. Rage Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 16, 19 l J P~ Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 16, 19!~ I "Inc -N decently funny!" .Y. TIMES A JACK ROLLINS-CHARLES H.JOFFE Povnal e t l s bananas COLOR by DeLuxe- Unitd Aristsy DAY 'URDAY ''61 E SAVE! SKI SALE! I K-2was NOWf No. 2 $125.00 $ 99.00 t No. 3 160.00 129.50 No. 4 185.00 149.50 KN EISSL me-1400 $140.00 $109.00 blue star 160.00 123.75 red star 185.00 138.75 SKI-WEAR-save 15-40% PARKA'S-SWEAT ERS-PANTS HOURS:2455 SOUTH STATE Mon., Wed., Thur., BANKAMER"CARD Fri.--- 10-8:30 MASTER CHARGE 1 mile south of campus V Tuesday-10-5:30 accepted 662-7307 Saturday- 0-5:30e WCHA scra FRIG SAT MLB 3 7-8:30-10 p.m. 'M' ICERS LAST $1.25 Friends of Newsreel also Pier Paolo Pasolini'sj Decameron "uninhibited and joyful. . . beautiful, uproarious panorama of early Renaissance life." TIMES MLB 4 7:30 & 9:30 $1.25 ($2 double-feature ARE YOU IN A SHELL? If you feel surrounded by the doldrums of daily life -- break out! DISCOVER YOURSELF IN 1 EITHER OR r one person is needed to Become a member run each of the following committees: of e newly-organ- ized 10-man Execu- Musket tive Programming all-campus student-run Board! musical. Soph Show Applications for all posi- Sophomore tions may be picked up in Class Musical. the U.A.C. office, second floor, Michigan Union, and T must be returned by Friday, February 23. Student-run travel office. Publications Freshman Registrar, U A C Calendar. By ROBIN WAGNER While the Michigan icers are firmly entrenched in the depths of the basement of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, the Denver Pioneers are pacing the WCHA with a 16-6 record, good for 40 points. That Denver Pioneer club, by the way, is the same club that dropped a 6-4 encounter on an innocent Friday night earlier this winter. Although the Pioneers lead the Carlton i s named ear's top.athlete CHICAGO (P)--Cy Young Award winner Steve Carlton of the Phil- adelphia Phils, a close choice over golf star Jack Nicklaus, was nam- ed yesterday the Hickok "Pro- fessionaltAthlete of the Year" for 1972. Carlton, last season' swinningest N'ational League pitcher with a 27-10 record for the last-place Phils, will receive a $15,000 dia- mond-studded, gold-buckeled belt at a special awards dinner h e r e Sunday night. A nationwide committee of sports writers and sportscasters voting in the Hickok poll gave the 6-foot-5 southpaw 81 first-place votes and 349 points, 2 more than Nicklaus. Nicklaus, who won seven 1972 tournaments, including the Mast- ers an PGA, received 67 first- place votes and 327 points. A distant third was veteran pro basketball star Wilt Chamberlain of the Los Angeles Lakers with 67 points, barely shading Larry Brown, the Washington Redskin's National Football League Player of The Year, with got 66%. Fifth with 64 points was Jerry West of the Lakers, followed by Bobby Orr of the Boston Bruins with 55; Franco Harris of the Pitts- burgh Steelers with 43, and Gene Tenace, of the World Series champ- on Oakland A's with 36 . I nearest competition by t h r e e points, they have yet to sew up the title. Michigan State and Mich- igan Tech still play Denver twice' this season and getting past those two contingents unscathed is a monumental task for anyone. Wisconsin's Badgers, sporting a 15-6 slate and 37 points, hold down the conference's runner-up slot with three weekends of play remaining. Home appearances against Minnesota - Duluth and Minnesota and a road affair with Notre Dame composes Wisconsin's ice action between now and play- off-time. Michigan Tech's Huskies, at 12-8, are one point behind Wisconsin in the tight WCHA struggle. Though Tech's record iss not as impressive as its partisans had hoped for at the season's outset, Tech has defeated the likes of Boston University this season and the Huskies definitely will be a squad to reckon with in the upcom- ing playoffs. After taking a trip to North Dakota, Tech finishes the regular season at home against Michigan and Denver. Following Tech in the standings and boasting a mark of 12-6 for 35 points is MSU, a three-time hockey winner over Michigan this season. After leading the WCHA most.