Basketball season tickets will be available tomorrow at the ticket office SPORTS I.M. football playoffs begin tomorrow Po; The Michigan Daily Sunday, November 6, 1983 ices By JIM DAVIS It is said that winning breeds con- fidence, and based on the performance of the Wolverines this weekend against New Hampshire, plenty of that con- fidence should be noticeable in the Michigan locker room. The Wolverines completed a two- game sweep of the Wildcats last night by claiming a 5-4 victory. HIGH-SCORING sophomore Chris Seychel tallied the game-winning goal for the Wolverines at 11:27 of the third period. With the score tied, 4-4, center Ray Dries fed Seychel, who was skating in the clear on the left side near the New Hampshire blue line. Seychel, who also notched two assists on the night, flipped the puck past Wildcat goaltender Bruce Gillies into the far corner of the net to give the Wolverines the necessary of- fense. Then. to cap the victory, Michigan killed a furious New Hampshire bid for the equalizer in the last two minutes with Dries off for holding, and an ad- ditional Wildcat attacker on the ice: when New Hampshire pulled its goalie. Michigan goalie Mark Chiamp made several key saves and the penalty killers cleared the puck just often rs edge enough for the Wolverines to hangc and up their season record to 5 overall, 2-2 in the CCHA. IT WAS New Hampshire's first seri of the season. Michigan defeated t Wildcats 3-2 in overtime Friday night. "I think a win like this is very big said Michigan head coach John Gi( dano, particularly when the fact th New Hampshire, one of the top teams the Eastern Collegiate Athlet Association, was rated in the top ten several pre-season college polls. The game started at a fast a furious pace and didn't let up. Tv minutes into the game, with t Ice r SCORES BY PERIODS 1 2 3 F UNH again, 5-4 on Wovlerines and one Wildcat in the goal of the year and second of the 5-4 penalty box, New Hampshire's Ralph off a perfect pass from Carlile t Robinson batted a rebound past the Wolverines within one. es Chiamp to make it 1-0. Michigan freshman John Bjor he AT THE six -minute mark, Michigan knotted the score again at 17:15 w blueliner Todd Carlile lugged the puck second goal of the season. ," into the New Hampshire zone on a HERMS TALLIED again. fo or- power play and fed Tom Stiles. Stiles' Wildcats on an unusual power pla at weak shot was stopped by Gillies, but in the second period. With Doug M in Wolverine's captain Jim McCauley slid for holding, Herms took a shot fr ic the rebound between the netminder's point that was headed over the of pads to tie the game. the goal. Chiamp reached up to ca Mark Doherty and Peter Herms but the puck bounced off his glov nd tallied goals to give New Hampshire a into the net to make it 4-3.. wo 3-1 lead, but once again on the power (At the 16:00 mark of the secon wo play, McCauley converted his sixth za, New Hampshire's Dwaynel to II rkn n ithj s or :e. ay goal day f. om to top f atch t, ve and d sopn- Rojin- 'U ipset H New Hampshire ............... 3 1 MICHIGAN ................... 3 1 FIRST PERIOD 0 1 -4 -5 Scoring: NH-R. Robinson (therms) 2:14; 1. M-McCauley (Stiles, Carlile) 6:08; 2. NH-Doherty (Chisholm) 6:48; 3. NH-Herms (Laganas, Douris) 14:33; 2. M-McCauley (Carlile, Seychel) 16:01; 3. M-Bjorkman (DeMartino, May) 17:15. Penalties: NH-Chisholm (tripping) 1:19; M-P. Goff (hooking) 1:37; M-Carlile (hooking) 2:01; NH-Petter (holding) 4:58; NH-Doherty (hooking) 15:40; M-Downing (roughing) 17:19; NH-Ellison (roughing) 17:19. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 4. NH-Herms (R. Robinson) 10:46; 4. M-Carlile (SeychelMcCauley) 16:07. Penalties: M-May (holding) 8:59; NH-Muse (tripping) 11:23; M-May (elbowing) 15:04; NH-Byrnes:(slashing) 15:04; NH-D. Robinson (slashing) 16:00; NH-D. Robinson (misconduct) 16:07; M-Neff (hooking) 17:58. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 5. M-Seychel (Dries, McCauley) 11:27. Penalties: M-May (hooking) 3:13; NH-Lee (in- terference) 5:30; M-Dries (hooking) 17:43. Saves: M-Chiamp, 25; NH-Gillies, 32. son took a slashing call to give Abe Wolverines a man advantage. S0en seconds later, Carlile netted a slap Got from the right point to tie it again. : That set up Seychel's winning gbal and the exciting conclusion to the game. "To have them (New Hampshire) come in here and then play as well as we did, it's a real confidence booster," said Carlile. "If you really think back on the game, there weren't too many give- aways tonight, "said Giordano. "We really worked hard, especially in the defensive zone. We're getting better." Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Michigan center Ray Dries battles a New Hampshire skater for the puck during last night's 5-4 Wolverine victory. Harriers fade to second in Big Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN - The Michigan men's, cross country team finished second to defending Big Ten and NCAA champion Wisconsin in yesterday's Big Ten Championship, barely edging out third- place Purdue. Dave Meyer's time of 24:05 was good for an 11th place finish, the best among Wolverines. Meyer was followed closely by teammates Brian Diemer in 12th place, Dennis Keane in 15th, Chris Brewster in 16th and Bill Brady in 17th. Wisconsin took the top three places. Badger John Easker, a top-five finisher in last year's NCAA race, toped all in- dividuals with a time of 23:22 for the eight kilometer course. Diemer and Brewster stayed with Easker early in the race, but could not *maintain the pace, according to Wolverine coach Ron Warhurst. "I'm a little disappointed that Diemer and Brewster faded as early as they did," he said, "but I'm still happy ,with the finish." Spikers dine on Loyola Although the Michigan women's volleyball team came up with a win N yesterday over Loyola, it seems to have Georgia JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)- Barry Young scored on a one-yard plunge early in the fourth quarter as fourth- ranked Georgia continued its mastery of Florida with a 10-9 Southeastern Con- ference victory over the ninth-ranked Gators yesterday. Young's scoring run with 13:18 to play capped a 99-yard drive for a sput- tering Bulldog attack that had netted only 96 yards for almost three quarters. The Gators, losing to Georgia for the sixth year in a row, had dominated the game until the winning drive. Florida drove inside the Georgia 25- yard line six times, but had to settle for lost its appetite for victory. The spikers defeated Loyola in four games, 9-15, 15-9, 15-10 and 15-7 in a somewhat stale performance. Michigan, which had planned to feast on a team like Loyola, found the first game"hard to swallow. Despite some sizzling hits by senior Alison Noble, the Wolverines just didn't appear hungry for the win. THE DEFENSE, always susceptible to the dink, made no exception today, allowing Loyola to drop the ball into the center of the court throughout the game. Michigan did manage to show some life in game two, combining the right ingredients to come up with a win. Play started off slowly, though, as the two teams exchanged the serve four times before a point was scored. Wolverine senior Barb Bensing finally got things cooking, serving up three straight poin- ts, all of them aces. After a narrow victory in the third game, Michigan came alive in the deciding contest, eating up Loyola with powerful hits. Senior Sue Rogers picked apart the defense with her strong and accurate spikes. The Wolverines savored Rogers' hits on the short set, and enjoyed the taste of victory. HEAD COACH Sandy Vong was not disappointed with his team's perfor- mance. "They played reasonably well," said Vong, "Considering that Loyola's players come out of a very good Chicago high school program, we did pr tty well. They've got a lot of height, too. "We did have trouble in the first game obviously, but we finally broke it open when we won the third game." Vong did admit that his team may be having trouble concentrating on volleyball at this point in the season. With a 16-13 record, the Wolverines' chances for a title ended long ago. "NO QUESTION about it," said Vong. "They are lacking (concentration) at times. There's not much left, but we always have to put forward our best ef- fort. "Our seniors have got to set the tradition. They've got to continue to play hard to set the example for the rest of the girls for next year.," Rogers was also nappy with the out- come of today's game. "IT'S NICE to win for a change," she said. "We've been inzalittle rut the past few games. We were determined to come back today and win." Rogers noted that while she doesn't feel that she and her teammates have let down at all, Michigan is not the same team that began the season with eight straight victories. "I don't think we're as tough as we were," said Rogers. "We have our t moments, but there are times when we're not playing that well. Overall, it's not that we aren't as good as we were earlier, we're just not as consistent." - BARB MCQUADE Women harriers ninth Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN - The Michigan women's cross country team ran to a disappointing ninth-place finish in the Big Ten championship here yesterday. Wisconsin won the race with 52 poin- ts, far ahead of the Wolverines' score of 224. The Badgers also fielded the in- dividual champion, Cathy Brant, who covered the five kilometer course in 16:26. Michigan finishers included Cathy Schmidt, Sue Schroeder, Kelli Burt and Bonnie McDonald, who finished 25th, 45th, 46th, and 53d, respectively. Ten MSU tops stickers, 2-1 Special to the Daily ~ EAST LANSING - The Michigan women's field hockey team lost its season finale, 2-1, to Michigan State yesterday. The Wolverines finish the season with a record of 9-7 overall, 3-7 in the Big Ten. 