I 3 THE MICHIGAN DAILY olverine lcers Rally To Whip Tech, 5-4 HOLMES STARS FOR LOSERS: 'M' Gymnasts Mangle Ilini By STAN KUKLA Five seniors, playing the last home game of their college ca- reers, showed Michigan hockey fans that they can play hockey, but it was Gary Butler's goal at 19:12 of the third period that gave the Wolverines a 5-4 victory over Michigan Tech last night. Butler picked up a pass from Gord Wilkie at Tech's blue line. An extra burst of speed enabled him to skate 'around Huskie defense- man Mike Draper. Butler had only Bauman to beat and he did that with amazing simplicity. He waited until Bauman went down to block the shot and then poked the puck between his pads. The quintet-Don Rodgers, Tom Pendlebury, Dave Butts, John Mc- Gonigal, and captain Larry Bab- cock-handled - themselves well. Pendlebury scored the third Mich- igan goal and got an assist on the second. Babcock received an as- sist on Butler's goal. McGonigal scored the goal that tied the game at 4-4 and Rodgers scored a goal for Tech in the second per- iod. Butts didn't get any points but his play on the regular line plus his work as penalty-killer-in-chief kept the Wolverines close to Tech. Same Story The Huskies dominated play in the opening minutes of the game and when John Ivanitz scored his first of three goals at 2:37, things looked black indeed. Ivahitz scored when he inter- cepted a pass and hit the far cor- ner of the net. But the lead he gave the Huskies didn't last too long, for Wayne Kartusch hit the net on a hard slapshot from the blue line. The period ended in a one-one tie, Kartusch !put the Wolverines one - up at 5:58 of the second frame with an almost identical play as his first goal. Pendlebury assisted on the play. Pendlebury then gave the Wol- verines a two-goal lead exactly five minutes later with Kartusch picking up the assist. F' Bug Then the fatigue bug caught up with the Wolverines and they blew their lead and watched the Huskies take the lead for the first time. The action was reminiscent of the Saturday night game at Houghton when the Wolverines had a 3-1 lead and wound up on the short end of a 5-4 score at the final buzzer. Ivanitz brought the Tech team within one goal on Rodgers' mis- play and then Scott Watson con- verted a goal-mouth pass from George Hill into the tieing marker. Ivanitz scored his hat trick goal 40 seconds later and the period ended with Tech holding a 4-3 lead. The Huskies outshot the Wolverines 19-8 in the second per- iod. Bottled The Huskies kept the Wolverines bottled up in their own territory for most of the third period. The best defense in hockey is to keep the puck away from your goalie and the Huskies did just that. Michigan got only six shots on net but, fortunately, two of those got by Bauman. Tech had many scoring oppor- tunities but an almost super-hu- man effort by goalie Bob Gray kept the Huskies off the scoring sheets for the period. But Gray wasn't the only one on the ice stopping pucks. Rodgers more than redeemed himself with smashing' checks and general confusion of the enemy. Kartusch played perhaps the greatest game of his career. Not only did his two goals double his output for the year but also he showed himself capable of com- ing up with the big play when the team needed a lift. The work of these men will probably be overlooked, however, because of the excitement of the last three minutes of the game. The Huskies had been applying pressure on Gray, as usual, when Butler got the puck and streaked down the left side of the ice, drawing the Tech defensive corps to him. Then he spotted McGoni- gal parked in front of Bauman. Open Nobody was covering Bauman and Butler's pass was right on his stick. At the same instant that the puck got to McGongial, he fired. Bauman stopped the shot but the rebound came back to