PAGE SI THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY_ MARCH 1'EARS', PAG SIIH IHGNDIYTJ~A ~AEf O IL U ,13xr,. ., flt*t,&A 1, 1Qvo a_~ '1, Spartans Face-off for Title Shot r 0 yI h E 1. What's up? Looking for my wallet. 8. The last time I dropped in you were taking the sink apart to get at your tiepin. j didn't want it to rust. 0 - 5. How come you have so much trouble keeping your hands on your capital? They don't call me Hot Fingers for nothing. 0 I By GRAYLE HOWLETT 72 times in 16 fpr'nn p. games in the con-I 2. In the lighting fixture? I once found my watch there. ;f 4 A month ago you left your clarinet on the bus to Boston. I really miss the old licorice stick. KY 6. If you want to start hanging on to your money, I'd suggest Living Insurance from Equitable. The premiums you pay keep building cash values that are always yours alone. And at the same time, the Living Insurance gives your wife and young solid'protection. Sports thrive on unpredictabil-i ity. Las Vegas oddsmakers just Volmar and State lived up to don't have a chance. expectations as the former tallied five points and the latter scored Case in point: The Michigan .seven times to record an easy 7-1 State icers moved into last week- victory over the sluggish Wolver- end's series with the Wolverines ines on Friday. boasting of a 4.5 goal per game Lots of Scoring? average and an offense which in- Now, what prediction could cludes the first and third leading have been made concerning their scorers in the WCHA conference, arematch on Saturday night? Right, Doug Volmar and Mike Coppo re- a game filed with a lot of scoring spectively. Michigan carried sim- where the unlucky fan who slipped ilar credentials as the hot-and- out for a box of popcorn would be cold icemen had rattled the nets the loser. M.W. KELLOGG will answer some important career questions in Basic and Applied Research Process Evaluation Pilot Plant Development Process and Systems Engineering Process Equipment Design Construction A Kellogg representative will be interviewing on your campus within the next week or two. In considering your career, you will find Kellogg's diversity hard to match. Now widely varying facilities around the globe are bearing the Kellogg signature. As an international leader, our operations encompass such fields in de- sign and construction as petroleum, chemicals, petro- chemicals, cement and pyroprocessing, cryogenics and nuclear energy. The word "comprehensive" when applied to Kellogg points to the full technical integration from basic re- search through construction and start-up of the varied industrial process plants. Kellogg is the ideal spot for the career-minded gradu- ate, because more responsibility and more professional competition push him ahead faster. To be included on our interviewing schedule, please contact your Placement Office. If you miss our visit, drop a card to Mr. R. L. Stacom. The M.W. KELLOGG Co. A Division of Pullman, Inc. 711 Third Ave., New York, New York 10017 An Equal Opportunity Employer (M&F)} Wrong. The two teams battled for over 60 minutes without a score until senior forward Barry MacDonald won it for the BlueI with his overtime goal. But the whole WCHA season has been this way and has kept the fans playing "Would you be- lieve . . .?" all year long. In the last month of play only the league - leading Michigan Tech Huskies and the tailenders, Colo- rado College and Duluth, have kept their same place in the stand- ings. Operating on the premise that a hot night could make anybody a winner in this conference, the WCHA will inaugurate a new play- off system. "We switched to the new playoffs this year," Michigan coach Al Renfrew stated, "where every 'team plays every other in- stead of just the top four teams WCHA Standings 1 FINAL W L Michigan Tech 15 4 Minnesota 13 9 North Dakota 13 9 Denver 10 7 MICHIGAN 9 9 Michigan State 911 Colorado College 4 12 Duluth 3 15 T 0 0 3 2 2 Pet. -' j .591 .591 .575 .500 .450 .277 .200 Thursday Night Playoff Round Michigan State at Michigan Duluth at Michigan Tech Denver at Colorado College Minnesota at North Dakota MEL WAKABAYSHI AP POLL: Kentucky StrengtheO as it was last year because we Bessone. coach of the Spartans, figured it would stimulate inter- mildly disagreed: "It's just one est. This gives everybody a chance game now (single game loss elimi- and, I believe, picks the best rep- nation). Personally, I think it's rbsentative." a lousy system. But wait a min- Bessone Disagrees ute. I guess it has its merits be- While up in East Lansing Amo cause if this were last year we'd be too low to get in." While Bessone is making up his mind, the Wolverines are having no second thoughts. "We're ready, and everybody is well," Renfrew commented referring to the rash of flu which had knocked Mac- Donald and captain Mel Wakabay- ashi out for a few days last week and which prevented Mark Thompson from skating against State Saturday night. Still Thinking of Saturday While the playoffs and a pos- b NCAA berth are on every- body's mind, still the memory of Saturday's night thriller lingers. Senior defenseman Ted Henderson put it this way: "The playoffs have a lot of pressure but Satur- day's game was most exciting. I know it just boils down to one game with State but now we know that we can beat them. We really DOUG VOLMAR took the wind out of their sails." Barry MacDonald, whose elev- enth hour heroics gave the icers their first victory over State this year. felt that that 1-0 win "gave us momentum. We're the type of ls L ead; team that can get up for one game. It's perfectly suited for us. We can outhustle thesother team." Certainly the icers earlier wins T enaainst Michigan Tech prove this fact. Henderson and MacDonald