THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, 17 JANUARY 1965 'PGE SI s: R:: P AL' c7xi % Rinkmen Salvage Victory, 4-2 76-29 VICTORY: Swimmers Swamp Purdue By DALE SIELAFF Following a last-second goal in the second period that tied the score, Michigan's hockey team tallied twice in the final stanza for a 4-2 win over Minnesota- Duluth last night at the Coliseum. Alex Hood's second goal of the night evened the score between Michigan and Duluth in more ways than one. In the first period Friday night, UMD forward Pat Francisco scored at 19:59, with CaZZie Sinks 36 as Cagers Surge Ahead (Continued from Page 1) margin before Buntin hit two free throws to end more than four minutes of misery and begin the Wolverine upsurge. After the- Wildcats had come- back with two freethrows, Tre- goning tipped in the Wolverine's fourth shot at the hoop bringing them back to a four-point margin with 4:27 to go. Cazzie came back quickly after a missed Wildcat shot, dribbled the ball the length of the floor, and swished a sweep- ing book to tie it at 31 all. The Wolverines then got a fast break, blew it, but came right back 14 seconds later as Buntin meshed a layup to put the Wolverines ahead to stay. A Buntin hook just 26 seconds later made it 35-31 Wolverines, and before the Wild- cats could scream for help, it was 39-31 after Russell had made a layup all alone and Tregoning added a tip in.' The Wildcats then came back and traded four baskets until Cazzie, with a spectacular 24- footer put the margin at 10 at halftime. The second half began just where the first had left off as the Wolverines edged the margin up to 18 with only eight minutes gone, despite wavering momen- tarily at 52 points when they yielded six in a row to create the smallest margin in the second half at 53-45. From then on the Wolverines coasted to the win keeping the Wildcats down by no less than 13 points. Wild, Cats! MICHIGAN Michigan claiming the buzzer had1 sounded to end the period. LastJ night Hood slid the puck out of a goal mouth scramble past Du-1 luth goalie Bill Halbrehder at 19:59, tying the score at 2-2, and it was the Bulldogs' turn to argue, that time had run out. Coach Al Renfrew, pleased with what he called "two good wins' over Minnesota-Duluth, felt the last-second score by Hood "gave us a lift. We were fortunate to get the goal." bechaine Tallies Michigan's two goals in the final period, one by Pierre Dechaine and the other by Wif Martin into an open net, locked up the Wolverines' first home weekend sweep of the season. Duluth opened th scoring in the first period from a scramble in front of the Wolverine rfet. Bill McGiffert got credit for the goal, with'the assist going to Dave Stepnes as they outfought four Michigan players in the crease to get the tally. Hood was given a hooking pen- alty at 18:41 of the opening per- Puckered Out MICHIGAN Pr s. DULUTH Page G Halbrehder Polonic D Hill Brand 1 Fisher Martin Shercliffe Dechaine RW Bell Hood W Rogers First Period Scoring: D-McGif- fert (Stepnes) 17:26. D-Christian- sen (Hill) 19:17. Penalties: M - Schiller (board-checking) 3:09. M- Dechaine (cross-checking) 6:44. D- Tok (slashing) 8:13. M - Hood (hooking) 18:41. Second Period Scoring: M-Hood (Martin, Brand) 17:33. M-Hood (Martin) 19:59. Penalties: M-rand (kneeing) 1:53. D-Tok (hooking) 2:24. D-Tok (10 min. misconduct). 2:24. M-Ferguson (cross-checking) 3:29. D-Fisher (hooking) 10:05. D- McGiffert (interference) 15:51. Third Period Scoring: M - De- chaine (Lucier, Brand) 8:04. M - Martin (Lucier) 19:53. Penalties: M -Dechalne (slashing) 3:39. D - Fisher (charging) 8:49. M-Lucier (hooking) 17:30. MICHIGAN 0 2 2-4 DULUTH 2 0 0-2 Saves by Periods: Page (M) 7 8 10-25 Halbrehder (D) 6 23 16-45 iod, and the Bulldogs took quick advantage, scoring from another scramble at 19:17. Keith Chris- tiansen pushed the puck between Greg Page's knees as the Michi- gan goalie knelt on the ice to smother the puck. In the second period, trailing 2-0, Michigan returned to the form they displayed Friday in forcing Halbrehder to make 79 saves. The Wolverines kept con- stant pressure on the Bulldog's goaltender, peppering the net with 25 shots. Hood Begins It was Hood who broke the scoring ice for Michigan. Martin' took the puck from Hank Brand and rifled a long pass to Hood at the Duluth blue line. The jun- ior left winger drove around the defense and slipped the puck past Halbrehder at 17:33. A little over two minutes later, Hood's eighth goal of the year tied the score, despite the arguments by Duluth, with Martin again assisting. It took Michigan eight