PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY rurnAV_ inFr*x - it, 14a t PAGESIX 'i~r A~ U~fV~rD'D Uinn r nlju Ax, 5., PZr EJA D EnI UJ luod F; WINTER TRADE: Tigers Send Bunning to Phils Grapplers Face Rugged Penn State LOS ANGELES (P)--"I couldn't be happier," said Jim Bunning. That was the right-handed pitcher's reaction yesterday upon learning he and catcher Gus Tri- andos had been traded by Detroit to the Philadelphia Phillies for outfielder Don Demeter and pitch- er Jack Hamilton. "I'm not surprised," added Bun- fing, who had a disappointing 12- 13 record last year after seven outstanding years with the Tigers. The 32-year-old pitcher was a 20-game winner in 1957 and pitched a no-hitter against Bos- ton the following year. "We're delighted to get him," said Manager Gene Mauch of the Phillies. "I always regarded Bun- ning as one of the best pitchers in the American League. Big Winner "I think he'll be a big winner for us. His record in All-Star games against the National League has been phenomenal." The Tigers were equally as de- lighted in acquiring Demeter, who will play center field with Billy Bruton moving to left. Al Kaline, of course, will be in right. "We tried to get Felipe Alou from San Francisco," said Man- ager Charlie Dressen. "But we pre- ferred Demeter. We just didn't think we could get him. Demeter and Alou play about even. Both are excellent outfielders. Demeter may have more power." Demeter, the Phillies' leading slugger the past three seasons, walloped 22 home runs and drove in 83 runs this past season, but the tall righthanded hitter's bat- ting average skidded from .307 in 1962 to .258. Left-Handers "We must find someone to re- place Demeter against left-handed pitching," said Mauch. "He mur- ders left-handers." Demeter, 28, batted .314 against southpaws but hit only .221 against right-handers. Mauch said he expected Trian- dos, a 33-year-old long-ball hit- ter, to alternate behind the plate with the left-handed hitting Clay Dalrymple. By TOM ROWLAND Michigan's Big Ten champion wrestlers won't waste any time resting on their laurels this win- ter. Coach Cliff Keen's men take on powerful Penn State in the sched- ule opener at Yost Field House tomorrow night, and the meet shapes up to be one of the big battles of the new mat season. The first match begins at 7:30. The Nittany Lions provided the only dual-meet loss for the Wol- verines in an otherwise defeat- less winter a year ago that led to the team title in the Big Ten tourney and a third place finish in the nationals. Both Michigan and Penn State rank as mat powers again this winter, but Keen holds a typically cautious note when he talks about the Wolverines' chances. "We've got a lot of fellows that are still pretty much untried in competition," he notes. "And we're going to be without two top- notch veterans against Penn State in Dave Dozeman and Rick Bay." Lose Dozeman Dozeman was the victim of an automobile accident last Satur- day and will be out for the season. Bay, defending Big Ten champ at 157-pounds, has just made an ap- pearance on the mats after a fall stint at quarterback on the foot- ball team, and according to Keen "still needs a lot of work to get into shape." Meanwhile, the Wolverines will start a team against Penn State that boasts only two seniors but1 still plenty of experience. Carl Rhodes, who finished third in the Big Ten meet at 123 pounds last year, didn't return to school and left the lightweight spot up for grabs; Ralph Bahna, senior from Grand Rapids, got Keen's nod yesterday to start against the Nit- tany Lions. At the 130 and 137-pound classes, where Dozeman was ex- pected to wrestle, Keen will go with two sophomores, Bill Johan- nesen and Cal Jenkins. Johanne- sen is a native of Waukegan, Ill., Bay's hometown, and Jenkins hails from Cedar Rapids, Ia. Deitrick Returns Runnerup in the 147-pound class at the conference meet last year, junior Lee Deitrick returns to start tomorrow in his usual weight spot. Deitrick made his mat debut for Michigan last year when the Nittany Lions edged the Wolverines, 14-11, losing by a 2-1 margin to Penn State captain George Edwards. Edwards returns to the State lineup again this win- ter. Captain Wayne Miller holds down the 157-pound spot for the Wolverines. The