THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' Icers Sweep Michigan (Continued from Page 1) when Huskie right winger Louis Angotti stole the puck from Wol- verine . defenseman Wayne Kar- tusch and set up Barry Johnson 14 feet in front of the net at 10:40. The goal seemed to inspire the Huskies and they began to put the pressure, on the Wolverines. But Butts and his stalwart defense held until 17:37 when Berenson again pulled Michigan through. The Wolverine captain made another of his solo rushes that have made him so popular. Te red- head took a pass from defense- man Don Rogers, and blazed down the left wing. He shot for the net, but it was blocked by Mc- Vittie but he instantly got his own rebound and pushed it in. Another near goal for the Wol- verines was when scrappy Bill Kel- ly got in all alone on McVittie on a break away. Kelly had the Hus- kie goalie beat but his soft shot hit the post and stayed out of the goal. The Wolverines went out in front by three at 7:47 in the final period when Tom Pendlebury rushed in on the left wing and set Larry Babcock up perfectly for the fifth and final goal for Michigan com- ing at 7:47. Don't Give Up The Huskies weren't beat yet, as defenseman Elov Seger assist- ed forward John Ivanitz who scor- ed from 35 feet. The puck hit the post but rebounded back in front of the net, but was allowed as a goal. The game was featured by rough, hard checking hockey which de- I TOO MANY COOKS-'M' wing,J in last night's game with Mic lant combine with goalie, Gary B lighted the capacity crowd at the Collesium. Unlike Friday night's contest, there were not as many penalties. Carl White was the bad boy for Michigan as he col- lected four minutes in the sin bin. White carried on a game-long= fued with Tech forward Mike Draper. In last night's game there were seven penalties as compared with 15 on Friday. Needless to say Wolverine coach Al Renfrew was delighted with his series sweep. "Tech is as tough a team as you'll find anywhere and th eboys played real good hockey to beat them. "The game was, a lot better to- iight," he added, "both teams skated harder." 1 Renfrew praised Michigan de- fense as a major cause for the Wolverine victory. "The defense was really good in the last period," he said, "they seemed to tighten up." Unfortunately, Michigan has two injuries. Rogers who injured his wrist Friday night and who Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 I Jerry Kolb, seems to have too many men between him and the goal higan Tech. Huskie wing, John Ivanitz, and defenseman Bob Pal- Bauman, to stop Kolb's drive. still played last night is still handicapped and Kartusch injured his leg. Tech coach John Maclnnes was rather disappointed with the weekend. "We skated alot better tonight but the pucks just didn't get into the goals." As for Michigan, MacInnis na- turally praised the Wolverines and especially Berenson. "Michigan played real good but I'm pretty sure it will be a different situa- tion when we play up at Hough- ton. "It's kind of hard to compare this year's Michigan team with last years, because they've only played three games, but they ap- pear to have good forwards, solid defense and good goaltending, a rather solid team." Tech was rated to be one of the top teams in the nation this year and two straight losses is not exactly the best way to begin the year. "It's not going to get any easier," said MacInnis who plays two game series with Denver, Toronto; Colorado College, Den- ver and Michigan in that order. Forward Scott Watson was out of action last night due to a ;eg injury. Red's Hat Trick MICHIGAN TECH Butts G Mcvittie Morrison D Pallante Rogers D Wimmer Wilkie C Casey Coristine LW Jonhson Berenson R W Angotti First Period Scoring: M-Berenson (Wilkie, Morrison) 3:16; M-Kolb (McGonigal) 5:56. Penalties: M - Morrison (hooking) 8:21); M-Mc- Gonzgal (hooking) 13:06; T-Casey (slashing) 13:09; M-Kartusch (trip- ping) 16:24.