SATURDAY, 16 JANUARY 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY t arv avlyvw avsa i vrxava AGE!SVE (e 9 e 5TH STRAIGHT: 'M'cers Take Overtime Squeaker, 6-5'2 TRAIGHT ( rnnly rs Crush Illini, 23-7 By PERRY HOOD in the last frame before they came alive on the efforts of the new- Michigan's scrambling hockey formed line. squad came from behind a two- Baird tallied the first marker of goal deficit in the last period anda finally won out over Minnesota- his varsity career at 10:45 of the Duluth 6-5 in a ten-minute sud- period on a diving shot from 20 den-death overtime last night in fe out after taking a pass from dichian-d sholietm.s g Wakabayashi at center ice. Baird Michigan s Coliseum. slid into the boards after his shot For Michigan it was almost a wihbogtteBu ihnoe truly futile game, as they pepper- which brought the Blue within one ed the Bulldogs' nets with over goal. 120 shots, and Minnesota's goalie Michigan's tying point was ob- Bill Halbrehder got 79 saves for tained on a picture-perfect play. the night. On several occasions Minnesota was short a man, as the Wolverines swarmed around Owen Rogers was sitting out a the Bulldog goal as if it were a holding infraction. With the pow- busy hotdog stand. er play on, Wakabayashi had the Futile 57 puck just off to the side of the Even with their 57 accurate net. shots in the first two periods the Teamwork Wolverines were on the wrong i After pausing a moment in front ndf -2so.t nof a desperate Minnesota defense- N -P, - 4.I/jjrvjV /L c1 V1t43Lbv -. 1 W s 1- U1 til the overtime that MichiganI iced its victory with sophomore Mike Martilla's second goal of the contest. Martilla picked up the loose puck behind the Duluth goal, stepped out to the right post and whirled the pill in 'low past a wide-eyed Halbrehder. All a happy Coach Al Renfrew! could say in the locker room was, "It was quite a game!" Renfrew had Mel Wakabayashi, Bob Baird: and Martilla together as a line in the last period and the strategy ' seemed to pay off. Each man ' scored a goal and the line addedI three assists in the last 12 minutes man, Wakabayashi flipped the puck behind the net to Alex Hood who immediately flicked it out to Pierre Dechaine at the left post. Dechaine popped it in off the pass to knot the score. Less than two minutes later the Wolverines went ahead on Waka- bayashi's lone tally. Baird got the puck on a faceoff in Duluth's end and flipped it back to Wakabaya- shi who had hardly moved from the circle. The shot went between Halbrehder's legs, as the far-from- capacity crowd came to life tol cheer the junior's efforts.I Michigan hung on until 17:461 of the frame, when Mike Tok off I E By BOB CARNEY Special To The Dany CHAMPAIGN-Michigan's unde- feated wrestlers swept throughI Champaign last night like the frigid Midwest cold wave and cool-j ed off the Illini to the tune of a 23-7 victory. It was the 25th straight dual meet victory and the first Big Ten win of the season for the) Wolverines who meet Purdue this afternoon at Lafayette. "The boys showed good form, and aggressiveness," said Coach Cliff Keen after the meet. "I was pleased with everyone's perform- ance. We're definitely not at our peak as we will have to sharpen our techniques before the Big Ten tournament in March." Two 'M' Pins In a meet that saw Michigan score two pins and three decision victories, the Illini had to settle for only one match victory. Two matches ended in ties. Michigan's representative in the 123-pound class, Bob Fehrs kept his season slate unmarred and set the tone of the meet with a pin of Dave Krom at 7:15 of the meet's first match. Before he fin- ally pinned Krom, Fehrs chalked up eight points on a takedown and three predicaments. "Fehrs has looked good every time he's wrestled," commented Keen, who cited the 123-pounder as a top contender for the Big Ten title. Michigan's second pin of the night came in the 147-pound dual between Wolverine Cal Jenkins and Illinois' Andy Zender. Jenkins gained a quick takedown and turned it into a fall with only three seconds remaining in the first period. Trio Returns In the