Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 5, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 5, 1969 U of M SKI CLUB ASPEN Jan. 3-Jan. 10 A FEW PLACES OPEN! some people like Rose Bowls better than skiing .. . for info DAVID OEMING 663-3202 or DARYL BARTON 761-0838 MEET MARYLAND, PIT TSBURGH: Seventh-ranked grapplers set for openers Lowest Prices on Campus JET TO LOS ANGELES X137 STILL SEATS LEFT By PAT ATKINS There are enough new fea- tures to the 1969-70 wrestling season, which begins today for the Michigan squad, to satisfy the rigors of any advertising agency's campaign. The Wolverines meet Mary- land today at the Events Build- ing at 4 p.m., then face Pitts- burgh tomorrow, a 1 so at the Events Building, beginning at 3 p.m. An additional weight class, mandatory headgear, eligibility of freshmen, a .seventh in the nation ranking, the 45th and fi- nal year of Coach Cliff Keen's career, and line-up difficulties leave possibilities for many changes. CALLED "a little generous" by Assistant Coach Rick Bay, Michigan's seventh in the na- tion ranking by Amateur Wrest- ling News stems from the abili- ty of Michigan to place seven lettermen on the mats and from their perennial strength in the lower weights. "We're flexible and strong in the lower weights," Bay says, "The first three weights are all toss-ups." The first weight class divis- ion is now 118, followed by 126, 134, 142, 150, 158, 167, 177; 190, and heavyweight. The n e w classifications apply to a11 NCAA members in a 11 meets and tournaments. The main reason for the change was standardization, ac- cording to Bay. In previous years, teams in the Big Eight and other conferences wrestled at different weight divisions than those in the Big Ten, and tournament divisions were also different. This Weekend in Sports T O D A Y HOCKEY--Michigan State at Coliseum, 8 p.m. WRESTLING-Maryland at the All-Events Building, 4 p.m. T O M O R R O W BASKETBALL-Michigan at Davidson HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan State WRESTLING--Pittsburgh at the All-Events Building, 3 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Invitational at Champaign 6 DAY TOUR PACKAGE IN LA. Deluxe Hotel Shuttle Service and Extras 189 DELUXE TOUR TO San Diego * Tijuana * L.A. ALL THE EXTRAS 2 Pools-27 Hole Golf Course 0 Parade Seats Disneyland " New Year's Eve Party in Tijuana, and Much More X222 -Daily-Jim Judkis INJURED LOU HUDSON leads his teammates through calisthenics in a practice earlier this season. The Wolverine captain suffered torn ligaments in his knee and will not be able to compete in this weekends' meets; however, doctors feel the Big Ten Champion in the 134 pound classifica- tion will be available for duty when the Wolverines compete in the Midwest open during semester break. U *plus taxes ROSE BOWL '70 H EADQUARTERS 601 E. WILLIAM ST.- (Corner Maynard & William St.) OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. DAILY See Us For FLYING INSTRUCTION .,,, .. _. . ..G. ..._.j. : , . , + '. I I Students and U-M personnel, before joining any flying clubs, investigate the original University of Michigan Flying Club. FAA - VA approved. Run by ANN ARBOR AERO SERVICE, INC. "Where flying instruction is a specialty." 20 State Rd. (Municipal Airport) NO 5-61 CALL 761-3596 43 36 ' IF . NED'S BOOKSTORE YPSILAN TI This new store carries more trade (non-text) books than any other in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Unusual 1970 calendars, thousands of paperbacks, lots of them u'sed, some hardbacks. GIFT BOOKS AND CALENDARS FROM $375 (DALI ALICE) DOWN Mon.-Thurs.-9-9; Fri.-9-6; Sat.