minutes and four seconds to ice the vic- tory. Brand took a hard slap shot from the blue line which De- chaine deflected past Halbrehder for his seventh goal of the season. With the Bulldogs putting the pressure on Michigan, Coach Ralph Romano elected to pull his goalie in favor of a sixth attacker with 45 seconds remaining. The attempt at tying the score back- fired completely on Duluth as Martin took a pass from Dean Lucier and beat the defense witlh a shot into the middle of the empty net. It was Martin's six- teenth tally of the year and in- sured the Wolverines' eight win. Polonic Back The game saw the return of Tom Polonic to the line-up after sitting out Friday's game. Duluth coach Romano felt Polonic's re- turn may have helped Michigan's play, but said, "We had the better scoring chances, but their goalie (Page) played a great game. I think we looked better tonight than Friday, and Polonic may have saved a goal or two." Coach Renfrew used Barry Mac- Donald sparingly, and explained his move by saying, "Barry's still not 100 per cent. His knee is still bad, and Mark Thompson is play- ing fine hockey. Mel Wakabayashi hurt his shoulder late in the third period and had to leave the ice. We won't know until tomor- row -how he is." Page Praised In addition to his use of Thompson at defense in place of MacDonald, Renfrew juggled his lines after the first peiiod last night in an attempt to "get the boys skating." Apparently the shifts worked for the Wolverines, as they got off 39 shots in the final two periods, after managing only six on the net in the first period. The 45 saves for Halbrehder pushed his weekend total to 124, which both SCORES] COLLEGE BASKETBALL By JIM LaSOVAGEj Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE-Despite attempts by swimming coach Gus Stager to keep the score down Michigan's tankers swamped Purdue yester- day, 76-29, even though they were not at full strength. Stager swam some of his better swimmers in exhibition and mixed up the roster in other events, while six swimmers and two divers remained in Ann Arbor, but it made little difference in the final statistics. Against the stronger Wolverines Purdue managed only one of 11 firsts and three second places. for some unknown reason his per- formance was discounted by the judges. However, Walls took first spot in the 200-yard freestyle and was on the 400-yard relay team, along with Tanner, Howie Brund- age and Tom Schwarten. Diving coach Dick Kimball' utilized three divers in the three; meter event, and they took the first three places. Bob Walmsley, Tom Ewing and Tom Meaden fin- ished ahead of Purdue's Terry Tracy, in that order. Walmsley totaled 273.55 points on his dives, just 16.35 points ahead of Ewing. Not Elated Stager was rather disappointed with most of the times in the meet next Saturday will be East Lansing. at The Great Flood 400-YARD MEDLEY RELAY 1. MICHIGAN (Orland, Williams, 0'- Malley, Reppert); 2. Purdue. Time- 3:49.3. 200-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Walls (M); 2. Brundage (M); 3. Ran- kin (P). Time-1:50.8. 50-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Tanner (1); 2. Carr (P); 3. Schlueter (P). Time-:23.1. 200-YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY -1. Kingery (M); 2. Vry (M); 3. Cooke (P). Time-2:07.6. DIVING - 1. Walmsley (M1); 2. Ewing (M); 3. Meaden (M). Points-. 273.55. 200-YARD BUTTERFLY-i1. Spann (M); 2. O'Malley (M); 3. Gapsis (P). Time-2:07.7. 100-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Tanner (M); 2. Carr (P); 3. Schwarten (M). Time-:51.1. 200-YARD BACKSTROKE-1. Or- land (M); 2. Vry (M); 3. McCredy (P). Time-2:05.8. 500-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Wil- liams (1); 2. Cooke (P); 3. "layer (P). Time--5:15.7. 200-YARD BREASTSTROKE - 1. Olzmann (P); 2. Dryer (M); 3. Ro- bison (P). Time-2:32.0. 400-YARD FREESTYLE RELAY- 1. MICHIGAN (Sehwarten, Tanner, Walls, Brundage); 2. Purdue. Time- 3:22.2. The only Boilermaker first came meet. Although there was very in the 200-yard breaststroke, in little competition from the Pur- which Norbert Olzmann barely due team, the coach felt that his touched out Michigan's Craig boys could have pushed a little Dryer in a time of 2:32.0. harder. Purdue was without its Lanny Reppert, swimming in best competitor, Harry Wickens exhibition, beat both of them. who is currently ineligible. Tanner Wins Stager is concerned about slow For Michigan Bob Tanner took clockings because next week his two firsts, in the 50- and 100-yard charges will face a strong MSU freestyle sprints, and was also on