PAGE SIR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SITNDAVW tA'hITA'R.V 92 taste PAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAX DAILY OUI'NJjaxf JAIN uAn I ZSI lubti Icers Fall to Nodaks Again, Cagers Best Gophers Koviak Nets Hat Trick as Wolverines Lose Myers, Darden Haul Down 38 Rebounds; Cazzie Leads Offense with 40-Point Blitz By JIM TINDALL Special To The Daily GRAND FORKS, N.D. -- Mich- igan's hockey team came back from four different two-goal defi- cits last night, but it was never enough as the Wolverines dropped their second straight to the rugged Sioux of North Dakota by a 7-4 score. igan and Brian Strimbiski of the Nodaks were handed one 'game suspensions for fighting. Through- out the hard-fought game there were hints that such a free-for- all might break out-and it did at 9:23 after a scuffle in the North Dakota goal mouth. North Dakota goalie Mike Curran got mixed up in the fistsacuffs and was handed Holiway To Quit Coaching Bob Holiway, a 12-year veteran of the Michigan football coaching staff has reportedly decided to retire from coaching to enter private business. Hollway, who is 39, has been the defensive strategist and right arm to Bump Elliott for the past seven seasons and assisted Bennie Oosterbaan before that. Although no official announcement has ,been made, Holl- way has indicated that he has accepted a position as a manu- facturer's representative with the Detroit firm of Crawford- Mazer. Hollway's decision comes as a surprise in that he was one of the finalists for a head coaching job at Oregon State last season, and was reportedly offered another head coaching job last fall. later to put the Sioux out in front. Michigan had to fight back from behind from the first period on as Bruce Koviak continued his scor- ing rampage, tallying the Wolver- ines only two goals of the period. Friday night Koviak hit the nets twice to get the Wolverines back in the game and he went right on making himself unpopular with the freezing Sioux fans. His first goal came at 8:09 when he con- verted a rebound that goalie Cur- ran had kicked out after a glove save on Lee Marttila's shot. Ko- viak tallied again late in the per- iod as he hit on a 18-foot slap shot from the left of the cage, Michigan continued its come- from-behind tactics in the second stanza as Koviak completed his hat trick at 8:12 after Michigan had swarmed around the North Dakota goal for over a minute. Bob Baird scored Michigan's last goal of the night at the 19:43 mark to cut the margin to5-4. North Dakota had the edge in play during most of the period as Herman had to come up with saves on three consecutive breakaways as the defense, without Hank Brand, who did not make the trip, began to drag. In Front by Two The North Dokta goal which put the Sioux out in front by two goals for the third time was scored after a shot bounced off Herman's chest and was piled up in the net by his own defenseman leaving the entire left half of the net open for Strimbiski. The second North Dakota score was on a breakaway that Herman didn't stop after some neat stick work by flashy Dennis Hexstall. North Dakota added two more tallies to pad the 5-4 lead as Terry Casey and Rich Ulvin both scored in the last period. Michigan will face league-lead- ing Michigan Tech in a two game home series this weekend with both games at 8 p.m. in the Coliseum. BRUCE KOVIAK The temperature dropped to 25 below zero INSIDE at the opening face-off last night and found the Wolverine players better than Fri- day night but a tired defense kept them from dominating the play. The loss forced Michigan to yield second place in the WCHA standings to the Nodaks by a slim margin of .082 percentage points. Michigan now stands at 5-3 in conference play while North Da- kota is on a four game hot streak giving them a 10-4 record. The third period was delayed for over 20 miuntes by two separate brawls that resulted in six men sitting in the penalty box at one time. Both Bob Ferguson of Mich- a two minute roughing penalty. Michigan was outshot (in total shots) by almost a two-to-one margin, and it took some great goaltending by sophomore Harold Herman to keep the Wolverines in the game. North Dakota picked up where they left off in Friday night's third period when they cane roaring away at the opening face-off and racked up two goals in 52 seconds after six minutes of rough, hard skating. Strimbiski rattled the nets first at 6:02 when Michigan's Tom Schiller was