Saturday, February 1, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven MICHIGAN FALLS, 28-8 Hawkeyes pin matmen i 4 { By RAY O'HARA But for a bizarre pin in the second match of the night the Michigan wrestlers might well have written a different story last night at Crisler Arena. As it was, however, they were rather badly beaten by the first ranked Iowa Hawk- eyes, 28-8. With one minute to go in the 126 pound match, Wolverine freshman Rich Lubell appeared headed for an upset victory. His opponent, Iowa's Tim Cy- sewski, had not been able to do anything about the slim 2-1 lead that Lubell had carried forward from the first few minutes. As Cysewski rose to his feet late in the third period Lubell was still with him, hanging on for dear life and threatening to ride out the match. S u d d e n l y, Cysewskilcol- lapsed backward with Lubell underneath him and pinned him without ever gaining con- trol. Iowa gained six points for the Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN WOLVERINE BRAD McCRORY is in control here of his opponent from Iowa, Steve Hunte. McCrory avenged an earlier defeat at the hands of Hunte by scoring a 6-1 decision over his nemesis at Crisler last night. The victory was one of two the Maize and Blue grapplers were able to secure as they were swamped by the H awkeyes, 28-8. pin whereas Michigan should Unfortunately for Michigan, der won't wrestle today against have picked up three for the McCrory's performance w a s Minnesota. decision. unique. Bill Schuck (142) and Dave "That was a nine point Brad Holman, in his first Curby (190), both recovering match," remarked Michigan's varsity meet for Michigan, from injuries lost very close coach Bill Johannesen. "I can't was crushed by Iowa's ace matches to healthy Hawkeyes say for sure how it affected the 150-pounder Chuck Yagla, 13- by one and two points respec- rest of the team but I was just 1. Mitch Marsicano was sim- tively. completely deflated." I ply overpowered by Iowa's John Bowlsby in the heavy- Despire some mistakes Mich- The meet had started off rea- weight class. igan's 177-pounder, Mark John- sonably well for the Blue as der was humili- son, drew Chris Campbell who Jim Brown easily disposed of ated by last year's second place has terrorized the 177 and 190; his Hawkeye opponent, Mark finisher in the Big Ten, Dan pound classes for two seasons. Mynsyk in the 118 pound match. Holm. Afterwards Johannesen Iowa's Dan Wageman stalled Brown, obviously trying des- Iw' a apa tle rtely forapining eirst frankly admitted that the in- out a narrow victory over Dan; two periods, was visibly drain- jured Wolverine should not have Brink (167). As the Hawkeye e b h h period d wrestled. departed the scene he gestured ed by the third period and "He separated his shoulder in obscenely to the unappreciative was unable to do more than practice and it took us a half crowd. The sentiment was re- take the three point decision. hour to get it back." Nieswen- turned by some. Despite the disaster at 126, - W olverine 134-pounder Brad Mc- .. : :;.:...:: .":., :: :. ,.:: n:...v.. . :... Crory wrest 1 e d beautifully > throughout his match and dis- 1 patched favored Hawkeye Steve I Hunte with a decisive 6-1 count. "Brad didn't make any mis- takes tonight," beamed Johan-' nesen, adding, "I would sayw that this was his best match l ever."Special to The Daily Sad and Blue DULUTH-Exploding for six goals in the third period the ; Michigan hockey team ripped past the Duluth Bulldogs last 118-Jim Brown (M) dec. Mark r night 9-2. Mysnyk (I), 8-3 The Wolverines led 3-2 after two stanzas on goals by 26-Tim Cysewskl (1) pinned: Doug Lindskog, Dan Hoene, and Gary Morrison. Sparked 134-Brad McCrory (M) dec. Steve by the play of Pat Hughes Michigan made the game a rout IHunte (I), 6-1 in the last period. The sophomore center scored two goals 142-Brad Smith (I) dec. Bill and assisted on three others in the lopsided period. Schuck (M), 4-3 . FIRST PERIOD 150-Chuck Yagla (I) sup. dec. SCORING: 1. M-D. Lindskog (Hughes, Moretto) 14:25; 2. UMD Brad Holman (M), 13-1 -Spoden (McDonald, Milani) pp. 19:22.; 158-Dan Holm (I) sup. dec. Ed SECOND PERIOD Neiswender (M), 17-2 SCORING: 3. M-Hoene (unassisted) 0:23; 4. M-Manery (Wer- 167-Dan Wageman (1) dec. Dan ner, Kawa) 4:03; 5. UMD-Koidahi (McDonald, Newton) pp. 5:47.' fBrink (M), 5-3 IRDPIO 177-Mark Johnson (M) drenwkSCORING: 6. M-D. Lindskog (Moretto, Hughes) pp. 1:06; 7. s M-Moretto (Hughes, D. Lindskog) 4:45; 8. M-Manery (Debol, Chris Campbell (1), 6-6 Werner) 4:55; 9. M-Hughes (Trudeau, Natale) 8:12. 