* Saturday, February 6, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Big Red Tank Machine to conquest over -Daily-Tom Gottlieb Spitz takes lead in 100-freestyle By JIM KEVRA The Big Red Indiana Hoosier swim team, as was expected, easily rolled to their 55th straight dual meet victory last night as they downed Michigan, 78-45. The Wolverines tought hard throughout the meet and, after the 200-yard butterfly, were only down by a 43-32 margin. But the Hoosiers splash2d to victory in each of the last five events to smash the Wolverines hopes for an upset victory. Michigan could only win three events all evening, the 200-yard butterfly and both diving events. In the butterfly, Larry D a y barely nosed out teammate Byron MacDonald as they left three Hoosiers wallowing in their wake. After the meet, Michigan head coach, Gus Stager said, "Our butterflyers really looked good out there. They really looked strong." In th one-meter diving, Michi- gan's Joe Crawford edged out Gary James of Indiana by less than a point. John Hamilton add- ed a third for the Wolverines. Dick Rydze completely domi- nated the three-meter contest as he turned in five consistent dives. Freshman Steve Schenthal from Louisiana, a former student of Wolverine diving coach Dick Kim- ball, took second for Michigan in that event. Indiana broke into an early 8-4 lead as they squeezed out a victory in the opening event, the 400-yard medley relay. Mike Stamm opened up an early lead in the backstroke leg for the Big Red. Stu Isaac in the breast- stroke and MacDonald in the but- terfly closed the Indiana margin to less than a body lehgth but, superswimmer Mark Spitz out- churned Michigan's freshman sen- sation Chris Hansen over the last 100 yards to give Indiana a lead they never relinquished. The Hoosiers showed their depth in the next event as they sat out their two best distancemen, John Kinsella and Santiago Esteva, in the 1000-yard freestyle yet still slammed the event. Indiana mentor Dr. James Coun- daily spmorts NIGHT EDITOR: BOB ANDREWS silman started Ulf Gustavsen and Bill Baird who sped to a one-two finish. Gustavsen came back later in the meet to take first in the 500- yard freestyle. In the 500, he nar- rowly nosed out Indiana's Gary Conelly in the closest event of the evening. Both men were timed in 4:51.38. Kinsella, a double world record holder, eased to victory in the 200- yard freestyle in his second best time of the year in that event. Es- tava barely nosed out Ray McCul- lough for the second spot. In the 200-yard freestyle, Spitz crawled to a slow but sure victory dragging teammate Rich Anderson in his wake. George Smith, a rela- tive unknown among the herald Hoosiers, followed with yet another Indiana first as he edged Michi- gan's Don Peterson in the 400-yard Invitational Medley. Michigan started their attempt at a comeback as they slammed both the three-meter diving and the 200-yard butterfly but then, the Big Red started to roll. Spitz cranked out his second win of the evening in the 100-yard free- style in' the leisurely time of 48.09. McCullough narrowly missed the upset of the evening as he finished less than a second behind the pe- destrian Spitz. Mike Stamm followed with the only record of the evening, a pool mark of 1:56.70 in the 200-yard backstroke. Stamm's time was still over three seconds off his best time of the year in that event. After the meet, Counsilman was not satis- fied with his star's performance. "It was a poor time for him real- ly," said Counsilman. After Gustasen's victory in the THIRD PERIOD ASSAULT Tech tramples ZI Special To The Daily A half minute later, Michigan's puck four minutes later and Akated HOUGHTON - The Wolverine hustling Brian Slack fed a pass to down unmolested to put Tech three icers played national powerhouse linemate Merle Falk and the Wol- up. Michigan Tech even for two per-{ verines tied the score. iads here last night before suce- The final Huskie goal came id- cumbing to four consecutive third period goals and lost, 5-2. The Wolverines, exhausted after a day long drive