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December 01, 1970 - Image 6

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The Michigan Daily, 1970-12-01

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Page Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, December 1, 1970

Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, December 1, 1 970'

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GOALIES STAND OUT

Icers
By RICK CORNFELD
"We g o t great goaltending
both nights," Michigan hockey
coach Al Renfrew said of his
team's split of a two game set
last weekend at North Dakota.
"Right now our big plus has
been our goaltending.
"I can't choose yet between
our goalies."
That might be a strange
statement for a coach to make
after his team lost one game,
6-5, before winning the nexta2-1.
But even though, with Karl
Bagnell in goal, the Wolverines
blew a third period 5-2 lead
Friday before losing in over-
time, Renfrew thinks the goal-
ie did an outstanding job.
"I don't think the forwards
checked back as well as they
might have," Renfrew said.
Saturday night was a differ-
ent story, however. "We were
much better defensively," Ren-
For the student body:
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(All Colors)
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split
frew said. "The forwards were
more aware that they had to
come back and help on defense.
"(Doug) Hastings did well in
goal," the coach added. T h e
sophomore goalie allowed only
one score by the Nodaks.
Friday night, goals by Rick
Mallette, Rick Jackson; Bernie
Gagnon - his fourth of the
season-and two by Paul Gams-
by enabled Michigan to take a
three goal lead, but, when
Michigan drew two penalties in
the final stanza, the Sioux be-
gan to fight back.
With a two-man advantage,
North Dakota scored easily.
Then two minutes I a t e r, the
Wolverines failed in an attempt
to clear the puck out of their
own zone and the Sioux seized
the opportunity to score again.
North Dakota tied the game
while a man short. The Nodaks
took the puck down the ice on
a two-on-one break and sent it
just under the crossbar.
At 5:55 of the overtime per-
iod, Tom O'Keefe took the puck
on a three-on-two break and
shot from the side. The puck

vith

Nodaks

just caught the side of the net
to win the game for North Da-
kota.
The Wolverines didn't let the
stunning defeat daunt them the
next night. "We showed great
character coming back Satur-
day and playing well," Renfrew
said..
Michigan took the lead for the
second straight night, on a goal.
by Mallette in the first period.
North Dakota came back with a
score in the second period to tie
the game.
WCHA Standings

Before a minute had elapsed
in the final stanza, Gamsby
stopped a North Dakota shot at
the blue line, skated down the
ice with the puck and scored on
a slap shot from 20 feet out for
his third goal of the set.
"The puck was on edge which
made it a tough shot," said Ren-
frew who singled out Gamsby
for special praise for his play
throughout the series. "He was
great up front,"rRenfrew said.
Gamsby's score was all t h e
newly tough Wolverine defense
needed to insure the victory,
Michigan's third of the y e a r
against one defeat.
The weekend set opened up
the Wolverines' Western Colle-
giate Hockey Association sched-
ule. The icers travel to Colorado
Springs Friday to play Colo-
rado College which defeated de-
fending conference champion
Minnesota twice this past week-
end.

4
4

Mich. Tech
Colo. College
Duluth
North Dakota
Michigan
Denver
Mich. State
Wisconsin
Minnesota
Saturday's

WCHA Season
2-0 5-1-1
2-0 2-2-0
3-1 6-1-1
4-2 4-2-0
1-1 3-1-0
1-1 2-1-0
1-3 3-3-0
1-3 4-3-0
1-5 1-5-0
Results

-Larry Cornield
JUBILANT WOLVERINES celebrate a goal in the first game
against St. Louis.

Gymnasts place in first meet,

A#

Colorado Col. 8, Minnesota 5
Michigan 2, North Dakota 1
Denver 10, Wisconsin 4
Michigan State 6, Ohio State 1

seek to retain national honors

Bush Jeans
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State Street at Liberty

By BETSY MAHON
While the rest of the campus
enjoyed their vacations the Wol-
verine gymnasts joined the largest
gathering of bouncers in the na-
tion for the Midwest Open as a
prelude to their regular season duel
meets.
Coach Newt Loken summed up
the meet by saying that his squad
was "in evidence but not predom-
inant". The meet was controlled'by-
Iowa State, who narrowly lost
to Michigan in the NCAA finals
last year. Iowa State garnered
165.5 points in this year's meet,
compared to the Wolverines'
155.75.
While Loken admitted that "It
is evident that we must make con-
siderable improvement if we want
to regain the prominence we held
last year," he was more than sat-
isfied with the performances of
several of his athletes. George
Huntzicker won the trampoline.
competition for the second
straight year and Junior D i c k
Kaziny placed third out of 150
competitors in the side horse

