THE MlCH1 AN [?Af Y Poge Nine THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine~ dangers annihilate Wings; Pistons By The Associated Press NEW YORK -The front-run- ning New York Rangers blitzed Detroit with 44 shots and battered the Red Wings 5-1 in a National Hockey League game last night. New York showered 17 shots in each of the first two periods and ran up a 4-0 lead on goals by Walt Tkaczuk, Jean Ratelle, Bob Nevin and Dave Balon. R ate l le, Nevin, and Balon bunched three goals in less than seven minutes of the second per- iod putting New York in control. More sports page seven Defenseman Jim Neilson's sec- ond goal of the season increased the lead to 5-0 in the third period before Detroit finally scored on Gary Unger's 23rd goal of the i Scores i * . . . .... Ohio U.84, Toledo 67 Louisville 77, Memphis State 48 LSU 97, Florida 75 Notre Dame 130, St. Peter's 88 N. Carolina St. 64, Maryland 54 Duke 92, Clemson 88 Georgia 74, Georgia Tech 69 South Carolina 79, Temple 71 Niagara 98, Buffalo 68 Providence 54, Villanova 44 Dayton 90, Xavier 78 Va. Tech 76, West Va. 75 daily NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL HERTZ year with Just over eight minutes remaining. * * * Lakers sunk DETROIT-Dave Bing fired in 40 points last night as the Detroit Pistons snapped a nine-game Los Angeles Lakers winning streak, 125-109, in a National Basketball Association game. The Lakers played without three of their stars, as Elgin Baylor and Jerry West joined the long absent Wilt Chamberlain on the sidelines. Hawks soar in 96 National Basketball Association victory over New York, snapping the Knicks' nine-game winning streak. The Hawks pulled away from a 76-76 deadlock early in the fourth quarter to hand the Knicks their worst defeat of the season, the previous being a 13-point loss to Milwaukee. The Hawks led 92-79 with 6:20 remaining, then New York man- aged to close it ot 94-85 with five minutes to go before Hazzard and Hudson combined for nine straight points that opened an 18-point, advantage. * * * CHICAGO-Bobby Hull scored two goals and Stan Mikita scored one goal and four assists to pace the Chicago Black Hawks to an 8-4 National Hockey League vic- tory over the Boston Bruins last night. The victory, tlhe Hawks' third over the Bruins in five games, moved Chicago to within one point - - - CU~P A£ SAVE - - m SM El JUST FORTHE ShVL FUN OF IT!!! 1 J-bar ^hali .Night Lighting, 3 charhisRestalurant, Loung a THE BEST IN ARTIFICIAL. SNOW! - 24" of base-2" new snow CONDITIONS VERY GOOD ' I og GRAND RIVER 21 I -96 EXIT c I s G MTDETROIT"WINDSOR BRIGHTON , SKI AREA o -,. sr an «ON 1.,,, .,DANCINGnFRI. >& SAT. 1 FOR SNOW REPORTS 90 o EQUIPT. RENTAS SORADDITIONAL INFORMATION, amZx0 aaINDIVIDUAL AND CALL: 313/227-1451 - ,e GROUP INSTRUCTION MT. BRIGHTON, zaSKI PATROL. BRIGHTON, MICH. 48166 .aZ > '.AMPLE LIGHTED Send for free color brochure. FREE PARKING - -CLIP & SAVE - - r ATLANTA-Lou Hudson scored of Detroit in the battle for fourth 36 points and Walt Hazzard 27 to place in the Eastern Division of spark the Atlanta Hawks to a 111- the National Hockey League. -Associated Press BROTHERLY LOVE: Black Hawk goalie Tony Esposito, who leads the league with the best goals against average, sprawls on the ice but brother Phil, of the Boston Bruins, who leads the league * with the most goals scored, flips the puck into the net for goal number thirty during the frist period of yesterday's game. The Hawks eventually won 8-4. rrtet},, c tl «c}o e p ys ' v. w"nvg.",:.}-.};.;.p;.;.}.";'v }, }.'P: :a'n'""'.i }'+ . s S' .y " 'Y :{' : r'+. ",{;vThTti'4+ ' ,,.. -. .':: .{i.-{.". ' .: 'v-%v:":v}n: "?}:v r.YU}: Professional Standings r .v v:: U EXCEPT FOR GRIDDERS Incognito walks the wrestler r r , i a Ne B P C B D At L C P sa Se Sa N BA Eastern Division w i Pc ew York 47 12 ilwaukee 39 18 . altimore . 