THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday Fehnirv 22.1970 .. M ,...:....,..r,,.... . . - r -Ul LA uI y LL., I . 1 V .f dump By TERRI FOUCHEY and BILL ALTERMAN Led by Don Thompson's goals, the Michigan State tans whomped the Wolverine 7-1 before a packed house a Coliseum last night. By the end of the first p the Spartans had a 4-0 lead were never seriously threa afterwards. Thompson, who two of his goals in the first p commented after the game, " igan's defense was very wea our penalty-killers and goalk won it for us." Michigan's chief offensive1 lem seemed to be their pa Time and time again an e Wolverine pass would be p off by an alert Spartan. In three of the Spartans' goals t as passes stolen from the verines. The game started off with Hastings in goal for Mich However it soon became ev that he was not in top form Coach Al Renfrew substi Karl Bagnell in the second p Hastings gave up Thomp first goal with only 1:19 go: the game when he allowed Spartans' center's slap shot tc out of his glove. in the next few minutes added two more goals, each ife ess Michigan being a man short. State's second goal was scored by five Dave Roberts at 3:53 on a slap Spar- shot just inside the blue line. icers, When Paul Gamsby attempted t the to clear the puck from inside his own blue line, Mike DeMarco in- 3eriod tercepted the pass and gave to d and Pat Russo who scored the third tened goal on a shot from the blue line got which went over Hastings' left eriod, shoulder. Mich- Tovward the end of the period k but Thompson scored his second goal :eeper when the Spartans again took advantage of the Wolverines' in- prob- ability to clear the puck. Bob Pat- ssing. tullo picked the puck up in the rrant corner and passed to Bill Fifield icked who took a shot which Thompson, fact standing in front of the goal push- began ed in on the rebound. This put the Wol- Spartans ahead 4-0 and as Ren- frew later admitted, "When they Doug get the jump on you like that, iigan. catching up is really tough." ident and Michigan's defense with the ad- tuted dition of Bagnell improved some- eriod. what in the second period as they Icers only allowed one goal (Thompson's third). However their offense continued to sputter. Though they frequently had a man advantage, the power play could not get the puck- near the goal as the Spar- tans continued to pick off numer- ous errant passes. Though the game was quieter than Friday night's brawling, tempers did boil over midway into the final period. Dave Roberts was attempting to stickhandle past Don Heyliger who highsticked him. Doberts dropped his gloves and proceeded to pound away on Heliger while he was down. Don's brother, Doug came to his rescue and attempted to pull off of his brother's back. Roberts was given a game misconduct for his actions and both Heyligers received two minute penalties. Michigan's i lone goal of the night was scored by Bernie Gag- non with 5:04 in the game. Gag- non took the puck straight up the middle and slapped it by Spartan goalie Dick Duffet.; OSU CLIPPED: Hawkeyes climb to 10-0 COLUMBUS, Ohio - Iowa's hurying Hawkeyes moved a step closer to the Big Ten Conference basketball title last night, pinning a 97-89 defeat on Ohio State. Iowa, the unbeaten league lead- er with a 10-0 conference record, swpet to its 12th straight victory behind John Johnson's 38 points and 13 rebounds. Iowa is 15-4 for all games. The defat, Ohio State's fourth against six Big Ten wins, prac- tically killed the Buckeye's title hopes. Ohio State is 15-5 for all games. Jim Cleamons drilled in 31 