f PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY fiATTTRnAV_ 911 FVRR.ITATt.V 149 PAGESIX UE ICHI~ANfl'~I.V ATTPT~r~ )fl ~'1~T~A'~L+E 1 A iu[ At.71 , ; V r CjLnUA~t LtJ.LiUa~ D Icers I Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - Michigan's hockey team backed into fourth place in the WCHA standings last night even though the Wolverines came up on a short end of a 5-4 score in a hard-fought game with Minnesota. The loss was a key one how- ever, since it prevented the Wol- verines from moving into a third place tie with Minnesota. The race fqr the fourth - playoff spot rages on as Michigan squeaked ahead of Michigan State by .022 percentage points. Lose; I In the wide-open contest. fi of the nine goals were scored the first eight and one-half mix utes of the first period. Althoug only 18 minutes worth of pena ties were called, including a7 minute misconduct, the conte was marked by rough but clea play, according to a Minnesota o: ficial. Big Red. The Gophers drew first blood 2:37 of the first period when wind er Dennis Zacho scored his 14t goal of the season, beating Mic igan goalie Greg Page with a E eep F ve assist from Jack Dale and de- in fenseman Frank Zywiec. n- Michigan fought back a min- h ute and 23 seconds later on a 'l- sharp goal by center Pierre De- 1C chaine at 4:00. Dechaine's goal st put the icers back into the game. an "Pete" was assisted by sopho- more Dean Lucier and All-Amer- ica defenseman Tom Polonic. De- chaine's shot went in from just in front of Minnesota goalie John at Lothrop's cage after a struggle in g- front of the net. th The Wolverines went into the h- lead three and one-half minutes an later when WCHA scoring leader, Mel Wakabayashi, tallied his first of two goals. Wakabayashi got an assist from Polonic and scored after some deceptive stick han- dling. Time It Minnesota Coach John Mariucc' remarked about Wakabayashi ear- lier in the day, "By the time you say his name, he has already got two goals," and the 155-pound center from Chatham got his twc tallies last night. OUTCLASS FOES: ourtli Place Tankers Trounce Bearcats Minnesota, not to be denied, snatched the lead back from the icers only 16 seconds later whery Dale scored his fifth goal of the year with assists from Roy Ny- strom and Pat Furlong, at 7:46. Defenseman Dick Haig put Min- esota ahead only 43 seconds later By CHUCK VETZNER surprised no one was Carl Robie's cats had only one man-Lance when he tallied his third goal of 4:51.78 in the 500-yard freestyle. Altenau-capabie of swimming the ,the season to close out the first Michigan's swimmers submerged The star butterflyer was swimming stroke, so Stager only entered period scoring. an outmanned Cincinnati squad the event for the first time, but Tom O'Malley. The result was a In the loosely-played first per- last night in a meet that ended was only :00.97 off Bill Farley's two-man race in which Alten.au iod, only one penalty was called, with backstroker Ed Bartsch's varsity and pool record set last took the only Cinci first of ,he and that was on Polonic for :51.3 in the final leg of the 400- week against Indiana. night. roughing. ; yard freestyle relay. Michigan divers had the easiest The Wolverines won everything The two teams will meet again The senior captain's time was time of all. Cincinnati doesn't have else, the most exciting race being tonight in another crucial WCHA well off a record, but it gave his any. In spite of this the Wolver- the 200-yard backstroke, where contest. teammates a good chance to ines swept the event with Don Reese Orland edged Jack Zakin whoop it up in a contest the Ewing taking first. by :00.24. SCORES Wolverines won 61-24. However ... Lay in Wait COLLEGE BASKETBALL The result was expected, but Because of the extenuating cir- Today, the Michigan water mon- N. Carolina State 62, Clemson 61 coach Gus Stager expressed cumstances, however, the event sters lay in wait for Ohio State DePaul 77. Portland 64 pleasure over the performance of was not included in the team at Matt Mann Pool in a meet Arizona State 71, New Mexico 65 sophomore freestyler Tom Wil- score. beginning at 4:00 p.m. Although usC 77. Oregon 56 Arizona 78, Wyoming 77 liams. "He's finally started to The 200-yard butterfly was an- the Buckeyes will be the under- Princeton 83. Dartmouth 57 open up," he noted afterwards. other place where an unusual dogs, Stager expects the meet to COLLEGE HOCKEY Swimming in exhibition, Williams situation was apparent. The Bear- be a good one. Michigan Tech 4, Michigan State 3 turned in a 1:48.61 for the 200- Boston College 8, Providence 4 yard freestyle. fust Itesti NBA Los Angeles 119, Baltimore 111 Another top time that really 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY - 1. 