Mc- Gonigal and he coolly slipped it by the helpless Bauman. With 2:55 left to play, the score was 4-4. Then at 19:12, Butler slammed the door on the Huskies' hopes for first place. "This'll make the fans come back for more," commented jubi- lant Michigan Coach Al Renfrew after the game. "Too bad we don't have any left, though." The Wolverines' modest winning streak-two games-is their long- est of the year. In fact, the sweep of the Tech series doubled Mich- igan's total wins for the season. The Wolverines now have a 3-11-2 record. Next weekend the team will try to salvage something out of this season. They play a two-game se- ries at East Lansing and a dou- ble victory there will give the Wolverines sixth place in the league. Not only that but also the team will have revenge for the two losses to State at the begin- ning of the season which started the Wolverines. on their downhill road. Butler Did It MICHIGAN TECH Gray G Bauman Rodgers D Pallante Kartusch D Begg Wilkie C Hill Butler W D. Draper Babcock IW Watson First Period Scoring: T-Ivanitz (unassisted) 2:37; M - Kartusch (Wilkie, Butler) 7:33. Penalties: T- Pailante (roughing) 3:06; M-Butts (roughing) 3:06; T-Dart (cross- checking) 7:18; 1M-Cole (holding) 14:36; M-Butler (holding) 16:58; T-Lauriente (tripping) 19:51. Second Period Scoring: M-Kar- tusch (Pendlebury) 5:58;T -Pendle- bury (Kartusch) 10:58; T--Ivanltz (unassisted) 12:34; T--Watson (Hill, D. Draper) 17:55; T-Ivanitz (Lauri- ente) 18:35. Penalties: T-Lauriente (charging) 1:58; T-Hill (tripping) 3:05; M-Newton (holding) 11:07; M-Kartusch (checking from be-" hind) 11:46; M-Kartusch (high- sticking) 15:54. Third Period Scoring: M-McGon- igal (Butler) 17:05; M-Butler (Wil- kie, Babcock) 19:12. Penalties: T- Pallante (holding) 13:57; T-Begg (highsticking) 15:58; T-Rebellato (misconduct) 19:12. By MIKE BLOCK Michigan's undefeated gymnas- tics team kept on rolling yester- day, as it swept to an easy 53-26 victory over 11linois at the Intra- mural Building. Paced by two first places for Captain Gil Larose, and two more for Arno Lascari, the Wolverines chalked up their fourth Big Ten win this year. The hapless Illini are now 0-6. Michigan took first in every event except tumbling, where, as expected, Hal Holmes emerged victorious. The Wolverines also copped five out of seven seconds in avanging last year's 60-25 loss to the Illini. Not Close The meet wasn't even as close as the score might indicate. The Illini were so handicapped by graduation losses t h a t they couldn't come up with performers. in either the high bar or the par- allel bars. As a result, of the four Michigan men who competed in these events, only one score was counted per event. Therefore, where nor- mally the Wolverines would have been given credit for first, second, third and fourth places, they only got first-place credit. In two additional events, the sidehorse and the still rings, the Illini were able to supply only one entrant, so Michigan Coach Newt Loken waived the scores of all his men but one in each of these also. In both cases, it turned out that the Illinois gymnast would have finished last instead of second, and this contributed to what otherwise would have been an ex- tremely low point total. Larose Scores Larose's firsts came in floor ex- ercise and the rings; in the latter his score was NTC (not to count) in the official scoring, but his 95 easily bested teammate J i m Hynds, who was given official credit for first place. Lascari's victories were on the high bar and the parallel bars, Larose is Larose FLOOR EXERCISE-1. Larose (M) 93.5. 2. Henderson (MW) 91. 3. Holmes (1)'88.5. 4. Lascarl (M) 87.5. TRAMPOLINE--1. Sanders (M) 91.5. 2. Erwin (MW) 90.5. 3. Flood (I) 88.5. 4. Iffland (1) 85.5. 5. Hamilton (M) 82. SIDEHORSE--1. Hynds (M) 86.5. 2. Levy (M) 83 (NTC). 