veteran grappler picked up one of Michigan's three match wins against the Nittany Lions last year. Dave Post, a jun- ior from Detroit, will be at 167, and Chris Stowell, fourth in the Big Ten last winter at 167, moves up to the 177-pound class. Junior Bob Spaly steps into graduated heavyweight Jack Bar- den's shoes to anchor the lineup. Spaly ranked fifth in the heavy- weight class at the nationals a year ago. Looking over the starters Keen comments "it's hard to tell right now just what our strength is go- ing to be this winter. We've got a couple of sophs in there, and you never know about them until they've seen some action. Both Spaly and Post haven't had a great deal of experience. The meet against Penn State should be a good test." The Nittany Lions, one of the top teams in the East, will bring a veteran team with them to Ann Arbor tomorrow night. Before they defeated Michigan last year, the Wolverines were the only team in the country to hold a winning edge over Penn State. The series is now tied with five wins apiece. First Chance Tomorrow's meet will be the first chance for Wolverine mat fans to see what Michigan will have in the way of wrestling for- tunes this winter, and it will be the last time until after the Christmas holidays. Keen's men go on the road for six straight away meets, including the annual Wilkes Tournament just after Christmas. The Michigan grapplers open the Big Ten season with North- western at Evanston, travel next to Wisconsin, and then return to the confines of Yost Field House for the next home meet against Purdue on January 25. The homecoming meet this year is with Iowa, a team that was the runnerup to the Wolverines in the Big Ten meet last season and con- ference champion the year before. 1963-64 Schedule V 4. December 7 Penn State 30-31 Wilkes Tournament January 2 Lock Haven State 4 NY Athletic Club 6 Hofstra 11 Northwestern 13 Wisconsin 25 Purdue February 1 Pittsburgh 8 Ohio State 15 Iowa 22 Michigan State 29 Minnesota March {H) (A) (A) (A) (A) (A) (A) (H) (H) (A) (H) (A) (H) A I' See Desert Star only at these Authorized Artcarved Jewelers Jewelers Name Town Rene's Jewelry Alpena Daniel's Jewelry Ann Arbor Sageman Jewelry Bad Axe Daniel's Jewelry Co. 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Like all Artcarved rings, it's styled to stay beautiful...guar- anteed in writing for permanent value. See new Desert Star now at any Artcarved jeweler listed here. It's designed for you., *TRAOEMARR Thompson's Jewelry Mt. Pleasant Marvin Jewelers Muskegon Morgan's Jewelers Muskegon Connolly's Jewelers Pontiac Lou-Mor Jewelers Pontiac Myer's Jewelry Shop Royal Oak Daniel's Jewelry Co. Saginaw Green's Jewelry St. Joseph Jean's Jewelry Store SaultSte.Marie Earl Cobb, Jewelers Traverse City Erwin has won the event the past two years, as Sanders finished second last December and Hamil- ton ended sixth. Frecska should anchor the team, competing in four events. He will see action on the sidehorse, the high bar, rings and parallel bars. Loken named four sophomores to participate in the meet. Rich Blanton will compete on the rings and p-bars, Ned Duke on the high bar and rings, Dave Brod in tumbling and John Cashman on the high bars. Loken also tabbed Mike Hen- derson for tumbling and Paul Levy for the sidehorse. Defending Champs The Wolverines, defending NC- AA champs, finished second to Southern Illinois last year in the Midwest, behind the performance of former captain Gil Larose, all- round champion. They then turn- ed the tables in the NCAA meet, as Southern Illinois ended as runner-up. Loken sees the defending Mid- west titlists, plus Iowa and Mich- igan State, as providing the top competition today and tomorrow. He called the Midwest as "like a small NCAA meet," with 25 col- leges expected to enter competi- tion. Primarily, he felt the meet would be "an opportunity for us to see what the other schools in the Big Ten have." Siren Takes Third Crown Tom Silfen, a senior from Glen- coe, Ill., won his third straight handball championship Wednes- day night in the finals of the so- cial fraternity handball tourna- ment. Silfen, competing for Sigma Al- pha Mu, has also won the social fraternity paddleball champion- ship for the past three seasons. As a freshman he won the 147- pound