Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 26, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 26, 1969 Opening State By JIM FORRESTER0 Michigan State collected four ~goals in the first, period and for asll intents and purposes finished last night's game in the Michigan Coliseum at the end of twenty minutes play. The Spartans added a goal in the second period to close out the scoring and sweep the two game series 5-1. ,Michigan came out fighting, .though, and for the first few min-f .utes controlled play in State's end. .But the Spartans scored first at .the 9:25 mark on a power play as Michigan had two men in the .penalty box and a the starch out of the Wolvefines. The goal came off the stick of' Randy Sokoll as he took a pass .from Ken Anstey and fired from .five feet between goalie Jim Keough's legs. . After that score, the Wolverines ; .turned as cold as the inside of the .Coliseum as they let the game get> .completely out of hand, finding .themselves outskated, out-checked .and out-hustled to the tune of .f0ur goals to none at the end of .only one period of play._ State struck again at the 12:11 MICHIGAN'S LARS .point as Gerry DeMarco flicked adversary a menaci home the rebound of Nel- M ai .son DeVenedet's shot from the Michigan zone in Ia .left side of the net. gressive Spartans rep * Facing a 2-0 deficit, Michigan own end of the ice a .not only lost more starch but lost the weekend series. nrmnnin4'inn andA dnl b..i t rnr blast chills Wolverine icers OFF TRACK: Wolverine thinclads chilly as Yost in curtain-raising Relays a pass from Brian Slack in the and the cross bar but all refused right corner and fired past the to cross the goal line as the Maize -helpless Spartan goalie, Richard' and Blue were thwarted in their Duffet. last scoring attempt. But that was all the scoring Though unhappy, R e n f r e w for the Wolverines as State scored found the best topic of conversa- another power play goal, again tion to be next week. "We've just from the hot stick of Randy So- got to get to work and get going koll. again," said the Wolverine men- From early inhe second period ntoreThenthe made a direct refer-i Eon~chlanpayed tateve, Ience to the WCHA playoffs in!r on, Michigan played State even, al ac nwihteSa- -but even that was not good enough eaily March in which the Spar-$x bt vencomtheafougoaldeaughtans will participate. "You never to over come the four goal lead. know," commented a revenge . In the Wolverine lockerroom minded Renfrew, "maybe we'llt after the game, Michigan coach meet them again." Al Renfrew was clearly disap- pointed and bewildered. "We had Score by periods: .a bad first period and the game Michigan State 4 1 0 - 5 ,, Michigan 0 1 0 - 1 was over. First period scoring: 01 MSU - Sokol Penalties hurt the icers almost (Anstey, Watt), 9:25; 2. MSU -/ G. De-S as uchas he nspredSpatanMarko (DeBenedet), 12:11; 3. MSU as much as the inspired Spartan Pattulo (Unassisted) 14:09. 4. MSU - forechecking and furious skating, G. DeMarco (DeBenedet), 16:17. Penal-, as the Wolverines collected ten ties: M-Gamsby (roughing) 5:31; MSU penalties for the game. "We only - M. DeMarco (roughing) 5:31; M - Blumie (Illegal check), 7:35; M - Brook1 had the man advantage twice," (hooking) 8:59; M - Marra (high-7 said a restrained Renfrew, "while sticking) 19:19. thyhad it seven times."I Second period scoring: 5. M - Pas- they hak (Slack, Galbraith) 13:05; 6. MSU -; Neither Michigan power play Sokol (Watt) 16:07. Penalties: M - resulted in scores as they came Gamsby (boarding) 10:52; M - Han- at the end of the second and third (roughing) 16:25; MSU - DeBenedet periods respectively. The second (roughing) 16:25; MSU - Watt (trip- time the Wolverines had the man ping) 18:37. Third period scoring: none. Penal- advantage, though, was typical of ties: M - Gamsby (slashing) 5:24; the frustration the icers suffered MSU - M. DeMarco (roughing) 8:09; M throughout the contest. - Pashak (roughing) 8:09; MSU - Michigan kept up constant Swanson~ (elbowing) 12:42; M -- Bench Penalty (too many men oh ice) 14:45; pressure after Spartan DeVenedet MSU - DeBenedet (elbowing) 15:41. was waved off the ice at the 15:41 Goalie saves: mark for elbowing. Michigan shots Duffet, Mich. st. 8 6 14 - 28 hit Duffet, his skates, both posts Keough, Mich. 10 13 7 - 30 Wolverine gymnasts impress in rout of Western Michigan By KEITH WOOD and JAN HEYL A cold Yost Field House provided the setting for some cold running at the Michigan Relays last night. The warmest person in the building had to be Michigan State freshman Herb Washington as he ran a blistering :06.1 in the 60- yard dash to tie the meet and Yost Field House record. The Michigan distance-medley relay team also provided some ex- citement by setting a new meet record of 10:02.1. Anchorman Rick Storrey ran the last mile of the relay in 4:08.6, six seconds faster than the winning time in ;he mile run. The rest of the meet was