Page 10-Tuesday, February 1, 1983-The Michigan Daily Doomed Irish win two over WMU 4 By MIKE MCGRAW Look out! It's happening again. When thoze Irish start getting lucky there's no stopping them. Take this situation that occured Friday night in Kalamazoo: Notre Dame trailed Western Michigan 7-4 with five minutes left in the game and the Irish had a man in the penalty box. A few days before, word came from the athletic department that the Notre Dame hockey team would cease play at the end of this season. And besides all this, the Irish were in 11th place out of 12 teams in the CCHA. BUT WAIT, the sky opens up. Notre Dame's Rex Bellomy scores a shor- thanded goal to close the gap to two goals. Kirt Bjork adds another and then, with less than a minute remaining, John Deasey got the mniracle goal to send the game into overtime. "We were all set to pull the goalie, but John put it in, so we didn't have to," said Notre Dame coach Lefty Smith. "Last weekend was one of the more satisfying days that I can remember in a while." Of course, the Irish scored in over- time to win that game and won the next night 5-4 as Steve Bianchi broke a tie with four minutes remaining in the third period. These wins put ND into eighth place in the conference, good enough for the last playoff spot with four weeks to go. IF THE Irish perform as they have been known to from here on, they should go on to score six goals in the last two minutes to win the CCHA championship, and continue on to win the national title - saving the hockey program in the process. But Smith isn't counting on it. "I think that may be asking a little more than the good Lord can give us," Smith added. "But hockey pucks can bounce in funny ways." Bowling Green 9-15, Illinois-Chicago 3-1 Is there no stopping the Falcons? The number one team in the country swam- ped UIC twice last weekend for their 21st win in 24 outings in conference play, outscoring the Flames 24-4 in the two games. "We had things going out way offen- sively," said BG coach Jerry York. "We took a tremendous amount of shots, I don't think the Chicago goalies were as bad as the scores appeared." During the onslaught, Brian Hills of Bowling Green became the CCHA's all- time leading goal-scorer in one season, as he collected three goals and three assists. The Falcons also tied the record for most wins in a CCHA season that they set four years ago. CCHA Standings Ohio State 6-5, Miami 2-4 Ohio State is on a roll. With two vic- tories over the Redskins, the Bucks put a firm hold on third place in the stan- dings and are just two points out of second. And all this for a team that was expected to have a hard time making the playoffs this year. W L Bowling Green ..........21 Michigan State ..........18 Ohio State ...............15 Northern Michigan ......13 Michigan Tech ..........14 Miami ...................10 Ferris State...........8 Notre Dame ..............8 MICHIGAN ..............8 Lake Superior...........8 Western Michigan ........8 Illinois-Chicago.........6 T 2 6 5 8 10 13 13 15 16 16 16 17 Pts. 1 43 0 36 4 34 3 29 0 28 1 21 3 19 1 17 0 16 0 16 0 16 1 13 This Week's Games February 4-5 MICHIGAN at Northern Michigan Bowling Green at Western Michigan Ferris State at Michigan Tech Lake Superior at Michigan State Illinois-Chicago at Ohio State Notre Dame at Miami Leading Scorers 911 WeM Diges Basketball With the regular season coming to a close and the playoffs starting next Tuesday, managers should be sure to schedule for the playoffs this Wed- nesday and Thursday. Residence Hall The Elliot Blues broke open an 18-18 halftime deadlock and went on to rout Kelsey in a Residence Hall 'B' contest last Tuesday night. The Blue's second-half outburst was led by Jeff Omichinski and Joe Yocum, who topped the individual scoring with 12 points each. "We switched from a zone to a man-to-man in the second half to pick up the tempo. It worked well and we pulled away," commented coach Howard Korman. The Second Rotvig Raiders committed 24 fouls, which played a large role in its 26-18 loss to the Palmer Rockets. The Rockets were the recipients of 20 trips to the charity stripe. Over half their points came on free throws. Tom Kish scored 15 points to lead the Guardian Angels to a 49-35 victory over the Frosties. Both teams started slowly and it looked like it was going to be a low scoring game. "When the pace picked up and it became a fast moving game we ran real well. We also rebounded strongly which was the real key," commened Kish. Co-Ree, Maryann Pinle poured in 36 points to help give Beuthwamba a 46-44 nail- biter victory over Theta Chi in the competitive Co-Rec. Divisions. This con- test was a close one all the way with the lead bouncing back and forth. The game, which was tied at halftime featured the female performers on both sides. Men only accounted for six of the winning team's points. Basket Case jumped out to a 38-4 halftime lead and went on to defeat the Rebels 82-46 in a Co-Rec laugher. Susan Kashenbeck poured in 27 points to lead the scoring effort for the winners. Independent Bellig Pizza broke open a close contest, outscoring the Hams 29-12 in the second half, and went on to win by a 47-31 count. Chuck Hartwig led all scorers with 14 points for the winners. The Stooges hung on to a two-point lead for the last minute of their Ind. 