Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 13, 1972 SAVE! up to 33%% Buy USED TEXTBOOKS I AT FOLLET'S Michigan Book Store State St. at North U. By BILL ALTERMAN and JOEL GREER Michigan's pucksters closed out 1971 with a bang by defeat- ing Western Ontario and Bowl- ing Green to win the first an- nual Flint IMA Tournament (Dec. 28-29). The twin killings were the fifth and sixth victories in a row for the Wolverines but the eu- pheria lasted only as far as the first series of the New Year when the Icers found themselves totally manhandled by Minne- sota-Duluth (Jan. 7-8). The tournament, Flint's first exposure to collegiate hockey, matched Bowling Green and Windsor in one first round en- counter while Michigan tangled with Western Ontario in the other. Obviously accustomed to Can- adian college rules, Windsor was confused all night as Bowling Green's slick passing g a m e skunked the Lancers 11-0. Win TM Canadian rules differ from the American variety in that they include the center red line pro- ducing a closer checking game. Western Ontario, on the other hand, plays many American op- ponents and had little trouble adjusting. But it was a case of- a fired-up Michigan team that made the difference as the Wol- verines dumped the Mustangs 4-2, for the third time this sea- son. The Icers built up a 4-0 lead before tiring half way through the second period. Bernie Gagnon scored twice while Pat Donnelly and Rick Mallette tallied once each. The Michigan-Bowling Green final was a natural champion- ship set-up as the contest pitted two contrasting teams, each risking five-game w i n n i n g streaks. Michigan, playing in its fiftieth season, has featured a tough-nosed hard-checking style of play, while Bowling Green, only in its third season has fa- 'It 1. OMMONOMMMMMIM4 IA tourney; then FIRST IT WAS DDT IN YOUR FOOD. THEN MERCURY IN YOUR FISH. NOW IT'S DEP IN YOUR BEER! We don't mean to be alarmist, but if the government doesn't care about what goes down your gullet, we do! First Fruits, Ltd. was founded on the notion that you'd rather eat good, pure, safe, healthy food like ours than your average carci- nogen. We sell pure food exclusively, and it's mainly Euro- pean, because that's what Europeans eat-pure food. We sell you what comes from natural soils, sunshine and rain, packaged and processed only to the extent of keeping it wholesome. First Fruits, Ltd. thinks you're ready to change your tastes, to move up to healthy foods from around the world, to beat the monotony of cafeterias, hamburgers, and pizza. For $10.00 we'N ship you a package worth $10.00, crammed full of sustenance. For $28.00, we'll ship you three monthly packages, or give you back $18.00 if you don't like the first. Each package will contain a selection of meats, jams, candies, cheeses, crackers, and more; all the things yon need to stay alive and be able to enjoy the first fruits of life. . .------------.-........ ... -- ...-.---.--- drop two Michigan's Dave Strack named new Arizona athletic director The Michigan athletic department announced Tuesday that Associate Athletic Director Dave Strack has accepted the post of athletic director at Arizona. Strack, 48, who has held the associate position since 1970, after two years as business manager, will assume the new post on February 15. "I'm realily thrilled," he said. "This is a great opportunity for me." Athletic Director Don Canham revealed that he had no im- mediate plans for replacing Strack. However, he did point out that in the interim Assittant Athletic Director Don Lund will take over Strack's duties. Strack, Wolverine basketball coach until 1968, posted a career record of 113-89 while heading the cagers. Behind the sharp-shooting of All-America Cazzie Russell a he led his teams to a third place national ranking in 1964, and the second spot in 1965 when the Wolverines lost in the finals of the NCAA tournament to UCLA. His 1966 team was elim- inated in the regionals. b(I~tki cub Weekend Trip To Collingwood, Ontario-Jon. 21-23 MEETING: Fri., Jan. 14 at 7:00 P.M., 3529 SAB or Go to Ski Club Office (2nd fl. SAB) Thurs., Jan. 13 or Tues., Jan. 18 SKI CLUB MASS MEETING Thurs., Jan. 20, 1972 7:30 P.M. Union Ballroom vored a strictly disciplined po- sitional style. Bowling Green scored first on a beautifully executed play while Jerry Lefebvre was in the pen- alty box. After taking a pass- out from Gord McCosh, Chuck Gyles fired from the