dis- appointing, especially for the Wol- verines, who did not nearly live up to their expectations. Olympian Ron Kutchinski ran well for Mich- V ! igan's relay teams, but obviously was not up to par. Besides the distance medley re- lay. Michigan won the two-mile relay, but only managed a fourth place finish in the mile relay and did not finish the sprint medley because Ken Davey, the third man, fell on the turn. Michigan's freshmen performed well in the earlier competition. Bell Middlecauf's :50.9 set a new meet record in the 440-yard dash. The frosh also claimed victories in the pole vault and 880-yard run. Another freshman, Gene Brown, finished second behind Herb Washington in the 60-yard dash with a :06.2. Because no team scores were kept for the meet, it was diffi- cult to judge any team perform- ances. The importance of the re- lays, therefore, was upon individ- ual performances. Although the Wolverines may be said to have performed adequately, they will definitely have to show improve- ment. Judging solely from tonight's meet, Michigan may run into, tough competition from Michigan State in their bid for the confer- ence team title. State showed some real potential in the short distances with their relay men who turned in quarter miles :49.0 and :47.7 both of which would have been good enough to break the Yost Field House record. I Purdue smashes Minnesota behind hot-shooting Mount -Daily-Larry Robbins HANSEN (3) gives his Michigan State ing stare as he clears the puck from the st night's action at the Coliseum. The ag- peatedly bottleI the Wolverines up in their and marched off with a 5-1 victory to sweep .w .1 ] a ,rawzathe seco ntwoSatae Keough's left shoulder for the first. one ended: State did all the .tallies hscore. skating and Michigan all the des- Bob Patullo started to bring the . The next score found the Spar- peration defending. But the Wol- Puck out of the Spartan end as tans peppering the Michigan net verines pulled themselves together 'Michigan Captain Paul Domm all but unhindered. After several for their only goal at the 13:05 tried to stealthe puck, but Patul- minutes of pressure goalie Keough mark, .lo fliped the puck over Domm's finaly succumbed as Demarco , The Wolverines had been press- .stick and went in on the goal all scored again, this time on De- ring for several minutes before they .alone. Patullo pulled up at 20 feet Venedet's rebounding shot. scored on Barney Pashak's shot .and fired the puck high over The second period started as the from the goal crease. Pashak took { r, >~~~~~~~~~~~.. . .. . . . -.. ....i-...... ... h:-i:xxd.. ......... ..nJ t -. y- - ~_t you are iterested i working with money on the Business Staff, come in and see either JANE or SUE any afternoon at The Michigan baily, second floor, Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St.* - f k s E 1 F, 1. MINNEAPOLIS (P)-Rick Mount sprayed in 34 points, from far and near, and the Purdue Boilermakers smothered Minnesota 102-79 last night in Big Ten basketball. The Boilermakers, coming off an 8-day rest, ran their Big Ten record to 3-0 and season mark to 11-3. Minnesota fell to 1-4 and 7-8. Mount's pinpoint accuracy and long Purdue passes destroyed a Minnesota press in the first half as Purdue racked up a 51-32 lead at intermission. The Gophers went without a field goal in a nine-minute span of the first half and made only two buckets in the last four min- utes of the half. Purdue's tight pressing defense, which greeted the Gophers at inidcourt, forced Minnesota into 21 turnovers and hurried mis- directed Minnesota field goal at- tempts. Mount, averaging 33 points a game in the Big Ten and 32.7 for the season, canned 16 field goals and two free throws. HermanGil- liam contributed 23 points for the Boilermakers. By MARION GORDON Special To The Daily KALAMAZOO-No one will be too surprised to hear the outcome of the Western Michigan gym- nastics meet. In competition high- lighted by many excellent rou- tines, the highest WMU score was an 8.0. It was Michigan all the way with a 189.30 total. Dave Jacobs had to be the out- standing performer, chalking up two 9.55 scores in floor exercise and trampoline. Jacobs should really give MSU's Toby Towson plenty of competition in floor ex- ercise. George Huntzicker's usual- ly strong performances were miss- ed this week, and, although he missed on his routine for a below average 8.9, Coach Newt Loken expects the ankle that has been troubling Huntzicker will be ready for full duty against Minnesota. The sidehorse s q u a d came through strong with a 27-1 total. Jim DeBoo and Mike Gluck hit beautiful routines for 9.2 and 9.1 respectively. Those who have been waiting to see good Michigan side- horse routines may get their chance this season. On rings, high bar, and parallel, Cont ac t lenses are made of mnodern plas- tics which have en- tirely different charac teristics than the tissues " and fluids of the eye. Conse- quently your eye