THE MICHIGAN UATT.V nsvvvTt3 O VN At! ?A 1Tvr A"-T>.yn - au ..'"v LL iSi Ltaall THU 1H Tfh~NIAT? GSDJAY, JANUARKY 1 .6 11 'M' Wrestlers Win Five, Injure Fou Take Off When The Spirit Moves You And Travel At The Speed of Sound _ ".K:...... i.... A:'i'_ :"{.: :} : yy %.' W s 4'::ir{: yi? ii~ ;:te$ :?i}i:?i: i :< n:~ By TOM ROWLAND Good fortune waxed and waned for Michigan's defending Big Ten champion wrestling over the holi- days-the Wolverines lost only one meet while winning five others, but a plague of injuries at key positions forced Coach Cliff Keen to make some major adjustments in the team lineup. The Wolverines snatched a first place at the Chicago West Subur- ban tourney with Buuddy Pal- misano, Cal Jenkins, and Rick( Bay gaining individual titles while Lee Deitrick retained his 147- pound crown at the Wilkes College Tournament. Keen's crew then downed Lock Haven, 18-8, fell to the New York Athletic Club, 23-7, and rolled past Hofstra, 25-3. In the Big Ten opener against Northwestern last Saturday heavyweight Bob Spaly's 4-0 decision over Jeff Brooke in the final match gave Michigan a 14-1l win, and on the following Monday the Wolverines breezed. past Wisconsin, 23-8. But the price of victory was high. The Michigan grapplers suf- fered an almost one-injury-per- meet casualty rate that sent some of the Wolverines' key performers out of the lineup. Injures Shoulder The biggest blow came at the NYAC meet when sophomore Cal Jenkinsmdislocated his shoulder during his 137-pound bout with Dave Auble, an injury that may possibly sideline the Michigan star for the rest of the season. There remains some hope, though, that Jenkins, who has had a spectacu- lar first-season start, may be back in action in time for the Big Ten meet in early March and the fol- lowing NCAA action. Gary Wilcox, 137-pound veteran who had been battling for the position with Jenkins, injured his shouldler in the Wilkes meet and had to miss the remainder of the holiday action. Wilcox is expected to be ready for the first meet of the spring semester, that against Purdue on January 25. The loss of Jenkins and Wilcox at 137 makes a total of three top- notch wrestlers who have been lost to the Wolverines this winter from the same weight class; Dave Dozeman, another 137-pound vet- eran, was injured in an auto ac- cident just before thei season be- gan. Against Lock Haven, 130-pound- er Billy Johannesen injured his nose and contracted a case of the flu; he was out for the NYAC meet but returned to the lineup and moved up to 137 pounds for the remaining meets to fill the va- cancy there. And before returning from the Eastern tour 177-pounder Chris Stowell pulled his side and suf- fered a rib injury that forced him to miss the two first conference meets. He, too, is expected to be ready for the upcoming Purdue contest. First Place The Wolverines piled up 83 points to lead the pack in the Chicago West Suburban tourna- ment. Wolverine lightweight Buddy Palmisano tallied two falls to win the 115-pound title, Jenkins won faur straight for the 137-pound crown, and Rick Bay, defending Big Ten champ at 157, copped the 167-pound medal. Wolverine soph Tino Lambrose picked up a third place in the 123- pound class, and Johannesen lost on a referee's decision in the finals to place second at 130. Other Michigan wrestlers: captain Wayne Miller gained a third place in the 157-pound department while Dave Post finished fourth, Jim Evashev- ski reached the semi-finals at 167, Stowell was fourth at 177, and Joe Arcure nabbed a second-place finish in the 191-pound class. Spaly was third in the heavy- weight bracket. Moving out East, Keen's mat- men breezed past Lock Haven, 18- 8, losing points only when Adam Waltz pinned Lee Deitrick (5:03) and with Frank Eisenhauer's 4-3 decision over Michigan's Dave Post in the 157-pound match. Rick Bay made his first dual-meet per- formance this season for the Wol- verines, defeating Roger Cook, 5-3. Only Loss Against NYAC, loaded with ex- collegiate wrestling champions, the Wolverines could salvage only seven points as Miller defeated NYAC's Jerry Greinier, 5-3, and Bay and Deitrick both drew. At New York two more Wolverines saw dual-meet action for the ini- tial time: Lambrose lost to Clem Crowe, 5-2, and Doug Horning suffered a 15-6 loss at the hands of Gary Simons. But for Horning it was