w - I PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1968 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 12. 1968 UNIVERSITY CHARTER FLIGHTS Detroit-London-Detroit May 9-June 20-6 weeks $205 Maq 20-Aug. 19-13 weeks $230 leers Meet Minnesota; Gymnasts at Western Face Tourney Conquerors By ELLIOTT BERRY seats now limited The old coliseum may not be the "world palace of ice hockey" -in fact most people think it June 27-Aug. 23-8 weeks $250 looks like it belongs to the plant department factories which sur- round it down on fifth street, but waiting list only the Wolverine icers are glad to spend their weekends right there. The Wolverines have playea four $100 Deposit per Reservation Western Collegiate Hockey Asso- ciation opponents away from the call Bill Raymer, Joe Mason coliseum this year, and have dropped all four. Their only 761 -2348, 5-7 P.M. league victory came last week, in their opening conference home game with Michigan State. In- MASS MEETING SOON cluding their four opening non- league victories, they are unde- feated in five games on home ice. "..... ". .."."""""" ......" ""."""""....." -. First-Test This weekend however, Michi- * I gan will receive its first real test at the coliseum in a weekend R series with second place Minne- sota. F Bee BUf fet verines could get back into con- * tention in the very tight WCHA race. The Wolverines, however, Deliciously Sweet Roasted Chicken .. . 99c dropped a 3-1 decision to the R now thru January only Gophers in the finals of the Big Inry Ten Holiday Tournament earlier * . this season, and revenge will not be easy. "The key to the Gopher * * attack is their tremendous speed," Carry Out Service Available | relates Michigan coach Al Ren- * ifrew, "and their defense is really solid." Hours: 11:30 A.M. to : The Gophers had rolled up six 8:00 P.M. Daily straight victories in WCHA play, * I and were alone in first place until North Dakota sent them reeling * with a two-game sweep of last EStadiumweek's series at Minnesota. 9E. d m Fertile * Leading the league's most pro- Hand this coupon to the cashier ductive offense, are Gophers Greg H Hughes; and wingers Bill Klatt * for your Frontier reward I and Chuck Norby who rank sec- * I ond, fourth, and-fifth respectively sm .ss sss..sss"""rrmsss m"..ss.msnms""m.-. mm" mm 1 in league scoring. Captain Gary Loken Unveils Frosh Squad By BILL DINNER Following a brief excursion to Eastern Michigan University last weekend, the Michigan gymnasts will travel west to Kalamazoo for an exhibition meet with the young Western Michigan Broncos. Tonight's meet, because it is exhibition, will permit both fresh- man squads to participate. This will enable the freshmai teams to acquire their first experience in regular meet competition. Ac the helm of the Broncos is coach Fred Orloisky, an outstand- ing gymnast in his own right. He was national AAU all-around, still rings, and parallel bar champion, besides being on the United States 1960 Olympic team. Orlofsky was named head coach in August 1966 and was presented the task of developing a new squad from scratch. Due to his late appoint- ment he was unable to recruit any outside talent for this year's varsity, and has had to rely on talent presently at the school. Broncos Green Only in their second year of competition the Broncos have few talented gymnasts. The standouts1 of the small ten-man team could be considered Alan Link on side horse or Harvey Whitefield, a decent all-around man. The only1 other returning lettermen are Mark Marzol and Janis Anderson, both on the trampoline. With this lack of experience and a major depth problem, Western Michigan should barely be visible in the final standings. Turning to the Western Michi- gan freshmen, matters brighten considerable. In his first oppor- tunity at recruiting, Orlofsky has CHUCK NORBY, Minnesota's third leading scorer and fifth in the WCHA, was instrumental in the Gopher's 3-1 victory over Michigan in the Big Ten Tourney. The Wolverine's face Min- nesota tonight and tomorrow night in the Coliseum. WINNING FORM IS DISPLAYED by junior Chuck Froeming as he practices an iron cross on the still rings. Froeming has shown tremendous improvement on the rings this season and placed first last week- in the meet with Eastern Michigan. Gambucci also adds experience to the Gopher offense. Anchoring the defense is senior Dick Paradise, whom Minnesota coach Glen Sonmor has singled out for his aggressive play. Minding the net has been sophomore Murray McLachlan whose goal-tending has been a major factor in the Gopher's rise from last year's last place finish. Tonight's contest should produce a match between two of the na- tion's finest collegiate net-minders in McLachlan and Michigan's Jim Keough. In what has been a disappoint- ing start, only Keough's play has been outstanding for the Wol- verines. Two of Michigan's four losses this season have been in sudden- death overtime. So far, Renfrew has not found a spark plug who can ignite the team in clutch situations, nor is he expecting to find one. "Everybody has to wgrk as hard as they can on this team or else we're in trouble. "'It's such a tough league," Ren- frew moans, "but we're in the same class as anyone." Michigan played possibly its finest hockey of the season in the latter half of its losing effort in East Lansing last Saturday night. And the return of speed- ster Dave Perrin, who has been out of action with the flu for two weeks, is bound to help. But the old coliseum may well have to make the difference. Pout Lauded as Coach-of-Year I READ HOWE NOW! t ON SALE IN THE FISHBOWL: STEADY WORK and POLITICS and the NOVEL by IRVING HOWE Writer-in-Residence-January 15-28 FIRST LECTURE ON MONDAY! NEW YORK (A')-John Pont, who pulled off a 100-1 feat in lead- ing Indiana University through a 9-1 season and into the