THE MICHIGTAN DlAY x 2rs Win on Late Scores RUN IN MICHIGAN OPEN: Cindermen i Big Ten Tuneup .4. (Continued from Page 1) publicity flowing out of Houghton. Same goes for Elov Seger and John Ivanitz. Angotti, if you will remember, is the same gentleman who threat- ened to de-capitate referee Marty Pavelich during his visit to Ann Arbor last month.. He experienced no such prob- lems ,last night, however, as he proved to the a thorn in the Wolverines' side. His second goal, late in the second period, was a stereo-type of the first as he cut across the blue line and deposited the puck into the far corner. He almost added another a minute later when he got a breakaway, but couldn't get a shot off. Coyle Brilliant It was Coyle who kept the Wol- verines in the game in the second period as he came up with some big saves. In the third period Michigan's newly formed lines began to jell, as the Wolverines started to carry the play. The line of Cushing, White and Kelly scored its second goal of the night to tie the score midway through the last period. Kelly took a pass from Rodgers and beat goalie Bill Rowe on a shot from the wing. This was a singular ef- fort for Kelly who usually lets his line-mates do the shooting. The Huskies came back strong and almost broke the tie less than a minute later, but Coyle was there to cover the puck as five players piled on top. New Line Jells Lunghamer, who, with Dale MacDonald, has recently been placed on a line with Red Beren- son, -celebrated the occasion by popping in two goals. .His go-ahead goal came on a MacDonald pass and gave Michi- gan a 3-2 lead with 10 minutes left in the game. The insurance tally, at 16:17, was accomplished when he shouldn't have even been on the ice. Lunghamer's line had been on the ice for its turn and the cen- \ter, Berenson, had been replaced by Larry Babcock. He and Mac- Donald refused to give up, though, and Lunghamer punched in a re- bound to ice the Win. The,Wolverines lost the services of defenseman Butch Nielsen with eight minutes left when he was helped from the ice. It was not known whether bie would be able to return to action tonight. By BRIAN MacCLOWRY Two thoughts will be in track: Coach Don Canham's mind to- day as he watches his athletes go through their paces in the Michigan Open trackfest. Qualifying heats and the broad jump finals take place at 1 p.m. in Yost Field House, with the other field events and the finals in the running events slated for 7:30 p.m. Canham's obvious concern will be with the performances of his troops in the Open, but lurking incognito in' the back of his mind will be thoughts of the upcoming Big Ten indoor meet, only one week away. Indiana's speedy Eddie Miles in the 60 and 300 at Illinois? These might be a few of the questions answered today, and Canham hopes the answers are to' the affirmative. The featured event of the Open could be the 60-yd, dash where Robinson will meet teammates John Gregg and Mac Hunter, in addition to Leroy Jackson. Legs Unbeaten Miler Ergas Leps, who has yet to be beaten this year, may also find his stiffest competition of the winter in that event. Running against him will be a pair of 4:15 milers, Bob Schul of the Air Force and Bert Ohlander, from Western Illinois via Scandinavia. To win, Leps will have to.im- prove his 4:18.9 clocking of a week ago when he won the event against Michigan State. What transpires tomorrow will provide Canham with a few an- swers, and it will also reduce his thoughts to one. *1 Last Tune Up I LARRY BABCOCK ... assists Lunghamer 1RT SHORTS: Cid Hockey Here Todayl ['homaas Faces Bruinel, -Daily-James warneka UP AND OVER-Tom Osterland, top-flight Michigan rebound tumbler, is shown here performing his specialty. He will be counted on for valuable points against Indiana and Iowa today. Gymnasts Travel to IU; Meet Hoosiers, Hawks Late Awakening ichigan's hockey team is onv road against Michigan Tech, ay, but the Coliseum will be Ping anyway today and to- rrow. vading Ann Arbor will be 250, ngsters for the General Sports ernational Invitational PeeWee ckey Tournament. irst games will be played at 0 p.m. with the last game .eduled for 10:30 p.m. Admis- i is fifty cents. Semi-final and al games will be played Sun- MICHIGAN Coyle Palensteln Rodgers Berenson MacDonald Lunghamer tional AAU Championships in New York. The question is will his improve- ment be good enough to , catch Russian Valery