THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 29, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 29, 1977 -, ICERS ATTACK FROZEN a Fighting By BOB MILLER Special To The Daily GRAND FORKS, ('N.D.)-Led by Brad Becker's two goals dur- ing a three goal outburst in the second period, North Dakota powered its way past Michigan, '6-1, here last night. The Wolverines, tired and frustrated, took out their anger at the Sioux players, the refer- ees; and the fans. Michigan's Gary Morrison tangled with Scott Marvin after only 1:31 of the third period, whaling away with both hands. Both the players were given game disqualifications and will not be allowed to play in to- night's contest. OTHER PLAYERS took ex- ception to the crowd's taunting, One Wolverine slammed his stick against the glass, and to top things off the entire team sur- rounded referee Gordon Lee af- ter Lee disallowed a goal which would have put Michigan ahead, The Sioux led 1-0 at the end of the first period on Mark Tay- lor's goal at 14:45. Starting goalie Frank Zimmerman stop- AP Photo ped thetfirst shot, but Taylor slipped the, puck into an empty net as Zimmerman slid out of the crease trying to make the ing Boston save. -dunk Mr. The second period was the crusher for Michigan. Within theC first 4:54, North Dakota popped in three unanswered goals to balloon its lead to 4-0 and the game was never in doubt after that. As the 4,795 rowdy fans at the Winter Sports Arena watcher 'joux on, the Fighting Sioux counter- ed Michigan's only goal with two of their won to round out the scoring. Michigan coach Dan Farrell was sullen after the game. "We've played two bad games burn flue Sweep Sioux FIRST PERIOD Scoring-1. ND-M. Taylor (Beck- er, Lamoureux) 14:45. Penalties - ND - DePiero (trip- ping) 5:58. ND-Lamoureux (cross- checking) 7:13. SECOND PERIOD Scoring - 2. NDBurggraf (De- fure, Goddard) :33.3. ND-Becker (Cox) 2:16. 4. ND-Becker (Lam- oureux, Taylor) 4:54. Penalties-M-Natale (tripping) 4:18. M- Rob Palmer (tripping) 15:53 THIRD PERIOD Scoring-5. M-Coffman (DeBol) 5:13. 6. ND-Lamoureux (DePiero) 8:11. 7. ND- Swartz (Daparniuk) 8:47. Penalties - M-Morrison (fight- ing, game disqualification) 1:31. ND-Marvin (fighting, game dis- qualification) 1:31. M-Thayer (el- bowing) 13:04. ND-Burggraf (hold- ing) 15:57. M-Turner (interfer- ence) 18:35. in a row and now is not the time Farrell also looked toward to- for that. night's game. "What can you "We had no offense. Earlier do, we have no excuses." in the year the shots were going The highlight of the evening in . . . now they're not," Far- for Michigan was Mike Coff- rell added. man's goal at 5:13 of the final Norh Dakota coach Rube stanza: Teammate Dave Debol Bjorkman was pleased with the passed the puck to Coffman who win. "It was our best defensive skated in from the blue line to game a l year," Bjorkman said. the right of Sioux goalie Pete "'We changed our forechecking W a s e 1 o v i c h and slipped it to be much more conservative." through his pads and behind him Bjorkman, however, was rea- into the net. listic about the win which moved 'Zimmerman left the net after the Sioux into a third place tie the sixth North Dakota goal and with the Wolverines. was-replaced by Rick Palmer. "I am pleased to have this Palmer played the final 11 mm- one, but it is over with. Tomor- utes of the game and stopped row is another night," he said. all five shots he faced. SAVES Zimmerman (M) 14 Palmer (M) - Waselovich (ND) 16 13 11 4-31 5--5 10-37 A real head for the game (BOSTON)--Milwaukee Bucks center Swen Nater is, caught Friday night dribbli Ce'tic guard Bob Wilson. Nater, showing good basketball instinct, was able to jam Wilson. Boston got revenge, winning the contest, 119-113. NEAR BEST START EVER ag i By HENRY ENGELHARDT Special To The Daily EVANSTON, Ill.-This is the land where a victory is always an upset and always very rare. Here is where Michigan (8-0 Big Ten,,15-1 overall) completes a two game road trip, its sev- enth battle in 14 days, here in McGaw at 5:05 EST. The Wolverines can set a rec- ord for the best start in Blue history if they trip the Wildcats (2-6 Big Ten, 4-13 overall), a team they throttled 102-65 ear- lier this year. tangle with THE KEY to a Wolverine win lies in slowing Northwestern's bonafide star Billy McKinney. The 6-0 senior guard popped for a game high 22 points in last Thursday's 66-58 clipping of Michigan State. He hit all six of his shots from the field and complement- ed that with ten perfect charity tosses. The Wildcats lost the three games prior to their win over! State by a total of six points. All these games were on the road. McKinney, Northwestern's all- time scoring leader, pumped in 29, 26 and 31 points in those narrow defeats. He seems to be the hottest thing north of