_________________THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1story Repeats in Butts' Move INDOOR CONTEST FRIDAY: Cindermen Ready for Penn State Meet r T w By STAN KULKA Historians like to say that his- tory repeats itself-or, at least, that the patterns of history are repeated throughout the years, if-one waits long enough. In Michigan hockey history, a goalie named Ross Childs was switched from the nets to a for- ward, position. He was replaced in the nets by his partner-in- goal, Jim Coyle. The next year Coyle had to share the nets with an up-and-coming goalie from Regina, Saskatchewan, William David Dave' Butts. Shares Duties The next year Butts found.him- self again sharing goal-tending duties. This time an Owen Sound, Ont., product was the alternate. The season was the. 1961-62 sea- son and the alternate goalie was Bob Gray. Prior to the '62-'63 season, Michigan coach Al Renfrew ap- proached Butts with a plan. It seems that a few promising fresh- man had been lost to this sea- son's team and Renfrew found himself in need of a forward or two. "I asked Dave to give it a try as a, forward," Renfrew recalled. "I told him that we'd wait a couple of weeks os o and see how he performed." Thus is history re- peated: Helps Team breathing room. Then Red Beren- son scored two more (at 13:55 and 15:08) to put the game on ice for the Wolverines. The Blues were unable to turn on the light behind Butts. Only Shutout ',Curiously enough, that has been Butts' only shutout as ;a Wolverine. Last season, Butts had a fine season. He and Gray alternated in the goal. At the season's end, when all the tabulations had been completed, some surprising statis- tics had come to light. Both -Butts .and Gray had fin- ished the season with a 2.7 goals- against record. Still more amaz-. ing i's the fact that they both had the best record in WCHA play and were jointly awarded the Bill Borousky Memorial Trophy for their play. Eight Points So far, Butts has scored two goals and picked up six assists for eight points. He scored one goal against the Chatham Ma- roons in the Wolverines' season opener and picked up the other: T By CHARLIE TOWLE Taking a cue from Speedway racing mechanics Don Canham is planning a few alterations in his track team. Last Saturday, at the Michigan State Relays, Canham found his racing machine was not, up to par, at least not up to Canham's stand- ards of Big Ten track champion- ships. The team managed only two seconds out of the nineteen event runoff. Now, back in the pit (Yost Field House) Canham is planning some adjustments to put the cindermen back into high gear. Busy Bernard Kent Bernard, a sophomore from Trinidad, British West In- dies, is one of the men Canham will be counting more heavily on. Used in only one event in the two earlier meets this year, the 600 yard run in the Michigan Relays and the anchor leg in the mile re- lay at the Michigan State Relays, Bernard finds himself scheduled for three events against Penn State Friday night at eight o'clock. The principal reason for this move lies in the performance of the fleet Trinidadian in his ear- lier two outings. In the Michigan Relays he covered the 600 yards in 1:13, while at Michigan State he covered his share of the mile relay (440 yards) in :48.6. Against Penn State Canham is planning to call on Bernard in the open 440, the open 300, and the anchor leg of the mile relay. Hunter Too Running with Bernard in the 300 yard dash will be Mac Hunter. Hunter has been running 440's in his earlier two outings, mainly as a test for his thigh muscle which has shown, in the past, a marked tendency to exceed its elastic limit. Nowthat Hunter has stayed healthy, and with the Big Ten In- door Championships two weeks away, Canham figures it is time for Hunter to move to the shorter distance where his dash speed will be more felt. Another change in the works for Friday is the moving of football halfback' Denis Jones to active duty on the track team. Listed on the roster but not practicing ear- lier, Jones has been called on to fill the gap left when Dave Raimey signed a professional football con- tract. Friday Canham will be try- ing to find out just what the refu- gee from Elliott-land can do. As a halfback', last fall, Jones established a reputation for speed, running mostly on defensive side of the scrimmage line. Friday he will be competing in the 60 yard dash and the broad jump, Rai- mey's old specialties, and in addi- tion will get a shot at the high jump. Package Deal Besides Jones, Canham has also borrowed Dick Rindfuss from the football team. Just last year Rind- fuss