THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven, I FOREST TERRACE 5 tx J g ;4 Jt s1001 SOUTH FOREST ~ Fall Rentals Modern Two-Bedroom Apts. . " + !' fully furnished & carpeted each apt. equipped with its own burglar alarm system private parking-free garbage disposals 24 hr. emergency maintenance service live in resident manager Cable TV--free 8 or 12 month lease available See Randy or Andy Young Apt. 211, 769-6374 11 i' r .. This Weekend in Sports FRIDAY HOCKEY--Minn-Duluth, at Duluth WRESTLING-Iowa, at Iowa City TRACK-Notre Dame and Bowling Green, at South Bend GYMNASTICS-Illinois and Indiana, at Crisler Arena, 7 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL-Illinois, at Champaign HOCKEY-Minn-Duluth, at Duluth WRESTLING-Minnesota, at Minneapolis GYMNASTICS-Illinois and Indiana, at Crisler Arena, 1 p.mi.. SUNDAY SWIMMING-University of Toronto, at Toronto MONDAY WRESTLING-Oklahoma, at Crisler Arena, 7:30 p.m. , NOTICE Non-Native Speakers of English All Speakers of English as a Second Language* Are Invited to Take Part in an Experimental Test of English Language Proficiency to be Given in RACK- HAM LECTURE HALL AT 7:00 P.M. ON THE 6th OF FEBRUARY. You Will Receive $5.00 for Approx- imately 1V-2 Hours of Your Time. If Interested You Must Call and Register at the Following Num- ber: 764-2416 on or before February 6th. *No ELI Students Currently Enrolled in the Intensive English Courses Are Eligible for the Test at This Time. jU MICHIGAN TEAMS ARE BUSY this weekend-both at home and away. The hockey teams goes into action tonight with a two game series against Minnesota-Duluth. The track team travels to South Bend to face Notre Dame and Bowling Green in a triangular meet. Pat Bauer (right) pushes home in the breaststroke. The Blue Wave should have an easy time Sunday at Toronto. Jerry Poynton (bot- Daily Staff Photos tom left) figures in the top two on the pommel horse this weekend against Illinois and Indiana. GRAPPLERS TESTED: Michigan faces off against Duluth RUHANI SATSANG Science of the Soul invites you to the annual celebration of the birth anniversary .of the LIVING MASTER SANT KIRPAL SINGHJI Saturday, Feb.,2, 1974 3-5 p.m. FRIENDS MTG. HOUSE 1420 Hill St., Ann Aibor "We are all brothers and sisters in God."-Sont KIRPAL SINGHA Sports-of e Daily I d0 00f IM1 division playoffs start; women swim in open meet By LESLIE RIESTER Tension is building among IM teams as competition swings' into high gear. In all divisions, playoffs in winter sports begin in the next two weeks, as teams lay it all on the line in their quest for a division or all campus championship. In All Campus action,. former national racquetball champion Craig Finger defeated Greg Grambeau 2-0 to capture the racquet- ball singles title. WINNER OF THE 1970 National Racquetball crown, Finger currently devotes his time to his doctoral dissertation in psy- chology. Finger is also a 'former paddleball doubles national champion; and he and partner Dick Pitcher are favored to take the All Campus title. Semi-finals in Residence Hall dual swim meet competition take place next week; when Couzens challenges Huber, South Quad and East Quad faces South Quad Gomberg. Couzens also made the semis in bowling and will face Markley Scott next week. West Quad Chicago takes on Wenley also of West Quad in the other semi-final match. Team paddleball entries for Independent and Residence Hall teams are due February 4. Basketball playoffs in all divisions begin next week. Sigma Phi is favored to repeat as Fraternity champion and Law Gold is expected to win the Graduate title once again. Title in the other divisions are up for grabs this year. DEFENDING CHAMPION Hacker's Row is the team to beat in the co-rec waterpolo playoffs which start next week. The No Names, second-place finishers last semester, will be splashing close behind Hacker's Row again this term. Co-rec entries for badminton, bowling and table tennis are due February 4 The women's division said they will accept last minute paddleball doubles and squash singles entries on Monday. The Fraternity dual swim meet semi-finals will be February 6, 7:30 p.m. at Matt Mann Pool. Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Beta Theta Pi are favored in that meet. Tie Evans Scholars are favorites in the table tennis playoffs next week. IN ADDITION TO the basketball championship, Law Gold is expected to sweep the Graduate squash and table tennis play- offs which begin next week. Faculty action is light this week. Dick Pitcher is favored to win the racquetball singles tourney if he can ace defending champion Dick Lampman in the first round. Pitcher should also win the paddleball singles. Faculty volleyball entries are due Monday. In the "M" Gals division, the Bombers defeated Couzens 3-0 to capture the All Campus Team Badminton championship. Women's Residence Hall basketball playoffs start next week with League One champion Couzens waiting to battle the League Two champion, probably Stockwell. THE WOMEN'S All Campus swim meet takes place Monday, February 4, at Margaret Bell Pool. Team and individual entries are encouraged for the full schedule of races and diving com- petition. The women's division is circulating participant questionaires which can be obtained from the Barbour