Men's Tennis vs. Kalamazoo Wednesday, 2 p.m. Track and Tennis Building SPORTS Women's Basketball vs. Illinois Friday, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena The Michigan Daily Tuesday, February 12, 1991 Page 9 Phil Green No. 2 OSU stuffs Blue, 81- *Buckeyes smother 'M' offense, regain tie for first place 65 . , ., . Columbus flooded with ted sea of hoops success COLUMBUS - It may be a down year in the Big Ten, but at Ohio State, spirits are flying high. :The Buckeyes moved into the No.2 ranking in the national polls yes- ferday, and if their performance against Michigan is any indication, they belong there. Television announcer Dick Vitale justifiably accused Ohio State of playing a cupcake non-conference schedule. Georgetown, whom Ohio State handily defeated, 71-60, represented the only ranked opponent the *ckeyes faced. Regardless of their pastry-like schedule, the Buckeyes are awesome. This team is stocked at every position and can do it all. After an impres- sive 93-85 victory over Indiana in Bloomington three weeks ago, and last night's 81-65 thrashing of Michigan, the Buckeyes proved their lofty skills in front of Dicky V and a national television audience. ?While the half-time score was relatively close, 36-29, Ohio State stood firmly in command. The Buckeye press frustrated the Wolverines into 13 first-half turnovers, frequently resulting in easy transition baskets. You see, Michigan wasn't playing Iowa any more - this was the big "We were handling similar kinds if situations on Saturday," Michi- gan coach Steve Fisher said. "We had all kinds of problems today. We tried to dribble it too much for one thing, especially Demetrius (Calip) early." If Michigan managed to break the press, tight Buckeye man-to-man defense took the Wolverines out of their half-court offense. One-on-one moves by Michigan's guards or the occasional three-point bomb ac- counted for most of the Wolverines' scoring. Ohio State proved that its physical play would be too much for the Wolverines to handle. The Buckeyes combined a ferocious inside scor- ig attack with their transition buckets to pick apart the Michigan de- ense and draw three first-half fouls on Eric Riley - setting the stage for a buckeye offensive explosion in the second half. Forwards Treg Lee and Perry Carter exploded for some mammoth dunks, and sixth player Chris Jent exploited holes in Michigan's perime- ter defense by burying a plethora of jumpers. The scariest thing for Michigan was that the Buckeyes' leading scorer, sophomore sensation Jim Jackson, had barely broken double fig- ures, and yet the Wolverines trailed by ten. Like in Ann Arbor, Jackson remained relatively quiet for three-fourths of the game. But he quickly exploded for a myriad of points to open the Mio State lead to nearly 20 points. The only thing to slow down the Buckeye attack was a rambunctious fan sprinting across the floor to obtain some television glory. But Ohio State quickly tallied another basket once play resumed. .Things should remain sky-high next year in Columbus. To the Big Teh's delight, Carter and Lee will finally head to the pros, but the rest by Theodore Cox Daily Basketball Writer COLUMBUS - Would possible, just maybe, mediocre Michigan could second-ranked Ohio State? No. it be that beat The Buckeyes (10-1 in the Big Ten, 20-1 overall) proved they de- served their national ranking be- fore 13,276 fans at St. John Arena last night, easily disposing of the Wolverines (4-7, 11-10), 81-65. The Buckeyes strengths, height and quickness, seemed to over- whelm Michigan all game. "I'm sore, I'm real sore after this one," Michigan forward Fred- die Hunter said. "They're big and strong. It was rough down there try- ing to get low and get position." On the opening Buckeye pos- session, Ohio State's Treg Lee tried to post up on Hunter. Even though Hunter had to give up a few inches and some pounds to Lee, he got the better of the Buckeye for- ward. The senior lost control of the ball, and Michigan gained posses- sion. Hunter's scrappy defense kept Michigan close most of the first half, as he blocked two