow the age, Wolverine center Paul Heuer- Michigan margin to 65-61 with 1:14 to ivotman Joe Barry Carroll during play, but the Boilermakers went on n fouling rampage in the final minute.. PURDUE Mark Bodnar made both ends of a one- Min. FG/AFT/A R A Pts. and-one situation, John Garris Morris ............20 3/. 2/2 4 1 8 executed a three-point play, and Hallman.......... 34 3/11 2/2 3 1 8ply Carroll ............ 37 8/14 5/8 13 1 21 Johnson and Smith each hit a pair Q Edmonson......... 28 3/13 4/4 6 1 10 charity tosses to widen the lead. Walker. Brian. 38 4/9 0/0 2 4 8 "When some one starts making them Walker. Steve ... 18 2/5 .1/2- 4 0 5 Scearce........... 16 1/8 2/2 5 0 4 (free throws), everyone just follows Stallings .....i... 7 0/1 0/0 1 0 0 through," said Mark Bodnar. Benson ............1 0/1 0/0 0 0 0 "It just makes me feel so good," he Barnes ............1 0/0 0/0 0 0 0 Team Rebounds ... 4 continued. "Earlier in the season, I was Totals ............. 24/70 16/20 43 8 64 playing real well. I just figured my shot Fouled Out: Morris (P) was going to come." Halftime: Purdue 35, MICHIAN 29 Attendance: 11,538 ishes Olympic record' esh, tough competition in that final champion Linda Fratianne of Nor- ,000-meter event. thridge, Calif., convincingly won the 'rat ianne moves up short program and moved into second place behind East Germany's Annet LAKE PLACID, N.Y. - World Potzsch at the halfway point of the XIII OLYMPIC WINTER {3Y GAMES LAKE PLACID 1980, t..~ Heidetladies figure skating event at the Win- ...earns 4th gold ter Olympics yesterday. Fratianne, wearing a flaming red r an outfit and skating to music from "Firebird," had 21 ordinals and 84.20 ock or Disco? points, moving from third place to second. E IT! Fratianne is the reigning world figure skating champion. Potzsch won the title wven ing of in 1978. Dagmar Lurz of West Germany d good time was third. The medals will be awarded after' 'LE a BIM BO'S tomorrow night's free skating com- E of B'M BO'SPetition.; RDAY featuring HTERS" SCORES i-long group _ College Basketball MICHIGAN 75, Purdue 64 114 East Indiana 75,.Michigan State 72 Illinois 60, Minnesota 58(OT) Washington Wisconsin 62, Iowa 58 Ohio State 68, Northwestern 59 DeJ'aul 105, Wagner 89 Ion 77, Louisville 60 nks for the price of one! Scheduled Events Every day 8 pm-,lpM yI Y D 4 4p 4 4 M 9 ~vjoOdL JK~ I I m . .1. 4 r M I VR tiY . n By The Associated Press' LAKE PLACID, N.Y. - Confident Eric Heiden, the speed skater from Madison, Wis., flashed his way to another Olympic victory yesterday, claiming an unprecedented fourth con- secutive gold medal. The 21-year-old American superstar slipped in a turn during the 1,500-meter race, but caught himself with his left hand and quickly regained his sleek stride en route to a comfortable victory over a 40-man field. Heiden won the race in Olympic record time of 1:55.44, making him the first man in history to win four golds in one Winter Games. He's not as confident, however, about the last and longest - 10,000 meters, nearly six miles, tomorrow - which would give him a dazzling, unpreceden- ted five-medal sweep. The grueling racing schedule, the rugged training pace are beginning to wear on the har- dy athlete as he gets ready to face fr 10 F Looking fo Alternative To R( WE HAV For a fun-filled e music, singing, an Join The HAPPY PEOF Ever FRIDAY and SATUF "THE GASLIG Dixieland and sing-a DOWNTOWN 21142 THE 'NEW V-NECK KNIT T ~SHIRT AND STRAIGHT LEG CORDUROYS. YOU'RE LOOKING GOOD, MR. J. X. Casual takes on an active sports look in T-shirts and cords from our Mr. J Shop for young men. V-neck cotton knit shirt. Sand, natural, copper. S-M-L sizes, $8. Levi's polyester/cotton corduroy jeans. Blue, brown, green, grey, navy, mocha or sand. 28 to 36 waist, 30 to 36 length, $15. 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