Wrestling vs. Athletes in Action Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Women's Basketball vs. Michigan State today, 2:00 p.m. Crisler Arena The Michigan Daily Sunday, February 5, 1984 page7 Icers, Lakers skate to 3-3 standstill McCauley's goal ends five-game losing streak By MIKE McGRAW Special to the Daily SAULT STE. MARIE - The season is still in limbo for the Michigan hockey team as its showdown for the final Cen- tral Collegiate Hockey Association playoff spot with Lake Superior ended in a 3-3 tie last night. The Wolverines and Soo Lakers remain tied for eighth place in the con- ference at 9-14-1, but Michigan won the season series between the schools 2-1-1 so if there is still a tie three weeks from now the advantage will go to the Blue. A Victory by either team would have put it well into the driver's seat. MICHIGAN survived a weak perfor- mance overall and fatigue by its shor- thanded defense to come back from a 3- 1 deficit to salvage the tie, its first in 10 overtime games this year. "I think we're a little burned out, especially on defense. We need a couple of days off," said Wolverine coach John Giordano. "I'll tell you, we've been playing on emotion." Senior co-captain Jim McCauley found a loose puck all alone between the cir- cles and beat Soo goalie Lawrence Dyck with just over 11 minutes left to, force the extra stanza. IN THE overtime, Michigan had several good chances early on, but almost all of the last six minutes of the, game were spent with Superior on the offensive. The Lakers' best scoring chance came about three minutes into the period, but Allan Butler flipped a backhander over an open net. Almost all of the early action in the game was in the Lake Superior end, but Michigan wasn't able to follow up on any of its chances. The Lakers, however, capitalized eight minutes into the game as sophomore Fred DeVuono deflected Grant Clark's shot from the right point past Wolverine goalie Mark Chiamp. Two minutes later, Michigan tied it up on Chris Seychel's 12th goal of the season. The Allen Park native collected a loose puck at the Superior blue line and had his shot blocked by the Soo defense, but he got the puck right back and this time, put it under the screened Dyck. SUPERIOR REGAINED the lead, though, before the period was over when Monty Beauchamp caught a per- fect pass from linemate Butler, skated in behind the Wolverine defense and lif- ted the puck over Chiamp's left shoulder. In the second period, Michigan displayed some of its worst defensive play this season, but a combination of great saves by Chiamp and an inept Laker offense kept the game close. Chiamp stopped Lake Superior's Mike Warus and Nick Bumbacco on breakaways after Bumbacco had earlier failed twice to score from close range with an empty net in front of him. TIDE LAKERS finally connected to up their lead to 3-1, as Butler slid in a rebound from the left side, after Chiamp made a save on Paul Jerrard's shot from the opposite point. Two minutes later, the referees disallowed a goal by Michigan's John Bjorkman, saying that the puck went into the net off his skate. Late in the period, Lake Superior tur- ned in a defensive blunder of its own to undeservedly allow the Wolverines back into the game. The Lakers had too many men skating toward the Michigan net and the Wolverines got a four-on- one break the other way, with defen- seman Bill Brauer firing in the puck off a pass from Paul Kobylarz for his first goal of the season. Michigan played much better in the third period, tying the game on Mc- Cauley's goal which came after the referee didn't call an apparent roughing penalty on Seychel. The, referee did, however, call the Lakers' Warus off for slashing midway through the period. The Lakers managed a two-on-one break while shorthanded, but Chiamp made a tremendous save on Beauchamp to send the game into overtime. Skating in Soo and a 'tie. FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. LSSC - DeVuono (Clark, Cote) 8:46; 1. M-Seychel (McCauley, P. Goff) 10:47; 2. LSSC- Beauchamp (Butler, Collar) 12:25. Penalties: None. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. LSSC - Butler (Jerrard, Beauchamp) 8:32; 2. M - Brauer (Kobylarz) 18:38. Penalties: M - McCauley (high.ticking) 12:55: LSSC - Collar (high-sticking) 12:55; M -May (high- sticking) 14:19; LSSC - Martin (high-sticking) 14:19; LSSC - Dahquist (roughing) 16:15; M - Stiles (roughing) 16:15. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3. M-McCauley (unassisted) 8:48. Penalties: M-Bjorkman (slashing) :51; LSSC- Wares (slashing) 10:16; M-McCauley (slashing) 12:52 M-McCauley (holding)-18:58; LSsC-Dixon (high-ticking) 15:58. OVERTIME Scoring: None. Penalties: None. SAVES 1 2 LSsC-Dyck..................9 2 M-Chiamp...................9 11 SCORING BY PERIOD 12 Lake Superior...............2 1 MICHIGAN .................. 1 1 3 5 10 3 0 1 OT 4 7 OT 0 0 T 20 37 T 3 Brauer ... first goal of the season COLLEGE BASKETBALL, ROUNDUP: Purdue stallball edges. IOWA CITY (AP) - Curt Clawson and Jim Rowinski scored key baskets down the stretch and 16th-ranked Pur- due, using a delay game for much of the second half, held on to beat Iowa 48-46 in Big Ten Conference college basket- ball yesterday. Purdue, winning here for the first time since 1977, sent its record to 15-4 overall and 8-1 in the Big Ten, assuring the Boilermakers of remaining at least tied for the conference lead. Iowa, losing its fourth straight game, fell to 9- 10 and 2-7. Iowa kept threatening, but Purdue tresponded with critical baskets in closing minutes and the .Hawkeyes never got closer than the final margin. Iowa made its final run after Steve Reid hit one of two free throws for a 48- 44 Purdue lead with 29 seconds to go.. The Hawkeyes' Greg Stokes dropped in a rebound shot with four seconds remaining, but Iowa was unable to foul on the inbounds pass and the Boiler- makers ran out the clock. Indiana 81, Wisconsin 67 MADISON, (AP) -- Marty Simmons scored 30 points and Mike Giomi added 21, leading Indiana to an 81-67 Big Ten basketball victory over Wisconsin yesterday. With Indiana leading 39-33 early in the second half, Wisconsin missed three opportunities to pull within four points. Giomi then scored a layup and Sim- mons hit two drives and a free throw to stake the Hoosiers to a 46-33 lead. Wisconsin was never able to get closer than 10 points after that. Indiana, which has won 21 of its last: 25 games against the Badgers, in- cluding eight in a row, upped its record to 14-5 overall and 7-2 in the Big Ten. Wisconsin, led by Rick Olson's 28 poin- ts, is 7-11, and 3-6. Illinois 71, Northwestern 52 EVANSTON (UPI) - George Mon- tgomery scored 12 of his 16 points in the first half td lead an Illinois scoring blitz that carried the seventh-ranked Illini to a 71-52 victory last night over North- western, keeping Illinois tied for first in the Big Ten conference. The win, Illinois' eighth in nine league games, gave the Illini their best Big Ten start in 28 years and kept them tied with Purdue atop the league. Nor- thwestern, suffering its worst homecourt loss in three years, fell to 2-7 in the league and 9-10 overall. MONTGOMERY; who also grabbed 1 rebounds, scored six baskets in the first half when the Illini exploded to a 39-17 lead at intermission. Illinois, shooting 58 percent from the field, dominated the backboards, scoring most of their baskets underneath. Quinn Richardson added 12 points for Illinois, now 17-2, while the Wildcats were paced by Art Aaron, who scored 16, and Andre Goode, who added 15. Big Ten Standings Iowa, 48-46 basketball game I've ever seen Alabama play. It was a great effort," SC( said Alabama coach Wimp Sanderson. who credited the extra timeouts in the Colleg televised game with helping his Dayton s, Vermont5a exhausted team hold on to its lead. Mississippi 57, Tenness De~au1 59St. ~~ Indiana St. 74, S. Illinois DePaid 59, St. John's 57 'Dn aan59 St. John's 5'7 CHICAGO (AP) - Kenn Patterson's Nebraska 47,Kansas St Purdue 48, Iowa 46 10-foot jump shot with three seconds Memphis St. 53, Alaban remaining in overtime yesterday lifted Oklahoma 76, Missouri undefeated and second-ranked DePaul Louisville 93, Lasalle to a 59-57colg basketball vco Washington 89. UCLA s college victory Wake Forest 76, Clems over St. John's. Columbia 48, Dartmou Patterson had put DePaul ahead 57-55 Cornell 62, Harvard 60 with a pair of clutch free throws with 17 Florida St. 78, So. Miss seconds left, but Chris Mullin, who led all scorers with 21 points, tied it for St. ful -service John's on a pair of free throws with nine PHO TO seconds to go. hr. servi The victory was the 17th straight for 7,y - the. Blue Demons, while the hard-luck eQualityL Redmen fell to 12-7 and have now lost six of their last seven games. A N D Regulation play ended with the score MICHIGANUN tied at 51-51 and St. John's playing for a final shot, which the Redmen missed. ORES e Basketball ee 56 Is73 OT A. 46 ma 51OT 65 88 81 on 72 th 45 sissiuvi 74 DAYTONA BEACH .84 $ 4950 Full Price includes: " Round trip Charter Bus --soda and beer enroute to Fla. " Free Beer and entertainment daily * EPCOT-Disney1World option " Sea Escape Loveboat) option -one day cruise! contact: Ed 668-1829 Jans 668-6137 TRIP OFFERED BY FUN TIME TgoUR, Into P.O. Bo6063 Sta A DAYTONA BEACH, FLA 32022 X04-t 72-7i 73 Purdue ................ Illinois............ Indiana ............... Ohio State ............ MICHIGAN......... Minnesota ............. Wisconsin ............. Iowa .................. Northwestern ......... Michigan State...... Conf. W L 8 1 8 1 7 2 5 4 45 4 5 3 6 2 7 2 7 2 7 Overall W L 15 4 17 2 14 5 12 7 12 7 12 6 7 11 9 10 9 10 8 10 Alabama 69, Kentucky 62 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) - Alabama, led by Buck Johnson's 18 points, pressed Kentucky into 23 tur- novers and upset the third-ranked basketball Wildcats 69-62 in college basketball yesterday. "Alabama beat us with the press," Kentucky Coach Joe B. Hall said. "They handled us well with the press, and it certainly was the difference this afternoon. " "I THINK this is the most intense IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT FOR UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STUDENTS FROM THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY -In August, 1983, the Graduate, Undergraduate, Medical, Engineering- Transportation, North Engineering, and Natural Science Libraries began using a new computerized book circulation system manufac- tured by GEAC, Inc. -Since the GEAC system was introduced the six libraries have not been sending out overdue notices and charging fines--except for reserve materials. -On February 8, 1984, these six libraries will begin sending out notices and- charging fines for library materials overdue on the GEAC system. -No fines will be charged for overdue books from these six libraries if returned before February 8. All course reserve services, however, will continue charging fines during this period. -Users of these libraries returning overdue books after February 8, 1984, will be responsible for the total amount of all fines due. --I fvonn have rnwetinne ahont the nimher nr Otinnf hnnkrc vmi hav AP Photo. Louisville's Milt Wagner, splitting the LaSalle press, pushes the ball upcourt en route to a 93-88 victory over LaSalle yesterday. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Tumblers topple Bowling Green Special to the Daily BOWLING GREEN - The Michigan women's gymnastics team attained new heights as it vaulted over Bowling Green, 175.50-174.05, yesterday. It was the highest score ever for the Michigan women. Senior Kathy Beckwith paced the Blue, and all competitors, capturing the overall competiton with a score of 36.1. Teammate Dayna Samuelson finished just behind Beckwith at 35.1 for a third- place finish. The two women tied for first place in the bars and second place in the vault. BECKWITH ALSO captured the top spot in the beam competition, and a seond-nlae tie in the flnnr eyrcie i. _L / team was punished by a top-twenty team yesterday. The Minnesota Gophers dropped only three of ten mat- ches while defeating Michigan, 31-13, and the Cyclones of Iowa State romped to a 35-6 victory over the Wolverines on Friday. In the Minnesota match Joe Mc- Farland pinned Chris Terrell at 126- poun'ts, Mike Dergarabedian decisioned Scott Hannah at 134-pounds and Kirk Trost decisioned Eric Lehrke in the 190-pound class for Michigan's three victories. Wrestling in Ames, Iowa last Friday, Michigan managed to win only one match against the Cyclones. Bill sophomores, a junior and only two seniors are listed as the combined star- ting lineups for the game, which begins at 2 p.m. The Wolverines, who are 0-8 in Big Ten games this season, will face Spar- tan coach Karen Langeland's squad, which has won its last three games and its last two in the Big Ten. State (3-5 in the Big Ten and 11-7 overall) turned back Illinois and Purdue last weekend and downed a strong Notre Dame team, 73-72, Friday night in East Lansing. All three of those teams have beaten Michigan this season. LEADING THE Spartans' youth