FPcge Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 23, 1972 , I ~~ E i h tT H I C I GN.A I YSu.a,.a n ay.3 ,1.7 RUSH-WHO NEEDS IT? (a 30-second course on fraternology) LET'S FACE IT; not many guys need it. You can hove parties in your apartment. You don't have to be organized to get drunk. Every fraternity has a social program, an athletic program, a pledge program, and a formal. We're not an image; we're a fraternity. We believe in the fraternity system-any fraternity. So here's what we'll do: Come over and see the flicks with us; come over and have a few beers. We'll tell you what rushing and pledging are all about. We'll tell you 'where the other houses are. And, if you ask, we'll tell you about us. And if you need a ride, give us a call. Rap to anybody who answers. We'll have cars at dorms., OPEN KEG Friday, Jan. 28- 7-12 p.m. DELTA SIGMA PHI, 2009 Washtenaw-761-7420 Pepp By JOEL GREER Michigan Tech hockey coach John Macfnnes has long been an advocate of a strong defensive hockey team. Last night, his idea of a good defense was nowhere toR be seen as the Michigan icers out- scored the Huskies 8-6 before a sellout crowd of 3,600 at the Michigan Coliseum. "We didn't play very tight de- fensively." MacInnes assessed, "the goalie, the defense, the for- wards, in fact, all of them." But it was more of a case of; the Michigan offense, which has been practically non-existent of late, that came through with an excellent performance. From the tenacious forchecking of Julian Nixon to the heads-up backcheck- ing of Paul-Andre Paris, the Wol- verines had the Huskies confused right from the opening face-off. It was the goal at the one- minute mark of the first period that gave the Wolverines the mo- mentum they needed to carry them past the highly regarded Huskies. Bernie Gagnon, who has been in a mild scoring slump, scored his first of two after Bob Falcon- er's shot hit the post. The re- cksters pummel Tech, 86 pads. The goal produced the spark the Wolverines apparently needed to get them moving again. The Wol- verines showed signs of breaking out of their current slump Friday night but the lack of breaks and the failure to put the puck in the net caused another defeat. This time. "we had the momen- tum and got a few breaks," men- tioned a happy Wolverine coach Al Renfrew after the game. "When you don't score a goal," Renfrew added in reference to Friday's 3-0 loss. "you can't gain the momen- tum." FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. M- Gagnon (Falconer, Jarry) 1:00; 2. T- Starmer (Chestolowski, Mott) 5:43. PENALTIES: 1. M-Dunbar (2, hi-! stick) 5:57; 2. T-McPhail (2, int.) 8:04; 3. T-McPhail (2, hi-stick) 10:24; 4. M- onnrelly (?, hi-stick) 10:24; 5. T-Nahr- giang (2, rough) 12:40: 6. M-Dunbar (2, hi-stick) 15:00; 7. M-Trudeau (2, hold) '18:36. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 3. M- Jarryx (( :gnon. Triideau) 2:24; 4. M- Par'is (Skinner. Lefebvre) 10:48; 5. T- Mott (C hestolowski, Stamler) 11:09; 6. M-Neal (Falconer, Mallette) 11:48; 7. M_ Lefebvre (Falconer, Jarry) pp 19:29. PENALTIES: 8. M-Falconer (2, trip) 31; 9 T- Pushie (2, elbow) 4:30; 10. T-Abbey (2, int.) 5:34; 11. M-Trudeau (2, trip) 7:46; 12. M-Skinner (2, hi- The Huskies evened the score at the first frame, but the theme of game, only three goals were of the less than two minutes apart, half- 1-1 at the 5:43 mark when Lorne the entire game was beginning to power play variety. Jerry Lefebvre way through the final period. Stamler, who missed Friday's en show as Michigan was out-hustling got the first one with Bill Steele counter with the flu, converted the Huskies on every occasion. in the box for tripping. fectly by Darwin Mott in the slot Ed Chestolowski's rebound. Just past the two-minute mark A fist fight between Tech's Bob to