PAGE ETGRT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1968 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN B~lIX FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1968 De , By JOEL BLOCK Big Ten Examiner John Dewey told The Daily last night that he had traveled to East Lansing Tuesday night "to set up the pro- cedure for the investigation of Michigan State." Dewey said he talked to John Fuzak. MSU faculty representa- tive, Biggie Munn, athletic direc- tor; Bert Smith, assistant athletic director; and two athletes. Dewey did not talk to Duffy Daugherty, Spartan football coach. Dewey said he went to East Lansing to determine "what to do, how to do it, and what to. look Announces iSU Violations Investigation at" in the probe at Michigan State. Earlier, however, MSU Sports Information Director Fred Stabley claimed that Dewey "left the cam- pus with no indication of dissatis- faction or an order for further fact-finding." He termed the visit an "unannounced call." Munn said that he was "satis- fied that things are in excellent order at Michigan State." , Dewey also said last night, "I'm not going to give a progress re- port of the investigations to any- one. It's going to be a matter of weeks before I'll be ready to give my report to the conference ath- letic directors. Only after the and that an opinion now would group decides whether there were only be "prejudicial." violations or not will I be able to Meanwhile, Daugherty said he reveal my findings." had taken no further action on his The Big Ten investigator said that he encountered the same "good" cooperation at Michigan State that he has found at Mich- igan. In the Michigan athletic depart- ment's own investigation, Profes- sor Edward Halpern, chairman of the faculty investigating commit- tee, could only say that "we are working exhaustively on the mat- ter." He said the committee would be working "for days" on the case threat of a libel suit against The F 17 S COl EtS Rio Grande, Ohio 108, Point Park 93 Mt. St. Mary's 75, Baltimore Loyola 63 Tulane 71, NYU 60 St. Peter's, N.J., 112, Vermont 76 Cincinnati 73, North Texas St. 61 Windham 109, Lyndon St. 77 Geneva 87, Edinboro 78 Grove City 72, Slippery Rock 62 Houston 106, Miami,Fla., 64 St. Louis 60, Southern l1. 54 Indiana Tech 88. Spring Arbor 61 Northwood, nd. 116 Northwood, Mich. 75 Earlham 103, Marian 98, overtime Wichita 112, Bradley 97 Viillanova 78, Niagara 56 Daily and did not wish to mak any additional comments. The Spartan head coach said Tuesday he planned to consult hi, attorneys about a possible suit be- cause of a Daily story Sunday which revealed apparent athleti violations at MSU. :e d. ES - yC * * * * leers Face Tech In 'Must' Game *[ * --, I UNIVERSITY CHARTER announces CALEDONIAN AIRWAYS JET BOEING 707 for Flight No. 3 June 27 to August 22-8 weeks-$250 DETROIT-LONDON-DETROIT Additional seating capacity for 60 persons I I i I J UST IARRIVED! By ELLIOTT BERRY Momentum, home ice, and a bit of good fortune may be enough to thrust the Wolverine icers to the top of the Western Collegiate Hockey League this weekend. Their opponent however, Mich- igan Tech, is currently enjoying- its seat atop the red-hot race, and will not easily relinquish it. The Huskies are coming off a weekend split with powerful North Dakota, while the Wolver- ines are riding the crest of a 10- game winning streak. Added to the momentum is the friendly confines of the Coliseum where the Wolverines have yet to taste defeat., The last time a first place team rolled into the Coliseum (Minne- sota) they found themselves on the short end of two one-goal de- cisions. Husky Coach John McIn- nis is well aware of Michigan's performance at home and hopes his luck will be a little better than the rest. Mclnnis, though, wasn't as op- timistic as most first place coach- es. "We have to have a split," he stated warily, "no less than a split." Michigan Tech, a club depend- ent on, sophomores, has fared well in its previous contests