intramural wrestling title and as a sophomore was second in a close decision. He played on this season's SAM football squad that went to the "A" fraternity finals before being beaten by Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Silfen was on the SAM "B" base- ball team that has won two straight championships. He is also an outstanding I-M tennis player. CHRIS STOWELL WAYNE MILLER ... up to 177 ... captains wrestlers BIG TEN FOOTBALL: 'S' Cops DefenseTitle Y Despite the fact that they could not stop Illinois in the final game of the season for the 1963 Rose Bowl Bid and Big Ten football championship, Michigan State's Spartans finished at the top of the league in defense this fall. The Spartans gave up only 7.2 points a game and 3.1 yards per play to opponents on the way to a second-place finish in the confer- ence. Wisconsin, on the other hand, paced the offensive statistics in 1963, leading in first downs (17.4 per game), passing yards (170), and net total yards (305.4). While winning the offensive crown for the second year in a row the Badgers headed the Big Ten in eight statistical categories. Michi- gan State led in nine defensive categories. Michigan ended up in the mid- dle of the conference in just about every division but was dead last in the Big Ten in net yards gained per game. Ohio State's Dick VanRaaphorht set a Big Ten record in 1963 with his 49-yard field goal /against Illi- nois, and Iowa's Fred Riddle set another record with five touch-: against Indiana. Tom Nowatzke, Indiana fullback who had to fill the =scoring shoes of the injured Mary Woodson; won the 1963 Big Ten all-games coring title with 58" points. Sherman Lewis of Michigan State was sec- ond with 48. In the pass-catching depart- ment, Hoosier wingman Bill Mal- inchak took all honors in a single- game performance by snagging nine against Purdue. Longest pass play of the year: MSU's Steve Juday to Sherman Lewis for 88 yards and six points against Southern California. down passes in one game - that Big Ten Standings FINAL W L T PF PA Pet. Illinois 5 1 1 125 77 .785 Michigan St. 4 1 1 95 43 .750 Ohio State 4 1 1 83 60 .750 Purdue 4 3 0 112 140 .572 Michigan 2 3 2 91 86 .428 Wisconsin 3 4 0 95 115 .428 Northwestern 3 4 0 102 106 .428 Iowa: 2 3 1 95 91 .417 Minnesota 2 5 0 64 95 .286 Indiana 1 5 0 89 139 .167 (Ties count Y/z game won, % game lost) t 4 --Daily-Jim Lines TRY FOR FOUR-Alex Frecska works out on the rings in pre- paration for the Midwest Open tournament in Chicago today and tomorrow. Frecska will be competing in four events this year--sidehorse, the high bar, rings and parallel bars-to strengthen Michigan's bid for a fourth consecutive Big Ten title and a repeat as NCAA champions. to half of America's college students either quit or flunk out before graduation? Are so many students today suffering from emotional disorders? Is the suicide rate among young people rising dramatically? r- by Rich Writte one of bestsel Trap- poses A tim y . .-- ad CritiCal Vrepurt Ul . thle crisis in Amc-frican Colic a fife :.. yard E. Gordon, M. D.::: Katherine K. Gordon en by the authors of =? the most talked-about hers-- The Split-Level -hish n s e a ook es- J>=>: th a s lteanxieties and tensions ":- :" Y 6 -. Courses got you down? Need help for those finals? Come to the TUTORING SERVICE offered by the Michigan Union Stop in STUDENT OFFICES OF THE UNION 2nd floor Tues.-Thurs. 3-5 WI , q 4 *4 144 amp PA e rb , 11tGS41 nl11J " running rampant through today's campus generation. Through dramatized case histories based on thousands of interviews, the authors show how the socio-economic patterns and the unrealistic goals and pressures in America today are creating problems of emotional ill- ness, sexual deviation and promiscuity, insecurity and a lack of moral fiber in the lives of college students. Here, too, are dynamic proposals for preventing these emotional ills. This is must reading for parents, students and all con. cerned with the college scene. rla* Un.r r nnv mr*nv X4.95Q WISE OWLS ... do all their banking at Ann Arbor Bank. Three campus offices serve your entire banking needs including Specialcheck account, especially prac- tical for students. Why not stop in today and open your Specialcheck account? NM...! tp l 14 * /-' } air I I