MMMMM" PAGE SIX THlE MICHIGAN 1i 11111w TTTISCTI A ZT 7\Tf'1TTTYltXTfqmT) nth V AAA i as aJ lea i V u V A 11 ll (11 Yl 1 TUESDAY, NOVEDiBER 28, 1967 I irsrs By DIANA ROMANCHUK j This weekend saw the finale of a disappointing football seasonI and the unveiling of a promising hockey team. p With eight minutes gone in the Wolverine 1967-68 hockey season, Ron Ullyot took the puck at the Michigan blue line and skating in alone on McMaster goaltender Chuck Lee, slapped home the first goal in the McMaster demise. Two games and 20 Wolverine goals later, McMaster, as yet un-, beaten in Canada (3-0). headed{ back to Hamilton, Ontario, to re- cuperate from 10-4 and 10-3 beatings. The games were as nearly iden- tical as the scores. Both nights McMaster held Michigan close In1 first periods, which ended 2-1 int Michigan's favor Friday, and 1-1 Saturday. AS Michigan Coach Al Renfrewt noted, "we didn't play very weil the first period either night mainly because we couldn't get the puckI out of our own end." Blue Move Michigan began moving in thec second periods and left the icek ahead 6-3 Friday and 6-2 Satur-I day. The Wolverine scoring ran in sinillar modes, each night resting on two hat tricks. Dave Galbraithr racked up a triad plus one in thet first game along with Dave Per- rin, whose three goals came amidst x a hat trick in penalties. Perr'.a re-f Goals Assists Total Pts.t Gis. Asts. T Pts., peated his s oring performance on Saturday with Bruce Koviak chipping in another trio of tallies. Despite toe similarities there was one main difference between the two games - the number of penalties called. The referees meted out 30 penalties on Satur- day compared to 12 the night before. Michigan came out on the better end, actually, with only 37 minutes and a game misconduct, while McMaster suffered 46 min- utes and a game misconduct. Smash The misconducts were the result of the most spectacular tangle of the night - a second period cross-checking which led to flying: gloves for Michigan captain Bill Lord and McMaster's George Bab- cock. Yet, oddly enough, there wereI only three power play goals in the game. Though happy about the two victories, Renfrew expressed sur- prise at the McMaster play. "We expected them to be a lot strongerI in the net and on defense. They did have a couple of fast forwards, but they just 'couldn't jell against us. Actually, they're a better team than the scores show." ' Pipe Reds Light' But it is goals that win, andj Michigan put the red light on Two Fro m c1i z t * * * * * * Varsity, Frosh DOUG GALBRAITH ON WATERS: 'M'Sailors ' Cop Regatta: The Michigan Sailing Club, represented by Chris Chatain and Hans Meyer, defeated sailors from, schools from every part of the By HUD ENGLEHART Going from high school basket- ball competition to collegiate competition is hardly an enviable task to undertake. And when the first splash in the collegiate puddle is to be made against a team that will start four seasoned veterans, the task is even more difficult. Add to that the on-the-spot critic that always attends Michigan athletic contests and the whole thing reaches cataclysmic pro- portions. Freshman basketball c o a c h George Pomey and his version of the Wolverines are faced with this monumental dip in the pool of Michigan athletics tonight in Yost Field House as the Varsity will be making its assault on its first non-conference and non- scheduled foe of the season. Historical Ironically the game will set the .scene foi two beginnings and t«t o ends in Michigan basketoall. The game of course will begin and end. The game will also mark the beginning of four years of basket- ball for some of the freshmen and the end of a long and glorious history for Yost Field House. To- night's game also will be the last ever to be played in the "House that Cazzie destroyed." Barring a rain storm, there won't be many splashes in Yost before, during, or after the game. For one thing the freshmen lack the size to be able to take the water out of this year's varsity. Doug Galbraith Dave Perrin Bruce Koviak Ron Ullyot Randy Binnie