~S~l hoto sun P o 1 Amateur and Commercial Photofinishing "RUSH"S~a..e "R U service: Some- times even our fast service isn't quick enough. For those needing as-soon- as-possible processing, we offer a rush service. Schedules are depend- ent on processing requirements. The cost is $7.00 per request and usual charges. s ervice: Sun Photo offers processing services to customer specifications at com- petitive prices. Let us do your next custom order. Lab at: 3180 Packard 973-0770 SPORTS Page 8 Sunday, March 8, 1981 The Michigan Daily Icers lead Denver after two, 3-2 9 By MARTHA CRALL Special to the Daily DENVER - The Michigan hockey team was leading Denver, 3-2, after two periods last night at DU Arena. The Wolverines held a four-goal ad- vantage in their total-goals first-round playoff series after their 5-2 victory Friday night. Michigan was playing without two defensemen, leading scorer Steve Richmond and Dave Richter, and the two were assessed game 'disqualification penalties for fighting after Friday's game. GLENN JOHNSON AND Ed Biers were out of Denver's lineup for the same reason. In the second period the Pioneers tied the game at 1-1 with only 30 seconds gone when leading scorer Ken Berry scored on goalie Paul Fricker. Michigan broke the tie at 1:25 when Jeff Mars sailed down the right side of the Pioneer zone and slapped the puck from the face-off circle past goalie Scott Robinson. Joe Milburn and Mark Perry assisted Mars' second goal of the night. The Wolverines upped the score to 3-1 at 10:18 when Mars took a shot which was stopped by Robinson and Ted Speers lifted the rebound past the goalie from the slot. Barring collapse, tourney advancement is imminent Berry brought Denver back to within one on his second goal of the period at 14:05 on a pass from Don Fraser. IN THE FIRST period only one goal was scored,'that by Michigan to give it a 1-0 lead after the initial action-packed twenty minutes. Mars took a pass from Speers down the left side on a two-on-one breakaway and fired a slapshot from the point past Robinson. Roger Bourne also chalked up an assist on the power play goal which came at 7,: 33. The Michigan defensive zone foiled three Pioneer one-man advantages during the first period. THE WOLVERINES triumphed last night, 5-2, thanks to a brilliant perfor- mances by Fricker and the line of Gor- die Hampson, Bourne ar.l Dennis May. May and Bourne each scored two goals and Hampson collected three assists. The victory was a bit marred, however, as a bench-clearing brawl en- sued after Denver's Ed Beers clob- bered Michigan's Joe Milburn, causing the Wolverine to slump to the ice. One thing led to another, and several scuf- fles broke out between Denver and' Michigan players. During the melee, the fans, who bor-; dered on rabidity all evening, knocked two Plexiglas partitions onto the ic' and threw a chair at Fricker. When referee Richard Haith tried to restrain the Blue's Brian Lundberg from at costing a Denver player, Lundberg reeled around and belted Haith, knocking him unconscious for a few.: minutes. Finally, after both coaches had gone onto the ice to round up their players, order was restored. It took the referees over an hour of game tape reView to come to a decision as to which players to penalize. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Store at: 1315 S. University 994-0433 Store at: 691 S. Maple 663-6529 d Tracksters take 2nd i 737 N. Huron 485-0240 Monday: GREEK NIGHT Large crowds, Pitcher specials. No cover charge shirts, etc.) From the Associated Press Seemingly in command of the meet after Friday night's competition, the Michigan track team found itself in need of a victory in the final event.of yesterday's Big Ten Championships in Columbus to claim the conference title. Instead, Illinois captured the 4-by-400 meter relay and the championship with 117 points to the Wolverines' 104. Michigan State claimed third place with 70.5 points, Wisconsin took fourth with 51, and the defending champion Indiana Hoosiers dropped to fifth in 1981 with 47. ANDREW BRUCE, the former Trinidad Olympian, led the Michigan cause with a.4ouble victory, taking the 55-meter dash in 6.25 seconds and the 300-meter run in 33.8. Wolverine distance runner Dan Heikkenen won the 3,000-meter run on Friday night, but his time of 3:50.03 in the 1,500 yesterday was not sufficient to catch the Big Ten record-setting pace (3:49.9) of Iowa's Ed DeLashmutt. Several Wolverines gave less-than- expected performances during the 71st annual championship. Mike Shea en- tered the meet with the season's fastest Big Ten time in the 800-metef run but finished a disappointing tltirrh 1:53.7. BUTCH WOOLFOLK, who was the defending conference champ in the 300- meter could manage only a fifth this year. He also failed to qualify for the finals of the 55-meter dash to dismiss any hopes he had of