cool- ing his skates in the penalty box. Paul Rygh added a 20-foot goal on a tough angle shot seconds BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Iowa Halts State; OSU Wins By The Associated Press IOWA CITY-Iowa broke open a tight game late in the first half ,then continued a rampage after intermission to hand Michi- gan State its first Big Ten basket- ball defeat 90-76 yesterday. The lead changed hands six times during the first 10 min- utes before Iowa moved ahead for good at 20-19. The Hawks, in snapping a three game Spartan winning streak in conference play, held only a one or two point margin until streak- ing to a 42-33 command during the last few minutes of the open- ing half. Large Margin Iowa maintained a big margin through most of the secondhalf, although Michigan State man- aged to cut the deficit to 63-57 with 8:46 left in the game. The victory was the second in four Big Ten games for the Hawkeyes, who are 10-3 overall. Michigan State is 10-4 for the season. Dennis Pauling paced Iowa's scoring with 21 points, 14 in the second half. Chris Pervall had 17 and George Peeples had 16. Vander Voort, Jacobs Shine in Flint Open COLUMBUS - Ohio State re- serves came off the bench in the second half yesterday and pro- vided the impetus that carried the Buckeyes to a 79-73 Big Ten basketball victory over North- western. Mike Swain, Al Peters and Al Rowley contributed 21 key points late in the contest that proved the difference against a scrappy Wild- cat quintet. The Bucks, winning for the first time in league play after two losses, held the upper hand most of the way but never by a com- fortable margin Hosket High Man Sophomore Bill Hosket, who took scoring honors for the game with 23 points, contributed 16 in a first half assault that saw Ohio State take a 37-35 lead at inter- mission. Northwestern's Ron Kozlicki scored the first six points of the second half that put the Wildcats in a short lived lead, and the con- test was tied five times after that. But the visitors suffered a tell- ing blow when Kozlicki, who fin- ished with 17 points, sustained an injury that forced him to the sidelines with 13 minutes still to play. (Continued from Page 1) still Cazzie." Kundla had no special plans for Michigan. He wanted his team to go out and just play their game. He had Lou Hudson, cast and all, defensing Russell for most of the game because of his height. When Wes Martins, a 5'11" guard, was in he lineup with Clark, Hudson moved to defend at forward and Clark picked up Russell. Greetings Hudson, making his entrance to- the arena late, was greeted by applause from the stands. (Rus- sell, on the other end of the floor, was practicing lefty shots at the time.) The cast on his..right arm, running from the palm to just below the elbow, protects the thumb and wrist area. "The problem," said Hudson afterhthe game, "is that I can't move my wrist at all. I lose ac- curacy at any distance." He was supposed to stay out- side if he could during the game, but he saw that he had to move in to the boards. "It really wasn't as rough as it must have looked," he said. "It's just a matter of getting good position .and getting lucky." But rebounding with one hand is no fun and games. One of the Best "I have to sympathize with a great player like Hudson," said Strack. "He has to be one of the five best in the country. But with that cast on, what canhhe do? "We knew that he'd have to get inside to hurt us. We tried to keep him at least 10 feet out." This worked well enough. Hud- son's first points came with nine minutes gone in the opening per- iod, when he pulled in a pass on a wide open fast break, seemed to have muffed the play when he fumbled the ball, but put in a desperation over - the - shoulder lefty lay-up when the rest of the bunch caught up. He finished the game with six field goals, only one not a lay-up. off a fast break. On defense he was on Russell like a vise for quite awhile. The two-pound cast could be a pretty persuasive instrument at times. But the 6'5" senior from Greensboro, North Carolina-a sure All-America by pre-season predictions-is still not in his best playing condition, and playing Siamese twin with Cazzie Russell is no vacation. , A Few Weeks More ... "It'll be two or three weeks before the cast comes off," said Kundla. "I'd figure another week after that for him to get back in top shape and regain perfect use of his right arm." Big Ten races have been decided on smaller details than fortun- ately-timed scheduling. "We're always up for the big games." said Strack. "This was one V -Daily-Frank Wing OLIVER DARDEN MUSCLES his way between two Minnesota defenders, Lou Hudson (14) and Dennis Dvoracek, for the expected rebound. Michigan's version of the 'Big O' pulled down 17 rebounds agairst the highly touted Gophers. He, along with center Jim Myers; accounted for more bounds than the entire Gopher team* Special To The Daily FLINT, Mich.