event. Ed Howard snagged a third
place berth by his performance on
the high bar.
Besides Iowa State, Loken was
impressed with the Southern Illi-
nois and Indiana State squads.
The Wolverines will face the lat-
ter team later in a duel meet but
will not face Iowa State or
Southern Illinois again unless they
make the NCAA championships in
April.
Minnesota, Illinois, Iowa and
Michigan State all made impres-
sive showings in the meet and
Loken forsees his Wolverines in a
"tight race" with these teams for
the Big Ten Championship.
Michigan will compete in eight
dual meets but none of these will
count toward the championship.
The Big Ten Crown and the
representative to the NCAA
Championships will be decided
solely on performances in the Big
Ten Championships to be held at
Ohio State on March 5 and 6.
The winner there and the t o p
three finishers in each event will
move to the NCAA Championships
to be held here in Ann Arbor.
This year's Wolverine squad is
led by co-captains Rick McCur-
dy and Ed Howard. McCurdy is
one of the best all around men in
the country and he is backed up
by Murray Plotkin, Ted Marti,
Ray Gura and Pete Rodgers.
Three of these men must compete
in all six meets.
In floor exercise McCurdy, Gura,
Marti along with Ward Black and
Chuck Weibel are capable of scor-

ing 9 out of a possible 10 in that
event.
The side horse team is led by
Dick Kaziny but he also has help
from Mike Gluck who placed
tenth in the Mid Western Open.
The rings are a strong Wolver-
ine event as veterans Skip Frow-
ick and Mike Sale are joined by..
superb freshmen Monty F a l b ,
Crag Sjogren and Bill Hudgins.
Sale and Falb were tied for tenth
spot in the still rings competi-
tion over the weekend.
Bob Johnson, a freshmen who
won the Illinois State parallel bar
title last year, and upperclassmen'
Marti, Gura and Plotkin will try
to replace Ron Rapper who w a s
twice the NCAA parallel bars
champion.
The all arounders will be assist-
ed by Ed Howard and Jim Scully
on the high bar and by Terry Boyd
and Ward Black in the valuting4
event.
Although the trampoline com-
petition is no longer an event in a
Big Ten or NCAA meet, it re-
mains a Michigan strong point.
Huntzicker took top honors again
and Tim Wright finished in tenth
place.
While the Wolverines made a
presentable showing in the Mid-
west Open they must improve if
they hope to make the NCAA
finals again this year. Loken is
hoping that they will begin to
show stronger performances start-
ing this weekend when they travel 4
to East Lansing for the Big Ten
Invitational.

n,.- ..., ......ry :..... .,. , , wm ..,. , u.

SWINGING EDUCATION
(by the tail)
with STUDENTS FOR EDUCATIONAL INNOVATION
at an INFORMATIONAL MEETING
" new challenges to the Educational Establishment
0 creative roles for students in Ed School
* nominations for SEI executive council
Tuesday, December 1, 7:30 p.m.
Schorling Auditorium, School of Education Bldg. St

-. ,.... Y, fe
MICHIGAN'S CO - CAPTAINS,
Ed Howard (left) and Rick Mc-
Curdy.

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Berr shipped to Angels;
Rentzel accused of no-no
By The Associated Press
* LOS ANGELES - A multiple player trade between the Cali-
fornia Angels and Chicago White Sox and some slim pickings in the
major league draft session got the annual baseball meetings under
way yesterday.
The Angels, who picked two of the eight players selected in
the draft, followed that with a three-for-three trade with the White
Sox, acquiring outfielder Ken Berry in the exchange.
Along with Berry, the White Sox sent infielder Syd O'Brien and
pitcher Billy Wynne to California for outfielder Jay Johnstone,
catcher Tom Egan and pitcher Tom Bradley.
The Chicago Cubs made a deal, sending'47-year-old relief pitcher
Hoyd Wilhelm and cash to Atlanta in exchange for first baseman,,
Danny Breeden. Chicago had acquired Wilhelm - from the Braves
last September. He pitched in three games for the Cubs during the
National League stretch drive.
0 DALLAS - Star wide receiver Lance Rentzel of the -Dallas
Cowboys, charged with indecent exposure, was placed on the inactive
list yesterday at his own request.
Rentzel was charged yesterday morning in an alleged incident
involving a 10-year-old girl, placing his brilliant football career in
jeopardy.
0 BUFFALO, N.Y. - O. J. Simpson, Buffalo Bills' running back,
who has missed the last three games with a left knee injury, is now
out for the rest of the National Football League season, a team
spokesman announced yesterday.

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