THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 8, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 8, 1970 W.V W H Y is ULRICH'S Ann Arbor's busiest bookstore ? THERE must be a GOOD Reason- Lets Talk It Over . - * r " I -1 ~ln Cagers, leers Basketball squad goes 3-3 g By MORT NOVECK margin at the half. All the starters Continuing to play better bas- were removed by the end of the ketball than anyone expected be- game, giving many of the Michi- fore the season began the Michi- gan reserves an opportunity to gan cage squad compiled a 3-3 play. record' over the vacation period. This puts their overall record at Tigers trounced 5-5 for the season and 1-1 in the Overcoming an eight point Big Ten. After losing their games halftime deficit the Wolverine to Duke and Utah the Wolverines cagers won their second straight, came 'back to defeat Butler, defeating the Princeton Tigers by Princeton and Northwestern be- an 80-72 margin after trailing by' fore bowing to Iowa. as much as 16 points in their New Year's Eve contest. Michigan was Duke wins forced to the bench early in the Six-foot ten Randy Denton game and Coach John Orr credited poured 27 points in and guard reserve forwards Wayne Grabeic Dick Devenzio hit on several key and Bill Fraumann with saving free throws to spark Duke's Blue the squad in the first half. Devils to a 73-68 come from be- Rodney Fqrd came to life in hind triumph over Michigan in a the second half and hit for 15 game played December 10 at the points in the period. Michigan events building. employed a pressing defense in The Wolverines could not over- the period which the Tigers come ice cold shooting nights by couldn't handle. Geoff Petrie was their two leading players, D a n the game's high scorer with 34 fol- Fife and Rudy Tomjanovich. Fife lowed by Rudy Tomjanovich with missed on n i n e of eleven shots 33. and Tomjanovich scored his sea- son low of twenty points and fail- Wildcats -whipped ed to connect on 12 of his 18 field Opening the Big Ten season with goal attempts. a win on the road the Wolverines defeated the Northwestern Wild-F Utah triumphant i cats 96-92 on Jan. 3. In addition Despite Rudy Tomjanovich's 42 to being Michigan's first Big Ten Ipoint effort the Wolverines camewioftesanit asH d out second in a scoring duel with Coach John Orr's first win in the University of Utah 117-102. Northwestern's McGaw Memoriale The scoring pace w a s so quick Hal in his seven years in the Big that in one 75 second period 16 Ten. points were scored. The Wildcat's Dale Kelley was gain Icers struggle to 4-3 record By BILL DINNER the first half and we controlled it The Michigan hockey team, still in the second half," was the way lacking cohesiveness, struggled Renfrew summed it up. through the holiday season with Earlier in the evening Minne- a 4-3 total, boosting their overall sota sweeped the Buckeyes off the record to 7-6. ice, outshooting 41-18( and rack- Michigan, in the nightcap of ing up the only shutout of the the opening doubleheader of the tourney 4-0. Big Ten Tournament, easily out- The Gophers, however, couldn't distanced the Buckeyes, 7-2. keep their dandruff up as they In the opening game freshman succumbed to Michigan State in Jimmy Johnson slapped in his the finals 6-3. second goal of the season to give In the consolation game, there the Badgers an overtime 4-3 vic-| was little suspense over who would tory over the Gophers. win but rather who would win the Although Michigan outscored fight. the Buckeyes 49-26 the contest The Wolverines pretty much was in sharp contrast to a gruel- settled the first question with four ing hard-checking struggle be- goals in the first period. tween Wisconsin and Minnesota. The second question stemmed The Wolverines were, to say the from the somewhat questionable least, sloppy in their opening cic- officiating. The contest had been tory. marred by numerous scuffles and Buckey Straub and Michel skirmishes throughout and it was Jarry starred for the Wolverines, not until all but 25 seconds re. each netting two goals. The game, mained in the game that the however, was in sharp contrast to brawl erupted. the Buckeyes' last appearance here Michigan's Paul Gamsby bar- in 