--Gary Vander 'Voort had what Coach Newt Loken described as a "very good day" as he led Michigan's gymnasts to a 188-point team showing in the Flint Open. No team standings were given, however, because the meet was an exhibition. Vander Voort took the all- around title, in addition to two other first-place - finishes. Dave Jacobs also turned in an excellent performance, grabbing a first and a fifth. Satisfaction The team as a whole satisfied Loken. "The varsity had to per- form their routines twice in the same day against tough competi- tion. Actually, I think they did better in their second perform- ance tonight," he commented. In addition to his all-around win, Vander Voort copped first in the parallel bars with a 9.0 rating. He finished on top of the heap in the high -bar event with a 9.1 to take his third event of the night. That wasn't all though, as he also nailed down second on the rings with a 9.15 performance. Trampoline Jacobs nabbed his first place finish by gaining a 9.2 judging in the trampoline event. He also finished fifth in the free exercises. The Wolverines dominated the free exercises as Chip Fuller fin- ished second, Phip Fuller third, and Wayne Miller fourth, along with Jacobs' fifth. In the vaulting, Chip Fuller walked off with first place by turning in a 9.3. In addition, three Michigan gymnasts, Wayne Miller, Cliff Chilvers, and Mike Sasich, a 0i freshman, tied for fourth in the event. Besides Jacobs' first on the trampoline, Wayne Miller and Ed Hussman took second and fourth places, respectively. Michigan gymnasts dominated the parallel bar competition. After Vander Voort in first came Ken Williams in second, Rich Blanton in third, and Dick Richards in fifth. Sweep The sidehorse event saw the Wolverines sweep the top three positions. Art Baessler grabbed first with an 8.5 showing. Dave Geddes finished second and Chris VandenBroek third. It was the same old story again on the high bar as Michigan gym- nasts grabbed off four of the top five places. In addition to Van- der Voort's first, John Cashman took second place, Mike Sasich third, and Cliff Chilvers fifth. Finishing up the Wolverines' impressive showing, Blue gymnasts nabbed three of the top four places on the rings. Besides Vander Voorts second, Rich Blanton finished third and Cliff Chilvers fourth. Freshmen were allowed to com- pete in the meet because it was an open competition. Loken was impressed with the showing of his freshmen. Perhaps the Michi- gan gymnastics dynasty will run for a few more years. of them. We played real hard out there and they played well. Min-I nesota is an important name for' us. I'd just as well not have toa go up there to play them for a4 long, long time." The Gophers were never as, close as a tie anywhere in the game. At one point late in the first half, after Russell had put, in three baskets in 54 seconds. Minnesota started a good come- back bid which would have let them leave the floor at inter- mission with only a four point deficit, at 45-41 .. if it weren't for one or two things. One: playing for one shot with 41 seconds left, Jim Myers, ended the stall when he clicked on a 25-footer at the 0:05 mark. Two: Russell took two steps up the court as the Gophers were about to bring the ball in after. Myers' score, and then flew back in to grab theshort pass-in and make an easy lay-up. This game. Michigan versus Minnesota, has been the game for both teams for three years. It was the game. Lou Hudson, fresh out of the showers with a plastic wrapping around his right arm, explained: "We came in as sophs together. There was Cazzie, Darden, and Myers. We had Clark, Dvoracek, and myself. We always played tough games . . and they were good ones. They took three, out rlDardlen f Clawson f Myers c Russell g Bankey g Dill Thompson Pitts Totals IDvoracek f Presthuis f Kondla c Martins g Clark g Hudson Barry Totals . a of four. Well, we sorta wanted to leave with at least a 2-3 record. We expected them to be tough on the boards today, but we never expected to get beat by 30 re- bounds. Things just didn't work out." He spoke like an able, confident man who had tried his hardest and lost. For him no excuses are necessary. 