Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 12, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 12, 1969 TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSIONS start again at INTERNATIONAL CENTER, Jann. 14, 12 noon Speaker, MR. ISAAC ADALEMO from Nigeria His Topic: h "How to Meet Academic Pressure" For reservations call 662-5529 Sponsored by the ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER 921 Church Tankers By ROD ROBERT "We really showed Indiana that we've got some good stuff. Every- body swam well," said a happy Gary Kinkead after Michigan's strong showing in the Big Ten Relays at East Lansing yesterday. The powerful Hoosier team had hoped to beat the stuffing out of an upstart Wolverine swim squad. But they won over Michigan by only a 136-120 margin. Michigan State was third, scoring 89, follow- ed by Wisconsin with 73, Ohio State 66, Minnesota 35, and Iowa 21. If Michigan ,had gotten breaks in some of the photo finishes, they might have even won the meet. Coach Stager explained, "We lost some close races, while In- diana won theirs. The rest of the field hurt us quite a bit when they caused a few of our relays to fin- ish third or fourth. If they had ART PRINT LOAN OPEN 3rd floor S.A.B. a strong been seconds instead, the meet would have been much, much closer." Indiana was still impressive as they captured first in seven of the twelve relays. But so was Michigan. Wolverine relay teams set two meet records in four of their vic- tories. That"s quite a rebound from last year's 60 point loss to the Hoosiers, when they failed to win a single event. It was obvious from the start that Michigan would not sink easily. Their 400 yard freestyle relay of Bob and Greg Zann, Bob Kircher, and Juan Bello won the first event of the day. But Indiana won the next two races easily. In the 300 yard back- stroke relay, Olympian Charlie Hickcox came from more than ten yards behind to just touch out Ohio State's swimmer at the fin- ish. The Indiana breaststroke team featured two other Olym- pians and theyhelped set a new meet record, in the 300 yard event. Not to be outdone, Michigan's butterfly trio of Lee Biabee, Tom Arusco, and Juan Bello made the new Conference relay mark of 2:38-51. They won by nearly half the length of the pool. Both Indiana and Michigan faltered in the one meter diving as Ohio State took first, breaking the two-team monopoly. The 1500 yard relay followed and provided Michigan's most outstanding performance of the. January 14-7-9 P.M. January 15-3:30-5, 7-9 P.M. January 16-7-9 P.M.--- January 17"-1-3 P.M. second in Relays Matmen score early .i1to tame 'Cats, 21-10 JUAN BELLO TOM ARUSOO, AND LEE BISBEE (left to right) set a new meet record is the 300 yard butterfly event at the Big Ten Relays in East Lansing yesterday. Michigan finished only sixteen points behind swimming powerhouse Indiana, Sollo Gralla Grooves at I Student Book Service 1215 S. University The Interpersonal Dating Service i'1 The most complete supply of NEW and USED TEXTS and, PAPERBACKS -no computerization, no impersonalization --matching scheme, based upon psychological theory -data sheets and pictures for each of your dates For information send a post card with your name and address to: I. DoS COME TO Student Book Service and visit NEFF WELLIN SQUIRREL meet. Sophomore Mike Allen with- stood the challenge of Indiana's Fred Southward, until the Big Ten champion in the 500 and 1650 gave up pursuit. Gary Kinkead and Mike O'Connor had built up a good lead for the first year varsity distance swimmer, but Southward was closing the gap steadily. With four laps to go he had had enough, and Allen coasted home. Indiana Coach Doc Councilman commented on the race after the meet. "Southward has been both- ered with tendonitis this year, and has been at his best. I told him to go after Allen, but if his shoulder hurt too much, just to hold on to second." At this point, Michigan was ac- tually in the lead 60-58. But most of Indiana's strong events were is at the Student Book Service II! 't' U still to come. The perennial Hoosier depth showed up again this year as they took first in the next five relays. Michigan, however, won the final race of the day. Mike O'Con- nor, Gary Kinkead, Bob Zann, and Juan Bello took the 800 yard free- style relay with ease as they set a new meet record of 7:11.96. Stager was obviously happy with his team's performance. "When we came up here, preventing an Indiana sweep was the big thing on my mind. We ended up doing a lot more than that." 400 FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Michi- gan (G. Zann, R. Zann, Kircher, Bello), 3:13.82. 2. Indiana. 3. Michigan State. 300 BACKSTROKE RELAY - 1. In- diana, 2:46.82, Pool Record. 2. Ohio State. 3. Michigan (R. Allen, Mertz, Kinkead). 300 BREASTSTROKE RELAY -- 1. In- diana, 3:04.31, Pool Record. 2. Michigan State. 3. Michigan (Mahler, Mahoney, Wainess). 300 BUTTERFLY RELAY - 1. Mich- igan (Bisbee, Arusoo, Bello), 2:38.51, Pool and Meet Records. 2. Indiana. 3. {Wisconsin. ONE-METER DIVING RELAY -- 1. Ohio State, 391.30. 2. Wisconsin. 3. Michigan (McManaman, McGuire). 1500 FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Mich- igan (M. Allen, O'Connon, Kinkead), 14:53.25, Pool and Meet Records. 2. Indiana. 3. Michigan State. 200 FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Indiana, 1:28.10, Pool Record. 2. Wisconsin. 3. Michigan (Harmony, Kircher, Moore, G. Zann). 