was competing for Scott House's IM track team, but now Canham in his search for more broad jump talent has brought about what must be one of the rarest events in Michigan sports history, the jump from IM track to the varsity. R i n d f u s s had entertained thoughts of trying out for the track team earlier this year but had decided against it because of the conflict with spring football practice. However, after a sales pitch from George Wade, whose specialty is the pole vault, he tried' out for Canham, with the result that he will be appearing Friday' in varsity togs. Another man competing in a different event is Dan Hughes. Billed as a half-mile specialist Hughes has been less than spec- tacular in his earlier perform- ances. For Friday Hughes has beenI moved down to the 600 yard run in the hope that the shorter dis- tance will encourage the sopho- more to greater efforts. Other trackmen in line for Can- ham's regrouping are Dave F main and Des Ryan. Romain tui ed at East Lansing what Canh: termed an "exceptional" perfor ance in placing second in the 6 yard run in a time of 1:13. Ca ham is hoping he will show t same speed Friday when he ru in the mile relay as well as 1 600. Ryan will be moving to V two mile run. Ryan has shown has the stamina and the style go the two miles, but has on been used at the mile distance far. ' f , -, 4' "If I thought he could help the team more ais a forward than in the goal, I told Dave that I'd leave him there," Renfrew con- tinued. "If not he could have his regular position back. "Ross Childs made 'the switch, but he made it in the middle of the season and thus wasn't as adept as Dave is' "Dave has done a pretty fine job," analyzed Renfrew. "He's a fine checking forward and a very good positional player. For a player new to a position, he isn't out of position ,as much as other players who have switched positions." How did Butts feel about mak- ing the switch? Any Position OK "I guess I was a little disap- pointed," Butts reminisced, "but as long as I am playing hockey, any position is okay with me." "As long as I 'am playing hockey"-that seems to be the code of life for 90 per cent of the Canadians. Butts is probably the exception to the ordinary Cana- dian hockey player. The reason for this is that he didn't start playing hockey until he was seven years old. He has been playing ever since. Butts started his hockey career as a forward on his,'grade school team and playing on a parks league. When he was 12, Butts made the switch from forward to goalie and has played that posi- tion until this season. ]'our-Sport Star Butts attended Campion Col- lege High School, where he was a four-sport man. He quarterbacked a provincial champion football team and played guard on the school's provincial champion bas- ketball team. While playing guard, Dave was named All-City guard. In the spring, he was catcher on the baseball team. There is an interesting side- light to the basketball-hockey story. The season of both sports coincide. To be able to play on, both teams, Butts spent all after- noon practicing basketball and then would rush to practice hockey. It is a . great tribute to Dave that he was able to be a star in both sports. Butts played on the Regina Pats hockey team and then sat out a year before he came to Michigan. He has never played Junior "A" hockey., Alternate Goalie In his first year as goalie, Butts alternated in the nets with Coyle. By season's end he had a respect- able 3.42 goals-against per game average and had made 429 saves. Butts turned in a shut-out in his first game as a Wolverine. The game was played in Ann Ar- bor and it was against the Toronto Blues. Both goalies had been play- ing a tight .game and neither team had scored in the first two periods. Al Hinnegan and Bill Kelly scored at 5:53 and 6:57, re- spectively, to give Butts a little BUTTS SWITCHES-The switch from goalie to forward was made successfully this season by Dave Butts. In, the top picture, Butts (15) is being congratulated by a teammate after scoring one of his two goals this season. In the bottom picture, he is blocking a shot as a goalie last season. Also in the picture are defensemen Wayne Kartusch (3) and Captain Red Berenson (9). against Queens. In WCHA play, Butts has credit for five assists. The hockey career of this ver- satile player was almost cut short last year when it was discovered that'Butts had ruptured a disc in his spine during play. However, he received the go ahead from the doctors and has made a strong comeback to be one of the few bright spots in a dismal year. Checks Well "Dave hasn't scored