'Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY'' Tuesday, January 21, 1969 'Page Eight THE MICH!GAN DAILY Tuesday, January 21, 1969 Howe leads Eastern All-Stars against West's net-minding duo i I f E F i t Icers find skating hard in great divide By ELLIOTT BERRY By The Associated Press Detroit's great Gordie Howe, making his 20th All-Star appear- ance, leads the Eastern Division against the West tonight in the NHL All-Star gane at Montreal. The West features St. Louis goalies Jacques Plante and Glenn Hall-two of the best in NHL his- tory. The game, which begins at 8 p.m., will be televised on Chan- nel 9. Splitting the goaltending chores between them, Hall and Plante have opened a wide lead in the race for the Vezina Trophy. Their 88 goals allowed is 24 less than any other team in the league. Prior to Tuesday's game, the formula has been for the defend- ing Stanley Cup champions to take on a team of All Stars chosen from the other clubs. This year marks the first time the players will be paid for participating, with $500 going to each member of the win- ning squad and $250 to each on the losing side. Of the 19 players scheduled to appear for each side, only one will likely miss the affair, although one other may see only limited action. Pat Stapleton, the Chicago de- fenseman, wil be missing from Coach Toe Blake's East line-up because of a recurring eye prob- lem. Stapleton was struck in the eye by a stick recently and will remain in Chicago for further examina- tion and -treatment of resulting double vision. An NHL spokesman said Monday that no replacement has been called. Tommy Ivan, Chicago general manager, said that Bobby Hull, a unanimous choice for the left wing position on the Eastern team, will play. Hull has been hampered for the Mountains-the objects of phi- losophers' dreams and athletes' nightmares. Falling into the second of the above categories, the Wolverine icers who traveled to Colorado Springs last weekend for a two gane. series with lowly Colorado College, did indeed find the lofty heights of the Rockies somewhat of a nightmare as they struggled for a split. Coming to Colorado equipped with their own supply of oxygen but seemingly little else, the Wol- verines gasped to a 6-4 victory Friday night in a game which Michigan coach Al Renfrew called "our poorest effort of the season." Following the same baffling pattern of the Denver series the week before, the Wolverines won the opener despite playing poorly. However, they came out on the short end of a 5-4 score on Satur- day even though their play showed marked improvement. While a split with Denver, often regarded as the league's finest team, was satisfactory to the Wol- verines, the split with 7th place Colorado College was acceptable to none of them. High scoring left- winger Dave Perrin moaned, "We played terrible in both games, the whole team." While not looking at things quite so bleakly as Perrin, Ren- frew's assessment of Friday's play was hardly very cheerful. "We just weren't playing hockey but for- tunately we did take advantage of the chances that presented themselves." Nothing illustrated this fact more than the statistic showing the Wolverines scoring on its only shot on net in the first period. The heroes of Friday's contest were sophomore forward Brian Gordie Howe last month by a fractured jaw, an injury that required his teeth to be wired together. As a result, he has been unable to eat solids and has become weakened by the en- forced fasting. Blake will use Gerry Cheevers of Boston and Ed Giacomin of the New York rangers in the net. On the eve of the game, per- sistent reports have coaches Ber- nie Geoffrion on his last legs at New York and Red Sullivan in trouble at Pittsburgh. Geoffrion returned to New York Monday after spending the week- end in an Oakland hospital. He collapsed in the dressing room fol- lowing the Rangers' 3-1 victory over the Seals Friday night. Doc- tors diagnosed his condition as a lack of sufficient sugar in his blood brought on by the flu and unstable eating habits. Billboa rd Slack who notched two goals and four assists, and netminder Jim lIecugh, who turned away 40 Tiger shots. Perrin, the team's leading goal- getter, collected two goals while Doug Galbraith and Barny Pashak each tallied once. On Saturday, in a repetition of their previous Saturday's per- formance, the Wolverines opened the game by blitzing the opposi- tion net for the first ten minutes of play but were again unable