Acapulco. Rickey Green, whom Michi- gan assistant coach Bill Frieder claimed is virtually at full strength, faces the task of con- trolling McKinney. Green, who looked less than 100% against Wisconsin due to a back injury suffered over a week ago against Purdue, has done a top-notch job on the Northwestern sparkplug in their previous encounters. THE WOLVERINE lineup re- mains the same, with the prob- ability of Alan Hardy continu- ing to see more playing time. "He'll play a little more be- cause he's been playing better," Frieder explained. Northwestern, which seems to shuffle players like Amarillo Slim shuffles cards, plays twelve men. They will probably start with' 6-10 Mike "Soupy" Campbell at Ca tS ' center, Chris Wall and David Fields in the forecourt and sophomore Jerry Marifke joins McKinney in the backcourt. Wildcat coach Tex Winter is somewhat optimistic of his team's chances. "THIS GAME means a lot to us," Winter said, "and our team is in the frame of mind where winning is possible." "Winning this game would mean a great deal to our pro- gram," Winter noted. "We need to win a big game." Michigan has knocked the Wildcats off fourteen straight times. The last Northwestern win dates back to 1969. Not surprisingly, Northwest- ern worries Michigan coach Johnny Orr. However, his team's light practice yesterday pleased him. The Wolverines fly back to Ann Arbor immediately after the game. They finally get to breathe between contests, not playing again until Indiana in- vades Crisler Arena next Thurs- weather strands Michigan teams By CINDY GATZIOLIS If the recent weather developments cancelled your weekend plans, take solace in the fact that you're in good company. Blizzard threats and severe weather conditions forced many changes in the sports schedule yesterday. The Michigan swim meet against Indiana, scheduled to take place in Ann Arbor last night, was cancelled. A tri- meet with Michigan State is tentatively planned for today pending the Hoosiers' arrival into town. MICHIGAN'S Women's basketball received a setback when road conditions helped to call off their game with Northwestern. The women planned to drive to Chicago to- day unlike the men's team which went into the Windy City from Wisconsin. A rescheduling of the game will depend on the availa- bility of both teams. INDIANA State Police tracked down the Michigan wrest- ling team as they were heading toward a cancelled meet at Purdue. The call from Purdue to Michigan came after the team had left. Coach Bill Johannesen's wife gave State Police the license number of the team's travelling vehicles and the wrestling team returned to Ann Arbor safe and sound. Also cancelled was the women's gymnastics meet at Central Michigan. Gymnastics and Track will wait until- today to determine whether or not the scheduled meets will take place. The hockey team, used to the ice and cold, did not let the weather keep them down. After late departures from Detroit and Milwaukee and a turbulent landing in Minneap- olis, the team faced- a barrier that it couldn't overcome. The Grand Forks Airport was closed. Patience and determination paid off as the team took off Friday morning for Grand Forks in plenty of time, for last night's contest with North Dakota. ° ' a FRI.-SAT. BEAR RECORD'S HEDY WE! $3.00 T . -gin ,s ; :: ' 1 AP Photo STEVE RIDDICK raises his arm in triumph after winning last night's 60-yard dash in 6.0 at the Millrose Games at Madison Square Garden. Possessing one of the most dynamic and exciting sing- ing styles on the folk scene t o d a y, Hedy West's ap- pearance at the Ark is a must to attend. She is an excellent b a n j a player, guitarist and songwriter. (her most famous-song was "500 Miles") * >There IS a difference!*! * MCAT " LSAT *fDAT .w~~ws p J-u Ii-S CORES1 NBA Boston 119, Milwaukee 113 Golden State 106, New York Nets 84 Houston 118, Atlanta 104 Kansas City 105. Chicago 44 Denver 108, New Orleans 96 NHL Atlanta 3, Colorado 3 (tie) COLLEGE BASKETBALL Columbia 71, Yale 44 BILLBOARD The Michigan Rugby Club begins practicing for its up- coming season on Tuesday, February 1 at 8:00 p.m. in the Coliseum. For further information, con- tact Angelo Tocco, 763-6571. " GMAT .CPAT SPORTS OF THE DAILY Bryant ysets world, mark " VAT ."GRE . OCAT .SAT By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Olympian Rosa-' lyn Bryant shattered the world indoor record in the women's 440-yard run with a time of 53.5 seconds and Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan upset Tanzanian Filbert Bayi in a swiftly paced mile at the Milrose Games last night in Madison Square Garden. Miss Bryant, 'Who also holds the world outdoor mark of 50.62 seconds, clipped three-tenths of a second off the indoor mark of 53.8 set by Lorna Forde of Bar- bados two weeks ago at College Park, Md. SUN.