point to beat a screened Karl Bagnell. But the scrappy Wolverines took advantage of two Falcon lapses to grab a quick 2-1 lead. Gagnon fired a shot from his side of center vhich caromed straight off the boards in front of the Falcon net. Michel . Jarry, who somehow outmaneuvered the defense, was all alone to bury the rebound. Jarry scored again just min- utes later as Paul-Andre Paris intercepted a Falcon pass and found the Quebec center open again. The remainder of the first period was scoreless and like- wise the second as great goal- tending was turned in at both ends. Michigan finally broke the drought late in the third period as Punch Cartier converted re rarely-used Pete Dunbar. Nor- mally the fifth defenseman, Dunbar was moved up to the left-wing to help fill the void left by Pat Donnely who came down with the flu just prior to the game. "This was the first time he's (Dunbar) played for- ward," declared Coach Al Ren- frew, "and he did quite well." With less than two minutes left Bob Falconer clinched the 4-1 victory as he found the net- ting with a hard wrist shot just after the face off. Duluth, alas, was to be an entirely different story. The Wolverines were clearly out- played by Duluth both nights and despite taking early leads both times, the pucksters seemed doomed to the inevitable. . Harried Michigan goalie Karl Bagnell had to make an incred- ible 55 saves in the first night's 9-3 loss, and found himself in much the same position in the second game as he had to turn back 48 shots in a 7-3 shellack- ing. And while Bagnell was con- WCHA Standings stantly under pressure from the Bulldogs, the Duluth netmind- ers could have gone to sleep, be- ing required to make only 18 saves each night. Friday night the Wolverines drew first blood as Gary Con- nelly converted on an intercept- ed Bulldog pass moments after the opening faceoff. But the Bulldogs had control of the puck for almost the entire period, taking 18 shots to six for the Wolverines. The Bulldogs knotted the score before the period was over and then completely blew Mich- igan off the ice with four goals in the first 2:36 of the second period. The Wolverines came back with two quick goals of their own but to no avail as the Bulldogs' superior passing and playmaking ability kept the Wolverines on the defensive for the entire game. The script remained un- changed the following night as two Gagnon goals gave Michigan a 2-1 lead at the end of the first period. But then Duluth started to find the range and racked up five goals in the second period to none for the Wolverines to ice the game. Again the Wolverines ap-, peared as if they shouldn't have even been out on the same ice with Duluth as the Bulldogs completely dominated play. Some of the blame for Michi- gan's poor showing, though ob- viously not all, could be attrib- uted to the poor condition of the ice. Because of its construction and size, the arena is unusually warm and makes for a much slower game. Both teams of course had to play on it but the assumption is that Duluth is used to it. After the first game, a dejected Coach Renfrew claimed, "when you play like we did it doesn't make much difference." * But Duluth mentor Terry Shercliffe admitted, "There's no way a team can come up here and like this stuff we play on." The double loss was a costly one for Michigan as a single victory would have meant four points for the Wolverines, cur- rently floundering in next to last place in the WCHA. The Wolverines are now 9-5 over- all and 5-5 in conference. The nine victories equals their en- tire win total of last year. 4 *b 'V FIRST FRUITS, LTD. 221 East 78th St., New York, N.Y. 10021 CHECK OR MONEY ORDER ONLY NAMF SCHOOL ADDRESS__ MAJORH YEAR GRAD_ PLEASE CHECK: single pctckage Q $10.00 .HOME STATE three packages Wisconsin Minn.