SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1968 THE MICHIGAN a _t cr x SUNaAY, FEBR1ARY 4,1968 Al i s ! .!J J PAU.zs~L EEN i Tankers Pounce on Minnesota) Icers Hold Off Duluth, 7-4; Move Past NoDaks into Third Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. - "We juggled the lineup and let the guys swim where they wanted" said diving Coach Dick Kimball after the Wolverine swimmers pum- meled Minnesota 7812 to 43%/2 last night in the Gophers' pool. Kimball was explaining why the Wolverines had so many men out of position against the unusually weak Minnesota team. And the final results showed he wasn't exaggerating. After Michigan lost the opening 400- yard medley relay, using assorted Quarry Wins OAKLAND(R)'- Jerry Quarry, who has been fighting as a pro- fessional less than three years, moved one step away from the world heavyweight boxing cham- pionship when he stopped Thad, Spencer in the 12th and last round yesterday in their semifinal match of the World Boxing Association elimination tournament. The 22-Year-old Irishman from Los Angeles was pummelling Spencer around the ring with a two-handed barrage when referee Jack Downey stopped the fight with three seconds remaining. Quarry floored Spencer, who had entered 'the ring as a 7-5 fa- vorite, in the fourth and 10th rounds. people, Tom Arusoo, the standout butterflyer, finished second in the 100-free behind Mike O'Connor. Then Bruce McManaman and1 Peter Emond swept the diving. The only trouble was, Jay Meaden whoI dove exhibitic,- for practice, actu- ally had the highest score. Juan Bello, the individual med- ley specialist, won the 200-yard1 freestyle in 1:45.5, setting a pool record. According to Kimball, "it1 was the best time in the nation' we've seen this year." It was also the first time Bello swam the event this year. Back- stroker Tom Mertz took third. After the 50-free and individual medley, swum by the normal par- ticipants (Ken Wiebeck and Gary Kinkead won), the three meter diving began. This time Meaden won with Emond third. But Mc- Manaman, swimming exhibition, actually had the high score. 'the Whole Thing The whole thing sounds even more ridiculous when you remem- ber that Captain Fred Brown, by far the outstanding diver for Michigan this year, stayed in Ma- dison, Wisconsin, the sight of the previous day's meet to take grad- uate b u si n e s s administration boards.z In the 200-yard butterfly, Kink- ead, who specializes in almost: everything except butterfly, won1 the event. He was Michigan's only entry.I The next interesting event found Lee Bisbee, normally Arusoo's sidekick in the butterfly, finishing behind O'Connor in the 500-yard freestyle. After John Robertson and Jay Mahler swept the breaststroke, the Wolverines stopped kidding around, finally, in the last event, the 400-yard freestyle. With Bello, Wiebeck, John Salassa, and BobI Kircher, the Wolverines had their best time of the season, a 3:16.5.j 400-yd. MEDLEY RELAY -1.I. Minnesota (Knight, Walker, Hans- sen, Lundburg) 2. Michigan. Time - 3:41.8. 1000-yd VREESTYLE - 1. 0- Connor (M); 2. Arusoo (M); 3. Swanson (Minn). Time -- 10:40.3. ONE-METER DIVING - 1. Mc- Manaman 4M); 2. Emond (M); 3. Madura (Minn). Points - 269.85. 200-yd. FREESTYLE - 1. Bello (M); 2. Doten (Minn); 3. Mertz (M) Time-1 :45.5 (pool record). 50-yd. FREESTYLE - 1. Wiebeck (M); Knight (Minn); 3. Leattgen (MI). Time--0:22.6. 200-yd. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY- 1. Kinhaead (M1); 2. Hannsen (Minn); 3. Bello (M). Time-2:04.1 Meaden (M); 2. Madura (Minn); 3. Emond (M). Points-285.8. 200-yd. BUTTERFLY - 1. Kin- kead (M); 2. Struve (Minn). Time -2:01.7. 100-yd. FREESTYLE - 1. Doten (Minn); 2. tie, Kircher (M) and Lunberg (Minn). Time-:49.1. 