4 Page 10-Sunday, February 13, 1983-The Michigan Daily TURNER 'S 21 SPARKS 74-67 VICTORY 'M' By JIM DWORM Special to the Daily EAST LANSING - The Jenison Field House, but1 pretended the basketball played in Jackson State P The officials acted like pri last night, calling a combin fouls on the two teams. The end result: Michig with a 74-67 victory over the THE WIN, THE Wolver its last six attempts, enab break free from the Big Te they shared with Wisconsi the week. Michigan secure in the conference with a 3-7 overall). Michigan State droppe place in the Big Ten with (11-9 overall). The Wolverines took th four minutes remaining in and never relinquished it. 0 cagers ri Cg rip AN and a jumper by Eric Turner and THI layups by Butch Wade and Isaac Per- Michig scene was, son gave them a 27-21 lead, and they Sparta the referees stayed on top with a little help from the their i game was flailing arms of the Spartans and the nit make 'enetentiary. picking of the referees. stoppa son wardens PHIL ROBINSON, Phil Bova and home t ed total of 53 Dick Bestor whistled 20 second-half tans c fouls on the Spartans, including a horde and m gan escaped of hand- and body-checking calls. reason e Spartans. Michigan converted on 25 of 30 foul was at ines' first in shots in the half to preserve the victory. "Mi bled them to "I thought they (the officials) made a defens n cellar that lot of what I call 'junior high school cote." n going into tacky calls,'" Michigan State head physic d ninth place coach Jud Heathcote said. "But that would1 record (12-8 crew usually does." Lea Michigan guard Dan Pelekoudas stand d to eighth agreed that the officials called a tight forgot a 4-6 record game. "There was one period where it forwar seemed that every time someone tried into th he lead with to drive, they would call a foul," said in th the first half the junior. "At least they were con- Michig A free thrnw sistent." week Spartans RTEEN FOULS were called on gan after the intermission, but the ans did not take full advantage of free throws. Michigan State did 12 of 18 from the line, but the ges of play seemed to take the team out of its offense. The Spar- ommited 10 turnovers in the half issed several easy shots. Another for MSU's lack of offensive flow tightened Michigan defense. chigan played much better e than last time," said Heath- 'We know they're a strong and cal team, but we didn't think they play defense that well." ding the Wovlerines' defensive was Person, previously the ten man on the team. The senior rd responded well to his insertion he starting lineup. He succeeded e difficult task of guarding gan State's Sam Vincent, who last riddled Michigan for 25 points on or 17 shooting performance in the ans' 70-65 victory at Crisler .T NIGHT, it was a different Vincent managed only 17 points, g on just five of 13 free goal at- , tempts. Many of the sophomore guards shots were taken from off balance. "I wanted him to take awkward shots," said Person. "I tried to guard him tight and keep a hand in his face." Person eventually fouled out with 7 points to his credit. His performance drew the praise of Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. "He did a good job on Vincent and he finally got a couple of baskets for us," said the third-year coach. IN THE SECOND half, Michigan held leads of 33-26 and 41-33 before the Spar- tans cut the lead to 43-42 on two Larry Polec free throws with 10:17 left to play. Michigan then went on a 16-3 scoring spree to up their lead to 59-45. Ten of the points came on foul shots. The Wolverines went into a delay of- fense with 6:00 left to hang on to their lead. Michigan State cut the final margin to seven on a pair of Patrick Ford three- pointers. Turner led Michigan's scoring attack with 21 points and 6 assists. Tim Mc- Cormick added 19 points and Wade banged in10. Scott Skiles pumped in 13 for the Spartans before he fouled out. A liCC UllVW Sweet revenge a 10 foi Spart Arena LAS' story.' hitting MICHIGAN MICHIGAN STATE MinFG/A FT/A R A PF Pts MinFG/A FT/A R A PF Pts Wade............ Relford ........... McCormick ....... Turner ............ Person ............ Jokisch............ Tarpley......... Pelekoudas... Henderson........ AP Photo Team Rebounds 24 12 28 37 23 20 12 22 22 4/5 1/3 4/8 5/13 3/5 2/4 0/1 1/2 1/4 2/5 3/4 11/12 9/12 1/2 2/2 0/0 2/2 0/0 3 2 8 4 3 3 2 0 4 3 0 0 1 6 0 0 0 3 0 2 2 4 1 5 I 2 5 0 10 5 19 21 7 6 0 4 2 Perry........... Ford .............. Willis............ vincent........... Skiles........... Mudd........... Tower........... Polec.............. Cawood........... Walker.......... Gore .............. Team Rebounds TOTALS ........ 25 16 37 37 29 5 21 21 3 4 2 4/8 2/3 3/12 5/13 5/8 1/1 2/6 2/3 0/0 0/0 0/0 1/1 0/0 2/2 7/10 2/4 0/1 0/1 2/3 0/0 2/2 0/0 5 2 11 0 2 2 0 4 0 0 0 2 X 0 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 4 3 4 5 5 1 1 4 0 1 2 9 6 8 17 13 2 4 6 0 2 0 4 TOTAL ............ 21/45 30/39 32 10 22 74 Michigan State's Sam Vincent surveys the defense during last night's 74-67 Wolverine victory at East Lansing. First half score: Michigan 27, Michigan State 26. Attendance: 10,004 Three point goals: Turner (2), Ford (2); Skiles. 24/54 16/24 28 8 31 67 CHICAGO (AP) - Michael Jenkins scored 28 points and Ted Kitchell added ference with a 9-2 mark, is 19-2 overall. scored 16 points to lead underdog Nor- 19, sparking fourth-ranked Indiana to J e nkthwestern to a 66-55 Big Ten basketball 75-56 Big Ten victory over Wisconsin victory yesterday over 18th-ranked yesterday. Purdue. Kitchel scored 15 points in the first Big Ten Standings " JJim Stack, with 12 points and Gaddis 11:18 of the game, pacing the Hoosiers i Rathel, who chipped in with 11, helped to a 21-10 lead..Conference Overall Northwestern offset a game-high, 22- Wittman took over in the last 8:46 of point performance by Purdue's Russell the first half, scoring 12 points to help W L WL Cross. Indiana take a 41-24 halftime lead Indiana.................9 2 19 2 nThe victory boosted the Wildcats' before a UW Fieldhouse crowd of *Minnesota...........:6 4 ' 15 4 record to 14-7 overall and 5-6 in the Big 10,127. *Ohio State ..............6 4 14 6 Ten. Purdue dropped to 15-6 overall and Gregg Steinhaus hit three jump shots Purdue .... , ......... 6 5 15 6 6-5 in the conference. It marked the fir- early in the second half to bring Illinois ..................6 5 16 8 P u ra u e st time in three years that North- Wisconsin to within 45-32, but that was Iowa ....................6 5 15 6 western has won five conference as close as the Badgers could get as Northwestern .........5 6 14 7 games. The Wildcats have seven Big Uwe Blab scored 12 of his 14 points in Michigan State ..........4 6 11 9 Ten contests remaining. - the second half. MICHIGAN ...........3 7 12 8 6 6 =Id a , i n Wisconsin, now 7-13 overall and 2-9 in Wisconsin ..,.........2 9 7 13 Indiana 75, Wisconsin 56 the Big Ten, was led by Brad Sellers *Does not include last night's game. MADISON (AP) - Randy Wittman with 22 points. Indiana, first in the con- 4 I , AP Photo Indiana coach Bobby Knight manages to find something to be upset about' despite the fact that his fourth-ranked Hoosiers were in the process of troun- cing Wisconsin, 75-59, yesterday at Madison. Thinc By MIKE BRADLEY Brian Diemer set a Michigan record in the mile and finished second in the 1,000-yard run to help give, the Wolverines a 90-39 victory over Michigan State yesterday at the Track and Tennis Building. Diemer covered the distance in 3:59.93, eclipsing the time of Dan Heikkinen, who ran 4:02.28 in 1980. It was the fifth time this year that a collegiate runner has broken the four- minute barrier. 7 70 a lads sprint "WE WENT out and tried to run Bill O'Reilly captured1 hard, and I didn't think about the time, run in 8:52.18, and Jason because if you have the competition the the 1,000 yard event in 2:1 times will come," commented Diemer by Diemer and Passenger. after the race. MICHIGAN'S THOMAS Michigan's Don Passenger and jured his knee while com Gerard Donakowski finished second long jump. The extent of and third to complete the Wolverine however, is unknown. sweep. While Die:mer's time qualified "They are going to adm him for the NCAA championship, hospital. Right now, it Passenger and Donakowski narrowly problem is in the lateral missed the qualifying time of 4:03.20, the knee," said Michigan turning in times of 4:04.09 and 4:04.95 