35 23 . hiladelphia 29 28 . incinnati 26 34 . oston 23 33 . letroit 22 37 . Svest Division tlanta 33 26 os Angeles 31 25 . hicago 26 33 . hoenix 26 33 . an Francisco 24 32 ieattle 23 35 . an Diego 19 34. Yesterday's Results, Detroit 125, Los Angeles 109 AtlantaC 111, New York 96 Seattle 121, Cincinnati 115 Milwaukee at San Diego, inc. Today's Game San Francisco at Chicago ct. .797 .684 603 509 433 411 .373 .559 554 441 441 .429 .397 .358 GB 7 17 21% 22W 25 7 7 11 NHL East Division W L T Pt. GF GA New York 29 10 10 68 174 112 Montreal 26 11 11 63 166 119 Boston 26 12 11 63 185 151 Detroit 25 15 7 57 141 125 Chicago 25 17 6 56 147 108 Toronto 20 20 8 48 144 144 West Division St. Lois 24 17 7 55 148 113 Philadelphia 12 20 17 41 126 145 Pittsburgh 15 25 8 38 113 158 Minnesota 10 24 14 34 138 168 Oakland 12 29 8 32 104 164 Los Angeles 9 35 5 23 103 181 Yesterday's Results Montreal at Oakland, inc. Toronto 1, St. Louis 0 New York 5, Detroit 1 Chicago 8, Boston 4 Pittsburgh 7,.Minnesota 5 Today's Games.. Montreal at Los Angeles Toronto at Detroit Philadelphia at Boston By PAT ATKINS Last month in the season of ex- travaganzas like bowl games, a f~ hundred thousand maniac fans packed into one stadium, and un- told sums involved in television football gridiron psychotics, ano- ther event did take place. Not a great many of those in the foot ball stan'ds or on the field would have known about it, and, sadly, , most would not have cared to know A few such as Michigan's tail- back, Preston Henry or. Ohio State's left tackle Paul Schmidlin had a . personal stake in the re- sults of the Midwest Open in La- Grange, Illinois, along with the f couple thousand fans who watch- ed. The Midwest Open is a wrestling tournament and it is obvious that Preston Henry or Paul Schmid- lin are known not for their ex- ploits on a 24 by 24 foot several inch thick mat, but for their d rambles on an area about 60 times larger. Some of that difference in em- phasis is directly traceable to pub- licity, news exposure based on what the fans will pay to read or see. In an era where footpall is on the psychoanalysist's c o u c h along with everyone else, cited as an outlet for our aggressive age and as a mob sport fitting in with the kaleidescope moving film of mass society, wrestling may be too Ago inst ltie Wall personalized for mass involve- with all the other crowd. people in the ment. It is without question a sport for ths individual. And this, to Pres- ton Henry, is what makes wrest- ling more challenging than foot- ball. "You can make it a personal duel, a personal vendetta or what- ever you want to call it," he says. You're out there by yourself and don't have 10-20 guys around you. Everyone is looking down at you and no one can cover up your mis- takes." Henry's first bout since return- ing from the wide world of foot- ball came last Friday against Illi- nois. It would be wrong to say that the fans vatching him per- form were not wrapped up with what was occurring on the minis- cule playing field. Yet the specta- tor participation was of a dif- ferent nature than that for foot- ball, basketball, or hockey. The object still was to kill the other guy, but it could be done with a uniquely individual style. The fans still yell, but t h e yelling is emotionally with the wrestler standing on the mat, not. Henry talks easily of his own distinctive wrestling style. "I have a different style than most of the other guys. They like to pace themselves. I go hard all the time and try to just kill the guy. Most of the guys circle, make a shoot, then circle some more. But I like to go out there and slap the guy, yell, continually p u s h myself into action." . Preston Henry may play foot- ball the same way he wrestles, that is with all out non-stop effort, but the sport itself conspires against him. And from 70 rows up in the stands, fans would have diffi-' culty detecting his personality any- way. It was obvious