Thursday, February 6, 1;975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Thursday, February 6, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Bo names Schudel as assistant coach s°r s 1 m I formation ,By FRED UPTON Paul Schudel was named yes- terday by football coach Bo Schembechler to replace Elliot Uzelac, now head coach of Western Michigan, as offensive line coach. Schudel comes from Syra- cuse, where he was offensive line coach under Frank Malo- ney. Maloney left Schembech- ler's staff one year ago as de- fensive line coordinator to take the Orangemen's head coaching position. State University, and New Hampshire. He also served two ears as a graduate assistant SatMiami, while obtaining his Masters degree in education. THOUGH SCHUDEL was un- NIGHT EDITOR available for comment after his LEBA HERTZ appointment was announced, it is expected that he will strongly ..;:, ::: ::< .:::...... :<::;:<:;:: contribute to the success of the AX lnt ootaiiproram Playoffs start . . ,. .Open house soon By JEFF LIEBSTER IT'S PLAYOFF time again, and the competition appears to be the best in many years. Tonight marks the beginning of the Independent Basketball 'A' playoffs. This tournament and all others will take place throughout the next two weeks, culminat- ing on February 20. On that Thursday night the IM Department presents its an- nual Open House. Along with the Basketball Championship finals, there will be demonstrations by various sports clubs, including: or coached under him at Miami. These include Chuck Stobart, Tom Reed, Jack Harbough, Gary Moeller, Jerry Hanlon, and Tirrel Burton. Miami known nation wide Michigan football program. Schudel and his wife, Mary, have two small children. ..s.. ............... s Kayak, Boxing, Tae-Kwando and Women's gymnastics, and a NBI G showcase of the entire intramural program. a NBA STANDINGS i t e s is o t TE 30 YEAR OLD Schudel for its "cradle of coaches" was formerly an offensive tac- reputation, has graduated such kle and tri-captain for Bo at men as Ara Parseghian, John Miami of Ohio, graduating in Pont, Woody Hayes, Bill Mal- 1966. He was one of the few lorv oody He, Bl Mrw- men in the annals of Miami his- and Paul Dietzel, Paul Brown, tory to have lettered four years. Bmy , Before comning to Syracuse, is WITH SCHUDEL'S appoint- Schudel was offensive line s ment, seven of Bo's ten assist- coach for two years each at ant coaches have either played William and Mary, Colorado EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Daily Photo by STUART HOLLANDEF SENIOR LEFT-WINGER Frank Werner (16) rides a Minnesota Gopher heavily into the board in last year's WCHA action. The Detroit native, affectionately referred to by his teammate as "Motor City," is the third leading scorer on this year's Michigan squad with 26 points. i i k Boston Buffalo New York Philadelphia Central1 Washington Houston Cleveland Atlanta New Orleans w 37 33 27 22 L 14 19 25 32 Pct. .725 .635 .519 .407 GB , 314, 16 Admission to the 'evening's activities is free to all students, faculty, and staff members. Next week, swimming highlights the numerous activities. Monday, February 10 the women's open swim meet will take place in Margaret Bell Pool beginning at 7:00 p.m. For further information contact Ann Carney at the Coliseum at 763-5195. Tuesday and Thursday the Residence Hall, Graduate, and Fraternity swimming preliminaries will be held starting at 7:45 p.m. in Matt Mann pool. The finals in all three divisions will take place on Tuesday, the 18th. Division 36 15 26 27 24 27 22 33 6 43 .706- .491 1 j .471 12 .400 16 .122 29 tL~0 Uckih9 I ,lfl',, REGIONALS AT CMU Union garners gather WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Chicago 30 21 .588 Detroit 31 23 .574 K. C. - Omaha 28 26 .518 Milwaukee 24 26 .480 I Frank Werner... .. Ja man of man words By LEBA HERTZ MICHIGAN'S FRANK WERNER may be. having his most suc- cessful year in his college hockey career. The senior forward already has 9 goals and 17 assists in what could be the Wol- verines' best season since 1969. Werner, who grew up in Detroit, started playing hockey around the age of eight and developed his skills through the years. He played with the Junior B Red Wings when they won the nationals. "It was excellent experience," commented Werner, "The Howe Brothers were on the team. They were superb players. As a walk-on, Werner joined the Michigan hockey team in 1971. "I was admitted to Michigan more for academics than for playing hockey," he remembers. "I didn't make up my mind till late so I received no athletic scholarship. In his first year with the