Harvey. respectively. Bob Boynton nipped Mic the two-mile. Bryant won 5.10 followed Wilcher in- peting in the f the injury, it him to the appears the ligaments of coach Jack higan State's re in the 600- blew a big down the covered the shed first in 00 g4, ~tO J *The best freshly-made quality sandwiches on campus eFast, personalized service *Daily specials - oriental lunch box edelicious egg rolls Marcus Sanders at the wig yard dash, after Sanders lead by hot-dogging homestretch. Boynton< distance in 1:13.14. DEREK HARPER finis ist Spa the long jump, soaring 25'1", and John- ny Nielsen won the shot put with a thr- ow of 57'4". The highlight of the field events was the high jumping of Paul Piwinski. The Spartan senior cleared 7'3" and narrowly missed 7'6". "My best this year is 7'5". If I went to 7'4" or 7'5", it would have been no big thing. Everything is flowing together now. I've been learning a lot this year and I should be at 7'6" within the next three months," said Piwinski. The Wolverines travel to Western Michigan next weekend to take part in the Central Collegiate Championships. Frederick-Foster qualifies Senior Sue Frederick-Foster became the first Michigan woman to qualify in two events for the NCAA Indoor Cham- pionships as the women's indoor track and field team captured five individual titles in the Wolverine-Nike Invitational yesterday at the Track and Tennis Building. Frederick-Foster, who has already qualified for the NCAA Championships in the mile, easily cruised to a first- place 1,000-yard run finish with a time of 2:30.25, nearly three seconds below the NCAA cut-off time of 2:33.24. "I FELT pretty strong," said Frederick-Foster. "I wanted to get a rtans, good time in the 1,000 because I think that's what I'll be running in the nationals." Joining Frederick-Foster at the NCAA's, which will be held at the Pon- tiac Silverdome on March 11 and 12, will be high-jumper Joanna Bullard, and 600-meter specialist Joyce Wilson. In yesterday's competition, Bullard cleared 5-9%1/2for first-place and crossed the line fifth in the 60-yard hurdles with an 8.40 clocking. Wilson and Brenda Kazinec finished second and third behind Michigan State's Judi Brown in the 440-yard run. All three shattered the meet, fieldhouse and varsity records in the event with times of 55.05, 55.98 and 56.91. THE WOLVERINE women also got a super performance in the two-mile run from All-Americans Lisa Larsen and Melanie Weaver and from freshman standout Sue Schroeder, who was run- ning in her first 2-mile event. The three traded leads throughout the race with Larsen finally coming out on top in 10:12.13 followed by Weaver in 10:12.75. Western Ontario's Sue French slipped by Schroeder on the final lap to haid the Wolverine rookie 4th place. "I felt o k until the last 3 laps," said Schroeder. "Then I just had to hold on." "Schroeder is beyond belief," said Michigan head coach Francie Goodridge. "It was her first two mile 90.39I EI Frederick-Foster ... NCAA qualifier and in a way I was afraid she wouldn't be able to make the pace." MICHIGAN got strong efforts in the 60-yard dash where Lorrie Thornton and Kazinec finished one-two. Both Wolverine runners broke Wolverine- Nike standards, turning in times of 7.16 and 7.20, and edge ever closer to the NCAA qualifying time of 7.02. "We still have a couple of meets left," said a confident Thornton. "We'll do it." Thornton also placed second in the long jump with a leap of 18-4. Michigan 6 picked up its final victory in the 4x880- yard relay as the team of Martha Gray, Weaver, Schroeder and Larsen finished in 9:10.88. JOE EWING I RESORT HOTEL & COUNTRY CLUB SUMMER EMPLOYMENT NIPPERSINK MANOR - LARGE RESORT HOTEL IN SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSON HAS OPENINGS FOR APPROXIMATELY 150 STUDENTS... Waiters-Waitresses-Bus Persons-Housekeepers- Bellhops-Kitchen-Bar Set-up-Janitors- Loundry-Housemen-Switchboard Operators-Desk Clerks- Coffee Shop-Lifeguards and... Social Hostesses & Hosts-Athletic Directors-Teen & Young Adult Directors-Children's Directors- Playschool Teachers SAVE ON TYPING PAPER ByEATONTM NON'S COWRSABLEI '. *itrWp * Corrasable * 25% rag S16 lb. 20 alb. . Private stock 24 lb.