Saturday, January 25, 1969 THE MICHIGAN GAILY Page Seven Saturday, January 25, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Cagers enter Spartan camp CHECKED OFF: State chipslr7-3 By DOUG HELLER Associate Sports Editor If the Michigan basketball team doesn't have a good group of freshmen next year, it won't be the fault of the coaching staff. Head coach John Orr and all. three of his assistants were out of t o w n recruiting yesterday afternoon. As a result, the team waited to practice in the evening after Orr got back. And all they have to do today is play Michigan State. The visit to East Lansing, televised at 2':10 on the "Game of the Week," might seem to be a battle between Mich- igan's runners and gunners and State's defense. But that isn't necessarily so. For one thing, the Wolverine defense is undergoing a drastic change. "We're going with the zone" says ,Orr, whose team has tried a zone only sparingly this season, while its man-to-man has1 4 been riddled to the tune of 91.1 MICHIGAN Dennis Stewart (6-6) Bob Sullivan (6-4) Rudy Tomjanovich (6-7) Dan Fife (6-2) Ken Maxey (5-9) points a game.' The idea will be to keep State center Lee Lafayette separated from the ball. The Spartans, who slumped with a five game losing streak after a quick start, have won two of their last three to establish themselves as a confer- ence title threat. The key to this has been the sudden development of sophomore guard Rudy Ben- jamin and his ability to get the ball to Lafayette in close. Benjamin, who is only averaging nine points a game on the year, has come through with efforts of' 26 and 17 in his last two games, while Lafayette, with an average of less than 19 'a game, connected for 33.in his last contest. That last contest, incidentally, MICHIGAN STATE Jim Gibbons (6-6)I Bernie Copeland (6-6)j Lee Lafayette (6-6) Rudy Benjamin (6-3) Harrison Stepter (6-3) was an 89-75 trouncing of North- western on the road, the same team that blasted Michigan by 15 on Tuesday. According to Orr, it makes MSU "the hottest team in the Big Ten right now" despite its 6-6 record overall and 2-2 league mark. The other starters, Bernie Cope-: land, Harrison Stepter and Jim Gibbons, have been consistently at or near -double figures. Copeland had an injury which set the stage for the losing streak as the Spar- tans were unable to replace him. With State's new-found scoring punch coming at a time when the Wolverines want to take off their crash helmets after being bombed their last three games, Michigan expects all it can handle. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JOEL BLOCK Orr traces his problems to the Minnesota disaster when Richard "Bird" Carter was ineligible for one game, and "we haven't been able to get started since." According to Orr, Rudy Tom- janovich has regressed to - the point where "he isn't moving Well without the ball, so we're having trouble getting the ball into him. "He also isn't going to the boards as well. The action's get- ting tougher inside and as our only rebounder he hasn't been able to get his tip-ins. He's been very disappointed in himself." To top it all off, Tomjanovich has "lost his touch at the free throw line." Meanwhile, Orr says "our run- ning game has slowed down to three-quarter speed and we hav- en't been able to shoot and get the rebound before the other team is organized." Dennis Stewart, who almost al- ways looks like a ball of fire the first few minutes , of the game, "just gets tired" according to the coach. On the other hand, Bob Sullivan, who has reclaimed his old starting job "is finally starting to play some basketball." Orr doesn't know what to expect from State in the way of defense but John Bennington's disciplined defenders should answer the ques- tion as to whether the Wolverines have regained their scoring touch. The Wolverine coach does feel his team can beat anyone else's zone. He says his team whipped three zone defenses before the Ohio State game and when the Buckeyes tried a zone, "it gave us: trouble for a while but then we were able to reduce their 18-point lead to five." Northwestern played Michigan using just a man-to- man. Concerning the conference race, neither Orrtnor his team are ready to quit yet. The squad still is having fun in practice despite its; problems. Orr says, "just because we've had a slump doesn't mean the same