- of the season, the Spartans have slumped recently, losing four of their last six games. In fifth place and standing at 14-8, Notre Dame is the only other WCHA team with more confer- ence wins than losses. The last six regular season contests for the Irish are indeed, demanding ones, with two games each against MSU, Wisconsin and Minnesota-Duluth. WCHA Standings ible tightens Minnesnt , North D-)kota -md Jim C:Thoon of North Dakota Minne.-Duluth round out remain- (14-27-41) and Pete McNab of Den- ing playoff spots. Minnesota has ver (18-21-39) round out the top the easiest schedule yet to play five. Michigan's Rick Mallette of the three teams, with two-game finds himself in 18th position tally- series opposing Michigan, Minne- ing 3 goals and 24 'assists for 27 sota - Duluth and Wisconsin. points. Floundering in eighth position in Of the regular WCHA goaltend- the conference, Duluth can still ers, Denver's Ron Grahame has afford to relax as the nearest been the most effective, allowing competition is Colorado College, 16 only 3.1 goals per game, while points behind. It need not be men- making 780 saves. Brad Shelstead tioned who is the sole squad trail- of Minnesota with a 3.2 average, ing Colorado. and Dick Perkins of Wisconsin who The individual scoring race in is permitting but 3.6 goals a game, the conference is paced at the mo- rank second and third among the ment by Eddie Bum acco (25-24- loop's topnetminders. 49) and Ian Williams (21-22-43) of With three weekends of action Notre Dame. Duluth's Pat Bou- remaining before the WCHA play- tette, who gave Michigan goalie offs, only one fact about the con- Robbie Moore fits last weekend, ference is certain: Michigan's is tied for second place scoring- dekers will read about the play- wise with 14 goals and 29 assists off results in the papers just like for 43 points. the rest of us. Volleyball teams show talent in early action 4 A SPECIAL TWO NEW AND DIFFERENT TYPESOF CATALOGUES iri oM0 - 4a t. i 3 ? v REAL TIME 1: ed. by Brockman & Rosenfeld A Catalogue of Ideas and Information- An Interdisciplinary View of New Models and Metaphors of Reality. List Price: 3.95 SPECIAL PRICE: 3.18 THE CATALOGUE OF CATALOGUES: QCompiled by Maria Elena De La Iglesia Everything from Cloaks to Cars, from Sil- verware to Skis-Just About Anything! List Price: 4.95 SPECIAL PRICE: 3.99 316 S. STATE STREET OPEN Mon.-Sat. 8:45 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. - l (F n a s ti 3 3 I t 3p 3p {{b IO p I i '0 v E R b T i TEAM Denver Wisconsin Mich. Tech. MSU Notre Dame Minnesota North Dakota Minn.-Duluth Colorado College MICHIGAN W 16 15 12 12 14 9. 11 11 3 3 L 6 6 8 6 8 10 12 11 19 20 PTS. 40 37 36 35 34 29 27 26 10 8 .. . a film on the-excavation of the historic Q site of Jewish resistance to Rome in the 1 st 40 Century ... will be shown at the &40 BET CAFEp this FRIDAY Feb. 16-8 p.m.-936 Dewey (off Packard) &i. AFTER THE FILM . . . Israeli food, singing, con- versation. Current literature and information on Israel and programs-for students in Israel.0 INFO: 761-3161 I$ $ By MARK RONAN More than once during the span of his colorful career, Ty Cobb was accused of relying as much upon his sharp spikes as upon his bat for his offensive prowess. Understandably, punc- tured opponents were among the most outspoken critics of this practice: yet, few fans co'ild aeree with the nrotestation that sniking is not baseball at its best. However, snikirg is widely re- garded as one of the finer mo- mnnts of another snort, vollov- hall. tho'igh. this snort of snik- ing has little to do with the Gerpia Peach's injurious fo- rays. Indeed, one of the most intri- guing snectator aspects of vol- leyball is experienced in watch- ing a player (generally known as a hitter) slam the ball stream- ing with surorising velocity . In a downward traiectory over the net. Opposing players may strive to halt the streaking sphere, but their desperate diving attempts to intercept its flight are often in vain. The spike shot may well be the most exciting facet of Olympic- style volleyball as played by the Michigan Volleyball Club: how-' ever, the mention of subtler de- mands made upon the players may serve to reinforce apprecia- tion for the spikers. Swift reactions, endurance, agility, jumping ability, and the skill to play the constantly mov- ing ball are required of every FHITG PHI RHO SIGMA Med. Frat. 8:00 Friday, Feb. 16 220 N. Ingalls across from St. Joseph's Hosp. ANN ARBOR BEER, WINE, MUSIC provided phone for information 761-6515 player as his team strives for the fifteenth and game point. Though it was almost certain- ly overlooked amid the abund- ance of last weekends' sport action, the Volleyball Club util- ized all these skills as t h e y opened their season with con- tests with Bowling Green a n d Western Michigan. They emer- ged from the first week of com- petition with an even record, los- ing to Bowling Green by a 3-0 score and defeating the' WMU club 2-1. The Club itself fields t w o separate teams. The open team, comprised of graduate students and older players, compete for the most part against teams sup- ported by organizations such as the YMCA. But it is the undergraduate team which is truly the team of record. This is the squad t h a t actively participates with a large number of other clubs in the Midwest Intercollegiate Volley- ball association. Among, the members of the indergraduate teambare hitters Gary Pittinger; Andy Freivalds, the Club president; and Andy Kiersonis, a freshman of consid- erable talent. Serving as t h e centers, those play-crs who spec- ialize in setting the shots for the hitters, are Bob Fuzoika a n d Bruce Kaplan, another talented freshman. Freivalds spoke highly of the squad, "It does look like we have a very good team with a defin- ite chance to take first place in the MIVA." The acronym "MIVA" actualy refers to the Midwest Intercolleg- iate Volleyball Association tour- nament. Once again the tourney will be hosted by the Michigan Club in Ann Arbor this year on the fifteenth of April. To a large extent the tournament is the en- tire season. It is the general feeling among Association mem- bers that the season schedule constitutes little mere than pre- paration for the Spring Tourna- ment.' Last year, the Michigan club placed third in a field of eight teams in the sports club division, a category reserved for schools at which volleyball does not en- joy varsity status. A second step toward the tour- nament and the determination of the Club's true potential t a k e s place this coming weekend in scheduled play with WMU and Toledo University. I r , I z zz-zzzz Wake Up-There's an Election on Monday ! And It's Important . . . 1 1 Nonviolence: What's Happening in the World Movement A discussion with CHARLES WALKER, Director of the Field Studies Project, Hoverford College. He has directed worokshops SNCC, SCLC, Poor People's Campaign and has recently returned from a series of in- ternational conferences on nonviolent social struggle. Suday afternoon-4:00 p.m. Wesley Foundallion Lounge (Corner Huron and State) I s You can vote for an HRP which will concentrate on changing the system- or for an HRP death-by-factionalism. * You can vote for an HRP candidate who won't let city bureaucrats make up excuses for the status quo-or for a candidate who emphasizes how little the city can do. 0 You can vote for someone who's gone door-to-door to discuss issues -- or for someone who's run a slick media cam- paign. * You can vote for someone who's dis- cussed ways to end the housing ripoff or for candidates whose leaflets ig- nore the issue. Frank Shoichet "NOT INSANE" a COME OUT TO: $1.00 Donation A GAY COMMUNITY DANCEI To Benefit the Human Rights Party FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1973 9 P.M. to 1 A.M.