Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 1, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 1,1970 Wolverine grapplers impressive Ti-sn b .-. Iln ladp i t b in trampling Minnesota, Mankato _ Bv RANDI GE-I- than two feet but missing t e rtans In the only sweep of the e 4, ven- Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS-The Michigan wrestlers tuned up for next week's Big Ten Championships here in Ann Arbor next weekend with, two surprisingly convincing wins{ against Minnesota and Mankato State in a triangular meet yester- .day. The Wolverine matmen trimmed Minnesota 23-8 and belted the In- dians, traditionally a small college power, 27-6. his upper weight wrestlers down a notch to give added strength to the upper divisions, which have not been one of the Wolverine's strong points this season. Tlierlon Harris, who has been wrestling light at 190 all year, fared quite well at the 177-pound slot, nabbing two 2-0 decisions. Jesse Rawls, who had been at 177, dropped down to ,167 and looked strong in garnering two decisions.1 In a move that may well be a TY BELKNAP, however pro- preview of the Big Ten champion- vided the biggest surprise of the ships, Wolverine mentor Cliff meet as eked out a 3-2 decision Keen, who is retiring at the end over the Gophers' Reid Lampere.' of this season, dropped three of Lampere was unbeaten going into the match and he finished fourth in the nation last year. Keen was pleased with the team's showing, noting that "we are finally putting it all together. This was was our best meet of the year." MICHIGAN 27, MANKATO 6 118 - Jerry Hoddy (M) dec. Bill Ross, 9-4. 126 - Jim Hagan (M) dec. Scott Evans, 9-4. 134 - Ty Belknap (M) dec. Ken Stockdale, 3-1. 142 - Paul Pacquin (M) dec. Dale Richter, 6-3. 150 - Lane Headrick (M) tied Dale Richter, 4-4. 158 - Jim Sanger (M) dec. Rick Lee, 7-0. 167 - Jesse Rawls (M) dec. S t e v e Johnson, 7-4. 177 - Therlon Harris (M) dec. Stan Tesch, 2-0. 190 - Jim Thomas (M) tied B r i a n Hage, 1-1. Hwt. - Rick Bolhouse (M) tied Den- nis Pierro, 2-2. MICHIGAN 23, MINNESOTA 8 118 - Jerry Hoddy (M) dec. D a le Putrah, 12-1. 126 - Tim Cech (M) tied Steve Hyl- bak, 1-1. 134 - Ty Belknap (M) dec. Reid Lam- pere, 3-2. 142 - Terry Pelcl (Minn.) dec. Paul Pacquin, 5-0. 150 - Lane Headrick (M) dec. Jay West, 7-3. 158 - Tom Quinn (M) dec. Jim Axtel, 2-0. 167 - Jesse Rawls (M) dec. D i c .k Gautsch, 9-1. 177 - Therlon Harris (M) dec. Dale Turner, 2-0. 190 - Jim Thomas (M) dec. D a n Root, 2-1. HWT. - Clayton Scheurer (Minn.) dec. Rick Bolhouse, 4-I. BO IS BACK!!! Michigan's Norm Cornwell nip- NCAA qualifying vault by a scant d Michigan t's NormCAAnwel ~ two inches. ped Michigan State's NCAA Shot putters Guilie Catallo and Schamp Bill Wehrwine in the 600 Paul Toran garnered top honors yard dash of yesterday's Mich'ini the shot put with heaves of 49- gan-Michigan State dual track 9 and 49-6 respectively. meet, in a race that typified the In another episode of the Gene fierce competition exhibited by Brown-Herb Washington battle. the two inter-state rivals all day Washington again emerged t h e as Michigan rolled to an 89-51 victor, setting a new meet record in with u lnkic of d ~rnl 1 With Wehrwine leading going into the gun lap, Cornwell put on a tremendous burst of speed; just managing to touch the tape be- fore the MSU star. Both contest- ants posted identical 1:20.4 marks setting a new meet and Yost Field House record. Michigan field specialists dom- inated their opponents, picking up 33 of the Wolverines' 89 points. High jumper John Mann contin- ued to exhibit consistency as he once again cleared the bar at 6-10, breaking the meet record of 6-5 set in 1960. In two attempts at 7', he barely failed to clear the bar. Teammate Warren Bechaed, competing for the first time this season, copped first place in the triple jump with a leap of 45-11, and competing out of his normal event, took third place in the high jump with 5-8. Ira Russell took his usual first in the long jump, with a jump of 44-2 and a third in the triple jump. Vaulter Ron Shortt turned in the best performance as he vault- ed 15-8 to tie the old varsity rec- ord and set a new meet record, eclipsing the old mark by more wi a cloc ng oo.z secanu s.1 second better than Brown. In a rematch in the 300 yard dash, Brown gained a measure of re- venge, taking