are Wake Forest in overtime. seniors who have been through There were no changes in the this before and tend to play down next four positions as Chicago the pressure angle. On the other Loyola held fourth, followed by:and, the sophomores readily talk Vanderbilt, Kansas and St. Jo- about it. Harold Herman, the seph's of Pennsylvania. The four Blue's first yeai goalie, has a dif- were unbeaten last week. ferent outlook. "The playoffs have Providence switched places with a lot more pressure because you Nebraska, the Friars climbing to have to play your best hockey. eighth and the Cornhuskers .slip-But this whole team has the same ping to ninth after losing to Kan- dewng.heafeweksabut e sas, 110-73. Providence lifted its down the last few weeks. But we record to 21-3 with victories over bwi nnhthecntm a mes ." New Orleans Loyola and Holy by winning the next few games. Cross. Lord Plans on Winning Cincinnati is the only new team Another partner in defense with in the rankings. The Missouri Herman is Bill Lord, the sopho- Valley Conference champions, 20- more defenseman from St. Paul, 5, replaced Michigan in tenth who has already planned on win- place ning the next few. "If we get into The Top Ten, with first-place the NCAA tournament," Lord half- votes in parentheses, won-lost way prophecised, "it will be the records through games of Sat- biggest thrill of my life. I've play- urday, Feb. 26 and total points ed in playoffs before because we on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: were Minnesota state champs, but 1. Kentucky (38) 23-0 396 it is certainly tougher in these. 2. Texas Western 22-0 330 The hockey is much better up here 3. Duke 20-3 311 with better competition." 4. Chicago Loyola (1) 21-2 244 The Wolverines will certainly 5. Vanderbilt 21-3 219 have a hard job in containing the 6. Kansas 20-3 215 offensive rocket launched by MSU 7. St. Joseph's, Pa. (1) 21-4 133 this Thursday night when the two 8. Providence 21-3 90 teams face-off against each other 9. Nebraska 18-4 44 at 8 p.m. at the Coliseum, but no- 10 Cincinnati 20-5 37 body is going to make any pre- Others receiving votes, listed dictions. Mike Marttila, who is alphabetically: Davidson, Day- at that awkward age (being a jun- ton, Houston, MICHIGAN, Okla- ior), put it best: "With one game homa City, Penn, Rhode Island, like this, either you do or you St. John's of New York, San don't. We'll be up for this one, and Francisco, Syracuse, Utah, Vir- I can guarantee you that they ginia Tech, Western Kentucky. won't catch us flat." 0 * Rv mho Aec-i.+na Ll-- You don't happen to remember where I parked my car, do you? For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write: Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N. Y. 10019 CEquitable 1965, An Equal Opportunity Employer By The Associated Press first-place votes and 396 points Michigan's Wolverines dropped in the voting by 40 regional ex- out of the national rankings fol- perts based on games through last lowing their loss to Iowa last week, Saturday. Kentucky, which de- 91-82. Michigan still remains feated Mississippi and Tennessee the national top 20, with two last week, faces Tennessee again games remaining, against unrank- this Saturday and Tulane in its ed Northwestern and Michigan final game on March 7. State. Texas Western has 330 points The Kentucky Wildcats, need- on a basis of 10 for a first, nine for ing only two more victories to second, etc. The Miners advanced complete an unbeaten regular one notch after defeating West season, have strengthened their Texas and Colorado State for a lead in the Associated Press col- 22-0 mark. lege basketball poll. Texas West- Duke, which trailed Kentucky by ern, also undefeated, replaced 48 points a week ago, slumped to Duke in second place. third. The Blue, Devils lost for the The Wildcats, 23-0, collected 38 third time this season, 99-98 to Challenging Career Opportunities Exist in ISRAEL for Seniors & Graduates in: * Architecture * Business Management * Engineering Chemical Civil Electrical Industrial Mechanical Textile Traffic We provide relocation expenses to Israel 0 3-YEAR CONTRACTS " ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWING WILL BE HELD ON MARCH 14, 1966 Arrange Your Appointment in Advance Through Your College Placement Office OR Write, Call, or Send Resume to: LUCY D. MANOFF, Director COMMITTEE ON MANPOWER OPPORTUNITIES IN ISRAEL 515 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 (212) PLaza 2-0600 OR The Regional Office Nearest You: 13947 Cedar Road, Cleveland, Ohio (216) 321-0757 0 The "in" thing to do is catch Olds 88 Swing Fever. '-s - t~2 At Fillet -o- Fish . .29c Triple Thick Shakes .. 22c Delicious Hamburgers 15c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. "pS "'Y Campus Financial Wizards .. do all their banking at Ann Arbor Bank. they appreciate the economy and convenience of Ann Arbor Bank's Specialcheck checking accounts ... you pay just 14c for each check you write . . . there's no service charges either) Campus financial wizards also appreciate the fact that Ann Arbor Bank has 3 campus offices . . . and soon to be four .. . to serve their complete banking needs. If you're not a CFW (Campus Financial Wizard) see Ann Arbor Bank soon. or So here. + You're now a candidate for an Olds 88, one of the most formidable machines ever to touch rubber to road! Delta, Dynamic and Jetstar 88-eleven Toronado-inspired models in all-ready to rocket you into spring. Each comes on with standard safety items like windshield washers, back-up lights, more! So buckle up (seat belts are stand- ard, too) and take the cure! At your Oldsmobile Dealer's! LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW! tsillt \ 01 II I