10. M-Hughes> 190-Greg Stevens (1) dec. Dave (unassisted) sh. 15:16; 11. M-Kardos (Hughes) 16:02. Curby (M), 2-0I:: GOALIE SAVES H Iwt.-John B o w 1 s b y (I) dec. M-Moore 14 8 7 - 29 Mitch Marsicano (M), 10-2 UMD-Heinz 11 13 22 - 46 ~~------ --- ~ --- ---- - - ---^ .: ." '4} Y.'{{:}.':"Y:::. <.. . . . . ..-:^}:r4"{4: , 'r . r y. : I,....s{Yr:.C:' . G :'?.':'{" ..., {% "... .4:::e"R .{.':r{:4 }r:}h;J;:}.4wr::;}sS'r<{ti r: ^ i;:rv."~';ri :'t:i{ ~vv}::::::"":+ ~ "Love thy enemy... This is a religious precept that challenges the mind. Love my en- emy when I can barely deal calmly with my in-laws? Yet this hard say- ing has validity in a world where even a small act of violence has such unforeseeable repercussions. Scientific advances have heighten- ed our mutual vulnerability. Only love and non-violence can sustain us. We may concede violence is in all of us. So is God. Try His way. It works. Get together with your .family, friends, neighbors, or co- workers to discuss the problems of violence and how you can work to- gether to help solve them. For a helpful discussion guide and fur- ther information write: Religion In American Life, 475 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Play an active role in your community and help show the way. RELIG1INAUERICAH I The community of God. Make ityourway. M' SWIMMERS DUNKED, 74-49: Indiana drowns By ED LANGE "Doc" Counsilman, the legen- dary swim mentor of Indiana, and Michigan's G u- s Stager changed the usual format of last night's swim meet to make it more interesting for the spec- tators. But for the fans at Matt Mann pool who witnessed the event one change could not be made: the final score. Counsilman's imposing Hoosiers took care of that as they pounded the Wol- verines, 74-49. THE OPENING event of the night, the 400 yard medley re- lay, was divided into three in- di& -al races, the backstroke, breaststroke and butterfly. The 100 yard freestyle, held later in the meet, also counted in the medley relay. The two coaches also decided to convert the 200 yard individ- ual medley into a 400 yard race and changed the 400 freestyle relay into an 800 yard event. The combined times of the 100 yard races gave Indiana an early lead. The Hoosiers' Bruce Dickson captured the 1000 yardI freestyle in 9:32.6, outdistancing the second place finisher, Mich- is-n's Joe Bader, by 17 seconds. The next event, the one me- tar di-ing event, was the start of a dynamic evening for the lhe's brilliant d i v e r, Don Craine. He took a close battle on the one meter, edging In- diana's Todd Muckler by 12 points but the story of the night was his unbelievable perform- ance on the three meter board. CRAINE piled up an aston- ishing 360.4 points in what coach Dick Kimball called a "helluva performance. It's the- highest score we've had here. The high- est I can remember is 348,"' commented Kimball. Tom Szuba won the elongated 400 individual medley in a time of 4:05:96 and Stager lauded his performance, commenting that "I figured he could do it in 4:06 and then he goes and does it in 4:05." Szuba's win gave the Blue a narrow 14-13 lead. INDIANA'S world class sprint- ers, Tom Hickox and Jim Mont- gomery, finished one-two 50 freestyle with Hicko ning in 21.20. The Wolverines' tighte the score in the next two as Gordon Downie and Wylie .finished one-three 200 freestyle. C r a i n e' place performance on th meter board was supple by teammate Dick Quint ond place finish as th tankers in the verines grabbed a short-lived x win- 29-25 lead. Then the inevitable happened. ned up The