SPORTS Sunday, November 7, 1982 ;The Michigan Doily Page 7 State sweeps icers with 4-3 win Harriers place high in B g Ten meet Special to the Daily "And Diemer was nipped out By JOE CHAPELLE Special to the Daily EAST LANSING- Top-ranked Michigan State poured in two goals in- side 40 seconds to take the lead in the Wthird period and handed the Wolverines their fourth straight loss last night, 4-3, before a record crowd of 6,793. However, the scoring summary does not tell the entire story, as Michigan goalie John Elliot staved off a fierce Spartan offensive attack throughout the contest. "ELLIOT played well," said Michigan coach John Giordano. "I think he recaptured his old forma He made some great saves." The Wolverines played tough hockey in the first period, jumping out to a sur- prising 2-0 lead and hinding the Spar- tans their first scoreless period of the Season. Don Krussman put Michigan on the board at the 6:30 mark with the first goal of the night. The senior left wing took a Kelly McCrimmon pass from behind the net and slammed the puck into the left corner of the net, past MSU goalie Ron Scott. FRESHMAN Bill Braurer garnered the first goal of his college career and Michigan's second of the game at 8:59. Braurer took a pass from teammate Brad Tippett and fired it into the top of the net from the top of the right faceoff circle. The Spartans got on the board at the 4:14 mark of the second period when senior forward Mark Hamway's shot from the inside edge of the Wolverines left circle richocheted off the right post and bounced into the cage. Hamway's goal came after Michigan killed two penalties and played with two men short for 45 seconds. Michigan's Elliot had 32 saves com- pared to Scott's seven at the end of the period. Elliot had already stopped 10 Spartan shots before Scott had his first save of the stanza at the 9:20 mark. MICHIGAN State, after missing numerous opportunities throughout the first two periods, took the lead just one minute into the third. With both teams playing one man short, the Spartans shocked the Wolverines by pouring in two goals within 40 seconds. The first MSU goal came just 20 seconds into the period when Dale Krempz flipped the puck past Elliot. Junior, Newell Brown scored the go-ahead goal for the Spar- tans on a breakaway when he took a pass from Dan McFall at center ice and brought the puck in one on one against Elliot making the score 3-2. Kelly Miller added one more for MSU at 10:25. The Wolverines pulled within one at the 13:26 mark when Tom Stiles fired a Dave McIntyre rebound past Scott, but it was not enough. "We didn't play that well" said Giar- dano. "We're still a couple weeks behind. We still need to jell. We played hard but I'm not pleased with our overall performance. Those first two goals in the third period killed us.' Michigan's Elliot was named first star of the game due to his performance in the net. Giardano indicated that Elliot would be the Wolverines' starting goalie for now. Elliot will no longer share the net minding duties with Chiamp. The win was the Spartan's eighth in a row, boosting their record to 8-0. Michigan fellto 3-5 on the season, 1-5 in the CCHA. Four in a row FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1_ M-Krussman(McCrimmon, Stiles) 6:30; 2. M-Brauer (Tippet, Downing) 8:59. Penalties: Goff (hooking) 19:51. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. MSU-Hamway (McFall) 4:14. Penalties: M-Tippet (slashing) 1:06; MSU-Taylor (slashing) 16:04; MSU-Phair (slashing) 20:00; M- Tippet (slashing) 20:00. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 2. MSU-Krentz (Leiter) :20; 3. MSU- Brown (McFall, Scott) 1:00; 4. MSU-Miller (Eisly, Martin) 10:25; 3. M-Stiles (Krussman, McIntyre) 13:26. Penalties: MSU-Smyl (interference) 5:44. SAVES 1 23 T M-Elliot ..........................14 18 18 3 50 MSU-Scott .........................4 3 10 - 17 GOALS BY PERIOD of IOWA CITY - Michigan was well represented at the Big Ten cross- country championships yesterday, as the men's team finished second and the women's team captured third. The men's team finished with a score of 62, second to defending champion Wisconsin's 29. Iowa won the women's championship with a score of 70, 10 better than the Wolverines. BRIAN Diemer and Gerard Donkowski finished third and fourth respectively for the men. Diemer, with a time of 24:22 for the 8,000 meter course, missed winning the race by only two seconds. Indiana's Jim Spivey and Wisconsin's Scott Jenkins edged him out in an exciting finish. "Diemer and Donkowski were in the top five all the way," said Michigan coach Ron Warhurst. second place at the end." Lisa Larsen and Melanie Weaver paced the women's teams as Larsen finished second and Weaver took fif-. th. Larsen finished eight-seconds behind first-place finisher Kathy Brata of Wisconsin at 17:33 for 5,000 meters. 1 2 MICHIGAN ...........................,2 0 Michigan State ........................0 1 3 1 3 T 3 4 women netters lose only fall match Diemer .. so close U U TV LISTINGS (Continued from Page 5) An English expedition searches for the lost treasure in Africa. 2:000 (© ) CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH ® A ROMANCE THEATRE THE MAGIC OF DANCE 1 MOVIE ** "The Slap" (1963) Lino Ventura, Annie Girardot. A group of young people on the brink of adulthood face a bar- rage of grown-up problems, decisions and dilemmas. ) MOVIE **1/2 "Laura" (1980) Dawn Dunlop, Maud Adams. A woman tries to pre- vent a relationship between a sculptor with whom she had had an affair and her teen- a6 e ballerina daughter. "R' 2:15 m MOVIE *** "The Naked Runner" (1967) Frank Sinatra, Peter Vaughan. Brit- ish Intelligence requests that an American businessman assassinate a defector while in East Germany with his son. 2:30 0 MOVIE * * * "Lovers And Other Strangers" (1970) Gig Young, Anne Jack- son. A modern young couple's courtship and wedding ae interrelated with the lives of their families and friends. © I SPRTSCETE a) MOVIE * ** "A Pain In The A..." (1973) Jacques Brel, Lino Ventura. While an assassin concentrates on his next killing, he is rudely interrupted by a bumpling failure of a man who is attempting suicide. 'PG' 2~.550 Q NEWS 3'0 ® THE GOLDEN AGE OF TELEVISION Patterns" Ed Begley, Everett Sloane and Richard Kiley star in a 1955 production of Rod Serling's multi-faceted study of stress in the competitive world of big business. 0 WNEWS m MOVIE * * "Melvin And Howard" (1980) Paul LeMat, Jason Robards. An oth- erwise unknown gas station attendant claims to be the rightful heir to Howard Hughes' bil- ;lion dollar estate. 'R' 3:050 HBO MOVIE *** "Stranger In The House" (1975) Keir Dullea, Olivia Hussey. A psychotic murderer hides in the attic of a college sorority house on Christmas Eve. 3:30 Q 0 TOM COTTLE: UP CLOSE ' O ®HORSE RACING WEEKLY (R) m NOVEMBER PLAYBOY MAGAZINE Fea- tured: Playmate of the Month, Kelly Tough; a Playboy interview; "Playboy on the Scene" and more. 4:00 E1) PBS LATENIGHT Am ES BARRY FARBER TQ COLLEGE FOOTBALL LSU Fighting Tigers at Alabama Crimson Tide (R) 4:201 m MOVIE ** "Hell Raiders" (1965) John Agar, Richard Webb. During World War I, a demolition team is assigned to blow up American headquarters to prevent enemy access to the valuable documents stored there. 4:30 C() NEWS * MOVIE ** "The First Time" (1982) Tim Choate, Krista Erickson. A college fresh- man who has been taught many schemes to capture a woman's fancy, discovers that love is more important than cheap thrills. 'R' BRAVO OPERA: THE GREEK PASSION 12:15E) MOVIE "Political Asylum" Cameron Mitchell; Emilio Fernandez. 12:300 0( ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT E UNTAMED WORLD © G E MOVIE * ** "The Picture Of Dorian Gray" (1945) Hurd Hatfield, George Sand- ers. A man remains eternally young while his portrait shows the effect of the years. 