3. Frecska (M) 80.5 (NTC). 4. Hackelman (I) 70.5. HIGH BAR-1. Lascari (M) 94. 2. Frecska (M) 92.5 (NTC). 3. Larose (M) 91 (NTC). 4. Hynds (M) 90.5 (NTC). PARALLEL BARS-1. Lascari (M) 95.5. 2. Larose (M) 94.5 (NTC). 3. Hynds (M) 92 (NTC). 4. Frecska (M) 86 (NTC). STILL RINGS-1. Larose (M) 95 (NTC). 2. Lascari (M) 93 (NTC). 3. Hynds (M) 86.5. 4. Frecska (M) 85 (NTC). 5. Hackelman (I) 82. TUMBLING-1. Holmes (I) 97. 2. Henderson (M) and Bolton (M) 91 (tie). 4. Iffland (I) 83. where he edged out Larose, 95.5- 94.5. The junior flash was also runnerup on the rings-here his double somersault out for a finale was only bested by Larose's dis- play of the iron cross. The Wolverines' other firsts were garnered by Fred Sanders on the trampoline and Hynds on the horse. Loken was especially gratified by Sanders' showing, since it was his first first recorded in dual meet competition. Bestin Meet Holmes' 97 mark was the high- est recorded by either team, and according to veteran gymnastics observers, he was never better. His assortment of double back- flips and handsprings, coupled with his phenomenal speed down the mats, left few people wonder- ing why he was four times the national AAU champ. But the Michigan tumblers wer no slouches themselves, as bot Phil Bolton and Mike Hendersc recorded 91 to tie for second. A promised, they also employed th double back to the satisfactionc the over 2000 spectators presen Two More Places Holmes accounted for additior al Illini scoring by placing thir behind Larose and Hendersoni the floor exercise. Llewellyn If. land placed fourth on the tram and in tumbing, and Mike Hac kelman received those charit seconds on the horse and the ring Bill Flood wa the only oth( Illinois scorer with a third on ti tramp. Loken was extremely please with his team's exhibition, an immediately began to look forwar to this Friday's home meet wil an undefeated Minnesota squad Cincinnati, Loyola Both Are Defeated -Daily-Bruce Taylor DIGS IT OUT-Michigan sophomore Gary Butler (to left), the team's leading scorer in WCHA ac- tion, iced last night's game against Michigan Tech with a last-minute goal. Here Butler is about to check Tech's Mike Draper into the boards in a scramble for the puck. Butler's goal gave the Wolver- ines a 5-4 victory and enabled them to split the season series with Tech,at two games apiece. BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Hoosiers Dropl li iiDespite Downey's 53 By The Associated Press WICHITA - Wichita stunned Cincinnati's national champions, 65-64, last night, ending the Bear- cats' 37-game winning streak, as Dave Stallworth threw in 46 points. Stallworth scored the last seven points in the final four minutes. Cincinnati led, 64-58, with four, minutes to go when the Wheat- shockers started their amazing ral- ly. Stallworth got the last three points on free throws. He made one of two fouls for a 64-63 read- ing with 1:32 left. Cincinnati then went down the court, missed a shot, and Wichita got the rebound. Gene Smith, a Cincy sophomore, then fouled Stallworth and he made both free throws for the final 65-64 Wichita edge with 74 seconds left. The Bearcats missed another shot with 32 seconds left, Wichita took the rebound and stalled out the victory. An overflow crowd of 10,693 whooped it up for Wichita. It was Cincinnati's firqt defeat since Jan. 10, 1962, when Bradley upset them in overtime at Peoria, 70-68. Cincinnati, shooting for an un- precedented third straight NCAA championship, seemed to have it wrapped up with the six-point lead with four minutes left. But their errors and Wichita steals turned the tide. Ron Bonham led the Bearcats with 26 points and George Wilson had 15. Stallworth hit 14 of 22 shots from the field, and 18 of 23 foul shots. He also grabbed nine re- bounds, leading Wichita in that department.. Wilson had 