THE MICHIGAN DAILY LIKE LAST YEAR: ; : Seven Coaches To Del Tech and Michigan Don't Lead WCHA By STAN KUKLA e first and second place teams st year's Western Collegiate ey Association standings - igan and Michigan Tech - themselves at the opposite of the ladder after the first weekend of play. st year Tech was first and Wolverines were second. Now Igan is in last place and the ies are in second last, setting stage for the weekend series een the two teams at Hough- One of the two teams must ; the series to remain in the ing for one of the four play- Disastrous Series The Wolverines played a disas- trous series in Minnesota, losing 6-4 on Friday and tieing 3-3 on Saturday. The big blow to Michi- gan's hopes came late in the first game when goalie Bob Gray strained his already weak left knee making a save. Gray now has his leg in trac- tion and a decision will be made Wednesday whether or not to operate on the knee. Coach Al Renfrew cites Gray's loss as a big one but is fully confident that Bill Bieber can ably fill his skates. Gray's was the only injury and the team will be in good shape when they fly to Houghton for the big series. Colorado College, last year's cellar-dwellers, leads the league by virtue of an 8-7 overtime vic- tory over Michigan State last Saturday. Since the league stand- ings are determined solely by per- centage points, the Tigers are 1.000 as the Spartan game was their first WCHA game. The Spartans, who were the league leaders going into the weekend's action, dropped two. They lost to Denver on FTriday, 6-2, before dropping'the Colorado College game. The Spartans play- ed Denver last night and meet the Tigers again tonight before they return home for two exhibition games against the Duluth division of Minnesota. The Huskies from Houghton lost one and tied one over the week- end. On Friday the Tech men dropped a 4-2 decision to North Dakota and then held the Nodaks to a 3-3 tie the next night. North Dakota is 2-1-1 in the WCHA, tied for second with Min- nesota, who has an identical rec- ord. The Sioux beat Michigan State 11-4 in an earlier series. Denver is fourth in the stand- ings, with a 3-2 record followed by Michigan State at 3-3.. Denver and Colorado College play a home and home series this weekend, while North Dakota travels to Minnesota for an im- portant two games. The WCHA results to date: Nov. 30--Minnesota 3, Michigan Tech 2 Michigan State 2, Michigan 1 Dec. 1-Michigan Tech 1, Mich- igan 0 Michigan State 4, Michigan 3 Dec. 7-Michigan Tech 3, Den- ver 1 North Dakota 11, Michigan State 4 Dec. 8-Denver 4, Michigan Tech 2 Michigan State 6, North Da- kota 5 Dec. 14-Michigan 5, Denver 4 Dec. 15-Denver 3, Michigan 2 Jan. 4- Denver 6, Michigan State 2 North Dakota 4, Michigan Tech 2 Minnesota 6, Michigan 4 Jan. 5-Colorado College 8, Michigan State 7 Michigan Tech 3, North Da- kota 3 (tie) Michigan 3, Minnesota 3 (tie) Lund Given '62 Coach of Year Award Former Michigan baseball coach Don Lund has been named the College Coach of the Year by the American Association of College Coaches. The award was presented at the baseball coaches' annual banquet. ,Lund guided the Wolverine squad to the NCAA national cham- pioinship last year after, being edged out of the, Big Ten title on the last day of the regular season. His squad won the Big Ten crown in 1961, however. Formerly a right fielder and scout for the Detroit Tigers, Lund left his coaching post here to be- come farm director for the Tigers. A Detroiter by birth, Lund also, coached for the Tigers from 1955- 57. He replaced Ray Fisher at the Michigan helm and was himself, replaced by Moby Benedict as the Wolverine coach. NEW YORK (W) - Seven col- lege track coaches, headed by George Eastment of Manhattan, said Monday they would defy the Eastern College Athletic Confer- ence and send teams to AAU-sanc- tioned meets during the indoor season. The ECAC, in a letter mailed to its 130-member schools last week, "strongly urged" that they boy- cott the indoor meets unless they were sanctioned by the United States Track and Field Federa- tion. The USTFF, with the back- ing of the NCAA, has been trying to wrest sanctioning power from the AAU. The ECAC, in turn, is a member of the NCAA. The indoor season gets under way Saturday with the Boston Knights of Columbus Games. The meet has not sought USTFF sanc- tion. Joining Eastment, who also serves as chairman of the Olym- pic Track and Field Committee, in the action, were Joe Healey of New York University, John Gibson of Seton Hall, Howie Bulgar of Iona, Steve , Bartchold of St. John's, Artie O'Connor of Fordham and Dick Mason of Columbia. They left one "if." If they are specifi- cally instructed by their athletic directors or presidents to boycott the meets, they will follow orders. The action came on the heels of a statement last week by Jumbo Jim Elliott, Villanova coach, who said he had full intentions of com- peting in the indoor meets. However, in Los Angeles, at the NCAA convention, Villanova Ath- letic Director Arthur Mahan is- sued this statement: "The Villanova University track team definitely will follow the pol- icy of the ECAC and the NCAA and will not participate in track meets unless they are sanctioned by the U. S. Track