to bulge the mesh. The Tigers then scored three times within the span of a min- ute and a half to pull in front for good. Michigan played what Renfrew called "their finest period of the series" in the final stanza of Saturday's game as the Wol- verines narrowed the gap to 5-4 while outshooting the Tigers 14-3. The difference proved to be the phenomenal goaltending of the Tigers' Don Gale. In trying to explain Saturday's defeat Renfrew noted, "We played only a period and a half of good hockey and that wasn't enough. I guess we mentally let down a little from the big series with Den- ver, figuring we should beat a team like that (Colorado College 1-7 through last Friday) ." He was imperative about his team's improvement over the night before. "We definitely should have won Saturday and lost Friday," he mused. The weekend split kept the Wol- verines in second place in the WCHA with a 6-2 league record, three games behind league-leading North Dakota and a game in front of third place Michigan Tech. NHL SCORING LEADERS G A Pts. 1. Esposito, Bos 29 38 67 2. B. Hull, Chi 30 32 62 3. Howe, Det 21 37 58 4. Mikita, Chi 17 38 55 5. Berenson, St. L 21 29 50 6. Uliman, Tor 23 26 49 7. Beiveau, Mtl 18 31 49 8. Delvecehio, Det 17 32 49 9. Hodge, Bos 21 25 46 10. Pappin, Chi 20 26 46 '* The U hold its meeting of M Rugby Club will annual organizational on Wednesday, Jan- uary 22, at 7 p.m. in room 131 of the Business Administration Building. The club will elect new officers and discuss t h e previous season. The meeting is open to anyone interested in joining the club. * * * The Markley Fan Club is chartering a bus forthe gym- nastics meet at. Western Mich- igan Saturday, January 25. The bus will return that night. For information call 662-4331. -Daily-Richard Lee MICHIGAN'S BRIAN SLACK (8) digs for the puck in the Minnesota Duluth zone in an early-sea- son encounter won by the Wolverines 8-2. Slack showed his explosiveness last Friday against Cold- rado College, breaking loose for ,2 goals and 4 assists in a 6-4 Wolverine victory. Previously against Michigan State, he scored both goals in a victory. RAN WITH THORPE: Hopi track man races last mile on trail of A rizo na reservation 4 WCHA i Standings W L T Centa Student.,Judiciary (formerly Joint Judiciary Council) Announces Open Petitioning for FIVE SEATS Sign up for interviews at SGC offices 1st floor, SAB Petitions due Tuesday, January 21, 5:00 P.M. North Dakota MICHIGAN Mich. Tech. Denver Minnesota Mich. State Colorado College Minn. - Duluth 10 6 5 8 4 z 1: 2 2 2 4 5 5 7 11 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 ... :...,u_. .......".....,..5 .... r.. .... " ",.: .. .:..a . . ."::. .":.. . . . . . . . . . .:«":;-;rr:;;.. .:.":"r;":a,;rry;,:.>::a.::.;.:..'::. .::a. .>.:.9. ; k :: - . " r n.. . : ,-.... .. X: : . :". r v - : ..... ** .** . : .\ "x , rr?}:':::.;: . *; . "" a i , r~ ATTENTION: .4j THE19 9 .MICHIGA NENSIA N _t Ally be reserved inz the EFISHBOWL This Week Tutesday thru Friday IJ1.00 to 4:00 M} Reserve Your Yearbook 3IlA {I i I <: i 4 ::, We. can leach you to read faster - (3-4-5 Times Faster) with better comprehension. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS FOR IMPROVED :.GRADES .CONCENTRATION . COMPREHENSION "STUDY SKILLS e RECALL SKILLS MRS. EVELYN WOOD " RESEARCH SKILLS It is difficult for those who read in the plodding, old-fashioned way to appreciate the sense of freedom that comes with effortless reading. Most of you read the way people did a century ago-word by word, at rates of perhaps 150 to 350 words a minute. But now there is a new and modern way to read. It is called Reading Dynamics. With it you can read at least three times faster than you now do, without skipping or skimming. You can learn this new way of reading in just a few hours a week. It will help you to understand better what you read and to remember it longer. And you'll find you enjoy your reading more. The Reading Dynamics method has been used by many students, United States Senators, Congressmen, educators, business executives and professional people. President Kennedy asked us to give this course to members of his staff in the White House. In the last decade Reading Dynamics has shown more than 400,000 persons how to increase their reading speed and comprehension substantially. We may be able to do the same for you. In fact, if you follow the course correctly, you will at least triple your reading-comprehension rate, or your tuition will be refunded. Learn the facts about Reading Dynamics-plan to join us in this exciting new experience. FREE Mini-Lesson DEMONSTRATION 0 THURSDAY, JAN. 23 N YW-YMCA-350 S. 5th Ave. N L across from Ann Arbor Library L Y 4 P.M., 6 P.M.