200-yd. BACKSTROKE - 1. Knight (Min); 82. Dorney (MI); 3. Mertz (M). Time-2:03.9. 500-yd. FREESTYLE - 1. O'- Connor (I); 2. Bisbee (M); 3. Swan- son (Minn). Time--5:03.0. 200-yd. BREASTSTROKE - 1. Robertson (M); 2. Mahler (M); 3. Walker (lIvlnn). Time-2:22.5. 400-yd. FREESTYLE RELAY - I1. Michigan (Bello, Wiebeck, Salassa, .. / s.. ; Kircher); 2. Minnesota. Time - 3:16.5. NEW BIG TEN LEADER: oSU ,Sorenson Bomb DULUTH, Minn. - Michigan's hockey team jumped to an early I lead, then hung on to defeat high- spirited Duluth last night, 7-5., The victory moved the Wolverines1 into third place in the WCHAi standings.t First period goals by forwardsI Dave Perrin, Doug Galbraith, andc Lee Marttila shot Michigan to anI early 3-0 lead. The Perrin andt Galbraith goals came but 19 sec- onds apart at the four-minute mark of the period. The second frame opened with JUAN BELLO, Michigan indi. a score by Bulldog Bruce McLeod vidual medley star, swam the on a power play. This was closely 200-yard freestyle for the first followed by Michigan's fourth goal time this year last night and' of the contest, scored by Ron set a pool record. Ullyot. - --Duluth's David Farrow tempora- rily pulled the host team within two again on a marker with 3:37 remaining in the period, but a pair! of goals by Wolverine junior Ran- dy Binnie just 201 seconds apart B ad g ers ________ o B a gers shot the score to 6-2 by the buzzer. Duluth dominated the final per- defending Big Ten scoring cham-_ pion, snapped out of his personal lump and fired Minnesota to an WCHA Standings 82-75 victory over Indiana yester- he Gophers' first conference win L T Pt. of the season after five losses. Michigan Tech 9 2 0 .818 Minnesota, leading by 16 points, Denever 9 3 0 .750 7-51, midway through the second MICHIGAN 7 3 0 .700 half had to stave off an Indiana North Dakota 9 4 1 .679 'ali h tofstavefoff anuIndianajMinnesota 10 6 0 .625 gael th e final four i tes o Colorado 3 10 0 ,231 Michigan State 2 9 1 .208 The Gophers, with Kondla pour- Duluth 3 15 0 .167 ng 31 points, led 76-64 with four LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS minutes left. Then Joe Cooks led MICHIGAN 7, Duluth 5 one-man charge which brought Michigan Tech 6, Mich. State 2: he Hoosiers back into contention. Minnesota 3, North Dakota 0 Its Monotonous Same Results iod of play, blasting 19 shots at! Michigan goalie Jim Keough. The Wolverine netminder managed to stop all but three of the shots. however, and Galbraith added an insurance goal to bring the final tally to 7-5. League leader Michigan Tech in- creased its margin to .668 over idle Denver with an easy 6-2 victory over Michigan State in the other WCHA game last night. FIRST PERIOD: Mich-Perrin (Pashak, Lord) 4:20; Mich-Gal- " 4raith (Gross) 4:39; Mich--Mart- tila (Hansen, Pashak) 13:27. Pen- alties: Mich-Ulyot (interference) 7:06; Duluth-Hegg (interference) 15:14; Duluth-Newell (holding) 19:38; - - -- --- - - ---------------- Monday Noon Discussion Series THE THIRD WORLD BUFFET LUNCH 25c -i. SECOND PERIOD: Scoring: Duluth -McLeod (Newell) 5:11;5tich- Ullyot (10mm) 7:21; Duluth-Far- row (Tok. Thompson) 16:33; Mich- Binnie (Koviak, Ullyot) 16:46; Mich -Binnie (unassisted) 17:06. Pen- alties: Mich--Dommn (holding) 5:02, Duluth-Newell (elbowing) 5:43; Mich-Lord (hi-sticking 8:37; Mich -Hartman (interterence) 20:00. THIRD PERIOD: Scoring: Duluth -Wheele (unassisted) 5:52; Mich -Galbraith (Hartman) 12:43; Du- hith--McLeod (Ahrans) 13:26, Du- uth-Hegg (1McLeod, Wheele) 13:36. Penalties: Mich-Hansen (cross- checking) 8:09; Mich--Pashak (in- terference) 19:35; Duluth-Hegg (cross-checking) 20:00. MICHIGAN (Keough) 11 13 16 40 DULUTH (Le Blanc) 9 5 7 21 MICHIGAN JJULU I'II 3 3 1-7 0 2 3--- Thinclads Monopolize-; Seven Yost Records