THE MICHIGAN DAIILY uckmen Bury Spartans SWEET REVENGE: Come-Behind Cagers, Lose to, Hawkeyes (Continued from Page 1) Q d and it was a rout from then one-sided was the play that Spartans didn't even get into tatistics ,at all until Martin Scoring Spree G D D C W W MICH. STATE Chandik Slika Kempf Turcotte Fournel Doyle irst Period Scoring: M-Coris- e (Berenson, Rodgers) 10:12; M- rison (Coristine, Berenson) 6; M-Berenson (Wilkie,Corlns- e) 16:14. enalties: M-Babcock (hooking) ; M--Morrison (tripping) 18:56. econd Period Scoring: M-Beren- (Coristine, Wilkie) 7:24; M- icock (Kolb) 9:28; S-Baldwin urnel, Doyle) 12:48; M - Kelly hute, Rodgers) 16:27; MW-Beren- (Wilkie) 18:57. enalties: M--Kelly (charging) ; S-Quirk (cross checking) ; M-Kelly (tripping) 9:54; M- cock (roughing) 13:09; S-JKempf ughing) 13:09; M-Kartusch (in- ference) 18:32; M - Rodgers yarding) 19:46. hIrd Period Scoring: M=-Kar- ch (Wilkie) 4:04; M-Pendlebury ib, Babcock) 15:39; M-Babcock ndlebury) 16:00; 5- Fournel yle, Turcotte) 19:22. enalties: S - Quirk (hooking) . b ire by Periods: Quirk picked up a penalty at 8:12 of the second period. The score was 4-0 at the time and Larry Babcock scored on the power play to make it 5-0 before Michigan State could get on the scoreboard. Pat Baldwin spoiled Bob Gray's shutout when he caught Michi- gan in a defensive lapse and scored' on a breakaway. Stop Shutout Gray himself was at fault for the Spartans' final goal at 19:22 of the third period when he came all the way out to the blue line in an attempt to break up the Spar- tan rush. Bob Doyle pushed the puck around him and Claude Fournel had only to steer it into the net. Berenson scored once in the first period and twice in the second period, the last when Michigan was shorthanded. He received a stand- ing ovation before the final per- iod when he and four* other grad- uating seniors (Jerry Kolb, Carl White, Bill Kelly, and Al Hinne- gan) were introduced to the ca- pacity crowd of 3,550. The Red- head tried to answer the plaudits with the record-tying goal but peppered the Spartan net to no avail. f Sets Up Tallies In addition to his hat-trick, Berenson also directly set up two other Michigan tallies with his rink - length dashes. Michigan State goalie John Chandik was so afraid of Berenson that he twice came too far out of his net and was an easy mark for the re- bound. Ron Coristine scored the first of these at 10:12 of the first period to put Michigan ahead 1-0. He fielded a Berenson shot which bounced out from behind the goal and tossed it into the open cage. Ross Morrison upped the count to 2-0 when he picked up a re- bound after Chandik had fallen outside his net stopping a Beren- son shot. By BILL BULLARD Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-Michigan's basket- ball team, losing to Iowa 18-1 after eight minutes of the first half, fought back several times but couldn't pull out a victory here last night. Iowa was forced into a stall in the last minutes of play to protect its lead and held up for a 68-63 victory. Monday night at Yost Field House theWolverines will try to stop a two-game losing streak- when they face Indiana. The Hoosiers defeated the Wol- verines last Monday night at Bloomington. M' Comes Back With 7:56 remaining in the game and Iowa leading by 14 points, Michigan started its last bid to overtake the Hawkeyes. The Wolverines chopped the lead from 62-48 to 62-55 in less than three minutes. Tom Coles' lay-up made the score 63-59 at 3:14, but Don Nelson tipped in the shot to put the Wolverines down again by six points. Another lay-up by Cole made the score 65-61 with 2:41 left in the game. Here, Michigan had its chance to win shattered after Bob Cantrell stole the ball, but Michi- gan couldn't score on a fast break. Iowa's stall successfully neld off the Wolverines until the final buzzer. Wolverines Shoot Well Michigan's shooting-average was .444 compared to Iowa's .408, but the Hawkeyes got away 17 more shots than the Wolverines. This was because Michigan lost the ball much more often than Iowa on bad passes and charging fouls. Al- though Michigan out - rebounded Iowa 39-26, many times a Hawk- eye would steal the ball away from a Wolverine or force the jump ball after the Wolverine had come down with the rebound. The second half performance by Michigan was much improved over the first half. For most of this period the Wolverines kept the lead to 10 points after beginning the half with a 37-23 deficit. Twice Michigan seemed to threaten to take the lead. Cole Stars Tom Cole sparked the offense in the second half by scoring 20 of his 26 points. He started Michi- gan's first rally of the half by making five straight points. He broke through for two lay-ups and when fouled on the second one, dumped the free-throw. This put the score at 51-44, but the Wolver- ines couldn't cut it down further until he initiated