I THE MICHIGAN DAILY , ge seven I Hunter hunts tough defensive backs ig Eight powerhouses favored to capture NCAA grappling title By LEE KIRK "Playingin theKsecondary is rough," says new defensive back- field coach Dick Hunter, "but it's a challenge. I think this is the main reason people like to play there." Consider the jobs a defensive back must perform. He's got to Scover huge tight ends and fleet [flankers, fend off blockers and bring down running backs in one- on-one situations. These are not tasks for mere mortals. Hunter, one of the coaches who migrated to Michigan from Miami of Ohio when Bo Schembechler was named head coach, feels that a defensive back has to be a man of many talents. ' A good defensive back has to be an all-around athlete," Hunter commented. "He has to be fast and quick and he has to be tough mentally as well as physically." Hunter stresses the importance of attitude and alertness for the defensive back. "Except for the quarterback, no one's mistakes are as obvious as those of the defen- sive back when he gets beat or misses a tackle," Hunter says. "A good back must learn not to let these mistakes rattle him. He must have poise." Poise is a very important quality for a defensive back, Hunter con- tends, but one that must be learn- Ted rather than taught. -Dally--Larry Robbins BRIAN HEALY (24), Wolverine defensive back returns an intercepted Minnesota pass in last sea- son's game in Ann Arbor. Tom Curtis (25) and Phil Seymour (91) provide the escort as Healy heads for the Gopher ,goal. Both Curtis and Healy return next season to give Michigan a solid base upon which to build a new backfield. HOPE FOR REPEAT: Buckeyes opell grid By The Associated Press Late March is the time for the lamb to emerge, and the lion to return to its den and patiently wait for the first sign of fall be- fore stalking its prey in the jungle of collegiate sports. It is the time for the fan to re- lax, to think carefully about what he would do if he was in Lew Alcindor's shoes, and to wait for the slow and easy pace of the baseball season where he can take advantage of the between innings' lull to flash the three ring sign to the nearest vendor. But if your name is Woody{ Hayes and your lion has suucceed- ed in decapitating the head of every hDavidon the college grid- iron, you have ho sympathy for the law of the seasons, for pen- siveness, for a slow beer, and, least of all, for anyone else in pads and helmets. Coach Hayes greets his national' champion Buckeyes and a dozen outstanding frosh candidates with a sadistic and hungry eye to the rest of the nation's gridiron elev- ens on Monday, when Ohio State opens five weeks of spring drills. The Bucks are allowed four practice sessions leading to and climaxed by the spring game windup on May 3. Hayes has the unenviable task of improving on the performance of his 1968 squad which racked up a perfect 9-0 season, an im- ,pressive Rose Bowl triumph over Southern California and a na- tional championship. But there is such an abundance of talent here that the Buckeyes figure to be overwhelming favor- ites to capture the Big Ten cham- pionship and add to their 14-game winning streak, the longest in the nation. Only three offensive regulars- tackles Dave Foley, an All-Ameri- can, Rufus Mayes and center John Muhlbach-and a pair of defen- sive stalwarts-middle guard Vic Stottlemyer apd linebacker Mark Stier, graduate. Returning are-quarterback Rex Kern, the super sophomore, and a host of other sophs who blossom- ed into fullefldged stars last sea- son and will be juniors this fall. Kern, recovering from surgery for a chronic shoulder ailment, will not participate in spring drills. Backup Ron Maciejowski will be at the throttle but Hayes i I i a 1 j 3 Michigan Rugby practiee Spring Schedule rcic .MARCH3 and his aides want to take a good :i_29-CLEVELAND RUGBY look at Don Lamka, up from the CLUB* frosh squad. APRIL There are few openings, indeed, 5-Michigan State* on the first team offensive and 12/13-BIG TEN TOURNA- defensive units. MENT (at Ferry Field), Lamka, a 5-foot-11, 190-pound- 19-BORDERERS RUGBY er is one of a half-dozen all-state CLUB prep