PAGE SIC THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1867 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 7.1967 Tankers Enter Minn. Relays By GRETCHEN TWIETMEYER Before Christmas, Indiana prob- ably figured they could walk all over any team in the Big Ten and sweep today's Minnesota's relays. Why not? Their divers, among them Ken Sitzberger, Win Young, Charlie Neel, and Jim Henry, are considered the best in the country. Bill Utley in the 200 yard in- dividual medley, Ken Webb in the 400 individual medley, and Sitz- berger are all three national champions. Charlie Hickox, a sophomore who won six gold medals at the recent Little Olympics in Mexico City, is praised by Hoosier coach Jim Coucilman as "on his way to becoming one of the great swim- mers of the world." The list could go on. Vacation may have changed that. Utley broke his jaw in an automobile accident. He will be out for six weeks, along with other swimmers. Unquestionably, Indiana still has a lot of good swimmers left. But the sport often depends on how well a coach can juggle his team to provide the depth needed to earn -oints. And Indiana has lost some of that depth. This does nothing towards elim- mating Michigan's other poten- tial rival, Michigan State. Coach Charles McCaffree's sure-point man is Gary Dilley, 100- and 200- yard backstroke NCAA and Big Ten champion, whom he tabs, "an intense competitor with great abil- ity and all the characteristics of a great champion." Perhaps the key man, however will be Ken Walsh, a good sprinter who will also have to be used in distance events. Michigan's swim- ming coach Gus Stager summed up the squad with seven All Amer- icans tersely: "State looks tough." The Meet Today's competition, which dif- fers from regular dual meet con- .___ ' tests, is comprised of 14 relay events. The relays are open to all Big Ten schools and most of them will be represented. Stager noted that "we should take at least four events, and I'm pretty confident of two others." He has the 400 yard freestyle re- lay, the 300 butterfly, the 200 med- ley and the 400 medley stacked to win. Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball is pitting All-American Fred Brown and sophomore Jay Meaden against Indiana's Sitz- berger and Young, and Ohio State's Chuck Knorr and John Guning. And Kimbal believes his duo could take it if they dive well. Nobody could confidently pre- dict the outcome of today's activ- ity in Minnesota's ancien t, wretchedly narrow pool. But what- ever it is, it should be a good in- dication of the Big Ten's develop- ment. There will be a meeting Mon- day night at 7:00 at the IM Building for all those interested in officiating IM basketball. Pay for IM referees is $2 per hour. Cagers By HOWARD KOHN The way basketball experts see it, a team on its way up is at Yost Fieldhouse today for a passing glance at a team on its way down. A veteran group of wizardly: shooters from Northwestern are favored to gun down Michigan's unproven quint, which is still hid- ing in the umbrage of the Cazzie- Buntin era, at 1:30 this afternoon. After years of "better luck next time" jeers, the Wildcats are on the spot to come home a winner this season. And smashing three- time defending champion Mich- igan, in the Big Ten opener for both teams, would give the 'Cats a running start on the rest of the pack. 'Cat Coach Confident. Northwestern coach Larry Glass, who nursed the lowly tabbies through the second-division blues to a 7-7 fifth-place finish-high- est in six years-last campaign, thinks he has the right team of horses. In a pre-season interview, he agreed that "on paper, at least, Northwestern figures to be right in there." A poll of the Big Ten basketball coaches put Northwestern second, right behind Michigan State, and pushed Michigan down to seventh. Glass, although wary of the prediction about his Wildcats, seemed satisfied with the verdict on the Wolverines. "Besides us, there are five or six other teams that have a good shot at succeed- ing Michigan," he qualified. ... and Cocky Northwestern's three losses in its last four games haven't really di- minished Glass' opinions of his Face Wildcat Wizards NORTHWESTERN (45) Weaver (32) Cummins (43) Kozlicki (35) Burns (34) Gamber * * * Pos. F F C G G MICHIGAN Sullivan (20) Stewart (40) Dill ( 4) Pitts (24) Bankey (32) Terry Gamber, who replaced last kept soph Dan Davis from taking year's starting guard-senior Walt away Cummins' job, but Davis Tiberi. played against Rhode Island and "Gamber gives us an excellent is expected to see more action playmaker who can score." said today. Glass as he explained Tiberi's Despite their relative shortness, benching. Gamber and Burns rep- the Wildcats are shot-gun quick resent an explosive outside scoring and trigger-finger dextrous. threat. Wnlvoi itc U Hih 0 * * * explained. Make WAHR'S your headquarters for all your textbook and college supplies SERVING U OF M STUDENTS SINCE 1883 or any of the other conference' teams. "I still think it'll be a tight race," he said yesterday. "We didn't play exceptionally poor games against Providence or Rhode Island, but we were play- ing on their floor and with their referees. We were in both games up until the end when we seemed to start fouling a lot more, and all the fouls were two-pointers." Northwestern lost to Providence and Rhode Island after knocking down St. John's in the opening round of the New York Holiday Festival. In addition, its scoring total per game dipped over 20 points beneath its 95 ppg average -one of the best in the country- in the tournament. Earlier in the season, the fast- break 'Cats had been stretching to 100-plus scores. No Slow Going Glass, however, stressed that there has been no