points for Ohio State, 21 of them in the second half. Dave Sorenson had 23 and Jody Finney 21 for the Buckeyes. The Hawkeyes, punishing Ohio State on the boards 50-33, moved to a 10-point lead late in the first half and were on top 46-38 at halftime. They moved to a 73-58 lead with just under 11 minutes to go. Badgers bounced EVANSTON, Ill. -- Northwesterr blew an early 12-point lead last night but roared back for an 82-75 victory over Wisconsin in a Big Ten basketball game. Leading by 12 points in the early going, Northwestern had to settle for a 41-39 halftime lead. Wisconsin battled back to a 69-69 . tie and then took a 70-69 lead onl yto have Northwestern shoot to a 78-70 advantage. Clarence Sherrod paced Wiscon- sin with 28 points while Dale Kelley paced Northwestern with 20 points. Five other Northwesteril players scored in double figures. . Big Ten ti Standings Kentucky belts, LS U, but Pete guns in 64, More Green Meanies! MSU's Pat Russo nets another I L ANN ARBOR'S MOST ECONOMICAL & EASY First Period. SCORING:, 1. MSU, Thompson (Pattullo) 1:19; 2. MSU, Ro- berts (Thompson) 3.53; 3. MSU, Russo (M. DeMarco) 6:04; 4. MSU, Thompson (Pattullo) 16:05 (Fifield). PENALTIES: 1. H, Marra (boarding) 3:35; 2. M, Shaw (slashing) 5:55 3. MSU, Roberts (charging) 6:21; 4. MSU, Price (elbow- ing), 9:47; 5. M, Deeks (charging) 11:26; 6. MSU, Swanson (high sticking) 17:21; 7. M, Gamsby (high sticking) 19:44; 8. MSU, Michelutti (high sticking). Second Period. SCORING: 5. MSU, Thompson (Pattullo) 16:16. PENALTIES: 9. M, Perrin (tripping) :40; 10. MSU, Robers (striking) 10 minute miscon- duct, :42; 11. MSU, R. Olson (charg- ing) 9:56; 12. MSU, Price (holding) 11:22; 13." M, Perrin (llegal check) 12:37; 14. M, Shaw (high sticking) 15:30; 15. MSU, Fifield (illegal check) 15:58; 16. M, Gamsby (interference) 16:16; 17. MSU, R. Olson (tripping) 18:28. Third Period.° SCORING: 6. MSU, Thompson(M. DeMarco) 1:15; 7. MSU, Thompson (un.) 6:26; 8. M, Gagnon 14:56 (Straub). PENALTIES: 18. MSU, Roberts (fighting, game misconduct) 8:33; 19. M, Don Heyliger (high stick- ing) 8:33; 20. M. Doug Heyliger (inter- ference) 8:33; 21. MSU, J. DeMarco (crosschecking) 14:32; 22. MSU, J. De- Marco (roughing) 14:32; 23. M, Shaw, (roughing) 14:32; 24. M, Straub (hold-' ing) 15:58; 25. MSU, Price (holding) 17:34; 26. M, Slack (tripping) 18:58. Score by Periods:- Michigan State 4 1 2-7 Michigan 0 0 1-1 By The Associated Press BATON ROUGE - Pete Mara- vich, the nation's leading college scorer, outpointed Dan Issel in a shootout of All Americans but second-ranked Kentucky whipped Louisiana State 121-105 here yes- terday afternoon. Maravich netted 64 points to Issel's 51 in the game played be- fore a national television audience. LSU stayed close to the Wild- cats in the first half. Kentucky led at the half 56-48. The Tigers closed the gap to within two points in the second half-78-76 with 10:10 remaining - but the Wild- cats spurted out of range and won going away. With the victory, Kentucky strengthned its SEC lead with a 13-1 league record; they are 21-1 overall. The loss was ISU's fourth in 14 SEC games, and the seventh in 24 starts this season; it virtually knocked them out of the running for the league championship. * . * * . Titans thumbed DETROIT - Junior guard Dean Meminger scored 34 points, 21 of them in the first half, as Mar- quette's basketball team overpow- ered Detroit 80-60 yesterday. Meminger, who went into the game with an 18-point average, get good screens from his team- mates as he scored most of his points on set shots. Iowa' Purdue Ohio State