4 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 SPORTS Friday, March 11, 1983 The Michigan Daily Page 10 Sstuns Hawkees (Continued from Page 1 ) 7 " "~' the Wolverines pulled off a major upset " late in the season - for the second time in two years against the Hawkeyes. Last year, Michigan beat Iowa at ST. Crisler Arena igniting a season-ending r :anks fouled the Downers Gove native, and Pelekoudas sank both ends of a one-and-one to give Michigan a 65- 60 lead and iced the game. "He was driving, dribbling the ball with his head down," said Pelekoudas, "so I tried to take the charge." PELEKOUDAS'S charge was only one example of the tough defense played by the Wolverines all evening long. Except for Bob Hansen, who tallied a career-high 25 points for Iowa, no one on the Hawkeye squad could muster much of an offense. "We played with much more inten- sity and much better defense than last week," said Frieder, who was- especially pleased with the play of Tur- ner guarding the Hawkeyes' Steve Car- fino and Hansen late in the game. "Eric' Turner played great defense tonight. If he played defense like that last week we might have won." Carfino scored just two points on one- for-seven shooting, and fouled out with 2:10 to go in the game. Rellford Wade McCormick Turner Person Pelekoudas Henderson Tarpley Jokisch Team TOTALS Min FG/AFT/A 23 2/7 1/2 30 2/6 0/0 21 4/8 3/5 40 9/18 15/19 21 2/5 0/0 15 0/0 2/2 23 3/5 0/0 3 0/0 0/0 12 2/3 0/0 R 1 8 7 0 5 0 7 0 4 2 A PF Pts 0 2 5 1 4 4 0 2 11 5 1 30 3 3 4 1 2 2 1 1 6 0 2 0 0 2 4 24/52 21/28 34 11 19 66 Looking for a chance to move in the fast lane? Then check out Marine Corps Aviation. The training is superb. The challenges are unique. Your ticket to fly is your college diploma and your drive to succeed. If you've got what it takes, you could be at the controls of anything from a Cobra to a Harrier to the hottest thing flying, the F-18 Hornet. See your Marine Corps Officer Selection Officer when he visits your campus or call him, at the number listed below, today. oouTe-The proud.The Marines. Mo usThe e e p S aybe you can be on Payne Gannon Stokes Carfino Hansen Anderson Banks Berkenpas Lohaus Team TOTALS IOWA MinFG/A FT/A Ri 39 4/8 3/7 10 30 4/7 0/1 4 28 4/10 3/3 6 37 1/9 0/0 3 40 12/20 3/6 3 15 1/2 1/1 1 9 0/1 0/1 1 1 0/1 0/1 0 1 0/0 0/0 0 3 A PF Pts 2 4 11 1 3 8 0 3 11 4 5 2 1 4 25 0 2 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 24/51 10/19 31 9 24 60 SEE YOUR MARINE OFFICER SELECTION OFFICER IN THE UNION ON THE 14th and 15th OF MARCH, OR CALL HIM AT 313/688-2211 Three-point goals: Turner (3-5), Gannon (0-1), Carfino (0-2), Hansen (2-4). First half score: Iowa 35, MICHIGAN 30 Attendance: 11,583 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRER Iowa's Steve Carfino gets more than the ball as he fouls Eric Turner in a steal attempt. The play typified the night's mismatch, as Turner proved to be a headache for Carfino, outscoring the Iowa guard 30-2. ST. JOHN'S, VILLANOVA ADVANCE: PE SF A E AUA I Georgetown up-set L'u INI NEW YORK (AP) - No. 20 Syracuse, led by seniors Erich Santifer and Leo Rautins, upset 15th-ranked Georgetown 79-72 last night and joined No. 8.,St. John's and No. 13 Villanova in. the semifinals of the Big East Conference basketball tournament. Syracuse, beaten twice by Georgetown during the regular season, will play the winner of last night's second game between No. 14 Boston College and Seton Hall. IN THE afternoon program at Madison Square Garden, St. John's, 22- 4, coasted past Pittsburgh behind Billy Goodwin's 16 points, 64-53, and John Pinone's free throw with 23 seconds left was the difference in Villanova's 69-68 win over pesky Connecticut. Villanova is now 21-6. s'' , Conference Overall" Syracuse shot 65 percent from the field. Georgetown shot 48 percent. - Big Ten Standings ,t Indiana....... Ohio State...... Purdue .......... Illinois .......... Iowa ............ Minnesota..... Michigan St...... Northwestern ... MICHIGAN ..... Wisconsin...... 12 11 10 10 9 9 9 7 5 3 5 6 7 7 8 8 8 10 12 14 22 19 20 20 18 18 16 16 14 8 5 8. 8. 10A 9. 9, 1 13 18 INVITE YOU TO... AN OPEN HOUSE Monday, March 14 Michigan League Building Third Floor Library 6:00 - 9:00 PM If you are a student working towards your B.S., M.S., or PhD in EE, ME, IE, or CS, you are cordially invited to attend our Harris Open House. Faculty members are also welcome. Harris is a Fortune 300 Company head- quartered in Melbourne, Florida employing p approximately 26,000 people at 40 worldwide locations. It is the nations largest manufacturer of printing equipment, electronic editing U 0equipment for newspapers, and AM and FM broadcasting transmitters. A leader in the research and development of phased array O 0technology, Harris is also the nation's sixth largest telecommunications equipment firm. Harris Semiconductor ranks among the world's top ten manufacturers of integrated circuits. In conjunction with the Open House, engineers and technical managers representing various divisions of the five business sectors of Harris (Semiconductor, Government Systems, Communication, Information Systems, and / Printini Fninment) will he on camnus to A gastronoptical illusion. E: Which pizza is bigger? If you said the smaller pizza is bigger you are right! The bigger looking pizza is an ordinary pizza (the flat kind). The more the dough is rolled out... the bigger it looks. The smaller looking pizza is Uno's original deep dish pizza. It's rich, crisp crust is baked in a deep pan and filled with up to twice as much of what people love most about pizza... the finest, freshest meats, vegetables, cheeses, and spices. For example... the"Numero Uno" pizza(the works) is only 12" in diameter, but weighs about 5 pounds, with over two pounds of meat and cheese alone. Buvx W~ one n piza- get twice asmuch aeood food- at our . , . " , , , , i fl i