drastic switch back to the stifling ball-control strategy of the past two years. "We still plan on a wide-open game. This is a running team and we're going to run. On the other hand, I think our defense has also tightened up. "In the Tulane and Vanderbilt games, played right after exams, we acted like a back alley team .. just daring them to shoot so we could get the ball back," he Northwestern ripped Tulane but was knocked off by Vandy. Going into today's encounter, the 'Cats boast only a run-of-the-mill 4-4 mark compared to the Wolverines' 6-4 standard. Northwestern's other loss was an excellently- played 118-116 decision to Ken- tucky. Big Games For the lightly-regarded Wol- verines, today's session is the first in a five-part exam in January. In rapid succession, Dave Strack's class has tests against Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan State and Iowa -and the latter three have also been mentioned as conference favorites. Marking on a pass-fail basis, the grades on these five games should be a good indication of Michigan's chances for another title. "I'm certainly not counting us out of anything,' declared Strack. "I think, though, that a Big Ten opener has got to be rated as a crucial game, especially against a team as talent-laden as North- western.' High Scorer All - America candidate Jim Burns, a 6'4" senior guard, was the conference's fifth top scorer last year and has been hitting for 22 ppg in pre-season bouts. Joining him in the backcourt is the 'Cats' lone sophomore starter, Kozlicki in PivotI Senior Ron Kozlicki, a former 6'6" forward who shares the co- captaincy with Burns, has been shifted to center to replace grad- uated Jim Pitts. Kozlicki, although not as rangy as the bounding Pitts, is a smooth-working pivotman who manages to get position on "We're going to try and play a control game. If we can pull down those defensive rebounds and limit our mistakes, we may be able to slow them up. "Of course, we really consistently controlling the ball tioned. haven't been successful in yet," he cau- taller backboard men. Michigan, which lost only one Flanking him in the frontcourt home game during the past three will be junior whiz Mike Weaver years, is unbeaten at Yost so far and senior dependable Jim Cum- this year. The way Strack sees it, mins. A shoulder separation suf- Northwestern may be in for more fered in practice a month ago than just a glance. Gymnasts Host Indiana, Drive for 'Seven in'' "We'll be playing Northwestern vUiverines useAAeig on a man-to-man basis today. Strack, who has settled on the They shoot so fast that there same five starters he began with would pe too much daylight if we six weeks ago, is anxious that the used the zone defense," said Wolverines use their height and Strack-giving credit to the 'Cat ball-hawking ability to advantage sharpshooters. today. I PETITIONING IS NOW OPEN. FOR SEATS ON TheC Presidential Commission To Study University Decision-Making - : The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society .MASSM MEETING for the winter production of PATIENCE Union Ballroom 7.30 >:A* Sunday, January 8 , By JON SISKIN Head gymnastics coach Newt Laken squirmed in his chair. Anxiously awaiting today's dual meet with Indiana here at 3:15, there was a bit of uncertainty in his voice as he spoke about his 1967 squad. "Today's opener is a question mark," he said. "Eight sophomores are competing for the first time in a varsity dual meet, and you can't be sure how they'll react under pressure. Should they and the rest of the squad perform as they have in practice, Michigan could be off to a fast start in this year's Big Ten race." Winning has become a habit to coach Loken and his bymnastic teams. The Wolverines are out to capture their seventh consecutive Western Conference title. Loken, wno came to Ann Arbor in 1947, has seen his squads pile up an enviable 98-29 dual meet record. On the trampoline, Michigan appears to be unstoppable. Junior Wayne Miller and sophomore Dave Jacobs accumulated nine titles between them over the past year, and the trophies should keep pouring in. Miller became the first gymnast ever to carry off the Mid- west, Big Ten, NCAA, NAAU, Schuster Cup and World' Title crowns in one-year. Jacobs, mean- while, picked' up the NAAU, Nis- sen Cup, and last month won the Midwest Open. Two other seniors, Phip Fuller and his twin brother, Chip, 'are counted upon heavily in the vault- ing event. They along with captain Gary Vander Voort and Wayne Miller make up Michigan's entries in the floor exercises. Chip Fuller placed fourth in the NCAA finals and second in the Big Ten in floor exercise last year. On the side horse, seniors Art Baessler and Chris Vanden Broek will be the mainstays. They will be given able assistance by junior Dave Geddes and sophomore Steve Swiryn. The Wolverines should be strong on high bar with seniors Vander Voort and Vanden Broek, junior Scott Paris and sophomore Mike Sasich. Dick Richards, a sophomore, leads the parallel bars contingent followed by Vander Voort and sophomores Tim Mousseau and Fred Rodney. Seniors Cliff Chil- vers, Dick Stone and Vander Voort will perform on the rings along with sophomore Rich Kenney. Hoosiers Improve Indiana, under head coach Otto Ryser and assistant Jim Brown, a former Michigan alumnus, could pose some problems for the Maize and Blue. Loken calls the Hoosiers a "very formidable opponent which has improved tremendously over the past few years. They scored well in their December meets while showing some fine talent." o'S and THE DRAFT COMMITTEE To Study University Relations With Selective Service PETITIONS AVAILABLE AT SGC OFFICES A FIRST FLOOR, S.A.B. 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