squad. the winning 400-yard freestyle haThebSpartans, he points out, team. In the 100-yard race, Rich have been turning in good times Walls finished ahead of him but! even against mediocre teams. The -Daily-Richard Cooper MICHIGAN FORWARD ALEX HOOD cuts in front of Minnesota- Duluth goalie Bill Halbrehder, forcing him to make a save early in the third period last night. Halbrehder was called on to stop 45 Michigan shots in the game. Halbrehder missed on four, two by Hood, as the Wolverines boosted their record to 8-5-1 with a 4-2 victory. coaches felt was an indication Michigan's aggressive play. of Romano, whose team has play- ed North Dakota and Minnesota, both former Michigan opponents, said ifter last night's contest, "Michigan looked as good as any team we've played this year, and we caught North Dakota and the Gophers at their best. Somebody told me that .Page was weak ih the nets. I don't believe it. He played two great games and made some fantastic saves on a lot of tough shots." DISCUSSIONS ON LOVE, SEX and MARRIAGE JAN. 23 and JAN. 30 10 a.m.-12 noon Call Planned Parenthood Clinic z 663-3306 Indiana 84, Ohio State 72 Illinois 75, Minnesota 72 Iowa 111, Michigan State 68 North Carolina 87, virginia 80 Wichita 75, St. Louis 64 Missouri 80, Kansas State 68 Notre Dame 94, Butler 57 Tennessee 77, Kentucky 58 Duke 105, Wake Forest 77 Syracuse 104, LaSalle 81 Washington 64, Oregon St. 53 Cornell 70, Princeton 69 North Carolina St. 73, Maryland 68 DePaul 63, Dayton 59 Penn State 80, West Virginia 79 St. John's 76, Seton Hall 69 Kansas 72, Iowa State 60 Bradley 104, Cincinnati 80 Baylor 84, Arkansas 75 Shorter 68, Valdosta 59 Detroit 75, Marquette 67, Dartmouth 85, New Hampshire 79 Temple 73, Villanova 59 Evansville 96, St. Joseph's (Ind) 77 Tregon Darden Buntin Russell Pomey Myers Clawso Thomp Dill Total Kozlicl Jackso: Pitts c Tiberi3 Burns3 Printer Nelson Mason Cumm Schaeft Tota - G P R ing f 7-15 1-2 16 oft 2-5 3-4 3 c 6-12 5-5 10 1 14-28 8-10 11 g 5-6 1-1 5 1-6 0-0 3 n 0-1 0-0 2 'son 0-1 0-0 1 1-2 0-0 0 is 36-76 18-22 55 * NORTHWESTERN G F R ki f 2-7 3-5 8 n f 10-26 0-1 6 2-3 1-2 12 g 4-12 2-2 1 g 6-16 3-4 11 n 0-1 0-0 1 . 1-4 2-3 1 1-10 0-0 2 ins 1-5 3-4 5 'ex 0-0 0-0 0 PT 2 15 3 7 3 17 2 36 3 11 t0 2 1 0 1 0 0 2 15 90 P T 3 7 3 20 1 5 4 10 4 15 1 0 0 4 0 2 1 5 0 0 17 68 45-90 3-68 I U I 4 r COLLEGE SWIMMING Minnesota 71, Iowa 34 Michigan State 62, Iowa 43 COLLEGE GYMNASTICS Iowa 82, Ohio State 27 Iowa 64, Michigan State 54 NHL Montreal 3, Boston 2 Detroit 4, Toronto 2 New York 6, Chicago 3 - 4 TRYOUTS -NOW- for the ACU Intercollegiate MEN'S BOWLING & BILLIARD TOURNAMENT To be held Feb. 1-27 To qualify appiy at Michigan Union Bowling Alley and Billiard Room, 1-5 p.m. SEE GEORGE. Also qualifying for Big Ten Union Bowling Team I Js 27-84 14-21 53 - MICHIGAN 45 NORTHWESTERN 35 4: Join ANONYMYTH at restlers Whipped by Weather LAFAYETTE-The Michigan vs. Purdue wrestling meet scheduled for 1:30 yesterday at Lafayette was cancelled. The Wolverines ran into extremely bad road conditions on their trip from Champaign and didn't arrive until early Saturday morning and then declined to wrestle. The swimming team also had great difficulty getting to the cen- tral Indiana home of Purdue. A few miles out of Lafayette the first in a caravan of' three station wagons carrying the Wolverines went into a spin on the glazed roads. The second wagon ran into it causing $100 damage to the ve- hicle, but fortunately no injuries. W INTER EMKEND Feb. 12 & 13 -b '65 Now Ammw L.' r ...r 1000 TO 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will allow you to accomplish-in your required reading and also in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. "can Isolve problems for IBM?"2 A variety of technologies-any of which you may have studied-can be used to build com- puters. You can solve problems in Research, Development, Manufacturing, Marketing or Programming. Wherever you start in IBM, your abilities can grow along with the computer field. Some of the disciplines we put to work are Chemistry, Physics, Metallurgy, Engineering, Mathemat- ics, Statistics, Economics and Business Ad- ministration. If you want growing room for your ideas, see IBM. Your placement office can make an ,appointment with our interviewers. Or write directly to Manager of College Relations, IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, New York 10504. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Interviews Feb. 8, 9 Applied Mathematics, Applied Mechanics, Data Communica- tions, Digital Computers, Guidance Systems, Human Factors,