100-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Walls Michigan (Bartsch, Scheerer, Vry, (M); 2. Boerio (C); 3. Schwarten Farley); 2. Cincinnati. Time-3:44.7. (M). Time-:48.94. 200-YD. FREESTYLE -- 1. Hoag 200-YD. BACKSTROKE - 1. Or- (M); 2. Kin (C); 3. Brundage (M). land (M); 2. Zakin (C); 3. Stacy Time-1:48.04.(C). Time-2:05.19. I De-ICer First Period Scoring: Minn -- Zacho (Zywiec, Dale) 2:37. M-De- chaine (Lucier, Polonic) 4:00. M - Wakabayashi (Polonic) 7:30. Minn- Dale (Nystrom, Furlong) 7:46. Minn --Haig (Stordahl) 8:29. Penalties: M-Polonic (roughing) 8:55. Second Period Scoring: Minn- Larson (Woog, Hokanson) 4:58. M-Wakabayashi (Martin) 7:13. Minn-Larson (Woog, Hokanson) 11:14. M-Hood (Martin, Read) 16:56. Penalties: Minn-Edman (slashing) 6:17. Minn - Falkman (tripping) 16:22. Minn-Falkman (misconduct) 16:56. M - MacDonald (holding) 19:55. Third Period Scoring: None. Pen- alties: Minn - Branch (holding) 16:37. Saves: Page (M) 14 10 5-29 Lothrop (Minn) 15 9 11-35 Scoring by Periods: MICHIGAN 2 2 0-4 MINNESOTA 3 2 0-5 t° Break Seven Meet Records MEL WAKABAYASHI CHAMPS NO M IORE: Lowly B uckeyes Challenge r'21' Cagers By BOB McFARLAND Michigan's c i n d e r m e n over- whelmed Penn State in a dual meet at Yost Field House last night by a score of 92-48, as the Wolverine thinclads continued to steadily improve their perform- By RICK STERN Battling Michigan this after- noon in Yost Field House, Ohio State's Buckeyes find themselves in a highly unusual position, literally. The game will be televised on WJBK-TV, Channel 2, beginning at 2 p.m. years, they are currently buried peacefully in seventh place, al- ready mathematically eliminated from even a share of the top spot. Naturally, the first ranked Wol- verines cannot afford to take their opponents lightly. Assistant Coach Jim Skala has described the Buckeyes as "dangerous," and head man Dave Strack comment- ed yesterday that OSU is "a big team, with a fine pair of back- court men, which has shown that it can play well." t i x One of those back-court men is Dick Ricketts, a veteran,"of Ohio State's glory teams, who is aver- aging 17 points per game in the Big Ten this season. Teaming with Ricketts will probably be junior Al Peters, although a sophomore, Al Rowley, has seen Lucas and Gary Bradds. Taylor did not appear enthu- ances in preparation for the Big siastic when interviewed yester- Ten indoor meet. day. "We're just here to try and Highlighting the meet was a play a ball game. Beating Mich- victory by ' Ted Benedict in the igan isn't going to make a season two mile run. Benedict turned in for us. We'll have to play just as the best performance of his career, well as we know how," are sam- running the distance in 9:12.7, r good enough to crack the meet! record in the event and qualify him for the NCAA Indoor Cham- pionships. Michigan swept the first three places in the shottput and 600- yard run. Sophomore Jack Har- vey got off a 54'6%" heave to win the shot put. Placing behind Har- vey were Steve Leuchtman and Bill Yearby who finished second' and third, respectively. Snapping a meet record, Dan Hughes turned in a 1:11.7 clock- ing in the 600-yard run, followed by Bob Gerometta who took sec- and and Brian O'Neill third. Two double winners, both foot- ball players, paced the Michigan cindermen. Carl Ward sprinted to victory in the 60-yard dash and leaped 21'2" in the broad jump. Dominating the hurdles, John Henderson earned firsts in the 65-yard highs and 65-yard lows. 50-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Groft (M); 2. Borio (C); 3. Orland (M). Time-:21.64. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. Reppert (M); 2. Kingery (M); 3. Kute (C). Time-2:04.85. DIVING-1. Ewing (M); 2. Walm- sey (M); 3. Shuff. (M). Points -- 278.70. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY-1. Altenau (C); 2. O'Malley (M). Time-2:02.26. 