N M d M ~ Y y SPORTS ANNOUNCING The University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Society ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING, For the April 1982 Production of "Patience" Please join us if you are interested in participating in the cast, orchestra, costume or set crews. Everyone is welcome! 8 PM Sunday, Jan. 10th Pendleton Room in Michigan Union *lhe Michigan Daily Friday, January 8, 1982 Page 11 BADGERS EXTEND 'M' WOES, 65-63 Buzzer bomb beats _, .:. .... im- 1^111V iTLrUim tttt)- ...-" _... .... ..L-..L .......... 11 L. --:.i By JUHIN KE With his head bowed, Michigan bbsketball coach Bill Frieder walked siowly into the press room. He took a s t'in front of the reporters, rubbed his 4i t eye and looked down at the table. "we just came up snort again,' ne saia. "I'll tell you men, I don't have a hell of a lot to say." No one really expected him to. Not with the circumstances as they were. The Wolverines fought back to tie last night's Big Ten opener against Wiscon- sin at Crisler Arena only to watch 6-7 freshman forward Scott Roth throw in a 22-foot jump shot at the buzzer to give the Badgers a 65-63 victory. Michigan had come close for the third time in four games, yet still hadn't won. The loss dropped Michigan's record to 1-8, the worst start in the school's history. Wisconsin is now 4-5. AND HEARTBREAKER is the only way to describe this one. After trailing throughout most of the second half, and by seven with 2:30 remaining, Michigan tied it up at 63-63 with 33 seconds left when Thad Garner took Eric Turner's pass, drove behind the basket and reached underneath the backboard to lay it in. The crowd of over 8,000 came alive, but the best of the heroics was still to come. Instead of pressuring the Badgers af- ter Garner's bucket, Michigan went back into its zone defense and waited for Wisconsin to bring the ball up. Badger guard Carl Golston did just that and after he ran the clock down to five seconds by dribbling around at the top of the key, he passed the ball to Roth. Roth, who was standing about 25 feet from the basket on the right side, calmly tossed the ball through the bucket as the clock expired. Wisconsin coach Bill Cofield said that Roth was the one he wanted to take the shot. "THAT WAS not a luck shot," Cofield said. "Scott Roth shoots that jump shot very well. We wanted him to take that shot." ODDLY ENOUGH, the strengths that the Wolverines exhibited in their late comeback were the weaknesses that had plagued them all year-rebounding and foul shooting. Michigan outreboun- ded Wisconsin 34-23 and managed to shoot 76.4 percent from the foul line. However, the Wolverines shot selection (they shot 44.6 percent from the field) and 22 turnovers proved to be the dif- ference. In the early going, though, it looked as if Michigan would have a good night. The Wolverines jumped out to a quick 8- Blue 2 lead and still led 16-14 midway through the first half. But Wisconsin rallied to take a 24-23 lead and after a Michigan bucket, rattled off six straight points and went into the locker room with a 32-27 lead. Michigan made a run at the Badgers as the second half opened. The Wolverines ignited the partisan fans by scoring 10 of the first 12 points to take a 37-34 lead. Michigan took advantage of its tough full court press and some Wisconsin turnovers to get the lead. WISCONSIN wouldn't buckle, as many Big Ten teams playing on the road would, and it scored the next six points to lead 40-37. Michigan stayed within one of the Badgers from that point until the 8:30 mark. Then Wiscon- sin scored eight straight to make it 54- 45, and when Michigan narrowed that to one, the Badgers tallied six more unan- swered points to hold a 60-53 lead with less than three minutes remaining. Then Michigan decided to make the game really exciting. Garner hit four of his game high 17 points, and center Ike Person hit two of his 12 to make the score 62-59 with 1:20 left. Wisconsin, it seemed, was finally feeling the pressure. But Golston hit three of four foul shots down the stretch before Gar- ner could tie it up and Roth could win it. The loss means that it will be a long time between victories for the young Wolverines, and Frieder knows it. "We might not win another game," he said, "but we're going to hang in there tough and I'm going to call on these kids to come back." Bucky doesn't stop here Oyez, Oyezl p' Ulrich's now stocks law texts. -'l And our commitment to service will stand up under the toughest scrutiny. Stop in and begin your own discovery. WISCONSIN Min FG/AFT/A '~1, N I. R A PFPts. Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM MICHIGAN GUARD Dan Pelekoudas lays the ball off the glass as Wiscon- sin's Scott Roth (31) and Carl Golston (11) look on. Roth notched the winning bucket for the Badgers in last night's 65-63 triumph over the Wolverines. Sellers ............ Blackwell .... .. Mitchell ........ Bailey.......... Golston............ Roth .............. Zinkgraff .......... Dandridge....... Hippen.......... Ploss............ Team Rebounds Totals........... 