powerful Hoosiers buried events the Blue tankers in what can Brian best be described as an ava- in the lanche of power, taking five o1 s first the last six events as Michi- e three gan's Pat Bauer was the only mented Wolverine to break through; t's sec- winning the 200 yard breast- e Wol- r stroke in a time of 2:11.7. Michigan, Purdue meet in crucial contest today Sports o TeDaly Women tankers stun Purdue The women's swim team scored an unexpected victory over} Purdue yesterday, 69-54. The win was paced by Kathy Knox's three record-breaking swims, Debby Brevitz's three first places, and divers Brenda Truitt and Sue Gottlieb. According to coach Stu Isaac, the wo- men put in "strong, excellent swims all afternoon". Michigan's record now stands at 2 wins and one 'loss. The women take on Oakland University in Matt Mann pool today at noon. Trachmen host meet Following a fine performance in last weekend's Michigan Relays, the Maize and Blue tracksters will entertain Notre Dame and Bowling Green today at 1 p.m. at the Multi-Sports Building.1 Several Wolverines that were unable to compete last weekend will be beck in action. 600 yard star Dave Wil- liams, distance man Greg Meyer, and shotputter Mike Lan-f try will be added to a Wolverine team that should have few difficulties winning today.1 Another important note is that highjumper Jeff Swanson cleared seven feet in practice this week. "It doesn't mean he's' ready to do it in a meet," said Michigan coach Jack Harvey, "but it shows what he's capable of." -ANDY GLAZER Bucks tumble into town Fresh from an inspiring victory over Minnesota last week- end, the Michigan gymnastics squad returns to Crisler Arena today from a dual meet again Ohio State at 1 p.m. Like several other sports in Buckeye-land besides foot- ball, Ohio State can't boast of its gymnastic program. In the Big Ten Invitational last January 11, just two. Buckeye com- petitors were able to take any sort of honors. However, Michigan coach Newt Loken remains cautious, warning, "Ohio State can always be a formidable foe." Ohio State's hopes for success ride largely on the efforts of Chuck Ewing a superb all-around performer. -MICHAEL WILSON U. Of M.! ISMRRD CAREER INFORMATION PROGRAM WHAT: 20 Allied Health, Education, and Social Welfare Careers FOR: College Students WHEN: Tuesday, February 4, 8:30 a.m.- 4:00 p.m. Continuous Presentations By TOM DURANCEAU The Michigan basketball team will find itself in some uncom- fortable "snake pits" this week- end playing two of the most rugged road games of the year. The Wolverines play at Pur- due today and travel to Bloom- ington to play Indiana Monday night- The "snakes" in Purdue's Mackey Arena include mas- sive center John Garrett, a 6'1" giant who is the Big Ten's leading rebounder at the pres- ent time with an 11.9 per game average. The Boiler- makers' big man is also the Air time Today's Michigan - Purdue game starts at 4:05 EST and will be broadcast over radio stations WUOM (91.7-FM); WPAG (107-FM); and WAAM (1600-AM). fourth leading scorer in the Conference with a 19.0 aver- age. Supporting Garrett in the starting lineup are a trio of freshmen that, according to Purdue coach Fred Schaus, haverperformed well despite in- experience. F o r w a r d Walter Jordan averages 12.5 points per. game and is tough on the boards. Wayne Walls, the sec- ond freshman, holds down the other forward spot and is hit- ting at 8.6 points per game aver- age. Guard Bruce Parkinson is the second leading assist man in the Big Ten with a 6.5 per game average. He is also scoring more than 12 points per game. Freshman Eugene Parkerthas performed well at the other guard for Mike Steele, who is just recovering from mononu- cleosis. The Boilermaker b e n c h strength is led by sophomore forward Gerald Thomas, who came off the bench to con- tribute 12 points in the Purdue loss to Ohio State. Coach Fred Schaus' charges are curre- lv tied with Mich- igan, Ohio State and Minnesota in a battle for second place be- hind leader Indiana. All the second place teams have a 5-3 rord in the