-12:5:30 We think we're interesting- We hope you will. *1s 84 Both Jim Hagan, a sopho- more, and Jerry Hoddy, a Jun- ior, are contenders for the first slot against Maryland t o d a y. The 126 division will be taken by junior Tim Cech, who open- ed the season last year with a 16 match unbeaten streak be- fore losing to Eastern Michi- gan's Yamamoto in a triple dual meet. At 134, team captain and Big Ten champion Lou Hudson would be t h e logical starter. However, Hudson pulled liga- ments in his knee in practice earlier this week and will be un- able to start. "The 'doctor said he should be able to wrestle the next time we face competition," Bay informed. HIS REPLACEMENT is soph- omore Ty Belknap. Belknap pin- ned all three of his opponents in last year's Freshman Tourna- ment here in Ann Arbor, on the way to first p 1 a c e. He was Michigan's starter at 130 in the NCAA Tournament, when Hud- son tore chest cartillige in the Big Ten tourney and was out for the remainder of the sea- son, and won one and lost one. A freshman, Marty Chouin- ard, w ill go behind Belknap. The Big Ten rule in the past has been to exclude freshmen in competition. But this year, things have changed. "We don't like the freshman eligibility rule," Bay says strongly, "but we had to lobby for it,,because freshman ineligibility was hurt- ing us in recruiting." "Coach Keen and I don't be- lieve in it. A boy needs the op- portunity, especially at Michi- gan, to adJust academically. athletically, and socially. This The Schedule Dec. 5 MARYLAND, 4 p.m. D1ec. 6 PITTSBURGH, 3 p.m. 1Dec. 29-30 Midwest open (at LaGrange, Ill.) Jan. 5 New York Athletic Club Meet (at Ne* York City) Jan. 10 at Northwestern Jan. 17 at Eastern Michigan Univ. Jan. 24 PURDUE, 3 p.m. Jan. 30 ILLINOIS, 4 p.m. Jan. 31 OHIO STATE, 2 p.m. Feb. 6 GRAND RAPIDS J.C. JV, 4 p.m. Feb. 7 INDIANA, 4 p.m. Feb. 14 at Iowa Feb. 21 at Michigan Stat~e Feb. 28 Minnesota, Mankato State (at Minneapolis) Mar. 6-7 BIG TEN TOURNAMENT, Ann Arbor Mar. 26-28 NCAA Tournament (at Evanston, Ill.) HAPPY f HOLIDAYS! Student Book Service 1 is just extra pressure," Bay ex- plains. THIRD PLACE finisher in the Big Ten last y e a r, Mike Ru- bin will be absent from this season's line-up. For personal reasons he chose not to com- pete this year, Sophomores Paul Paquin and Mark King were competing for their chance to debut in the 142-pound class, b u t Paquin has been ill with the flu the past week. King is now scheduled to go against both Maryland and Pittsburgh. Four lettermen fill the next four divisions. L a n e Headrick, Jim Sanger, Tom Quinn, and Jesse Rawls make Michigan sol- id. Quinn will wrestle one of the two meets, with sophomore George Surgent at 167 in the other. Another fine sophomore, Herb Sudduth, will be behind Headrick. THE TOP TWO weights go to sophomores also. Therlon Harris, a former Michigan high school champion, will take over 190. Heavyweight was to be the domain of Pete Drehman, but eligibility problems forced him to bow out in favor of Jim Thomas. Thomas will be a light heavyweight, since his normal position is 190. Bay said that Drehman should be wrestling next semester. Because of Drehman's ineli- gibility, he won't be able to face Pennsylvania high school rival Ralph Cindrich. Drehman won the Pennsylvania state cham- pionship from Cindrich, when Cindrich was a junior and he a senior. Last year Michigan beat Pittsburgh 21-10, but the two didn't wrestle each other be- cause Cindrich was out. Pitts- burgh has a young team this year, rated a d a r k horse by Wrestling News. MARYLAND is listed as hav- ing great potential. After they meet Michigan today, the squad will travel to East Lansing to grapple with fourth ranked Michigan S t a t e. "Wrestling schedules aren't like football schedules," Bay says. "They're only made out two years in ad- vance, so the fact that Mary- land scheduled us and Michigan State is a pretty good indication of their strength." "It's early competition for us, but we needed a couple of good tough teams before exams," Bay concluded. 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