39 30 31 25 28 20 4 17 1 5 7/11 7/12 3/5 B/9 1/5 2/5 0/0 1/3 0/0 1/1 2/2 0/3 0/0 2/2 3/5 0/0 2/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 11 2 4 0 0 2 1 I 1 0 1 23 i 0 1 5 2 0 3 0 3 2 4 2 2 0 1 5 0 0 16 14 6 14 5 4 2 2 0 2 , BIG TEN ROUNDUP: 200 28/51 9/14 MICHIGAN Min FG/A FT/A R 14 19 65 A PF Pts. MSU t EAST LANSING (AP) - Kevin Smith hit a record setting 19 free throws last night to lead the Michigan State Spar- tans to a 65-58 upset win over Indiana. The win boosted Michigan State's record to a 6-5 while the defending NCAA champion Hoosiers dropped their third straight and are 6-4. IT WAS the Big Ten opener for both eams. Indiana led by as many as five points in the first half, 12-7, before Michigan State rallied to capture a 30-28 halftime advantage. The Hoosiers claimed a 43-40 lead with-11: 40 to play in the game, before, the Spartans took control. Michigan State outscored Indiana by an 11-2 margin to take a 51-44 lead with 7:12 remaining. THE SPARTANS increased the lead to 13 points, at 61-48, with 3:02 remaining and stalled the rest of the way. Ten of Michigan State's final 14 points came with Smith at the foul line. Supporting Smith's game-high honors were freshman Sam Vincent with 16 and Derek Perry with nine points. Ohio St. 49, Minnesota 47 COLUMBUS, (AP)--Clark Kellogg's >asket with less than three minutes remaining for Ohio State enabled the Buckeyes to upset sixth-ranked Min- nesota 49-47 in the Big Ten Conference college basketball opener for both teams last night. The Buckeyes, who posted their sixth straight victory, clinched the victory when freshman guard Ron Stokes sank a free throw with three seconds left. IT WAS THE tenth victory in 13 Wames this season for the Buckeyes. Minnesota, losing for only the second time in 10 contests, battled back from a 9-point deficit with 12:38 remaining. The Gophers moved ahead 47-46 on a t. LSAT - MCAT - GRE GRE PSYCH - GRE BIO - MAT copples Hoosiers field goal by Randy Breuer with 3:31 lead and were never threatened as they remaining. hiked their season record to 8-2 while THAT SET the stage for the winning Northwestern slipped to 4-6. basket by Kellogg with 2:38 to play. NORTHWEESTERN was horrendous The score gave the Buckeyes a 48-47 in the first half and went nine minutes lead. in one span without scoring while Tony Campbell, a 6-6 sophomore for- Range and Tucker took charge for the ward, paced Ohio State with 18 points Illini with shots over the Wildcat zone while Kellogg, a 6-7 junior, contributed defense. 14. Range and Tucker each had 10 points Breuer had 16 points for Minnesota, in the first half as the Illini took leads of but managed just two baskets in the 12-4 and 22-8 before settling for a 26-10 second half. edge at intermission. Breuer missed a short jump shot w2*h With Illinois leading 12-8, North- 12 seconds left that would have lifted western went dry for nine minutes the Gophers into the lead. Kellogg without a point. The Wildcats broke the rebounded the ball and was fouled by spell with a pair of free throws by Art Trent Tucker. Aaron with 4:24 left. But the Wildcats failed to score another point in the half, Illinois 60, Northwestern50 which ended with Tucker canning a EVANSTON (AP) - Perry Range ' pair of free throws. and Craig Tucker scored 18 points each Northwestern scored the first six last night to lead Illinois to a 60-50 vic- points of the second half but never could tory over Northwestern in a Big Ten get closed than 10 points until the basketball opener. closing minutes. The Illini held the Wildcats to 10 poin- Jim Stack scored 12 points for North- ts in the first half as they took a 16-point western and Aaron added 10. APPLI CATIONS AVAILABLE UAC EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, FALL/ WINTER 1982 President OVERALL COORDINATION OF ORGANIZATION. LIASON TO UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY, LEADERSHIP ROLE Vice President: Flnanc f PLAN AND CONTROL OF BUDGET, SUPERVISION OF ACCOUNTING STAFF Vice President: 'Prngram Development DIRECTORSHIP OF NEv UAtJ '.iUMMITT EES, UAC PERSONELL DIRECTOR Vice President: Promotion and Publicity RESPONSIBLE FOR PROMOTION OF ALL UAC EVENTS TO THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY $ APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THE UAC OFFICE 2105 MICHIGAN UNION DUE: JANUARY 11 Sign up for interview Garner ............ 23 Hopson..........29 Person...........38 Pelekoudas .......32 Turner............ 36 Rockymore........ 26 Carter ............ 11 Brown ............ 3 Hall ............... 2 Team Rebounds Totals........... 7/11 3/5 3 2/4 2/2 8 6/8 0/0 9 4/9 4/4 1 3/15 2/3 2 3/8 2/2 5 0/1 0/1 3 0/0 0/0 0 0/0 0/0 0 3 25/56 13/17 34 2 2 0 5 5 1 0 0 0 4 2 3 3 4 0 1 0 0 17 6 12 12 8 0 0 0 15 17 63 MS MORE THAN A, BOOKSTORE 516 E. Liberty 994-5350 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 HOUSING DIVISIO'N RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1982-83 ACADEMIC YEAR Available starting January 6, 1982 In Housing Office, 1500 S.A.B. POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1982 for the Resident Fellows in Residential Col- lege, Resident Advisor and Minority Peer Advisor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U of M student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of four terms or equivalent and 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1982. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at the University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average