Brumel. Thomas' coach, Ed Flannagan, said yesterday that he has found a flaw in the Boston University junior's technique which had gone undetected since Thomas finished third to Brumel and Robert Shav- lakadze at the Rome Olympics. A - normal' Thomas can jump T'3" or a little better. Brumel, who came within a whisker of doing 7'5" last week, and then apologized for 7'3" as if it were a mediocre performance, has promised to do better tonight. G D C W W TECH Rowe Merlo Akervall White Angotti Johnson FirstgPeriod Scoring-M-White (Cushing, Kelly) 9:49, T--Angotti (Lauriente) 18:17. Penalties-None. Second Period Scoring-T-An- gotti (Johnson, White) 17:06. Penalties-None. Third Period Scoring - M-Kelly (Rodgers, Cushing) 8:15, M-Lung- hamer (MacDonald, Berenson) 10:37, M-Lunghamer (MacDonald, Babcock) 16:17. Penalties-None. " s STON (P) - High jumper Thomas has picked up speed i altitude-for tonight's Na- Michigan Michigan Tech Saves: Coyle (M) Rowe (T) 1 0 3 4 1 1 0U2 5 7 13 25 9 4 11 24 )NFERENCE TUNEUP MEET: NI' Swimmers Host Ohio State By BOB WAZEKA fchigan's swimming team hosts h-rival Ohio State this after- n at Varsity Pool at 3:00 p.m. the Wolverines' last dual meet the season. The lifetime record of the two ms in dual meet competition )ws Michigan with 21 wins, Ohio te with nine, and two ties, vlichigan divers Bob Webster d Ron Jaco, whohave defeated ryone they faced this year ex- t Purdue's Vogel, will not find Buckeye divers easy. Led by m captain Tom Gompf, a sen- the Buckeyes have a sizable of top-flight material. Soph- ore Jruan Botella finished third the Olympic three-meter board npetition in Rome and has rkled in early season meets. termen Fritz Fisher and Jack yes and sophomore Lou Vitucci nibine to give -the OSU diving .ad depth. Shatters Record 3reaststrokers Ron Clark, who ittered the NCAA record for the -yd. breaststroke In the Indi- a, meet with a dazzling 2:15.9, 1, also 'face' stern competition, s time in the person of OSU dor Tom Kovacs. Kovacs' has sistently been under 2:20 in 200-yd- breaststroke and ms as one of the Big Ten's t. Senior Don Will will also m breaststroke for the Buck- s. after losing ten men through .duation, the Buckeyes have at- ipted to rebuild their team und sophomores. Perhaps the st notable of the sophomore, w is backstroker L. P. Schaefer.' tar in high school, Schaefer at time held the American rec- in the 100-yd. backstroke. He 1 swim against Michigan's mpian, backstroker Alex Gax- Strong in Butterfly n the 200-yd. butterfly, Ohio ,te will send Artie Wolfe and ; McKelvey out against Michi- i's Dave Gillanders. 'he Buckeyes, however, do not re strength in all events. Michi- i, with a wealth of talented terial should score heavily in freestyle events. With not as ch depth as the Wolverines, the ekeyes figure to lose additional nts in the relay events. By DAVE KIMBALL Michigan's powerful Gymnastics team will .try and give Coach Newt Loken his first undefeated season in more than a decade to- day when it treks to Bloomington for a three-way dual meet with so- so Indiana and tvfice-beaten Iowa. The Gymnasts, the only remain- ing varsity team who have yet to taste defeat, will be shooting for their eighth and ninth straight victories in a tuneup match for the Big Ten Championships to be held here next Friday and Satur- day. It was 11 years ago, in 1950, when the Wolverines last went undefeated. That was the year they whipped seven straight oppo- nents, only to finish second to perennial conference champion Il- linois in the Big Ten meet. Mich- igan and the Fighting Ipini did not meet in dual meet competition that year. Come Close The Wolverines came close, in 1937, when they lost to powerful Penn State in a nonconference match, but went through Western Conference competition undefeat- ed, but once again they were un- able to cop the coveted Big Ten crown. The 1961 squad; however, has Celts, Hawks Win in NBA BOSTON (AP) - Boston's travel- weary Celtics, behind by 24 points late in the first period, turned loose Sam Jones. Frank Ramsey and the fast break in overwhelm- ing Syracuse 144-128 yesterday. The NBA contest, played before a Boston Garden gathering of 12,- 238, had been delayed because the Celtics could not get air trans- portation from New York. TheBoston victory, which saw Syracuse Coach Alex Hannum thrown out for arguing in the first period, left the Celtics magic num- ber at five. Any