S PORTS Saturday, January 8, 1983 The Michigan Daily Michigan icers top UIC in 4-3 thriller 1 D a s Page, d By JOE CHAPELLE What a difference 68 seconds can make. It only took the Wolverines one minute and eight seconds of playing time to convert a sure defeat into a spectacular victory, as Michigan drop- ped Illinois-Chicago, 4-3, at Yost last night. WITH ONLY 38 seconds to go in the third period, senior Ted Speers sent the game into overtime when' he literally fired the puck past a shocked Rich Blakey. The game winner came with nly 30 seconds gone in the overtime when Jim McCauley took a pass from Brad Tippett and rifled it into the left side of the goal from the top of the right faceoff circle. Junior center Ray Dries put the Wolverines on the scoreboard early with a goal at the 5:52 mark. Dries picked up the puck on a cross from junior Kelly McCrimmon. The 5-7 Mt. Clemens native then backhanded the puck into the left side of the net past Illinois-Chicago goalie Blakey. The score was only Dries' second n the 1982- 83 campaign. Early in the game, Illinois-Chicago simply could not put anything together, offensively. The Flames failed to con- vert on a power play which resulted when Wolverine sophomore Doug May was waved off the ice at the 13:04 mark. Illinois-Chicago only managed 13 shots on goal for the stanza while the Wolverines only garnered 14. MICHIGAN, however, coughed up several scoring opportunities in the second period and allowed the Flames to know the game at 1-1. Illinois- Chicago's Greg Hooper tied up the con- test at 10:11i. In a play straight from the coach's notebook, the 5-9 freshman took a pass from sophomore Oscar Pozzolo and literally fired the puck past Michigan goalie Mark Chiamp. The Wolverines had many oppor- tunities to uip their lead earlier in the period but failed to take advantage of them. When Jeff McIntyre, the Flames right wing, was called off the ice at the 6:58 mark, Michigan simply could not put together a respectable power play. Again, with 10:07 to go in the period, McCrimmon couldn't put the puck past the Flames' Blakey on a breakaway. the Wolverines even outshot the Flames, 16-6, in the stanza but still could not buy a goal. Illinois-Chicago took the lead for the first time in the third period. Majich took a pass from teammate Oscar Poz- zolo on a two-on-one breakaway and poked the puck into the left side of the net with only 1:52 gone in the stanza for his first goal of the night. Michigan, however stirred back to life, knotting the contest at 10:36. the goal came when sophomore Mike Neff fired a shot that deflected off the skate of teammate Tom Stiles into the Flames' net. Illinois-Chicago seemed to have put the game on ice when Majich chalked up his second goal of the evening with only 3:06 remaining n the game. Speers, however, then coughed up a game-saving goal with less than a minute of play left to send the game into a sudden-death overtime period. Y.I Off the Record By BOB WOJNO WSKI Giggling girs, flaming floats .. ... football California-style W~ELL I HAVE seen the promised land and I have seen Bo's boys blow another and I am back. And recovered. Fer sure. On my virgin trip to California I saw mountains and valleys and talked to girls who inhabited the latter. Fer sure. I saw things you never see in the Midwest-like the sun. I saw Steve Smith hurt his shoulder;, which may be the best thing that hap- pened to Michigan on New Year's Day. For though there was no way the outmanned Wolverines were going to beat UCLA anyhow, Smith's injury leaves room for alibi. I saw the Sunset Strip, and I saw a glittery sign that blared its wares: "Nude nudes." As opposed to fully-clothed nudes I presume. I saw the little old lady from Pasadena ... selling watches from inside her trench coat. I saw enough to realize that normal people do not live in Califor- nma. But they rolled out the red carpet and thousands of Wolverines frolicked in tjie lightlife and nightlife. And all the activities preceding the game pushed the three hours of football on New Year's Day into the realm of relative in- significance. Oh that California living ... " They say the place to eat late at night in L.A. is a little greasy spoon called Ship's that has a potted palm and a toaster at every table. It wasn't long before I figured out that it wasn't the food that made it the place to eat, but rather the clientele one gets to dine with. In the space of one hour, we bumped elbows with a UCLA cheerleader (so she claimed), a lovely lady of the evening, Laker forward James Worthy and a blue-haired girl who smiled and giggled when one looked inquisitively at her hair. For $.50 you could get a burger or for $1.05 you had your choice of five Kadota figs or seven stewed prunes. I opted for the burger. " I am now thoroughly convinced that the entire New Year's weekend, in Pasadena is set up to ensure that nobody gets any sleep. The parade starts at 8:00 a.m. California time and with New Year's Eve the night before, well, let's just say nthere were long lines at the porta- johns. But the parade was nice if you like flowers, floats, and flutes. I found especially interesting the IHOP float that burst into flames and the circus float that takes down telephone poles.0 " The overworked-of-the-week award goes, horns-down, to the Michigan Marching Band, which will probably need the next three weeks to recover from its Rose Bowl .10 for five figs? vacation. At every function, party and dinner, the band played. And played. And played. It played until its clarinets fell off and then it played some more. Everywhere you looked there was a pack of little blue bandsmen. They even put on a pep rally New Year's Eve before the big bash at the Hyatt. Alas, they stopped playing at 9:00 p.m. and had to leave at 10:30, long before the revelers had cranked up the 87th rendition of the ''Victors."