thing won't happen to Ohio State or Purdue. You just watch us against State. We're going to win," Erv Hall wins hurdle, dash PHILADELPHIA (P)-Erv Hall of Villanova flashed to twin vic- tories, taking the yard high hur- dles in meet record time and run- ning away from the field in the 60-yard dash, lastw night in the Philadelphia track Classic. Dave Romansky, Philadelphia AC, defended his title in the mile walk with a 6:28.5 clocking, break- ing his own meet record of 6:34.6 set last year. COLLEGE BASKETBALL UCLA 81, Northwestern 67 Ohio State 96 Corneli 78 Oklahoma City 84, Arkansas 73 Holy Cross 49, Colgate 40 RUDY BENJAMIN By ELLIOTT BERRY Special to The Daily EAST LANSINDG-Th second place Wolverine icers got a lesson in hustle from sixth place Michi- gan State as the fierce forecheck- ing Spartans scored four goals in the final period to skate away with a 7-3 victory last night at East Lansing. After getting loosened up in the first two periods which saw the two teams battle to a rugged 3-3 tie, the Spartans came out faster than ever stunning the Wolverines with three goals in the first six minutes of the period. The Spartans starting line of Ken Anstey, Bill Watt and Randy Sokoll skated tirelessly, accounting for five goals, three in the final period. Anstey and Watt each tal- lied twice and Sokoll once while leading the way for the Spartans as they outshot the Wolverines 42-31 and handed them their worst beating of the season. Spartan wing Nelson DeBenedet added the other two Spartan goals. Sophomore back-up goal tender Bill Busch saw his first game ac- tion at 16:07 of the third period when ace goalie Jim Keough left the game with a minor injury. Sokoll scored on Busch on a per- fectly executed three-on-one break which the green netminder had no chance to stop. The goal was no more than score board dressing for the inspired Spartans. On what both coach Amo Bes- sone of the Spartans and Wolver- ine mentor Al Renfrew called the turning point of the game, Spar- tan wing Watt intercepted a pass which hit the refereee, skated in on the Michigan net at a sharp angle, and flipped the puck into the exposed corner on Keough's short side. Less than four minutes later, DeBenedet blasted the puck over Keough's stick glove taking a per- feet pass from teammate Al Swan- son. At the 5:52 mark of the same period Watt put the game far out of reach on an unassisted goal that was almost identical to his earlier talley. The Spartans opened the game with a spirited forechecking game and jumped off to a quick 2-0 lead. On goals by DeBenedet and Anstey. Dave Perrin, however, closed the gau to 2-1, knocking down a shot by Paul Domm and backhanding it into the lower right hand corner of the net past Spartan net-mind- er Bob Johnson. The Wolverines then came to life as Barney Pas-, hak and Paul Gamsby scored just eleven seconds apart to give the Wolverines a 3-2 lead; their only one of the night. As the second period opened the Wolverines missed few golden op- portunities to break the game open as sophomore Merle Falk missed the wide-open net on two different occasions. As the period progressed, how- ever, the Spartans took over with their tenacious forechecking. From the three minute mark of the sec- ond period they kept the play in the Michigan zone almost con- tinuously until Lars Hansen was thumbed off for high sticking at 11:11. The Spartans then executed a perfect power play as Ken An- stey slid the puck past Keough in a goal mouth scramble. Only Keough's spectacular play kept the Spartans off the score sheet for the first minute and a half of the penalty. After the ty- ing MSU tally, play leveled off for the remainder of the period as the checking got exceedingy close and neither had many good shots on the opposition net. First Period: MSU: 2:02-DeBenedet (DeMarco); MSU - 7:56 Anstey (unas- sitd.M .'9:17 Perrin (Domm, Gamns- by) - 18:01 Pashak (Slack, Gal- braith), M - 18:12 Gamsby (Perrin). Penalties: M - 12:42 Gamsby (elbow- lug), 1W - 14:50 Gross (holding), MSU - 12 DeMarco (interference). Second Period: MSU - 12:57 Anstey (DeBenedet). Penalties: MSU - 2:28 Swanson (interference), MSU - 4:50 De- Benedet (highsticking),' DeBenedet (roughing). M - 4:50 Domm (h ig h - sticking), Domm (roughing), M - 5:09 Binnie (hooking), M - 11:11 Hanson (high sticking). Third Period: MSU - :35 Watt (un- assisted), MSU - 4:44 DeBenedet (Swanson), MSU -. 