PAGE SIX' THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. JAN17ARY 12. 1906 PAGE SIX TUE IUICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 12. 19~6 , . , Harold Herman: Hockey's'Cool' Netminder FRATERNITY By GRAYLE HOWLETT There are certain things you have to accept: David will always say "good night" to Chet; stay- pressed pants will wrinkle; and goalies will have hives. Perfect predictions-as sure as finals and tuition payments. But this has not been a good I headache pills since his goalie! problems have been solved, com-3 mented on Herman's play by say- ing, "He's just been terrific. As a sophomore he has done a great job. You know, a good goalie gives confidence to a team and con- fidence allows it to take a few chances. Harold gives this con-! fidence. He has been the heart ofj This includes pretty strong company since Bob Gray, an All- American in the nets, played for the Blue and led them to an NCAA championship in 1963-4. Russian Roulette "Herm's" motive for spending' weekends looking down the barrel of the enemies' sticks is quite simple-he thrives on it. "I love being out there," says Herman, "even though it gets a little nerve- wracking. On Fridays and Satur- days I see pucks in my sleep, but I always wanted to be a goalie." Usually a goalie embarks on his! career when he is the only kid in the neighborhood without; year for predictions, as witnessed'. the team and I would compare in the football bowls, and now one him favorably to any goalie we more can bite the dust. There is, have had." at least, one goalie who does not have so much as a nervous twitch. Harold Herman, Michigan's sophomore netminder, is the1 1op spoiler. "Heim" manages to sleep at night and his locker is free from tranquilizers, both important o reasons for the icers' current hotskto r Ticrd streak of three straight victories. While other goalies worry about CHAMPAIGN. Ill. ( -Illinois whether or not thei'r ulcers are took over the Big Ten basketball getting properly fed, Herman lead with an T06 victory make savs (32 in11 gmes lead with an 80-64 victory over makes saves (302 in 11 games), icni atngt and he has firmly established Wisconsin last night. himself as Michigan's No. 1 goal- The Illini, pulling away 'when tender necessary, grabbed a 39-29 half- C As thetime lead and went on to score calsofthe their third conference triumph CwithoAtl Rnfrfet Since the fre,-.man earn does not play a regu.ar schedule. last . year was Herman's first year of ,etivity since 1956. "It's a real' ,ad situation, and it hurts being out of competition. It's good to get back in th' groove," sail Her- man and competition sure agrees with him. He concedes that col- lege hockey "is a lot faster. and a lot better brand" of hockey than what he has been used to, but' he seems up to the challenge. In a league where it is tough to win away from home. Herman has been in the nets for three conference victories-all on the road. His best game, according toI Coach Renfrew, was against Den- ver. Badgers Straigyht ag urpiising "quickncss and the ity to make the key save," re- ulting 'n 52 saves last weekend i nst Minnesota. Team Show C rtainly much of the improve- nent of the puckmen the last few weeks must be ciedited to Harold errran, but, according to him, it ha:: not been a one man show: "I think we're surprising everyone. It has been a complete team effort with everyone giving over 100 per cent. It's our spirit." "Herm" is reluctant to talk about the team's future, prefer- ring to play them one at a time, but it is obvious that he is gun- ning to play for another national championship team. Even though Michigan Tech is 6-0 in the conference without having played a home game, and most of the sportswriters have al- ready given them the title, with a guy like Harold Herman who thinks goalies lead normal lives, the "M" icers might destroy an- other forecast. 4 0 l {kk I} I I 1 1 held scoreless for some seven" minutes. The Badgers battled back to pull within five points at 60-55 late in the second half but again° Illinois sped ahead to insure its1 victory. Don Freeman led the Illini with HAROLD HERMAN 21 points and sophomore Rich Jones followed with 25. High for skates. Since sneakers tend to cut the Badgers was Ken Barnes with down skating speed, he is placed 15. in the goals with the instructions "Out there, he was fantastic in the clutch." Herman, a little reticent on what his finest game was, agrees that the Denver game was the turning point for him, and readily admits that he is, "playing the best hockey" of his life. His "best hockey" includes aj 1 W1b11VUtt a ucluaI+. I WCHA Standings