Fall By PHIL BROWN turned in excellent half-mile per- New records in seven events formances. and fine performances by Mich- Jim Dolan, who set a varsity igan's middle distance and field record for the two-mile run in events men highlighted the Mich- the Western Relays last weekend, igan Federation Relays held last easily captured first place in the night in Yost Field House. event last night. His clocking of - Victories in the distance med- 9:04.6 on the slow Yost dirt track ley relay, mile relay, two-mile re- was just 4 seconds slower than lay, and mile run, as well as wins his record. in the shot put and high jump, A special surprise was Bob sparked the Wolverines' team ef- Thomas' win in the shot put, ex- fort. Both the high jump and pected to be a weak spot for the distance medley' relay victories Wolverines this spring. Thomas set new Field House records. recorded a 51'2" heave to edge Junior . G a r y Knickerbocker Ernst Soudek of the Ann Arbor cleared 6'10" to match Bob Den- Track Club by a quarter inch. sham's 1964 mark. Knickerbock- Still Second er's effort . was backed up by A second place finish in the teammate Rich Hunt's 6-8" leap, long jump and a third in the pole good for third place. vault rounded out Wolverine per- Sensational formances in the field events. Tom Trumble, Taimo Leps, Ira Russell's runner-up position, Tom Kearney, and Ron Kuts- with a 23'82"' leap was his sec- chinski teamed up for the dis- ond in as many weeks. Teammate tarice medley relay win that sent Bob Wedge slipped to a fifth place officials rummaging through the lafter taking, fourth at Western t~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~~~~ ".__ _L_ 2_--1 l....C..~;.]w....Z1}7 V G ? YS C f r k G C , F t t f E e e COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State, powered sophomore Dave So- renson's shooting and rebounding, swept past Wisconsin 86-64 last night and vaulted into first place1 in the Big Ten basketball race., The Buckeyes, whipping the Badgers for the eight straight time, boosted their league record to 4-1 and their seasonal mark to 11-4. Wisconsin fell to a 3-2 con- 'erence record and 9-6 on the season. Sorenson led all scorers with 23 points, 19 coming in a first half} display of deadly shooting. The 6- foot-7 rookie also hauled in 18j rebounds giving the Bucks a de- ,ided advantage off the boards. Ohio, hitting its first three bas- kets of the game, rolled to a 31-17 advantage midway in the first half before the Badgers whittled away at the lead and trailed only 41-33 at intermission. Purdue Scores LAFAYETTE, Ind.-Sophomore Rick Mount scored 30 points to top three other Purdue scorers in double figures last night as the Boilermakers knocked Northwest- ern out of the Big Ten basketball lead with a 98-89 triumph. It was the most points Purdue ever scored against the Wildcats, who were left with a 4-2 confer- ence record as Purdue climbed to 3-2. * *e ** Illinois Slips by CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Illinois stayed in hot contention of the Big Ten basketball title race last night by grabbing the lead in the last 6%r/2 minutes and keeping it to down Iowa 66-63. Until that turning point, the game had been tied 13 times and the lead had changed as many. The victory gave the Illini a 3-1 conference mark and left the Hawkeyes with 3-2. Minnesota Wins MINNEAPOLIS - Tom Kondla, SCORES NBA Boston 112, New York 108 St. Louis 125, Cincinnati 111 Philadelphia 133, Baltimore 121 NHL Detroit 8, Minnesota 1 Montreal 5, Los Angeles 1 New York 3, Boston 3, tie Pittsburgh 3, Toronto 3, tie Philadelphia 5, Chicago 3 St. Louis 4, Oakland 1 College Basketball UCLA 101, Southern Calif. 