-8 P.M.J Y See a TV Mini-Lesson Tonight, Channel 62, 10:15 P.M. If You Cannot Attend a Demonstration, callcollect 353-5111 or malcoupon EVELYN WOOD SECOND MESA, Ariz. (P)- Louis Tewanima, who left the Hopi Indian Reservation for Olympic track fame in the days of Jim Thorpe, is dead. Feeble and more than 90 years old, the one-time distance runner fell from a 70-foot cliff to his death late Saturday night on the reservation where he had spent all but five years of his life. In those five years, he went to the Carlisle Indian School, and ran on Coach Glenn "Pop" War- ner's track teams. He finished ninth in the 26- mile run in the 1908 Olympics at London, and four years later came in second to the Flying Finn, Kan- EASUME CUESTr FAMILY ME ALS, GE T TOGET HERS PICNICS, L ATE EVENING SNACKS Phone your order ahead for immediate pick-up service FAMILY RESTAURANT Professional Standings nes Kolehmainen, in the 10,000 "Me run fast good," the Indian meters at Stockholm. No American youth replied. "All Hopis run fast bettered his time at that distance good."' until Billy Mills did it at the 1964 Writing in 1940, Thorpe recalled Tokyo Games. that he, Tewanima, and a third He attended a religious cere- Indian, Frank Mount Pleasant, mony at the Kiva here Saturday made up a team that-beat the 20- night, according to a nephew, Al- man team at Lafayette College, fred Joshongeva, and was return- and later won a dual meet with ing to his home at Shonogopovi, Syracuse. about a mile away. He apparently Thorpe and Tewanima were mistook a beacon light, the nephew sai, tok he ron tril nd el good enough that they were se- said, took the wrong trail and fell donthe cliff. lected for the U.S. Olympic team He was found early Sunday, and, according to Hopi custom, Tewanima spent about a month buried the same day. at Carlisle after the 1912 Games, When he enrolled at Carlisle then returned home to tend his Indian s c h o o 1 weighing 110 sheep and raise his crops. He rare- pounds, Tewanima reportedly ly left the reservation. asked Warner for a track suit. In 1954, the Helms Foundation "What for?" asked Warner. flew him to New York to be hon- "You're not big enough to do any ored as a member of the all-time thing." U.S. track and field team. 1 N H L East Division Boston Montreal Toronto Chicago Detroit New York St. Louis Oakland Los Angeles Philadelphia Pittsburgh Minnesota Wv L T Pts. GFGAj1 26 8 9 61169 112 Baltimore 25 12 7 57 148 119 Boston 20 12 10 50 129 112 Philadelphia 23 19 3 49 160 135 New York 21 17 7 49 146 132 Cincinnati 22 18 4 48 120 112 Detroit Milwaukee NBA Eastern Division W L 34 11 31 15 a 30 14 32 19 25 22 19 28 15 34 Western Division s 32 15 30 17 21 27 sco 20 27 19 29 15 35 9 39 Piet. .756 .674, .682 .627 .532 .404 .306 .681 .638 .438 .426' .396 .300 .188 West Division 22 11 11 16 24 6 15 20 6 11 23 11 10 28 7 9 29 7 GB 3% 3% 5 10 16- 21 2 11Y2 12 13% 18Y 23Y2 55 38 36 33 27 25 126 111 92 95 115 101 88 Los Angeles 146 Atlanta 118 Chicago 125 San Franci 158 San Diego 155 Seattle Phoenix Sunday's Results Boston 5, Toronto 3 Philadelphia 3, Detroit 1 St. Louis 3, Minnesota 1 Oakland 6, Pittsburgh 3 Only games scheduled. Today's Game Al-Star Game at Montreal Only game scheduled. Last Night's Results Milwaukee 102, Detroit 101 Baltimore 122, Boston 109 Only games scheduled. Today's Games Los Angeles at Milwaukee Seattle at New York Baltimore at Chicago Atlanta at San Diego Cincinnati at San Francisco Only games scheduled. 4 i February 34, 1969 Become a part of the better idea company in the following fields: Design Engineering Design implementation-packaging-cost manu- facturing feasibility-vendor consulting. Development Engineering Vehicle systems and component development- engineering evaluation. """ Test Engineering Program, facilities, and methods development- vehicle systems and component testing. Technical Computer Systems Engineering Manufacturing Engineering Process engineering-pJant layout-tool design-- material handling-Industrial engineering. Plant Engineering Maintenance control and scheduling-equipment installation-stru'ctural changes-utility services. Quality Control In-process inspection and material testing-sup- plier quality control-machine capability-product testing. Prrbuir'rnn Crnntrni