I Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Frida ay, January 27, 1984 A" A P YMNNI E-ECFMI rT4 VA ESL RE VIE W-INTRODUCTION TO L I S '- EDUCATIONAL CENTER Call Dcays Eves & Weekends (313) 662-3149 211 E. Huron St. ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 Permanent CenterS In More Than 115 Major US C2es & Abroad for intormatron about other centers OUTSIDE N.Y STATE CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-1782 1 p iagers n (Continued from Page 1) THE LEAD PROVED insurmountable for the Wolverines. After Joubert hit a jumper to pull Michigan to within two, 55- 53, at 1:32 it seemed as if someone had put the lid over Michigan's basket. First, Tim McCormick missed a free throw after a Jim Rowinski foul inside. Then, on Michigan's next possession, the Wolverines missed four shots from underneath the basket and for all of their futile efforts, were hit with a foul call on Roy Tarpley. Purdue's Rowinski connected on a free throw to put the Boilermakers ahead 56-53 with 26 seconds left in the game. Michigan made another desperate charge as they cut the leadto 57-55 on a pair of Turner free throws with six seconds remaining. But time was too short and Purdue remains in first place tied with Illinois in the Big Ten with a 5-1 record while the Wolverines drop to 4-3. ALTHOUGH Michigan could have won the game in the last minutes, they buried themselves a hole in the first half. "We just didn't play well in the first half," added Frieder. "When you get behind like we did, it takes a lot of effort to come back. You have to play hard all 40 minutes and we did- 111 6IA7 WA" mv-u---, v 6 n't and that's why it's a loss and not a win." Purdue came out opening the contest aggressively as they were able to go inside with ease against a sluggish Michigan team. Purdue's bruiser forward Rowinski and Mark Atkin- son, who started in place of Jim Bullock, at the other forward position, were the main beneficiaries of the Wolverines' slop- py play. Atkinson went on to score a team-high 15 points, 10 of which came in the first half. "THEY WERE very strong inside and we couldn't beat them like we should have," said McCormick, who fouled out of the game with less than a minute remaining. Still, despite inconsistent shooting, and a thunderous crowd of 13,610, Michigan almost overcame the barriers of winning on the road. "It's got to be a morale booster for them even if they lost," said Purdue coach Gene Keady, who now owns a perfect 7-0 record against Michigan. "If we go up there and play like they did here, I'd be happy." "We really felt that we could win," added Turner, who was the game's high score with 17 points. "Now it puts our backs to the wall and we just have to hope we get it back together against Illinois." PU-ed MICHIGAN I PURDUE MinFG/AFT/A R A PF TP MinFG/AFT/A R A Atkinson.........34 Eifert..............19 Rowinski........... 40 Hall ............... 40 Reid .............. 29 Bullock............ 26 Clawson............12 Team rebounds .... 6/9 0/1 3/12 4/9 3/9 2/4 1/3 3/4 2/2 5/8 5/5 4/4 2/5 2/3 4 6 12 7 1 6 0 4 2 2 0 3 6 0 0 PF 1 3 4 3 3 3 1 TP 15 2 11 13 10 6 4 Joubert........... Wade.............. McCormick ....... Rockymore........ Turner.......... Tarpley........... Reilford ........... Pelekoudas ........ Jokisch............ Henderson........ Team ............. 25 19 31 24 37 28 14 15 6 1 3/11 1/5 2/7 1/7 6/14 5/8 3/4 2/3 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 3/8 2/2 5/5 1/2 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/0 2 8 8 2 3 5 1 0 1 0 2 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 4 4 5 2 3 2 1 3 0 0 6 2 7 '4 17 11 6 4 0 0 Totals............200 19/47 23/31 40 13 18 Halftime score: Purdue35, MICHIGAN 29 Attendance: 13,610 61 4 AP Photo 4 Ohio State's Tony Campbell tries to pass around Iowa's Steve Carfino as Iowa center Brad Lohaus looks on in the first half of last night's game in Colum- bus. Totals..............200 23/60 11/18 34 10 24 57 Spartans lose sixth straight, 46-40 R. K. Nexus K.M.S. ARCADE BARBERS Daily 9-5 Evening Appointments Available CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Quinn Richardson hit three clutch field goals in the second half last night to help No. 9 Illinois to a 46-40 victory over Michigan State and retain its share of fir- st place in the Big Ten. Illinois remained tied with Purdue for the conference lead. Both teams are 5-1 in the Big Ten. The Illini are 14-2 overall.' Michigan State dropped