Minnesota Illinois T:ICHIGAN Wisconsin Mich. State Indiana Northwestern W 10 8 6 6 5 4 4 3 2 2 L 0 2 4 4 5 6 6 8 8 - 0 * Pet. 1.000 .800 .600 .600 .500 .400 .400 .300 .200 .200 Yesterday's Results MICHIGAN 95, Minnesota 87 Iowa 97, Ohio State 89 Northwestern 82, Wisconsin 75 Purdue 88, Illinois 81 Mich. State 78, Indiana 66 r. 1%4 SEASON FINAL: Swimmers drown Bucks V L I Scores 'r i : ? ,,, n i t. f. . : ?'r '.i-;; SULLIVAN f CENTER An Advertisement in a Service Works Every Newspaper Speaks Only once For You . . . Our Sub-let Day, Six' Days a Week, Until We Rent Your Apt. For Is a School in Ann Arbor for % Trainable Retarded Children. They Need Your Help During the BUCKET DRIVE College Basketball Niagara 72, St. John's 70 Penn State 61, Pittsburgh 48 Navy 70, New York U. 62 Oklahoma 75, Iowa State 73 Davidson 91, Geo. Washington 74 Ohio U. 91, Virginia Commonwealth 75 St. Peter's 96, Marshall 80 Denver 85, Air Force 84, o.t. Penn 84, Brown 56 Kent State 85, Western Michigan 82 Columbia 94, Harvard 69 N. Carolina St. 104, Wake Forest 86 Florida 87, Mississippi State 70 Florida State 97, Georgia Tech 80 Cincinnati 53, Louisville 52 Miami, Ohio 66, Xavier 59 Richmond 78, William & Mary 60 Roanoke 101, Old Dominion 91 Bucknell 82, Westminster 66 Virginia 94, Clemson 79 South Carolina 79, North Carolina 62 NBA Atlanta 122, New York 106 Philadelphia 112, Detroit 110 ABA Indiana 130, Pittsburgh 110 New Orleans 117, Kentucky 100 NHL Detroit 7, Toronto 5 Chicago 4, New York 2 Montreal5, Philaldephia 3 Boston 4, Minnesota 2 You! Avoid the Hassle ... Let Us Do Your Running For You ... Our $25.00 Fee Covers All Advertising and Expenses For You . . . We'll Even Give You 1/2 Your Fee Back if We Don't Sub-let Your Apt. Come In Today - ON F EB. 25, 26, 27 AND AT THE BENEFIT MIXER S I T FRIDAY, FEB. 27 By ROD ROBERTS Special To The Daily COLUMBUS - Michigan's swim team survived Ohio State's home pool advantage yesterday after- noon closing out their dual meet season with a 69-54 victory over the Buckeyes. Wolverine Coach Gus Stager reiterated, "I've always said that Ohio State has had a ten point advantage when we swim them down here." The Wolverines weren't able to grab the lead for good until the seventh event-the 200-yard but- terfly. Freshman Larry Day spurt- ed to an early 'lead with the aid Buckeyes drubbed 400-YARD MEDLEY RELAY - 1. MICHIGAN (McCarthy, Mahoney, Mac- Donald, Sullivan); 2. Ohio State. Time - 3:35.4.1 1000-YARD FREESTYLE - 1. Harri- son (OSU); 2. Norlin (M); 3. Finney (M). Time - 10:20.2. 1-METERyDIVING - 1. Skilen (OSU); 2. Rydze (M); 3. dagnet (M). Points - 269.75. 200-YARD FREESTYLE. - 1. Bello (M);2. Catt (OSU); 3. McCullough (M). Time- 1:45.4. (Ties pool record). 50-YARD FREESTYLE - 1. Ehrke (OSU); 2.(tie)Harmony (M) and Jack- man (OSU). Time - :22.0. 200-YARDs INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. (tie) Kinkead (M) and Schmidt (OSU); 3. Peterson (M).Time -1:58.3. 3-METER DIVING - 1. Skillen (OSU); 2. Gagnet (M); 3. Rydze (M). Points - 300.25. 200-YARD BUTTERFLY - 1. Day (M); 2. MacDonald (M); 3. Townsend (OSU). Time - 1:57.9. 100-YARD FREESTYLE - 1. Bello (M); 2. Catt (OSU); 3. Baehren (OSU). Time - :47.6. 200-YARD BACKSTROKE - 1. Slev- in (OSU); 2. Peterson (M); 3. McCarthy (M). Time - 2:00.7. 500-YARD FREESTYLE - 1. Kinkead (M); 2. Harrison (OSU); 3. Schmidt (OSU). Time - 4:57.1. 200-YARD BREASTSTROKE - 1. Ma- honey (M); 2. Grunau (OSU); 3. Clark (M). Time - 2:14.4. 