'PAVIV VY'\r' THURSDAY, MARCH 9,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 9,1967 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY A f~ ra"L ,; ; lcers By DAVE WEIR You might call it the beginning of the end; or maybe, the end of the beginning. Whichever way you look at it, tonight's hockey game between Michigan and Michigan State is the first obstacle facing the Wol- verine icers in their attempt to run the NCAA gauntlet. A late season slump dropped the Wolverines into fourth place in the WCHA standings, after they had spent most of the season in or near the top spot. But that part is over and for- gotten, since under the current playoff system, conference stand- ing has absolutely nothing to do with the NCAA tournament. Instead, coach Al Renfrew's squad is looking to the future, embarking on 'The Road to Syra- cuse' with as good an opportunity to capture the title as anyone else. Long Road "We are capable of going all the way," says Renfrew. "But it will be a monumental task. We just Face have to take them one at a time. "This game with State is the key one for us. The boys know that they face a formidable task, and they are definitely 'up' for the game. If we don't win, we won't have any alibis." It's been a strange season for the Wolverines so far. Led by All- America center Mel Wakabayashi, they won their first ten games and copped two Christmas holiday tournaments. Despite Wakabayashi's gradua- tion at the end of the term, the club pulled together and moved into first place in the league at mid-season with an 8-1 record. But a 3-5-1 mark for the last nine games ruined any title hopes, and plummeted the Wolverines in- to fourth place. Cyclical "It's been a season of ups and downs," says Renfrew. "Earlier, when we had to adjust for per- sonnel changes, we began to win and the goys gained confidence. They were playing good hockey. MSU "When the breaks started to go against us, we lost confidence and it showed up in the results. Even so, we played one of our best games of the season two weeks ago when we beat North Dakota, 2-1. "Maybe the Tech series was a turning point . . . although there has never been any 'let-up' on the part of anyone on the team. Breaks and scheduling have play- ed important parts in the turn of events." Giant Dwarfs The Spartans are hoping for a repeat performance of last year's Cinderella finish, when they won 10 of their last 13 games, includ- ing four straight at the end to capture the NCAA title. Renfrew calls State a "big' strong, fine team . . . capable of beating you physically as well as on the score board. They skate real hard and shoot well. They will often simply wear the other team down." Standouts on the MSU outfit include goalie Gaye Cooley, center Tom Mikkola and wing Doug Vol- mar. Renfrew points out that the Spartan netminder "can be the best or worst on any given night. The first time we played him, he had a terrible game and we won 10-4. Since then he's been out- standing against us." Mikkola sat out half the sea- son with a wrist injury and missed the first three meetings between the two teams, all won by Mich- igan. The MSU co-captain did, however, play in the most recent series a month ago, and led the Spartans to a double victory by racking up eight points on three goals and five assists. Volmar is known for his bullet shots on goal and is the defending WCHA scoring champion. Goalie Showdown Cooley's counterpart in the nets will be Jim Keough, Michigan's sophomore goalie from Toronto. Renfrew believes that "goaltend- ing will definitely be the key for both teams." The Wolverine mentor states Showdown Big Ten Cagers Await Frantic Finale Saturday By JOEL RUBENSTEIN the beginning of this season, iron- A chameleon, according to Noah ically, Sports Illustrated dubbed Webster, is "any of a group of the Big Ten as the most powerful animals remarkable for changes conference on the national bas- of color . . . according to the mood ketball scene. Both SI and the of the animal or surrounding con- Big Ten admit to being slightly ditions." surprised. Webster, the dictionary man, Even more people have been as- n bty hahekn dinctbso nuay nh- tounded. From a pre-season pre- may have known absolutely noth- diction of a dynamic league top- ing about basketball, but he ped by Northwestern, the chame- couldn't have been more accurate leon-like 1967 Big Ten has evolved in describing the chameleon-like into a group of teams that play 1967 Big Ten hoop race. badly against each other but sun. -Daily-Chuck Bockoff WOLVERINE WING MIKE MARTTILA turns up the ice as Ron Ullyot leads the way against the Spartans in last month's Michigan-Michigan State encounter. The two teams meet tonight in the first round of NCAA tournament action. THE FINAL SCORE JIM LaSOVAGE L r . Waterlogged Coaches and A Hershey Bar on Olck My original intent concerning the Big Ten swimming meet was to enjoy it, not cover it. But I ended up doing both. Somehow, though, I cannot consider that I actually covered the meet inasmuch as the account that appeared in Tuesday's Daily was more a recapi- tulation than a cover due to the fact that meet had been over for three days. A Big Ten swimming meet has a few unique intricacies which would be unfeasible in just about any other sport, but in swim- ming they have proved both apt and practicable. For instance, the diving coaches of the ten teams are the judges for the diving events. Try it out in some other sport. Can you imagine Woody Hayes as head official in a Michigan-OSU football game? But it works in t diving. The stipulation that makes the system fair and workable prohibits a coach from judging one of his own divers. As one coach put it, "Frankly, we just don't trust each other." In other words, only nine coaches actually score a given dive. And in further control of bias, only five of the judges' scores are used. The two high and two low scores are dropped. Another rule allows a coach to enter four men in a relay event during the qualifying preliminaries and substitute any number of them with different swimmers in the finals. The pur- pose of this rule is to let a coach rest his best swimmers so they'll be fresh for the finals. While this tends to slow down the qualifying times, it could be responsible for the difference between just a win and a new record in the finals. Another idiosyncrasy of Big Ten swimming meets which isn't practiced in other sports is the tradition of the winning team heaving its coach into the pool at the meet's end. I can't quite picture the track team tossing Don Canham on the cinders and rubbing his face in the dirt, but that would be the equivalent. The swimmers pick up their coach and throw him a couple yards into the water, with much splashing and dunking characterizing the ceremony. Coach Doc Counsilman of Indiana has gotten rather used to the practice in the past seven years. So used to it that this year he was ready for it. After the last event he had removed his glasses, and be had the forethought to wear a sport shirt instead of a suit. Up in the press box, the reporters were enjoying the meet to the fullest. Nick Vista, Assistant Director of Sports Information at MSU took care of the paper work for the press. I'd like to take this opportunity to thank him for his efficiency and friendliness, which made the meet all the more enjoyable. Saturday night the first event was the 1650-yard freestyle and there was a lot of speculation among the press as to the out- come. There was, of course, the expected battle between Carl Robie and Bob Windl for first place, but what got most of the attention of the newsmen was the race for third. Ed Glick was swimming for the Spartans and Mike O'Connor for the Wolverines. O'Connor had already finished a respectable fifth in the 500-yard freestyle and seventh in the 200, and although Glick had taken a fourth in the 400-yard individual medley, he had not performed up to ex- pectations. A bet was on. George Van, covering the meet for the Detroit News, bet a Hershey bar (with almonds) against Nick Vista. Nick, of course, backed the Spartan while Van was the Michigan man. For a while it looked like the race could go either way, but a late surge by Glick won the chocolate bar for Vista, payable at the NCAA meet on March 23. Aside from the individual champions, the most talked about swimmer in the meet was a Michigan sophomore, Tom Arusoo. Part of the talk was of the Canadian champ's name (Toomas), which only Nick Vista had any luck in spelling, but most of it was about his swimming. Arusoo was beaten only by Robie and Kevin Berry, the silver and gold medalists in the last Olympics, in the 200-yard butterfly, and he also took eight in the 100-fly and fifth in the excruciating 400-yard I-M. It gives Michigan fans something to look forward to when Robie, Paul Scheerer, Bill Groft, Russ Kingery, and Tom O'Malley are gone next year. sy - t~ that "we know we can win, but after allowing 10 goals to Minne- sota in our last outing, it's hard to say what our chances are to- night. "The defensemen wonder what they're doing wrong . . . the for- wards wonder if their checking is up to par, and if they are drop- ping back fast enough to cover defensively. "But we have beaten every team in the league at one time or an- other . . . and we are no better or worse a team than Michigan State." Renfrew's crew does have one disadvantage however: two regu- lars will miss the contest because of injuries suffered in last Satur- day's loss to the Gophers. Senior Bob Boysen has had his career cut at least one game short due to a knee injury described as "identical to the one