IM office. Ann Carney has promised that the department will consider participant sug- gestions in decisions concerning the structure and organization of next year's program. All right all you handball freaks. The Handball Sports Club is sponsoring an exhibition at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the IM Sports Building. Lake Forest College, a top-ranked intercollegiate team, and its coach. Mike Dau. will conduct a clinic prior to two By Daily Sportwriters Tonight, by the shores of Lake Superior, the Michigan h o c k e y team faces off with the Minnesota- Duluth Bulldogs as the tight WCHA playoff race heads into its final full month of regular season play. Going into this weekend's two- game series, the Wolverines find themselves tied with Notre Dame and the Bulldogs for seventh place, in the conference. The top eight teams will make the playoffs. With just ten more games left on the schedule, it's obvious these games in Duluth are extremely impor- tant. - Statistically, it would be hard to find two teams more evenly matched. In addition to the same 7-10-1 WCHA records, both the! Wolverines and Bulldogs have identical 13-10-1 overall marks. In WCHA play, Michigan scores an average of 3.7 goals per game. Duluth averages 3.6. In the goals-against category, Mich- igan averages 4.5 to Duluth's 4.7. Neither team has managed a shutout. Perhaps the'only significant dif-I ference in the two teams' statistics is the fact that the Wolverines have accumulated almost 100 more minutes in the penalty box than the Buldlogs. Hopefully, though, Michigan has overcome Its illegal ways, as evidenced by two pen- alty-free periods in last Saturday's win over the Minnesota Gophers. But of course the only numbers! that really count are those in the won-lost-tied columns, and there the t e a m s are even. Or are they? On the surface, yes, but Duluth's record deserves closer examination. Since Christmas, the Bulldogs have been playing incredibly well. All seven of their WCHA wins have come in this period, while they have lost only three times. And the wins include four over second-place Denver, two over third-place Minnesota, and one last Saturday over 1973 NCAA champion Wisconsin. "I've never seen them play this year," admitted Michigan coach Dan Farrell, "but I know they have won seven of their last ten. They seem to be a 'no-star' team but they have been playing well together." The Wolverines will be playing without the services ofbGreg Na- tale, who did not make the trip. The freshman defenseman injured his foot last weekend in the Min- r-sota series. Making the trip, but in "considerable pain" is sopho- more forward Don Fardig, who has a cadhback. Taking Natale's place on the roster and backing up Fardig, in case he falters, will be Russ Blanzy. Unlike last week, when Farrell made a major change in his game plan to upset Minnesota, there are no special plans for the Duluth trip. The only new move will be switching Don Dufek to right wing and Gary Kardos to left wing on the Kardos - Manery - Dufek line. This is being done to take advan tage of Dufek's backhand shot, which he likes to use. It is bound to be an excting series up in the north country, with both teams fighting and scrapping for their payoff lives. Michigan hockey fans can hear the game in 00 ulil p'rs NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA MERKER line three times between now and next Monday . While Monday's match againstj Oklahoma deserves its full share of attention, the Maize and Blue's most important confron- t tion will take place this eve- ning with the third-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes at Iowa. "We won't meet a more solid team up and down the line-up," Bay affirms. "I think we're a little better team, but being away makes the match a toss-up. A trio of freshmen and several outstanding veterans will key Iowa's hopes. Chris Campbell, a 177-1b. neophyte who wrestled Clarion State's defending NCAA champion Bill Simpson to a draw recently, heads the list of Hawk- eye newcomers. Steve Hunte, at 142, and Chris Sones, at 118, con- stitute the other Hawkeye new- comers. I n d e e d, several Hawkeyes should have no trouble dispens- ing with their Wolverine foes. Dan Holm will disappoint his fans if he scores anything less than a superior decision over Michigan's wrestling champion of the week Dan Brink. Jan Sanderson, now wrestling at 167, was good enough at 150 to decision Jerry Hubbard, 6-3, when they met back in 1971. John Ryan will be a pleasant surprise, if he can hold Sanderson to a similar score this time. Iowan 134-pounder Brad Smith, although he has lost twice in a row to Billie Davids, will be a definite upset threat. In their last; match, Smith extended Davids in- to overtime, losing on a referee's decision. To compound Bay's problem, Hawkeye Tim Cysewski at 126 has been destroying his opponents this year. Iowa counts on him being able to do the same to Rich Valley. In particular, Davids' and Schuck's performance could prove decisive, with the expect- ed Hawkeye victories at 126, 1S8 and 167, and the Maize and Blue's solid combination of Brown - Huizenga - Curby - and Ernst. The Minnesota Gophers, whol Michigan wrestles Saturday after- noon, could be surprisingly trouble- some. The