Rose Bowl, was named college football's Coach of the Year yesterday by his 'fel- low coaches. The 39-year-old Miami of Ohio graduate was voted the annual Kodak Award in a poll of 2,000 members of the American Football Coaches Association. Pont took a Hoosier team that had won only one of 10 games in 1966 and turned it into a winner that placed fourth in The Asso- -ciated Press national rankings. "Discipline and imagination were the trademarks of our team," Pont said. "The boys possessed tremendous spirit and drive. They didn't believe they could be beaten. They were a team that would make any coach look good." Po:t was a star halfback under W ELCOME STUDENTS ! " DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men- And Women- OPEN 6 DAYS THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre Woody Hayes at Miami. He coach- ed seven years at Miami and two at Yale University before taking the Indiana job in 1965. "Coaching is coaching," he said, in describing the difference be- tween the Ivy League and the rug- ged Big Ten. "The Ivy League has some great boys, but not as many as the Big Ten. Depth of material is the difference." Pont said that at Indiana this year he and his staff picked the best 22 players and decided to for- get about replacements. "We sought to instill responsi- bility in them fromthe beginning," he added. "I called no more than 10 per cent of the plays. The other 90 per cent of the plays were left to our quarterback, Harry Gonso. "I believe in giving this responsi- bility to the players and we get more out of them. They learned to believe in themselves. They were a remarkable group." The Hoosiers lost only one game -to Minnesota, 33-7-but came nabed a few boys with excellent promise. Heading the freshmen team are two Michigan boys in Bob Barrow, who performs all-around except the side horse, and Chuck Beatty who has looked impressive in floor exercises. Filling the side horse gap is Wamon Guinn who enrolled this semester and will not be eligi- ble till January. Although the freshmen squad has had little ex- perience there is a good chance that they will out perform the var- sity squad. Even though the meet is slated as exhibition, the Michigan gym- nasts should be in top form in preparation for an important meet against a very strong Iowa team next week. Heading the Michigan gymnasts will be the highly touted tram- poline trio of Captain Wayne Mil- ler, Dave Jacobs and George Hunt- zicker. The sophomore sensation Sid Jenson, who last week cap- tured two firsts and a second against Eastern Michigan will be trying for a repeat performance. Flying Finish Another standout last week was Chuck Froeming. He took first place on the still rings with a solid performance and has been work- ing hard all week polishing his double flyaway dismount. In addition to the trampoline trio another friendly rivalry be- tween sophomore Jim Deboo, Dave Geddes, and Mike Carpenter is developing on the side horse. Freshman Springboard This will be the first meet for most of the Michigan freshmen and it should act as a spring- board for the eight freshmen that Newt Loken is sending to the meet. And if two great trios aren't enough Coach Loken has recruited what might be three of the best all-around freshmen in the Big Ten: Ed Howard from NewTrier High near Chicago; Rick Mc- Curdy, a New Jersey boy; and Murry Plotkin from Chicago's Niles North. Plotkin participated in the Midwest Open and grabbed seventh place in vaulting against some of the best. Another New Trier grad attending the meet will be John Cotsirilos who is present- ly concentrating on the high bar. One other Michigan trio will also make the trip, Kelly Cannon from Glenbroken High, Mike Shapiro from Niles West, and Bob Wagner, a sophomore who trans- fered from Iowa, all whom work on the side horse. Although Michigan should eas- ily outdistance Western Michigan University, it will give the Bronco fans a good opportunity to ob- serve a top rate gymnastics exhi- bition. Cards Swar Alex Johnson By The Associated Press The St. Louis Cardinals tradeds." outfielder Alex Johnson, older brother of Michigan football star Ron Johnson, to the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for outfielder Dick Simpson yesterday. Johnson came to the Cardinals from the Phillies following the 1965 season but has had two dis- appointing years. After hitting .294 and .303 at Philadelphia, he hit only .186 in 25 games for the Cards in 1966. Johnson was sent to the triple A club at Tulsa where a late- season surge gave him a .355 batting average and brought him back to the Cardinals. The 25- year-old Detroit native alternated with Roger Maris and Bobby Tol- anin right field during 1967 but hit only .233 in 81 games. Simpson, 24, was traded to Cincinnati from Baltimore in 1965. 4k The next year he hit .238 in 92 games for the Reds. Last year the speedy outfielder hit .259 in 44 games. JOHN PONT I I back for a titanic 19-14 triumph over Purdue and the great Leroy Keyes. They lost to top-ranked Southern-California in the Rose Bowl, 14-3. ia: l f f A A --- ' SABBATH SERVICE Tonight at 7:15 Torah Service and Oneg Shabbat THE HILLEL CHOIR Join The Daily Sports Staff' Corvette Sting Ray Convertible with removable hardtop. Its running mate: Camaro SS Coupe. STEVEN OVITSKY musical director 1429 Hill Street JOAN SPITZER organist All Welcome_ i S Petitioning for Joint Judiciary Council Six Seats Available Pick up petitions at SGC offices in the SAB Petitions Due 5 P.M., Tues., Jan. 16 YI NEED LEVIS? BUY NOW! PRICES INCREASE FEBRUARY 1st 1 0 41 FOR YOUNG and OLD ALIKE! HEAR THE MOVING SOUND of RONNIE ROSS and CAROLE WALKER and the CIRKUS DIRECT FROM CHICAGO-TWO WEEKS ONLY You wouldn't expect But when you i anything to match drive "The Hugger"... Corvette's sports car ride will you 11 1 1- i f ill 11