Tuesday, February 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Nage Seven Schenk takes third gold; U. S. pucksters pull upset S A P P O R O, Japan VP) - Ard; Schenk, the world's fastest man on skates, won his third gold medal yesterday and became the undis- puted hero of the 11th winter Olympic Games. The handsome 27 - year - old fIaily sports NIGHT EDITOR: RANDY PHILLIPS a J I i c. i Dutchman crowned four days of glory by winning the gruelling 10,- 000-meter speed skating event in an Olympic record time of 15 minutes 1.35 seconds. His other gold medals were in the 5,000 and 1,500 meters. Only one other man, Hjalmer Anderson of Norway in 1952, has ever won all three events in the same games. Another Dutchman, Cees Ver- kerk, won the silver medal in 15:04.70 and Sten Stensen of Nor- way took the bronze in 15:07.08. Johnny Hoglin of Sweden, who set the old record of 15:23.6 in winning the gold medal at Gren- oble in 1968, was all set to defend his title but pulled out of the race at the 11th hour with a throat ailment. Three men-Lavrouchking Sten- -Associated Press JANET LYNN, four-time United States champion from Rock- ford, Ill., is shown here competing in the free style figure skating event at the Makomanai Arena in Sapporo yesterday. Miss Lynn won a bronze medal for her performance in which she fell once thus denying herself any chance of winning a silver medal. sen and Verkerk -lowered the Olympic record in turn. But as the lead changed hands, the 13,- 000 fans kept their eyes on the big' Dutch superstar who was skating gently round the inner track in practice. Meanwhile, the U.S. hockey team' rested up for another whack at giant killing tomorrow, when it meetsIthe Soviet Union; defending champion in the Winter Olympics. The young American team pulled one of the big upsets of the Games T u e s d a y by whipping second- ranked Czechoslovakia 5-1. The victory was the first in two Class A games for the underdog Yanks, who pulled into a second- place tie with the powerful Czechs, one point behind front-running Sweden and the defending cham- pionship Soviet Union, who bat- tled to a 3-3 tie earlier yesterday. The Czechs scored their lone goal at 4:32 of the first period on a power play as Eduard Novak rammed home a hard shot from close range. But from then on, Curran was unbeatable, finishing with 51 saves. man short, Frank Sanders blasted in a 40-foot shot. The Americans' final goal came midway in the last period when Ronald Naslund came up with the puck in a goal-mouth scramble and fired it in. Janet Lynn, the 18 - year - old blonde from Rockford, Ill., brought the United States its second bronze medal in women's figure skating. She came from fourth place in the compulsories to get it and might have won the silver medal except for a fall. This allowed Karen Magnussen of Canada to take second place with a nearly flawless performance. Julie Lynn Holmes of North Hollywood, Calif. second after the compulsories, dropped to fourth after she too took a spill, Today's Events Pairs figure skating, free- skating finals. Women's five - kilometer cross - country men's compul- sory figure skating. Ice hockey, Class B, Yugo- slahia vs. Japan. Men's skiing; giant slalom. Ice hockey, Class A, Swe- den vs Poland; Class B, Ger- many vs. Norway. Three American girls-Marilyn Cochran, 22, and her sister Bar- bara, 21, of Richmond, Vt., and Sandra Poulsen of Olympic Val- ley Calif.