400-YARD FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. MICHIGAN (McCullough, B. Zapn, Kin- kead, Bello); 2. Ohio State. Time - 3:13.9. LIVING QUARTERS I I SAVE $300 "Everywhere To Live Under the Sun" 1217 S. UNIVERSITY 662-6591 OPEN 10-6-6 DAYS A WEEK -I 'I SEE THE GOING THING AT THE OXFORD OPEN HOUSE Sunday, February 22nd 2-4 P.M. MAX KADE GERMAN HOUSE 603 OXFORD ROAD Apartments, Suites, Co-ops-Three Distinctive Living Patterns in One Unique Housing Complex by making your own decisions ... .. . and dinner For Fall living, investigate the possibilities at OXFORD HOUSESF Open House Sun., Feb. 22 2-5 P.M. of two flip turns, then coasted home to win in 1:57.9, followed by teammate Byron McDonald. Victory wasn't certain, however, until the next-to-last event when junior Bill Mahony took the 200- yard breaststroke in his best time of the season in 2:14.4. Stager admitted, "I was shaking through most, of the meet" The Wolverines got off to a slow start, as the Buckeyes captured the first two events. Lonny Harrison, Ohio State's only entry in the 1000- yard freestyle, won easily, as Mich- igan freshman Tim Norlen faltered to a distant second. The Wolverine medley relay team, normally favored in the event, was challenged to the limit by a stacked Ohio State entry. Michigan was judged the winner, while both relays were timed in an identical ,3:35.4. Senior Juan Bello, who just re- turned from the South American Games; tied a pool record of 1:54.4 as he won the 200-yard freestyle, but the Wolverines had to settle for two points in the 50 free, from a tie for second place. The 200-yard individual medley produced another tie as the judges couldn't determine a winner be-' tween"Buckeye'George Schmidt and Michigan Captain Gary Kink- ead, as both bettered the existing pool record. Badgeirs nrip' Thinc ads Special To The Daily MApISON -- Michigan track- men saw their 21 dual meet win- ning streak broken yesterday af- ternoon by a powerful Wisconsin squad, as the Wolverines dropped their first dual meet of the sea- son 91-48. The loss was the first ever in a dual meet with the de- fending Big Tan champion Bad- gers, and provided a major blow to the Wolverines' Big Ten champ- ionship aspirations. High jumper John Mann, dis- tance man Ken How and sprint- er Gene Brown provided the Wol- verines with their only three in- dividual firsts of the afternoon. Mann continued to display good form as he cleared the bar at 6'10" for the third time this sea- son, a mere quarter inch off his/ best. How turned in his best per- formance of his career with a 8:59.8 clocking in the two mile, coming from behind in the last lap to win by fifteen yards. EN T TED BERRIGAN THOM GUNN ROBERT HAYDEN ANNE STEVENSON NANCY WILLARD RICHARD WILT r{ Yi ;i 'ih ' f tti, } Ott i: 'f'"'Y. ?t j} Sii?2 g " of nti: . I I Go Coed-Go Oxford in 70-71 Tired of Being BURNED BY AA Prices? So are we, and we're doing something about it at: SI (at the Max Kade House, across from the "Arb") I 'II and 30 other Local artists are really in JOB IN EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE For Graduate Students who are-Radically Reac- tionary, Liberal, Moderate, Manics to deal with depressive types-and vice versa ROOM AND BOARD PLUS TOKEN SALARY Contact NORM SNUSTAD Main office Residential Collee-Deadline March I The Second Floor gration CAMPUS INTER-ARTS MAGAZINE Ed School and the Environment (Especially Student Teachers) There will be a meeting of people in the School of Education who are interested in environmental education and in organizing Ed School for the Teach-In on Sunday, Feb. 22, 1970, at 7:00 at Rm. 3K of the Union. 516 E. 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