5:52 Watt (unas- sisted), MSU 16:07 Sokoll (Anstey). Penalties: M - 5:52 Gross (misconduct- 10 min.), M - 6:11 Pashak (high stick- ing) M - 8:19 Perrin (tripping), M - 11:37 Marra (elbowing - 5 min.) MSU - 6:11 Watt (roughing), MSU - 13:08 Ruosso (roughing). GOALIE SAVES Goalie Saves M 9 14 12 -- 35 MSU 11 9 a - 28 Scoring m MSU 3 1 0 - 3 2 1 4-. 7 RENT STRIKE SUNDAYS ARE NOW BONUS DAYS. from 12 Noon-5 P.M. at d iscountre cords, , 1235 S. University only CHECK US FOR IN-STORE SPECIALS HARRISON STEPTER JIM GIBBONS BERNIE COPELAND Sat., Jan. 25: Steering Committee 1:00 P.M., 1532 SAB Tues., Jan. 28: Floor Meetings, Albert Terrace, 8:00 P.M. Meeting I PRO BASKETBALL: Pistons, Hawks narrowly win I Tenants not contacted in Target Agencies can Call 763-3102, 1532 SAB "LANDLORDS ARE PAPER TIGERS" - DETROIT OP)-A driving layup by Eddie Miles with seven seconds to go gave the Detroit Pistons a 107-106 National Basketball As- sociation victory over the New York Knicks .last night. Miles' winning shot came after New York had gone ahead on a basket by Don May with 1:06 left and had kept Detroit scoreless for almost 21/ minutes. The Pistons, after leading 54- 51 at halftime, built up a seven- point lead early in the third quar- ter before New York ran up straight points and went on to gain a 75-67 lead as Dick Barnett led the way with 10 points and Walt Frazier had nine in the spurt. Detroit then came back to trail 82-81 after three quarters, and, after a see-saw fourth, period in which at one time New York led by as many as six points, the Pis- tons finally pulled it out in their' third straight one-point finish. They have won two of the three. Walt .Bellamy led Detroit with * 28 points while Dave Bing had 22 I and Miles 20. Barnett scored 34 for the Knicks. * * * ATLANTA (0) - Zelmo Beaty shot over, around and under Wilt Chamberlain for 36 points last night and led the Atlanta Hawks to a 110-106 National Basketball Association victory over Los An- geles. The victory moved Atlanta to within one game of the Western Division-leading Lakers. The tri- umph also was the Hawks' 20th in their last 23 games. Beaty hit his top point total of the season and teamed with guards Walt Hazzard and Don Ohl to give the Hawks enough cushion to withstand a late Los Angeles rally. Hazzard and Ohl combined for 22 straight points to wipe out a nine-point Laker margin in the second period and give the Hawks a lead they never lost. Los Angeles used 16 final period points by Elgin Baylor to pull to within two points with two min- utes remaining. But Beaty hit six, straight points to clinch the triumph.I Hazzard finished with 30 points. Baylor topped Los Angeles with 34 and Jerry West added 28. BOSTON (M)-The Philadelphia 76ers built a commanding lead; shook off several challenges and then rode the fourth-period shoot- ing of Chet Walker and Darrell Imhoff to a 120-111 National Bas- -ketball Association victory over the Boston Celtics last night. The Celtics, who trailed 61-54 at halftime,closed to within 87-84 at the three-quarter mark. How- ever, Walker and Imhoff took charge. Walker scored 12 of his 20 points in the final 12 minutes, while Imhoff hit for nine, finish- ing with 14. Bill Cunningham topped the 76ers with 27 points. Wally Jones matched Walker's 20 points. Bailey Howell and John Havli- cek scored 26 and 19 points re- spectively, for Boston which lost its third straight. WORSHIP STUCK WITH AN APARTMENT TO SUB-LET FOR THIS SUMMER? Here's How To Rent It Quick Through The Michigan Daily's "Student Housing Guide" DEADLINE- MONDAY, FEB. 3 The quickest and easiest way to sublet your pad is through The Daily's special apartment supplemert to be published Sunday, February 9th. For only $5 you Can place a EXAMPLE THE FINEST IN APARTMENT LI VINO MODERN 4-MAN APT, with central air con- ditioning and heating, garbage disposal, parking:lot facilities, large front view picture window, completely furnished, live-in manager. 2 large Bedrooms CALL .769-324 ! 1 I I * NAME ______ I/ 1 I t ! PHNEI !. I / I Print or Type Copy Legibly in; Space Provided as You Would Like it to Appear. I ! t t I I I * ! 1 1 ! I ! t ! t I I I t t t I 1 I I ! t t 1 I t I t ! 1 t t ! I t ! t I ! 1 ! 1 I 1 I ! ! 1 ! 1 t t ! I ! I ! 1 ! 