The Michigan Daily-Sunday, December 10, 1978-Page 11 MILLER, EAVES PA CE BL UE IN SECOND STRAIGHT WIN Michigan sweeps MSU off ice, 5-2 By BOB MILLER It was the Mark 'N Murray Show sterday at Yost, starring Mark Miller d Murray Eaves who entertained the owd in a variety of ways during ichigan's 5-2 victory over Michigan ate~ Miller and Eaves skated, scored, sisted, and danced all night in the olverines' conquest of the Spartans. Miller scored two goals and had a nd in another, while Eaves popped e home after a number of misses and sisted on Miller's second score of the me. Coach Dan Farrell was naturally eased with the way the senior team aptain and the highly-touted freshman >mplemented each other on the ice. "I t them together at the beginning of e year," Farrell said. "You never now what will work out. They're the 2ly line scoring for us right now," he ded. Although the pair did pick up five ints between them, it could have been much more if they hadn't missed on a number of chances throughout the evening. On at least 11 different oc- casions the duo had Red Light City, but either the shot was wide or it was Each had a full-fledged breakaway go awry, including one instance when- Eaves, found himself, the puck and three-quarters of the rink all alone. Eaves sailed in on MSU goalie Doug Belland and shot it high off the glass behind the net. Farrell was not at all upset'with his team's inaccuracy, "At least we got the chances," he astutely noted. Farrell was also unconvinced that it was strictly a two-man effort which'up- ended Michigan State. "In the fact that we won two games this weekend, this was a good team effort." Farrell's case was strong. His goalie, Rudy Varvari saved more than a few shots down the stretch. Varvari made a number of stops that preserved the Wolverines' one-goal lead throughout the second period. Add the names of Tim Manning and Brian Lundberg on defense to the list of names of contributors to the cause. The defensive duo did everything expected of them in order to keep MSU off the scoreboard. But, despite their efforts, neither they, nor Varvari nor Mark 'N Murray were perfect - the Spartans did manage-two scores. The first gave MSU the lead at 1-0 on a goal by senior Darryl DiPace after the Wolverines were pressuring Belland at the other end of the ice. DiPace slipped a pass over Varvati's left shoulder and MSU drew first blood. But the Wolverines came right back just 18 seconds later to tickle the twine and tie the game. The goal was scored by Manning on a blazing shot from the point. - Michigan took the lead at 2-1 and never trailed. Eaves made good on a rink-long dash as he and Miller went in on Belland with only one Spartan defen- seman in pursuit. The Spartans tied it for the final time when the puck was shot past Varvari during a pile-up after a face off. Var- vari (and probably the 5,714 fans in the stands), never saw the shot taken, but saw the result. From that point on, Michigan was never really challenged. The Wolverines kept constant pressure on Belland, especially when they were shorthanded. Miller and Eaves did an encore when the former gave Michigan breathing room with a 25-foot shot that beat Belland cleanly. Jeff Mars closed out the scoring on a power-play goal with only 40 seconds left that did nothing for the game but make Michigan fans happier. Streak city FIRST PERIOD scoring: 1. MSU-DiPace (Omiccioli, Miller) 7:41, 2. M-Manning (Bourne, May) 7:59. Penalties: M-Todd (interference) 4:23, MSU--DiPace (high sticking, roughing) 10:48, M-Richter (roughing) 10:48, MSU-Shutt (interference) 16:07, M-Varvari (served by Richmond, slashing) 19:26 SECOND PERIOD scoring: 3. M-Miller (unassisted) 8:42, 4. MSU- Paraskezin (Finn, Rucks) 10:24, 5. M-Epves (Miller, Manmning) 15:50. Penalties: MSU-Shutt (slashing) 15:43, M-Richmond (roughing) 16:39, MSU-Rucks (interference) 17:02. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6. M-Miller (Brennan, Eaves) 9:14, 7. M-Mars (Tessier) 19:20. Penalties& M-Rich- mond (interference) 10:02, M-Richter (roughing) 14:07, MSU-Barr (roughing) 14:07, M-Blum (elbowing) 14:52, MSU-Shutt (interference) 18:48. Scoring by Periods 1 2 3 Total if MSU ..................1 M ................... 