PAGV SIX[ THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY JANUARY 24_ 1947 PAGE ST~ TINE MICHIGAN DAILY T1TF5~iT)AV JANTTARV 91 1O~ 1--- a Vai 13"n, a. .l[s:,q IL) rm aai FY, 1.701 I y -,-i -- ICERS STILL ON TOP: LESLIE A. FIEDLER ~FINAL EVENT:,j "The Last Usesl of the I ~University" i ~Tues., Jan. 24, 1967 8:00 P.M. Rackham Lecture Hall, Reception following at the Union Writer-In-Residence Puckmen Put Icing On Midway Lead By GRAYLE HOWLETT. When Giant ace Gaylord Perry had racked up an unbelievable record of 20-2 last August, one reporter asked him if before the season he had expected such a slate at that point in the cam- paign. "Well," replied a dis- gusted Perry, "I didn't think I'd lose those two games." Even though everyone should be celebrating the Michigan hoc- key team's 15-1-1 record, you still have to act surprised. "I guess I never thought before the season we'd be this well along in the middle of our conference schedule," junior forward Bruce Koviak offered, "but now that I look back on it we should be 17-0. We should have beat Denver and I don't want to even talk about that tie with RPI." Bushed What the Wolverines did want to talk about was the series sweep over Colorado College last week- end in Colorado Springs, even though they all seemed a little tired. "We left Colorado at 3:00 in the morning after our Satur- day night game," Coach Al Ren- frew explained, "and when you're playing a couple of games in that high altitude out there, well-you can see why we're tired." Paul Domm, sophomore defense- man, interjected that "we should have stayed out there to rest up," referring , to the beautiful resort area of Colorado Springs. The Wolverines have two weeks to "rest up," being idle this week- end, before they tackle Michigan Tech and Michigan State on suc- cessive weekends, Story Time "These next two series should tell the story," Renfrew com- mented. "The fact that we're off this weekend both hurts and helps. We've been going good and you're always afraid that in- activity might stop your momen- tum. But we can sure use the rest." The momentum Renfrew was referring to was generated in the icers' fourth and fifth straight wins, their sixth and seventh in the WCHA, as they held on to the top spot in the conference. "Both teams played well out in Colorado," Renfrew stated, "and our kids skated hard for the first time in that altitude, and don't think that's not a factor. We were changing lines every minute and a half or so, where here we can run them for two minutes." In Friday night's victory, sopho- more netminder Jim Keough turn- ed in his second shutout of the season, and Bob Baird, Dean Lu- cier and Lee Marttila provided the goals in the Wolverines 3-0 back to the series with Michigan whitewash. Tech coming up. "We played well "It took us a couple of periods in spots against Colorado," Koviak to get untracked," Renfrew men- commented, "but if we play like tioned, 'but Keough came up with that against Tech we're going to some great saves and the kids get knocked over. But I think we skated back real well." all know this and we all know Brother Act what we have to do." Saturday night provided a little Renfrew added: "Whenever a more offensive fireworks as the team gets hot you have to guard Wolverines broke a 3-3 tie at the against the letdown. It happened 3:16 mark of the third period to us against Denver and we don't on Mike Marttila's second goal want it to happen against Tech. of the night, assisted for the sec- But because of the crucial nature ond time by his brother Lee. of the series there shouldn't be Ron Ullyot added a cushion at any letdown. We should all be up the halfway mark of the last for it. It's all a question of being stanza to give the icers their 5-3 ready, and in two weeks we should win. Lucier and Ullyot got the be." other two markers and Harold To Beat the Sick Herman went all the way in theoheal the ko twine, turning away 25 shots. Another advantage of the two "We played a much stronger week layoff is that it should pro- game Saturday," Renfrew ob- vide adequate time for healing. served, and our offense really Paul Domm, who went into the perked up. Plus, our defense is the Colorado series with a shoulder starting to play better. We had injury, reinjured it Saturday night many stars-the Marttila boys, but should be O.K. come the first- Lucier, Ullyot, and Bill Lord. But face-off February 3. Koviak and everybody had to skate well be- Lars Hansen also entered last cause of the atmosphere out weekend's play with various ails, there." but nothing serious developed and 7~ I II WCHA Standings 11 MICHIGAN N. Dakota Michigan Tech Denver Michigan State Colorado Duluth Minnesota W 7 8 4 5 4 3 3 2 L 1 2 3 4 5 4 8 9 T 0 0 1. 0 1 0 0 0 Pet. .875 .800 .563 .556 .450 .429 .273 .182 Power Failures Even with a 15-1-1 record, Ren- frew could point to a weakness: "Up until the last period of Sat- urday night's game, our power play hadn't been functioning well. That period we pushed in two on the power plays but we can still work on it. I guess no matter what your record is you think you can play better. You never play the perfect game." Of course, all conversation seems to shift away from Colorado and they should be all right for the Tech encounter. AL RENFREW As Koviak said, "You know, we Critic and Coach don't have too many games left at home, and with the way we've know why they're staying away." been going it's a wonder we I guess it takes a little time to haven't had a sell-out yet. I don't get over the surprise of 15-1-4. UCLA STILL ON TOP Carolina Climbs in Poll; Louisville Slips to Fourth I UNION-LEAGUE RENT FAMOUS This Week inSports FRIDAY Track-Michigan-Relays at Yost Field House, 6:30 p.m. SATURDAY Gymnastics-Illinois (Chicago Branch) at Sports Building, 1:30 p.m. Track-Michigan Relays at Yost Fieldhouse, 1:30 p.