cannot handle this foreign object without help. So, in order to correct for Mother Nature's lack of foresight, you have to use lens solutions to make your contacts and your eyes compatible. There was a time when you needed two or more separate bars, the team showed exceptiona strength. All five high bar per. formers scored 9.0 or better. Char lie Froeming and Rich Kenne' led the ringmen to a 27.85 total while on parallel bars Ron Rap, per's 9.4 and a 9.2 by Dick Rich ards really solidified the event. Sid Jensen totalled 53.75 in all. around, including an 8.551 side horse performance, showing grea improvement in his weakest event Rick McCurdy did not compet all-around due to a knee injury. The 12 freshmen and transfer who competed did a fine job, av eraging 8.0 on each performance Bill Mackie, a junior transfer stu dent, and Jim Scully placed sec ond and third, respectively, to Sit Jensen in all-around competition The freshman team outscores Western's varsity by 50 points. Coach Loken was pleased vwtl the meet's outcome since the tean met and surpassed their 160-poin goal, in spite of the definite lacl; of competition. Next Saturday in Minneapolis they'll encounter a bit more op- position, but the way the team j: gelling, their performances shoult get even better as the season pio- gresses. solutions to properly mod- - 'vify and care for your con- tacts, making them ready for your eyes. But now there's Lensine from t he makers of Murine. Lensine, for contact com- fort and convenience. Lensine is the one solution for complete contact lens care. Just a drop or two of Lensine coats and lubricates your lens. This al- lows the lens to float more freely in the natural fluids of your eye. Why? Because Lensine is an "iso- tonic" solution, very much like your own tears. Lensine is, com- patible with the eye. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the build-up of foreign deposits on the lenses... BIG TEN Purdue Ohio State Iowa Illinois MICHIGAN Northwestern Michigan State Indiana Wisconsin Minnesota STANDINGS W L Pct. 3 0 1.000 3 0 1.000 3 1 .790 2 1 .667 3 3 .500 2 3 .400 e 2 3 .400 1 3 .250 1 3 .250 1 4 .200 RON KUTSCHINSKI Red Wings' late rally tops Seals, New York puts blank to Chicago DETROIT (P) - Rookie Edj Hatoum, just recalled from the minors, banged in Pete Stemkow- ski's pass from the right boards with 6:12 to play yesterday to break a 3-3 tie and lead the De- troit Red Wings to a rallying 5-3 matinee victory over the Oakland Seals in a National Hockey Lea- gue game. Norm Ferguson scored the three- goal hat trick for the Seals; who never trailed until Hatoum's game winner. But Oakland couldn't stand off Detroit's fast finish that produc- ed four third period goals, the final one by Bruce MacGregor in- to an empty net with 5 seconds to play. The Seals took command in the first period on two goals by Fer- guson,.a leading candidate for the. rookie of the year honors. Oak- land outskated the sluggish Red Wings, who didn't awaken until Gordie Howe turned in F r a n k Mahovlich's pass during a power SCORES play early in the second period. Mahovlich took a Gary Berg- man pass and drilled it between Gary Smith's pads at 7:40 of the final period to tie at 2-2, but Ferguson back-h a n d e d t Ted Hampson's pass-in over Terry Sawchuk to restore the Oakland lead. Shutout for Gjacomin NEW YORK (P) -- Vic Ita d- field scored one goal and assisted on another and tenacious New York checking helped goalle Ed Giacomin to his first shutout in 40 National Hockey League gam- es as the Rangers blanked Chi- cago 3-0 yesterday. The victory stretched N e w York's unbeaten string to four games-three of them since Emile Francis took over as coach for the ailing Bernie Geoffrion. Defenseman Arnie Brown open- ed the scoring with the game just three minutes old. Brown took passes from Hadfield and Jean Ratelle and beat Chicago's Denis DeJordy from about 3 feet. Ten minutes later, Hadfield scored his 5th goal of the season on a perfect lead pass by rookie defenseman Brad Park. The goal came just three seconds a f t e r Chicago's Pat Stapleton had fin- ished serving a penalty. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Purdue 102, Minnesota 79 Illinois 91, No'tre ]lame 57 Auburn 92, Vanderbilt 79 Detroit 92, John Carroll 52 Davidson 80, Citadel 72 Kentucky 108, Louisiana St. 96 Iowa St. 99, Nebraska 93 (ot.) Tulsa 85, So. Illinois 82 (ot.) Toledo 84, Western Mich. 64 ?North Carolina St. 77, Duke 74 virginia Tech 86, Clemson 75 Georgia Tech 85, Hawaii 59 r Princeton 74, Penn 62 Texas Tech 73, Baylor 70 N BA Philadelphia 124, Detroit 106 Atlanta 112, Baltimore 109 New York 113, Milwaukee 96 *1 And soaking your contacts In Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper lens hy- giene. You get a free soaking-stor- age case with individual lens com- partments on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. 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