with the WCHA's front-runners. The Huskies previously swept their two-game series from the league's co-leaders Denver, and in four games with previously top ranked North Dakota, they won two. The sparkplugs of the Tech at- tack are sophomore Brian Watts and junior Al Karlander. Watts, is the team's leading point-getter, while Karlander, who tallied 11. times in his first 11 league con- I BRIAN WATTS DICK SIERADZKI Cotton Turtlenecks JOHN DEWEY Phone JOE MASON, BILL RAYMER 761-2348 I colors galore! $2.29 ALSO possibility of jet on Flight No. 1, May 9-June 20 CALL FOR RESERVATIONS I I I I SA M SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: FRED LaBOUR PAUL CAMELET MASTER TAILOR Specializing in shortening women's coats, skirts, and slacks. Alterations for Men & Women 663-4381 1 103 S. University above drug store tests, is the Huskies' leading goal producer.+ The real strength of the Huskies however, is defense. Their league opponents have been held to un- der two goals a game, as the phe- nomenal goaltending duo of Bill; Hughes and Gordon McRae are the league's leading netminders. The strong blue line corps is an- chored by Dick Sieradzki, one of, the club's two seniors, and sopho- more Doug Hinton, a fast and ag-j gressive rear guard. The Wolverines have countedi heavily on ace goalie Jim Keough in their big games and Keough should get a sound testing to- night. Both coaches have contin- ually stressed that their squads lack any superstars and must de-+ pend on hustle and a total team effort. The Wolverine offense has got- ten a big lift from Lee Martilla, who has put the light on 14 times since he returned to the team. In their victories over Minne- sota, the *Wolverines used their muscle to great advantage, and sufficiently slowed down the lightening-fast Gophers. Bill Lord, Jerry Hartman, and the rest of the Michigan musclemen are hop- ing to do the same against the Huskies. A split would not put the Wol- verines out of contention, but a sweep would put them in the driver's seat. First places have been scarce in Ann Arbor this year, but the icers finally have a chance to find one. 4 I I I £ 122 E. Washington Open Mon. & Fri. Evenings NOW!! 21 PRO HOCKEY: Detroit Freaks Out, 2-0 CHANCE OF A LIFETIME! The Famous KLHMdlEleven-FM Was $269.95 says DETROIT - The high-flying rallied to clobber the North Stars I Montreal Canadiens survived a 6-2 last night in a National s p i r i t e d third-period Detroit Hockey League game. charge and went on to defeat the The victory strengthened New Red Wings 2-0 in a National York's bid for a Stanley Cup play- Hockey League game last night. off spot, bringing the Rangers to Henri Richard and Claude Pro- within one point of third place in vost scored the Montreal goals, the the East Division. latter's coming with Detroit goalie Jean Ratelle and Rod Gilbert Roger Crozier off the ice in the powered the Rangers' assault, each final minute of play in favor of picking up four points. another skater. 3 The victory was the fifth in a 'TN Nrow for Montreal. which has lost IN IL Standings only once in its last 21 games. The loss, Detroit's first after two East Division straight ties following a personnel w L T Pts GF GA shake-up, was a severe blow to the Montreal 31 15 9 71 172 114 Wings' chances of making the Chicago 25 18 13 63 164 162 Boston 25, 19 10 62 193 162 fourth and final Stanley Cup play- New York 25 18 11 61 161 143 off berth in the East Division. Toronto 23 22 9 55 147 126 The shutout was the fourth this Detroit 20 25 10 50 182 179 season for Canadien goalie Roga- West Division tien Vachon, who played brilliant- Phil. 25 21 8 58 134 125 ly, especially in the final period Minnesota 22 24 9 53 1401 167 when Detroit took command of the Los Ang. 23 27 5 51 137 173 Pittsburgh 20 25 9 49 139 157 game, pressing the playV into the St. Louis 19 24 10 48 123 133 Montreal zone. Oakland 12 33 11 35 114 162 Yesterday's Results ST. 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