'Michigan's lone goal came at 7:57 of the second half, when Mau.ra Bruger scored off a pass from Joan Taylor. Michigan goalie Jonnie Terry had four saves, and the Wolverines had seven shots on goal. POETRY READING with DAVID EPSTEIN and RAYMOND STOCK Reading from their works MONDAY, NOV. 7th -8 PM at GJILD HOUSE 802 MONROE t Rogers ... feasts on Loyola 4 squeaks byFlorida, 10-9 hat co e ed 21 a sby obby Raymond Plushwgh 21, Notre Dane 16 The touchdown, six plays later, gave thatcovred21,25 ad 3 yads.the Hurricanes a school record ninth 0 Auburn 35, Maryland 23 AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Tommie Agee raced for 219 yards, including touchdown bursts of 61 and 44 yards, as No. 3 Auburn ground out a 35-23 victory over seventh-ranked Maryland in a top intersectional matchup yesterday. Maryland quarterback Boomer Esiason threw three touchdown passes, scoring strikes of 10 yards to Sean Sullivan and 14 yards to Greg Hill in a third-quarter rally and a 40-yard bomb to Russell Davis in the fourth quarter. Canucks halt Wings, 3-2 SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Tailback Joe McCall scored two touchdowns and John Congemi hit BillWallace with a 44- yard pass for another TD yesterday to lead unranked Pitt to a 21-16 college football victory over 18th-ranked Notre Dame. The Panthers struck for two quick scores in the first period on a Congemi- Wallace pass and a 10-yard run by Mc- Call following a fumble recovery. They wrapped it up in the fourth quarter when McCall scored on a one-yard plunge that he had set up with a 31-yard run. Miami 12, East Carolina 7 MIAMI (AP) - Quarterback Bernie Kosar lunged in from the one-yard line with 1:04 to play Saturday to lift No. 5 Miami to a 12-7 college football victory over upstart East Carolina. Kosar set up his touchdown sneak with a 52-yard strike to wide receiver Ed Brown, giving the Hurricanes a first down at the Pirates' 13 straight victory after an opening loss while East Carolina dropped to 6-3, all three losses to Florida teams. SCORES A labs .na 32, LSU 26 Baylor 24, Arkansas 21 Boston College 34, Army 14 Bowling Green 45, BalIState 30 Colorado 34, Kansas 23 Kansas State 21, Oklahoma State 20, Kent State 37, Eastern Michigan 13 Miami (Fla.) 12, East Carolina 7 Missouri 10, Oklahoma 0 Nebraska 72, Iowa State 29 Southern Methodist 20, Rice 6 Texas 9,Houston 3 Texas Christian 10, Texas Tech 10 West virginia 27, Temple 9 THE DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES presents the ANNUAL HAYWARD KENISTON LECTURE "Romance and Picaresque in Spain, 1599-1605 by EDWARD C. RILEY (University of Edinburgh) THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 4:10 P.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE By SCOTT Mc.KINLAY DETROIT - The Detroit Red Wing's unbeaten streak ended at seven games last night in front of the third-largest crowd in Wing history. The 19,525 fans were with the Wings until the end and didn't let up until the final second was history and Detroit had fallen to Vancouver, 3-2. THE SCORING started with Reed Larson bagging his sixth goal of the year on assist from Ron Duguay. The Wings padded their first-period lead with a goal from rookie Steve Yzerman with Duguay getting his second assist. The second period scoring started with Rick Lanz netting his fourth goal of the season for Vancouver, to cut the lead to 2-1. Dave Williams tied the game up about seven minutes later and Tony Tanti scored the game winner, his 16th goal of the year, midway through the third period. The game score was tainted, however, when in the second period the Wings scored a phantom goal. The shot had apparently crossed the goal line, but referee Don Koharski ruled other- wise. Daily Classifieds Bring Results! . . ... . ....... ..... to GRAND OPENING OF 1Mm sky. rI r O Ot' h0 4+ l ' O ' 4 4t + ' ' + +0t1' 0IO § TMBADA § D § UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY TO VISIT WITH ADMISSIONS OFFICERS AND § DEANS FROM GRADUATE SCHOOLS OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION. § k £r nA Tt^AI nhI AntsiP^IC f %/ r r llr Amam ....- - - -.I. Feeling FRUSTRATED? 57 V V i