through a heavy Northern Michigan blizzard, never- theless came out at the start of the contest fired up. The Wolverines refused to be intimidated by a Tech squad which' Michigan coach Al Renfrew called' "perhaps the best squad since the early 1960s," and when the Huskies ' scored an early first period goal, the Wolverines quickly got it back. The Tech goal was scored by a Toronto twosome, Ken Tucker with an assist from Graham Wise, at 4:55. ThWnat was all the scoring until the start of the final frame, as the two teams played a hard-checking de- fensive contest. The second period was marked by a number of power play opportunities for both teams, but neither squad could cash in. Then, almost with the opening face off of the third period, came the Tech' onslaught. Tucker put the Huskies into the lead with his sec- ond goal, on assists from Gary Crosby and Jim Grisdale. The Wolverine struggled, but four minutes later Tech scored again, with Steve Coates getting the tally on an assist from Wayne Pushie. Mike Chestolowski took a stray way in the frame on a shot by Wise with assists from Tucker and Cros- by. The Wolverines belatedly got back into the scoring picture with four minutes remaining on a goal by Punch Cartier. Cartier was as- sisted by captain Paul Gamsby, who receivd a hooking penalty with a minute and a half left to kill whatever impossible dreams the Wolverines may have had. This was the second defeat the Wolverines have suffered at the hands of Tech this year, the other one coming in last month's Great Lakes Tournament, 7-2. The Wolverines, still in the base- icers ment of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, and the Hus- kies, who strengthened their tena- cious hold on first place, square off again today at 3 p. m. The contest, part of Houghton's Winter Carnival, will be played for the Governor's T r o p h y. Ann Arbor's Bill Busch, a senior, will give goalie Karl Bagnell a rest and see his first varsity action in two years. The last appearance for Busch was a one-period substitute for All America Jim McKeough against Michigan State. A blizzard Score by periods MICHIGAN 1 1 - 2 Michigan Tech 1 0 4 - 5 First period scoring - 1. Tucker (Wyse) 4:55; 2. M -- Falk (slack) 5:23. Penalties - 1. T - Usitalo 2 (charging) 14:55. Second Period scoring - none. Penalties - 2. T - McPhail 2 (el- bowing) 6:12; 3. T - Murray 2 (high-sticking) 6:51; 4. M - Gage non 2 (high-sticking) 6:51; 4. M - Lefebvre 2 (tripping) 9:01; 5. M - Jackson 2 (high-sticking) 12:55; 6 - T - Grisdale 2(kneeing) 17:04. Third period scoring - 3. T -- Tucker (Grisdale, Crosby) 0:18; 4. T - Coates (Pushie) 4:46; 5. T. Chestolowski unass. 8:36; 6. T - Wise (Tucker, Crosby) 11:30; 7. M - Cartier (Gamsby) 16:01. Penalties - 7. M - Gamsby 2 (hooking) 18:36. Saves Tech - Bob Lee 7 13 6 - 26 MICHIGAN Karl Bagnell 14 11 14 - 39 'Pistons toppleKnieks, 108-99; Celtics put it to Royals, 114-110 I 400 YARD MEDLEY RELAY: 1. Indiana (Stamm, Dahlberg, O'Con- ner, Spitz); 2. MICHIGAN. Time - 3 :32.05. SPRINGBOARD DIVING - ONE METER: 1. Crawford (M); 2. Gary James (I); 3. John Hamilton (M).' Points - 280.35. 1000 YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Gus- tafson (I); 2. Bairl (I); 3. Fish- burn (M). Time - 9:36.71. 200 YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Kin- sella (1); 2. Estava (1); 3. McCul- lough (M). Time - 1:42.43. 50 YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Spitz (1); 2. Anderson (1); 3. Zann (M). Time -.21.79. 