4 Page 10- The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 17, 1986 PURDUE TIES 'M'AT4-1 Illinois tops Wildcats by 19 CHAMPAIGN, Ill (AP) - Illinois guard Glynn Blackwell scored 18 points yesterday to lead the Fighting Illini to a 73-54 win over Wisconsin. and snap the Illini's three-game Big Ten losing streak. The win improved Illinois' record to 11-5 overall and 2-3 in the conference. Wisconsin fell to 9-5 overall and 1-3 in the Big Ten. Anthony Welch and Bruce Douglas contributed 13 and 10 points respec- tively to the Illinois effort. Wisconsin was led by Mike Heinemen and Rick Olson, who each scored 12 points. Illinois took a quick lead on an Efrem Winters jump shop when the game was just seconds old and trailed only once at 6-5 in the game's opening minutes. They quickly regained the lead on a Welch basket and built a 33- 22 halftime lead on good long-range shooting. The only scare in the game came early when a midcourt collision for- ced Blackwell to the bench with an apparent knee injury. But the sophomore guard, filling on for in- jured starter Tony Wysinger, retur- ned to the game minutes later with a knee brace and continued his hot shooting, finishing 9 for 11. Wisconsin made a run at Illinois early in the second half, cutting the Illini lead to 39-34 on a 12-4 scoring burst. But two straight baskets by Douglas and a three point play by welch built Illinois' lead back to ten and the Illini coasted from there. Illinois plays tomorrow at home against Northwestern, and Wisconsin travels to Purdue on Sunday. Purdue 85, N'western 64 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - Sophomore forward Todd Mitchell had 11 second-half points, including six as Purdue reeled off 14 unan- swered points to start the second half, to pace the No. 19 Boilermakers to a 85-64 victory over Northwestern in Big Ten Conference basketball action yesterday. Purdue, now 4-1 in conference play and 15-3 overall, went into the inter- mission with a 35-30 lead before its run in the first 3% minutes of the second half gave it a 19-point cushion, 49-30. The Boilermakers reached their biggest lead of 25 points several times in the second half, the last being 79-54 with four minutes left to play. Mitchell and sophomore guard Troy Lewis each had 19 points for Purdue. Mack Gadis and Melvin McCants ad- ded 10 apiece. Mitchell ..19 points leads Purdue The Wildcats' sophomore center, Shon Morris, had a game-high 20 points. Northwestern saw its record drop to 0-4 in league play and 6-8 overall. Hawks 116, Cavs 99 ATLANTA (AP) - Dominique Wilkins scored 26 points to lead six Atlanta players in double figures as the Hawks pounded the Cleaveland Cavaliers 116-99 last night in a National Basketball Association game. Atlanta moved from a 30-22 first period lead to a 71-45 halftime edge on the shooting of Wilkins and Randy Wittman, who added 18 points for the Hawks, winners for the seventh time in eight games. Big Ten Standings Conf. Overall W-L W-L QUANTUM SEDAN $0 DOWN Stock No. 184-5 "Based on 60 mo. tease plus first, plus sec. -~Dealer preparation, freight options, tax & license. MAZDA 626 LUXURY SPORT SEDAN MICHIGAN ........ Purdue........... Iowa ............ Indiana.......... Ohio State ......... Michigan State ..... Illinois .......... Minnesota........ Wisconsin........ Northwestern...... 4-1 4-1 3-1 3-2 3-2 2-3 2-3 1-3 1-3 0-4 16-1 15-3 13-4 11-4 9-5 11-4 11-5 11-6 9-5 6-8 Upsetting Associated Press we MINNESOTA MinFG/T FT/A MICHIGAN MinFG/A FT/A $0 DOWN Stock No. 1313-5 **Based on 48 mo. lease, plus first, plus sec. *Dealer preparation, freight. options, tax 8 license. Shasky...........39 Wilson.........40 Kevin Smith..... 37 Williams ........ 39 Alexander......37 Woods..........3 Hanson .......... 5 Team Rebounds Totals .......... 200 4/10 8/9 2/9 5/6 7/10 1/1 0/1 4/4 8/9 5/6 0/0 2/3 0/0 0/0 R 9 6 4 0 4 0 A 1 2 1 0 7 0 0 PF 4 2 1 2 3 0 0 Pts 12 24 9 10 16 2 0 Tarpley ......... 33 Grant ........... 32 Joubert ......... 34 Rellford ......... 25 Wade..........32 Henderson ...... 16 Thompson ....... 17 Rice ...........10 Butts..........1 Team Rebounds 4/12 9/16 6/15 4/6 2/11 0/2 2/6 1/6 0/0 0/0 1/2 0/0 2/2 2/2 2/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 2 R 12 5 2 6 8 3 0 3 0 A 0 2 2 0 0 0 r 0 0 PF Pts 3 8 4 19 2 12 1 10 3 6 1 2 3 4 1 2 0 0 Michigan's Butch Wade could not stop Minnesota forward George Williams nor the Gophers. The Wolverines were dealt their first loss, 76-63. Gophers ground Streak ends, 73=63, LIVONIA VW-MAZDA 34501 Plymouth Rd. 425-5400 OPEN SATURDAY ONLY 20 MINUTES FROM ANN ARBOR-JUST TAKE M-14 TO PLYMOUTH RD. * SUPER SPECIAL WINTER SAVINGS! 1* AT . *E * *ALL MEN'S AND WOMEN'S WINTER COATS 15 to 30% OFF * * ALL LEATHER INSULATED BOOTS BY TIMBERLAND, HERMAN SURVIVORS, WOLVERINE, SHEBOYGAN, * ROCKEY, ETC........... ....... .... . .20 to 50% OFF ~ALL SWEATERS.' .........