1 !I! FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY, FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Church-662-4536 Wesley-668-6881 Hoover Rupert, Minister Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister Interim Associate, William B. Lutz SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Morning Worship. "People Are the Best Sermons," Sermon by Dr. Rupert. 6:00 p.m.-Fellowship Supper. 7:00 p.m.-Fellowship Program: "Welfare-. What is the Christian's Responsibility?" with Prof. Vasey of the School of Social Work. TUESDAY 12:00 noon--Luncheon Discussion. "Are the Arabs and Israelis Pawns in the East-West Conflict?" with Rev. Beavin. Out in time for.1 :00 classes. WEDNESDAY 7:00p.m-Holy Communion, Chapel. 7:30 a.m.-Breakfast, Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 classes. 12:00 noon - Luncheon Discussion: "The World at Our Doorstep: Africa," with Rev. Lutz and International Students. Out in time for 1 :00 classes. FRIDAY 12:00 noon-Luncheon Discussion: "Encount- ers Necessary When in Mission," led by Rev. Beavin. Out in time for 1:00 classes. WINTER RETREAT Jan. 3 1 -Feb. 2-Sign Up Today. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:30 and at 11:00 a.m.-Sevices. Sermon by Pastor Scheips, "Called for a Purpose" (Communion at 9:30). Sunday at 11:00 a.m.-Bible Study. Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Gamma Delta Supper- Program. Discussion, "Evangelism and the Christian Student." Monday at 8:00-Church Membership Class. Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Service. Friday at 6:30-Chapel Choir Rehearsal. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 East Huron Phone 662-3153 Minister: Calvin S. Malefyt 10:30 a.m:-"People Called Saints" by Dr. John MacLeod of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S. 7:00 p.m.-"Church Merger" by Dr. John MacLeod. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High John M. Hamilton, Minister SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School. 11 :00 a.m.-Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Phone 662-4466 SUNDAY Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m.-Preaching: The Rev. J. Charles McKirachan of Cincinnati. Presbyterian Compus Center located at the Church. Transportation6furnished for all NO 2-2756. services-Call FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Dr. Erwin A. Goede, Minister Sunday at 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon: The Moon Will Wait.' Church School and Services at 9:20 and 11:00 a.m. Student Religious Liberals at 7:00 p.m. CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard 11:00 a.m.-Free Worship. Sermon: To be made up as we go along. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH On the Campus-- Corner State and William Sts.4 Terry N. Smith; Minister Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant Services at 9:15 and 11:00 a.m.-"Disorder, Discipline and Disciples." Douglas Memorial Chapel open daily. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST Southern Baptist Convention 1131 Church St. 761-0441 CHURCH ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. 9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 11:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer. CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 WashtenaW Donald Postema, Minister 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. "Two Ways of Seeing," Mr. Gerrit Haagsma, speaker. 11:00 a.m.-Coffee. 5:00 p.m.-Vesper Service. Rev. Tom Bloxam 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School. 11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 6:30 p.m.-Training Union. 7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL A.L.C.-L.C.A. Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Donald G. Zill, Pastor SUNDAY 9:30 a.m.-Matins. 11:00 a.m. - Contemporary Liturgy (Holy Communion). Sermon: "Affairs Are Now Soul Size." 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 7:00 p.m.-Program: Dr. Richard Brandt, Chairman, Philosophy "Dept., "Hang Ups_ for the Faithful in Philosophy." HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH #- i 1 Col. x 4" BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Pors, H. G crnehIe, A C .izer, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. SUNDAY y n st v~ _._.. . ... _.. ,...J. C.4... advertisement with a guaranteed circulation of - I I 11 I I