-were capable of schuss- ing into medal honors in the women's giant slalom. John Mischa Petkevich, 22, of Great Falls, Mont., and Ken Shel- ley, 21, of Downey, Calif., bore American hopes for a men's figure skating medal into the first round of compulsory figures. Petkevich was given a better chance than Shelley even though Shelley won the national championship in Long Beach, Calif., last month when Petkevich fell. MEDAL STANDINGS -Associated Press CZECHOSLOVAKIAN GOALIE Vladimir Duxurilla smothers a shot by the United States' Stu Irving (19), who tangles with Karel Vonralik (9) in front of the Czech net. Skating in from behind is U.S.'s Robbie Ftorek (11). The United States won the game 5-1, despite getting only 18 shots on goal. To-. morrow night the United "States will take on Russia in another important Olympic hockey match. HUSKERS NIPPED Gamecocks charge on Ae NWTADS, . PLAY POOL Half Price Today & Thurs. Ladies play free first two hours Wednesday,- Michigan Union Billiards 7 By The Associated Press omore Al Drummond led a 9-1 COLUMBIA, S.C. -Kevin Joyce surge with about four minutes left scored 21 points and Tom Riker last night that halted a VirginiaI rifled in 20 to lead ninth-ranked Tech comeback and gave Virginia's South Carolina to a 91-67 basketball sixth-ranked Cavaliers a 107-85 victory over DePaul last night, college basketball victory. Leading by only 34-33 at halftime, Drummond ignited the charge the Gamecocks upset DePaul's with two field goals., and the Cava- control offense with the zone press Tiers never were in trouble again and led by 50-40 six minutes into as they rolled to their 16th victory the final period. .in 17 starts and dropped Tech to DePaul stayed within striking 11-9. distance until the final nine min- * * utes when the bigger Gamecocks pulled away to build their 24-point fn.LAWRENCE, Kan.-Georgia s * * Tech went without a field goal for Corn husked more than eight minutes at the ORN , ka Oklah start of the second half and Kansas NORMAN, Okla. - Oklahoma easily disposed of the Yellow stunned Nebraska with a devastat- ing full-court press late in the game and went on to clip the CA.GE POLL Huskers, 72-70, before 4,800 fren- The Sooners trailed during most of the second half, but gained the g lead for the first time at 59-58 with 3:55 remaining. Oklahoma kept up the press for By The Associated Press over a minute and forced the: UCLA rolls along as the nation's Huskers into four turnovers. The top major college basketball team. Jackets, 93-65, in a non-conference I basketball game last night. By the time Steve Post got Tech's first field goal of the second half with 11:58 remaining, the Jay- hawks were ahead, 58-38, and had put the game out of reach. Buffs blitzed STILLWATER, Okla.-Paced by Jerry Clack's blistering field goal shooting, Oklahoma State gained its first Big Eight victory of the season with a 72-53 bumping of Colorado here last night. Clack connected on nine of 12 floor shots and two of two from the free throw line for a game-high 20 points. ip tightens FREE INSTRUCTIONS Thurs., Feb. 17th 7-9 P.M. . i I I - WINTER OLYMPICS +Use Daily Classifieds +, Then, with the Czechs two men short, Keith Christiansen started the U.S. outbursts, barging into a goal-mouth scramble and ram- ming home the equalizer with just 3:13 remaining in the period. In the second period, Kevin Ahern took a forward pass from Craig Sarner and charged in on a two - on - one breakaway on the Czech defense and blasted a goalf in from about 20 feet away. Three minutes later, Jim Mc- Elmury shot from the blue line and Sarner deflected it past Czech goalie Jiri Wholecek. With 40 seconds left in the per- iod, and with Czechoslovakia one t East Germany Netherlands Soviet Union Switzerland West Germany Japan Sweden Austria Norway Finland United States Canada Go. 3 3 2 2 2 1 Ii 1 0 0 0 0 Si. 2 1 2 I 1 1 1 0 1 Br. 3 0 1 1 0 1 1 4 1 2 0 Tot. 8 4 5 4 3 3 3 3 7 2 2 1 Sooners turned three of those into buckets. , * * Cavs strike CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.