THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 16, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Sunday, February 16, 1969 t CZZZYZ ZILZT I State overpowers wrestlers 20-9 *1 ry TT TXXXXiiiii By JOE MARKER Michigan's wrestlers won th e two "feature" matches but 10 s t nearly everything else as they+ bowed to powerful Michigan + State, 20-9, yesterday at the Events Building. Both Tim Cech, wrestling at 123 pounds and Pete Cornell at 177 defeated highly-touted opponents, but their showings could not off- set State's team balance. Cech opened the meet against Gary Bissell, third-place finisher in the Big Ten meet last year, and extracted a narrow 2-1 victory in a conservatively wrestled b o u t. Much of the time was consumed 2538 SAB OREST"FOOD with the wrestlers twisting e a c h other up in armlocks. The only scoring was the result of escapes by each contestant, but Cech earned the victory on o n e point riding time. Cornell badly outpointed State's Jack Zindel, who was third in the NCAA's two years ago, by an 8-3 margin. After a sco'reless .first period, the Michigan captain rode his tiring opponent the entire second stanza, and then piled up all his points in the last t h r e e minutes. The five matches following Cach's victory proved to be the Wolverines' downfall as S t a t e piled up an insurmountable 15-3 lead. Lou Hudson's match at 130 was "the one that really broke our hearts," according to Assistant Coach Rick Bay. Hudson's op- ponent, Mike Ellis, scored a re- versal with only three second left in the bout to earn a razor-thin 7-6 victory. Ellis' other five points w e r e scored on a dramatic take-down and near pin in the second period, during which Hudson spent most of his time with his shoulders barely off the mat. However, he escaped near the end of the per- iod to force the match to its dra- matic conclusion. The other back-breaker f o r Michigan was at 145, where Mike Rubin lost 6-4 to Ron Ouellet. The action aroused the ire of the partisan Michigan crowd, which thought that Rubin had scored take-downs several times which weren't counted. The referee ruled, however, that the wrestlers were off the mat each time Rubin had gained con- trol over his opponent. sacrifice the heavyweight class. where State's Jeff Smith h a s been undefeated since he lost to Dave Porter in the NCAA's last year, and to concentrate on win- ning the other two. The idea worked fairly well, as Rawls provided the Wolverines with their only other victory of the day besides Cornell's and Cech's. He handily defeated Jim Hall and in the process provided some lively action by repeatedly hoist- ing his opponent up off the mat and taking him down. Quinn, however, was less for- tunate, dropping a 5-2 decision to Tom Muir. In the end it was State's over- all balance, plus its ability to gain narrow victories in the 130 and 145 pound classes that doomed the Wolverines. The victory gave the Spartans two wins over Mich- igan in the last two years, but still left the Wolverines with a healthy 5-2 bulge over Michigan State over the last seven years. STATISTICS 123 pounds - Tim Cech (Michigan) dec. Gary Bissell (MSU), 2-1. 130 pounds - Mike Ellis (MSU) dec. Lou Hudson (M), 7-6 137 pounds - Keith Lowrance (MSU) dec. Geoff Henson (M), 15-3 145 pounds - Ron Ouellet (MSU) dec. Mike Rubin (M), 6-4 152 pounds - John Abajace (MSU) dec. Lane Headrick (M), 8-0 160 pounds - Tom Muir (MSU) dec. Tonr Quinn (M), 5-2 167 pounds - Jesse Rawls (M) dec. John Hall (MSU), 10-3 177 pounds - Pete Cornell (M) dec. Jack Zindel (MSU), 8-3 Heavyweight - Jeff Smith (MSU) won by forfeit. Final score.- Michigan State (8-2) 20, Michigan (12-2) 9. of 4 m Serving U-M Hospital and Campus Area with Foods, Health and Beauty Aids, Liquor-Beer and Wine Open Daily Mon.-Thurs. 8 A.M.-7 P.M., Fri.-Sat. 8 A.M.-10 P.M., Sun. 10 A.M.-7 JESSE RAWLS RIDES his opponent en route to a 10-3 victory in yesterday's meet with Michigan State. Rawls was one of only three Wolverines to reach the winner's circle as Michigan bowed to their arch rivals, 20-9. Coach Bay explains, "the take- down counts if the controlling points of the controlling man are on the mat when the take-down occurs." In addition, the crowd thought that the State man should have been called for stalling in the third period. He was finally given a warning, but no penalty was imposed. The 137 and 152 pound classes ..g{a:::. }'i{"S{4i ! Ga ":v4:e":"::":S4"":i r":+:":{ ":{ i~ isii1ilaiigismgif}:{"°:.