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December 08, 1959 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1959-12-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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I . .

poach Puzzled over Colorado Win

Si~ I UN P
by Jim Benagh, Sports Editor

THIRD IN MIDWEST OPEN:
Shows Gymnasts Need To Improve

of Michigan Tech over, the past
weekend. The Huskies won the
second game against North Da-
kota, a league powerhouse, to take
a split in the series, on the No-
dak's home ice.
'MSU leer~s
Lose, 4w3,
'To Colorado
By MIKE GILLMAN
Special to The Daily
EAST LANSING-A third period
goal by a third line wing gave'
Colorado College a 4-3 win over
Michigan State here last ;night.
Bryant Dutkowski broke loose
just in front of the Spartan net
at 7:15 of the last frame, toyed,
with the puck until MSU goalie
Eldon Van Fpydrook lunged for-
ward, and flipped it over his shoul-
der for the clincher.
State started out the loosely
played game by breaking the ice
at 1:30 of the first period when de-
fenseman Ed Ozydko drove home"
a 20 foot screen shot when Colo-
rado College was a man short.
First Period Pressure
Although Colorado kept the
pressure on both teams had scor-
ing chances that they missed
through the opening frame. It
wasn't until 40 seconds before the
end of the period that CC's Phil
Goodacre knotted the score on a
short shot from the side that slid
under the goalie's stick.
The Tigers pulled to a 2-1 lead
in the second period when Jerry
Maiko took a pass from the corner
and slapped a shot home from the
point.
MSU got its only substained at-
tack going midway through the
period and hit for two goals within
a minute. Tom Mustonen followed
his screen in and hitthe far corner
at 7:50. Terry Morony followed 30
seconds later as he knocked in a
rebound to give MSU a short-lived
lead.
Power Play Score
But CC's Goodacre scored on a
power play at 13:50 to bring the
score to 3-3. And after Dutkowski's
third period tally the fired-up
Tigers kept the Spartans out of
their zone.
The saves for the evening were
evend at 30 apiece for Van Fpy-
brook and Colorado's Earl Young.
The loss left Michigan State still
without a win in the new Western
Intercollegiate Hockey League.
Colorado's record now stands at
2-1.
Michigan coach Al Renfrew, who
watched the game, refused to take
any solace out of Colorado's win
over State, saying, "State will be

1'

By CLIF MARKS
"That meet sure showed us we
have a lot of work ahead if we
have any idea of winning the Big
Ten," said Gymnastics Coach
Newt Loken in reference to Sat-
urday's Midwest Open at Navy
Pier in Chicago.
Michigan finished third in the
meet, behind Big Ten foes Illi-
nois and Miehigan State, with
50 points. The winning Illini had
92 and runner-up MSU 52.
"A break here and there of a
point or two would have given us
second," Loken said, "not to-men-
tion that Ron Munn (ineligible
until next semester) won the
Trampoline Championships which
would have added 11 points to our
total,"
The Wolverines showed up ex-
ceptionally strong in that event
K@L KF

as two Toms; Francis and Oster-
land, tied for third against com-
petition Loken termed "the best
we will see this year.
"It is an event strong only in
the midwest since the Eastern
schools don't even compete in it,"
he added.
Michigan's Rich Montpetit, last
year's top point winner, also per-
formed well, taking second in the
side horse, fourth in the all-
around and seventh in the still
rings.
"We were real pleased by this as
well as Stall's (AD second in the
long horse," said Loken. "The
boys were facing topflight com-
petition both in quantity and
quality."
The presence of 14 teams in the
meet, plus unattached individuals

adding up to some 70 gymnasts.
backs up Loken's statement.
Michigan's remaining points
were won by Jim Brown and Cap-
tain Bill Skinner, by virtue of fin-
ishing third and fourth respec-
tively in tumbling, the same order
they did in last year's NCAA
Championship;.
"All in all, we didn't do too bad-
ly," Loken said, "but no matter
what, Illinois was just too strong
for anyone. It's a good thing that
their Abe Grossfeld is graduating
in February, because he scored
)ver 60 of their points. The meet
was a fine opportunity for our
team to see some real red-hot
competition."
Phone NO 2-4786
for Classified Advertising

