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March 02, 1962 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-03-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

-Daily-Len Lofstrom
ON THE SKATES LOUIE--Hockey is played on skates, but Michigan Tech's Louis Angotti (14) appears to have other ideas here after
a check from Michigan State's Carl Lackey (2). It didn't happen often enough for the Spartans, however, as Angotti was a constant
problem, scoring one goal and assisting on another as the Huskies posted a 5-1 victory.

Huskies Overpower MSU, 5

-1

Spartans Squelched
MICHIGAN TECH MICH. STATE
Baumnan G Chandik
Pallante D Silka
Seger . D Kempf
Sullivan C Johnstone
Ivanitz W T. Lackey
Rebellata W Thomas
First Period Scoring: T--Rebella-
to (Sullivan) 4:01.
Penalties: T-Begg (holding) 3:32;
S-T. Lackey (hooking) 3:50; 5-
Ska(slashing). 13:90; T-Pallante
(holding) 18:19; S-Silka (interfer-
ence) 18:19.
Second Period Scoring: T-Sulli-
van (unassisted) 5:02; S--Thomas
(unassisted) 11:06."-
Penalties: T - Seger (holding)
1:19; T-Begg (charging) ":21; T-
Merlo (illegal check) 1:21 T-Merio
(holding) 14:26; S--Turcotte (trip-
ping) 15:40.
Third Period Scoring: T-Casey
(Angotti) 2:21; T-Angotti (Casey)
3:06; T-Ivanitz (Sullivan, Rebella-
to) 9:37.
Penalties: S-C. Lackey (hooking)
4:16.
Michigan Tech 1 1 3-5
Michigan State 0 1 0-1
Saves:
Bauman (T) 3 9 8-20
Chandik (S) 15 8 17-40

(Continued from Page 1)

margin to 2-1, but Pat Casey and
Louis Angotti ended any Michigan
State hopes early in the third
period.
Casey caged Angotti's passout at
2:21 and then Angotti single-
handedly increased the margin to
4-1, 45 seconds later.
OneMan Back
Neither defenseman Jim Jacob-
son, who was the last man back
for the Spartans, nor goalie John
Chandnik could do much once
Casey broke Angotti loose at the
Huskie blue liner
The slick-skating winger left
Jacobson behind at center ice and
cleanly beat Chandnik with a 10-
foot blast from straight out.
John Ivanitz finished Tech's
scoring at 9:37 of the final period
with a short slap of captain Jerry
Sullivan's goal mouth pass.r
Tech Scores First
Gene Rebellato at 4:06 of the
first period and Sullivan at 5:02
of the second had opened the Tech
scoring.

The loss, the ninth straight for
Michigan State after an early sea-
son surge, left Spartan Coach Amo
Bessone a little on the quiet side.
Mumbling things about the
Michigan Tech depth in the Spar-
tan locker room, Bessone paid the
Huskies many compliments but re-
fused to pick a tourney winner.
MacInnes Surrounded
On the other side Tech's John
MacInnes, surrounded by some of
the 150 fans that followed the
Huskies from Houghton, also re-
fused to pick a winner.
We'd like a chance to prove our-
selves against Michigan, he said,
but they've got to beat Denver
first.
It will be nice to just watch for
a change, he continued. "It's a
lot different when you're coach-
ing."
Turining to the game at hand
MacInnes went on. "We played
well in the first and third periods
but in that second one nothing
went well.

Besides being outshot

by theI

Q UAR TERFINA LS:
Taylor, Falcons I-M Victors

Spartans 9-8 during the session,
the Huskies spent much of the,
time killin gpenalties. Elov Seger
went in for holding at 1:19 and
then Gary Begg followed him to
the sin bin at 3:21 giving the Spar-
tans a virtual four-minute power
play.
"We didn't do a very good job
of killing those penalties," Mac-
Innes mused. "We couldn't get out
of our own end."
Maybe that was an indication of#
the perfection he expects of his1
team for during the four minutes,
of Michigan State power play Sul-
livan scored giving the Techmen a
1-0 scoring advantage.
And as even Maclnnes will be
forced to admit, they pay off in
that column.
Conferlene
Title Qu~ests
BeginA new
After some abbreviated swim-
ming action in Bloomington last
night, all of the Big Ten cham-
pionships swing into full action
today.
The Michigan hockey team also
begins its quest of the WCHA play-
off championship tonight, playing
host to present NCAA champion
Denver.
Swimming before a home crowd,
the Indiana Hoosiers wasted no
time taking over the top spot in
the Big Ten swimming meet, run-
ning up 33/2 points after only two
events. Michigan was second with
24.
Two other Michigan teams begin
defense of their Big Ten crowns
today. The gymnastics team will
once again try to stave off a strong
Illinois squad. Coach New Loken's
squad interrupaed the Illini's long
reign last year in Ann Arbor.
At East Lansing, the Wolverine
track squad is favored to cop its
fourth straight indoor title. The
Wolverines are led by hurdler Ben-
nie McRae and middle-distance
runner Ergas Leps, both double
winners in last year's meet.
Coach Cliff Keen and his wrest-
lers will be involved in a five-team
dogfight in Minneapolis for the
crown presently held by Michigan
State. The Wolverines have only
one individual champion return-
ing, Fritz Kellermann.
All of the Big Ten meets will
conclude on Saturday.