in the Illinois match. Henry stood up and walk- ed across the mat during the Illini meet, not an action that would ordinarily make a crowd go wild. But in this instance, his opponent Paul Jacob, was still holding on with a grapevine. "It was sort of a psychological move," Henry says, "because if he knows I can stand up and walk, he'll realize he doesn't have much control." The rewards for football and wrestling are vastly different, with football on the heavy end of the balance. But Henry adds, as other wrestling advocates would, "It's a better sport, frankly, because it's personalized." r YPSILANTI This new store carries more trade (non-text) books than' any other in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Unusual 1970 calendars, thousands of paperbacks, lots of them used, some hardbacks. 1y 10% OFF Mon.-Thurs.-9-9; Fri.-9-6; Sat.-12:5:30 We . think we're interesting- We hope you will. """"" ""' East Quad's Coffeehouse & Snackbar PRESENTS SATURDAY, FEB. 7 THE GREAT GREY BLANKET FILM AT 7 & 9 P.M. CONTINUOUSLY OPEN STAGE- ALL WELCOME TO PERFORM or Just Come in and Jam HOURS: Mon.-Thurs.-11 :00 A.M.-2 A.M. Fri.--- 1:00 A.M.-3 A.M.; Sat-7:30 P.M.-3 A.M. Sun.-3:00 P.M.-12 A.M. informal Atmosphere, Good Food m p TIhe U-M Toe Kwon Do Association CO-EDUCATIONAL The ultimate in self-defense and physical fitness WEST-SOUTH QUAD CLUB TIME: Tues. and Thurs., 7-9 P.M., Sun., 2-4 P.M. PLACE: West Quad 2nd Floor Dining Room MASTER INSTRUCTOR: Robert B.C. You, 5th Dan Korean Black Belt " INTERVIEWING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 for CAMP MA-HI-YA Chelsea, Michigan a program service of the TOLEDO JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER Counsellors Unit Heads Program Director Nurse (R.N.) Music Dance Drama Music Specialists Waterfront Arts & Crafts Pioneering Nature EAST-SIDE CLUB-EVERT DAT TIME: Mon. through Fri., 7-9 P.M., Sat., 10-12 Noon PLACE: Angell School on S. University at Oxford HEAD INSTRUCTOR: James B.C. Yu INFORMATION: Call 769-4619 4^ Contact Summer Placement Office for an appointment ( ... r ti ARC TO THE 1 . - A K The Ann Arbor Bank is notorious for its bad service to students. And NOW it is aiding landlords in the garnishment of tenants' bank accounts. The Bank has even refused to notify tenants of th e garnishments and has just' bounced their checks., The Tenants Union, SGC, and other student organizations urge ALL students to withdraw their bank accounts from the Ann Arbor Bank on Friday, Feb. 6 at 3 P.M. at the South U. branch.' The technology of moving things That's right! Grumman's real business is the technology of moving things ... men and machines in purposeful patterns within a great diversity of origins, destinations and tactical situations. Speed is often, but not always, the answer. Performance reliability-in spite of many interfaces-is the thing. In close-in combat "dog fights"-an aircraft with speed, maneuverability and armaments,... the F-14 Air Superiority Fighter. In lunar exploration-The Lunar Module which successfully landed the astronauts on the moon. In areas of enemy activity-an aircraft with track and search radar that can locate, identify and lock on to the target, even in zero visibility ... the A6A intruder, and advanced versions. In early warning emergencies-an aircraft that can extend the eyes and ears of a Navy task force at sea through radar and computers that alert interceptor aircraft to impending enemy attacks,... the E2A Hawkeye, and advanced versions. Far above the earth, a satellite that can discover more about the evolution of the universe... the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory. Add Deep Submersibles, Hydrofoil seacratt, High-speed Ground Transportation systems, Corporate aircraft and Lunar Surface vehicles, and you get some idea of how Grumman is extending the perimeters of the technology of moving things. I, 1