PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1967 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAX DAILY FRIDAY. JANUARY 13, 1961 E. 7M' Goal: Melt Gopher Icers FRATERNITY Millet I SABBATH SERVICE Friday at 7:15 P.M. PROF. ERIC KING-SMITH Visiting Professor from the University of Melbourne and very active in the Jewish Community of Australia "JEWISH LIFE DOWN UNDER; A PECULIAR SITUATION!" John Planer, Cantor and The Hillel Choir will chant the Sabbath Music { By JOHN SUTKUS Last weekend Minnesota's hock- ey team did North Dakota a fa- vor. They fought the Sioux right down to the wire before losing both ends of a weekend series in Minneapolis. The double win while Michigan was splitting with Denver enabled the Nodaks to slip into first place in the WCHA standings, leaving the Wolverines tied for second with Colorado Col- lege. The Minnesotans come to town to face off at 8 p.m. this evening in the Coliseum hoping to do the Nodaks another favor-indirectly -and maybe blow Michigan right out of the WCHA picture, Crucial Contests This series with the Gophers is crucial. The Wolverines must win both ends of this home series with a deep second division club before heading out on a tough road trip, After the Minnesota series, 1Michigan journeys to Coloradof College and Michigan Tech, and plays a home-and-home pair with! Michigan State. Colorado and Tech are both first division teams sive wave, the Gophers found out their regular goalie, Rich Peter- son, was declared ineligible. They, promptly dropped the two game set to North Dakota. A Silver Lining The dark cloudsnhaven't com- pletely set in. The new man, Pete Roussopoulos, played well against the Nodaks, a fact which should help morale. In addition, eight icers are back from last year's team-a squad that did very well cn the road. At one point the Gophers won six road games in a row, part of a 10-out-of-11 streak that enabled them to tie North Dakota for second place in the WCHA after kicking around in seventh place at the beginning of the season. bussi is fourth. Rough and Rugged The defense is just as rugged as giver, with veterans captain Jim Branch and Dick Paradise joined by soph Don Fraser and Jerry Christianson, who was just put on the roster last week. Paradise leads the WCHA for penalties, in league play, servingr34 minutes for 13 Infractions. The Gophers as a team lead the league in all games, serv- ing 262 minutes in 117 penalties- an average of 20 minutes per game. Minnesota must begin their first division drive now and Michigan must win to keep pace with North Dakota. This series will tell a lot about the future for both. The St. Lawrence contest started Returning this year is Gary the Gophers on a mad binge in Gambucci, last season's WCHA which they scored 32 goals in sophomore - of - the - year and three games. The surge enabled the Gophers' scoring leader for them to cop their second straight 1966. Gambucci is now a wing on St. Paul Hockey Classic title. They the premier line centered by Jack mashed hapless Army 12-1 and Dale and flanked by Dennis Zacho. whacked Michigan State 9-3. Dale is the present scoring lead- Riding the crest of this offen- er. Zacho is second and Gam- I Steven Ovitsky, Choir Director 1429 HILL STREET Joan Spitzer, Organist ALL WELCOME JACK DALE I I ENGINEERS season is no exception. They open- ed the season with a shaky de- fense and minus a goalie. Both problems were enough to cause them to drop their first five games in a row. I VICKERS Controls, transmits, and converts power with its HYDRAULIC COMPONENTS AND SYSTEMS for * AEROSPACE " MOBILE EQUIPMENT * MACHINERY 0 MARINE AND ORDNANCE APPLICATIONS Looking for the challenge of real engineering work? Want to learn while having the satisfaction of con- tributing, of responsibility for a part of the team effort? Want the financial and personal develop- ment rewards available with the leader in a growth industry? Vickers is seeking engineering graduates for at- tractive positions in research, design, development, and sales engineering. We'll be interviewing on campus January 18. Plan to talk to us. Sign up now in the placement office. VICKERS, INC. Division of Sperry Rand Corp. College Relations Staff Box 302, Troy, Mich. 48084 An Equal Opportunity Employer and State loves to play Michigan. Third and Then First Minnesota shows up with a 5-8 They then organized enough to losing record, a new goalie, and a place third in New York's Eastern holiday tournament title for the Colleg Athletic Conference Holi- second straight year. day Hockey Festival by falling to The men of the North are tra- Boston, 8-5, and ripping St. Law- ditionally slow starters, and this rence 11-2. This Weekend in Sports TONIGHT Hockey-Minnesota at Coliseum, 8 p.m. Swimming-Michigan at Indiana TOMORROW{ Basketball-Michigan at Illinois Hockey-Minnesota at Coliseum, 8 p.m. Swimming-Michigan at Purdue Wrestling-Northwestern at Yost Fieldhouse, 3 p.m. Gymnastics-Michigan at Illinois ,I -. QUC tIK LEW ALCINDOR of UCLA has been conceded all in the college basketball world except the NCAA scoring lead. After grabbing the first place spot from Alcindor last week, JIM WALKER, who doesn't read Alcindor's press releases, widened the gap. The PROVI- DENCE guard is now averaging 31.0 points-per-game to the UCLA center's 29.7. Alcindor still leads in field goal percentage with 69.1 per cent. The Big Ten failed to place an individual among the nation's top __ -- --- _ _ __ .----_ v- ----_ union-league I I I CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL FROM PARIS VONA FRIEDMAN LECTURE ON ARCHITECTURE MONDAY, JANUARY 1-6... 4:00 P.M. k AUDITORIUM D, ANGELL HALL Reception in A&D Lobby Following ten scorers, but the first issue of conference statistics s h o w e d NORTHWESTERN'S JIM BURNS on top of the league race. Cur- rently hitting at a 28.5 points- per-game pace, he has led North- western to two Western Confer- ence victories in the young season. JIM PITTS, MICHIGAN junior, held the lead in field goal per- centage with a .625 mark, while WOLVERINE CRAIG DILL rank- ed seventh in conference scoring with a 22.5 average. Awards were being passed out by the American Football Coaches Association yesterday, and among the recipients was TOM CAHILL of ARMY, named Coach of the Year for the university division of the NCAA. Cahill directed the Cadets to eight victories in ten games as a rookie head coach. Like honors for thetNCAA col- lege division were voted to DAN JESSEE, a veteran mentor of TRINITY COLLEGE, in Hartford, Conn. Retiring this season after 35 years at the helm, Jessee com- piled a 150-76-7 record at Trinity. CASSIUS CLAY never gives up. He appealed againfor another draft deferment yesterday, this time on the grounds that he is a Black Muslim minister. The appeal was denied, therefore shutting off any further action by Clay, ;unless a federal court should ordera re- view of the decision. 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