MICHIGAN SECOND:
Hoosiers Dominate,
Big Ten Swimming
By JOHN SCOCHIN Both men will jin six others in
Special To The Daily
BLOOMINGTON-Kept out of the finals tonight.
the winners' circle by a bevy of Purdue's John Vogel was the un
Indiana stars, the persistent Wol- expected leader with 258.60 point
verine swimmers used high finishes while Ohio State's Juan Botell
in the day's events to keep pace was second. Defending champio
with the favorite from Blooming- Lou Vitucci, also of OSU, finishe
to with 24 points to Indiana's a disappointing fifth and will' g
The real battle for the second into the finals 27 points behin
place position behind the unani- the leader.
mous favorite Hoosiers saw Coach Hoosiers Hurry
Gus Stager's men buil up a 13- 200-YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY
point bulge over third place Mich- -1, Stickles, Ind. 2, Jastremski, Ind.
igan State and a 16 point margin 3, Tremewan, Ind. 4, Wood, MSU.
over highly regarded Ohio State. 5. Peterson, Minn. 6, Mull, OSU. 7,
Milota, Minn. 8, Wolf, Mich. 9, Long-
Indiana Sweeps streth, Mich. 10, Moore, Mich. 11,
Although Indiana swept the first Ciga-,:MS.l(Bgenrecord: old
two places in the 1500-meter free- record, 2:04.0, Roethke, Ind., 1961).
style; Michigan's upstart Wolver- 1,500-METER FREESTYLE - 1,
ines grabbed third, fourth, fifth somres, Ind. 2, Thompson, Ind. 3,
and 'seventh places to take an Bury, Mich. 4, Uhler, Mich. 5, Du-
early 18 to 14 lead at the end of mont, Mich. 6, Westman, OSU. 7.
Canepa, Mich. 8, Blaseekski, MSU.
the first event. 9, Watts, MSU. 10, Wadington, Iowa.
Defending champion Alan Som- 11, Johnson, Minn. 12, Anderson,
ers of Indiana set a Big Ten and Minn. Time-17 :37.5. (Big Ten rec-
Royer Pool record by winning the 1961).drcr,174s aaa
race in 17:37.5 to break his former
conference mark of 17:49.9.
Somers' Hoosier teammate,
Claude Thompson, broke the rec-
ord by finishing second in 17:40.1
while Michigan Roy Bury was also
in on the record smashing clock-
ing, third in 17:43.5.
Following Bury, Michigan's War-
ren Uhler placed fourth while
John Dumond and Carlos Canepa
were fifth and seventh respectively.
Competing in his first Big Ten
championship, sophomore Bury
also eclipsed the Michigan varsity
record of 17:46 set by Win Pendle-
ton last season. Pendleton had to
be left behind because of the new
18-man team limit, but the stand-
out performance of the Michigan
sophomores and juniors helps
make up for his loss.
Stickles Takes Teammate
Ted Stickles of Indiana overtook
teammate Chet Jastremski in the
backstroke leg of the 200-yard in-
dividual medley and stayed out in
front' of the breaststroke record
record holder in his specialty to
win the event and set a new Amer-
ican NCAA and Big Ten record
of 2:00.1. Fellow Hoosier Gary
Tremewan also took third for the
host team.
The old American record was
2:02.1 set by Stickles in New
Haven, Conn. last year. Jastremski"..:.......,..
also shattered the old mark, finish-
ing ,7 seconds behind Stickels in
the runner-up slot.
Michigan entries Fred Wolf, Jeff
Longstreth, and Jeff Jones failed<x"..
to make the finals, but gained"A.M
points by finishing eighth, ninth,
and tenth respectively.
Cox in Fourth Aman
In the diving preliminaries and
semi-finals, Michigan's Pete Cox
is in fourth place with 237.10
points while Ron Jaco with 221.85 He could u
is currently in the seventh spot. made for th
dl to the skin

(.

By A~O'B ZWINCK
and MIKE BLOCK
The first week of intramural
basketball playoffs ended last
night, and so did the hopes of some
perennial powers.
Taylor 'A' topped Strauss 'A' by
a 29-21 count in the lone resi-
dence hall contest. Sharp outside
shooting by both squads was nyc-
essitated by strong defenses in the
first half, during which Taylor
grabbed a 16-12 lead. In the sec-