Michigan Tech MICHIGAN Colorado College North Dakota Michigan State Denver Minnesota Minnesota, Duluth W L 6 0 3 1 3 1 5 3 2 4 2 4 2 5 0 5 Pct. 1.000 .750 .750 .625 .333 .333 .286 .000 The victory lifted Illinois one- half game ahead of defending' champion Michigan and Michigan State, both of whom are tied for. second place with 2-0 records. The Illini actually sealed the game near the halfway mark when they built a 31-29 lead into a 42-{ 29 advantage as Wisconsin was SPORT SHORTS: Toin Rank'pd fluUv Illinois travels to Purdue toi face the Boilermakers this Satur- day. Purdue is winless on the; season. Michigan, meanwhile, isi also on the road at Northwestern in a bout with the high-scoring Wildcats on Saturday.{ I TWO NON-CURRICULAR COURSES Sponsored by The University of Michigan, Office of Religious Affairs Beginning Thursday, January 13: Contemporary Catholic Theology. Ten weeks, Thursdays, 1 :30-3:00 p.m. Student Activties Building, Room 3545. Instructor: The Rev. William J. Ennen, M.A. Beginning Tuesday, January 18: Religious Thought in Contemporary Europe. Twelve weeks, Tuesdays, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Busi- ness Administration Building, Rcom 76. In- structors. N. Patrick Murray, Ph.D. and Charles Minnemann, EMU. A $25.00 registration will be required for this course only, as it is being offered under the auspices of the University Center for Adult Education as a pre-requisite for any who wish to participate in the "Euro- pean Study Seminar" in the summer of 1966; j this seven-week travel-study program through England and the continent will feature visits with Emil Brunner, John A.T. Robinson, HansI Kung, Oscar Cullman, Kenneth Cragg, Helmut Thielicke, Thomas Torrence, Eberhard Bethge, W.A. Visser't hooft, and Helmut Gollwitzer. For application forms and or further infor- mation, contact the Office of Religious Affairs, 2282 Student Activities Building, 764-7442. Big Ten Standings l :i ?t , to stop everything in sight. j ---"+' ' v But Herman took to the nets at the age of ten, skates and all,- under his own free will, and he mOT did stop everything in sight. Play- ing in his hometown Detroit inj the Park and Recreation League, By The Associated Press ball victory last night. he compiled an impressive dossier, Vacendak, the game's highest including membership on two state CLEMSON, S.C.-Steve Vacen- scorer with 28 points, shoveled in and one national championship dak's underhand layup with two the layup from about five. feet team. His last year in prep hockey seconds left snuffed out a fine after Duke worked some 50 sec- was spent with the Junior RedClmo ralan gaeDksndfrthfilso. Wings, where he played with , Clemson rally and gave Duke's onCleson called e out with rent Michigan icers Lee and Mike top-ranked Blue Devils an 87-85 Ceo c ed t ime out with two seconds to go, but Randy Ma- Martilla and Bruce Koviak. Atlantic Coast Conference basket- haffey's overhand heave from be- yond midcourt hit high on the right side of the backboard and East All-Stars Crush West; bounded away. Ten Straight The victory, Duke's 10th in a S thNamed Most Valuable row, ran the Blue Devils' record to Smit Nam d Mot Vauabl12-1 over-all and gave them the Illinois MICHIGAN Michigan State Iowa Northwestern Wisconsin Minnesota Ohio State Purdue Indiana W L Pct. 3 0 1.000 2 0 1.000 2 0 1.000 I1 I ..4 1 1 .500 1 2 .333 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 0 2 .000 0 2 .000 E t Y s CINCINNATI, Ohio 0 (P)-The for an examination. Saturday's Games Illinois at Purdue 'Indiana at Minnesota MICHIGAN at Northwestern (9 p.m.) Ohio State at Michigan State HAIRSTYLING to Please !! -CONTINENTALS -COLLEGIATE --RAZOR CUTS Try U of M Barbers (Near Michigan Theatre) j East turned the 16th annual East- West National Basketball Asso- ciation All-Star game into a shambles last night as it romped to a 137-94 victory with a second- liner-Adrain Smith of the Cin- cinnati Royals-leading the scor- ing. Smith, who wasn't selected for the starting line-up, scored 24 points and won the most valuable player award by a vote of sports- writers covering the game. The West never was ahead and any faint hopes it had for victory died when Jerry West of the Los Angeles Lakers, its principal of- fensive threat, suffered an eye injury in the second quarter and had to leave the game, watched by 13,653 fans. West was taken to a hospital Jerry Lucas of Cincinnati and John Havilcek of the Boston Cel- tics, former teammates at Ohio State, combined to shoot the East into a 4-0 lead at the start of the game. West and Guy Rodgers of San Francisco had the West only two points behind at 6-4, but from then on, it was no contest. East Coach Red Auerbach of the Boston Celtics left his start- ers in until near the end of the first quarter and at the first in- termission the East was coasting along with a 33-18 lead. Eddie Miles of the Detroit Pis- tons, another nonstarter, led the West in scoring with 17 points. West got only four points in the 11 minutes of action he saw. r 4 L Engineers and Scientists: Let's talk about a career at Boeing... 