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wrestling-Michigan at Minnesota., Li- - - ~ - I Cottage Inn Pizzeria SPECIAL By The Associated Press IThe unbeaten UCLA Bruins are unanimous choices for the top spot in the Associated Press' major college basketball poll for the sec- ond straight week. North Carolina is the new runner-up while West- ern Kentucky and Vanderbilt moved in among the Top Ten teams. The Bruins collected all 39 first- place votes in the balloting by a national panel of sports writers and broadcasters, while North Carolina advanced from fourth place in taking over the No. 2 spot from Louisville. Houston held third place and Louisville fell to fourth. Princeton remained in the fifth position. UCLA, 14-0, downed Portland 122-57 and the University of Cali- fornia at Santa Barbara 119-75 last week. North Carolina, Hous- ton and Princeton were idle, but Louisville, after defeating Dayton 66-50, dropped its second game of the season, 59-58 to Cincinnati. Texas Western remained in sixth place' after beating Weber State 72-38. Kansas, which lost to Colorado and then beat Iowa State, held seventh place. Western Kentucky and Vander- bilt, both unranked a week ago, advanced to eighth and ninth, re- ,spectively. Providence, idle last week, remained in 10th place. Florida, No. 8 last week and New Mexico, No. 9,slipped out of the Top Ten. The Gators lost twice to Tennessee while New Mexico was beaten Brigham Young. by Utah and - 4 YOU!-JOIN THE STAFF TODAY' I -Medium Pizza-one item $125 U NiON-LEAGUE CREATIV PRE II NT JER-ARTS Spaghetti & Rolls... $1 .00 (all you can eat) -12 Fried Chicken . .. $1.00 Salad and French Fries (These prices not good for delivery) Specials Good Mon.-Thurs. 512 E. WILLIAMS 1. UCLA (39) 14-0 390 2. North Carolina 12-1 279 3. Houston 14-1 269 4. Louisville 15-2 255 5. Princeton 13-1 233 6. Texas Western 12-2 206 7. Kansas 12-3 93 8. Western Kentucky 14-1 74 9. Vanderbilt 13-2 67 10. Providence 11-3 50 Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Boston College, Brad- ley, Brigham Young, Cincinnati, Cor- nell, .Dayton, Florida, Iowa, Missis- sippi State, New Mexico, Northwest- ern, St. John's (NY), St. Peter's (NJ), Syracuse, Tennessee, Toledo, Tulsa, University of the Pacific, Utah State, Yale. Scare COLLEGE BASKETBALL Ohio State 82, Purdue 72 Florida State 81, Jacksonville 70 Virginia Tech 77, Pittsburgh 60 Florida 63, Georgia 61 Tennessee 52, Kentucky 50 (2 ovt) American 76, Lafayette 69 Alabama 91, Mississippi State 74 New Mexico State 87, West Texas State 68 Toledo 100, Evansville-90 Denver 115, Oklahoma City 99 NBA Philadelphia 112, St. Louis 105 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR DAN OKRENT i i E ARTS FESTIVAL ! Big Ten Standings -SEN4TS Northwestern Michigan State Wisconsin Indiana Illinois Iowa Ohio State Purdue Minnesota MICHIGAN W L 3 0 2 '1 2 1 2 1 S2 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 3 1 4 Pct. 1.000 .667 .667 .667 .500 .500 .500 .33 .250 .200 ~1' SYIMPO - - WITH Engineers, Mathematicians: EDWARD CHUDECOFF-MUSIC MELVIN FELHEIM-LITERATURE PROFESSOR ROBERT EGLEHART- { { k Contribute to Techni- Programs of Natio.. Significance "IN ) x4n e.ra,.a I4 ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN s A MRS. HANS KURATH-DANCE WEDNESDAYJANUARY 25 lli A Creating secure communications systems and equipments unknown anywhere else. This is the mission of the National Security Agency-a mission which in turn creates problems of a high order of difficulty, re- quiring an uncommon amount of ingenuity. There is no other organization like it... no other organization doing the same im- portant work, or offering the same wealth of opportunity for imaginative graduates in mathematics or the engineering sciences. A separate agency operating within the defense establishment, NSA has a critical requirement for: ENGINEERS. To carry out basic and applied research, design, development, testing and evaluation of large-scale cryto- communications and EDP systems. Engi- neers may also participate in related studies of electromagnetic propagation, complex Comm unrcam..o,-re .e problems in support of the NSA mission. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra, finite fields, probability, combinatorial analysis, programming and symbolic logic are but a few of the tools applied by Agency mathematicians. They enjoy the full support of NSA's completely equipped computer laboratory where many of them often become involved in both the hardware and software of advanced com- puting systems. Theoretical research is also a primary concern at NSA, owing to the fact that the present state of knowledge in certain fields of mathematics is not sufficiently advanced to satisfy NSA re- quirements., CAREER BENEFITS MATHEMATIC To define, formulate mr m u ica A The "Cipher Disk" . .. NSA symbol and one of the oldest and most effec- tive cryptographic devices known. associations and assists you to attend na- tional meetings, seminars, and conferences. Located between Washington and Balti- more, NSA is also near the Chesapeake Bay, ocean beaches and other summer and winter recreation areas. The location per- mits your choice of city, suburban or country living. Starting salaries, depending on educa- 7 30 P.M. X A I to" UIro-A KI fDCnn K A I CrA 0"-"1 1 M, 111i ii '!!Il I Y I I