Liston Rejects
Patterson Bout
NEW YORK (P)-Sonny Liston,
who once said he would fight
Heavyweight Champion Floyd Pat-
terson for nothing, yesterday re-
jected a possible $700,000 purse
for the multi-million dollar title
bout.
Unless the 28-year-old challeng-
er from Philadelphia changes his
mind soon, he stands a good
chance of losing the golden op-
portunity to another contender
such as Eddie Machen, said pro-
moter Tom Bolan of Champion-
ship Sports, Inc.
Liston disclosed in Philadelphia;
yesterday he had spurned an offer
from CSI of 121/2 per cent of the
live gate and 10 per cent of the
ancillary rights (television, radio,
movies, etc.) Patterson, Liston
said, was to get 55 per cent.
"It's ridiculous," said Liston.
"It appears they are trying to rob
me blind. The others got 20 per
cent. Why not me?"
Bolan said Liston had turned
down an offer of 122 per cent
of the gate, 121/2 15er cent of the
ancillar rights and a minimum
guarantee of $200,000.
The promoter, who usually ten-
ders his bids with the approval of
Patterson and the champion's ad-
visers, said this was the highest
guarantee ever offered to a chal-
lenger in the history of boxing
and "was apt to produce over
$700,000 for Liston."

ond half each team managed to
get men free under the hoop on
many occasions as the style of
play completely reversed.
John Henderson dominated the
backboards and scored 13 points
to pace Taylor's victory.
Heavy Action
Joe McDade's 13 points and De-
Lyle Condie's 12 tallies led TER,
while John Tully and Larry Mc-
Cormick were tops for the losers
with 11 and 10, respectively.
In a game marked with fast
breaks and good shooting, Phi Ep-
silon Kappa bested Delta Sigma
Delta, 54-41. Scott Maentz (19
points) and Gary McNtt ( 16)
were high scorers for PEK, who
never trailed. John Downs out-
sot his DSD teammates and fin-
ished with 19 markers.
The independent teams also saw
action. The Latvians outscored the
Sportsmen 44 to 33. David Silber
of the Sportsmen took game-high
scoring honors with his 21 points.
George Scherler sank 17 in leading
But the action was by far the
heaviest in the professional frater-
nity playoffs. The Falcons, spurt-
ing to an 11-3 lead in the first
two minutes, won going away, 54-
17, over Delta Sigma Phi.
The winners' height made all
the difference, as they controlled
the boards and intercepted passes
the. whole game through. M. C.
Burton topped all scorers with 16
for the Falcons, while teammate
Gary VanderArk dumped in nine.
Dave Darling's 10 point output
dominated DSP's offense.
Another wild and woolly affair
saw Tau Epsilon Rho edge the
Law Club, 42-37. The winners
jumped off to a quick lead and
were never headed, although to-
wards the end of the battle the
I-M Scores
Phi Delta Phi 24, Delta Theta Phi 17
Vainguers 38, ASCE 31
Phi Chi 51, ACS 14
Phi Delta Chi 45, Alpha Omega 26
Foresters 40, Zips 27
Tyler-Prescott over CMdS, forfeit
Alpha Kappa Psi over Phi Delta Ep-
silon, forfeit
Gamma Alpha over Eta Kappa Nur,
forfeit

outcome appeared uncertain. Near
the finish, the action was hectic,
and the majority of the scoring
was via the charity line.
13 for McDade
the Latvians to victory.
The Fletcher-Newman contest
went right down to the wire before
Fletcher claimed a two-point 37-
35 triumph. In the final minutes
of play, the lead changed hands
several times as there was only a
one point margin until a Fletcher
free throw swished with five sec-
onds remaining.
In another cliff-hanger, Owen
House pulled out a 32-31 victory.
NHL
Chicago 5, Boston 4
NBA
Syracuse 137, Cincinnati 103
COLLEGE
Cincinnati 61, Xavier (Ohio) 58
South Carolina 57, North Carolina 55
Duke 71, Mayrland 58
Clemson 67, No. Carolina State 46
Loyola (Chi.) 81, Bowling Green 68
Rhode Island 88, Maine 85
Marquette 86, Valparaiso 77

JOBS,
IN
EUROPE
WRITE TO: AMERICAN STUDENT
INFORMATION SERVICE, 22 AVE.
DE LA LIBERTE, LUXEMBOURG

Once Again - The Famous TCE
EUROPEAN STUDENT TOUR
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livhe severs!sdays with a French family -ma anet
aoad, special cultural events, eveninecept ons,n meet
visits to unusual places, sped
studentsfravel By Deluxe Motor Coach
SUMMER 53 Days in Europe $625 0 INCLUSI
cTransatlanticTransportation Additional
TRAVEL & CULTURAL EXCHANGE, INC-
501 Fifth Ave. " New York 17, N. Y. " OX 7-4129
"~ ~~

IBM
WILL
INTER VIEW
MARCH,
7.8.9

r7

11

Come to the
I.S.A. SQUARE DANCE
for a GOOD TIME!

E

ECUMENICAL LEADER WILL
ADDRESS SATURDAY MEETING
Dr. Henry P. Van Dusen, Internationally known authority
in religion in higher education will speak at an open meeting
at 6:30 P.M. March 3rd. His subject will be: ASIA, AFRI.
CA, AND THE CHURCHES. Dr. VanDusen, President
vv . t 4 . 4 ^ " . I.T- . - .1_--4 4

11

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