Wolverines, Werner discovered he had to change his style to adapt to the WCHA. "At first I was surprised at how the college game was much quicker than Junior Hockey," recalls Werner, who looks back on his career with mature insight and a candid attitude. "The seniors all tried to help you out a lot. I didn't expect that much aid. A freshman is hesitant and it takes awhile to ad- just from one extreme to another. "I have come a long way from freshman year," continued Werner. "I play more and have more experience. I try to help the freshman. I treat them like anybody else. Currently the Wolverines' third leading scorer, Werner needs only one more point to improve on his 1972-73 sea- son, his best, when he tallied 13 goals and 13 assists. He acquired those points on a Michigan team that finished in the cellar of the WCHA with a 6-27-1 record. "The most disappointing time for me was the year we had only six wins," Werner said, "I thought we had a better team. It's just hard to play on the bottom." In his four years at Michigan, Werner has had the oppor- tunity to work under two coaches. - Al Renfrew and present coach Dan Farrell. "Renfrew treated each of us like a person and a man. He expected us to act like one on and off the ice," Werner said. "le wanted us to learn something about life. He stresses that. "Farrell had a reputation before he came here for being a disciplinarian. I think we overreacted. I thought hell, here he comes - 'Little Hitler.' But he wasn't like that. He want- ed to bring us from playing as individuals to playing together as a teem. You ijst can't pl-y hockey and win with indi- vid -l tvlent. This year, like the rest of the team, Werner is still looking for a fourth place finish (the last home playoff spot) in the WCHt\. "We never give up. We all know we got the best team in the league: We just haven't put it together. If we have a chance for fourth spot, it's this weekend. In the Great Lakes Invitational against Harvard, Yale and Michigan Tech, Werne', along with Michigan's leading scorer Angie Moretto and defenseman Greg Fox, sat out the Harvard game due to game misconducts received against Michigan State. The Wolverines still managed to defeat number one ranked Harvard 3-2. "Harvard plays in a league with only one or two good teams, Werner said, "I think the Crimson are overrated. There are much better teams in our league. You just can't relax or a ninth place team will beat you. You can't take any team in the WCHA for granted." Last year, Werner suffered a setback in his collegiate career when he broke his ankle in a game against Michigan Tech. "I knew it was broken immediately," Werner remarked, This weekend, sixteen Michi- gan students will travel to Cen- tral Michigan University in Mount Pleasant for the A.C.U.I.a regionals. The Association of College Unions, International is coor- dinating the event as part of; inter-collegiate competition in a wide range of sports on the regional, national andointer- national levels. THE MICHIGAN Union tra- ditionally participates in A.C.- U.I. men's bowling, bridge and billiards. This year, however, sees the addition of a women's bowling team and the first wom- an bridge player to ever repre- sent Michigan. All players were selected through intra-Michigan competi- tion. To determine the two five member bowling teams, a fif- teen game total pinfall tourna- Iment was held. In the men's division, Keith West topped the group with a strong finishing series of 630, edging runner-up Roger Ziemba by 10 pins. NHL STANDINGS Division I ZIEMBA HAD led the field un- til the final game by virtue of: a 705 series and 256 game, tournament highs respectively. Third man, Doug Shepard moved up from sixth by rolling. 222 and 210 in the last two games. In an earlier tournament this year, held at Bowling Green, Shepard sparked a near miss attempt by the Wolverines to upset Michigan State (2757 to 2719) in the team event by rolling a 645. The Spartans were third in the nation last year. Second in singles and party to a third in doubles, Shepard took second in all events, insur- ing that a pleased Michigan Union would amply sponser fu- ture teams. MIKE CLANCY, Shepard's partner at Bowling Green, plac- ed fourth. Fifth man, Brooke Strang was last year's All Campus Singles runner-up and promises to help make this team the strongest from Michigan in many years. Paul Baker repeated as al- ternate, as he had for Bowling Green, due to working the mid-j topped over half of the men competing. The other women include Deb- bie Marshall, Ruth Zimmerman, Julie Brownell and Nancy Im- men. The inconsistancy during the demanding 15 game tourney' shows a good chance of getting hot at CMU and placing high in every event. The bridge team consists of Frank Bell, Michael Karson, James Lawniczak and Susan Wolf; the billiard players are Tom Clark and Vida Ride. Golden Sta Seattle Phoenix Portland Los Angeles Pacific Division Gte 31 20 25 26 21 27 22 30 s 20 31 . .608 .490 .438 .423 .392 Yesterday's Results Los Angeles 113, Philadelphia 110, ot KC-Omaha 90, Portland 82 Boston 92, Milwaukee 90 Houston 124, N. Orleans 97 Phoenix at Seattle (Inc) Today's Games Detroit at Atlanta Portland at Cleveland K.C.