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February 10, 1972 - Image 9

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The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-10

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Page Nine

Thursday, February 10, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, February 10, 1 97Z THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Paae Nine

i

Wolverines
By BILL ALTERMAN hard."
In perhaps their finest effort of The game started off slowly for
the season, Michigan totally domi- the Wolverines as State kept the
nated -arch - rival Michigan State puck bottled up in the Michigan
for a crushing 6-2 victory last night end for the first two minutes.
at the Coliseum. "They were shooting the puck in
Michigan's third victory in a and we uouldn't clear it out,"
row stopped a seven-game Spartan claimed a none-too-upset Renfrew
winning streak and vaulted the after the game.
Wolverines into a tie with Notre But the momentum quickly went
Dame. for seventh place in the over to Rennie's boys and Mich-
Western Collegiate Hockey Asso- igan broke into the scoring column
ciation, on a power play with six and one-
For all intents and purposes the half minutes gone. A slap shot by
game ended in the second period Punch Cartier rebounded off Spar-
when Michigan scored three goals tan goalie Jim Watt and out to
on an incredible 28 shots to take Michel Jarry who sent it home
a comfortable 4-1 lead. from 20 feet.
After the game, a broadly-smil- Each team had several chances
ing Coach Al Renfrew admitted, on power plays but couldn't convert
"We exploded in the second and the Wolverines went into the
period." Following some prompt- dressing room with a slender 1-0
ipg from the milling throng, Ren- lead.
frew also said, "Overall, offen- But the second period was an-
sively and defensively, it was our other story as the fired-up Wol-
best game of the year. We worked. verines came out and totally domi-

mangi<
nated play for the remainder of
the game.
Perhaps the turning-point came
at the five minute mark when
Brian Skinner went out for two;
minutes for interference. Though
a man down Michigan put tre-
mendous pressure on Watt and
kept the puck bottled up in Mich-;
igan State's end for almost the
entire two minutes.,
At the nine minute mark, with
Michigan a man up, Bernie Gagnon
lit the light on a slap shot but
the referee ruled that the whistle
had blown before the puck drib-
bled into the goal.
Not to be denied, the WCHA's
leading scorer (with 20 goals)
blew home a slap shot two min-
utes later that Watt couldn't
handle.
A half minute later Michigan
upped it to 3-0 when Doug Ash-
worth's shot from close in re-,
bounded off the post, taking Watt

State

icers

REDS DE-ICE YANKS

out of position and allowing Bucky
Straub an easy tap-in for the
marker.
Four minutes later Gagnon, who
also had three assists, knocked
in his second goal of the, evening
when Watt couldn't control Brian
Skinner's slap shot and Bernie
pushed it by him from out in
front.
daily
sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
CHUCK DRUKIS
State ended Wolverine goalie
Karl Bagnell's bid for a shutout
when Don Thompson rapped in the
rebound on Chris Mufey's power
play slap shot with three minutes
left in the period.
Michigan received the proverbial
blessing in disguise to start off the
third period when two Wolverines
quickly found their way to the
penalty box. Gagnon went off at
1:10 for hooking and Bob Falconer
followed a minute later for trip.
ping.
But the fired-up Wolverines re-
fused to bend and kept State from
even getting close to a score, and
as Renfrew later admitted, "That
took the steam out of them
(MSU)."
The Wolverines upped it to 5-1
on a Cartier slap shot from the
corner and Jarry iced it, convert-
ing on a slap shot by Gagnon that
Watt couldn't control.
Don St. Jean's long slap shot
with two minutes left made the
final score 6-2.
Though passing well, State ap-
peared to have left their shooting
scopes in East Lansing as time
and time again their shots failed
to come near the mark.
State coach Amos Bessone, how-