first place to Wash- ington's third. ing, distance men Rick Storrey, John Thornton, and Al Cornwell f placed one, two, three respectively in the 1000 yard run, as Storrey set a new meet and field house record with his 2:10.5 perform- anace. In the hurdling events Michi- gan's Godfrey Murray and MSU's John Morrison shared the honors as Murray took fist in the lows and second in the highs and Mor- rison took first in the highs and second in the lows. Spartan Wayne Hartwick t o o k third in both events. . Mowing down the Green MILE RUN - 1. Ken Popejoy (MSU), 23-4; 2. Jess Williams (MSU), 22-8%; 4:10.6; 2. Phil Pyatt (Mich), 4:14.7; 3. Eric Allen (MSU), 21-9%. 3. Tom Swan (Mich.), 4:15.3. 880-YD. RUN - 1. John Mock (MSU). 440-YD. RUN - 1. Al Henderson 1:52.8; 2. Eric Chapman (Mich.), 1:52.8; (MSU), :49.3; 2. Greg Syphax (Mich.), 3. Paul Armstrong (Mich.), 1:52.9. (New :49.5; 3. Lorenzo Montgomery (Mich.), Dual Meet Record). :50.0; (New dual meet record). 300-YD. DASH - 1. Gene Brown 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES - 1. John (Mich.), :31.4; 2. Trevor Mathews Morrison (MSU), :8.4; 2. Godfrey Mur- (Mich.); 3. Herb Washington (MSU), ray (Mich.), :8.4; 3. Wayne Hartwick 32.0; 4. Mike Murphy (MSU), :32.1. (MSU), :8.5; (New dual meet record). 70-YD. LOW HURDLES - 1. Godfrey SHOT PUT - 1. Guilio Catallo Murray (Mich.), :8.0; 2. John Morrison (Mich.), 49-9; 2. Paul Toran (Mich), (MSU), :8.0; 3. Wayne Hartwick (MSU), 49-62; 3. Dan Kulikowski (MSU). 49-6. :8.1. (Ties Meet Record). 1000-YD. RUN - 1. Rick Storrey POLE VAULT - 1. Ron Shortt (Mich.), 2:10.5; 2. John Thornton (Mich.), 15-8; 2. Dave Ursin (iMch.), (Mich.), 2:12.7; 3. Al Cornwell (Mich.), (Mich.), 15-8; 2. Dave Ursin (Mich.), 2:14.7; (New Dual meet and Y o s t 13-6; 3. Sig Lillevik (MSU), 13-0; (New Fieldhouse Record). Dual Meet Record and ties varsity re- HIGH JUMP - 1. John Mann (Mich), cord.) 6-10; 2. Gordon Bowdell (MSU), 6-0: TWO-MILE RUN - 1. Ken Howe 3. Warren Bechard (Mich.), 5-8; (New (Mich.), 9:03.5; 2. Ken Leonwicz (MSU), Dual meet record). 9:07.1; 3. Chuck Starkey (MSU), 9:17.8. (New Dual Meet Record.) 60-YD. DASH - 1. Herb Washington MILE RELAY - 1. Michigan (Greg (MSU), :6.1; 2. Gene Brown (Mich.), Syphax, Trevor Mathews, John Lowe, :6.2; 3. Sol Escpie (Mich.), :6.4. (New Lorenzo Montgomery), 3:16.7. 2. MSU, Dual Meet Record). 3:16.8. 600-YD. DASH - 1. Norm Cornwell TRIPLE JUMP -- 1. Warren Bech- (Mich.), 1:10.4; 2. Bill Wehrwein (MSU), ard (Mich.), 45-11; 2. Eric Allen (MqU), 1:10.4; 3. Paul Cooke (MSU), 1:12.4. 45-3; 3. Ira Russell (Mich.), 44-2. (New dual meet). FINAL SCORE: Michigan 89; Michi- LONG JUMP - 1. Ira Russell (Mich.),, gan St. 51. -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Michigan head football coach Bo Schembechler made his first public appearance since his heart attack at yesterday's basketball game against Wisconsin. Schembechler, who was named 'Coach of the Year' in most polls, received a prolonged standing ovation from the crowd. A SPRING BREAK ONLY END UNDEFEATED I Gymnasts subdue Iowa CLINCH TITLE SHARE Drake towers over Louisville .I r Special To The Dailyp The Michigan gymnasts col-p pleted their third consecutive un- defeated season with a 160.87 to 159.19 victory over the Hawkeyes 2 of Iowa. This victory marked thea thirty-second consecutive dualb meet which. the Wolverines have captured. The first event of the afternoon was vaulting, and Michigan com- peted without the services of George Huntzicker, who has been i averaging over nine points in this s event this year. Huntzicker was9 not able to participate in the meet due to the fact that he was per- forming in the World Trampoline Trials which are being held in New Orleans. In the vaulting competition, Michigan was outclassed 26.32 to 25.99. Ray Gura scored 8.76 to lead the Wolverines in that event, while Iowa had two Men w h o scored over nine points. "It was the work of Ron Rap- per and Sid Jensen, both who had great days, that pulled us through to victory," Coach Newt Loken commented. Indeed this was true for Jensen averaged 8.87 in all the six events and captain Rapper VAULTING - 1. Scorza (I) 9:13; 2. Flotten (I) 9:03; 3. McCurdy (M), 8.86. FLOOR EXERCISES - 1. Flotten (1) 9.2; 2. Jensen (M) 9.1; 3. Mackie (M) 8.85. SIDE HORSE - 1. Liehr (I) 9.5; 2. Kaziny (M) 9.3; 3. Citron (1) 9.1. RINGS - 1 Repp (I) 9.1; 2. Jensen (M) and Frowlick (M), tie, 9.0. PARALLEL BARS - 1. Rapper (M) 9.5; 2. Scorza (I) 9.2; 3. Jensen (M) 9.1. HIGH BAR - 1. Farnum (I) 9.35; 2. Jensen (M) 9.2; 3. Howard (M) 9.05. ALL-AROUND - 1. Jensen (M) 53.25; 2. Scorza (I) 52.43; 3. McCurdy (M) 51.41. TEAM.TOTALS: Michigan 160.87; Illinois 159.19. once again gave an outstanding McCurdy had a disappointing 8.30 performance on the parallel bars in this event. with a 9.50 score. Once again, Michigan lost out Michigan's biggest score was ithedspotutha yasivenhed 27.2 boh intheparalelbars much difficulty all year, the side 7.25 both in the parallel re horse Iowa scored 27.50 to the and the high bar. In the former, mediocre 26.40 by the Wolverines. besides Rapper's fine 9.50 show- The one bright spot in this event ing, Jensen finished with a 9.1 and was a 9.30 score by Dick Kaziny. Murray Plotkin had an 8.65. Although this was a relatively In the high bars, three of the poor showing by the Wolverines, four Wolverine competitors fin- the win did give them a perfect ished with nine-plus scores; Jen- 7-0 record to finish in first place sen with 9.20, Ed Howard with in the Big Ten, ahead of Illinois 9,05 and Ted Martin with 9.00. (6-1) and Iowa (5-2). By The Associated Press LOUISVILLE - Drake won a share of the Missouri Valley Con- ference basketball title- yesterday by overcoming a stubborn Louis- ville defense 79-73. The Bulldogs, in winning their first victory on Louisville's home court, were led once again by their towering center Jeff Halliburton, who poured through 27 points. Mike Grosso, playing his last home game for the Cardinals, turned in a 28-point performance before leaving in the final four seconds. The teams were tied 39-39 at the half, but Drake took a one- point edge when Bobby Jones sank a free throw on a technical foul called against Louisville Coach John Dromo -as the first period ended. From that point on Drake went ahead as Louisville was unable to stop Halliburton's deadly ac- curacy from , far out on the floor. Tom Bush contributed 16 points for the Bulldogs, whose conference record is 13-2 with one game re- maining. Louisville, going into Saturday's game, had been in sec- ond place with a record of 10-2. Wildcats roll on LEXINGTON, Ky - Kentucky threw away a 17-point lead yester- day afternoon before downing pesky Vanderbilt 90-86 in a Southeastern Conference basket- ball game. Except for a first-half flash, the No. 1 Wildcats played sloppily, perhaps because they already have the SEC trophy locked up. Dan Issel led all scorers with 31 points, and Tom Parker added 21 for Kentucky. Perry Wallace paced Vander- bilt with 25. Thorpe Weber added 19, Tom Arnholt 18 and Jimmy, Conn 10. The victory was Kentucky's 23rd in 24 starts and gave the Wildcats a 15-1 SEC record. Vanderbilt now is 11-13 over all and 7-9 in the conference. * * * Cadets trip Middies WEST POINT - Army, with an eye on the National Invitation Tournament, destroyed Navy 80-56 yesterday as Jim Oxley scored a career high 24 points in his final home college basketball game. The Cadets, 19-5, had little trouble dealing the outmanned Midshipmen their 19th defeat in 23 decisions. Army scored the first eight points, four by Oxley, and then reeled off eight more, with ii Oxley again scoring four, after Navy pulled within 13-11. The lead grew to 40-19 by halftime and Navy never threatened again. Doug Clevenger added 18 points and Max Miller 10 for the Cadets while Jack Conrad had 20 and Scott Semko 12 for Navy. * * * DePaul defrocked CHICAGO - Howard Porter, hitting 18 of his 27 points in the second half, fired tournament- bound VillanovA to a 102-90 bas- ketball victory over DePaul yes- terday. Villanova, 19-6 for the season and headed for the NCAA Tour- ney, topped the 100-point mark for the sixth time this season. Trailing at the half 47-43, De- Paul tied the score 51-51. Then Porter made three straight jump shots and Clarence Smith added a basket to put the Wildcats com- fortably in front. DePaul moved to 86-81 with four minutes left but Porter and Chris Ford combined to boost Vil- lanova to a 96-84 bulge. Rice cops crown HOUSTON - Rice clinched a tie for the Southwest Conference basketball title yesterday by de- feating Texas Christian 82-73, surviving a second-half scare. The Owls blew a 12-point lead midway in the second half but