PAGE IX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JA1 UARY 27,1965 PAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY 27,1966 Matmen Seek Start Of New Win Streak icer MacDonald Moves to Offense By CLARK NORTON Attempting to get back on the winning side of the ledger after watching his 34 consecutive dual meet victory streak broken last! Friday against Minnesota, Coach Cliff Keen's wrestlers will host the Purdue Boilermakers this Saturday afternoon. Purdue, winner of six Big Ten titles in past years (second only to Michigan in this respect since the point system was adopted in 1934) invades Ann Arbor after dropping a meet last week to Northwestern.1 Earlier this year the Wolverines defeated the Wildcats by a score! of 23-10. Coach Reeck1 Claude Reeck, who has served as Boilermaker coach for the past 28 years, sports a squad thatis head- ed by 130 pound sophomore Bill Trujillo and 137 pound junior Roger Anderson. Last year's star, heavyweight' Robert Hopp, was hurt earlier in an automobile accident and is out of action this season. Taking over Hopp's place will be John Williams, who also serves with Hopp on the Boiler- maker grid squad. Facing Mexican-born Trujillo for the Wolverines will be Dave Dozeman, who is back after miss- ing the Minnesota meet with a sprained back. Anderson's op- ponent will be Michigan's captain Bill Johannesen, and Michigan heavyweight Dave Porter will be matched up against Williams. Porter was one of only two Wol- verine wrestlers to cop victories in Friday's loss to Minnesota. Bob Fehrs, the only other mem- ber of Coach Keen's crew to de- SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: feat his Gopher opponent, and loser of only one this season, will be pitted in the 123 pound division against Larry Katz of the Boiler- makers. In other matches, veteran Cal Jenkins of Michigan will face Rich Ratliff, a junior from In- dianapolis, at 147 pounds. Burt Merical will tangle with Dale Smith, one of the few Purdue seniors seeing action, in the 157 pound bracket. At 167 The rest of the day's activity will find 167 pounder Bill Water- man of the Wolverines battling junior Dave Petree of the Boiler- makers, and Michigan sophomore Wayne Wentz taking on Bruce Lancet at 177 pounds. Jim Kamman, 167 pound Wol- verine regular who has beenW in jured since the Northwestern meet two weeks ago, will have the cast removed from his wrist tomorrow, but will definitely not be in action Saturday. Coach Keen is taking a wait-and-see attitude as to the future status of Kamman. Other than Kamman's injury, Keen re- ported that the Wolverines were in good shape. "I think we'll bounce back this Saturday against Purdue," the coach emphasized. "Maybe we'll get some of the breaks we didn't get against Min- nesota." The meet will take place Satur- day afternoon at 3:00 immediately following the gymnastics meet in the I.M. Sports Building. Due to the tremendous popularity of the Michigan wrestling team, there were not enough bleachers avail- able to accommodate the fans last Friday night, and approximately one-third of the crowd had to be turned away. There is a possibility however, that- some temporary bleachers will be set up for the meet this weekend. By BILL LEVIS Barry came to Michigan as a wing. He was shifted to defense When you first take a look at his sophomore year because the senior Barry MacDonald, you varsity was short on that com- might get the impression that he modity. That year, Michigan won has played forward his three years the WCHA and NCAA titles, and on the Michigan hockey team. even as a defenseman, Barry five of our top forwards. My loss of weight was the biggest factor in my adjustment to the position." He explained he was happy with the change back to his old posi- tion. MacDonald played a year of junior hockey at St. Michael's in Montreal. There, he played mainly forward, but some defense. After graduating from high school at the age of sixteen, "The Bear" played one year on a Toronto "The Bear," as he is known, is! second leading Wolverine scorer with 27 points. He is teamed on the most productive Michigan line with All-American Mel Wakaba-! yashi at center and Bob Baird at! the other wing position. It just seems natural to assume that Barry has always been a wing. But this is not the case. Hockey Tickets Tickets to both Friday and S a t u r d a y night encounters against 1965 WCHA and NCAA champs Michigan Tech will not be on sale today. They will go on sale Friday morning at 8:30 in the ticket office at the cor- ner of Hoover