PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, 26 FEBRUARY 1965 1'AGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. 2R FF~RRTTARY 1QR~ - ZAJL, NU A A,"Kw%,),r3jL%,jL Aovp r U i Icers Put Hopes on Tech Series .>.'V -. Boothman: By LYNN METZGER Diver Deluxe $ By JIM TINDALL This is it! Michigan's hockey team has been working all season to get into the WCHA playoffs, and all of their hopes rest on this weekend's home series with Michigan Tech. Action will begin at 8 p.m. at the Coliseum both tonight and to- morrow night, while over in East Lansing the Spartans tackle Colo- rado College in an effort to catch the Wolverines. Michigan is pres- ently in fourth place by .021_ Should both teams sweep their games the race will be thrown into a tie, which would result in Mich- igan' State receiving the fourth l Michigan earlier in the season when the Wolverines trounced the Huskies by a score of 6-1. In that game Michigan was never behind and scored in every period. The night before, however, it was a different story as Michigan was blasted off of the ice by a fired- up Huskie squad, 10-2. In the Michigan win, it was goalie Greg Page who sparked the Wolverines to victory, as he cane up with one of his best games o the season, according to both coaches. Michigan Coach Al Ren- frew is relying on Page to stoi the Huskie offense again this weekend. The Huskies' leading point-get- ter is winger Wayne Welker, who' ranks seventh in WCHA scoring V i 5 _i s. 5, ,'. f' ? !, s spot on the basis of goals for min- Last weekend Tech edged Mich- us goals against. If both teams igan State by scores of 5-4 and split or lose twice, or if Michigan 4-3 on Spartan ice. should win one more game than Key Defense the Spartans, the Blue will go into One of the biggest factors in the WCHA playoffs against North Michigan Tech's success this sea-: :, , Dakota. Tech Second Michigan Tech is presently in second place in the conference with a 10-5-1 mark. One of those five loses came at the hands of For the best in PAPERBACK BOOKS Browse at FOLLETT'S State Street at N.U. son has been their defense. Spear- headed by goalies Tony Esposito and Rick Best the Huskies have only allowed 43 goals, the lowest in the league, while scoring 81. The Tech defensemen led by juniors Pete Leiman and Terry Ryan along with Dennis Huculak, Bruce Riutta, and Mike Gorman have been improving all season, according to Michigan Tech Coach John MacInnes, and have been one reason for the Huskies'l success this year. The Tech-Michigan series has always been a rough one and with so much at stake in the final weekend of WCHA action, this series is not likely to be an ex- ception. with nine goals and 11 assists. Michigan's Ed Boothman is a Michigan'stMel Wakabayashi still star diver today because he leads the league in individual couldn't make the g-rade as a scoring with 13 goals and 15 freshman swimmer in high school., assists for 28 points, two better As a freshman at Royal Oak than Minnesota's Doug Woog. If Kimball.Boothmnan tried out for Wakabayashi should win, the the swimming team as a free- Chatham junior would succeed styler. "I was a real bad freestyler, Gordie Wilkie, last year's captain and the team was in need of some of the NCAA champion Wolver- divers so the diving coach, Art jnes. Solow, started me diving," Booth- The second scorer for Tech this man remarked yesterday. season has been center Gary Mil- Boothman didn't just become a roy w~ho is eighth ini the confer- top diver overnight. As a sopho-' ence at the present time. more he practiced six hours a day. Al Holm is the third man on "I'd go to the regular practice Tech's line. In the last series with with the team after school and Tech, Holm scored a hat trick. He then I'd come in every night for tallied the first three goals of the about three hours," Boothman ex- game for the Huskies which set plained. them well on their way to their By his junior year. the results 10-2 victory, of his efforts began to appear. 'White' Line That year he finished second in The "White" line, as MacInnes the Michigan State one-meter MICHIGAN'S ED BOOTHMAN likes to call them, is backed up by diving contest. But at that time CE the Bob Toothill-Colin Patterson- Solow left Kimball and swimming Boothman finished second in tt Ricky Yeo combination. These Coach Rick Fetters did not get a to equal, if not better, that mark three Huskies have tallied 35 replacement, so Ed was on his to become a professional diver. points in the WCHA season. own. Tom Polonic is still a question Kimball Sees Potential "I received the biggest thrill of my diving career when I beat out mark for the series. The All- At about this tne Michigans i d in the 1964 