Maize and Blue will be! recovering from a supreme effort,. looking forward to Oklahoma and t Minnesota who have the talent to take advantage of any Wolverine! overconfidence. The more formidable Gophers in- clude Jeff Lamphere at 126, Larry Zilverberg, who has lost only to Iowa's Holm at 158, 167-pounder Don Chandler, Evan Johnson, who beat Michigan's Curby at 190 in last year's Big Tens, and heavy- weight Dave Simonson, 1973 Big Ten runner-up to Gary Ernst. If the Wolverines are still un- defeated by the time Oklahoma comes to town, their match will definitely be one of the most important in the nation this year. Although the Sooners have lost; three times, to Penn State,aClarion I State, and number two Oklahoma! State, their best men will be fac- ing, for the most part, rulatively , weak points in Michigan's line-up.! And in dual meets, half the tattle is making sure your best guys can score easy victories, prefer- ably pins. Jeff Callard is generally con- sidered to be the best 167-pounder operating west of the Mississippi. He has been upset by a couple of people this year; how;ver don't look for anyone from Michigan to do the same. 158-pounder Rod Kilgore has lost only once while battling some murderous foes, but the key to the Sooners' destiny will be whether 118-pounder Gary Breece will be able to wrestle. Breece finished second in the 1972 NCAA and was forced to with- draw from the 1973 with an injury. When healthy, Breece ranks right with Jim Brown as the best in the country. If Breece doesn't make it, the{ Sooners' will wrestle at that weight with Shawn Garel, who isn't nearly' as good. "Every one of these three teams has the ability to lick us and licka us good," the concerned Bay claims. "But I don't think they can do it." -CLARKE COGSDILL * * * Thincluds frolic Michigan's track teamventures, to Notre Dame today where they, the host team, and Bowling Green will be involved in a triangular in- door meet. Michigan appears atI full strength with the exception of Pete Hill and Kim Rowe. Hill, a long-jumper and triple-jumper, hurt his ankle and may miss the trip. Rowe returns Mondaysfrom competition in the British Com- monwealth Games. Notre Dame's 176-yard track is the same type as Cobo Hall's, which will give the thinclads a lit- tle practice for the upcoming NC- AA indoor championships. Com- menting on the competition, Michi- gan coach Dixon Farmer stated, "Bowling Green is strong in everyL distance event from the half mile on up. Notre Dame doesn't have a' lot of depth, but they've got a good individual in each event. It should be a good track meet." -JEFF CHOWN * * * Tumblers host The Michigan gymnastic team under Coach Newt Loken go against Illinois and Indiana to- night at Crisler Arena. Among the Wolverines com- peting will be Jean Gagnon who last week against Minnesota broke his high score career-wise in the all-around set one week earlier at Southern Illinois. On the rings, Captain Monty Falb and Joe Neuenswander have their work cut out with Indiana's Jack Melmedahl and the Fernan- dez brothers, Benny and Landy. Malmedahl was the only non- Michigan man to capture a first place event at the Big Invitational. -LEBA HERTZ WCHA Standings 4 A LIVING MASTER KIRPAL SINGHJI Discourses, Books, Tapes, Free Literature, C o' o'r Films. No Charge . Free Vegetarian. No collection. Refreshments. All are welcome. ,. FOR MORE INFO CALL KEN SMITH, 971-3080 PHI DELTA PHI the international legal fraternity A NNOUNCES its first annual COMBINED RUSH PARTY AND ALL-CAMPUS BOOGIE LAW STUDENTS-come and check us out-ADMISSION FREE. EVERYBODY ELSE-just come to drink & dance-50c donation. SATURDAY, FEB. 2-9:00 P.M. 502 E. MADISON BEER and BAND and BEER and BAND FACTS .ON ABORTION YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT: * Abortions are legal in Michigan and easily available for early pregnancies 0 Early abortions need not cost more than $150, for total care * Some r'inics are better than others f U of M counseling and medical staff have approved KEEMER CLINIC.............1-961-9779 SUMMIT MEDICAL CENTER ... 1-272-8450 WOMEN'S HEALTH SERVICE .. 1-272-2100 * All the above clinics perform free pregnancy testing and pro- vide counseling services 0sLate abortions (over 12 weeks from the last menstrual period) must be performed in a hospital, For more information or pregnancy counseling, call the abpve clinics or: EAST CLINIC, Health Service Afternoons 3-5, Mon.-Fri. 207 Fletcher 763-1210 STUDENT SERVICES, Counseling Services 9-5, Mon-Frl. 3rd Floor, Mich. Union 784-8437 ETHICS AND RELIGION 9-5, Mon.-Fri. ! 3rd Floor, Mich. Union 764-7442 MENTAL HEALTH CLINIC 8-5, Moh.-Fri. 2nd Floor, Health Service 764-8313 WOMEN'S CRISIS CENTER 2 pm.-1 a.m. 306 N. Division (St. Andrews Church) 761-WISE W L. T Michigan Tech Denver Minnesota Michigan State Wisconsin Colorado College MICHIGAN Minn - Duluth Notre Dame North Dakota 13 3 11 9 10 6 10 9 ,9 9 8 10 7 10 7 10 7 10 6 12 PTS. 2 28 2 -24 2 22 1 21 2 20 0 16 1 15 1 15 1 15 0 12 i I' THIS WEEKEND'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Minn-Duluth Notre Dame at North Dakota Michigan State at Mich. Tech. Wisconsin at Colorado Coll. Denver at Minnesota DYLAN and only Dylan! SATURDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M. :::