and State. The native from an English- speaking Montreal suburb was a rugged defenseman, 'who teamed with All-American Tom Polonic, for his first two years at Michi- gan. "The Bear" led the Wol- verines in penalties each of those years. MacDonald commented on the difference between playing defense versus the forward position yes- terday. "On defense, you have to pace yourself more. You are on the ice a lot more of the time. At forward, you have to take a whole different approach, an offensive approach. There is plenty more skating in a shorter period of time." "I find I get less penalties as a forward. The reason is you have to concentrate on scoring and not getting the puck out of your own end. To make the transfer to for- ward, I had to lose twenty pounds." managed to score 15 goals and 19 assists. MacDonald made the change to forward this year., He explained, "It was inevitable that someone had to make the switch. We lost JIM TINDALL Maple Leaf amateur farm team. To Michigan From there he came to Michigan after weighing the benefits from some Eastern schools, especially Boston College. Barry explained, "The biggest factor in coming here was the academics. It means a lot to me. Michigan has been a great experience. There is noth- ing like it back home in Canada." Barry is an English major in LSA and he hopes to go on to law school in Canada. He explain- ed he would be unable to go to law school in the United States since he is a Canadian citizen. He hopes to go to school through the Canadian Olympic team. About ,Mel' When asked about Mel Wakaba- yashi, Barry could give nothing but praise about his linemate. "Mel is a really good hockey play- er. He is heady and smart-he always knows where a guy should be. I've played with the center of the Canadian. Olympic team and Mel is just as good as he is. He is unselfish and just tre- mendous, like two extra men." Lion's Forte Resigns Aldo Forte, 48, Detroit Lions offensive line coach, resigned late last night. He explained that his business interests de- manded more of his time. He has been a coach with the Lions organization since 1950. When asked about Michigan's chances in the WCHA, Barry felt they were still good. "We have met just about every one. With extra effort and hustle, we can beat any hockey team. It's a young team." Looking forward to this Friday and aSturday nights against Michigan Tech, Barry pointed out, "We have an avid rivalry with Tech. The seniors have played against them for three years. We know their moves, and we know the players. It will be a good fight. It was a close one at Bos- ton when we lost to them 7-6. Biggest Thrill Barry's biggest thrill was this year at Minnesota. "We swept two from them. We have a bitter riv- alry with the Gophers. Their fans are very pro-Minnesota. The over- all play of our team was a pleas- ant surprise. We just outhustled everyone." The biggest factor in the team's play to MacDonald has been the hustle. "It's the team, and not the individuals that has surprised a lot of people. With fans and the band at the Coliseum, it can't help but boost the spirit and hustle of the team. With people in the stands, if we didn't hustle we wouldn't be just letting down ourselves but those fans too." Barry's plans are law school and an ultimate hope for a place on the Canadian Hockey team. He has had a taste of professional hockey but doesn't really want to continue along that line. The Michigan hockey team will play one of its most important home series of the season as they face Michigan Tech at home twice this weekend. Michigan Tech is currently tops in the WCHA and the Huskies have only dropped two games this season. Both of those games will begin at 8:00 p.m. at the Coliseum. D EPEN DABL E IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS NEW CAR DEALER Triumph-Volvo Fiat-Checker WE LEASE CARS as low as $4.50 per 24-hr. day See us now about EUROPEAN DELIVERY HERB ESTES AUTOMART 1319 W. Huron 665-3688 LLOYD GRAFF The Joyful Jdolts Of IM Basketball "Owwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww" Screamed the barefoot, sockless, bearded, heezing aesthete as his tootsies absorbed 200 pounds of plump gravity-pulled basketball player during an intramural jam session. After a minute of yelling, thirty seconds of moping, and an instant of positive thinking he was back in the maelstrom of elbows, hips . feet, awkward as a penguin trying to climb a tree. But still giving every gram of his scrawny being to looping a ball through a hoop. Intramural basketball is a cross