}-0 ri4::r i iski{;{.}:: ;{~,:.. .v #faira:::"rynx.{.}.::q: AD...........f.^... . .... ..^.:" ::..1..........::"":':: :.5 } 14 :}":.": f:::."":": f:}:"~i.V:. Di$iAi~?$#siEIY O AF#25F sI IksiAikL B U11AsfAL LETA#21i~si~h9IN .Continued from Page 3) Warren, Mich.: (Fitzgerald schools) Elem.: K-6, Art, Lib., Vocal, Type A. H.S,: Earth Sci., Biol., .A., G.P.E., Re- source Teach., Sch. Soc. Wk. Sp. Corr. Portage, Mich.: Elem.: Em. Dist., Teli. Couns., Ment. Ret. H.S.: Math, Eng.,' Bus., Art, I.A., Scl., Lib,., Engl./S.S.,' H.E., G.P.E., Fr., Latin, Span., V.T., Sp. Thier. Madrid, Spain: Elem., Engl., Lib. (Must have 2 years of experience.) Rudyard, Mich.: Elem: K-6. Vocal Music, Art, Sp. Corr. East Lansing, Mich. Battle Creek, Mich.: Elem: A r t, Music, P.E. Sec.: All fields. Sp. Ed.: Deaf & Hard of Hearing, Ment. Re- tarded, physically handicapped. Sp. Teachers: Music, Art, P.E., Sp: Corr. (Elem.), Physical Therapist. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1969 1 Orange, California: Elem: K-6. Sec.: Engl., phys. sci., Gen. Sci., Math, Span., French, I.A., Girl's P.E., Reading, Lib.I Sp. Ed.: Sp. Ther., Deaf, E.M.R., T.M.R., Emot. Dist., Psych., Sch. Nurse. Flint, Mich.: Elem.: Pre-K, K., Early Elem., Later Elem., Art, Homeroom,1 Sci, Math., Vocal Music, Instr. Music, P.E., Rem. Read. Sec.: All fields. Sp. Ed.: Ment. Retarded, Sp. Therapy, Phy- sically Hand., Orthopedically (Multi-; ple), Emot. Dist. Wyoming, Mich.: (Godwin Hts. P.S.): All fields. Denver, Colorado: All Elem. Sec.: Sp. Ed.. Math., Sc., I.A., H.E. Hoffman Estates, Illinois: Elem: K., Primarys(1-2-3), Intermediate.(4-5-6), Voc. Music, Art, Girls P.E. Jr. High: Art, Engl., French, Lib., Math, Boy's P.E., Sc., S.S., Voc. Music. Sp. Ed.: Psychologist, Soc. Worker, E.M.H., So-t cially Maladjusted, Disability Teacher. Corte Madera, Calif.: (Marin County1 Schools): All Sp. Ed.t Glenridge, N.J.: Elem. were captured easily by the Spartans. Keith Lowrance piled up nine points in the second per- iod to defeat Geoff Henson at 137, while John Abaj ace blanked Lane Headrick, 8-0 nearly pinning him in the process. Coach Cliff Keen placed T o m Quinn and Jesse Rawls at 160 and 167 respectively, each wrest- ling one class below his n o r m a 1 weight. Keen's strategy was to Warren, Mich.: (Vacancies for Feb. 1969): Elem: K, Vocal Music. Jr. High: Math/Science. High Sch.: Math/Physi- cal Sci., Math, Gen. L.A., Drafting/Blue Print Reading, Woodworking/Drafting, Electronics. Sp. Ed.: Ment. Retarded, Soc. Worker, Diagnostician, Type A. (Vacancies for Sept., 1969): Elem.: K-6, Art, Voc. Music, Lib., P.E., Reading. Jr. High: I.A., Lang. Arts/S.S., Math, Sci., Math/Sci. Comb., Girl's P.E., Home Ec., Art, Vocal Music. Glenridge, N.J.: Elem. (ecan 111ffSS. Denver, Colorado: 'All Elem. Sec.: Sp. Ed., Math, Sci., I.A., H.E. Huntington 'Beach, Calif.: (Ocean View Sch. District): Elem: K-6, Sec. E.M.R., T.M.R., Sp. Ther., Engl., Math. Sci., Sp. Corr. Tacoma, Washington: (Tentative). FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1968 Janesville, Wisconsin: Elem.: K., Sp. Ed., Art, Counselor, Read. Specialist, Jr. High 7th gr. Sec.: All fields. Sys- tem-Wide: Psychologist, Soc. Worker, Personnel Director. Freemont, Calif.: Elem.: Primary (Grades 1-3), Grades 4-6. Jr. High: Math, Gen. Sci., Reading, Remedial Reading, Home Ec. (Foods & Cloth.), Girl's P.E., Speech, Lib., Admin. High Sch.: Reading, Drama, Gen. Sci., Biol- ow Lompoc, Calif.: Elem K-6. Sec.: Spanish, French, German, Girl's P.E., g gl., Lib., Math, Graphic Arts, Voca- Vocational Agriculture. Sp. Ed.: Ment. Retarded (Educable & Trainable), Or- thopedically Handicapped, Aurally Handicapped, Educationally 'Handicap- ped (Secondary), Traverse City, Mich.: Elem.: K-6, Type A, Vocal, Orch. H.S.: Couns., Math., Engl., S.S., Sc., Span., Read., Dist. Ed., Art, G.P.E., Dr. Ed. Mamaroneck, New York: All fields. Elgin, Illinois: Most fields K-12. To Arrange Appointments, Contact Mrs. Staelin at 3200 S.A.B.-764-7459 *1 .~'..,.i.. , I I . ORGANIZATION NOTICES Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Sun., Feb. 16th: 2-4 p.m. Israeli Folk Danc- ing, 5:30 p.m. Dell House followed by a Beit Midrash seinar, "Melemundij The. Human as Jew" presented by Dr. Lawrence Berkove, UM Dearborn. * * * * Outing Club: The most informal (i.e. disorganized) club around. Meets every Sunday for a couple of hours of hik- ing, ice skating, etc. Mostly grads but others invited. 2:00 p.m. at Rackham Bldg. (Huron St. entrance). - - - - - - - - - - - iI JUMBOY ogy, Gen. Math, Algebra, Geometry, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Bus. Ed., H.E. (Foods & Clothing), Rochester, New oYrk (Greece Cen- Girl's P.E., P.E. & Coach., I.A. Auto. tral). All grade levels - All subject # Sp. Ed.: Sp. Therapist, Sch. N u r s e , areas. Reading Specialist, Psychologist, Psy-I Livonia, Mich.: All fields. chomotrist. I r M-M-m-m-m, yummiel A giant hamburger of 1 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup . . ALL THIS FOR ONLY 49c hILNG EEtOY ERYICE West of Arborland I II) III f I ( I FRESHMAN MASS MEETING For those interested in petitioning for SOPH SHOW '69 CENTRAL COMMITTEE THURSDAY, FEB. 20 7:30 PM petitions can be picked mass meeting and at U in the office after Feb. 20th. UGLI Multi-purpose TIONS DUE FEB. 27th. Room 0 *I I up at the AC League ALL PET!- e 0" ADVERTISEMENT Freedom and True Identity The drop-out philosophy won't produce personal freedom any more than a slack guitar string will play folk music, says a Chris- tian Science lecturer. Being loose, the guitar string can't do what it is supposed to do, commented Edward C. Williams, C.S.B., of Indianapolis in a lecture to a group of college students. "Freedom to be slack and do nothing isn't freedom," he con- tinued. "It doesn't give freedom, and it can't protect our freedom. In fact, it invites loss of freedom." People, like guitar strings, Mr. Williams stated, need to act with responsibility and in concert with sthers. His lecture, titled "Freedom and True Identity," dealt with develop- ment and establishment of ident-i ity through a responsible approach to freedom. He spoke Friday night, February 14, in the UGLI Multi- purpose Room. Turning to student demonstra- tions and sit-ins, he reminded his student justified the violence by: saying simply that "our rights" were more important" than thei rights of those taking an opposing position, he related. Real meaning is given to free- dom, Mr. Williams stated, when1 people responsibly value the rights + of others as highly as they value + their own- rights. Freedom, he: said, is rights with responsibilities, the right of men to govern them- selves individually and collectively. The right balance in carrying, out the responsibilities of freedom' can be achieved through "an en- lightened sense of God," Mr. Wil- ' liams said.+ Such enlightenment, he explain- ed, involves looking beyond mate-i rial concepts of individuality that! so often restrict, a higher sense of+ freedom. Jesus, the lecturer stated, was+ making this point when he said "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free" (John 8:32). A God who is Love, he said, is "wise enough, powerful enough, tender enough to meet every hu- man need whenever we will accept it." Mr. Williams told the students that he did not ask them to at once agree with this definition of God. But he did-ask them to con- sider the good effects of such an understanding of God. "Wouldn't it clarify who and what we are as individuals?" he asked. This definition of God, he con- tinued, enables men to perceive their identity as "the expression of God, of Truth, Principle and Love," thereby transforming the human experience. This kind of understanding of one's identity as based on God protects one's experience from the enemies of true freedom, such as fear, inferiority, or sensualism, Mr. Williams said. It enables men to gain the freedom of self-govern- ment by subjugating rather than q~iservnz awless and aimal You can fly. As a TWA hostess. And you know what that means. None of that 9 to 5 hassle, number one. Good coin, number two. And number three, lots of time off to do what you want to do. And the places you can go are fantastic. Name a place in the world. We're taking a trip there every day. If you're trying to get above it all, make note of the little blurb below. It may be the start of the rearrangement your mind's 0 * hoan innCeina fnr I..