-Duluth Colorado Col. North Dakota Denver Notre Dame Michigan Tech Michigan State MICHIGAN Minnesota 11 9 6 5 7 5 4 5 5 3 L 3 5 6 7 5 5 6 9 5 9 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 30 24 16 14 14 14 14 14 10 6 Here they are! YES, FOLKS, featuring your very own copy of the 1971 edition of the Daily Libels, to have and to hold, forever and always. That's right, from left to right in the front row we have three clods you'll never want to run into, Froggie Alterman, Bobo Andrews, and Elliot "The Big E" Legow. And right behind them are four of the worst football players in Libel history. The first two are Ann D. Golding and the coach (blame him for it all) Weirdbeard Noveck. The last two are Sir Death Drukis and Bob "Halavah" Halvaks. In the center, however, is that fine and upstanding All-American from Patchogue, N.Y., Chip Papanek. MICHIGAN SECOND: Hoosiers take Big Ten Rela s p $28.00 All packages are postpaid and1 include your ZIP Cedes. insured to point of delivery. Please I, I By CHUCK BLOOM In Big Ten swimming, Indiana dominates all. The Hoosiers show no sign of relinquishing their hold on the event as evidenced by their performance in last Saturday's Big Ten Relays. With nine of the ten schools competing, Indiana finished first by a wide margin. Michigan was tied for second with a surprising Ohio State squad. The Hoosiers took eight out of 12 events in their runaway vic- tory. The Wolverines had one bright moment though somewhat tarnished. Indiana finished first in the 400 medley relay but was dis- qualified, g i v i n g second - place Michigan the win. The Wolverines' time of 3:31.8 established a new meet record. SCORES Micihgan was handicapped by£ the absence of three of its top swimmers. Senior Byron MacDon- ald and junior Mike Whitaker weret in Australia swimming for theI Canadian National team and sopho- more Augosto Gonzales was at his home in Lima, Peru.3 An area of major disappointment for the Wolverines was diving. Expected to do well, Michigan could finish no higher than third and fourth in the three-meter and one-meter e v e n t s, respectively. Ohio State finished first in the one-meter diving with Indiana, sec-1 ond, and Wisconsin placing third. The three-meter event was won: by Indiana followed by Ohio State, and Michigan. Ohio State showed surprising power in taking three events; div- ing, 200 free style relay, and the 800 medley relay. Familiar names led Indiana; names certain to be heard at the Olympics. Mark Spitz, Mark Lam- bert, Gamy Connelly, and Tom Hickcox led the winning 400 free- style team. NCAA record holder Larry Barbiere anchored the vic- torious backstroke team. John Kinsella, the nation's top swimmer, led the 1500 freestyle squad that finished 21 seconds ahead of second-place Wisconsin, and 32 seconds in front of third- place Michigan. Spitz and Kinsella teamed to take the 800 freestyle ahead of Michigan, again placing second. Overall, with a combination of swimming at home and a clear superiority. Indiana once again reigned supreme in Big Ten com- petition. Professional League Standings + 6J o' retes e @ 9'Ge, d ro' 4 Q'ata o' to 001 C, t e r~a COLLEGE BASKETBALL Marshall 102, DePauw 76 Delaware 83, Gettysburg 82 Miami of Ohio 86, West. Mich. 64 North Carolina 81, Clemson 61 South Carolina 116, Manhattan 78 Toledo 78, Butler 55 Colgate 100, Rensselaer 82 Cornell 105, Rochester 98 N.C. State 85, Duke 58 Dartmouth 93, Boston Col. 88 Memphis State 82, LSU 65 Louisville 71, Dayton 64 New York Boston Montreal Toronto Detroit Buffalo vancouver Chicago Minnesota California St. Louis 27 6 7 w 27 7 6 23 10 7 19 13 10 17 18 '1 8 24 10 10 24 5 West Division 28 8 51 22 12 6 12 22 9 13 22 71 NHL East Division W L TP Pts 61 60 53 48 41 26 25 GF 183 158 153 121 131 113 94 139 106 128 120 Philadelphia 12 21 7 31 Pittsburgh 11 23 7 29 GA Los Angeles 11 30 2 24 91 Yesterday's Results 88 Los Angeles 1, Toronto 1 109 New York 5, Chicago 5 111 Boston 2, Pittsburgh 2 132 Minnesota at California, inc. 163 Only games scheduled 138 Today's Games Pittsburgh at Buffalo 76 New York at Buffalo 82' Los Angeles at Boston 174 Only games scheduled 149 96 101 93 128 129 170 61 50 33 33 d In Welcoming The New Adults the BAIYAT ';1 1 102 S. First 663-2401 NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 30 16 .652 - New York 25 18 .581 3% Philadelphia 19 26 .426 102 Buffalo 13 50 .297 152 Central Division Baltimore 19 23 .452 - Atlanta 16 28 .364 4 Cleveland 15 28 .349 42 Cincinnati 12 31 .274 72 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Milwaukee - 36 10 .782 - Chicago 31 13 .712 4 Phoenix 26 19 .578 9% Oetroit 17 28 .378 18% Pacific Division Los Angeles 40. 5 .888 - Seattle 27 19 .578 13% Golden State 25 19 .568 14% Houston 15 29 .341 24% Portland 11 35 .239 29Y2 Yesterday's Results Boston 113, Chicago 112 Cincinnati 108, Los Angeles 107 Buffalo 111, Philadelphia 109 Atlanta 104, Milwaukee 102 Only games scheduled Today's Games Announces Every Thursday Night after 9:30 P.M. A YOUTH NIGHT with the Iris Bell Adventure rocking your minds D