^.2% OFF .ALL FLANNEL SHIRTS. .......20% OFF* RAY BAN SUNGLASSES 15% OFF *E OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES -X. MEN'S AND WOMEN'S LEE AND LEVI'S * 20% OFF OUR REG. PRICES * * ARY * SURPLUS * S201E. WASHINGTON OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK * 994-3572 * ***************** ** ** Become a Daily photographer - Get into concerts for free, Go backstage and meet the stars, Stand on the sidelines at U of M football games, Impress members of the opposite sex (or the same sex, if you prefer). tI- 27/46 19/22 28 7 12 73 First half scores: Minnesota 30, Michigan 26 Attendance: 13.618 Totals..........200 28/74 7/8 41 5 18 63 DRY CLEANING NOW AVAILABLE (drop off, pick up, and delivery) Special Offer: $5 off any of our bulk services CALL 996-0894 FOR MORE INFORMATION Sign up at 617 E. University, Suite 211, above Taco Boll expires April 15. 1986 (Continued from Page 1) Tarpley who slammed the ball home. Rellford followed with a layup to tie the game at 30. The following eight minutes were evenly fought and Min- nesota held a 44-43 advantage at a television timeout with 11:27 remaining. THEN THE roof fell in. Minnesota reeled off nine straight points, six of which belonged to Wilson, and never looked back. "I was just trying to get up and down the court," Wilson said. "That's my best game, transition." Each time Michigan made a charge, Minnesota answered with clutch buckets. "WHEN WE had to catch them, we didn't do the types of things we had to do to get over the hump," said Friedei. "We weren't playing well." The first half almost got away from the Wolverines. It began innocently enough, with neither team building a sizable lead in Michigan Daily SPORTS 763-0376 the early going. Michigan's halfcourt offense was erratic, but the Wolverines rebounding edge game them the garbage baskets they needed. MIDWAY through the half, however, the Gophers made a charge, turning a 14-12 Michigan advantage4 into a 24-14 Minnesota lead. The Gophers, who usually rely on Shasky's inside muscle for scoring, grabbed the lead with hot shooting from their guard, Todd Alexander. For its part, Michigan was unable to work the ball inside, and the Wolverines rebounding dominance of the opening minutes evaporated. THAT PLUS the Gophers shooting took the transition game away from Michigan and threatened to open up the game in favor of Minnesota. After a Michigan timeout, however, the Wolverines put together their own 10-point string. Alexander's touch finally dissolved and Michigan was able to do what it does best - run, run, run. The Wolverines tied the game at 24 on Grant's 12-foot jumper with 3:18 left in first half, but Michigan's offen- se was still out-of-synch, shooting only 36 percent for the period, and the4 Gophers tookra 30-26 lead into the locker room. 0~ Q COACH AND FOUR The HAIR STYLING & BARBER SHOP All " Convenient Location and Hours Sports " Reasonable Rates Shop " Personal and Distinctive Styling Appointments Open Tues.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 806 S. State St. Available Mon. & Wed. 8:30-8:00 Bet. Hill and Packard 668-8669 Saturdays 8:30.5:00 Engineering CAREER FAIR Drop In: Monday, January 20, 1986 North Campus Commons 10 - 4 p.m. AT & T Information Systems Arthur Andersen & Company Chrysler Corporation Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Research Institute of Michigan FMC Corporation Ford Motor Company Frito-Lay, Inc. GTE General Electric Lighting General Motors Honeywell, Inc. Lear Siegler, Inc. Libbey-Owens-Ford Company McDonnell Douglas Corporation Michigan Bell Standard Oil Company of Ohio The Timken Company PRESENTED BY TAU BETA PI AND SWE WORK WITH KIDS AT TAMARACK CAMPS THIS SUMMER BRIGHTON & ORTONVILLE, MICHIGAN Positions for cabin counselors . . . specialist counselor in arts & crafts, waterfront & small craft, campcraft-nature, sports, horseback riding, computers, performing arts . . . trip leaders . . . unit & specialist super- visors . . . nurses . . . secretaries. . . food service staff. . . maintenance & bus drivers. S00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000009' AEROSPACE ENGINEERING GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Major areas of graduate study and research (M.S. & Ph.D.): Aerodynamics Aeroelasticity Combustion Computational Fluid Dynamics Computer-Aided Design Controls, Flight Mechanics & Optimization Propulsion Structural Dynamics Structures - composites INDIVIDUAL TUITION & FEES ARE $1,564 PER CALENDAR YEAR. Total Financial Aid per calendar year: $13,000 plus tuition & fees Center of Excellence in Rotary Wing Aircraft Fellowships $15,000 Lockheed/Georgia Tech Research Assistantships $9,000I$13,500 Research Assistantships I a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0