regained their poise and won going away to boost their conference mark to 10-3 and their season to 14-9 with one game remaining. -Daily-Richard Lee Sid Jensen doing his thing i 71 Acme and Justin Boots MS-PhD GRADUATES I Banks' life threatened; Baseball players to strike??? By The Associated Press *SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - Chicago Cub baseball star Ernie Banks was in seclusion yesterday following a telephone call threat on his life. Banks was whisked off the practice field Friday, cancelled a speaking engagement Friday night and was not expected to engage in workouts today following the threat. FBI agents here and in Chicago were investigating the matter. Pitching Coach Joe Becker answered the call and when the op- erator identified the caller as Larry Jackson, retired former Cub pitcher, Becker accepted the call. The caller told Becker, who immediately knew it was not Jack- son, that "I've got a gun and I intend to use it on Banks." OMIAMI - The threat of a players' strike looms for the 1970 baseball season after major leaguers ignored a save-baseball pitch from Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and turned down a basic contract from owners. Despite Kuhn's plea Friday for "the need for good publicity," representatives of the 24 clubs rejected a written contract submitted by the owners. Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, said "There will be a problem" concerning sch- eduled season openers if no agreement is reached before the old con- tract expires April 5. A game in each of the National and American leagues is schedul- ed for April 6. * * * *NEW YORK - The New York Rangers have sent rookie Juha Widing and veteran Real Lomieux to the Los Angeles Kings in a Na- tional Hockey League trade for veteran left wing Ted Irvine. Irvine, 25, played in 58 games for the Kings this year. He scored 11 goals and had 12 assists. Robinson named coach 1 LEE JEANS Rodeo and Regular cuts SCHNEIDER WESTERN SUPPLY 2635 Saline Road Ann Arbor, Mich Ph. 663-0111 I ) i I FAMILIAR EQUATION? it describes the dynamics of a linear system. We use such equations in solving problems in inertial guidance for ships, aircraft, and submarines. The work involves analytical research relating to gimballed and strapdown inertial systems and sensors including: mathematical modeling of physical processes, inertial system error analysis, system snythesis, optimization and evaluation in the area of Navigation, Guidance and Control. We'll be on campus MONDAY, MARCH 2nd talking to MS and Doctoral graduates in EE, Aero/Astro or Systems who are familiar with automatic control systems and random process theory. The positions are located 8 miles from Boston and Cambridge and offer excellent salaries, benefits and paid re-location. If you're interested in joining a small fast-moving research firm and enjoy professional recognition of your work, plan to see us on Monday, March 2nd. THE ANALYTIC SCIENCES CORP. 6 JACOB WAY READING, MASSACHUSETTS 01867 Register by March 6 TO VOTE in the APRIL 6 Ann Arbor Elections -REFERENDUM ON THE VIETNAM WAR -COUNCIL RACES IN THE FIVE WARDS REGISTRATION: at III, State NORMAL, Ill. (A) - Will Rob- inson, who made a habit of de- veloping basketball stars at De- troit Pershing High Schools, has been named head coach "at Illinois State University. In 1967, Robinson led Pershing to the state title with much help from Spencer Haywood, R a l p h 4 Simpson, and John Lockard. Haywood is now a leading scor- er in the American Basketball As- sociation after joining the Denver team from the University of De- troit, where he established several scoring records during his one year on the team. Simpson is a sophomore at Michigan State and one of t he top scorers on the Spartan basket- ball team. Lockard Just finished his fresh- man season at Michigan where he lead the Wolverine frosh in re- bounding and was the number three scorer. I : t: '":i:i;"i:;i?::;Si: {fr22fi, :#"rs>a; ' ": "". ".""".z>: ?i:'{ ;{>.:f{.rr:i:4:4+.ii. {:.:?:++: ;:}i:"rirrY :+i ''+ .'"+:h.: :"i;{}'.yi{;: :Jti: J ::::. ..... ...... ;.;.::::::..::::. : "::.....:":: i:.."r. ::"::::" :.f . t: t W i 2nd Fl. City Hall: Mnn ~m r k finTh s,-r 1 st Fl. Michigan League Community Center PiaC. ntn c VOTE ANTI-WAR!! A Vietnam War Referendum is on the City Ballot. I S:S.'"f. S: k::~ii":