- Second Period Scoring: T-Pallan- te (Angotti) 5:14; M - Berenson (Wilkie) 7:03; T-Johnson (Angot- ti) 10:40; M-Berenson (Rodgers) 17:37. Penalties: M-White (hook- ing) 13:50. Third Period Scoring: M-Bab- cock (Pendlebury) 7:47; T-Ivanitz (Seger) 14:47. Penalties: M-White (interference) 12:54;, Angotti (spear- ing) 19:19. MICHIGAN 2 2 1-5 TECH 0 2 1-3 Saves: Butts (M) 10 13 7-30 McVittie (T) 6'13 9-28 WCHA Hockey North Dakota 6, Michigan State 4 BUY Middies Cinch Service Classic; Alabama Bombs Auburn, 340 Cycon Contact Lenses A NEW CONCEPT IN FITTING THIS LENS 1S SHAPED TO CONFORM MORE TO THE NATURAL CURVATURE OF THE CORNEA, MINIMIZING LENS MOVEMENT AND PERMITTING THOSE SUFFERING FROM ASTIGMATISM TO ENJOY A NEWEXPERIENCE IN CLEAR VISION. CALL AT OUR OFFICE FOR CONSULTATION AND THE CONTACT LENS STORY. DR. H. W. BENNETT -- OPTOMETRIST 117 S. Main St. NO 5-5306 or NO 5-8110 By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA-Greg Mather, Navy's, near-sighted kicking wiz- ard, booted field goals of 32 and 36 yards yesterday and dealt Army its third straight defeat, 13-7, in the colorful service football game witnessed by President Kennedy and a crowd of 101,000. The two errorless goals by Mather, a 212-pound Los Angeles end who can't see the playing field without contact lenses, provided the decisive margin in the fierce, defensive battle which saw the two teams trade touchdowns in the third period, Both touchdowns were set up by 'long passes. Al Rushatz, Pile- driving fullback, scored from the 1-yard line for Army while sopho- more Bill Ulrich raced 13 yards for the Navy's score. The field goals-in the second and fourth periods-were the 10th and 11th for Mather, who set\ an all-time record for points scored through kicking by a college player. Mather, who has 20/300 vision, kicked 11 field goals and 22 extra points in 23 attempts this year, giving him 55 points and beating the record of 54, set by Ed Dyas of Auburn last year. BIRMINGHAM - Alabama, the nation's No. 1 college football team, stormed past Auburn 34-0 yesterday, completing an unbeaten and untied season and opening the way to an expected Sugar Bowl bid. The Bowl invitation, followed by Alabama's acceptance, came short- ly after the game. The passing and running of quarterback Pat Trammell, the running of fullbacks Mike Frac- chia and Dink Wall, and the mas- tery of Alabama's awesome de- fense combined for a display of raw power that never gave Auburn a chance. Trammell and Fracchia led a first-half rampage that put Ala- bama out front 24-0 at the inter- mission. The Crimson Tide's de- fense never let Auburn* get past the 26. Alabama's rugged defense, which went into the game the best in the nation statistically, allowed Au- burn only 59 yards in the first half, despite Auburn's unexpected use of a short punt, or shotgun, forma- tion for passing. GAINESVILLE, Fla: - Miami iiiI s ,* O8 O! 4a O 'N Tar o 2Q t0 **the flavor.. a::DVAL FILTER DOES IT! I Cameras-- Films Photo Accessories at PHOTO DEPARTMENT State St. at N. University TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Chicago Cleveland at Dallas New York at Green Bay Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Washington at St. Louis Los Angeles at Minnesota San Francisco at Baltimore , w.... _ ....,_....., .._ r_ _ .. AHAN GOUT without A HANGOVER Drown your sorrows in coffee .1 I.r- A/l Ir- C CIA,-"/DAD ' :i;::R :;iIic:;:i2 :i' :t:i> . :: >v::, ,5 : ;y: : : : : ? Si .-,;: i :%:% :;r':;: :; nCIAWCV~.cI I ~ ~~~r"' . iN:fT :} : ;: ::,::t~v."." :::. ".L " i :; :? :t :'':':: ::ii ':*':.".+::%;?; i ;; j:::: 59