NCAA's," America defenseman was in the diving Coach Dick Kimball spot- Gilbertn e 19 4 Na sa University Hospital earlier in the ted Boothman and took an in- Boothman recalled. He was speak- has terest in his career. "When I first ing of Rick Gilbert, the NCAA week with an infection that he hs',wne f16 n ebro saw Ed at the Michigan High winner of 1963 and member of been fighting all seasonichigan isSchool State Championships histhe Indiana swimming team. Last Withtha excptin Mihign is. .year, Boothman edged out Gilbert healthy and ready to take on the junior year, I noticed his poten- for, scorng his own per- Huskies in the Wolverines' big- tial but also noticed he'd need aa for second, scoring his own per- Huskies in thewWokvermnks' big- onal high of 326 points. gest series of the season, for in lot of work to make it as a top. ordertohave a shot as he diver in the Big Ten," Kimball ex- With the Big Ten Champion- MacNaughton Trophy and NCAA plained yesterday. ships in less than two weeks, title the Blue must win this Boothman then decided to come Boothman is busy training in weekend. to Michigan because of Kimball' preparation for the meet. He had and because of its academic rat- I not been enrolled in school the f 4 I I, -Daily-Dave Abineri is a key figure in this year's swimming team's future. Last year be NCAA one- and three-meter diving events, and this year he hopes . This is the last season with the Wolverines for the senior who plans explained. "He is also a great competitor and will perform! equally well regardless of the competition. He doesn't have the build for a diver, but he sure makes up for it in his determina- tion and competitive spirit." In Kimball's opinion Booth- ban's best dives are twisters. Boothman added, "I like doing twister dives best and I know that I can usually count on them com- ing out right." Early Start Boothman is originally from Arizona where he lived until he was 12 and moved to Royal Oak. He started swimming at the age of three which is why he initially went out for the Royal Oak swim- ming team, so he could stay in the water. The first time Boothman went off a diving board was at the age of five, but as ne says, "that was feet first and those kind don't count. I used to like swimming very much, because down in Ari- zona you could swim for the en- tire day for only a dime. It was so hot, who would want to do any- thing else?" Boothman might be a very im- portant figure in tonight's meet with Indiana at Bloomington. Swimming Coach Gus Stager feels that "diving is going to play a real decisive role in the meet and could determine which way it will go." The meet will not have tow- er diving, but in its place will be one-meter diving, in addition to the regular three-meter event. This will be Boothman's last year of eligibility after which he plans to go professional, perform- ing stunt shows and giving diving lessons in resorts. 1 L 1 r I WCHA Standings North Dakota Michigan Tech Minnesota MICHIGAN Michigan State Denver Colorado College IV 1. 'I' 11 3 0 10 5 1 10 6 0 5 70 4 7 1 2 12 0 Pct. .786 .656 .625 .438 .417 .375 .143 ing. He had a B-plus average in high, school and has been carry- ing a B average at Michigan. During his freshman year here. he first dived frommathree-meter board and eight-meter tower. "I had never been on either before in my life and had to start from scratch," stated Boothman. He learned rapidly and as a first semester and so when he came back at the beginning of this semester he had not dived in nine months. Back in Shape Kimball thinks that Boothman1 is almost back in shape as can be1 indicated by his performances in the Michigan State and Indiana dual meets. Against State, Booth- sophomore in NCAA competition man scored 305.3 points for a first was second on the three-meter place in three-meter diving. In board and fifth on the one-meter, the Indiana meet, he tallied 234.15 an All-American in both. Last points for a first in the platform - Free to Michigan , Students 25o to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda. tion, tells which career field lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year - which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other-what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor- tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli- gation. Address: Council on Op- portunities, 550 Fifth Ave.. New York 36, N. Y., UM-2-22 year he finished second in the NCAA's in both one- and three- meter diving. event. "Ed's greatest asset is his con- sistency in competition," Kimball FIVE IN '65: Gymnasts Face Final Foe Aiming for Perfect Slate A OF sound IL insulated construction UflIV(RSITY TOWERS " Now renting