the left of Bagnell. At 10:08 The flu bug, however, remained of the second period, the Wol- Lorimer and Michigan's veteran Jim Nahrgang, who has already to haunt the Huskies as Mike verines grabbed the lead for good. puncher Gary Connelly late in the been claimed by the Detroit Red' Usitalo, a two-goal scorer Friday, Michel Jarry turned in Randy second stanza fired up the Huskies Wings. made things a bit shaky had to sit this one out. Not one Trudeau's blue-line slap-shot for for the comeback in the final per- for the Wolverines with his long for making excuses, MacInnes his eighth goal of the season. iod. BothLrimerand Connely,'eenhosg quickly pointed out that "him Paris pushed the lead to 3-1 who started the incident with a (Usitalo) being absent didn't make midway through the period with But Michigan scored three times any difference." But it was ob- a fifty-foot drive that beat Tre- high-sticking maneuver were giv- in the next four minutes to ice vious that Tech's number one line win on the stick side. en five-minute major penalties. the victory. was certainly hampered without A goal by Darwin Mott less than Automatically, both players missed The triumph should give the the Laurium, Michigan standout. 30 seconds later almost turned the the remainder of the contest and Wolverines the confidence they There was no further scoring in game around but Randy Neal's will be lost to their respective need to move back into the WCHA stick) 13:21; 13. T- Coates (2, hi-stick)Iseventh of the year barely 40 sec- teams for the next game also. race. "It was a great win for us," 13:23; 14. T-Steele (2, trip) 17:39; 15. onds after Mott's, kept the mo- ' Renfrew naturally declared, "I M-Connelly (2, hold) 19:44; 16. M-Con- mentum on Michigan's side. Tech narrowed the Michigan hope we're back on the right nelly (5, fight) 19:44; 17. T-Abbey (2, Despite being a penalty-marred lead to one with a pair of goals track." slash( 19:44; 18. T-Lorimer (5, fight) 19:44. TsIRD PERIOD SCORING: 8.'T-1 :IOWA UPSETS GAMECOCKS: Chsoosi(Mott) 8:26; 9. T-Nahr- ''''UST gang (Crosby, Wise) pp 10:08 10. M- Gagnon (Falconer, Jarry) 10:34; 11. T- Mott (Stamler) 11:00; 12. M-Straub (Werner, Nixon) 124:1;13 M-Jarry Falconer) 14:18; 14. Bucksd ab Hoosiers ler (Mott, Chestolowski) pp 15:42. PENALTIES: 19. T-Nahrgang (2, int.) 2:46; 20. M-Cartier (2, in.) 9:52; 21, COLUMBUS, Ohio - Allan 49-45 early in the second half. in 40 points, and the Hawkeyes M-Dunhar (2,Abe(2slh1:5 crosscheck)3 10 :00; 22. T - Abbey (2, slash) 16:25; 23. M-Paris (2, Hornyak fired in a season-high 36 Once the Hoosiers closed to upset fifth-ranked South Carolina hi-stick) 17:36. points last night, leading seventh- within four points, Witte and 91-85 last night after No. 4 Long ------ ranked Ohio State to its 13th Hornyak took charge. They scored Beach State ripped Loyola of Chi- straight Big Ten basketball vic- the next 13 points for Ohio State, cago 79-58 in a Chicago stadium tory 80-74 over Indiana. which surged back into a 62-53 basketball doubleheader. n u n d ate Seven-foot Luke Witte contrib- lead. Aftre lagging 42-39 at halftime, uted 21 points and 16 rebounds The Buckeyes hit 50 per cent of South Carolina moved in at 56-55 for the Buckeyes before fouling their shots from the floor, includ- on a jumper by Casey Manning out with 27 seconds to play. The ing 55 per cent in mounting a and a minute later made it 58-57 Buckeyes spurted to a 13-3 lead 40-30 halftime lead. on a shot by Danny Traylor. in the first five minutes and never Mark Minor held high-scoring Williams, who pumped 17 of his trailed. total points in the first half, added Rick Bay's charges host defending Jonl Ritter le the Hoosiers Joby Wright to four field goals 10 in the last 10 minutes to com- NCAA titlist Oklahoma State. with 27 points. He scored 16 in d 1 t gb n S . 1 «. . .4 ...eragin20 it bin with the free-throw shooting $ mmmmw To 0 -'s T A TT z T - ti - - - Visit the DAILY booth at Activities Day bound came off to Gagnon who- Islipped it under Morris Trewin's _ } PIrS I 'I folk& tive dual meet victory, the Michi- Micnigan's chances gan wrestlers thoroughly trounced the Cowboys appear Indiana yesterday, 25-12. The the Wolverine swimn Wolverines swept five of the first ing off Indiana. Th six matches from the out-classed State meet rates as t but spirited Hoosiers. of the Wolverine hor Bill Davids (12-3) recorded the 118--Jim Brown (M) deci lone Michigan fall of the after- Hulsell, 4-1. noon. Trailing 2-0 after one per- 126-Bill Davids (M) pinn Mash, 7:52. iod, Davids came alive and surged 134-Jim Hagan (M) decis to a 12-2 lead over an exhausted Angel, 12-2. Tom Mash. Eight seconds re- 142-Bill Willetts (I) deci mained when Mash succumbed. Schuck, 5-0. Senirs im aanandLon150-Jerry Hubbard (M)d niors Jim Hagan and Lon Rick Thomas, 6-0. Harris turned in their finest per- 158-Mitch Mendrygal (M formances of the season. Hagan John Willson, 6-4, Ang 167-ave Clark (I) decisi methdicaly aule Jef Anel, Ryan, 3-2. 12-2. Harris' solid 6-2 victory over 177-Dave Curby (M) deci Jim Main left little doubt that he Clary, 4-2. has broken out of his early season l9OLon Harris (M) deci slump. .aMain. 6-2. slump. HVY-Gary Don atelli (I)1 Monday nighit at 7:30 Coach Er'nst, 4:13. of upsetting the second half to keep Indiana as bleak as in contention. mers knock- Steve Downing, who wound up e Oklahoma with 15 points, led an Indianaf he highlight rally that cut the Buckeye lead to me schedule. By BOB McGINN7 Capturing their fifth consecu- of Kevin Kunnert to keep the 1Hawkeyes out of range. The near- Iowa inures est the Gamecocks came in this CHICAGO -- Iowa led all the last stretch was 85-81. Kunnert way with Rick Williams pouring totaled 20 points. With 21/2 minutes to go 'and leading 84-79, the Hawkeyes went into a partial stall and were suc- Sfindings cessful in piling up free throw Big Ten All Games points to pad the score. TBi ei lthC Gmli 2 out of the last 3 Presidents Invited us to teach our Speed Reading Course to members of the White House Staff. (If these Kennedy and Nixon people could find the time, shouldn't you?) Take a free Speed Reading Lesson sioned Marty ned Tom sioned Jeff sioned Bill decisioned ) decisioned Boned John isioned Jim sioned Jim pinned Gary Ohio State Minnesota MICHIGAN Wisconsin Iowa Purdue Illinois Michigan State Northwestern Indiana W L Percentage W 3 0 1.000 12 4 0 1.000 10 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2_ 1 3 1 4 0 3 Big Ten .750 .500 .500 .500 .333 .250 .200 .000 8 9 7 7 9 7 3 8 In 60 minutes, over 80% of our Mini-Lesson audiences Increase their reading speed. Just a little, but enough to know what It's like. At the Mini-Lesson, you will find out how the Evelyn Wood technique handles difficult textbook material. How it improves memoty and concentration. And, how It makes reading a pleasure Instead of a chore. 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Mini-Lesson Schedule INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED AT A MINI-LESSON Today, Sunday, Jan. 23 or Tomorrow, Monday, Jon. 24 or Tuesday, Jan. 25 AT 6:30 or 8:30 PM. HOLIDAY INN Ann Arbor 3750 Washtenaw U.S. 23 and Washtenaw OR MICHIGAN LEAGUE 215 S. Ingalls Phone number 313-353-5111 Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 17320 W. 8 Mile Road Southfield, Michi in 48075 NOON LUNCHEON-35c MONDAY, JAN. 24 PROF. DAVID SINGER of Mental Health Research Institute "PAST AND FUTURE WARS; WHAT ARE THEIR CAUSES" GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Yesterday's Results MICHIGAN 83, Northwestern 79 Ohio State 80, Indiana 74 Minnesota 67, MichiganState 57 Iowa 91, South Carolina 85 TOKE UP TWO AT YPSI I Tumblers streak grows L ippnig oum caronna was L Kevin Joyce with 23 points and 3 Tom Riker with 18. 