'C' game with the Outcasts to win a 42-40 cliffhanger. The Stooges went ahead on two free throws and then held on to the ball for the remaining 60 seconds to ice the victory. Mike Janowicz, who led all scorers with 18 points commen- ted on the win. "It was an intense emotional game I've never been in an IM game that had that much excitement. We were just glad to be able to win it." All six of the Big Dogs hit double figures in their defeat of the Chargers. the 81-30 final score is a good reflection of the performance turned in by the Dogs last Tuesday night. they found men open in the lane all night, which made for many easy baskets.John Witry was the Top Dog with a 20-point per- formance. The IM Digest briefly relates the activites of the Michigan Intramural program during the previous week. This week's information was compiled by Daily sportswriter Dan Price. I When my hunger I want to allay, I head to my favourite buffet. Where the food is first rate, And the prices just great, A meal at the League makes my day! A.F. TheMichigan Next to Hill Auditorium Located in the heart of the campus. it is the heart of the campus Lunch 11 :30 to 1:15 Dinner 5:00 to 7:15 SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to. Manager. Michigan League 227 South Ingalls You will receive 2 free dinner tickets if your limerick is used in one of our ads. Paul Poolley scored two goals on Friday in Columbus, while Gord Rivington llied twice in the final period to help erase a 4-2 Miami lead in Oxford the following night. Northern Michigan 4-7, Ferris State 2-0 The CCHA Player-of-the-Week award goes to Eric Ponath of NMU, as the senior winger from Saskatchewan net- ted three goals and six assists for the Wildcats, enabling them to sweep past Ferris State. The win marked the fif- teenth victory for the Wildcats over the Bulldogs in Marquette's Lakeview Arena. Michigan Tech 9-4(OT), Lake Superior 0-5 Tech goalie Mudge Tompsett recor- ded his first shutout on the collegiate level Friday night, in. the Huskie's 9-0 victory. But Steve Mulholland scored two goals and assisted on Nick Palum- bo's tally at 31 seconds of overtime to rally the Lakers to a series split. 4 1. Hills, Bowling Green 2. Browne, Ohio State 3. Kobryn, Ohio State 4. Kane, Bowling Green 5. Bissett, Michigan Tech Speers, MICHIGAN HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF JOB OPENINGS FOR 1983-84 HAVE YOU CONSIDERED THE U-M HOUSING OPTION? The Housing Division is looking for well-qualified candidates to serve in the Residence Halls as: G A Pts 30 35 65 27 23 50 13 37 50 20 22 42 20 20 40 15 25 40 Resident Director Assistant Resident Director Resident Advisor Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Head Librarian Minority Peer Advisor There Will Be An INFORMATIONAL FAIR February 10, 1983 7:30-10:00 p.m. Stockwell Hall Blue Carpet Lounge for all students interested in becoming a resident staff member. Representatives from each Residence Hall will be there to provide information on the different buildings and answer questions. The Coordinator of Project Awareness and the Director of Residence Hall Libraries will also be available to answer questions. Come for 15 minutes or an hour. 'Y' Summer Camps THE ANN ARBOR "Y" IS NOW ACCEPT- ING APPLICATIONS FOR STAFF POSITIONS AT THE FOLLOWING CAMPS: CAMP AL-GON-QUIAN: a resident camp for boys and girls located on Burt Lake in northern lower Michigan. Camprdates are June 25 to August 6. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are available in the fol- lowing areas: horseback riding, sailing, can- oeing, arts and crafts, archery, nature, woodworking, riflery, land sports, swim- ming, water skiing, and camp nurse. Salary plus room and board. CAMP BIRKETT: a day camp for boys and girls located on Silver Lake near Pinckney. Camp dates are June 20-August 19. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are avail- able in the following areas: archery, swim- ming, sailing, canoeing, arts and crafts, na- ture, and general counselor. APPLICATIONS AND ADDITIONAL INFOtMA- TION REGARDING POSITIONS AT BOTH CAMPS MAY BE OBTAINED BY CONTACTING THE ANN ARBOR 'Y', 350 S. FIFTH AVENUE, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 OR CALLING (313) 663-0536. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WDOM-CHSB Media Poll W LT Pts 1. Bowling Green (5).......2-4-2 94 2. Minnesota (4) ..........25-5-1 92 3. Providence (1) ............22-4-0 80 4. Michigan State ............ 22-6-0 65. 5. North Dakota .............18-9-1 59 6. Clarkson ..................13-4-1 47 7. Ohio State .................18-5-5 33 8. Wisconsin .................20-8-3 26 9. St. Lawrence...........16-4-1 19 10. Minnesota-Duluth......21-11-1 15 Tumbler By PAUL RESNICK Outclassed is the only way to describe it. The Michigan men's gymnastics team compiled its best score of the season Sunday. Nebraska and Ohio State both turned in mediocre perfor- mances. And the Wolverines still lost by a big margin. FOR THE first time during the 1982- 83 season, the Wolveirne gymnasts broke the 270 mark, scoring 270.5. The Buckeyes, fourth-place finishers in last year's NCAA championships, scored 275.70 to take second, and the four-year defending NCAA champion Cor- nhuskers captured first with 279.60. Michigan coach Newt Loken was pleased with his team's performance. "I am satisfied with the progress, and pleased at breaking the barrier of 270. We didn't have the feeling of being overshadowed." But the facts indicate otherwise. Nebraska competed without freshman Chris Riegle, who has performed on numerous U.S. national teams. Despite the victory, Husker coach Francis Allen said his team should be scoring a point or two higher than it did Sunday. THIS YEAR'S NCAA championships will come down to Nebraska and UCLA, according to Francis. When not com- peting against UCLA, the Cornhuskers compete against themselves because no other team can challenge them. 4 espostb "We have five of the top 11 kids in the country, and UCLA has three of them,"said Allen. Buckeye coach Mike Willson was also disappinted in his team's performance. One Buckeye fell off the pommel horse and two fell off the high bar. "We gave up a point on pommel horse and two to three on high bar," said Willson. "Against a team like Nebraska, you can't do that." OSU's was considerably lower than its season high of 278.90. Of course, it really isn't fair to com- pare the Wolverines' performance with that of the other national powers. Michigan has improved steadily during the season. "Come Big Ten time," said Loken, "we will be among the conten- ders." THE TEAM performed well on pom- mel horse Sunday, which has given it trouble recently, as Nevin Hedlund scored 9.55. Rick Kaufmann paced a "stellar" performance on rings with a 9.7. Milan Stanovich did well, as usual, scoring a 9.75 in vaulting and 55.50 in all -around competition. "I'm proud of the guys," said Loken. "They really kept their cool even though they were battling national powers. It shows they have great character." Women gymnasts gain re renge The nice thing about Sunday's gym- nastics meet at Crisler Arena was that the Michigan women's gymnastics team got revenge. "There was nothing nice about it," said Eastern Michigan's Steve Wilce. EARLIER IN the season, EMU had beaten Michigan for the first time in its history. But the Wolverines were not to 4 est mark be out-tumbled again, scoring 169.1 points against the Hurons 164.05. The sweetest victory of the triangular meet, however, was Ohio State's with 176.4. The second-ranked Buckeyes made a predictable sweep in all the events, but, surprisingly, were disappointed with their results. '"They looked tired," said OSU coach Larry Cox. "They definitely had a bad meet overall." NEVERTHELESS, OHIO State's Susan Filardi captured first place in the vault, beam, and floor exercise. She then secured the all-around com- petition, with teammate Kathy Temple and Michigan's Kathy *Beckwith finishing two-three. Other Wolverine triumphs included Dayna Samuelson's third on bars, Angela Deaver's third on beam, and Beckwith's second on vault. Beckwith said she had mixed feelings about her performance. She is aiming for the nationals, but needs to do slightly better in her all-around scores. She was, however, pleased with her floor exercise. "I'M HAPPY, it was the second time I've hit a double twist (in competition) and the first time I've landed it." Unfortunately, the rest of the Wolverines were not as lucky. Several fell off the apparatus frequently, totalling four falls out of six perfor- mances off the bar alone. They fared no better on the floor exercise. "We were throwing some new tricks in floor and we had a couple of falls," said coach Sheri Hyatt, who was still encouraged by the team's results. "We're pleased with where we are right now; we are doing the best we can." 4 HOLD 0 4 eiw 4 UNTIL YOU TALK TO CAPITAL HOLING CORPORATION! - PAULA SCHIPPER . - 1 C',w.", 'fir-- : Insure your future by beginning your career.with a dynamic, major life insurance leader-Capital Holding Corporation. 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