SATURDAYFEBRUARY 18, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PArn AW.VV SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY ra u si'v 5A is Skaters Squeeze as Grapplers Breeze Boysen s Goal Wins- In Overtime Contest By JOHN SUTKUS Michigan goalie Jim Keough sat on his knees in front of the bench on the ice. The rest of the Wolverine hockey team filled the bench behind him. Coach Al Ren- frew tendered a few instructions. Just a few feet away Duluth coach Ralph Romano hollered in- structions to his team. Above it, all the clock ticked off play. The Bulldogs' Rick Newell was4sent to the penalty box at 17:45 for tripping Dean Lucier. With the pressure on the Duluth net, point man Paul Domm slap- ped a shot toward LeBlanc. It was deflected by a Bulldog defense- man right to Boysen, who flip- ped the puck past LeBlanc from beside the net. Comeback Avenue The heroics were all made pos-' sibe by a Michigan comeback in the second period. Duluth jumped away to a 3-0 lead in the first stanza. "We knew when we skated back onto the ice for the second period that we weren't going to leave the ice behind," said Keough. "We were in here between periods yel- ling and running around." "They worked themselves up during the intermission," added Renfrew.- Romano hadn't any illusions about a runaway for Duluth either. 'We knew we weren't going toy walk away with it. Michigan is just too good a team for that,1 especially here at home. That's why they're in second place." i Lords First Both prophecies turned out to be right as Michigan wasted no time breaking the drought. Bill Lord scored his first goal of the season, a slap from the point onl a power play with only 1:48 elapsed.t The charge was on then. At 4:47z Lee Marttila notched his tenth goal of the season to close the gap to one.E A blocked slapshot sent the puckr high into the air in front of thet Grapplers Obliterate - Illini, 36-2 Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN -The smaitest wrestler on the Illinois squad last night was 152-pounder Bob Lof- fredo. He spent his entire match with Michigan's Fred Stehman tr ying to avoid a takedown, and it work- ed. The match ended in a draw, though Loffredo was warned for stalling. But at least he didn't lose. Every other Illini did. -Daily-Thomas R. copi In fact, the match, which eventually became a 36-2 Mich- manages to pepper the nets for one of its few goals against Mich- igan victory, started as if Illinois ight against Minnesota-Duluth, however, the puck sped past the 'had forgotten they were supposed winning effort. to compete at all. Bob Fehrs, back to his normal 123-pound grappl- "They were sure getting the Marttila had that breakaway, ing weight after a week in the breaks in the first period," said took the shot and it went about 130-pound classification, gained a Keough. "They got them all night. two inches above the bar." victory by forfeit as no one show- Their tying goal in the third per- He might have added that Ullyot ed up to contest him. iod hit Lord's skate, bounced up, had a couple of hard shots hit the It was Bill Henson's turn next, and just got under the bar, post and richochet to the boards. but he too git a free ride as Ii- "We just couldn't seem to get The same two teams faceoff in nois failed to previde a contender. our share. As an example, Lee the Coliseum at 8:00 tonight. From then on, however, the Wol- Tdrverine grapplers had to at least No Time-and-a-Half for Overtime 1work for their victories. FIRST PERIOD SCORING - D- ping) 17:26. M-Koviak (roughing) Wolverine Blitz As a final point; Bay said that the Michigan was the object of a special scrutiny from certain of the spectators. "Michigan State is supposed to meet the Illini tonight," he de- clared, "and they were all in the stands. This was an excellent chance for them to scout us for our upcoming meet with them. "Whatever good it will do then." Maybe they're taking lessons from Loffredo. King-Pins 123 lbs.--Fehrs (M); won by for- feit. 130 lbs.--Henson (M), won by forfeit. 137 Ibs.--Weeis (M) dec. Rott, 12-5. 145 lbs.-Merical (M) dec. Zander, 6-1. 152 lbs.--Stehman (M) drew Lot- (redo, 1-1. 160 lbs.-Kamman (M) pinned May, 7:14. 167 lbs.-Hanson (M) dec. Watts, 7-1. 177 lbs.-Cornell (M) pinned Mac- Comber, 6:54. Hwt.-Porter pinned Tillath, 2:30. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD KOHN Wolverines will tangle this ning at Lafayette. eve- GORDON WEEKS MICHIGAN'S HOCKEY TEAM igan State last weekend. Last n Bulldogs' goalie six times in ai Duluth net. LeBlanc came out to[ flip it aside, but he missed it.i With the goalie out of the play,, a Bulldog defenseman became theI netminder. B r u c e Koviak, in quickly on the play, lost his stick,r but blocked the other defensemanG as Mike Marttila flipped the puck+ into the opposite corner from the neophyte goalie. With only 6:08 gone, the score was tied, 3-all. Twelve minutes later, Ron Ull-! coach Rick Gay was quite pleased with the performances displayed by the entire squad. "Considering the competition," he stated, "they wrestled exceedingly well. "Sometimes there's a tendency to let down against this kind of competition," he continued. "In that case, you're usually better off with a good practice. "But they didn't let down, did they?" Boiled 'Em Bay also noted that "Illinois has won only one meet so far this year-against Purdue." And it is the Boilermakers with whom the BOB BOYSEN the ten-minute rest period. It wasn't relaxed. An hour of hockey had come down to nothing but a 5-5 stand- off. Ten minutes of sudden death lay ahead. And sudden it was. 2:49 in Overtime Just 2:49 of skating later, Bob Boysen rammed the dramatic clincher past Duluth's Dave Le- Blanc to notch victory number 17 for this season's Michigan icers. Only a thin Coliseum crowd watched as the Wolverines came from a three goad first period deficit to pull ahead by one, go down by one, and then send it into the extra period with a tying goal scored also by Boysen with less than two minutes left in regula- tion time. "Bob played a tremendous game," praised Renfrew about the scorer of the tying and winning C goals. Boysen's winner skidded right side of the net between LeBlanc's skates. Bulls-Eye "Believe it or not, I was really aiming for that corner of the net," Boysen laughed. "I was helped when the puck stayed on the ice. If, it ould have gotten up, the goalie probably would have stop- ped it." The tying score came at 18:23 of the final period on a power i--YG ". A-l v Q 1GiV4 , 1 V1 1 ,.~ i Thompson (lMurphy) 5:53. D-M yot completed the prediction by Leod (Newell, Christianson) 8: splitting LeBlanc's legs with a llocKay (Ahrens, Thompso 15-footer. 19:22. Penalties: M-Lord (illeg check) 6:52. Duluth took the initiative in the SECOND PERIOD SCORING-M third period, scoring two goals to Lord (Mike Marttila, Lee Marttii retake the lead and setting the 1:48. --Lee !Marttila (Hansen, Mi IMarttila) 4:47. M1-Mike Martti stage for Boysen. Mart(Le arttila, Koviak)6:08. 3M "We just weren't skating fast Ullyot (Lucier) 18:13. Penalties: enough in the first period," com- -Wolfe (boarding) 0:42. M-Ha mented Boysen. "They outraced sep (illegal check) 7:24. D - B (holding) 12:18. D-Bell (10-iu us to the puck." misconduct) 12:18. D-Newell (tri Ic- 04. n) gal _- la) ike ila D an- 3ell ute p- 19:52. THIRD PERIOD SCORING-D - Bell (Christianson, McLeod) 4:56. D -Thompson (Murphy) 6:12. M-Boy- sen (Domm, Binnie) 18:23. Penalties: M-Hansen (illegal check) 4:19. D- Froiland (illegal check) 9:13. D - Newell (tripping) 17:45. OVERTIME SCORING: M-Boysen (Binnie, Lucier) 2:49. Saves: LeBlane (D) Keough (NI) 13 11 9 1-34 7 4 9 0-20 ORDER8S RETROACTIVE SANCTION: Kheel Silences Feud Belligerents And, except for the draw, all the rest were victories. Though the Illini finally found someone to enter the circle against Gordon Weeks, the 137-pounder easily decisioned his opponent, 12-5. Burt Merical followed suit with a 6-1 decision. The next event was Loffredo's waltz contest, where the Illini gained their only points of the evening. This little two-step, how- ever, served only to inspire Jim Kamman, who pinned his oppo- nent at 7:14 in the 160-pound match. Wayne Hanson followed with another easy decision, 7-1, over Larry Watts in the 167-pound class, but that was the last time an Illini even lasted the entire three periods. Porter in the First Pete Cornell, wrestling for the Wolverines in the 177-pound class, pinned Illinois' Bert MacComber at 6:54 of his match. But Dave Porter, heavyweight supreme, dis- dained to let his match last even that long, as he got his opponent down on the mat for keeps after only 2:30. Assistant Wolverine wrestling Special To The Daily NEW YORK-After yesterday's quasi-impartial shot by the Sports Arbitration Board (SAB) the two warring sides in the NCAA-AAU track feud were noticeably more silent. Ted Kheel, chairman of the SAB appointed by Vice President Hubert Humphrey to arbitrate the five-year vendetta, ordered the U.S. Track and Field Federation to apply for a retroactive AAU sanction for last week's controver- thinclads, is a constitutent mem- sial meet in Madison Square ber of the NCAA. Garden. The AAU, regulatory body for Ga rednnon-collegiate trackmen, also re- He also ordered the AAU to plied in non-commital tones. grant the sanction However,Kheel's statement, an- From NCAA President Marcus 1nounced in a press conference Plant, who fired an indicting tele- here, appeared to be a credit on gram to Kheel Thursday, there the AAU's side of the ledger. was no reciprocative action. "At Kheel, in