combination of Boston victories and Philadelphia defeats adding to five will clinch their fifth straight Eastern Divi- sion title for the Celtics. NEW YORK (P) - The St. Louis Hawks, playing without Cliff Hagan and Woody Sauldsberry, held off the New York Knicker- bockers for a 122-119 victory in a NBA game atMadison Square Garden last night. The victory wasn't established until the Hawks, losing a first half 20-point lead, battled through a four-minute session wtihout a field goal down the stretch. Len Wilkens and Clyde Lovel- lette, who scored 29 and 28 points, respectively, for St. Louis, did key work in the last five minutes. Dick Garmaker was high for New York with 28 points. SCORES COLLEGE BASETBALL Cornell 67, Brown 65 Princetons 8, Harvard 73 Clemson 85. Virginia 63 Wayne State s0, Western Reserve 68 Penn 77, Dartmouth 69 Columbia 59, Yale 52 Rice 64, SMU 62 Arkansas 70, Baylor 48 Texas Tech 101, TCU 75 Kelly AFB (San Antonio) 101, Air Force 87 Colgate 95, Syracuse 86 Northern Illinois 98, central Michigan 81 COLLEGE HOCKEY Mninesota 12, Colorado College 2 North Dakota 4, Michigan State 2 whipped seven straight opponents, including Illinois, and is confident of bringing home its first confer- ence championship under Loken's reign next week. While Indiana doesn't loom as a threat to the Wolverines un- beaten record, the Hawkeyes could pose a problem to Loken's charges. Russ Porterfield is con- sidered "excellent" on the high bar by Loken, and should give Michigan standouts Rich Mont- petit and Gil Larose competition in that event. Don Carney and Roger Gedney will try and, make the Wolverines' Tom Osterland work for a win in his favorite, the "Trampoline." Oustanding Tumbler In addition to rebound tum- bling, Gedney is considered out- standing in tumbling and free exercise, while Joe Cada is rated high by Loken in all-around com- petition. The Hawkeyes have lost only two meets this year, to Illinois and Michigan State. One victory today will give them a fourth place finish in the Big Ten dual meet standings. Indiana, the, meet's underdog, will set a split in the day's activi- ties as their goal. With their overall record now standing at 5-4, the Hoosiers need to whip at least one of their favored op- ponents to wind up the dual sea- son with a winning record. The Hoosiers, while lacking in depth, will nevertheless provide a couple of standouts in Jim Wood- ward and Tom Lancaster. Wood- ward, only a sophomore, is already considered one of the best tum- blers in the conference. The lead- ing Hoosier scorer, Woodward is also considered strong in free ex- ercise, while Lancaster is a po- tential standout in the rings, his Cager-Cast ThebMichigan - Northwestern basketball game will be broad- cast tonight over radio station WHRV at 9 p.m. latest victory coming last week' in a losing cause against Illinois. Loken, when asked to evaluate Illinois and MSU, the Wolverines' two top conpetitors for the Big Ten title,,viewed them as two en- tirely different kinds of teams. "State has powerful specialists," the popular mentor remarked, "in- cluding one of the best trampo- line and tumbling teams in the country. "However, Illinois has more depth, and in the Big Ten type of competition, that's what counts most." Today's program will be the last tune up for the track team before they travel to Champaign to do battle with the best in the Big Ten. Today's Open meet could provide some interesting answers as to what can be expected a week hence. For instance: Will the often injured Les Bird come out of the Open in good_ shape and be ready to take all of his jumps in Big Ten competition, something that he has not done in quite a while? After missing the Michigan State dual meet because of ineli- gilibity, can the now eligible Ray Locke regain the form that made him Big Ten outdoor shotput champ last spring? Having competed in only one meet since his Bahama vacation, can sprinter Tom Robinson hope to be in the kind of shape that will be necessary for him to beat AT NU: Cagers Try To Escape Last Place By DAVE GOOD Determined to win after two near- upsets of highly - ranked Purdue and, Iowa, Michigan's cagers travel to Evanston for to night's game against seventh-place Northwestern and then to Mad- ison Monday for an encounter with eighth-place Wisconsin. Starting to click as a unit for the -first Time this season, the Wolverines boast improved play- making by