50-year leader in aerospace technology SCORES COLLEGE Bowling Green 86, Kent State 83 Providence 86, Rhode island 79 Central Michigan 83, Northern Illinois 64 Todelo 77, Marquette 71 Davidson 81, The Citadel 77 John Carroll 88, Case Tech 62 Texas A&M 75, Arkansas 72 Duke 87, Clemson 85 Illinois 80, Wisconsin 64 Baylor 89, Texas 74 NBA East All-Stars 137, West All-Stars 94 ACC lead at 4-1. Clemson, down 45-42 at the half, cut the Duke lead to three, 60-57, with about 14 minutes left and keptsthe pressure on the Blue tDevils to the end, Gary Helms, whose 24,points led Clemson, scored 14 of them in the second half, and got yoeman help from Mahaffey with 23 points and a game high of 17 rebounds. Close Shave Duke led 76-70 with 6:15 left, but Mahaffey and Jim Sutherland combined to haul the Tigers with- in one, 78-77, at 4:03. Clemson finally tied it 85-85 on Suther- land's jumper from the corner. Then Duke called time out and played for the last shot. Koufax Wins Award Sandy Koufax, the sensational southpaw pitcher who overwhelm- ed opposing batters while setting a major league strikeout record, was the overwhelming choice yes- terday as the Male Athlete of the Year for 1965 in the Associated Press year-end poll. On a basis of three points for a first-place vote, two for second and one for third, Koufax had 778 points. Bill Bradley, Princeton basketball star, was a distant sec- ond with 153 points and South Africa's Gary Player. winner of the U.S. Open golf title, was third with 152 points. Koufax also was named the outstanding male athlete in 1963. Koufax struck out 382 batters last year, topping the mark of 348 established by Cleveland's Bob Feller in 1946. The Dodger left- hander won 26 games and lost eight, and led the National League in earned run ai rage for the fourth consecutive year with 2.04. The top three were followed by Jimmy Brown, veteran Cleveland Browns' fullback; Gale Sayers, sensational rookie halfback of the Chicago Bears, and Willie Mays of baseball's San Francisco Giants. REGISTRATION JAN. 10 thru 17 SOUTH QUAD WEST QUAD Campus Interviews, Monday and Tuesday, January 24 and 25 The most effective way to evaluate a com- pany in terms of its potential for dynamic career growth is to examine its past rec- ord, its current status, and its prospects and planning for the future, together with the professional climate it offers for the development of your individual capabilities. Boeing, which in 1966 completes 50 years of unmatched aircraft innovation and pro- duction, offers you career opportunities as diverse as its extensive and varied back- log. Whether your interests lie in the field of commercial jet airliners of the future or in space-flight technology, you can find at Boeing an opening which combines profes- sional challenge and long-range stability. 3 The men of Boeing are today pioneering evolutionary advances in both civilian and military aircraft, as well as in space pro- grams of such historic importance as America's first moon landing. Missiles, space vehicles, gas turbine engines, trans- port helicopters, marine vehicles and basic research are other areas of Boeing activity. There's a spot where your talents can mature and grow at Boeing, in research, design, test, manufacturing or administra- tion. The company's position as world leader in jet transportation provides a measure of the calibre of people with whom you would work. In addition, Boeing people work in small groups, where initia- tive and ability get maximum exposure. Boeing encourages participation in the company-paid Graduate Study Program at f> leading colleges and universities near company installations. We're looking forward to meeting engi- neering, mathematics and science seniors and graduate students during our visit to r; your campus. Make an appointment now at your placement office. Boeing is an TV RENTALS LOWEST RATES STUDENT SPECIALS HI FI STUDIO 1319 S. Univ. NO 3-7242 ' SKIERS SPECIAL ECON - O - CAR Weekend Rental FREE,, All you pay is 9c per mile with a minimum mileage of 800 miles: FREE GAS, OIL, and INSURANCE ECON - 0 - CAR 663-2033 We rent to students 19 and over 4 I- SULLR SIKIC'LUB A 11-Campus 10 0°