a three-page type- the moment, I have no comment," written statement, said that un- Plant told The Daily last night. der the moratorium signed in The U.S. Track and Field Fed- June, 1966, open competition was eration, which represents college subject to sanction by the AAU. This moratorium applied to for- eign athletes participating in the United States. Kheel's statement also said that it was contrary to the spirit of the moratorium and the best ip- terests of amateur sports for the USTFF to hold a meet without seeking a ruling from the SAB. Kheel's statement said that the AAU also should have consulted the SAB -before suspending the foreign athletes. Kheel said the SAB will arrange immediately for the two parties to present their final arguments on the basis of the record to date and shall render a final decision in 60 days. THIS SUNDAY 'M' Thinclads Challenge Irish By BOB McFARLAND SCORES, INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL Independent Division Second Place Finals Carious Lesions over NADS, forfeit Third Place Finals Actuaries 58, LeFevre 28 PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES First Place Semis Phi Delta Phi 49, Law Club 29 Second Place Finals Nu Sigma Nu 55, Phi Delta Tau 38 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Princeton 51;, Columbia 41 North Carolina 80, South Carolina 55 Brown 79, Dartmouth 77 Clemson 62, No. Carolina State 50 NBA Philadelphia 127, Cincinnati 118 St. Louis 133, Baltimore 132 Traveling into South Bend, In- diana, during the winter sports season isn't nearly so harrowing as a similar Journey during the fall. But the Wolverine cindermen certainly won't have any field day this afternoon when they clash with the Fighting Irish. Led by sprinter Bill Hurd and half-miler Pete Farrell, Notre Dame rates as a respectable op- ponent, and according to Wolver- ine track coach Don Canham, "they could give us some trouble.' The dual meet is the first of its kind for the Michigan thinclads this season, as Canham prefers to emphasize relay competition for his squads. "Results of dual encounters don't mean very much," Canham states. "If one team has a couple of strong individuals in an event' which you are weak in, it can tiltr the final result strongly in theirI favor."I Michigan will counter the Far- rell threat with sophomore Ron, Kutschinski, anchor man of the Wolverine two mile relay unit. Kutschinski ran a 1:49.0 final, leg at the USTFF Invitational last' week, while Farrell has been timed in 1:49.4 over the half mile dis-. off due to a sore arm, Michigan's captain, Jack Harvey, will renew his campaign to crack the 60-foot barrier in the shot put. Sawed-off Shotgun With the Wolverines' outstand- ing depth in the middle distances, Canham will be able to spread his crack runners over three events; the 600-yard dash, the 880-yard run, and the 1000-yard run. Tom Kearney and Taimo Leps PIANO PLAYERS openings NOW with Rich Bloch and the Gosliters at Bimbo's Part time - Steady Call 761-6797 after 6 p.m. at the Presbyterian Campus Center DR. GEORGE MENDENHALL "ARCHEOLOGY and the NEW UNDERSTANDING of the BIBLE" (illustrated discussion) Supper (50c) 6 P.M. Dr. Mendenhall 7 P.M. tance this season. will join teammate Kutschinski in Speed-king Hurd may have the the attempt to head off Farrell in track largely to himself in the the half mile. 60-yard dash, for Wolverine so- Slated for the 1000-yard run for phomore George Hoey will miss Michigan are Ken Coffin, defend- competition for the second straight ing Big Ten Indooor Champion in week because of a leg inqury. the event, and another member of Canham is taking no chances with the record-setting two-mile relay his best dashman, with the Big squad, John Reynolds. Alex Mc- Ten Indoor Championships only Donald, Elmo Morales, and Mar- two weeks away. ion Hoey will comprise the Wol- Returning to action after a week verine effort in the 600. U' UNION-LEAGUE MARCUS PLANT 1967 Symposium Presents: :ar.": ra...:r"v. ; .; .:... :":{":i"'r:4' "i"'~.rv:S"n:"Y.":"';:"'4:"' S-Frr."ti{":{::;"vyr,.p}: SC.o . .".:x{v'ti<,; :4? :}{:::i:;:ii:: :'Sii::v}"r{{t:%i: 'r: i: :%i:":i{{v}: .. r........ s.r.. x. -..:v n. . . .4 rk :r ,r :v:?n" .......................................................................,........{'r.{:7{i?$ ivo:":: ate:::::.+::a":":i{vb:{{.v: r:.": ": F l M." Ri hrti 'JJ s. : f D I A M O N D R I N G S .::' 1'+ .., ,r': :j;: "i j?{: .'l ':,: i % : 'r :: ";}: ' :: II ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structures oriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS, APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS FATHER MALCOLM BOYD "the expresso priest" £peakih9 "on FREE TO LIVE Union Ballroom February 19 3: 00 P.M. 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