Don Deeks Doug Glendinning Craig Malcolnson Phil Gross Bill Lord Barney Pashak 4 6' 3 2 3 1 1 0 0 0 a 4 1 3 4 2 3 2 3 i 1 1 S 7 6 6 4 3 3 1 1 ten times each night (not count- country over the weekend in win- ing the two shots that hit the ning the 21st annual Timm'e pipe Saturday). The most 'per- Angsten Memorial Regatta in fect' tally Friday came with barely Chicago. three minutes left in the opening - Meyer, with one first place and period and gave Michigan back six seconds in 17 'B' Division a 2-1 lead. With Galbraith wait- races, and Chatain, taking a pair ing to the left of net, Bruce Ko- of firsts in the 'A' Division series, viak blazed a pass from the cor- amassed 476 points to give Mich- ner, which Galbraith just tap- igan the team title. ped by Lee. Resha Miller crewed for Cha- McMaster tried changing goal- tain and Al Austin assisted Meyer ies Saturday, replacing Lee with in the Michigan club's winning. Ian Budge, but it still looked like effort. a. rerun. The standout goal of the While neither skipper took in- game was a breakaway by Perrin. dividual honors in his respective As Budge moved forward to take division, the two-crew total was the shot, Perrin faked, Budge enough to give the team a 15- went down, and Perrin flipped point margin over the second- the puck behind Budge into the place Coast Guard Academy. open net. Individual titlist in the dinghy regatta, sponsored by the Chicago Collegiate Sailing Association, was Richie Doyle, sailing for Notre Dame. Amk l"u MI-- The tallest man on the fresh- men team is only 6-5 and the varsity, although not laden with height themselves, can come up with at least six players who are as tall or taller than freshman center Tim Nicksic. Also Starting with Nicksic will be Tom Lundstedt (6-4) and Rodc Ford (6-4) at the forward spots and Dan Fife (6-3) and Mark Berg (6-0) at the guard positions. Fife is expected to be the big gun for the freshmen. He has a fine jump shot and the moves to work his way into the open in order to take full advantage of his shot-making ability. Fife will probably be working against the only senior on the Varsity starting five, guard Jim Pitts who averaged a little better than 16 points a game last year and matches Fife on the size chart. ROses Await Indiana Trip By The Associated Press f BLOOMINGTON - Physically and emotionally exhausted, Indi- ana University's football players and fans went back to classrooms and jobs yesterday - but it was a happy hangover. And they were all ready to get charged up again Dec. 21, the tentative date set for the happy hurryin' Hoosiers to board a chartered plane for Pasadena, Calif. They're going early to get ac- climated to warm weather before taking on top-ranked Southern California in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day. Coach John Pont, whose 9-1 record has been bettered at I U. only by the 1945 team's 9-0-1 mark, planned to let the team un- wind for two weeks before starting to wind it up again. He also endeared himself to a lot of program committeemen by promising he would keep prior speaking engagements this month. Nobody was in a hurry to clean up store windows smeared with legends like, "A bucket makes a wonderful Christmas present," and "John Pont for president." The Indiana-Purdue game is for the Old Oaken Bucket. PRO SCORES ABA Houston 101, Pittsburgh 87 Kentucky 138, New Jersey 100 Clash Although the entire varsity squad will see action, the starters will be Pitts (6-3) and Ken Maxey (5-9) at guard: juniors Dennis Stewart (6-7) and Bob Sullivan (6-4) and sophomore Rudy Tom-' janovich at forward. The game has two purposes. First, it will give the freshmen an opportunity to show off their skills for Michigan fans as well as give them a little 'puddle tume' in collegiate basketball. Secondly, the game will serve as a tune up for the varsity for their opening game this Saturday in the new University Events Building against the Wildcats of Kentucky. Head Coach Dave Strack will be watching closely to see the effects of his rotating post offense.