ever, though not overjoyed with
play of his team, admitted, "We
had no excuses; Michigan deserved
to win. Offensively we weren't too
bad ,but Bagnell was up for the
game, he had a great game."
Bagnell meanwhile, had praise
for his own players. Used to hav-
ing to make far more saves than
his counterpart, Bagnell admitted,
"It was good, for a change," as
he had ten less saves than Watt.
"Our defense was as good as they
have been all year, the defense-
men were coming up and the
wingers came back well. State
wasn't able to get organized."
The Wolverines, only two points
behind Michigan Tech, travel up
to Houghton this weekend, hoping
to secure a stronger hold on a
playoff berth.
Meanwhile, Renfrew spiked rum-
ors that he is thinking of retiring.
"No, no," he said after the game
in response to the question of
whether he would retire next year.
"I'm going to be around here for
a while, hope to be around when
we win a championship."
FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. M-Jar-
ry (Gagnon, Cartier) 6:26 pp. PENAL-
TIES: 1. S-Olson (hi-stick) 4:33; 2. S-
Murphy (interference) 7:05; 3, M- Mal-
lette (hi-stick) 7:26; 4. S-Boyd (hi-
stick) 10:02; 5. M-Werner (histick)
10:02; 6. S-Barnes (slash) 16:53; 7. M-
Trudeau (tripping), 19:15.
SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 2. M-
Gagnon (Cartier, Paris) 10:42; 3; M-
Straub (Werner, Ashworth) 11:45; 4,
M-Gagnon (Skinner, Jarry) 15:07; 5. S..
Thompson (Murphy, Drews) 17:38pp.
PENALTIES: 8. S-Boyd (interference)
2:14; 9. M-Skinner (interference) 4:56;
10. S-Roberts (board) 8:07; 11. M- Fal-
coner (charging 16:53; 12. M-Skinner
(interference) 17:50.
THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 6. M-
Cartier (Gagnon, Jarry) 807; pp 7. M-
Jarry (Gagnon) 15:14; 8. S-St. Jearn
(Barnes, Boyd) 17:52. PENALTIES: 13.
M-Gagnon (hooking) 1:10; 14. M-Fal-
coner (tripping) 2:20; 15 . S-Barnes
(tripping) 6:49; 16. M-Gagnon (elbow)
15.44.
GOALIE SAVES
M-Bagnel 10 12 14-36
S-Watt 7 25 14-46
SCORING BY PERIODS
MICHIGAN 1 3 2-6
Michigan State 0 1 1-2

SAPPORO, Japan (IP)-Teen-aged
Anne Henning gave the United
States its second Olympic gold
medal in as many days Thursday,
winning the women's 500-meter
speed skating event at the 11th
Winter Olympics.
Miss Henning, the 16-year-old
skating star from Northbrook, Ill.,
set an Olympic record of 43.33
seconds to win the event despite
being fouled by Canadian skater
Sylvia Burka when the two girls
changed lanes. on the straightaway

al

mines gold

i WINTER(t
SAPPO
near the end of the race.
Because of the foul, Miss Hen-
ning was given another chance to
shatter her own world mark of
42.75 and she circled the sun-swept
Makomanai rink a second time.
*Miss Henning had been timed
in 43.73 seconds on her first run
and then was clocked in 43.33 the
second time around the rink.
The silver medal went to, Vera
Krasnova of Russia, clocked in
44.01 and another Russian, Lud.
mila Titova, the defending Olym-
pic champion in the event, took the
bronze in 44.45. Another American,
Sheila Young of Detroit, was fourth
in 44.53-one of six skaters to
shatter the previous Olympic
mark.
The victo'ry came just 24 hours
after Dianne H o 1 u m, another
Northbrook resident, took the.
1,500-meter test.
Both Miss Henning and Miss
Holum will try for Olympic dou-
bles in the 1,000-meter race Friday.
Miss Henning, wearing her fa-
miliar faded knit 'cap with a small
pin of the comic strip character
"Snoopy" pinned to her skin-tight
skating suit, was one of six skaters
to lower the Olympic standard.
She dashed around the Mako-
manai outdoor rink under sunny
skies with little wind-perfect skat-
ing conditions.
Miss Henning's victory assured
the United States of its most suc-
cessful Winter Games since 1960.
The Americans captured three gold
medals that year but managed only
one each in the, 1964 and 1968
Games.
In hockey the defending cham-
pion Soviet Union moved back into
a first-place tie Wednesday night
with a resounding 7-2 win over the
United States.
The victory vaulted the Russians
back into a tie in the Class A
standings with Sweden, which
scored a 5-3 triumph over Poland