for Aug. '65 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. & FOREST AVE. PHONE: 761-2680 By NIKKI SCHWARTZ Five in '65 was the season's motto of the Michigan gymnastics team, and five in '65 it will be. After their close triumph over Iowa last Saturday, the Wolver- ines are assured of at least a tie for the championship and have U IA S G UA RXE F 1 Cologne, After Shave,Talc,Deodorant,Soap Bar, Gift Sets Caryl Richards,,NewYork CAMPUS CORNER PHARMACY 818 State Street NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE ON SOUTH AFRICA VRIDAY KEYNOTE ADDRESS 7:30 P.M. Conference Room, 3rd floor, Michigan Union Professor Thomas Molnar of Brooklyn University in New York, author of Africa: a Political Travelogue and Professor Hugh M. Smythe also of Brooklyn University and author of The New Nigerian Elite will speak on APARTHEID: ITS HISTORICAL AND PRESENT DEVELOPMENT SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. Mr. Dirk C. Rezelman of the Information Service of South Africa will speak on THE SOUTH AFRICAN POLICIES OF SEPARATE DEVELOPMENT Union Ballroom 12:30 P.M. Luncheon with Mr. Joseph B. Phillips of the Ghana Mission to the UN in the Anderson Room'of the Michigan Union. His topic will be: THE WORLD OPINION OF SOUTH AFRICA Tickets: $1.65 at the SGC Offices 2:00 P.M. Seminar Discussions 3:30 P.M. Peter Hooper, Jr., of the U.S. State Department, the Office of Southern African Affairs, will speak on THE UNITED STATES AND SOUTH AFRICA Michigan Union Ballroom THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDozTM keeps you mentally alert with the same safe re- fresher found in coffee. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit- forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while studying, working or driving, do as millions do. . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz Keep Alert Tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. We have a camera we'd like to demonstrate for you. It's called the Honeywell Pen- tax, and it takes a bit of thought to operate. You don't just 'aim and shoot' the Pentax. No indeed. You have to focus it yourself, and the lens opening must be set by hand. CAMERA Sound pretty square? Well --in away it is. So is homemade bread. PURCHASE CAMERA 1115 So. University M only Indiana to defeat to wear the Big Ten crown outright for the fifth straight year. The Hoosiers will attempt to upset Michigan's applecart when they invade the main gym of the IM building at 2 p.m. tomorrow, "Indiana will be a formidable foe," commented. Coach Newt Loken yesterday. "They boast a 3-3 conference record with very impressive wins over Illinois and Minnesota." Small Squad Coach Loken's 16-man squad probably looks quite formidable to the Hoosiers. Indiana's gymnasts are so few in number that they must certainly qualify as the bus- iest athletes around. Their roster had diminished to four when they faced the Illini and diver Jim Ev- erroad was loaned bythe swim team, to compete in the trampo- line. The skeleton Hoosier squad is certainly not worried about an all-around performer. Although Joel Sultin, an Evanston, Ill., sophomore, is the regular all- around man, the small squad is forced to spread themselves thin, and Jim Woodward, Ron Mooar and Bob Lilly also labor in num- erous events. The Hoosiers' tiny team still has some specialists, however, Frank Knuckles, a senior from Indian- apolis, stars in trampoline and long horse. ,Rick Earley, who di- vides his time between diving with the swimming team and gymnas- tics, is top man in floor exercise. No Push Over "Indiana's squad is no push over," is Coach Loken's appraisal. "Their side horse star, Keith Rug- gles, is a good performer. He'll give' us some real competition in that event." The meet on Saturday will be the last chance to see the Mich- igan gymnasts in competition. The Maize and Blue, captained by World Champion trampoline star Gary Erwin, boast an impressive list of champion performers. 4 4 i 41 4 UNIVERSITY CHARTER-MICHIGAN offers the finest economy flights to Europe on CALEDONIAN AIRWAYS, holding Trans-Atlantic Charter licenses from the CAB of the USA, the British Air Ministry and the Air Transport Licensing Board of Great Britain. I MAY 10-AUG. 18 $238 11 MAY 26-JULY 26 233 I.I JUNE 29-AUG. 20 s245 for these low prices ROUND TRIP JETPROP SERVICEr T I AQNuJnn I SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK serving Southern California will have a representative on campus to interview on MARCH 3 Candidates will be selected from the Advanced degree levels of Account- ing, Business Administration, Eco- nomics, Finance and other Business Majors. Liberal Arts degree candi- 4 4 I. Campus 4 ;' III I