attaining a spot in next week's NCAA Championships. Michigan high jumper Dave Lugin, whose season best was 7' ", settled for a leap of 6'%" and fourth place at the Big Ten's. Illinois' Mile Lehmann set a con- ference record in the shot put with a heave of 67'4'/4". Michigan's John Nielson and Phil Wells scored in the field event by taking fourth and sixth place, respectively. , THE WOLVERIINES, (who had finished in the runner-up slot a year ago, as well) end their indoor season next week when they host the NCAA's at Detroit's Joe Louis Arena. Shea has qualified for the nationals in the half- mile, and James Ross earned a spot in the high jump. The Blue will also be represented in the distance medley and the mile relay events. Gymnasts lose to Falcons Special to the Daily BOWLING GREEN - The Michigan women gymnasts lost to Bowling for frats or sororities with Greek 1.D.) pins, Wednesday: TAU KAPPA EPSILON PARTY NIGHT 3 for.the price of 1 on liquor drinks till 11 p.m. Pitcher Specials all night Thursday: ALPHA XI DELTA PARTY NIGHT Overflowing crowds, Pitcher Specials al night. WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY AND MONDAY: MUSIC WITH A D.J. HU GE GAME AREA L U U' n Big Ten Green, 136.8-135.35 yesterday, to drop their season dual meet record to 5-5, but the tumblers' total boosted their all- important average score as they head into regional competition. The average is taken from the women's four highest scores of the season, and yesterday's tally replaces the previous fourth best of 130.9. Finishing third in the three-' team meet was Illinois State with 126 points. "We really didn't care whether or not we won the dual meet," coach Sheri Hyatt said afterwards. "That won't help us at regionals. Our real goal today was to get 135." KATHY BECKWITH stood out for the Wolverines by finishing first in two events, tying for the top spot in two more, and grabbing fourth in yet another. She completed the all-around competition with a score of 35.3, tops on the squad thus far in 1980-81. Teresa Bertoncin and Angela Deaver also performed well for Michigan. With a second place on the balance beam and a sixth in the vault, Bertoncin placed third in the all-around with 33.65. Deaver nabbed third on the beam and sixth in the floor exercise. The Wolverines entered the com- petition minus the services of Marian Lingstrom, who. injured her knee on Thursday but is expected to be back in action when the tumblers travel to In- diana State next Saturday. Fencers finish fifth . EVANSTON (AP)-Illinois retained its men's Big Ten Fencing Champion- ship team title yesterday with an aggregate 38 points, beating second- place finishers Ohio and Wisconsin by six points. Michigan came in fifth. Big Ten Fencing Championships Men's Team Championships 1. Illinois 38 2. Ohio 32 Wisconsin tie 32 4. Northwestern 18 5. Michigan 16 Individual Men's Champions Foil-Snow, Illinois; epee-Mat- thews, Ohio State; Sabre-Kroeten, Wisconsin. Women's Team Championship 1. Ohio 43 2. Wisconsin 22 3. Northwestern 15 4. Michigan 4 Individual Women's Championship Foil-Cornelius, Ohio State Scores College Basketball Louisville 42, Cincinnati 31 . Brigham Young 95, Utah 76 Syracuse 83, villanova 80 (3 OT) Arizona State 87, Oregon State 67 Pennsylvania 76, Columbia 71 Creighton 70, Wichita St. 64 Long Island U. 77, Iona 72 North Carolina 61, Maryland 60 Pittsburgh 64, Duquesne 60 W. Kentucky 71, Murray St. 67 Princeton 52, Cornell 46 (OT) Brown 73, Harvard 65 James Madison 69, Richmond 59 MAC Tournament Ball State 79, N. Illinois 66 Toledo 71, Western Michigan 65 (consolation) WCHA Hockey Playoffs Michigan Tech 7, North Dakota 4 NHL Boston 7, Chicago 1 New York Islanders 3, Vancouver 1 Edmonton 5, Philadelphia 3 St Louis 7, New York Rangers 2 NBA Denver 121, Detroit 109 Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan * I I [--"- --- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------hI - i I ! a------- --l~l AD MllTODAY!------------ I H ~USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST H Words 1 2 3 4 5 add'. 1 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 I Please indicale 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 w/ereihisad I 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 1 4.00 2.00 fo'rni I ~ 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 hlaneU I ~ 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 ,17.40 21.00 3.00 romae 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 W d7 words per line (Each ine of space used counts as 7 words). -Hyphented words over 5 characters Counts as two words-rhts includes telephone numbers I is torn VJED.HMARCU I ------ ---- . r- - MAE STER O TE ife .CA'T RI 611 CHURCH ST. 996-2747 u _ _ _ __ . - .- RESORT HOTEL & COUNTRY CLUB SUMMER EMPLOYMENT NIPPERSINK MANOR-Large Resort Hotel in Southeastern Wisconsin has openings for: