Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 4, 1968 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 4, '1968 Boutique for the Fashionable Woman - at 611 Church st..in the arcade. daily: 11 to 5:30. SALE E) I CONDITIONING DECISIVE: Grapplers sharp in Pitt wmin 'Wolverines in all-star contests By JOE MARKER Michigan's wrestling s q u a d swept into Washington, Pennsyl- vania, last Saturday and scored an unexpectedly decisive triumph over highly regarded Pittsburgh. The Wolverines captured five of the nine matches, while losing only two, en route to a 21-10 de- cision over the Panthers. Michigan coach Cliff Keen was wary of Pitt for two understand- able reasons. First, the Panthers' line-up was loaded with sopho- mores, who as freshmen last year defeated their Michigan counter- parts. Secondly Keen was sending an extremely inexperienced line-up onto.the mat. Three of the Mich- igan grapplers hlad no previous varsity experience, while two had wrestled only once before. QUICK WIN Michigan actually won the meet in the first four matches, piling up a 13-2 lead on a pin, two de!. cisions, and a tie. 1 Sophomore Tim Cech, one of those wrestling his first varsity match, started the b a11 rolling i l l r i l E _ R. J., Brown Goss, Hoey, LOU HUDSON GEOFF HENSON . . OPENINGS FOR CHILD CARE WORKERS -HAWTHORN CENTER Work-Experience Opportunity with Emotionally Disturbed Children. Hawthorn Center offers mature students a unique opportunity to work directly with disturbed children in a creative, well-supervised, in-patient treatment setting - a particularly rewarding experience for potential professional workers in Education Psy- chology, Social Work, Medicine and related Be- havioral Sciences. Hours: 32 or 40 per week. Must be able to work days and weekends. Potential openings on evenings and midnight shaft. Age Requirement: Minirum-20 years. Education: Minimum-Two credit years complet- ed, and good academic standing in third year. when he pinned Pitt's Tom Grant one in the crowd of 1,000 by tying at 4:09, taking charge from the the talented Panther 5-5 in the opening seconds, key match of the afternoon. "This Veterans Lou Hudson and Geoff gave us the shot in the arm we Henson added six more points to needed," commented assistant the Michigan total with easy de- coach Rick Bay. cisions in the 130 and 137 pound TIGHT DECISIONS' weight classes. Michigan dropped hairline de- Coach Keen has a nice problem cisions in the 152 and 167 pound in the 130 pound category, with classes, as Pat Lavery decisioned any of three men capable of doing Jim Sanger and Jesse Rawls, a the job, namely Hudson, Steve transfer student, was edged by Rubin, or Mark Rubin. Pitt's Bob Kuhn. Kuhn's victory His solution was to move Mark was accomplished with a takedown Rubin up to 145 p o u n d class, in the final seconds of the match. where he had to face highly re- Captain Pete Cornell turned in garded M a r k Payne. Payne, a his usual workmanlike job,. over- sophomore, had been undefeated whelming his opponent 12-0 in over a three year span, and was the 177 pound category. supposed to make easy pickings The heavyweight match-up was of his lighter opponent. supposed to be a rematch of the However, Rubin, another new- Pennsylvania state high school comer to the Michigan scene, up- championship tilt, in which Mich- set the applecart, stunning every- igan's Pete Drehmann had de- feated Ralph Sindrich for the ti- tle. However, Sindrich was unable to compete, and Drehmann de- cisioned Paul Allen, 4-2. He was somewhat exhausted after the match, since his football duties this past fall allowed him only three days to get into shape for the ipatch. Inh reflecting on the victory, Bay thought that conditioning in glanor tilts ANN ARBOR-Michigan's dead- ly offensive duo of halfback Ron Johnson and quarterback Dennis Brown, who between them domi- nated this year individual statis- tics, has been invited to join the East squad for the annual East- West Shrine All-Star, game Dec. 28 in San Francisco. Two other members of the Wol- verines, Tom Goss and George Hoey, will play in the North-South All-Star game in Miami, Fla., Dec. 25th. Johnson, who led the surprising Wolverines to an outstanding 6-1 record, said, "This is a real honor for me to be selected for this fine charity game and I'm certainly looking forward to playing in it." The 205 pound Michigan cap- tain broke five league records and tied a sixth in becoming the first rusher in Big Ten history to gain over 1,000 yards in league com- petition. Johnson broke single game and season rushing and scoring records and moved into the- No. 2 position among career rushers behind former Illinois great Jim Prabowski. He became Michigan's first rushing champion since Jim Pace won in 1957 with 584 yards and the sixth since 1939, and also won Michigan's 7th individual scoring,- title. Brown broke many of Michi- gan's xseason and career passing records and set a couple of Big Ten totals offense marks. He at- tempted more passes (389), com- pleted more (194) and had more yardage passing (2518) than any passer in Michigan football his- tory. The 178 pounder is only the fourth Wolverine to cop the con- ference passing title. Goss and Hoey spearheaded a Michigan defense which was thel conference stingiest in points al- lowed . . . until the Columbus de- bacle. In addition, Hoey returned punts for a whopping 550 yards in his career, second only to Gene Derricotte's 753 yards.. Goss, a superior defensive tackle, made 54 unassisted tackles, throwing run- ners for losses nine times this sea- son. His tough play was a main reason why the Wolverine defense yielded only 16.4 points per game. of -Daily-Eric Pergeaux DENNIS BROWN rolls out with Ron Johnson blocking against Michigan= State this year. Both players along with Tom Goss and George Hoey are slated to play in post season all star games. Johnson and Brown will be in the East-West Shrine game while Goss and Hoey will play in the North South all star game. FINA L POLL POSTPONED OSU solidifies No. ranin By The Associated Press for six straight weeks before being from 11th to 10th on the strength That Dream Match-the No. 1 displaced by Ohio State a week of a 41-7 blasting of Oklahoma team against the No. 2 outfit in ago, had 631 points-only 13 more State. the Rose Bowl-remained a reality than No. 3 Penn State, 9-0 and Idle Purdue, 8-2, moved from today . . . but just barely. Orange Bowl bound. 12th to 11th; Alabama, 8-2, ad- Ohio State solidified its hold on A week ago, Ohio State held vanced from 15th to 12th follow- thestoppot in he oated utonly a 10-point margin over ing a 24-16 victory over Auburn; Press' major college football poll., I Souther al. 'Aln ,r,ki 0_9 4+, *' Salary: With Bachelor's degree-$6786 Without Bachelor's degree-$5992 per year per year might have conditioning Pittsburgh's, in the close been decisive: was better which helped matches." "Our than a lot Call or Write: Director of Nursing Hawthorn Center Northville, Michigan Telephone: Area Code 13- Fl 9-300 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ......_..__ Al RPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips. Day but the Buckeyes' New Year's Day foe, Southern California, had only a precarious hold on second place after last weekend's 21-21 draw with Notre Dame. The Buckeyes, who wound up their regular season on a 9-0 note with their win over Michigan Nov. 23, drew 34 of the 39 first place votes in amassing 770 points. Southern Cal, the No. 1 team $ :+ :L ........ :xi:{v':'istit>'Jr,{Cm s ' iit :: :,'".:i:::, ,..k. k:VULA11 % U. ileMihian82, remaind 13t; WAIT FOR BOWLS idle Oregon State. 7-3, held on to Because the race is so tight the 14th, and surprising Ohio U., 10-0, final AP poll of the season won't leaped from 17th to 15th although be released until after the Jan. 1 it did not play. bowl games. Georgia, 8-0-2; which polished Rounding out the top 20 were arch-rival Georgia Tech 47-8 last No. 16 Missouri, 7-3;' No. 17 Ari- weekend, remained fourth, but zona State, 8-2; Houston, down all Texas, 8-1-1, advanced a notch to Ithe way to 18th from 10th after fifth after routing Texas A&M a 40-20 loss to Florida State that 35-14 Thanksgiving Day. lifted the Seminoles from among Idle Kansas, 9-1, slipped to the also rans into the No. 19 slot, sixth, while Notre Dame's tie with and No. 20 Southern Methodist, a USC boosted the Irish 7-2-1, up newcomer which finished with a two spots to seventh. 7-3 record Nov. 26, Tennessee, 8-1-1, a 10-7 con- Auburn, 18th last week, dropped queror of stubborn Vanderbilt was from the rankings after the loss r L 4 I fi Denzin garners academic award The top 20, with first-place votes, re- cords and total points. Points awarded first 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-14-12- 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Ohio State 34 9-0 770f 1,You sure are my kind of folksinger, Fran. "Oh, a lonely minstrel I'm meant to be..." 3. I've always admired you. "Forever to roam is my destiny..." 5. But i guess you're just too wrapped up with your music. Alone, yes, alone constantly... 2. Y'think maybe you and me could, uh, possibly... "A-smgm my song to humanity... - r 4. And I was hoping that perhaps, somehow, the feeling might be mutual. "Without any need for company... 6. It could have been beautiful, because I just got one of the great jobs Equitable is offering college people these days. Real good pay, challenging work, and promotions that come as fast as I can earn them. Center Dave lenzin has wan the 2. Southern California 2 9-0-1 631 Dr. Arthur Robinson Award. This 3. Penn State 39-0 eighth, down one spot; idle Ar- to Alabama. Also vanishing was honor is presented annually to the 4. Georgia 8-0-2-528 kansas, 9-1, dropped one place to Arizona 19th after suffering a 30- senor iathletentmdinnguth5best exas8-1-1399 ninth, and Oklahoma jumped 7 drubbing by Arizona State. snoatltcobnnthbet6. Kansas 9-1 3941 football ability and academic 7. Notre Dame 7-2-1 335 achievements. 8. Tennessee 8-1-1 312B us c 'i' trophy ----9. Arkansas 9-1 285x C t a~ o a 10. Okiahona 7-3 228 11. Purdue 8-2 139 12. Alabama 8-2 13 NEW YORK )- Ohio State A A ~ U 13. Michigan. 8-2 11E5OR hi tt A IM EE SU 14. Oregon state 7-3 87 and its 1969 football powerhouse 15. Ohio University 10-0 49 was named the nation's top college 16. Missouri 7-3 44 team by the National Football sells at 17. AHriotna State -2 Foundation and 13 grid greats of 19. Florida state 8-2 21 the past were inducted into the Student Book Service 20. Southern Methodist 7-3 18 National Football Hall of Fame at Other teams receiving votes listed al- the Foundation's annual banquet 215 S. University phabetically: Army, Auburn, California, last night. Harvard, tanford, Virginia Tech, Wyo- ChsrLa chredntf mningYale. Chester LaRoche, president of ---- -- -- the Foundation and Hall of Fame - and a formerYale quarterback, was awarded the Gold Medal for R o Jwie rlong and meritorious service. Eleven 'current college players received post-graduate scholar- ships for being named Founda- 8:15 P.M. December 6 tion scholar-athleteseW STOC K Y YJELL LOUNGECoach Woody Hayes acceptedIWOD HAE STOCKWELL LOUNGE ' the MacArthur Bowl Trophy for HAYES his Buckeyes, who won the Big or winner, Admiral Jonas Ing- Ten title and a trip to the Rose ram of Navy, 1906; the late Vin- ON E G S HAB BOT to follow Bowl and who are ranked No. 1 cent 'Stevenson of Pennsylvania, in ,The Associated Press poll. 1904-05; Judge Ed Rodgers of ALL ARE I NVI TED Clark Shaughnessy, honored for Carlisle and Minnesota, 1897- an outstanding coaching career at 1903; and Zora Clevenger of In- ---__ ' 'Tulane, Loyola of the South, Chi- diana, 1900-03. G I > ) o ro oo>o:: <><;;;; cago and Stanford, was inducted The modern inductees were into the Hall of Fame with 12 halfback Claude "Monk" Simmons NORWEGIAN former players. of Tulane, 1932-34; tackle Al "Ox" S I AFour of those players, compet- Wistert of Michigan, 1940-42; K b JACKETS efore 1910, were selected in quarterback Bobby Layne of the pioneer category. They are the Texas, 1944-47; halfback J o h n Slate Congressional Medal of Hon- Pingel of Michigan State, 1936- Assorted Sazes & Colors' FANON, FRIEDMAN, MAO, LENNON )THE'_, MEDINA SHOPA( 402 Maynard St. 663-4540 Franlz, Milly, Tse, John o<-o< yo < o_ - <->w <-><=-> <><=> <>c_-r oil sold us their books- Look where it got them!! - PlayteX*invents the first-day tampon" (We took the inside out to show you how different it is.) Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardboardy). Inside: it's so extra absorbent... it even protects on your first day. Your worst day! In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...) ti ~ctvFnrr-n-n~rnr art e{nn.an WORRIED ? EXAM TIME is Outline Time Use our condense( s STUDENT BOOK SRVIC T D5 5S. University Completely Remodeled Thano's Lamplighter. Like to hear my version of "Lead Me Down the Aisle, Lyle"? I I I