suffered by Bob Baird earlier in the season." He will be unable to play again this year. Lee Marttila has a wrenched shoulder and will not see any ac- tion tonight. "He may play in the second game if we can get by State," Renfrew remarked yester- day. "He's been skating a bit in practice this week, but is not strong enough yet to go 100 per cent. "The injuries are tough, but I think we're a team that can over- come that hardship," continued the Michigan coach. "We've never been a 'one-man team." Two new lines have been form- ed asa result of the injuries. Dean Lucier will replace Lee on the "Detroit Line" with Mike Marttila and Bruce Koviak. Sophomore Jerry Hartman will take. over Boysen's job as center on a line with Randy Binnie and either Danny Walter or Al Brook at the wings. "The new lines shouldn't bother the boys too much," hopes Ren- frev, "but you can never tell. Sometimes it helps to switch the line around, sometimes it hurts, and sometimes it doesn't matter. "This has been a good team-a great bunchbof boys with tre- mendous spirit. It's been a long, hard season for these guys and, in a way, we'll be glad when it's all over . . . but we. hope that won't be for another two weeks." Nodaks, Denver Vie for Berth North Dakota and Denver, the first and second place teams in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, will clash head on Saturday night in the western sec- tion playoffs. The WCHA regular season champion, North Dakota, defeated Minesota 7-2 Tuesday night at Minneapolis while runnerup Den- ver won on home ice against Colo- rado, 6-3. The winer of the week-end clash will represent the WCHA western division in the NCAA tournament in Syracuse, N.Y., March 16-18. Going into its last games on, Saturday, the unpredictable Big Ten is topped by Michigan State and Indiana, with 9-4 records, with; third-place Iowa, 8-5, the only other contender. Since the least-recent leaguea champ is eligible for the NCAA regionals in case of a tie, and the latest conference wins among1 the top three are Iowa '56, Indi- ana '58, and MSU '59, this is how it adds up: -MSU or Indiana is the cham- pion, if one of them wins and the other loses, no matter what Iowa does. -Indiana is the champion ift both MSU and Indiana win re- gardless of Iowa's outcome. Indi- ana also becomes the champ if Indiana, MSU and Iowa all lose. -Iowa is the champion if Iowa1 wins, and MSU and Indiana both lose. It sounds confusing and it is. That is the way the Big Ten has1 been all year.1 For the first time since 1935,- no Big Ten player is All-American. Only Honorable mention was awarded to a conference cager this year, to Northwestern'sJim Burns. Further, no Big Ten team is nationally ranked for the 1967 season. This is quite a switch from the last five Michigan- and Ohio State-dominated years. At erbly against outsiders. Witness the uncanny victory of, Michigan, now 2-11 in the Big Ten, over Houston, ranked in the nation's Top Ten with a 23-3 record overall. This Saturday will be a day of duels between the contenders and the potential spoilers. T h e championship hopefuls, MSU, Indiana, and Iowa, will be meeting their respective oppo- nents, Northwestern, Purdue, and Michigan. Anything can happen, and it probably. will. The awesome force of a string of 29 home victories will be one of Michigan State's most potent weapons against Northwestern. The Wildcats, led by Jim Burns, will be aiming for a possible third- place finish. They were picked for first at the start of the season. The hot shooting of Indiana's Butch Joyner and Vern Payne may be too much for Purdue when the Boilermakers attempt to turn the Scores NHL Detroit 3, New York 1 Toronto 6, Montreal 4 Chicago 3, Boston 1 NBA Detroit 120, Baltimore 113 Philadelphia 115, Boston 113 (ovt) .t Louis at Los Angeles (inc) Big Ten Standings tables on the Hoosiers this week- end, Strangely, t h o u g h, the league-topping Hoosiers have twice narrowly averted losses to cellar- dwelling Michigan in the last week. This game may also be a toss-up. In the final game involving a contender. Iowa attempts to gain a championship, while defending champion Michigan looks toward a face-saving win. The Wolverines' Dave McClel- lan, leading the league with a .597 shooting average, though in too few games to be officially ranked, is aiming to continue his torrid scoring streak. The sophomore's field goal record for the past five games is 40-for-63. Center Craig Dill is sixth in the conference with his 21.1 per game point average. In the ranks of the Hawkeyes, Sam Williams stands as the big- gest man on the court; pointwise, that is. The unanimous All-Big Ten junior college transfer is sec- ond to Tom Kondle (27.9 ppg) of Minnesota with a 25.7 average. Indiana Michigan State Iowa Purdue Wisconsin Northwestern Illinois Ohio State Minnesota