guards John Tidwell and Jon Hall and stronger re- bounding by the front line of Tom Cole, Scott Maentz and Charlie Higgs. This, along with an effective new zone defense and more scoring punch from all positions, has boosted Coach Dave Strack's hopes ofpulling out of the Big Ten cellar. In the Wildcats, Michigan will find a team without a devastating pivot man such as Terry Dis- chinger or Don Nelson, who were- instrumental in sneaking their teams past the fired-up Wolver- ines. Northwestern features a balanc- ed offense led by junior guards Ralph Wells and Bill Cacciatore and senior forward Brad Snyder. Wells, who his coach calls an "All-American a year away from Al-American recognition," cur- rently holds down eighth place in, the conference scoring race with a 15.1 average, just *head of Tid- well. After establishing a reputation as a deadly jump-shooter last year, Cacciatore was benched early this season and has just regained his starting berth. Coming in as a sub to spark the Wildcat's win over Wisconsin several weeks ago, Cacciatore hit 26 points in his last start against Illinois to up his avearge tg 12.9 points and re-establish himself as a key man on the squad. Snyder, at 6'2" is the smallest forward in the Big Ten, but still is an agressive board-man. His 99 rebounds place his eighth be- hind such monsters as 6'8" Jerry Lucas and 6'10/" Walt Bellamy. As Low As Eldrl X1995 JROPE-NEAR EAST-13951 Special Conducted Student Tours Meet us in Venice and tour the Mediter- ranean; sailing to Greek Islands, Rhodes, Cyprus and Israel. Includes guided tours, folk dancing, seminars, life on a kibbutz, etc., 27 days only $395 and up. For All Your Travel Needs Call, Write or Wsit Us Nowl ROYAL STUDENT TOURS (Div. of PATRA Inc.) 6,5 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C. * Tel.: PLaza 1-5540 Starting GUARANTEED REPAI R SERVICE USED BIKES. I BEAVER'S BIKE & HARDWARE 605 Church NO 5-6607 U I r t1 PERFECT FORM-Top competition for Michigan divers Bob Webster and Ron Jaco is expected to come from Ohio State's Tom Gompf, pictured here at the height of one of his new perfect dives. RazorsTo Help Wolverine In Atftempt 'To .Defend Title rs_. ttaTr r 'rsra+crtit r r t+ By JOHN REYNOLDS This is a story of some hairless men. Atomic radiation? No, these are the members of Michigan's defending Big Ten champion swimming team. -'Hairless? Well, shaven, or to be shaven within the next week or so, before the Big Ten Champion- ships at Ohio State March 2,, 3 and 4. Swimmers shaving their legs has been a relatively new development, first used by the Australians in the 1956 Olympics. Michigan's Dick Hanley, now in his graduate studies here, was probably the first American to shave his legs, and he borrowed the idea after going to the Olympics. The Michi- gan team was also the first "well- shaven" squad in the United States. Shaving a Help Asked whether the shaving was a psychological or an actual phy- sical help, swimming coach Gus Stager replied, "Ever feel the bot- tom of a boat, especially a racing said boat? Smooth, isn't it? In the same way a smooth body of a swimmer moves faster, since there's less resistance." "You might say that the swim- mer gets a lift out of it, because he feels better in the water. But that's just saying that a football team that wears light shoes, or a track team that slits the sides of its runners' pants, is psychologi- cally lifted. They wear those shoes or pants because they are ridding themselves of resistance."~ "Also look at the hairs on your hand under water. Do they stand up or lie down? They all stand up, and slow you down. "There are a lot of things done to speed up swimmers," continued Stager. "A boat sails faster on placid water. Thus we have smooth pools and special drains." Should Shave? Whether or not the team should have shaved for the Indiana meet; is unsure, except that Stager's philosophy is to put the absolute top effort into the really big meets, the Big Ten, NCAA, and AAU Championships, not the dual meets. The whole year is devoted to preparation for these meets. For this reason, shaving is waited until the time when their perform- ances count the most. L J. : .W t A I DOING IT THE HARD WAY bybp (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THA T iS') -In~~ersY11 - a d nm~smw~ V~tW .10 . .:F E B. 27, 28 JUST' R LEASED -------------- ----------- 111 in A A . L .I /ft /R' A A1A - U w 1__ 0 ----