r THE MICHIGAN DAIL jV SUNDAY, J ANUAF j --Daily-Jim Benagh MAENTZ HOOKS - Scott Maentz, Michigan's sophomore for- ward gets off a hook shot early in the game as Lance Olson (30) and Horace Walker look on. Maentz came through with eleven points in a losing cause, however the Wolverines were never in the game following the opening few minutes, and fell, 89-58. -David Giltrow WHOA THERE-Michigan's All-American defenseman Bobble Watt showed wiy last night. Here he steers Tech center Jerry Sullivan out of the p lay and blocks Dave Cowan's bid for the puck with his skate. Watt shone offensively last night too, sending the Wolverines off to their victory by firing the opening goal in the first period. Goalie Jim C oyle, hugging the post, turned aside 27 shots in another outstanding performance against the Huskies. Coyle's 2.5 goals allowed per game average is currently the best in the Western Collegiate H ockey Association. Michigan defenseman Butch Nielsen looks worried as he follows up the play. -David Giltrow COMING THROUGH - Michigan Tech goalie George Cuculick is sent sprawling by high-flying Wolverine Pat Cushing, who caught the visiting net-minder roaming behind the cage. Referee Marty Pavelich didn't approve of Cushing's rough-housing - he sent the junior left-winger to the penalty box for two minutes (charging). Cuculick, unhurt, finished the game after a brief rest. '11 Pucksters in, 4-1; Cagers Spartans Gain Early Lead To Crush Cold 'M' Cagers ef ense Stars as Coyle Stops 21 Shots; Becomes Top Goalie in Hockey League (Continued from Page 1) 1 Michigan junior did not add to that total after the intermission. Tidwell had a game total of four field goals in 17 .tries. With Tidwell, Lovell Farris, Dick Clark, and Dick Donley combining for a total of two second-half points, captain Terry Miller and sophomore Scott Maentz attempt- ed to, take. up the team scoring slack. Maentz contributed seven of his 11 points during that time, but Miller did the most outstand- ing job. The senior guard threw in 13 of his 22 points in the second half, as he canned half a dozen shots from 20 to 30 feet out. "We kept forcing him farther out, but he just kept on hitting," said winning coach Forrest An- derson. Michigan State, which now owns a 2-0 record in Conference play, showed last night that it has not lost much in the ineligibility of former regulars Art Gowens an'd Jim Bechinski. "i Rivals Romp MICHIGAN G Clark ........ 0 Maentz ...... 5 Farris ....... 7 Tidwell *..... 4 Miller .......lO Donley ...... 0 Robinson ... 0 Schoenherr .. 0 Lyons ........ 0 Zimmerman .. 0 TOTALS ..26 F 0-0 1-2 1-2 1-2 2-4 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 ;-a4 P 5 3 5 1 3 3 0 0 0 0 20 T 0 11 15 9 22 1 0 0 0 0 58 Mich. State G Olson ........10 Scott ........ 2 Walker ......10 Fahs ........ 8 Schwarm .... 5 Young ....... 1 Richey ...... 0 Sparvero .... 1 Golis .......0 Brandstatter . 0 Wilson....... 0 F 3-4 3-3 4-6 2-2 0-0 2-2 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 P 2 1 2 3 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 T 23 7 24 18 10 4 0 3 0 0 0 -David Giltrow PALENSTEIN DROPS - Michigan defenseman John Palenstein drops to his knees In an attempt to drop the backhand drive fired by Tech winger Barry Johnson (14). Palenstein failed, but Mich- igan goalie Jim Coyle managed to stop the shot and control the rebound to foil the Huskies. Wait- ing for the rebound which never came out are Tech's Dave Cowan (18) and Tom Bourke. IOWA, ILLINOIS ALSO WIN: OSU Sophs Nip Indiana, 96-95 . . + I F YOU MUST CLUTCH.. . make it onto a STUDY OUTLIN FOR YOUR EXAMS now available at SLATE RAS your college bookstore " .. brrti.rc W.V.V.Vs 7ir, tt ... . . '... .r::Kz. r. ..... .r: . :.at.r..". i2ri S\iau" ENTHUSIASM r. "You can play on the Diag but watch out for those St. Bernards!" SThis dog is Whitey. We used to call him Spot but someone By The Associated Press COLUMBUS -- Larry Siegfried connected for a basket with only two seconds left to give Ohio State a tremendous 96-95 comeback vic- tory over Indiana yesterday in a titantic Big Ten struggle. The field goal, Siegfried's only one of the contest, rolled around the brim before it dropped through. A capacity crowd of 13,497, larg- est to see an Ohio State basketball game, and a regional television audience, witnessed the action- packed thriller. The win for the Buckeyes, now 2-0 in Big Ten standings, virtually eliminated the Hoosiers from any chance for a Western Conference Crown as the heartbreaking setback saddled In- diana with its third straight con- ference defeat. Ohio State's terrific trio of sophs, Mel Nowell, John Havlicek and Jerry Lucas, paced the scoring column for the victors with 26, 21 and 20 points, respectively. Herbie Lee hit 23 fo rthe Hurry- in' Hoosiers, Walt Bellamy scored 17 and LeRoy Johnson tallied 16. Indiana held a 95-92 advantage late in the game but Lucas tipped in a field goal try to cut it to 95-94 with only 30 seconds left. Indiana, trying ball control, lost possession, and the Bucks called time out with 17 seconds remain- ing to set up the winning basket. The hectic affairs was dead- locked 12 times and the lead changed hands 10 times in a furi- ous first half that saw the Hoos- iers take a slim 56-52 halftime ad- vantage., S * * Purdue 99, Wisconsin 69 LAFAYETTE-Sophomores Ter- ry Dischinger and Jerry Berkshire fired Purdue to a 99-69 rout of Wisconsin's basketball team to- night, leaving Purdue undefeated in two Big Ten starts and Wiscon- sin a three-time loser. Dischinger hit 30 points, match- ing his production in Purdue's opening conference victory over Indiana a week ago. A 22-point splurge by Berkshire, from the little Indiana town of Royal Center, was unexpected. His best previous production had been 19. Iowa 73, Northwestern 59 IOWA CITY-Iowa kept North- western from stalling by taking an early lead here tonight and won its second Big Tetn basketball game, 73-59. Iowa went ahead for keeps 9=8 with five minutes gone and North- western never was able to make use of, its slow-down tactics which had upset Indiana. * * t Illinois 90, Minnesota 82 CHAMPAIGN-With four play- ers hitting in double figures, top- ped by Mannie Jackson's 25 points, Illinois trimmed Minnesota 90-82 yesterday in a Big Ten basketball game. The Illini, boosting their Cpn- ference record to 1-1, the same as the Gophers, jumped into a 19-8 lead and maintained at least a 10-point margin until the final two minutes.' At halftime, Illinois was ahead 52-37 and its biggest bulge was by 17 points at the outset of the second half. * : * Notre Dame 75, Detroit 63 SOUTH BEND - Notre Dame's basketball team throttled Detroit with a zone defense and inflicted the Titans' second defeat of 12 starts in an afternoon game yes- terday, 75-63. The Irish, winning for the ninth time in 12 starts, jumped into a 7-0 lead and never trailed. Detroit twice cut the margin to a point but was down 34-29 at the half. The Titans, who had been aver- aging 92 points a game, scored only one fielder in the first nine minutes of the second half and fell hopelessly behind. It's not too ate to hop on the right one-before graduation time. If you're interested in a business of your own and no limit on earn" ings, you should look into the advantages of a career in life insurance seiling. !U