--Soph- SC0RE S - COLLEGE SCORES Duquense 72, Murray St. 66 South Carolina 91, DePaul 67 LSU 62, Miss. St. 60 Florida St. 104, S. Alabama 84 Alabama 93, Mississippi 88 N. Carolina 101, N. Carolina St. 78 Kansas 93, Georgia Tech 65 Oklahoma 72, Nebraska 70 Western Kentucky 76, Dayton 74 Oklahoma St. 72, Colorado 53 Kentucky 78, Auburn 72 Missouri 77, Iowa St. 72 Tennessee 81, Vanderbilt 75 Hardin-Simmons 68, Texas-Arlington 62. Western Illinois 102, N. Michigan 85 Temple 68, Penn St. 66 Grand Valley 92, Lake Superior St. 70 The Top Twenty, with first-place votes in parenthese, won-lost records through games of Saturday, Feb. 5 and total points on the basis of 20 for first, IS for second, 16, 14, 12, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 1, through 15 plac 1. UCLA 17-0 (88 2. Marquette 17-0 (784 3. North Carolina 14-2 (64 4. Louisville 16-2 (47 5. Penn 14-2 (47 6. Virgina 15-1 (420 7. Ohio St. 14-3 (367 8. Long Beach St. 18-2 (35 9. South Carolina 14-3 (35 10. Brigham Young 16-2 (30 11. Marshall 17-2 (18 12. Providence 14-2 (12 13. SW Louisiana 14-2 (12 14. Florida St. 17-4 (6 15. Memphis St. 14-4 (5 16. Jacksonville 14-2 (5 17. Missouri 15-3 (3 18. Hawaii 18-2 (3 19. Minnesota 12-4 (2 20. Duquense 14-2 (2 Others receiving votes, in alp] betical order: Houston, Illinois, K tucky, Maryland, Northern Illino Oral Roberts, Princeton, Purdue, John's, N.Y., St. Joseph's, Pa.,; Louis, Southern California, Syracu Washington. es. 0) 4) 4) 4) '0) :0) ;7) 6) 2) 6) 18) :) !2) ;6) y5) i0) 18) 1I) 9) 2) ha- en- ois, St., The Bruins collected all 44 first place votes in this week's Asso- ciated Press poll conducted among sportswriters andkbroadcasters. Marquette ranks a strong sec- ond with 784 points to UCLA's 880. Both teams have 17-0 records for the season. North Carolina replaced Louis- ville in the No. 3 slot, as the Cardi- nals dropped into fourth. Penn moved up a spot to No. 5, replac- ing Long Beach State, which skid- ded to No. 8. Also moving up were No. 6 Virginia and No. 7 Ohio State. South Carolina and Brigham Young round out the Top Ten. There were no adidtions to the first ten, but Penn, Virginia, and Ohio State joined the Tar Heels in jumping ahead in the balloting an- nounced Monday. The Quakers moved from sixth to fifth, the Cavaliers from seventh to sixth, and the Buckeyes from ninth to seventh. U of M PHOTO SERVICES " PHOTOGRAPHY-PRINTS 0 OZALI DS-PHOTOSTATS 9 PHOTO SUPPLIES r . _ Rm. 540 L.S.A. Bldg. 764-9216 r :ro::-:s:s o:a::::.:::::eag e S an: :: ing:s::::: SProfessional League St-andings NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pet Boston , 41 18 .695 New York 34 22 .607 Philadelphia 23 34 .404 Buffalo 16 39 .291 Central Division Baltimore 24 30 .444 Atlanta 21 35 .375 Cincinnati 18 27 .327 Cleveland 17 41 .293 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Cleveland at Chicago Philadelphia at Phoenix Baltimore vs. Golden State at Oakland Milwaukee at Buffalo GB 5% 17 23 Houston vs. Seattle at Portland NHL Milwaukee Chicago Phoenix Detroit Los Angeles Golden Stat Seattle Houston Portland 46 12 41 17 35 25 20 37 Pacific Division 47 7 to 34 23 33 25 21 36 13 46 .793 .707 .583 .351 .870 .596 .569 .368 .220 - Boston 4 New York 6!/ Montreal 9 Detroit Toronto Vancouver -- Buffalo 5 12 Chicago 25- Minnesota California - St. Louis 141 ,Philadelphia 16 | Los Angeles 271 /2Pittsburgh 36Y2 East Division W L TI 37 8 8 32 11 9 29 13 10 23 23 8 21 22 11 15 30 5 11 30 13 West Division 36 11 5 27 18 5 17 27 11 18 28 8 16 26 9 15 33 7 13 30 9 Pts 82 73 68 54 53 35 35 77 63 45 44 41 37 35 GF 212 222 196 174 140 126 144 179 141 152 149 125 136 120 t' Marshall retained it's No. 11 1-. UL SP L I LUWJVY mCIXIJ use, rating, but Florida State fell to MONDAY-Salisbury SteG . $1.20 No. 14 and was replaced by Provi- dence as the 12th team. South- TUESDAY-Stuffed Pepper .......... $1.10 western Louisiana is 13th, while WEDNESDAY-Turkey ........... . . $1 .10 Memphis State broke into the rank- THURSDAY-Fresh Italian Spaghetti .. $1.00 ings and grabbed the No. 15 spot. Michigan's Wolverines dropped FRIDAY-Fish Dinner .............. $1.20 completely out of the top twenty IPizza at all times 25c off with this ad after their loss to Purdue who (For the Week of February 7-February 11) jumped up into the voting although they did not crack the top twenty. 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