and Field Fed- eration." Chick Werner, executive direc- tor of the federation, said, "Mr. Mahan's statement confirms the solid front of the nation's great track teams presented against the AAU and substantiates the recent reaffirmation by the ECAC in sup- porting the federation." ECAC Commissioner Asa Bush- nell, also at the NCAA meeting, said, "I would be very surprised if any of our members failed to sup- port the action taken at our Dec. 14 annual convention, and our Jan. 3 letters to all members that followed the convention resolu- tion." Bushnell said nearly 100 of 134 member institutions attended the meeting at which the ECAC's res- olution was adopted and the vote in favor was 83-0 with the others AAU Suspends Fitve A ustralian A thletes fy ECAC either abstaining or not attending. He emphasized that there was not one no vote.cpRAIJATION ANNOUNCEMENTS "We originally turned down an invitation to compete 'in Boston," said Eastment. "But It was be-* cause we had a dual meet sched- can be picked up uled with Army that day. How- ever, we decided to sendsome of our seven-line men in order to put in an appearance. "Manhattan will compete in all the indoor meets just as we al- ways have since track was intro- duced in the school 38 years ago." on the first floor of the.SAB Said Healey through spokesman Stan Saplin: "We have full intentions ofe n- tering a mile relay at the Boston - "We will continue as usual,""lKA Gibson commented. "I've seen a lot of things the federation has I been going to do on paper, but G EH' AP R S ETR esn a nn au noGREENE' PAMPER swEAT ERs I've seen no action. You run on tracks, not on paper." k "I've seen the letter from the .CAC and it doesn't impress me," said Bulgar. "We will compete in the indoor meets unless our ath- letic committee doesn't take my'- word." -k ,4)" 1I This is the year for luxury fabrics in sweaters-mohairs, alpacas T TT X Oand angoras. They're such fragile, beautiful things that Greene's have a special treatment for them-A gentle rinse in crystal clear solvent and we hang them to dry (never, never tumble th em). iFleecy naps are carefully combed and brUShed and your sweater Is blo~ked to size. Knit cuffs and waistbands are shrunk to their o riginal BK snug . These garments are precious to ydu so naturally they are to us. We >n promise-tender loving care only-for your best garments. Sweaters cleaned and blocked from 79c Free for City-wide delivery G 'NO 2-3231 N main plant campus east side west side 516 E.'tiberty 1 13 S. University 3033 Packard 1940 W. Stadium NO 2-3231 N 3-3016 NO 3-1336 NO2-2543 anytime} .}Yi 4~i ht.'w! ]1: . "A: ,.4Gl"1 hlYY !i3~:M7D2'nk..S~lb"" 1 FOLLETT'S State St. at North U. I Colorad North D Minnesi Denver MSU Tech MICHIG WCHA STANDINGS W L" o 1 0I Dakoto 2 1; ota 2 1I 3 2 3 3 2 3 GAN 1 41 T 0 1 0 0 1 1 Pct. 1.000 .625 .625 .800 .500 .447 .250 NEW YORK (A') - The AAU announced Monday it has sus- pended five Australian runners who attend the University of Houston for competing in the United( States Track , and Field Federation's open cross-country race in Columbus, Ohio, last Nov. 22. The five are Al Lawrence, Laurie Elliott, Alan Irwin, Geoff Walker and Greg Robinson. Col. Don Hull, executive director of the AAU, who made the an- nouncement of the suspensions, said the Australian AAU was in full accord with the move. He quoted a memorandum of the Australian AAU which was sent to all its affiliated bodies. The memorandum pointed to a reso- lution passed by the International A m a t e u r Athletic Federation which said that no member of the IAAF was to compete in the Unit- ed States except in meets sanc- tioned by the AAU. "The immediate effect of this resolution," the Australian mem- orandum said, "is that any athlete who competes in meets in the United States not approved by the AAU will incur suspension and will be barred from international competition until such suspension is lifted. "In the case of foreign athletes attending a university in the NCAA group, and competing in unsanctioned meetings under the U. S. Track and Field Federation, he will be unable to compete upon return to his home country until the suspension is lifted." The Australian AAU is a char- ter member of the IAAF. "It is incomprehensible," Col. Hull said, "that nations who sus- pend their own athletes who vio- lated the same IAAF resolution would permit United States ath- letes who violated the same reso- lution to be certified as eligbile for the Olympic Games. Any na- tion could properly challenge such United States athletes and the world governing body for track and field, of course, would uphold this challenge. "The AAU of the United States will do everything in its power to prevent the United States from being discredited by such inter- national challenge. Therefore, un- der no circumstances will the AAU certify as eligible for internation- al competition those athletes com- peting in open competition under the auspices of the United States Track and Field Federation. "Probably the only foreign ath- letes who may lose their eligibil- ity are on NCAA scholarships and. are forced to follow the NCAA di- rectives or risk losing their schol- arships." 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