500-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Robie (M); 2. Wingard (C); 3. Kin (C). Time-4:51.78. 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE -- 1. Reppert (M); 2. Williams (M); 3. Kute (C). Time--2:24.2. 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Michigan (Hoag. Schwarten, Brun- dage, Bartsch); 2. Cincinnati. Time -3:21.53. TOTALS: Michigan--61; OSU-24 tStudent oriented shopping UflVRSJTOW(RS I Although or tied for pionship in the Bucks have won the Big Ten cham- each of the last five considerable action this season. ples of the 6'5" former major At the forwards are 6'4" Ron league baseball player's com- Sepic and 6'6" Andy Ahijevycb ments. IStrack will go with the Wolver- ine line-up which has started Sweet Victory every Big Ten game this season. Out-running and out-jump- All-America Cazzie Russell and: ing their opponents, the Michi- 6'5" George Pomey will lead the gan Daily Libels edged the Blue attack, which seemed mo- Union Muggers 51-23 yesterday mentarily stifled by a rugged In- afternoon. After the massacre diana defense last Monday. -with tears in his eyes-Kent Oliver Darden will be playing (Superman) Cartwright said a more cautious game, in a'h effortI "It was a close game, and we to keep his foul total down, while played our dangdest." at the other forward, Larry Tre- goning is still not completely re- (Ah-hee-ah-vich). Sepic is only covered from his recent ankle in- a sophomore but ranks fourteenth juries. At center is Bill Buntin, among Big Ten scorers with an ,the sixth leading scorer in the average of over 18 points per conference. Russell is tied for: 1game. Ahijevych is a junior who first with Purdue's Dave Schell- was switched from center by hase. Each has scored 216 points. C Onnnh F d T1,'l-. r ftn, A o , n r The Buckeye-Wolverine clashes Runaway POLE VAULT-1. Canamare (M); 2. Wells (M). Height-14'6" (meet record). SHOT PUT - 1. Harvey (M); 2. Leuchtman (M); 3. Yearby (M). Distance-54'6!4." HIGH JUMP - 1. Jinks (PS); 2. Densham (M); 3. Hedmark (PS). Height-6'5Z." BROAD JUMP - 1. Ward (M); 2. Gregg (PS); 3. Hedmark (PS). Dis- tan('e-21'2. ONE MILE RUN - 1. Lampman (PS); 2. Mercer (M); 3. Morris (PS). Time-4 :17.0. 440-YD. DASH-1. Bernard (M); 2. Hoey (M); 3. Colasanto (PS). Time -:49.3 (meet record). 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES-1. Hen- derson (M); 2. Woodton (M); 3. Olson (PS). Time-:08.3. 1000-YD. RUN - 1. Bedick (PS); 2. Pheiffer (PS); 3. Kelly (M). Time -2:15.6. 60-YD. DASH - 1. Ward (M); 2. Cooper (M); 3. Gregg (PS). Time- :06.2 (meet record). 600-YD. RUN-1. Hughes (M); 2. Gerometta (M); 3. O'Neill (Ms). Time-1:11.7 (meet record). 300-YD. RUN-1. Gregg (PS); 2. Jarema (M); 3. Cooper (M), Time- :32.1 (meet record). 65-YD. LOW HURDLES-1. Hen- derson (M); 2. Woodton (M); 3. Olson (PS). Time-:07.9. ONE MILE RELAY - 1. Michigan (Hoey, Hughes, Gerometta, Ber- ard)r; 2. Penn State. Time-3:1.0 (meet record). w Now renting for Aug. '65 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. & FOREST AVE. PHONE:' 761-2680 presents from Harvard- MARK .MANC AL speaking on "SINO-RUSSIAN DIFFERENCES" p1 oac rea ayr i a cur er spot where he has distinguished himself in recent games. Says Taylor, "Andy has finally devel- oped confidence from the outside. He's done a good job for us." Center is the only spot where OSU will not be giving the Wol- verines at least two inches in height. Jim Shaffer, a senior, is 6'8," but is not in the class of such past Buckeye giants as Jerry have seen 48 victories by OSU, while Michigan owns 32. Ceremonies at halftime today will honor Michigan quarterback Bob Timberlake. Timberlake will receive the Chicago Tribune Silver Trophy, awarded annually to most valuable player in the Western Conference. Tribune Sports Editor Wilfred Smith will make the presentation. DICK RICKETTS, CAPTAIN of the Ohio State basketball team, will lead the Buckeyes into Yost Field House this afternoon to take on the Wolverines. Ricketts, a senior guard, has been averag- ing 17 points a game, placing him 17th in the Big Ten. I . Feb. 21-2:00 Angell Hall Aud. A .. . .. . $ 98 PER L.P. RCA VANGUARD EVERYMAN and VANGUARD Demonstration Discs TAPE New Low Prices TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5-Hollreiser THE COSSACKS:. 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