9' MICHIGAN G F R P T $-15 4-7=17 4 16 6-14 3-4 10 4 15 6-20 0-2 21 2 12 15-24 10-12 5 3 40 2-5 '2-2 1 1. 6 1-1 0-2 2 1 2 :-6 0-0 2 5 6 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 39-85 19-29 64 20 97 MINNESOTA G F It PT 5-11 4-4 5 5 14 4-11 3-6 7 3 11 4-13 3-3 7 4 11 3-6 1-2 1 3 7 9-14 12-13 8 3 30 6-13 0-2 3 4 12 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 31-68 23-30 36 22 85 M1 r Big Ten Standings l HI LLEL W L Pct. MICHIGAN 4 0 1.000 Michigan State 3 1 .750 Illinois 3 1 .750 Iowa 2 2 .500 Minnesota 1 2 .333 Wisconsin 1 2 .333 Purdue 1r 2 .333 Ohio State 1 2 .333 Indiana 1 3 .250 Northwestern 1 3 .250 Yesterday's Results Michigan 97, Minnesota 85 Iowa 90, Michigan State 76 Ohio State 79, Northwestern 73 HEBREW CLASS Mondays, 7:30 P.M. Irah Kahnernan, Instructor I AL PETERS DAVE JACOBS SPORT SHORTS: Wings Beat Canadiens, Hawks Lose By The Associated Press MONTREAL-Goalie Roger Cro- zier registered his seventh shut- out of the season as the streaking Detroit Red Wings blanked Mon- treal 3-0 Saturday night and tightened their hold on first place in the National Hockey League race. Goals by Paul Henderson, Gordie Howe and Ron Murphy backed a 31-save performance by Crozier, the NHL shutout leader, as the Wings extended their unbeaten streak to eight games and moved. three points ahead of the Cana- diens and Chicago Black ,Hawks in the standings. Toronto beat Chicago 4-0 Saturday night. Henderson put the Red Wings ahead to stay with 8:09 gone in the first period when he broke away for an unassisted goal eight seconds after completing a two- minute penalty for hooking. The young left wing picked up a loose puck and, skated in on Montreal goalie Gump Worsley for his 14th goal of the season. Howe fired his 19th goal of the campaign early in the second per- iod on a Detroit power play. * * * TORONTO (IFP) - Dave Keon scored with one second left in the second period, then added a goal inf a three-goal, third-period flurry as the Toronto Maple Leafs whipped the slumping Chicago Black Hawks 4-0 in the National Hockey League Saturday night. The loss was the fourth straight for the Black Hawks, who haven't won since Jan. 9. Keon snapped a scoreless dead- lock with three men in the penalty box-two Hawks and one Leaf, One Man Down First, Toronto's Wally Boyer and Ken Hodge of Chicago were sent off the ice for fighting at 17:47 of the second period. Then at 19:04 Eric Nesterenkoi went to the penalty box for two minutes, leaving Chicago with one man less than Toronto. Fifty-five seconds later, Keon fired the puck past Chicago goalie Glenn Hall. The Leafs put the game away in the third period as their goalie, Johnny Bower, resisted repeated Chicago efforts. BOSTON -Rookie Bob Dilla- bough scored a pair of goals and assisted on two others Saturday in leading the Boston Bruins to a 5-3 National Hockey League victory over the New . York Rangers. The game was marred in the second period when Reggie Flem- ing, traded by the Bruins to New York recently, was ejected for striking linesman Brian Sopp with his stick. Ted Green launchel the Boston scoring burst with his 15th goal just 16 seconds after the opening faceoff. Pit Martin made it 2-0 before the first period ended. Dillabough completed the Bos- ton scoring at 12:26 of the middle period. Bill Hicke backhanded in a rebound for the Rangers third goalhmidway through the finale. The victory enabled the cellar- dwelling Bruins to climb within four points of fifth-place New York. SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Kansas 69, Kansas State 61 St. Joseph's (Pa) 79, Penn 69 Cincinnati 67, Louisville 65 Drake 79, Wichita 72 (ovt) Miami (Ohio) 58, Kent State 43 .De Paul 84, Los Angeles 60 Bowling Green 90, Marshall 83 Evansville 105, Bai State 85 NBA St. Louis 119, New York 111 Baltimore 132, Boston 107 WATCH for the GRAND OPENING 0 of the NEWEST and FINEST CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT OPENING SOON IN DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR BALLROOM DANCE LESSONS ........ ......... ...... ... .. .. . .. GET YOUR NEW CARD FOR '66 * Fill out application below. Bring it to our store and receive your discount cord absolutely free, entitling you to 10% DIS- COUNT for the rest of the year. 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