400 MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Indiana, 3:37.82. 2. Michigan State. 3. Michigan (R. Alien, Mahoney, Bisbee, R. Zann). 200 MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Indiana, 1:38.66, Pool Record. 2. Michigan (Mertz, Mahoney, Bisbee, G. Zann). 300 IINDIVIDUAL MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Indiana, 2:46.71, Pool Record. 2. Wis- consin. 3. Ohio State. THREE-METER DIVING RELAY - 1. Indiana, 445.30. 2 Michigan (Meaden, Rydze). 3. Ohio State. 800 FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Mich- igan (O'Connor, Kinkead, R. Zann, Bello) 7:11.96, Meet Record. 2. Michi- gan State. 3. Indiana. By JOE MARKER Michigan's undefeated wrestlers racked up victories in three early matches and then pulled off un- expected upsets in the heavier weight classes to register a 21-10 triumph over Northwestern's Wild- cats yesterday at the Events Build- ing. The match marked the first of two important showdowns with teams that finished ahead of the Wolverines in the recent Midlands tournament. Next week the Wol- verines tangle with powerful Iowa in Iowa City. However brilliant the other Wolverines were in their victories, Jesse Rawls, grinning ear to ear, captured the hearts of the fans with his tie under extremely dif- ficult circumstances. Rawls, who normally wrestles at 167 pounds, moved up to heavy- weight to oppose 230 pound Dan Kraft. The match initially went as expected, with Kraft piling up a 6-0 lead. Then the tenacious Rawls fought back to a 7-7 dead- lock and left the mat amid a standing ovation. Michigan's lightweights as usual, got the Wolverines off on the right foot with superior perform- ances. Tim Cech started the ball- roll- ing in the 123-pound class by turning the Wildcats' Ed Dumas over and pinning him at 6:33. Lou Hudson and Jack Dunn then took decisions to increase the Wolver- ines' edge. Michigan either trailed or was tied going into the third period of each of these bouts. However, in each case the Wolverine grap- pler took command over a badly- tiring opponent, as Coach Cliff Keen's obscession with superior conditioning paid handsome divi- dends. Assistant Coach Rick Bay com- pented, "We've been back to work a couple of weeks and have always considered conditioning the most important part of the whole pro- gram. Strength and speed are no good to a guy who always runs out. of gas." As expected, the Wolvrines then ran into some difficulty 'in the middle weight-classes. Lane Head- rick, who had wrestled in only one previous dual meet, surprised everyone by tieing Northwestern's Steve Buttrey 7-7 in the 145- pound class. However, Jim Sanger came up with an unexplainably flat per- formance against Northwestern's Bill Laursen and lost 8-0. Charles Reilly then gave two- time Big Ten runner-up Otto Ze- man the scare of his life in the 160 class before narrowly losing 2-1. The winning point was scored. when Reilly was penalized for DAN KRAFT stalling with 30 seconds left in the match. At this point Michigan was clinging to a 13-8 lead and had yet to f Te Northwestern's strength in the igher weight classes. Tom Quinn, who is wrestling with a broken nose, had the du- bious honor of facing the Wild- cats' Seth Norton, who captured first in the 167 category at the Midlands Tourney. , Quinn, however, came from be- hind in a wild third period to capture an 8-6 decision. In the last half-minute of the match, Quinn scored three points on a takedown and then escaped after Norton had reversed the hold. Michigan now led 16-8 and needed only a tie in the last two matches to secure a win. Captain Pete Cornell, although a little careless, escaped with a 7-6 ver- dict over Bill Pauss to clinch the victory. Cornell won in a third-period which produced a Pauss take-down and predicament and a reversal by Cornell, all within a few sec- onds. Either Rawls or Cornell could have gone at 177. "We weighed them both in at 177," Bay said. "If we needed one sure one to clinch the meet, we are going to use Cornell at 177 like we did. If we had needed two, Rawls would have gone at 177 and Cornell at heavyweight." Then Rawls iced the victory cake with his shocking finale. 123 lbs. - Cech (M) pinned Dumas, 6:33. 130 lbs. - Hudson (M) dee. Moss, 4-2. 137 lbs. - M. Rubin (M) dec. Dunn, 4-2. 145 lbs. - Headrick (M) drew Butt rey, 7-7. 152 lbs. - Laursen (N) dec. Sanger, 8 0. 160 lbs. - Zeman (N) dec. Reilly, 2-1. 167 lbs. - Quinn (M) dec. Nortou 8- 6. 177 lbs. - Cornell (M) dee. Pauss, .s7- -. Hwt. - Bawls (M) drew Kraft, 7-7. P. 0. Box 2137 Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104. f Hear Ye ! i I We can teach you to read faster-(3-4-5 Times Faster) with belier Comprenon A Full Stock of Audio Tapes. .. Priced reel low. I I 1 / v 4 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS FOR IMPROVED I RECORDING TAPE ! ! 0 GRADESx CONCENTRATION COMPREHENSION STUDY SKILLS RECALL SKILLS RESEARCH SKILLS It is difficult for those who read in the plodding, old-fashioned way to appreciate the sense of freedom that comes with effortless reading. Most of you fead the way people did a century ago-word by word, at rates of perhaps 150 to 350 words a minute. /But now there is a new and modern way to read. It is called Reading Dynamics. With it you can read at least three times faster than you now do, without skipping or skimming. You can learn this new way of reading in just a few hours a week. 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