1964, when Michigan as na- relled into goalie Bill Bidon with tional champions demolished Ohio stick high, and was rewarded for State 21-0. his efforts when Rick Yurick Wolverine coach Al Renfrew cracked a stick that broke his noted that, "It was a tough game helmet and sent him to the ice. to play. When you play a team Thereupon Yurick pounced on you think you're better than, you him. Within second the whole ice have a tendancy not to do very was a mass of brawls. well." After the game Renfrew com- Michigan came mighty close in mented that, "It was the worst their second clash against eventu- officiated game I ever saw." al winner Michigan State. Michigan, in the St. Louis In- The Wolverines were down 5-1 vitational with Wisconsin, Yale in the second period, but surged and Brown once again sloppily back to down-one when Dave Per- and ended up with a split losing rin tallied on a wrist shot with 12 to Wisconsin 5-3, while beating minutes in the third period. Yale 6-3. A shot by Mickey Shaw that The Wolverines ended the holi- caroomed off the post could have days with a split at North Dakota tied it up with two minutes re- 9-2 and 5-1. maining and the Wolverines kept Renfrew summed up the vaca- the puck inside the blue line until tion period noting, "We hadn't the end, but to no avail. practiced at all before the Big Ten Perrin and Shaw shared the red and with ten new members, we light honors with two apiece. simply haven't played enough to- "They controlled the puck in gether." vacation splits 1~ So you're hung up between the military in- dustrial complex and the anti-establishment movement.., you can save for both causes at Ann Arbor Bank. ANN ARBOR BANK 4 CAMPUS OFFICES . East Liberty Street Near Maynard " South, University at East Uiversity " Medical Center (forest at Ann) " Plymouth Road at Huron Parkway And 7 More Offices Serving ANN ARBOR/DEXTER WHrTMORE'LAKE Butler bounced Rebounding from two con- secutive defeats the Wolverine cagers made easy work of their victory over Butler, winning 105- 65. After a slow start the Wolver- ines caught fire and began to pull away steadily, leading by a 59-35 t f f 3 f r x MEMBER; FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION t.FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM CANTERBURY HOUSE PRESENTS e THEBYRDt COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTISTS "The Byrds are "...the best still the Byrds, performing though who the arrangement they I Byrds are may have yet had." still be aN mystery." -Entertainment F World _ -Paul Willams Dec. 5, 1969 PLUS COMMA DER COY HILL AUDITORIUM- N17GENERAL SALES BEGIN JAN. 12 $2.50 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. $3.00 8:30 P.M. For Info., Cal665-0606 $3.50 high scorer in the contest with 35 points. The Wolverine's best ef- forts came from Bird Carter and Dan Fife who hit for 24 apiece. Northwestern's Don Adams hit for 23 in the losing effort but the Wildcats shot only 45.3 per cent from the floor while Michigan managed a more respectable 54.8 per cent. Hawkeyes holler Unable to keep Iowa's hot shoot- ers in check the Wolverine's drop- ped the Big Ten home opener to the Hawkeyes, 107-99. Behind throughout most of the gaie the Wolverines were forced to play catch up ball but Iowa's hot shoot- ing didn't give them a chance to pull ahead. The Wolverine's went into a press in the second half attempt- ing to stop the Hawks scoring, but were unsuccessful. Iowa shot 63.4 per cent from the floor and always managed to get a man clear to shoot. Rudy Tomjanovich was top scorer in the game with 37 points followed by the Hawkeye's John Johnson with 34. Chad Calabria added 24 for Iowa with Fred Brown hitting for 23. MEN: try a new hairstyle designed to your personality . . . OPEN 3 NIGHTS Mon.-Thurs.-Fri. 9 to 8 Tues.-Wed.