between gauntlet running and picnicking. It's one of the brutal joys of life. The shoeless wheezer is just one of hundreds of dedicated IM players who long for the grueling, sweaty workouts. There's something alluring, downright infatuating about popping for two from twenty feet whether you're Oscar Robertson or, a grad stu- dent planning a dissertation on the physiology of mastodons. There are two strains of IM ball, open and organized. Open is a free for all of half court pickup games. You wander into the gym, spy the floor for an amorphous bunch in need of manpower, and invite yourself in. * But, quite likely you'll find every court taken which means you must infiltrate an ongoing game. This involves hovering close to a court and then jumping into the action when nobody's looking. Since nobody knows anybody else in these open contests you're likely to get away with the ruse for about five minutes. Then a perceptive guard ventures "how the hell did we get four against five in this game." 'p 1*. I I Driving for the Basket At this point you propose that to resolve the inequities of the situation "we should shoot for teams." You only advance this idea if you're a solid free throw shooter, because the first eight to sink a free throw play, the first four against the second four. When the shooting for teams process begins the court suddenly becomes a teeming mecca of outcasts and newcomers in search of basketball action. So you better hit that shot on the first try or you'll have to reinfiltrate. It's good practice if you're interested in the CIA. Organized IM ball contrasts with open in certain glaring respects. Most obvious, in organized league play referees are injected into the melee. The refs tend to limit illicit entry but rule enforcement is generally mythical. A traveling violation here, a hacking foul there, an occasional technical for blue language, but really it's like trying to stop a gang fight by' administering spankings. You see part of the fun is in the bruises-given to the other guy. When abatch of nice, quiet, inhibited, polite, genteel, college guys get together for a basketball game there's really no way you can prevent a bloodbath. Bob Timberlake, one of the best ballplayers in IM history claimed only half in jest that intramural ball might be rougher than Big Ten football. And this from a quarterback who'd been mauled by Dick Butkus. But there's more to say about IM basketball than how tough it is. For it's a game that brings out essential qualities of those who play it. You find the gripers who'd complain about the ride if they were shipped to paradise. "The basket's too low, the ball's heavy, the lighting stinks, and I've got a hangover and sprained ankle," is his creed. And then there are the guys who live in the past. As the shot misses the bucket by a yard they chant for all to hear, "I'd have made that last year. I'm so miserable now, I just can't understand it." Of course, they've always been inept, but such protestations are logical defense mechanism. They may even believe their own fabri- cations. You come across the "good sports." These saccharine souls would shake hands with their own hangmen. When you trip one he'll compliment you on a fine defensive maneuver. They have so much class it drips. And finally there are the hot shots, the Bob Cousys with flat feet and paunch. They give the awkward fakes, throw the behind the back pass out of bounds four out of five, and bomb the jumper from thirty feet swishing one for six. But so what, we're all a little bit phony anyway. At least playing intramural ball you can indulge your quirks, sweat up your shirt, and feel the. satisfying achey exhaustion that no amount of eye strain provides. * 4 11 I 4 MEN'S SUITS, TOPCOATS AND JACKETS Don't delay another day! Shop WILD'S while there's still an excellent opportunity to find the suit, coat or jacket you have in nind. Entire selection reduced fromn our regular stocks of quality, fainous label clothing. See all the great values today! 2000 W. 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An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adjacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on February 15. Be our guest at a 30-minute public DEMONSTRATION of the ACCELERATED READ- ING method, and see it applied by U. of M. students who have recently completed the course. Join The Daily Sports Staff. A VARSITY-TOWN SUITS as low as $64.00 save $16.00 H. Freeman & Son SUITS as low as $89.50 save $10.50 Ia k' s 1 II DEM(CU 1AAkAFR .JACKTS a' i