14 re- bounds-high for the game. Wichi ta had a 33-30 edge in rebounds Wichita hit 21 of 46 shots for 45.7 per cent while Cincy hit 2: of 47 for 48.9 per cent. The Wheat shockers made 74 per cent fron the free throw line, Cinvinnati 75 Cincy committed 23 fouls, about double its, season average. The Bearcats led the nation in fou avoidance before the game. Wich ita was called for 17 fouls. Cincinnati Jumped ahead at the start of the second half and stayed in front until Wichita's game-win ning spurt. BOWLING GREEN - Bowling Green's resurgent Falcons, hitting more than 54 per cent of thei shots, toppled second-ranked Loy ola of Chicago from the ranks o collegiate basketball unbeatens las night, 92-75. The victory was the sixth straight for IBowling Green- (14-6 while Loyola suffered its first set back in 22 outings. Moving into a 9-0 lead at the be ginning, the Falcons never trailed and held leads ranging from 11 t 17 points. Loyola, one of the nation's high est scoring teams, was cold o: the floor, cashing in on only 4 per cent of its goal tries. Howard Komives led the Fal cons with 32 points while big Nat Thurmond, the Beegees' 6'11" cen ter, added 24. Leslie Hunter scored 24 for the losers and Jerry Hark ness added 21. Loyola's 75-point total was th team's second lowest of the year By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON-Dave Down- ey's record 53 points for Illinois yesterday afternoon in a televised basketball game failed to save the Big Ten leaders from a 103- 100 defeat by Indiana's surging Hoosiers. Illinois lost its second confer- ence game and dropped into a first-place tie with Ohio State. Downey's total was the most ever scored in a Big Ten regula- tion game but under the recogniz- ed league record of 56 by In- diana's Jimmy Rayl in an over- time game with Minnesota last year. Downey's 22 field goals broke the Big Ten record shared by three players. Terry Dischinger of Purdue had scored 52 points against Michigan State in a regulation length game two years ago. Indiana won at the free throw line in handing Illinois its second straight conference loss after six successive victories. Illinois had 10 more field goals but only 14 of 19 free throws against Indi- SORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Wichita 65, Cincinnati 64 Bowling Green 92, Loyola (Chicago) 75 Virginia 71, Maryland 69 Louisville 78, Georgia Tech 73 Ohio U. 90, Western Michigan 64 Princeton 85, Dartmouth 62 West Virginia 89, Richmond 72 Georgia 76, Mississippi 63 Loyola (N. Orleans) 84, Miami (Fla) 77 Duke 73, Wake Forest 60 Pitt 76, Bucknell 54 Iowa State 73, Colorado 60 Yale 75, Columbia 44 Penn 78, e Harvard 53 Oklahoma 64, Kansas 62 Connecticut 85, Holy Cross 75 Notre Dame 68, Navy 56 So.' Carolina 70, N.C. St. 69 (2 ovts.) St. Bonaventure 79, Villanova 58 Kansas State 67, Missouri 55 Florida 73, Mississippi State 52 Seton Hal 101, St. Francis (Pa) 85 Detroit 92, Buffalo State 70 Tulsa 66, St. Louis 65 Auburn 82, Louisiana State 57 Texas A & M 80, Arkansas 78 Bradley 75, North Texas 72 Texas Tech 77, Baylor 70 Murray 87, Western Kentucky 74 Georgetown 89, Manhattan 87 North Carolina 79, Clemson 63 Marquette 87, DePaul 81 Arizona State 104, Brigham Young 87 NHL Detroit 3, Boston I Toronto 4, New York 2 Montreal 4, Chicago 2 NBA Cincinnati 110, Detroit 99 Boston 114, St. Louis 94 ana's 37 of 48. Illinois lost three men on personal fouls. Rayl, playing his last year for the Hoosiers, scored 29 points but Tom.Bolyard topped the winners with 34. Illinois hit 43 of 93 field goal attempts for 46.2 per cent. Indi- ana 33 of 76 for 43.4. Indiana, making its Big Ten record 5-3, lost two starters on fouls, sopho- more identical twins Tom and Dick VanArsdale. Gophers Edge Spartans EAST LANSING-Minnesota's basketball team kept its Big Ten title hopes alive last