PAGE SUL THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1969 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 FOR UNDERGRADUATES SYMPOSIUM ON LEGAL OPPORTUNITIES "A STEP BEYOND" or "AFTER LAW SCHOOL-WHAT ?" With representatives from 1. Small town law practice 2. Big city-large firm 3. Corporate legal staff THURSDAY, FEB. 8, 7:30 P M., LAW QUAD LOUNGE Digger' Koviak Sparks Icer Attack By RICH EPSTEIN Bruce Koviak is the WCHA's answer to Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita. He's got Hull's blond, curly locks and Mikita's hustle. One wonders how this young- looking, small shouldered, 150- pound senior ever succeeded in a game of towering, brutish defense-1 Recreational Bantam League. At this time Koviak's size did not hinder him at all, for as he recol- lects, "We were all small." When he was 13, he played on a team sponsored by the John F. Ivory Company, along with young stars Lee Marttila and Harold Her- man. season. He was playing on a line with brothers Lee and Mike Mart- tila, a line which was dubbed "the kid line." It was not as productive a year for him as he had wished it to be, scoring only 11 goals in compari- son to the 18 he scored his first year. Koviak suffered a knee in- ij E " 9 ONL.CE FESTTV. ELECTRONIC. MUSIC THEATRE Thurs., Feb.8 Fri., Feb. 9 Sat., Feb. 10 Mich. U ONCE GROUP ONCE GROUP SONICARTS GROUP (N (Repeated performance-audience limited) $2.00/Students $1.50.. . at MICHIGAN UNION, DISCOUNT CENTICORE BOOK SHOP and PLASTER OF PARIS (Maynar in cooperation with the UM Creative Arts Festival men and fiercely aggressive charg- ' Bantam Champs jury in that February of that sea- ing forwards. The league, how- That year, they won the Bantam son, and while he didn't miss a ever, is well convinced of his abil- League National Championship. game. his scoring ability was ity. At 15, he was given a chance to weakened. Koviak is second in scoring for try out for thetJunior Red Wings. the Wolverines with 25 points. :The coach at that time was Jim He underwent surgery on the He joined his first hockey team Peters, whose son had left the knee during the summer and work- at the age of 10 in the Detroit Junior Wings for the Red Wing _farm system, thus opening a va- Tickets for the Michigan- _ --cancy. The vacancy happened to Michigan State hockey clash be on the center position on the Saturday night will go on sale first line, with "the two best play- at 8:00 a.m. tomorrow, ticket ers in the entire league" according manager Don Weir said last to Koviak. Still, Koviak won the night. !job, becoming the yourngest player ever in the league to that point. One of the greatest challenges ed hard to strengthen the leg. He r Koviak encountered while with had great hopes of having a suc- the Junior Wings was playing cessful season his senior year. So against Mel Wakabayashi, later to far he has lived up to these hopes. 'become Michigan star and captain. One curious fact about Koviak's Koviak had to shadow Wakabay- career is that he has not missed ashi, twice the league's scoring a game in the last seven years. He n ion Ballroom leader. has, however, had his share of in- Opportunist juries. Earlier in the year at Den- .Y.) 8:30 P.M. Koviak believes himself to be ver, Koviak fractured his cheek- more of an opportunist, than any- bone during a game. And he re- thing else, having "the knack of calls, "I was tripped and someone being in the right place at the skated over me." He did complete right time," he calls hockey "a the game, and was operated on RECORDS game of breaks." He feels that later that night. Still, he returned REODmany times a player will go out to action the following night, d House) hIand play the same type of ga wearing a protective face mask. tostraight nights atogamen one game his shots will go in Keyed Up while in the other, no matter what "I never get too nervous before he tries to do, hecannottachieve games, but rather after they are __ a single tally. all over," he explains. "I think it's In Koviak's first year with the caused by the keyed-up state I -- varsity he was named "sophomore usually end up in." *r Bruce. because the soul sound gets me in a good mood and takes my mind off the contest." Besides playing hockey, Koviak majors in business education, and is a student teacher in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades in Ann Ar- bor. M Koviak I of the year," placing fourth in the Koviak spends some time betore~ team scoring. His junior year, each game listening to the Temp- however, ended with a rather poor tations. "I enjoy listening to them goal output near the close of the a few hours before each game, SPORT SHORTS: He also assists the Ann