-Omaha vs. Milwaukee at Madison Seattle at Phoenix Washington at Golden St. - For those who haven't been fortunate enough to visit it yet, 4 the Coliseum is currently open for use by sports enthusiasts V2 of all kinds. On weekdays between 4 and 6 p.m. it is open solely for use by women. Most weeknights the Coliseum is occupied by various sports clubs, but there are many hours of open recreation. To find out more call 763-5195. I The Sunday Family program is in full swing and was highly successful throughout January. It offers an opportunity for the entire family to enjoy the extensive facilities for a very reason- able price. If you have any questions, call Mike Stevenson at the IM building at 663-4181. Luv Your Guy or Gal" AN LP RECORD MAKES A PERFECT VALENTINE CHOOSE FROM OUR VAST SELECTION MUSIC SOP The Midwest's Most Comprehensive Record Shop 417 E. LIBERTY 662-0675 Open Mon.-Sat. 10:00-5:30 Ofi.$$$$$$$$$$$.1-$ tl POETRY READING with JOE RUESING and PAUL WEINER THURSDAY, FEB. 6-7:30 p.m. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe 1± Philadelphia N. Y Rangers N. Y. Islanders Atlanta 33 26 21 22 Division 2 Vancouver Chicago St. Louis Minnesota Kansas City Montreal Los Angeles Pittsburgh Detroit Washington SBuffalo Boston Toronto California 26 25 19 13 10 Division 3 L 11 16 17 20 21 22 23 31 34 9 9 19 30 42 11 14 25 33 T Pts 7 73 10 62 13 55 11 54! Spartans win SOUTH BEND (P) - Mich- igan State's unheralded Spar- tans upset 14th-ranked Notre Dame 76-73 last night despite a 31-point performance by Irish sophomore Adrian Dant- ley. S 6 9 6 7 57 56 night shift previous to bowling 47 Saturday morning. It was es- 2 pecially costly as he had aver- aged 200-plus at the 1974 ACU's at Kent State (his second all- 75 events finish there sent him to 71 the nationals at Indianonolis in 53 March). 36 West and Clancy were also 13 on that Kent team, West taking second in the singles event. A , kIU*E1VT.D~e* 31 29 21 13 4 13 13 11 10 5 7 11 7 9 Division 4 34 27 20 12 75 65 47 33 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 4, New York Rangers 3 Atlanta 3, Boston 3, tie Montreal 8, Detroit 5 Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 Washington at California (inc) Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (inc) Today's Games New York Rangers at Philadelphia Buffalo at New York Islanders Minnesota at Boston Toronto at Kansas City Free Exhibition Pocket Billiards "PAUL GERNI" FEB. 20-4 & 8 p.m. Union Ballroom THE WOMEN'S team is led by a hard throwing lefty-Mar- cia Katz, whose 2546 total SCIENCE FICTION FANTASY FESTIVAL FEB. 13-16 ONLY Community Newscenter 1301 S. UNIVERSITY "I heard it crack. When I brok back from it. "However, it was discouragin ligaments. The doctor kept say- ing, "another few weeks, anoth- er few weeks'." Frank Werner did come back. Barring any injury this year, he should have thebest season of his collegiate career. DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 ke it I figured I could come g when I was told I had torn - i STUDENTS! THE Cross Eyed Moose Is RUSHING All Fraternities &s Sororities FREE PINBALL At the CROSS EYED MOOSE 613 E. LIBERTY TODAY: 6-7 P.M. (Show us your shirts or insicnia) bO Y O POLICY U WISH TO INFLUENCE DECISIONS ON HOUSING Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And you'reeating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coinof the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for allof us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency. Point two..By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength in the competitive world trade arena. When the balance of payments swings our way again we'll all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who can really do what you do any better is you. ISSUES? Housing Unit Committee needs non-residence h a I I student members to provide input. TO APPLY CALL WENDE BOWIE-764-6413 1! i i I~ -A~II .. . . ............ DON'T MISS THE ANNUAL KIWANIS SALE THURSDAY-10 a.m.-8 p.m. flfl*)\/ L1fx I 1 b I! .I CI