gridders who flocked to 27-HARTFORD (CONN.) Ohio State last year. RUGBY CLUB Lamka is a quarterback who is MAYr not likely' to dislodge Kern or 3-Mid-American Tourna-t Maciejowski. ment at Grant Park, "He's too good an athlete to be Chicago a third-string quarterback," says 10-Detroit Cobras Rugby freshman coach Tiger Ellison. "He Club will probably get a good test at 24-Sarnia Saints Rugby linebacking as well as at quarter- Club back." 31-Ontario Sevens Tourna- Ellison figures "there're enough m1ent at Victoria Square, good players coming up to pre- Torontor vent last year's team from getting fatheaded. Caps-home game fa* dubleeade "I certainly feel we will be a * doubleheader little better than last year ... The ability to outguess the op- position is a valuableasset for a defensive back, notes Coach Hun- ter, adding that "A back can gain a great advantage if he can anti- cipate the pattern his man is running." Hunter brings with him a fine record both as a player and a coach. He attended Miami of Ohio and was a quarterback there for four years. Miami lost only six games during these years and he was named the team's most valu- able player his senior year. After graduation, he coached high school ball for two years be- fore becoming an assistant coach at Denison University. He then went to Wake Forest for. two years before returning to Ohio as a high school coach in his home town of Barberton, where he led the school to its first undefeated season. During these years, Hunter was an offensive coach and he tutored quarterbacks George Izo and Norm Snead, both of whom later went on to play in the pros. In 1967, he became the defensive backfield coach at his alma mater. The transition from one side of the scrimmage line to the other was not a difficult one for Hunter. "A defensive backfield coach is concerned with essentially the same problems as the offensive coach," Hunter stated, "only he looks at the other side of the coin." When he played for Miami, Hunter was coached by 'Ara Par- seghian, who is nowthe highly successful mentor at Notre Dame. "Ara was a great coach," Hunter recalls. "He had a great way with people but he was still tough. I think every guy on that Miami would have given their right arm for him." To Hunter, Parseghian and new Wolverie mentor Bo Schembechler are a lot alike! "Bo and Ara both have always been greatly respected by their players," he said. In the past few years, Michigan has had strong defensive back- field and with All-American Tom Curtis and Brian Healy returning and a fine group of defensive backs coming up from the fresh- man team, Hunter expects to have another fine secondary in the coming season. THERE IS A MEETIN' IT IS AN OPEN HOOT NEWMAN CENTER Friday 8:30 come to entertain or to be entertained tj i .j "r 4 1 C l e ,_ Granfal loon presents SUN., MAR. 30 1 P.M.-2 A.M. Charging Rhinocerous of Soul Tickets'$2 Commander Cody Terry Tute Blues Ban HELP THE The Up RENT STRIKE plus 5 others Tenant's Union By PAT ATKINS About all that the other wrest- ling teams in the country can do against the Big Eight Conference in the 1969 NCAA Wrestling Tournament is to file an anti- trust suit and hope for the best. In 34 out of the last 39 years either Big Eight members Okla- homa, Oklahoma State or I o w a State, have captured the NCAA title. For the 35th time, o n e of these three Midwest magnates will more than likely top the tourna- ment field of 100 schools, with Michigan State playing the role of trust-buster. Michigan will be sending seven wrestlers, including one freshman under the new Big Ten rule, to the tournament which begins this af- ternoon at Provo, Utah, and runs through Saturday night. The Wolverines going in the lower weights are Jerry Hoddy at 115, Tim Cech at 123, freshman Ty Belknap at 130, and Mike Ru- bin - third in the Big Tens - at 137. Big Ten Champion Lou Hudson will not be entered due to a chest injury incurred during the third period of his Big Ten Champion- ship match. Others going for Michigan are Tom Quinn at 160, Big Ten champion Jesse Rawls at 167, and Big Ten runner-up Pete Cornell at 177 who placed fifth at 167 in the NCAA's last