-Sat. 9 to 6 I Dascola Barbers Arborland-Campus Maple village -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Bird Carter goes over the Hawks A SURPRISING SECOND Grapplers floor foes in tourney By PAT ATKINS totaled 68 points. All this was Michigan wrestlers ambushed the rest of the country over the holidays in a sneak attack worthy of a John Wayne movie, finishing second on the heels of'Michigan State in the classic Midwest Open. Competition came from over 450 wrestlers, including Big Ten cham- pions, Big Eight champions, and NCAA champions, to form the roughest collegiate wrestling tour- nament in the nation. And the Wolverine grapplers upstaged even Oefending national champion Iowa State. Days later on Jan. 5, the Wol- verines knocked off a tenacious New York Maritime College team in a dual meet 19-15. "We were certainly the surprise of the tournament," Assistant Coach Rick Bay said. "Everyone had heard about our loss to Pitts- burgh and our tie with Maryland," he continued,. "but we showed the group that if we do put everything together we can be tough." ON THE STRENGTH of a first place crown for Jerry Hoddy at 118, runner-up finishes by 150- pounder Lane Headrick and 177- pounder Jesse Rawls, and fourth place slots for Tim Cech at 126 and Mark King at 142, Michigan without the aid of Big Ten cham- pion Lou Hudson out with a knee injury. Michigan State was a narrow first with 76, Iowa State looked up from third with X62 points, Okla- hyoma came next with 58, and Northwestern held down a fifth place tie with 23 points. Others in the top ten were the Mayor Daley Atheltic Club, 23; Winona.State, 21; Eastern Michi- gan, 20; Muskegon Community College, 18; and Iowa, 15. GOING INTO the last round, Michigan trailed the Spartans by six points and still had a shot at first place. "It was a long shot," Bay noted, "but mathematically we had more than a small chance. "If Rawls, Headrick, King, and Cech had won their matches and the State wrestlers had lost, we could have pulled it out. We're not complaining about our perform- ance, though," he emphasized. Nor should they. Junior Jerry Hoddy w r e s t 1 e d exceptionally, taking five bouts on his rout to first, including decisions over Michigan State's Lon Hicks in the semi-finals and over Norm Wil- kerson of Iowa State in the finals. And both Headrick and Rawls' fell just short of first place fin- ishes. "Headrick wrestled better than he ever has before," Bay stated. "He won the first five bouts all convincingly before being beaten by Ron Ouellet of Michigan State in overtime on a referee's decision." Rawls also bested five opponents to reach the finals. Ahead of Iowa State's Chuck Jean, defending na- tional chamlion, with 33 seconds to go in the finals, Rawls ran out of gas and was pinned. "He was just a hair shy of conditioning." In the quarterfinals Rawls had downed former NCAA champion from Ohio State, Dave Reinbolt; and in the semifinals he took out the defending Big Eight champion from Oklahoma State, Gerald Winnard. SOPHOMORE MARK King was stopped 'in the semifinals after four wins "on a fall that was kind of an accident. He got caught in a silly hold," Bay said. The silly hold was achieved by a serious wrestler, Big Ten champ from Michigan State, Keith Low- rance, at 1:57. One of King's wins was a fall over Joe Carstenson of Iowa. The other five Michigan point getters, Ty Belknap at 134, Jim Sanger at 158, Tom Quinn at 167, Therlon Harris at 190, and fresh- man Rick Bolhouse at heavy- weight each won at least t w o matches apiece before elimin~tion. Michigan's first dual meet win of the season came last Monday against New York Maritime Col- lege. But a late car containing Hoddy, George Surgent, H a r r i s, and Sanger, forced Michigan to juggle line-up classes. With Hoddy not yet at the meet, the two teams began the clash with the 126 match. "THE TEAM is used to a cer- tain order," Bay said, "and wrest- ling 126 first was upsetting be- cause of this. No one knew when they were going to wrestle." Weight classes of 118, 158 and 167 were skipped before the four wrestlers arrived during the 177- pound match. The three bouts were then completed, and Michigan held a slim one point lead going into the last two matches. A draw by Harris at 190 kept the meet in balance until the f i n a l match. Then Rick Bolhouse paced John Reid to a 3-3 tie entering the third period. With Reid up, Bolhouse escaped. A desparate lunge by Reid as time ran out gave Bol- house a takedown to clinch the bout and meet win for Michigan 19-15. 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