6 tesiled I EAST LANSING, Mich. - Clyde 5iTurner poured in 31 points and 5 teammate Ron Behagen added 23 3 to lead Minnesota to a 67-7 Big 6 Ten basketball victory over Mich- 10 igan State last night. 5 Turner and Behagen combined for 30 points in the first half as the Gophers took a 35-23 lead. The Spartans returned after in- termission to close within four at 10:04 but the Gophers held off the comeback effort to win their sixth straight game. Minnesota increased its overall record to 10-3 and Big Ten mark to 4-0, while the Spartans drop to 7-6 and 1-3 respectively. Allen Smith with 20 and sopho- more guard Mike Robinson with 18 led the MSU attack '4 By CHUCK DRUKIS YPSILANTI - Michigan's gym- nasts extended their streak to 46 consecutive dual meet victories by crushing Eastern Michigan 159.4 - 146.9 and Chicago Circle 160.9 - 157.8 in a double dual meet held in Bowen Field House yester- day. Michigan registered the top score in each event against the Hurons while taking four out of six against Chicago. Ray Gura received top honors in two events - the free exercise and the long horse -while Monty Falb and Dick Kaziny copped one. each - the still rings and the side horse, respectively - to lead the Wolverines over highly respected Chicago. Murry Plotkin, despite recording a 9.05 on the parallel bars, lost to a 9.35 score by Chicago's Doug Anderson. Jim Scully's 8.95 per- formance was outdone by Chicago's Clarence Johnson with a 9.2. Michigan's .all around men - Gura, Ted Marti, and J. P. Bou- chard - bagged the top three spots against the Windy City rep- resentatives. The Wolverines fini- shed one, two, and five in the all around against Eastern. The most remarkable perfor- mance of the meet was executed by Michigan's Keith Martin on the still rings. Martin, who competed for the first time against North Carolina last week, received the largest ovation given by the crowd after performing a complete set with dismount. Michigan's coach Newt Loken thought that his gymnast's per- formance was encouraging al- though they performed erratically on the parallel bars and the high bar. Chicago's coach Bill Roetzheim was unsatisfied by the performance of his team. "We had gone four weeks without, a broken routine on the side horse." said Roetz- heim. "But today we fell off four out of five times.." Michigan will now prepare for the Big Ten season, starting with Iowa next week. 10 1jGU UL~ M 1T ttuon, ISCORES NBA Chicago 115, Houston 108 Cincinnati 113, Cleveland 96 Golden State 113, Philadelphia 106 ' NHL Detroit 3, Buffalo 2 Vancouver 5, New York 2 Boston 8, Montreal 5 Minnesota 4, Toronto 1 l -ABA Indiana 119, Utah 113 College Basketball Marquette 70,DePaul 61 Eastern Michigan 105, Ferris 73 Toledo 89, Western Michigan 82 Providence 89, Niagara 79 Kentucky 72, Tennessee 70 . Arkansas 100, Texas A&M 89 M arshall 103, Bowling Green 80 Cincinnati 81, Tulsa 74 Dayton 58, Kent 56 Florida State 71, Georgia Tech 69 Wake Forest 95, South Florida 68 Central Michigan 109, Central State 65 North Carolina St. 80, Pittsburgh 73 Miami, Ohio 91, Ohio U 77 Duke 76, North Carolina 74 Fordham 79, Princeton 75 Long Beach St. 79, Loyola, Chicabo 55 Colorado 74, Kansas 69 PHI DELTHET a living situation of fun, friends, comfort, and a wide variety of activities and outlets IN THE UNION ASSEMBLY HALL, UNION BASEMENT SUN. JAN. 23rd 2-5 & 7-10 The Center for Continuing Education of Women and the Department of Anthropology present NANCIE GONZALEZ Chairwoman, Department of Anthropology, University of Iowa speaking on Women in the Domestic and Jural Domains: An Evolutionary Perspective * 4 I 10 I