just the beginning. When Johannesen mov- ed up to the empty 137-pound spot for the Hofstra meet, Horning got the call at 130, and the ex-Ann Arbor High wrestler pinned Ken Robison in 3:25 and won three straight matches. The Wolverines had no trouble with Hofstra, winning 25-3, with Spaly gaining a second Michigan pin in theiheavyweight action. He floored Dick Cestaro in 6:14. Back to Evanston, Ill., for the Big Ten opener, the Wolverines squeezed past Northwestern, 14-11. The Wildcats, who had just won in a quadrangular meet with Min- nesota, Purdue and Michigan State, knotted the score at 11-11 on Dick Ernst's 5-3 win over Arcure, but Spaly iced the meet 1' '"""" 100 New Sets of Ski Rental THURSDAY- MONDAY $650 ComPete Includes skis, boots, bindings and poles. 2455 S. State St. 662-7307 for the defending champs with hi 4-0 victory over Brooke. Gaining points for Michigan Horning pasted Jim Hnath, 5-0 Johannesen rolled past Bob Laugh lin, 5-2, Miller beat Jerry Tor- rance, 3-2, and Bay drew witi Stu Marshall. Faced with final examinations and some overweight problems Wisconsin forfeited the 123, 137, and 177 pound bouts to the Wol- verines before bowing 23-8. Horn- ing, won in a close one--4-3 over NU's Bob Powell, Deitrick beat Bob Smith, 6-4 and Spaly drev with Ron Parr, 2-2. g ru "THE FINAL HARVEST OF BRUNO WALTER'S TESTAMENT:' I -DAVID HALL, H IFI/STEREO REVIEW (Dec. 1963) Favorite Symphonies with Special Bonus LP A UNIQUE COLLECTOR'S ITEM! BARGAIN MOZART SET! A 3-RECORD SET. . . AVAILABLE AT A SPECIAL LOW PRICE! 304 S. Thayer NO 5-4855 4 .I + Use Daily Classifieds + ri THE MOST IMPORTANT RECORD ALBUM Favorite Overtures! t' WALTER'S FIRST OF BRUCKNER'S SEVENTH!I A 2-RECORD SET Hi-Fi Fans' Dream Symphony (NO. 100) 'F +. g'SC " ""'.Cv .A.."Ny.V.Wii~'":{:Ct fl..A% w i:". "V~v"r."-r .''" 'x."Y4i F ".:'~i"'::T "": rr ri :".v..r :r . "*. .x" rcI . ,,,. ; rf: . 4 t."~.. ,.r ..r . :'."v h$'::" ; n~~h ? . ..t{;r'~T, FOUR DAYS.THAT SHOCKED THE WORLD The complete story-November 22 through November 25, 1963 Narrated byI REID COLLINS NOT AN ALBUM OF SPEECHES-YOU ARE THERE AS WNEW RADIO NEWS THE DRAMATIC FLOW OF EVENTS BECOMES HISTORY Favorite Wagner V ,IA sNIF flIAWP MNTTAOThN4 " With a mobile radio unit at-the-scene with the motorcade speeding on trip to Parkland Hospital nearby the President's car * On-the-spot coverage immediately afterward from Texas Book Depository (inserts) Actually reports from Parkland Hospital and Book Depository " Eyewitness report of the actual assassination * Announcement of the last rites by Father Oscar Huber and of death of President Kennedy " Eyewitness account-ambulance driver- Mrs. Kennedy prior to trip back to Love Field " Eyewitness report-Merriman Smith-scene aboard "Air Force 1" as Mrs. Kennedy returns with President's body, the swearing-in of President Johnson, and flight to Washington Hear the-Complete Story: " Actual swearing-in of Lyndon B. Johnson by Judge Sarah T. Hughes " Arrival at Andrews Air Force Base " First public statement-President Lyndon B. Johnson " Dallas policeman-eyewitness report of capture-of Oswald " Lee Harvey Oswald-actual voice denial of guilt " Actual court charge of Oswald for assassination " Reports of investigation " Sunday morning-tension mounts in Dallas ' On-the-spot report from basement of Dallas jail at the moment, Oswald is shot by Jack Ruby-exclusive coverage- Ike Pappas, WHEW-News " Oswald rushed by ambulance to Parkland Hospital " Police identify kiler as Jack Ruby " On-the-scene report-Parkland Hospital " Oswald's death announced " President Kennedy's body lies in repose in White House-Nov. 23 " President Kennedy's body taken from White House to Capitol rotunda " Final playing of "Hail to the Chief" " Chief Justice Warren-eulogy (excerpt) " Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield Eulogy (excerpt) " President Kennedy's body lies in state in, rotunda " Mrs. Kennedy-midnight visit to rotunda " Funeral procession from rotunda to St. Matthews Cathedral " Dignitaries from the entire world join procession " Mass at St. Matthews Cathedral by Richard Cardinal Cushing (excerpts) " Funeral procession from St. Matthews Cathedral to Arlington Cemetry " Jet planes fly-by-Arlington " Richard Cardinal Cushing- prayer at raveside Intensely Lyric Songs! 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