- Cheers But, no matter what the under- lying bases for the game, it should be a crowd pleaser. For one thing there is no admission price. Not only that but Strack is planning to play three halves instead of just the regulation two. The first two halves will pit the freshmen against the Varsity and the last half will be an intra-squad affair for the varsity members who don't see enough action dur- ing the first two segments. The varsity is favored to win the traditional battle but in rivalries like this one even fresh- men can learn to make big splashes just for a win. AP Taps Two 'AH' Gridders For Star '11' ALL BIG TEN TEAM-1967: Offense' Ends: Jim Beirne, Purdue; John Wright, Illinois TACKLES: John Williams, Minne- sota; Dick Himes, Ohio State GUARDS: Bruce Gunstra, North- western; Gary Cassells, Indiana CENTER: JIOE JAYTON, MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK: Mike Phipps, Pur- due HALFBACKS: Leroy Keyes, Purdue; Perry Williams, Purdue ICON JOHNSON, MICHIGAN Diefense ENDS: Bob Stein, Minnesota, George Chatios, Michigan State TACKLES: McKinley Boston, Min- nesota; Tom Domres, Wisconsin MIDDLE GUARD: Chuck Kyle, Pur- due LINEBACKERS: Ken Kaczmarek, Indiana; Jim Sniadecki, Indiana; Ken Crter, Wisconsin BACKS: Tom Sakai, Minnesota; Ron Bess, Illinois; Torn Garrestson, Northwestern other Michigan players named to the second team were offensive end Jim Berline, middle guard Dennis 1 Morgan, and defensive back George Hoey. Warren Sipp, Ray Phillips, John Gabler, and Rocky Rosema received honorable mention. CLARK NORTON - t~i ga9 Out] Well, You Win Two You Lose Three "Four and six." To an Englishman, it might mean "62 cents." To a football fan, it might make no sense at all. And to a football coach, it might mean a career. After a post-game locker room interview with Coach Bump Elliott following Ohio State's 24-14 bruising of the Wolverines Saturday, a sportswriter casually remarked, "See you next year, Bump." Elliott quickly replied, "I hope so." A freudian slip? Perhaps. And not because he thought the sports- writer might hang up his typewriter. Elliott became acquainted with the "win-or-else" vultures on a first-name basis this season during the midst of a five-game losing streak, and even after his squad posted victories in three of its last four games Bump has remained under fire. That's because it's hard for anyone to get excited about a 4-6 record. It's like finding one ant in your picnic basket-not a disaster, but it kind of takes the potato out of the old potato salad. And you can't even say, "Well, you win one you lose one." Who wants to have to say, "Well, you win two you lose three." Elliott knows this as well or better than anyone. During his nine- year tenure at Michigan, he has compiled a 43-40 mark, hardly in the "Michigan tradition" of Yost, Crisler, and even Bennie Oosterbaan. Nor has he come close to rivaling the success'of many of his present- day coaching counterparts at other schools. Other than his 9-1 Rose Bowl year of 1964, he has had no better than a 6-3 record, and in only three other seasons has he reached the .500 level. Pretty good bait for the blood-thirsty. But who can say whether Michigan's sagging football fortunes may be traced to Elliott's effectiveness as a coach? There is nothing easier than setting up a simple cause-and-effect relationship between a coach and a losing team, and therefore there is nothing more appealing to a simple mind. Elliott's more astute critics point out, perhaps with some justification, that he is unimaginative and inconsistent in calling plays. But Elliott's decisions can be no more successful than the degree of proficiency with which his players execute them on the field. A coach can do only so much if the talent isn't there-and this season Elliott's charges nearly beat some good teams with what was, according to one of his assistant coaches, "mediocre talent at best." And to blame Elliott alone for inept play on the field is to ignore one of the realities of modern-day coaching-perhaps the primary task of a head coach today is recruiting, at which Elliott