I

4

ft
Y

OLYMPIANS - Karri Kaykho, Dick Hanley and Joe derlach
point to 1960.
Olympics-Plus 3
IT DOESN'T seem like it was just three years ago. today that the
XVIth Olympiad at Melbourne, Australia, came to a close.
It was then that a young Dick Hanley had just achieved fame as
one of the world's prominent free stylers and was ready to head back
to Michigan for the start of a big collegiate career. A diver named
Joe Gerlach, which had just placed fourth in the platform competi-
tion, was just getting ready to flee his Hungarian team and move to
freedom in the United States.
A teen-age Finnish free styler, Karri Kayhko, was preparing
to go back to the hinterland and start work for 1960. He had finished
sixth in a heat of the century sprint and third in an unimpressive
400-meter qualifying match.
Back in the United Stakes a couple of high school supermen-John
Smith and Carl Woolley-were wondering just what they could have
done if they hadn't missed the trip. Earlier that year, they both
finished fourth in the American Olympic trials, which is one place
short of qualifying.
Meanwhile, a coach named Gus Stager was preparing to put
together a team that (he says). "could win some dual meets."
Well, to update things Stager put together a team that surpris-
ingly won the NCAA championships later that season at North Caro-
lina.
Stager pulled together all those above-named swimmers and
divers into an aqua dynasty that still continues. Now those five join
a dozen other'swimmers and divers to give Michigan what Stager
considers 17 threats for the 1960 Olympic team that he will coach.
THE 17 WILL START their preparation this weekend when the
25th Annual Swim Gala opens .the Olympic season competition.
To compensate for the international competition and several foreign
athletes on the team (they come from five countries), the combinaion
humorous-compeitive Gala has been given the theme "Around the
World in 80 Minutes."
The big-name threats are rugged swimmers like Dave Gallanders,
Tony Tashnick, Frank Legacki, Ron Clark and Hanley for the United
States as well as diver Bob Webster.
Ernie Meisner of Canada and Gerlach, if Hungary will allow him
to compete for that country, are almost sure bets for their countries
diving teams.
Swimmers Alex Gaxiola, a Mexican back-stroker, and Kayhko are
likewise shoo-ins for their homeland teams. Gaxiola wasn't even in
shape last summer and swam one second better than the qualifying
standards that his country has set. Stager thinks Kayhko, who has
been swimming very well lately, may come into his own in the Gala
matches. He's a real dark horse.
Of course, Woolley and Smith, who have yet to win a major event
in NCAA or AAU competition, are still prominent figures as they have
been since the Olympic trials of 1056.
Stager is loaded with newcomers to the American swimming
scene-and the coach feels that they may be big surprises as Smith
and Woolley were in the last trials.
Sophomore backstroker Fred Wolfe has been outdoing the vet-
erans in his specialty and Bill Darton is a free styler who the coach
advised "not to lose sight of."
Freshmen like American prep champ Owen Kleinschmidt, Warren
Uhler, Mike Nelson and Steve Thrasher are hopefuls who Stager
emphasizes, "you just can't count them out."
The field will be tough-that's for sure.

ROSSWORD

No. 10
19 l101

~ 12 13 1

16 17 18 1

ACROSS
1. Kind of
riecessities
5.Birds in
Bernstein (var.)
9. There's one for
every he
12. What you are
to P'op until
you work
14. Wow's first
name
15. The bad guy in
Westerns
16. English drink
17. Angry kind of
land
18. They're crossed
by duel
personalities
20. Affected smile
23. Tears for grass
widows?
24. Needlers
25. Bats backward
27 Tiny socialist

DOWN
1. Springsvillo
2. It's "perlite"
to do this when,
you cut in
S. This was the
thing in Roma
4. A state or
building
5. To be (French)
6. A kind of creek
7. Gives in
without a word
8. White rain?
9. Where inflation
pays off
10. What alibis and
carafes should
do
11. Members of the
Lambe Club?
13. Makes like
coffee
19. Olive drabs,
briefly

12

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JARE YOU Kt3DL 23
ENOUGH TO 25
KRACK THIS?"
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29. The doohickey bombs at sea
on type like this 22. Not the life-of- 3 42 43 44
32. Whose limbs are the-party type
for the birds 26. Subjects of
33. Places (Latin) Pop's lecture 454
$4. Belonging to 30. Willie's pad
. -Aerptor 31. Kind of French
Kind emof rcarriage 47489
37. fr 32. Beat the wheat
39. Yes from a 35. House in Spain
Wa vake the next 36. Oldschool items
one a Kool 37. Bill O's last W het o r 'hroat te
45. Start in service ame
46. With Kools. 8 o h t y u h o tte,
you're more 8smoking Kools? yu ' timefbor C hage
. a1 day long 41. Girls' Friendly
47. It's for Art's Society (abbr.) yo t
sake 42. Article Yo ue d
48. Latin version 43. Half a packan
of 5 Down of Koola c
49. What chicks 44. Edgar, Edwin
grow up to be Edward
YOU NEED THE
MILDOwMENW0L '.
1959, Brawn&6 Wiiliamnson Tobacco Corp. e~~' "' "',4ri"

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tougher when they play us."
STATISTICS
1 2 3
Young ........ 9 9 12
Van Fdybrook . .11 10 9

Score by Period
Colorado College 1
Michigan State . 1

2
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WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9

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