Arbor High School hockey team. Koviak encountered one interesting prob- lem. Instead of trying to find the weaknesses in the goaltending, as is usually the case, he had to im- prove the Ann Arbor goaltender's performance. I the only 1 A yo 'lI E f I NHL Standings East Ivivision iv L I Pts GF GA I will be your own AlT FO month lease Hawkeyes Whip Boil IOWA CITY, Iowa () - Smooth throws before he fouled out with1 Sam Williams and Glenn Vidno- 4:35 left in the game. vic, a sophomore making his var- Vidnovic, who joined the team' sity debut, sparked Iowa to a only this week after being scho- 94-87 Big Ten Conference basket- lastically ineligible through the ball victory over Purdue last first semester, finished with 17: night. points. The Hawkeyes won their fourth The Haweyes now have a 10-6 triumph in six conference games season record while Purdue is 9-7. despite a 31-point shooting display by Purdue's talented sophomore NBA Action Rick Mount. Purdue's league mark IWalt Bellamy scored 32 points was evened at 3-3. and picked off 21 rebounds while Williams scored 24 points. Six leading the New York Knicker- Iowa players tallied in double bockers to a 114-111 National figures. Basketball Association victory over Iowa took command of the the Baltimore Bullets last night. game midway in the first half Bellamy sank 14 of 22 shots and held a 49-37 margin at inter- from th- floor, including several mission. The closest the Boiler- key baskets after Baltimore ral-. makers could come in the second lied, and helped sink his former half was the seven-point spread teammates. at the final gun. ermakers tention when the Knicks started a 12-3 splurge late in the third quarter. Rookie Earl Monroe again led Baltimore with 30 points and his running mate in the backcourt, Kevin Loughery, scored 25. Baltimore's Ray Scott, the team's leading rebounder, played only nine minutes of the first half after incurring three fouls with three minutes remaining in the first quarter. Cazzie Russell scored 16 points for New York. Bailey Howell's driving layup at the buzzer capped a wild last min- ute finish as the Boston Celtics defeated the St. Louis Celtics de- feated the St. Louis Hawks 102- 101 in the windup of a National Basketball Association double- header. In the opener, Hal Greer's 27 points and Wilt Chamberlain's all- around play led the Philadelphia 76ers to their fourth straight vic- tory in a 125-123 romp over the San Diego Rockets before 8,549 fans at Boston Garden. Chicago 24 Boston 25 New York 23 Toronto 23 Detroit 201 west Philadelphia 23 Minnesota 241 Los Angeles 21 St. Louis 19 Pittsburgh 18 16 13 61 18 8 58 18 9 55 19 9 55 23 8 48 Division 20 8 54 21 9 49 26 4 46 22 8 46 24 8 44 159 182 147 142 129 124 128 113 127 149 151 134 118 170 118 150 166 120 140 'i axUand 10 31 11 31 1U3 I5 j x esterday's Games Montreal 4, Philadelphia 1 Chicago 5, Toronto 2 Boston at St. Louis (inc.) Plttsburgn at ua~land (Inc.) Minnesota at Los Angeles (Inc.) NBA Standings Eastern Division 4 Student Housing Association I L u mum Statisticians * Economists * Programmers - Demographers * Sociologists Systems Analysts " Mathematical Statisticians ... and other professionals Philadelpi Boston Detroit New York Cincinnat Baltimore St. Louis San Fran Los Ange Chicago Seattle San Diego Leh W L Yet hind hia 42 15 .737 -- 38 18 .679 '3 V2 29 29 .500 131/2 k 30 31 .492 14 i 26 31 .456 16 23 35 .397 19% western Division 43 18 .705 - icisco 36 23 .610 6 les 33 24 .579 8 18 39 .316 23 17 41 .293 242 14 45 .237 28 Mount sank 13 of 30 tries frt the field and added five I SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT BERRY rom Rookie Walt Fraizer scored all free 14 of his points for New York in the second half and also was cred- ited with eight assists and eight rebounds. The Bullets, who overcame an 11-point deficit to pull even at 55-55 by halftime, fell out of con- _ 1 Yesterday's Results New York 114, Baltimore III Philadelpnia 1nSan Diego 10:1 Boston 102, St. Louis 101 SCOKES Iowa 94, Purdue 87 Louisville 67, .Drake 66 Navy 89, Georgetown 85 Toledo 83, west. Michigan 71 Marshall 69, Miami, Ohio 68 Bowling Green 78, Ohio U 68 West Virginia 79, Georgia Tech 75 Depauw 90, Bali State 79 Cinvcinnati 99, Wichita 85 Dayton 64, Xavior Ohio 56 f .-....,. THIS IS WHERE IT'S AT: Talk, concerts, skiing, records, bridge, plays, wrestling, dancing, operas ice skating, basketball, pepperoni pizzas, bull sessions, folk ballads, candlelight dinners, hockey, intellectual lectures, student government, singing, swiming .'. ...-and you'll find plenty of friends around to ADVERTISING ASSISTANT company in southern Michigan. 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