--the original STUCK 1421 HILL blue grass opera, I N DETROIT $2.00 8:30 761-1451 C 1 C6CUf5 TwoPublic Lectures byDr. Robert Chazan Melton Professor of Jewish History Ohio State University "THE 13th CENTURY: Turning Point for Western European Jew'rey at 4 P.M., MON., JAN. 31 429 MASON HALL (connected to Angell Hall) Sponsors: HISTORY DEPT. Program in Judaic Studies "JEWISH SELF PERCEPTIONS, n b.k 1 -1 - M - t A . NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS ECFMG *"FLEX Flexible Programs and Hours Over 38 years of eperience and success. Small classes. Voluminous home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers open days and weekends all year. Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make-ups for missed lessons at our centers.- 'Write or call:4 1945 Pauline.Blvd. R N Ann Arbor 48143 eX " STOALIER Ann Arbr 48103TEST PREPARATI ONI 662-3149 SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Call Toll Free (outside N.Y. State) 800 - 221-9840 For Affiliated Centers in Major U. S. Cities Miss Bryant, who finished wildly applauded by the crowd, fifth in the Olympic 400 met- slender Steve Riddick unbeaten ers and ran on the U.S. silver this season, sped to his sixth vic- medal-winning 400-meter re- tory, capturing the 60-yard dash lay team, streaked into the in 6.0 seconds. lead at the outset of the 440 The 6-foot-3, 168-pound Rid- and finished far ahead of the dick, anchorman on the United field. Her winning margin was Sta es' gold medal 400-meter bptween 15-20 yards. team at the Montreal Olympics, was slow out of the blocks, but The 24-year-old Goghlan, win- he quickly caught up with the' 'ner of eight IC4A titles while at leaders and then easily 'passed Villanova University and four them in winning dandily over a NCAA championships, -took the first-class field. lead at the start of the final lap' * * * of the 11-lap race, then with- AlCCuir' successor stood a late effort by Kenya's Wilson Waigwa in winning in MILWAUKEE - Hank Ray- 4:00.2. Bayi finished third in monds, who has been assistant 14 L8 basketball coach and assistant I - PIRGIM thanks those public interest work. who have supported its For those who wish not to fund, PIRGIM announces a Pirgim Fee Cancellation I I MEMMOU" AEPi would like to welcome one and all Especially if you missed our party last fall. We feature music, dancing, food and beer With fun such as this you shouldn't sneer. We charge only fifty cents, at that price cheap By not being expenisve you won't think us creeps. At nine o'clock the party will begin / And if you can't make it we'll consider it a sin. AEPI All-Campus Party CANCELLED lne to weather 1. Your tuition bill shows the $1.50 PIRGIM fee. I 2. To cancel the fee assessment a. simply fill out any piece of paper or the form enclosed with your tuition bill b. with your name, i.d. number, signature, c. and SEND or take the cord .. . (you may enclosed it with your tuition payment) d. to the Student Accounts Office (2nd floor SAB) e. ANY time this term. (We hope, of course, you will want to support your environ- mental, consumer and housing activities with a $1.50 fee) Willie Davenport skimmed to his fifth victory in the Milrose Games' 60-yard high hurdles. Davenport, a four-time Oly- mpian and winner of the Games' gold medal in 1968 and the bronze last year, took the lead over the second of five hurdles and finished in 7.0 sec- onds. Miss Forde won her first 880- yard race ever and broke both! the Millrose Games aid Garden records with a time of 2:06.5. The Olympian easily beat Ro- bin Campbell in shattering the meet record of 2:10.0 set by Cheryl Toussaint in 1971 and the Garden mark of 2:07.1 estab- lished by Mary Decker in 1973., While Davenport's victory was athletic director at Marquette University for 16 years, was giv- en a multi-year contract yester- day to succeed Al McGuire as head basketball coach and ath- letic director. McGuire announced Dec. 17 he would resign at the end of the season as coach and ath- leticsdirector at Marquette to pursue business interests full time. McGuire had said he would recommend Raymonds for the coaching position if his long- time assistant wanted it. He said Thursday he ,had given Dr.' James Scott, the athletic de- partment's supervisor, and the Athletic Board just such a rec- ommendation. * * * Gophers host MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota will host Ohio State in a Big 10 basketball game tonight because of energy and weather crises in Ohio. I The game, originally sched- iled for Columbus, Ohio, was moved after Ohio State shut down, citing "severe, weather conditions, worsening energy crisis and the alarming weather forecastshfor this weekend." The Ohio State team was in Iowa Thursday night. I . /. .Are i.nt --do- -for -- ntenratn? I II II I I