shots within the first 3 minutes of the game to give the Wolverines an early 7-2 lead. "I was a little keyed with all the hype of the game," Hunter said. "It's a lot easier to get blocks when you're helping out on some- one else's man. They assume they've gotten by their man and I just come in and pick up the change." Michigan's biggest problem was hanging onto the ball on the offensive end. Not only did the Wolverines struggle getting the ball by Ohio State's full-court press, but they couldn't control theirspasses once they did get be- yond halfcourt either; the team had 13 first-half turnovers. "They did a good job of running behind us and knocking the ball away," Michigan guard Demetrius Calip said. "They caused us to look both ways with their pressure defense." The Buckeyes were able to convert on the Michigan mistakes to build a 20-11 lead. The teams then traded outside buckets for awhile before Calip made a spec- tacular double-pump jumper from 18 feet to end the half with Ohio State up by seven, 36-29. The Buckeyes opened the sec- ond half almost as slowly as they did the first. Michigan guard Michael Talley nailed two quick jumpers to pull Michigan within five points. But Ohio State coach Randy Ayers had the advantage of bringing in one of the best sixth men in the country, forward Chris Jent. "The thing we said coming out of the lockerroom was, 'if we didn't start out well, we'd put in Jent to stir some things up,"' Ayers said. "And lucky for us, he was able to get his stroke down." The 6-foot-7 junior scored quickly to build Ohio State's lead up to 14 points. "He was the big difference," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "Chris lent does for them what we hope Freddie Hunter does for us. He provides inspiration and those kinds of things that you just don't look at when you read how many points he scored." With 9:51 left in the game, Michigan center Eric Riley be- came a spectator as he picked up his fifth foul. At that point, the game was in the bag for the Buck eyes. Michigan continued turning over the ball. Talley was the first offender; the sophomore handed over the ball 11 times before he fouled out with 5 minutes left. "They were constantly pressing us to a point where you can never relax," Talley said. of the sensational squad will be back. Last Night's Boxscore "MICHIGAN (65) Hunter 1-2 1-2 3, Voskuil 3-6 1-3 9, Riley 0-4 4-4 4, Calip 5-13 2-3 14, Talley 9-13 0- 21, Taylor 0-2 0-0 0, Pelinka 2-3 1-2 6, Mitchell 4-8 0-0 8, McIver 0-0 0-0 0, Seter 0-0 0-0 0, Bossard 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 24-52 9-14 65. OHIO STATE (81) Jackson 8-14 5-6 21, Lee 6-8 1-2 13, Carter 4-8 34 11, Baker 5-9 4-6 14, Brown 1=6 0-02, Jent 5-11 2-2 14, Skelton 1-1 0-0 2, Robinson 1-2 0-0 2, Brandewie 0-0 0-0 0,Davis 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 32-62 15-20 81. lHalftime-Ohio St. 36, Michigan 29. 3- point goals-Michigan 8-16 (Talley 3-4, Vdskuil 2-4, Calip 2-5, Pelinka 1-1, Taylor 0-1, Bossard 0-1), Ohio St. 2-5 (Jent 2-3, Jackson 0-1, Brown 0-1). Fouled out- Riley, Talley. Rebounds-Michigan 26 (Voskuil 8), Ohio St. 36 (Carter 12). Assists-Michigan 12 (Calip 6), Ohio St. 21 (Jackson 6). Total fouls-Michigan 17, 'Ohio St. 18. :[,.13,276. ASSOCIATED PRESS TOP 25 TEAM REC. PTS LAST 1. UNLV (63) 20-0 1,575 1 2. Ohio State 20-1 1,472 3 3. Arkansas 23-2 1,443 2 4. Indiana 22-2 1,412 4 5. Duke 21-4 1,301 6. 6. Arizona 19-4 1,213 5 7. Syracuse 20.3 1,202 7 8. North Caolina 17-4 1,143 9 9. Southern Miss 18-2 1,018 12 10. E. Tenn. St. 21-3 953 13 11. Kansas 17-4 831 18 12. N. Mex. St. 17-2 764 16 13. St. John's - 16.5 747 8 14. Utah 22-2 746 17 15. UCLA 17-6 726 14 16. Kentucky 17-5 698 10 17. Nebraska 19-4 611 15 18. Georgetown 15-7 497 2 19. virginia 17-7 370 11 20. LSU 15-7 290 19 21. Okla. St. 16-5 274 22 22. Pittsburgh 17-7 240 X 23. Miss. St. 15-6 179 - 24. Texas 16-5 176 - 25. Princeton 16-2 117 - JOS JUAvEZUaNyi Wolverine forward James Voskuil lets a shot fly in Michigan's loss to OSU in January. Last night, Michigan lost to the No. 2 Buckeyes, 81-65. GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MONTANA