MICHIGAN w 9 9 8 7 7 6 6 5 L 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 9 11 Pct. .692 .692 .615 .538 .538 .538 .462 .429 .357 .154 COMMERCIAL ARTIST i F ELECTION MARCH 22: Koln, Doane Seek Position On Athl etic Control Board ATTENTION SEN IORS Graduating in April Order Your Advertising Dept. large Southfield, firm is looking for of a Mich., son to transform rough art-layout into final form for production. Excellent opportunity for student. -choose own hours -work at bome -substantial remuneration Please call Mr. Carnick at 313-357-3976 Howard Kohn, '69, and Thomas Doane, '69, have registered as candidates for the position of stu- dent representative on the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics. A campus-wide election, held in conjunction with the regular SGC election March 22, will decide a replacement for outgoing repre- sentative Richard Volk, '67-All- America defensive back. Students hold two seats on the 16-member board headed by Ath- letic Director H. O. (Fritz) Crisler. Each spring a sophomore is elected to a two-year term, which he offi- cially assumes in June, Bob McFarland, '68, executive sports editor of The Daily, will be the senior student member on the Board next year. - Kohn has been a member of The Daily sports staff for two years, currently holding the position of sports night editor, and has been a correspondent for United Press International for the past year. Doane, who went out for the football team even though he wasn't signed to an athletic tender, is a reserve linebacker. Signatures Needed Both candidates were required to obtain 300 signatures from Uni- versity students advocating their candidacy for the Board. The Board's function is to govern ath- letic policy and finances at the University. "In the past four years, student ticket prices have been increased on three different occasions. It is my opinion that the athletic de- partment should exist for the stu- dents, not vice versa, and that a ceiling on ticket prices should be established," Kohn told The Daily yesterday. Kohn also said that he would recommend legislation to transfer jurisdiction of the intramural pro- gram from the athletic department to the University. "The athletic department has been unable to meet increased student needs for updated intramural facilities; and I strongly feel that, with the add- ed boost of state aid, the Univer- sity could modernize the program,' he explained. Doane, in an interview with The Daily yesterday, declared that he also would fightto keep student ticket prices at a minimum. Graduation Announcements in the Fishbowl March 7-10 L B .. UNIVERSAL OIL PRODUCTS COMPANY will be interviewing B.S. & M.S. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS ,! -GTO 2+2 I Overhead Cram Sprint And Now Pontiac Presents THE FIREBIID Available in convertible and hartop coupes with engines up to 400 cubic inches. Call Peter Thom--Klingler Pontiac's student representative for more information. Or come to Klingler Pontiac on Friday or Saturday afternoons. Other times by appointment. Home phone: 662-8820 on March 14 1967 For work in: Process and Product Research and Development, Engineer- ing Research and Development, Engi- neering, Technical Service, Chemical Manufacturing, Construction, Process Control, Computer Activities, Process & Product Marketing, and Market Re- search and Economics. 0 SIGN UP FOR INTERVIEWS AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE 11 KLINGLER PONTIAC 2500 Jackson Road at North Maple 662-3221 End~inmte er s I I I'i 11 I MICHIGANENSIAN 1968 Announces Petitioning For Junior Staff Positions Art Editor and Associate Editor Academics Editor and Associate Editor Organizations Editor and Associate Editor Sports Editor and Associate Editor Campus Life Editor and Associate Editor Supplement Manager and Associate Manager Senior Sections Editor. Associate Sales Manager MBA's Are you looking fora company that will recognize you as an individual, provide you with a stimulating growth environ- ment, and expect you to grow and progress to your fullest potential in the shortest period of time? Especially when this potential includes top level management. For EE's and ME's with Graduate and Undergraduate De- grees, we have positions available in Design and Develop- ment, Project Engineering, Applications Engineering, Test Equipment Design, Manufacturing and Production Supervi- sion and Product Engineering. For MBA's with Engineering Undergraduate Degrees, we have positions in Program Management and as Assistants to Several of Our Officers. We're a small company (1500 employees and $25 million in sales), but we plan on getting much larger. If you are interested in discussing a future with us, a rperesentative will be on campus March 21. See your placement office for details. I I L