~ r Mighty courteous folks these Tournament of Roses people. They reserve a little cottage in front of the plush Huntington-Sheraton in Pasadena and wine and dine the press every day, all day. Stop in any time and pick up a sandwich or a libation or two from the open bar. They even have a machine that squeezes fresh oranges for screwdrivers on the spot. The bartender, who looks like he worked the first Rose Bowl in 1902, pours the vodka and smiles sweetly as he fills the glass to the rim. Then he tops it off with a splash of juice and nods pleasantly. " Driving through Beverly Hills, just west of L.A., you find the Century' Plaza Hotel, a ritzy high-rise that presumably houses some of the more ritzy Michigan alumni during Rose Bowl week. It's easy to figure this out because flying from every other balcony is a block 'M' flag. Driving further into Beverly Hills you encounter a cute little street called Rodeo Drive. Rodeo Drive is populated by Rolls Royces and Mercedes and frequented by blue-haired ladies with French poodles. No Michigan students were spotted on this street during the week. s Quick comparison between the UCLA and USC campuses: UCLA is pret- tier and in a much better section of town. USC rises majestically out of one of L.A.'s worst ghettos and is a more modern, cement-block campus. Most Michigan students caught a glimpse of the USC campus because that is where they were forced to go to pick up their game tickets. While alumni received theirs in the mail, the students had to drive into a bad section of L.A., some 45 minutes from Pasadena, and show 43 pieces of ID to get theirs. But who's to complain? The game was worth 30 bucks wasn't it? " Back to the bands for a moment. Quick thought: Does that fantastic UCLA card show in the stands at halftime cover up for a bad band? Nobody pays any attention to the band tooting away when the real show is in the stands. The Michigan band showed why it earned the Sudler Trophy as the best band in the land by totally out-classing its California counterpart every Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER but the puck was deflected Michigan senior Brad Tippet's shot on the Illinois-Chicago goal may look like a sure thing, off the shoulder of goaltender Rick Blakey. USFL signs Spencer McCauley overthrows UIC in overtime CHICAGO (AP) - Big Ten rushing leader Tim Spencer of Ohio State signed a four-year contract Friday with the Chicago Blitz, marking the first signing of a collegiate draft pick by the United States Football League. Financial terms of the pact' were not disclosed. "It was the best choice I, could have made," said Spencer, a 6-1, 212-pound tailback. "It was not in my best interest to wait for the National Football League draft. "PEOPLE TRIED to discourage me," he continued. "But they have some great linemen here and a running back always looks for that." It marked the second such coup for Blitz Coach George Allen, who spirited Tim Wrightman, a consensus All- America tight end from UCLA, from the Chicago Bears roster last fall. At that time, Allen said he did not an- ticipate a bidding war with the older, more established NFL. But he changed his tune Friday, saying, "I didn't get in- to the USFL to get into a second-rate outfit." SPENCER was picked second overall in the initial USFL collegiate draft Tuesday. His signing with the Blitz was announced at an afternoon news con- ference. Allen, who owns the Blitz with car- diologist Dr. Ted Diethrich and Bill Harris, called Spencer's signing, "History in the making.... a milestone and just the beginning" of his efforts to attract top-flight talent to the USFL. Diethrich earlier charged the NFL with "aggressive and widespread in- trusion" to block the signing of collegiate players by the new league. "But we're not going to be in- timidated," he said. SPENCER SAID representatives of the NFL and "outsiders" had contacted him in attempts to dissuade him from signing with the Blitz, but he declined to identify anyone. When asked whether he would regret not playing against the best-meaning the NFL-Allen interjected: "Do you think all the NFL teams are playing major league football?" Spencer then added, "I think I'll be playing major league footballk.., and I definitely don't think it will take the USFL sone 60 years to catch up with the NFL." SPENCER ENDED his career as the second-leading rusher in Ohio State history, with 3,553 yards. Spencer was a dominant factor in the Buckeyes' last seven games of 1982, all victories. The Big Ten's leading rusher earned 1,120 of his 1,538 yards in that stretch, averaging 6.4 yards every carry and 160 yards per game. He also caught 14 passes for 138 yar- ds. He was Ohio State's leading scorer with 15 touchdowns, earning him the team's Most Valuable Player award in 1982. FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Dries (McCrimmon, D. Mcintyre) 5:52. Penalties: M-May (hooking) 13:05. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. UIC-Hooper (Possolo, Majich) 10:11. Penalties: UIC-3. McIntyre (elbowing) 6:50, M-Mildburn (roughing) 11:02; UIC-Hranik (roughing) 11:02; M-Carlile (hooking) 17:01. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 2. UIC-Majich (Pozzolo) 1:52: 2. M-Stiles (Neff, Seychel) 10:36; 3. UIC-Majich (J. McIntyre, Hooper) 16:54; 3. M-Speers (Tippett. Brauer) 19:22. Penalties: M-Tippett (hooking) 7:15. OVERTIME Scoring: 4. M-McCauley (Neff) 00:30. STUDENT FAMILY HOUSING AVAILABLE WINTER TERM STOP IN ROOM 1011 S.A.B., TELEPHONE 763-3164 8 A.M. to Noon; 12:30 to 4:30 Weekdays HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1983-84 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 24, 1983 for Reapplying Staff Available Starting February 4, 1983 for New Applicants In Housing Office, 1500 S.A. B. POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1983 for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and Minority Peer Advisor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U of M student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of four terms or equivalent and 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1983. (3) Undergraduate applicants must have at least a 2.50 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the end of the Spring Term 1983. Graduate applicants- must be in good academic standing in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the end of the Spring Term 1983. (4) Proof of these eligibility