67 Louisville 81, Cincinnati 65 Kentucky 109, LSU 96 Florida 91, Vanderbilt 85 Tennessee 88, Mississippi 46 S. Carolina 80, Wake Forest 76 Columbia 9, Princeton 60 Slippery Rtock 74, Lock Haven 67 i f V, 3 t w 1 t t i E k f i J 1 i t Io i 6' r a ti The Wildcats' Jim Sarno and d Mount traded baskets at the out-p ;-t, but Purdue's Jerry Johnso sl broke the tie at 4-2 and Purdue 8 was never caught. t 11 January 29th: Professor Eric Wolf-"Peasant Movements in Latin America" THIS WEEK MONDAY February 5th: Prof. Rhoades Murphey-"National Liberation Move- ments and Counterinsurgency: Southeast Asia" February 12th: Prof. Henry Bretton-"Political Thought in West and South Africa" February 19th: Ispeaker to be announced) "Economics and Ideology in the Third World" February 26th: (speaker to be announced) "The Chinese Model and the Third World" March 4th: Naunit Kothary-"Expectations and Frustrations: Demo- cracy and Cold War Impositions in India" March 11th: Prof. Tom Mayer, "The American Dilemma: the Third World Within" March 18th: Prof. Vernon Terpstra, School of Business--"U.S. Busi- ness interests in the Third World" March 25th: Summary Discussion GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe MICHIGAN MIUH1rIG TA G Tomjanovich f 6-' Stewart 1 8-1 Fraumann c 1-5 Pitts g 5-1 Maxey g 2- Sulinvan r 3-8 Henry g 1-1 Totals 2-69 Crowd--12,2UZ MICHIGAN MICHIGAN STATE 7 9 4 -5 FT P T 5-7 1 17 2-4 3 18 1-2 0 3 10-14 5 20 3-4 5 7 4-4 2 10 0-0 1 2 25-35 18 77 Gibbons f CGopeland f LaFayette c Bailey g Stepter g Rymal g Edwards f Ward g Johnson g Gale f Geistler c 3-10 6-15 9-14 4-13 8-16 0-2 3-6 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 2-2 4-5 3-5 3-4 4-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 0 0 1 8 16 21 11 20 0 6 0 0 0 0 I _ T 39 38-77 39 43-82 Totals 33-78 16-21 24 82 I Gilbert and Sullivan Society MASSME ET ING Mikado Touring Company SUNDAY, FEB. 4-6:45 P.M. 3rd Floor Union ----- record books. Their time of 10:08.3. knocked., 2.7 seconds off the clocking recorded by Mich- igan's unit last season. Kutschinski turned the final quarter-mile in a sensational 53 seconds flat, after running a full mile. He returned to anchor Michigan's mile relay entry, tir- ing in the last 100 yards as the Wolverines finished second to Michigan State's record timing of 3:18.4. Michigan coach Don Canham was very happy with the power shown by Michigan's middle dis- tance runners. "This is a new bunch we're using in the two-mile relay," he pointed out. "Our best men are in the distance medley, and we still could win the two- mile." Good Enough to Win His charges did just that, com- pletely overwhelming all other quartets to win in 7:40.4. Steve Jaros and Ken Coffin took over the spots normally occupied by Kutschinski and Kearney, and Ron Shortt cleared 15'0 for third in the pole vault. But the' highlight of the' vaulting compe- tition was a 16'0" effort by Mich- igan State's Roland Carter, an- other meet mark. The meet served as a first warmup for the important Mich- igan State Relays which come up next Saturday. MSU's Relays are traditionally one of the best meets in the midwest prior to the NCAA championships in March. STAMP IT!1 IT'S THE RAGE NE REGULAR cY s MODEL ANY$ 3 LINE TEXT The finest INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL ,POCKET RUBBER STAMP. i/" x 2". Send check or money order. Be sure to include your Zip Code. No postage or handling charges. Add sales tax. Prompt shipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed THE MOPP CO. P. 0. Box 18623 Lenox Square Station i ATLANTA, GA., 30326 'A MUSKET' PRESENTS Ckariy "I can show you a good time" opens Feb. 14 TICKETS Open Sales: Feb. 5 rerformances: Date: Feb. 14-17 I 0 I ,I Thompson's Pizza: I' I+ THIS COUPON GOOD FOR . 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