1 1 2 0 2 z NDIANA STATE FALLS 70-67: Women cagers edge Sycamores By LIZ MAC Hopefully, the rest of this season's ictories will come a little easier than ie first one for the women cagers. Michigan survived a late Indiana te surge to beat the Sycamores 70-67 esterday at Crisler Arena. After falling behind early in the first alf, the Sycamores pulled to within one 2,61, with 4:14 left in the second half. fichigan followed with six unanswered oints as Terry Schevers sank two free irows, Katie McNamara contributed a ucket, and Brenda Venhuizen added that proved to be the winner with 0:55 ft in the game. McNamara tallied the game's final points on a pair of free throws at 0:37. THE WOLVERINES out-hustled the quick Indiana State team, which is just what Coach Gloria Soluk was aiming for. d "We started slow in the second half - that's when they caught up," she noted. "Our game is running." The Sycamores had trouble finding the hoop through most of the contest, except for junior guard Shelly Newell who took game honors with 19. MICHIGAN, meanwhile, countered with a balanced scoring attack led by sophomore Abby Currier, who fouled out with 5:27 remaining, with 18. Mc- Namara and freshwoman Diane Dietz added 14 and Venhuizen 12. "Abby's fouling out hurt us," Soluk said, explaining the sudden vaporization of the Wolverines' lead. "She steadies the team when she's out there." Sparking the blue cagers in the late second half was freshwoman guard ,McNamara, whose fast play and sharp defense.helped the team hang onto its narrow lead. "We were scrappy and just kept after 'em," she observed. INDIANA State jumped to an early 10-5 lead, but Michigan came back with the fast break to make it 13-10. The half- time score had the Wolverines on top 40- 31. Sloppy passing marred both teams' play. Michigan looked a little erratic on defense except for some good looking snuffs by 6-2 sophomore Yvette Harris. Rebounds throughout the game went the Wolverines' way, including a key rebound in the closing seconds by Mc- Namara. Western Michigan rolls into Crisler Arena on Wednesday. Game time is 6:30. Upcoming home games during the holidays include Adrian on December 18 and Grand Valley on the 22nd. Tim Manning The Michigan Quarterly Review FALL 1918 $* Pub I c a ov THE CLASS QUARTERLY A Presentation from The University of Michigan Subscription Rate 9 dollars a year 3032 Rackham, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Available in Ann Arbor Book Stores 4. Lions topple Vikes ,I By RICK MADDOCK Special to the Daily PONTIAC-"Surprise, surprise, surprise," said Detroit Lions tight end David Hill, perfectly describing the Lions' 45-14 upset over the Minnesota Vikings yesterday at the Silverdome. The Lions have not scored this many points since 1967, and had never scored this many against Minnesota. The loss knocks the Vikings out of first place in the NFC Central Division, as they are now a one-half game behind Green Bay with only a game against Oakland left to play. The Packers play Chicago today and Los Angeles next week. What was billed as the Fran Tarkenton show was preempted by the Gary Danielson show. The Lion quarterback hurled 33 passes, completing 26 for 352 yards. Five of those compeltions were for touchdowns, including three six pointers to wide receiver Leonard Thompson. The three year signal caller from Purdue established a new team record for touchdown passes, along with a new Lion record for most completions in a season (184). The Lions game plan worked just as they had hoped. Detroit coach Mon- ty Clark explained, "The first couple of times we had the ball, we went with all short, quick passes. Once we got them loosend up, then we started going long." The Lions never trailed in the game, leading 14-0 at the end of the first quarter, and 28-7 at halftime. They set up their first score with a fake punt on the Vikings 42 yard line. Punter Tom Skladany set up in punt formation, but the snap went to linebacker Tony Daykin who was in front and to the right of Skladany. Daykin ran through left tackle for eight yards and a first down. TAKING THE LSAT? Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in Amity's LSAT Review Seminars CALL TOLL-FREE FOR DETAILS AND LOCAL SCHEDULE INFORMATION: 800-243-4767 Ext.761 m This WEDNESDAY at 5:30 PM RICK LEACH, and BILL DUFEK on WOLVERINE SPORTS LIME with Host JEFF GOLDSMITH A Live Call-In Program E LM rn 00 00 Tankers top urons Michigan's men's swimming team wept the one-two positions in eight of .3 events as they defeated Eastern dichigan in a home meet, 82-31. The nen took the lead right off the bat and here was never any question about the utcome as the Blue tankers coasted to t win in the no-pressure meet, taking 10 >f 13 first places. THREE DIVERS, Ken Vigiletti, ferry Menegay, andMatt Chelich, also ll made cutoffs for the NCAA cham- >ionship meet. Coach Gus Stager commented, "It -ould be a hell of a team. We haven't >een best (in the country) for a few rears, but we're getting there. I know hat coming off this meet we're swim- ning very nicely." -Owen Medd SECOND SERVE (New clothes at factory outlet prices) STUDENT PRICES Tennis Apparel Makes Great Christmas q'& something warm for all your parts GUARANTEED TO LIFT THOSE FROZEN PARTS BLUESQ YESSIR * - ! " _ "' . MIT TENS GLOVES " ,/ y _r . H4AT b 1+ ,~R " kPr .i vl S. . 4{t D ICI ; t ; ... ,; :: . r.. -:.; . . .t EN'S t T' K UT.TNJ'C : ' '''s ...e ~'.' : .ti icy x :.tit.