its sixth straight game. The Spar- tans are 1-6 and 7-9. RICHARDSON, WHO finished with nine points, hit baskets while the Illini were in the throes of a 4-for-20 second half shooting slump. Illinois took an early 12-6 lead while the Spartans were mired in a shooting slump, hitting only three of their first 12 shots. But Illini center George Montgomery picked up his second foul with 10:04 to go and sat out the rest of the half. With Mon- tgomery on the bench, the Illinois offense began to sputter and Michigan State clawed to an 18-18 tie with 1:18 to go in the half. Ohio State 65, Iowa 54 COLUMBUS (AP) - Tony Campbell hit all 15 of his shots, seven of them from the field, to lead Ohio State to a 65-54 Big Ten basketball victory over Iowa last night. The 6-7 senior forward scored 22 points, his 50th straight game in double figures, in helping the Buckeyes post their third straight league victory for a 3-3 Big Ten record. Ohio State is 10-6 for all games. IOWA, LED BY Greg Stokes' 15 points, fell'to 2-4 in the league and 9-7 overall. Campbell hit all six of his floor shots and two free throws in the first half, pacing Ohio State into a 28-25 halftime lead. Iowa led briefly in the early moments of the second half before a basket by Dave Jones gave the Buckeyes the lead for good at 46-44 with 7:08 to play. Once Ohio State built a 48-45 lead, the Buckeyes went to a control game and forced the Hawkeyes to foul. Big Ten Standings Illinois ....... Purdue ...... Indiana ...... MICHIGAN.. Ohio State.... Iowa ....... Minnesota .... Wisconsin .... Northwestern, Michigan State Conf. Overall WL W L ......... 51 14 2 51 12 4 S42 11 5 ...... 43 12 5 ...... 33 10 6 .24 9 7 ......... 3 4 11 5. ......... 3 4 7 9 ......... 2 4 9 7 . 16 7 9 Soutswims Spartan rivals 4 No. 6 Nickels Arcade 665-7894 Special Discount Offer to U of M Students, Staff and Faculty Only ...M save 40% to 45%nwd i i i inn the new des.ktt SCORES College Basketball Indian a 57, Northwestern 44 Illinois 46, Michigan State 40 Ohio State 65. Iowa 54 Georgia Tech 59, Clemson 52 ?' oT By PAULA SCHIPPER Cranked-up with cheers, balloons, and banners, Michigan State may have beat Michigan in loud enthusiasm but they just couldn't pull the score out of the water. In last night's dual women's swim meet, the Wolverines nabbed their last dual home meet 77-63. ALTHOUGH MSU WAS rested two days for the event and only trailed Michigan by four points at the halfway mark, illness had already taken its toll on the Spartans. Michigan State's key performers, diver Tracy Malarik and freestyler Wendy Ingraham, had both only recently recovered from mononucleosis, and freestyler Mary Beth Carmichael had a bad cold. Nevertheless, they all grabbed top honors for MSU. Malar;ik took the 3- meter diving event and Carmichael won the 500-freestyle. Clearly, Ingraham was the Spartan powerhouse with wins in the 50- and 100-yard free. Yet she was upset with her loss in the 200-yard freestyle to Michigan senior Sue Cahill. "I was really disappointed," said Ingraham. "I heard a lot about her (Cahill) and I just tried to hang on." IN WHAT WAS the closest match-up4 of the night, Cahill lagged behind Ingraham until the very last length. "I don't go out fast but I always finish much faster," said Cahill who was rewarded by her best time of the season by over two seconds. Other fast times for the Wolverines included Cahill's firsts in the 400-yard individual medley and 200-yard breast. Lisa Lunsford snapped up the 200 and 100 fly, Kay Lundy got the 1000 free, Jane Esselstyn was first for the 100 back, and Cecilia Sheehan took the 200- yard back. IN ADDITION TO the win, the spirit- filled meet was especially emotional because Cahill and senior Andrea Wolf have swam their final home meet for the Wolverines. "It's so sad to see them go," said freshman Esselstyn. "We all go out together and they just joke around. We've gotten to know everything about them. "A.J. (Wolf) is like the Jane Fonda of- the team - she gets us all in shape. Sue, she's engaged, but she's just a little silly girl like the rest of us." o its ZEN ITH = Z-100 COMPUTER $850 worth of software IL-lneit ONi,..n. POO . 10Real Take advantage of this incredible offer with every computer purchased is made possible by a special agree- ment between Zenith Data Systems and the University!Own the sore e powerful Zenith Z-100 Desktop ____ Computer at a mere fraction of regular price. 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