much," ex- claimed Renfrew, "but as long as he checks as well as he has been, he doesn't have to score. I am real happy about his play this year" Butts is a senior in the College of Education and is planning on attending graduate school after he graduates. SSCORtES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Southern Miss. 73, Spring Hill 69 Houston 125, Texas Wesleyan 74. Ball state 89, Wabash 61 Indiana State 71, Valparaiso64 Delaware 87, Lehigh 86 (2 outs) Jersey City State 75, Trenton State 67 Missouri Valley 67, Westminster (Mo) 64 Buffalo 64, Brockport State 60 Duke 79, Virginia 74 Pitt 69, West Virginia 74 Bowling Green 59, Kent State 55 Ohio University 93, Marshall 73 High Point 77, East, Carolina 49 St. Francis (NY)a61, Manhattan 46 Calvin 74, Olivet 65 Notre Dame 82, Gannon 47 Dayton 58, Duquesne 57 W. Va. State 65, W. Va. Tech 64 Toledo 80, Western Michigan 44 Case Tech 81, Allegheny 59 Georgia Tech 69, Vanderbilt 62 Tennessee State 86, St. Bonaventure 85j S.C. State 79, Morehouse 46 Applachian 66, Western Carolina 62 South Carolina 64, Furman 56 Kentucky State 86, Union 0(y) 63 Louisville 70, Xavier (O) 69 (ovt) MIT 88, Lowell Tech 60 Central Conn. 117, So. Conn. 63 Vermont 94, Norwich 77 NBA St. Louis 103, New York 102 Los Angeles 134, Boston 128 Cincinnati 124, Syracuse 122 SPORT SHORTS: NHL Fines Montreal's Blake 11 MONTREAL (P) - National Hockey League President Clarence Campbell slapped a $200 fine yes- terday on Montreal coach Toe Blake for; remarks Blake made about the officiating in the Cana- diens' 6-3 loss to Toronto Jan. 31. Campbell noted that Blake was quoted in a French language Montreal newspaper as having said: "The league should stop talk- ing about the Gallinger case and start talking about the officials, whose work in this game gave the, impression they had wagered on the result." Campbell called Blake's re- marks "completely unwarranted and unfounded . . . a serious re- flection on the integrity of the officials and is clearly in viola- tion of the league rules." Eddie Powers refereed the game, in which Blake drew a bench pen- alty for protesting a Toronto goal. DUNEDIN, F'la. OP)-Gary Play- er still leads the nation's profes- sional golfers in money winnings, but only by a slim margin over all- time high winner Arnold Palmer. Player's second place money in the Phoenix Open put his earn-1 ings at $18,702 for six tourna-i ments. He has won one and placed in the top five four times.l Palmer's $5,300 victory in the Phoenix tournament gives himI $17,100 and a solid second spot. Palmer has won two tournamentsI out of five entered. He set the record last year with $81,448. Jack Nicklaus, the 23-year-old boy wonder on the tournament trail, is third with $13,865. Bill Casper Jr. ranks fourth with $10,- 978 and Jack Burke Jr. fifth with $9,450. The next five in order are Tony Lema, $7,806; Don January, $6,- 470; Bob Rosburg, $6,284; Gard- ner Dickinson, $6,102; and Julius Boros, $4,975. * * * F O R T LAUDERDALE (A') -- Marshall Bridges, pitcher for the New York Yankees baseball team, was shot yesterday night by a woman identified as a girl friend, police said. Bridges was admitted to the Broward General Hospital in Fort Lauderdale with undetermined leg injuries for emergency treatment. Officers said the shooting oc- curred at- a Negro club knowm as the Pride of Fort Lauderdale Elks Lodge shortly after 10 p.m. The woman who allegedly shot Bridges was not immediately identified. LOUISVILLE (P) - University of Louisville trustees voted yes- terday to join the Missouri Valley Conference, ending 14 years of unaffiliated participation in ath- letics. The Cardinals will be eligible to compete for championships in spring sports this year and will try for the football and basketball titles as soon as round robin schedules can be drafted. Louisville has been an inde- pendent since it dropped out of the Ohio Valley Conference in 1949. * * * CHAMPAIGN ()-Deadly gas leaking from a refrigerator al- most proved fatal to Bob Starnes, Illinois basketball captain, in a harrowing experience Tuesday. Awakened by an alarm in his off-campus apartment, Starnes managed to crawl from his bed to a door opening on an outdoor staircase. He lost consciousness for 30 minutes, but was revived by fresh air. Starnes suffered no after-ef- fects a n d attended practice Wednesday. The star, who suffer- ed a sprained ankle in fourth- ranked Illinois' 84-77 loss at Wis- consin Monday night, was pro- nounced fit to start against In- diana Saturday. STake a good trimming and like it! 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