1:00 ©©SATURDAY NIGHT 0 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTER- MAN O fO ROOTS:THE NEXT GENERATIONS Alex Haley's saga of a black American fami- ly continues in 1882 in Henning, Tennessee, with the marriage of Tom Harvey's daughter Cynthia to Will Palmer; Tom Harvey a des- cendant of Kunta Kinte, forbids his daughter to marry a man he considers to be too "white." (Part 1) (9 GREAT PERFORMANCES 0 Em ( MOVIE *** "Black Fury" (1935) Paul Muni, Akim Tamiroff. Gang- sters infiltrate a coal miners' strike. m NOVEMBER PLAYBOY MAGAZINE Fea- tured: Playmate of the Month, Kelly Tough; a Playboy interview; "Playboy on the Scene" and more. 1:100W HBO MOVIE *** "Ghost Story" (1981) Fred Astaire, John Houseman. Mys- terious deaths begin to decimatethe ranks of a small circle of elderly men who share both a monthly storytelling get-together and a 50-year-old secret. 'R' 1:25 (9MOVIE ** "Sensations" (1944) Eea- nor Powell, Dennis O'Keefe. A talented dancer makes a spectacular musical debut. 1:30 ) MOVIE ** "King Solomon's Treasure" (1976) David McCallum, Patrick MacNee. By JIM DWORMAN It's not often that a Michigan athletic team finishes a season winless. But the women's tennis team managed the feat yesterday by losing its one match of the fall season, 5-4, to the highly-regarded Indiana Hoosiers at the Huron Valley Tennis Club. In- diana is the defending Big Ten cham- pion. BESIDES yesterday's match, the team's season consisted of a tour- nament last weekend at Michigan State. In contrast, the match was the six- teenth of the fall for the Hoosiers, and Michigan coach Ollie Owens believes the additional competition gave In- diana the edge. "They were better and more relaxed under pressure," said Owens of the Hoosiers. "A lot of it had ,to do with them playing so much more than we have." NONETHELESS, the Wolverines' performance pleased Owens. "You're never really happy losing but I'm happy with the way we played. It's tough losing 5-4 when we were so close." Very close. The match boiled down to the final sets of the last two doubles positions with the Hoosiers, who were holding a 4- 3 lead, needing to take one set for the victory. And they got what they needed when Jenny Snyder and Tracy Hoffman finished a 6-2, 5-7, 6-1 win over Michigan's Mary MacTaggart and Jane Silfen. THE WOLVERINES' Juliet Naft and Paula Reichert bested Indiana's Anne Hutchens and Courtney Gebhart, 6-3, 5- 7, 7-6 to bring the team score to its final margin, 5-4. Michigan winners in the singles com- petition included Silfen, Reichert and Stephanie Lightvoet. The Wolverines spring season begins February 10 with the Big Ten Indoor Tournament. Spikers Iose The Michigan volleyball team closed out its home season by losing to Wisconsin, 8-15, 15-7, 4-15, 14-16. The Wolverines were plagued by mis-serves and bad returns. Michigan coach Sandy Vong said the Wolverines never adjusted to the game. "Against Wisconsin you need to keep the ball in play and we didn't do that," he commented. Michigan is now 3-8 in the Big Ten, 10- 16 overall. SCORES College Football Georgia 44, Florida 0 Clemson 16, North Carolina 13 Maryland 18, Miami (Fla.) 17 West Virginia 20,.Temple 17 SMU 41, Rice 14 LSU 20, Alabama 10 Navy 20, Syracuse 18 Harvard 24, Holy Cross 17 Oklahoma 24, Kansas St. 24 Say wscouwr Muwhz AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIAFST n3Trained *FITS MANY Specialists 9 SMALL CARS Installed *AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS FOREIGN CARS Featuring CUSTOM DUALS HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS einest names CUSTOM PIPE BENDING in automotive parts" YPSILANTI 2606 Washtenaw Ave...... 572-9177 (1'/2 mile East of US 23) VISA Individually Owned &-Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8-8PM Copyright 01982 Meineke m LAST CALL... MICHIGAN BASKETBALL SEASON TICKETS NOW'S THE TIME TO RESERVE YOUR SEAT FOR 1982-83 AND FUTURE SEASON S... JOIN MICHIGAN'S NEW ERA OF BASKETBALL! vP ' S gP ~ipi DAVE BRUBECK} f, 4 ON-4, %.2 p o V Ne Ic FELa d3, 1a P i da A FAMILY CHRISTMAS SHOW Tues., Dec. 14 8 PM Hill Aud. ANN ARBOR Al CA-Da....L .L ...ana Fight Night On Campus Excellent seats are still available to see Mickey Goodwin battle Rockey Stevens in a 10-round middle- weight bout in Crisler Arena Nov. 17. Tickets, $10, $8, $6, $4, are available at Michigan Athletic Dept., Sears stores and All CTC Ticket Outlets. M. i Cfo%*% ir% ftf 41%n RA;,%k;#%,mr% T;#%Iem" flc rf