400 YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY: 1. Smith (1); 2. Peterson (M); 3. Hylant (I). Time - 4:18.54. SPRINGBOARD DIVING - THREE METERS: 1. Rydze (M); 2. Schen- By The Associated Press1 DETROIT-The Detroit Pistons< built up a 21-point lead in theI first half, then held off a New ; York Knicks comeback and went on to score a 108-99 National Bas- ketball Association victory last, night. Dave Bing with 31 points and Jimmy Walker with 21 led the1 Pistons, who chalked up theirt 37th victory of the season, bring- ing them to within three of tying their all-time record in Detroit. Walker pumped in 12 points andf Bing 11 as the Pistons shot ahead, 37-20, in the first quarter.] The two then combined with Terry Dischinger and Bill Hewitt to lift the Pistons into a 61-40f halftime lead.I With Willis Reed pumping in 15 points, including 12 in a row fort New York, the Knicks pulled tok within five points in the third per-, iod and trailed only 82-76 going into the final period.t But then Bing took over and hitj 10 more points for Detroit to putI the game out of reach.r Reed with 35 points and Waltr Frazier with 26 led the Atlantic Division-leading Knicks, who suf-t fered only their second defeat in their last nine games. Business as usual the Cincinnati Royals last night at the Garden. White broke a 104-104 tie with a fallaway jump shot with three minutes left and the Celtics went on to only their second triumph in the last seven starts. W h i t e overshadowed Cincin- nati's Tom VanArsdale, who scored the Royals' last nine points and captured game honors with 27. The Celtics were led by White and John Havlicek with 26 points each and Don Nelson 18. Bullets bash Braves BUFFALO-Fred Carter scored a career high of 29 points last night and the Baltimore Bullets survived a disastrous second quar- ter for a 98-90 National Basket- ball Association victory over the Buffalo Braves. Carter scored on his first seven shots of the game as the Bullets jumped to a 34-18 first-quarter lead. But Baltimore scored only nine points in the second period, making just three of 23 field goal attempts, and fell behind 44-33 at the half. In the third quarter, the Bullets opened up an 11-point lead, 66-55. attack. Carter finished 13-for-23 from t he floor and added three free throws. The Bullets, hitting on 15 of 21 shots from the floor, raced to a 17-1 lead. The Braves scored their first field goal with 4:36 gone in the first quarter. The victory snapped a three- game losing string for Baltimore. Bulls breeze CHICAGO - Bob Love scored 37 points, 23 in the second half, as the Chicago Bulls romped to their fifth straight victory la s t night'bydumping the Philadel- phia 76'ers 114-102 in a National Basketball Association game. The Bulls got unexpected help from Matt Quokas, a 6-4 guard, inserted in the starting lineup at the beginning of the winning streak January 19. Love's teammate, Chet Walker, who scored 27 points, got 14 as- sists and held Philadelphia's a c e scorer, Bill Cunningham, to 14 points. Philadelphia's Archie Clark ac- counted for 30 points. The 76'ers, who never held the lead, five times came within one point in the se- cond quarter. The Bulls managed a 78-73 ad-' vantage after three quarters and got three straight baskets to open the final quarter and raced to a 100-83 lead with 5:53 left. * * * Blues draw ST. LOUIS - Ron Schock push- ed in the rebound of Dunk Mc- Callum's shot with 2:55 to go in lifting the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 2-2 National Hockey League tie' with the St. Louis Blues last night. Penn downs Cornell by 33 PHILADELPHIA (1£') - Down by i thai (M); 3. Muir (I). Points - 303.25. 200 YARD BUTTERFLY: 1. Day (M); 2. MacDonald (M); 3. O'Con- nor (I). Time - 1:55.11. 100 YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Spitz (1): 2. McCullough (M); 3. An- derson (I). Time - :48.09. 200 YARD BACKSTROKE: 1. Stamm (1); 2. Estava (I); 3. Hansen (). Time -1:56.70 (new pool re- cord). 500 YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Gus- tafson (I); 2. Connelly (I); 3. Fishburn (M). Time - 4:51.38. 200 YARD BREASTSTROKE: 1. Dahlberg (1); 2. Whitaker (M); 3. Isaac (M). Time - 2:13.35. 800 YARD FREESTYLE RELAY: 1. Indiana (Kinsella, Heiss, Barbiere, Stamm); 2. MICHIGAN. Time -- 7:10.95. For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Bells.........$8.50 DENIM Liquorti wins 1000-yarter; Palmer holds Hawaiian lead By The Associated Press 0 NEW YORK - Marty Liquori, Villanova's multi-talented Olympian, ran his Madison Square Garden winning streak to 12 straight last night, capturing the 1,000-yard run at the 52nd annual Knights of Columbus Indoor Track Meet. The Wildcat senior, considered one of America's top milers,j dropped down in distance to capture the 1,000 over the 11-lap banked elastroturf track for the third straight year, winning in 2:08.8, 1.2 seconds off his meet mark. * * * * * HONOLULU-Arnold Palmer, muttering in anger after bogey- ing the final hole, shot a three-under-par 69 and moved into a share of the early second-round lead in the $200,000 Hawaiian Open Golf Tournament yesterday. Palmer had a 36-hole total of 136, eight under par for two trips of the Waialae Country Club course. He was tied at that figure with hard-hitting DeWitt Weaver who had a second round 68. * * *' * * ATLANTA-Rico Carty, the 1970 National League batting champion whose career has been filled with injuries and illness, re- turned to an Atlanta hospital yesterday for treatment of pleurisy. Braves' officials said doctors report Carty probably will be hos- pitalized only two days. Doctors said the illness bears no relation to tuberculosis, which sidelined Carty for the entire 1968 season. Carty, who hit .368 last season, spent three weeks in the hos- pital in December following surgery on broken bones in his knee. That injury is expected to force Carty to miss some of the 1971 season.* . * 0 LOS ANGELES - The Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League announced yesterday they have purchased veteran defenseman Harry Howell from the California Golden Seals, Howell, 38, has been in the NHL 19 years, 17 of them with the New York Rangers. * * * * * ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS-The Minnesota North Stars drop- ped forward Tommy Williams from their National Hockey League roster yesterday, and General Manager Wren Blair said he would be traded as soon as possible. Bush Jeans Bells. Pre-Shrunk' Super Slims $10.00 $8.00 ... $7.50 ... $7.00 r, CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty and made it stand up the rest of Celts sizzle the way. Wes Unseld had 24 rebounds for BOSTON-Jo Jo White sparked Baltimore and held Bob Kauff- a closing rally, scoring eight of man, Buffalo's leading scorer, to Boston's last 12 points, in leading nine points-11 under his average. the Celtics to a 114-110 National Dick Garret, with 25, and Don- Basketball Association victory over nie May, with 24, led the Braves' Professional Leogue Standings ' New Yo: Philadel Boston Buffalo Bait ino Cincin Atlanta Clevelan Milwauk NBA Eastern Cmnferen Atlantic Div isior w L >rk 40 19 phla 35 25 31 28 16 45 Central Division ire 32 24 At i 24 33 19 39 id 11 49 * * * * Western Conferen Midwest Division ce East Division n W L Pct. G Pet. GB Virginia 40 18 .684 - .673 Kentucky 32 26 .561 1 .585 5i:, New York 25 31 .446 13 .525 9 Carolina 26 33 .431 1 .262 25, Pittsburgh 24 34 .421 1 Floridians 23 37 .383 17 1asWest Division .571 - Utah 36 18 .667 - .421 '' Indiana 35 19 .648 1 .328 14' Memphis 34 25 .576 4 .183 23 Denver 19 36 .345 1 Texas 19 36 .345 1 te Today's Games New York at Indiana .818 - Kentucky vs. Carolina at Raleigh .650 9 Denver at Pittsburgh .615 11 Utah vs. Virginia at Norfolk .586 12%, Only games scheduled. * * * * 593 - NH L .552 2 East Division .456 711: W L T Pts. GF .400 11 Boston 36 8 6 78 2461 .328 15 New York 31 11 10 72 169 Montreal 23 16 11 57 1771 GB 7 4 ', 5 1 4. 714 eaentibei o is February 14 M ~Give Your0 M Valentine0 O Necklace 0 Heart tag available only EIGHT DOLLARS No charge for engraving 'Ybu alw 48 hours, kee Detroit Chicago Phoenix Pacific 9 Los Angeles San Francisco Seattle San Diego Portland 45 10 37 20 35 22 34 24 Division 32 22 32 26 26 31 24 36 19 39 three points early in the first half fourth-ranked Pennsylvania went to its bench last night and the re-k serves ran off a 17-0 margin to help Petitioning now open for: the fourth-ranked Quakers come back to bury Cornell, 79-46. / Pennsylvania, trailing 14-li, got C ntraI son, Craig Littlepage and John C Koller. Those three, combined with 5 SEATS A1 ACntler. blanted Crnell for seven 1 'GA 129 118 143 v....a..,.a.,.-. t.. r"..........