conference. Monday night the Wolverines have the unenviable task of tak- ing on the number one team in the country and Big Ten leader, Indiana, at their home "snake pit," Assembly Hall in Bloom- ington. The key to Indiana's suc- cess is in their great balance- and strong bench. Five play- ers are averaging in double figures for the Hoosiers. They are led by 6'7" forward Scott May, who is averaging 17.0 per game in the Big Ten. Sophomore center Kent Ben- son iscruising along with a 15.5 point per-game average and also is averaging almost eight rebounds a game. Guard Quinn Buckner is pour- ing in 12 points and contribut- ing five assists per game as the Hoosiers' leading playmaker. Forward Steve Green is mov- ing along on 11 points a game, as is Coach Bobby Knight's Imain man off the bench, John Laskowski. The other starting guard is Bob Wilkerson, a 6'6" jumping jack, who happens to jump center. Wilkerson is aver- aging just over six points a game. Michigan coach J o h n Orr , stated, "Even if we lose both they only count as one gameI apiece. We'll have a better rec- ord than Ohio State and Notre Dame. Just remember there are three tournaments, the NCAA, the NIT and the CCC." "We think we're capable of beating both of them and we are going to give it our best."' In other Big Ten basketball action this afternoon Indiana will travel to Columbus to take on the Buckeyes. The Hoosiers will be looking to break a jinx against Ohio State. Inidana has lost three in a row since 1972 in St. John's Arena. Elsewhere, Illinois will host Michigan State, Minnesota travels to Northwestern, and Wisconsin entertains Iowa. SOON a l l of Ann Arbor will be Rocking with HI COUZENS FILM CO-OP Presents Bridge on the River Kwai FRI., JAN. 31 SAT., F E B. 1 7:30& 10 :30 ADMISSION $1.00 COUZENS CAFETERIA Student I.D. needed Growing Up Jewish in 20th Century Germany ANOTHER HILLEL WEEKEND RETREAT Friday, Feb. 7-Sunday, Feb. 9 at Camp Tamarak WITH RESOURCE PEOPLE: DR. ALFRED JOSPE [YR. ALFRED MEYER PROF. YEHUDAH REINHARZ DR. MAX KAPUSTIN COST $12.50 CALL 663-3336 SPONSORED BY U. OF MICHIGAN AND MICHIGAN STATE HILLEL'S YOU EOL SV Kosher Meat Koop Ordering, meetings will picking up, and be every two weeks SCORES at noon beginning SUNDAY, FEB. 2 at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. 663-3336 NBA Boston 121, Cleveland 99 Buffalo 111, Atlanta 101 Milwaukee 101, Philadelphia 97 Chicago 127, Golden State 103 Washington 106, New Orleans 101 Phoenix 105, Los Angeles 101 NHL St. Louis 4, Atlanta 2 WCHA Michigan Tech 5, MSU 2 MICHIGAN 9, Duluth 2 ii EE {tt t E g o Ce, 60I ~ 2K "ijJ rI' e lo , ' 4 UAC TRAVEL and UM SKI CLUB PRESENT 3"SKI UTAH"' MARCH 1-8, 1975 $28900 Triple $29800 Double! INCLUDES: " ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION FROM DETROIT ON AMERICAN AIRLINES. f ACCOMMODATIONS AT THE TEMPLE j SQUARF HOTEL IN SALT LAKE CITY. * ROUND TRIP TRANSFERS FROM AIR- G E nDT -rr) Un-rr1 - . A phone call. A simple, ten-cent phone call for a cab could save your friend's life. If your friend has been drinking too much, he shouldn't be driving. The automobile crash is the number one cause of death of people your age. And the ironic thing is that the drunk drivers responsible for killing young people are most often other young people. Take a minute. Spend a dime. Call a cab. That's all. If you can't do that, drive him yourself. Or let him sleep on your couch. We're not asking you to be a doctor or a cop.Just a friend. FASCbiNG 1975 If you thought last year was great - wait 'til you see this year's plans. Wild costumes, music, dancing, and drinking -- a miniature Mardis Gras here in Ann Arbor - clowns, skits, and a day for the children too. Come as you are or come as you like - just come on down and join the fun! Call Fritz now for information and reservations at 663-7758. Faehinn at the Old Waidelhern DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y* BOX 2345 I ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852 1 I 1want to save a friend's life. Tell me what else I can do. I Myname is 0