has proven quite effective. The day-in and day-out teaching of fundamentals at practice is generally left to the assistant coaches. As one of the seniors on this year's squad put it, "Bump doesn't really do that much coaching." The entire question may become academic if Elliott is named Michigan's new athletic director upon the retirement of Fritz Crisler this March. Elliott is presently one of several candidates being given prime consideration for the post, but he is by no means a shoe-in. While many football fans have voiced a desire to "kick Bump upstairs" (a consideration which is not, incidentally, expected to enter into President Robben Fleming's final decision this Febru- ary), Elliott faces competition from several men who have estab- lished top-flight credentials in collegiate and professional athletics. Among others apparently in contention are Don Lund, Director of Player Personnel of the Detroit Tigers, Forest Evashevski, Athletic Director at Iowa, and Davy Nelson, Athletic Director at Delaware. And if Elliott, is not the man to replace Crisler, he may well find his coaching position in jeopardy, at the mercy of a new athletic director-a man whose first act, according to a top candidate for the post, "should be to fire at least five or six coaches." No coach who is a consistent loser will last forever in big-time coaching ranks, and if Elliott can't win, he will in time seal his own fate. But Bump has won before, and if he's back, there's good reason to believe he can win again. Until then, everyone can wear buttons reading, "Michigan Foot- ball Builds Character." 4 a GOALS BY PERIOD MICHIGAN McMaster MICHIGAN McMaster Friday Saturday 2-4-4-10 1-2-1-- 4 1-5-4-10 1-1-1- 3 i ' - AP-Preseason Hardcourt Poll NEW YORK (AP)-The Top Ten in The Associated Press pre-season college basketball poll for the 1968 season which opens Friday night, Dec. 1, with first place votes and last season's records in parenthesis Still on Sale at THE UNION and DISCOUNT RECOR, KEEP AA OF YOUR HAIR * NO WAITING 0 8 BARBERS * OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Near the Michigan Theatre t; F: r] 9 DS sand total points on 5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. UCLA (30) 2. Houston 3. Louisville 4.North Carolina 5. Kansas 6. Dayton 7. Boston College 9. Vanderbilt 10. Davidson a 10-9-8-7-6- (30-0) 300 (27-4) 226 (23-5) 213 (26-6) 167 (23-4) 135 (25-6) 129 (21-3) 84 (21-5) 48 (15-12) 46 (S. Univ. Store) ... THE CAMPUS COMMUNITY IS INVITED TO ATTEND THE SESSIONS OF: SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE WEIR THE COLLEGE STUDENT -1967 A Sesquicentennial Program of The College of Literature, Science and the Arts NOVEMBER 28, 29 and 30,1967 All Sessions in the Rackham Lecture Hall at 3:00 p.m. The smashing after shaven. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 3:00 p.m. I. THE STUDENT AS CITIZEN: a panel discussion Moderator: D Participants: )EAN WILLIAM HABER STANLEY SWINTON, Assistant General Manager, Th MICHAEL DANN, Senior Vice President for Programs, CBS Television Network ROGER RAPOPORT, Editor The Michigan Daily he Associated Press The United man new stewardesses! See him, talk to him, listen to him, complete an application form. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Nov.29 Call your Placement Office..>:"::: . for an appointment .'.. , y \,A UNITD AiR LINES : M ~ ''"''. ""'tc"L t2 U AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY '''' ?" EMPLOYER "{ " {~ 4 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 3:00 p.m. II. THE PERSONAL LIFE OF THE STUDENT: a panel discussion Moderator: PROFESSOR ARTHUR EASTMAN Participants: DR. WILLARD DALRYMPLE, Director of the Health Service, McCosh t,., I Infirmary, Princeton University ROBERT O THEODORE . SHULZE, Dean of the College, Brown University NEWCOMB, Professor of Sociology and Psychology, Associate BRITISH STERLING So fine a gift, it's even sold in jewelry stores. Aftar eheav,± q Director of the Residential College I 11 THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 30, 3:00 p.m. II II M