three matches that saw injured Wolverines returning to the lineup, two draws and a Mich- igan victory resulted. Bill Johannesen, 130-pounder, who injured an ankle in his first match of the season at Cornell, gained two team points in a 1-1 draw with Illinois' Fred Aprati. In a very close match, both wrest- lers had to settle for one-point escapes. Despite the tie Keen was satis- fied with Johannesen's perform- ance but said he'll have to work Wolverine heavyweight Bob hard to "round into shape" before Spaly overwhelmed Bob Shively the Big Ten tournament. of the Illini in the meet's final At 157 pounds, the match be- bout and scored a 13-0 shutout tween returning Lee Deitrick and victory. On three different oc- Illinois' Clay Beattie was almost casions Spaly came within inches identical as each wrestler scored of pinning Shively and gained only one point on escapes It was nine points on near falls. a rematch for defending Big Ten Rich Callaghan emerged as Il- champ Beattie, who met in -the linois' only victor with a 6-2 de- Midlands' Tournament during the cision over Michigan's 167-pound- holidays. In that match Beattie er Tony Feiock. Callaghan gained scored a 8-0 decision. two takedowns and a reversal on Stowell Wins the way to the win. Also returning to the lineup was Chilled Champaign 17-pounder Chris Stowell who outclassed his opponent Jim My- 123-lbs.-Fehrs (M) pinned rom, rick, 7-1. Stowell dominated the 7:15. match and twice came close to 130-lbs.-Hornung (M) dec. Mc- pinning Myrick. Cullum, 4-2. 137-lbs.-Johannesen (M) drew With these three-Johannesen, Aprati, 1-1. Deitrick and Stowell-back in the 47hlbs.-Jenkins (M) pinned Zen- linep, nlyCaptin ickBay der, 2:57. lineup, only Captain Rick Bay 157-lbs.-Deitrick (M) drew Beat- remains sidelined due to a knee tie, 1-1.. injury. Bay hopes to begin work- 167-lbs.--Callaghan (I) dec. Fei- ing out Monday in preparation oc176-2. lbklbs.--Stowell({M) dec. My'- for the Northwestern meet. rick, 7-1. Michigan's other decision vic- Hvywt.-Spaly (M) dec. Shively, tories came in the 130-pound and 134. heavyweight divisions, while Il- linois scored a single victory at NBA 157 pounds. Boston 104, Philadelphia 95 Hornung Decisions Cincinnati 124, Los Angeles 106 Doug Hornung followed Fehrs' COLLEGE BASKETBALL pin with a tight 4-2 decision over Princeton 78, Columbia 68 Indiana 137, Univ. of the Americas 71 Illinois' Al McCullum in the 130- UCLA 76, California 54 pound class. Hornung used a take- Arizona 75, Brigham Young 73 down in the first period and a Utah 97, Arizona St. Univ. 90 takedown and an escape in the NorW Dakota 4 Dever 2 final period to cinch the win. Michigan Tech 4, Minnesota 1 TRYOUTS--NOW- for the ACU Intercollegiate MEN'S BOWLING & BILLIARD TOURNAMENT To be held Feb. 1-27 To qualify apply at Michigan Union Bowling Alley and Billiard Room, 1 -5 p.m. SEE GEORGE. Also qualifying for Big Ten Union Bowling Team -Daily-Richard Cooper WOLVERINE ALEX HOOD'S wrist shot is deflected into the corner by Minnesota (Duluth) goalie Bill Halbrehder. Reserve wing Marv Zilkie, (10) gets set to prevent a rebound shot while Hood battles of . A P n C C + n play. Duluth put in a short shot off a Come Alive long pass by Pat Francisco. Mich- The Wolverines fell behind 4-2 igan's goaltender, Greg Page, had little chance for a save as Tok 79 Saves was all alone in front of the net MICHIGAN Pr s. DULUTH Sdden-Death Page G Halbrehder In the case of a tie at the end Brand 1) Hill of regulation play, a ten-minute MacDonald 1) Fisher sudden-death overtime is played Martin C Sherciiff after a short rest. Michigan had Hod w Bell Baird W Rogers four more shots in the extra frame First Period Scoring: D-Fran- before Martilla slipped in his un- cisco (Christianson, Fisher) 8:57. D assisted goal with 2:06 gone. --Sherciiff (Christianson, Hill) 15:37. Duluth took a 3-1 first period M-Martin (Hood) 18:54. D-Fran- cisco (Hill) 19:59. Penalties: D - lead on two goals by Francisco Fisher (elbowing) 1:21. D-Maertz and one by Terry Shercliffe. KeithI (interference) 10:35. M--MacDonald Christiansen, Minnesota's leading (holding) 13:0 Second Period Scoring: M - scorer, had assists on the first two Martilla (Brand) 10:37. Penalties: D goals. for position in front of the cage. Halbrehder made 79 saves in a losing 6-5 cause and Michigan goalie Greg Page had to make only 21. eral starts in which Michigan was services of All-America defense- tory boosts the Wolverines' record out-penalized. Each team scored man Tom Polonic who is out with to 7-5-1 while not affecting their once on power plays, although the a finger infection. He may play 2-4-0 league mark. Tonight Du- Bulldogs copped twice as many luth and Michigan have at it again infractions as the Wolverines. tonight depending on the verdict in the second match of the two- Without Polonic of the team doctor. game series, 8 p.m. in the Mich- Michigan played without the Last night's non-conference vic- igan Coliseum. EXHIBITION MEET: Gymnasts Roll Over Eastern Mikhigan By LLOYD GRAFF "They could become the Van Arsdales of gymnastics." Mike Last night's first gym meet of Henderson posted a respectable the ca cn xrrer ---YA ' "' 1C -Bell (slashing) 1:44. M-MacDon- aid(elbowing) 9:16. D-Tok (trip- ping) 10:16. D--Tok (slashing) 13:03. M-Read (high-sticking) 18:20. Third Period Scoring: D - Bell (Rogers, Shercilff) 6:18. M-Baird (Martilla, Wakabayashi) 10:45. M - Dechaine (Hood, Wakabayashi) 12:- 52. M-Wakabayashi (Baird) 14:29. D-Tok (Christianson, Francisco) 17:46. Penalties: D-Rogers (hold- ing) 11:40. Sudden Death: M-Martilla (un- assisted) 2:06. MICHIGAN 1 1 3 1-4 DULUTH 3 0 20-4 Saves by Periods: Page (M) 4 10 7 0-41 Halbrehder (D) 35 22 20 2-78 Captain Wilfred Martin finally ;the season wasn't e put Michigan on the scoreboard Mfre t c a00fa with just over one minute left in the stanza, as he brought the puck ventured forth in br down and flipped in a backhand see the Michigan gym shot while being checked by a. compete with a gree Duluth defenseman. Ypsilanti. Caught Short Twin-Wir Michigan's defense was more The spectators had successful in the second frame as to marvel at the Mi it held the Bulldogs scoreless while showing off. Twins P Martilla picked up his first marker Fuller moved throug with each team short a player due tines in floor exer to penalties. scores of 92 and 89 The contest was the first in sev- f As someone said aft exaOJ.Ay close, R7 scinated fans rutal cold to nnastics team n squad from 1I n ample time chigan team' hil and Chip h their rou- cise, getting respectively. er the meet, OF COMMUNIST CHINA presents The United State's China Policy LINDSEY GRANT Director, Bureau of Asian Communist Affairs U.S. Dept. of State U1. On the trampoline Michigan showed its usual powerhouse. Gary Erwin missed his routine slightly and earned a 90, while teammate Fred Sanders scored 92. John Hamilton, recovering from'a knee operation, scored a neat 89. Sur- prisingly, a Michigan freshman named Wayne Miller from Louis- iana won the event with a 93. High Bar On the high bar, sophomore Gary Vander Voort executed his routine well enough to be judged at 91, edging teammate John Cashman who had a 90. Vander Voort tied with fellow soph Ken Williams on the paral- lel bars, and another rookie, Chris Vanden Broek, was right behind. Rich Blanton had the highest score of the meet, notching a 94 on the still rings to score two points more than Vander Voort in the event. 'Weakness' The sidehorse proved to be Michigan's only weak event. A freshman, Larry Quinnm had the highest score at 84, with soph! Art Baessler getting only a 79. Coach Newt Loken remarked after the game that "we were a little shaky in the sidehorse, but Baes-1 sler is capable of the 90's." PHIL FULLER -finest quality laundry- RAINCOATS $2.00 cleaned and waterproofed A & P CLEANERS 312 E. Huron across from City Hail 668 -9500 SUNDAY, JAN. 17 MICHIGAN UNION Eastern Michigan could do noj better than third place in any event. Bob Mial scored a 90 in vaulting for the highest numerical score by the seven-man Eastern team. Bill Arnold and Jim Monroe competed in five and four events respectively. 2 P.M. 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