Michigan's rally four minutes later. In the first half Michigan's sput- tering offense couldn't match Iowa's alternately hot and cold shooting. At one point the Wolver- ines were only five points down Close Defeat IOWA G FT Reb Pts. Novak 1 3-4 1 5 Mehihauf 2-7 0-1 3 4 Nelson 5-10 8-8 4 16 Szykowny 5-13 1-2 2 11 Rettington 8-15 2-4 3 18 Shaw 1-3 0-0 0 2. Messick 5-17 0-0 1 10 Morse 0-0 0-0 2 2 Totals 29-71 10-17 16 68 after having fallen behind 18-1 at the start of the game. But at half time the Hawkeyes had taken a 37-23 lead on a last-second shot by Jim Freese. No Fast Break Typical of Wolverine misfor- tunes was the fast break that failed to result in a score tear the end of the first half. John Harris tipped a jump ball to Bob Brown who relayed the ball to Doug Herner. John Hall, breaking down the right side of the court, pursued by an Iowa defenseman, received the pass from Herner and went in for the lay-up. The ball hung on the rim for a second, then fell off. Three Wolverines tried to nudge the ball a second time but Iowa firmly took control. The Hawkeyes brought the ball down the court and set up screens for a shot. -Daily-Ed Langs WHICH WAY DID IT GO?-Michigan's Ron Coristine (12) and Gordon Wilkie (8), and Michigan State's Frank Silka (4) and John Chandik (1) watch intently as a shot goes wide of the Spartan cage. Chandik stopped 39 shots during the night, but there were ten others that he didn't. MICHIGAN Brown Cole Harris Cantrell Hail Herner Totals G FT Reb. Pts. 0-2 0-0 7 0 11-15 4-5 10 27 a 3-7 1-3 12 7 5-12 0-0 3 10 4-11 7-8 3 15 0-3 1-2 0 1 24-54 15-21 33 63 AN es: iy (M) andik (MSU) 3 4 3--10 0 1 1-2 14 4 6-24 15 17 '7-39 TIT Bound PHILADELPHIA (P) --- Villano- s NCAA tournament-bound bas- ball team staved off a last sec- i rally to defeat determined Salle 65-63 before 9,232 in the htcap of a Palestra double- Wcer last night. 'emple defeated Delaware 62- in the opener. Berenson got his first goal when he knocked in a loose puck. He had started the play himself by feeding the puck out from behind the net. The production line of Beren- son, Gordon Wilkie and Ron Cor- istine scored its fourth straight goal at 7:44 of the second per- iod as Berenson added his second of the night. Berenson missed a breakaway shot and Coristine missed the open net, but Wilkie fed the puck out to Berenson for the score.. Berenson picked up his third goal while killing off a penalty to Wayne Kartusch. He took a pass from Wilkie, faked the defense- man out of position and whistled in a 25-ft. bullet at 18:57. Lost in Berenson's flurry was a two goal performance by Bab- cock and four assists by Wilkie. Those assists put Wilkie in second place behind Berenson in the fin- al WCHA scoring statistics. Scores NBA Boston 109, Philadelphia 86 Cincinnati 118, Los Angeles 114 Syracuse 120, New York 117 Chicago 129, St. Louis 119 NHL Chicago 6, Detroit 1 Toronto 7, Boston 2 Montreal 4, New York 2 TI Syracuse Wins UTICA, N. Y. (R)- The Syra- cuseNats moved closer to a Na- tional Basketball Association play- off spot tonight by overcoming the New York Knickerbockers 120- 117 on the strength of a 41-point third period. The result evened the Nat's season record at 35-35 with 10 games to go and left the Knicks at 25-44. Any combination of two Syracuse victories 'or New York losses would give the Nats the third and last Eastern division playoff berth. We are now Delivering PIZZA and SUBS DOMINI(K'S NO 2-5414 tr Ohio State Wins Again Ohio State stormed through a leaky Illinois defense last night for a convincing 102-79 victory. The Buckeyes proved to their critics that they were not getting tired by surpassing the century mark. Captain John "Hondo" Havlicek tossed in 19 points to lead the Bucks to their 26th consecutive Big Ten win. The regionally tele- vised game was practically no con- test as the Bucks pulled their first string with seven minutes to go and the score 88-55. It was their 33rd consecutive home court win, stretching over three seasons. 'M' Thinclads Top Wisconstin Ergas Leps won two events as Michigan won the Big Ten dual track meet from Wisconsin 76 5/6- 64 1/6 in Wisconsin last night. Leps took the mile in 4:14 and the half mile in 1:52. Larry How- ard of Wisconsin beat- Michigan's Bennie McRae in both the high and low hurdles in one of the days key upsets. The defeat at the hands of the Wolverines was the first loss for Wisconsin in four dual meets so far this season. The Badgers thus once again impressed observers who had not expected much from them follow- ing their last place finish. JON HALL TOM COLE ... captains cagers ... offensive leader I ' -,---- .1 "STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY AROUND THE WORLD" A Michigan Union International Seminar with special reference to problems brought out in the Committee Report from: UNITED KINGDOM BRAZIL JAPAN U.S.S.R. s to ICHIG FRATER ITIES