year. Only two returning champions are slated for the 1969 tournament and both wrestlers have moved up a weight. Last year's 115-pound titlist, Ken Melchoir, has jumped to 123, thus giving the Wolverine's Hoddy a little room to maneuver at 115. And I o w a State's Dan Gable, 130 pound champion in 1-968, will be in the 137 division. Hoddy has not had much com- petition this year, but has easily outdistanced the opponents he has wrestled. L a s t year's runner-up, Sergio Gonzales of UCLA, is fav- ored at 115. Ty Belknap, Michigan's only freshman representative, will also be hampered by inexperience. Bel- knap finished first in the Michi- gan Freshman Wrestling Tourna- ment this year, pinning all three of his opponents, but his1 compe- tition in the nationals will be over- whelming. Iowa State's 130-pounder Gable - undefeated in collegiate com- petition with 15 of his season's 17 wins coming on falls - has moved to 137, but the division of 130 still contains the Sooners formidable Dave McGuire. McGuire won the 130-pound title two years ago, and lost in the finals last year to Ga- ble. McGuire's stiffest competition could come from Colorado State College's Len Groom, undefeated in 25 bouts. Gable could h a v e trouble with Martin Willigan of Hofstra. whipped o n 1 y once by Gable, or Ron Russo of Blooms- burg State with a 17-0-2 record. Michigan's Big Ten champion Rawls, 13-2-1, and captain Cor- nell, 14-3-1, could be the Wolver- ine's one-two punch in the three day tournament, with Rawls at 167 and Cornell at 177. Michigan doesn't have a repre- sentative at heavyweight, but it could turn out to be the classiest match of all. This year's Big Ten champion, MSU's Jeff Smith, will probably oppose Oregon State's Jeff Lewis, 19-0 for the season, in the finals. Defending champion Oklahoma State, winner of the B i g Eight Tournament by one point o v e r Oklahoma, has been NCAA titlist 26 times, but is still a slight un- derdog to t h e favored Sooners. Oklahoma State, Iowa State, and Michigan State have the power to wrest the crown from Oklahoma. Ranked behind them are Iowa, Colorado State College, Cal Poly, Navy, Lock Haven and Maryland. But in the year of the conglom- erates, the Big Three of the Big Eight will once again monopolize the NCAA tournament. I LEADERSHIP COUPLE NEEDED for monthly (May-August) college service weekend pro- grams at Maxey Boys' Training School (a correctional insti- tution for boys 12-17, 12 miles north of Ann ,Arbor), spon- sored by the American Friends Service Committee, 1414 Hill St. Modest honorarium available. For more info, call Bruce Nordstrom, M-F, 9-12 or 1-5, at 761-8283. .I I THURSDAY, MARCH 27 NOON E Luncheon-Discussion at the ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER, 921 Church "WHERE IS PREJUDICE?" a National Educational Television film "It doesn't take much imagination to speculate on the now and the what and the why . . . . the question is where is prejudice?" -LUNCH 25c- SPAGHETTI DINNER TIME Is Sunday, March 30, at SDT sorority 1405 Hill St. from 5:00-8:00 P.M. PRICE: $1.25 ALL ARE INVITED BRING YOUR FRIENDS! Lee Composition Co. OPENING IN ANN ARBOR COLD-TYPE COMPOSITION-TYPESETTING FOR PHOTO OFFSET BM-FRIDEN-VARITYPER HEADLINER NEGATIVES-PLATES-MAILING 2440 W. STADIUM 761-4922 We never slack off I F OLLETTrS STATE STREET AT NORTH UNIVERSITY o ANN ARBOR will be CLOSED FOR INVENTORY FRIDAY-March 28th and SATURDAY-March 29th " f i'n'k t{1 C. ' on fashion. And here's evidence. Trim, tailored Haggar slacks in premium fabric of dacron and wool. The comfort- designed slacks. Machine washable, stain and crease resistant... and, they never need ironing. Choose distinctive style and fit - in fashion colors. Brown, olive, navy, black, medium blue. I Synchronized Swim Show MICHIFISH presents A NIGHT OF FROST Women's Pool Thursday-Friday-Saturday March 27, 28, 29 Only $13.00. Stop in soon. -r---- _ __ ~1 I SHOWING RENE CLEMENTS Anti-War Masterpiece FORBIDDEN GAMES WINNER Grand Prize-Venice Film Festival 8:15 P.M. Tickets can be purchased at the door i m > } C <;;:C> ?o" CCOOQ ' 0Osm SPRING ' I r $1.25 J SINCE 184$ 4 .l(i f l I E I I E E 7I - I hI S I T a