Come have the best summer of your life! Enjoy the invigorating, challenging experience living in the awesome Rocky Mountains brings. St. Mary Lodge & Resort, Glacier Parks best, now hiring for the 1991 summer season. Come see us on campus at the Career & Placement Services February 14th and 15th. Schedule an interview through your Career & Placement Services now, or call 1-800-368-3689. Don't pass up the opportunity of a life time! ADVERTISEMENT Memory Course helps students boost grades PRIZES! come in costume, come as you are! 996919 FREE .ae 99 MASKS 33 & BEADS (Hey, Mister! Throw me something!) Allons a la Louisiane! (c'est Mardi Gras, cher!) A Fat Tuesday Party at Ashley's! TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12 7:00 P.M. - 1:00 A.M. - Bacchus Punch! - Raw Bar, Oysters, Shrimp, Crawfish! - Cajun Beer Specials! " LIVE JAZZ! Johnny Lawrence Quartet with special guest Morris Lawrence! Chase the blues! Laissez le bon temps rouler at Ashley's Fat Tuesday Party! JOSTENS GOLD RING SALE IS COMING! FOR THE BEST: Crew Cuts-Flat Tops Princetons-Military THE DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State 668-9329 -50 years of service- The National ALPHA CHI RHO FRATERNITY is Reactivating the University of Michigan Chapter By Anthony Rao Former University of Houston foot- ball coach Jack Pardee said it best: "This course was so helpful to several of my players, I made the whole football team take the course." Pardee read about a memory seminar held by noted memory expert and teacher Alvin Jackson and sent three players who needed to pass some important tests in order to stay in school. Uncertain that anyone can be taught photographic mem- ory, Pardee sent athletic department aca- demic advisor Dr. Jim Berlow as an ob- server. In one three hour session Mr. Jackson took three college freshmen, whose grades were so poor they were not allowed to practice football, and transformed them into students who can perform studying and recall tasks better than the brightest students on campus. Since Dr. Berlow took part in the class, he admits his recall and memory increased six-fold. He wished Jackson's course was available when he studied for his doctorate. To test the athletes' increased mem- ory skills, Jackson asked the trio to memorize this number, 91852719521639092112, well enough to recall it in 13 weeks. It took them an average of 2 minutes. This reporter at- tended the same seminar and witnessed them master German, Pharmacy, Anat- omv names and faces, and Microbiologi- perfect G.P.A.s who wish to cut their study time in half while maintaining high grades," Jackson said. "85% of our education is memoriza- tion, therestis application andlogic. I will show you how to read your textbooks, his- tory, anatomy, economics, pharmacy and business ONCE, and know it so well you will be able to recall it by page number or tuition is free," Jackson added. "I know 321 memory techniques and teach my students the one that fits them best, including card counting. Right now students use the "Rote" memory tech- nique. Under "Rote" students are told to go over and over what they wish to leam. As far as I am concerned, "Rote" is tech- nique number 321, and I have 320 better techniques. What student has that much time to repeat information enough times to maintain top grades? A student has noth- ing to lose by taking my course. I.will teach them techniques to read it once and know it by paragraph and page number, or the class is free, absolutely," says Jackson confidently. Jackson will be at The University of Michigan on Thursday, Feb.14 in Room D of the Michigan League for two sessions. Section 1 begins at 1:00 pm. Section 2 begins at 6:00 pm. The tuition for the 3 1/2 hour session is $55.00, all materials including work- book are-provided. Students are asked to bring the textbooks they would like to memorize to class. Jackson's class comes with a strong If you strive for excellence in: -Scholarship Order your college ring NOW Stop by and see a Jostens representative Wednesday, Feb. 13 thru Friday, Feb. 15, rj I