night by downing Michigan State, 75-70. The win moved /the Gophers one-half game behind league- leading Ohio State and Illinois, who stand at 6-2. Minnesota is now 6-3. Michigan State's in eighth place, with a 3-6 record. Forward Eric Magdanz led the winners' scoring attack with 19 points. Pete Gent was high for MSU with 22. Minnesota pulled to a 40-30 halftime advantage. In the final minutes the Spar- tans went ahead, 68-67, but Min- nesota capitalized on Michigan State fouls and counted eight charity attempts in the final 2:02 to preserve the victory. Michigan State outscored the visitors' from the floor, 29-27, but counted only 12 free throws in 18 attempts to 23 for Minnesota in 33 attempts. Iowa Raps Purdue IOWA CITY--Iowa won its fifth. straight Big Ten basketball game Saturday night, whipping Purdue, 73-64, behind the deadly shoot- ing of Joe Reddington. Reddington fired a second-half Iowa rally that broke open a tight battle. He scored four straight baskets for the Hawk- eyes as Iowa pulled away in the ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Coll. Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars last 10 minutes of the game. He finished with 11 points. Purdue, which lost its ninth conference game in 10 starts, led 37-36 early in the second half. Then Purdue dropped behind 47- 43, and Iowa widened the gap to 15 points, 68-53, in the next five minutes to clinch the victory. Mel Garland, Purdue scoring leader with a 24-point average, was held without a field goal un- til he hit on a jump shot with 8 minutes left. He finished with 15' points one less than teammate Bob Purkheiser.j Dave Roach was Iowa's top scorer with 15 points. The victory gave Iowa a 5-3 conference record. Grams Leads Badgers MADISON -- Dave Grams, a junior forward who had scored only 58 points all season, led Big Ten Standings W L Pet. Illinois 6 2 .750 Ohio State 6 2 .750 Minnesota 6 3 .667 Iowa 5 3 .625 Indiana 5 3 .625 MICHIGAN 4 4 .500 Wisconsin 4 4 .500 Michigan State 3 6 .333 Northwestern 2 6 .250 Purdue 1 9 .100 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Ohio State 75, Michigan 68 Indiana 103, Illinois 100 Minnesota 75, Michigan State 70 Wisconsin 78, Northwestern 65 Iowa 73, Purdue 64 Big Ten Conference basketball vic- Wisconsin to a second straight tory yesterday with a, 26-point barrage against Northwestern. The score was 78-65 Grams, from Monroe, Wis., hit 12 field goals and two free throws. The victory was Wisconsin's fourth in eight Big Ten games and gave the Badgers an 11-7 over-all record. Northwestern now has lost six of its eight confer- ence contests and has a season record of 5-13. Grams put the Badgers into an early lead with three straight field goals. The Wilcats didn't get onto the scoreboard until 2% minutes had elapsed when Marty Riessen found the mark with a long shot. Northwestern stuck to its zone defense but when the Badgers couldn't filter through for short shots, Grams popped away from outside. The Wildcats took the lead at 22-20 with 6:40 left in the first period. But they couldn't hold it and Wisconsin left the floor at halftime with a 35-29 advantage. Rich Falk was high for North- western with 22. Wisconsin shot at a .427 clip, Northwestern at .350. OUR HAIR CUTTING and STYLING METHODS will please you. Try us! -Tonsoraici queries invited- THE DASCOLA BARBERS near the Michigan Theatre MICHIGAN TECH Saves: Gray (M) Bauman (T) 1 2 2-5 1 3 0--4 14 16 9-39 10 6 4-20 I Ui I. Petitioning' Now Open For UNION SENIOR OFFICES I DUE: MARCH 8 Petitions available at the Michigan Union Student Offices ,: - . , % . .1"v a./ S l " w ..^'' I i F V >. . ICI It's attention to details that makes the differene I in dry cleaning. I. Sport coats are the most versatile garment in a man's wardrobe. 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