)LYMPICS
RO '72
earlier Wednesday on the strength
of a four-goal outburst in the sec-
ond period, two of them by Inge
Hammarstorm.
The Yanks were outgunned 50-
27 by the powerful Russians with
21 of the shots coming in the first
period when the Soviets built a
2-0 lead on a power-play goal by
Blinov at 10:46 and Kharlahtv at
15:26.
The lead ballooned to 5-0 in the
second period when the frustrated
Americans inadvertently scoring
the fifth goal as Frank Sanders
intercepted a Russian pass, only
to have it rebound off his stick
and into its own goal past startled
netminder Mike Curran.
Sanders and Ron Naslund scored
third-period goals for the Ameri-
cans.

r ; + -Daly-Rolfe Tessera
MSU'S GOALIE JIM WATT (1) snuffs a shot on goal from Michigan's Bgfr°Fajconer(22) whileteam-
mate Michel Jarry (11) alertly looks for the rebound. However, Watt was stunned for six scorinig
shots as the Wolverines convincingly smashed the Spartans 6-2 to move into a tie with Notre Dame
for seventh in WCHA.standings.
SKIWE EKEND SPECA
CSit""

U

ONMEMM

CALL
INPUT
(763-4384)

I'.
f,

the Big Skiing This Winter!
From Friday noon through Monday noon rent
a new Ford or Chevy for the low rate of:
$17.50 and only
8c a mile

..,. }:..

Ruiz dead
Veteran major league infield-
er Chico Ruiz died in a car ae-
cident early yesterday morning.
Ruiz, 33, was driving home when
his car left Interstate 15 in
San Diego and struck a sign
pole.
ISC OR E S
NBA
Los Angeles 117, Atlanta 113
Milwaukee 126, Cleveland 121
New York 126, Detroit 102
Boston 139, Buffalo 112
ABA
Indiana 128, Miami 111
NHL
New York 4, Chacigo 1
Pittsburgh 4,'Toronto i'
Minnesota 4, Los Angeles 1
INCOME TAX
SERVICE
by W .S.B.
Special rates for all students.
Call 763-6618
after 4 p.m.
REMEMBER-FILE EARLY }
WAYNE S. BROWN
1352 Wilmot
aI

For the Student Bod y:
SALE
" .Jeans
" Bells
" Flares
'/2, off
CHECKMATE
state Street at Liberty

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When you have a question,

"t.
V .-_.,,,

FREE
DELIVERY ;
AND

plaint or .suggestion
Health Service.
Monday through Friday,
until five, Shari and Rob

abou

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t the

{rr;
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DIAON\D

151

Pi .jI
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from

noon

wait by the

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663-7

phone to take your call. They won't be
satisfied until you are.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN HEALTH SERVICE

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11

IS FOR TRAVELING

d

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f

i

o 48-hour session of exhibits, entertainment, informative talks,
and lectures on Kibbutz life-style.
WILL BE IN ANN ARBOR FEB. 15-16
FEATURING
COFFEE HOUSE-Join the Israeli atmosphere at the entertain-
ment show of songs, poetry, films, Kibbutz anecdotes, featuring
a group of young, singing Kibbutzniks.
FEB. BAth-8 p.m.; FEB. 6th-7 8 9 p.m.
at 1429 HILL STREET (downstairs)
admission: $25c
FREE EXHIBIT-See the book ane phot displays about Kibbutz
plus guerrilla theatre. Free studies about Kibbutz distributed.
FISHBOWL-FEB. 16th, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
LECTURES-Learn about child education in Kibbutz and other
subjects.
For more information about subjects, time, and place of lectures,
call:
HILLEL: 663-4129 or TZVIAH: 761-4037

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and SuspensionParts
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