THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page 5evef- THPIHGNDIYPg eel fall, 9-5; Grapplers eke b~y ARTISTIC CREATIONS NEEDED National Giftware Manufacturer will purchase new and unique items or collections of items from artists to be sold and pro- moted in leading department stares throughout the U. S. A. Full credit to be given to artist.. Items must be of limited edi- tons. Call art director, 9-1, 313 - 449 - 4448 for .appoint- ment, for review of art objects. Minn.-Duluth rallies for four late tallies Holn's foul language costs Hawke es win Special To The Daily DULUTH-Led by Tom Milani's four goals, the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs dealt a serious blow to tthe Michigan hockey team's play- off hopes here last night by scor- ing four straight times in the third period en route to a 9-5' win in the first game of this do-or- die series. The game belonged completely to thh B llda with Minhionn'. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: DAN BORUS to ine uimugs, wun i cunLIa ...a..- + only threat coming early in the The Bulldogs started their on- third period, when Pat Hughes slaught early, when Merv Kiryliuk and Randy Trudeau each scored and Lyman Haakstad each banged to bring the Wolverines back to home a rebound to give Duluth aj within one, 5-4. But the threat had 2-0 advantage before four minutes the steam taken out of it when had elapsed in the first period. Duluth padded its lead with a goal Michigan came right back, four minutes later, and then turned though, by shaking off its early the game into a laugher with game lethargy and scoring a pair three more tallies in less than two itself to tie the game. The Wol- minutes later in the period. verines' first came at 6:05 of the period, when Kris Manery finally flipped a rebound past Bulldogv goalie Jerome Mrazek after both Tom Lindskog and Gary Kardos had their shots kicked away. The: Os P ur d second came a minute and a half later"on Frank Werner's alert use of a beautiful Pat Hughes pass i keyda'sh from the corner. n Key clash **Michigan appeared to have the best of it at this point, but the By JOHN KAHLER gutsy and very physical Bulldogs Bill Frieder, the Michigan coach stayed tough and took the lead in charge of inspirational signs, again on a power play goal at the posted one this week in the Michi- 13 minute mark after Greg Fox gan locker room that read, First on left the game with a hooking pen- BRUCE MEDD works out on the paral the Second. To accomplish that alty. The period ended 3-2. case you were worried, rest assured I goal, Wolverines will have to get Unfortunately, the Wolverines some help from their despised did not play well at all in the mid- country cousins, the Michigan die period, allowing as Duluth to GAGNON GLITTERS: State Spartans. score twice, while not scoring at MSU battles Purdue today in all themselves. EasUt a e ws a is itho ui Hughes added some spark to the nib le rs t TmlrEatLnigiwhtiwtta doubt, the most impottant Big Michigan attack at 2:48 of the I 1 Ten game going today. The Boiler- third period when he put on aa splendid individual effort, skating makers, 60 in the conference, face through the Duluth defense and By LEBA HERTZ Mich a creampuff schedule, and this beating Mrazek. Things really be- Led by the versatile performance point have a reasonable chance of los- gan to look up less than two min- of Jean Gagnon, the Michigan gym- Mich in r bsutes later when Trudeau used nasts jumped to a commanding with ig. some nice faking to score an un- lead over Illinois and Indiana in Me The Spartans, -2 In conference assisted goal which boosted the yesterday's compulsories of the count play, have been threatening to be- Wolverines to within one goal of "Mini-Big Ten." each come a Big Ten contender. Awin Duluth. Going into today's optionals, the Bruc would boost them toward that goal, But then came the Bulldog's bar- Wolverines led the three-way corn- e while l.a loss would put them inbei dee trouble A Purdue loss and rage. At 8:03, Ernie Powell scar- petition with 159.85 points. Illinoisbehi a Michigan win would vault the ed to put Duluth up by two again. was second with 150.80 and Indiana Stev Wolverines into a first place tie The score stood 6-4 for another was bringing up the rear with secon with the Boilermakers. sevenminutes until Milani gained 150.65. Med Purdue will base its hopes on its for good measure a minute and a For awhile it looked like the On two big men, Frank Kendrick and for goteasure a m ined meet would only be a dual affair final John Garrtt the !half later. Mike Newton finished ial John Garrett, the pair that have the salvo 22 seconds later. since the Illini were delayed by in- diana carried them to the heights they clement weather. As a result, the 26.20. currently occupy. meet started 15 minutes late with dez The Spartans will counter with over two events being performed simul- with the hottest shooting team in the FIRST PERIOD taneously. JoeI Big Ten, the long rebounding arms SCORING: 1. UMD-Kiryliuk (Haak-' Gagnon, who placed first in +the with of Lindsay Hairston, and the home stad, McDonald) 1:21 PP; 2. UMD -- all-around competition, amassed In court advantage of Jenison Field- Haakstad (Newton, Kirylluk) 3:36; s. 53.0 points, surpassing his career leda house. At Lafayette, the Spartans .M -- Manery (Kardos, Lindskog) 4:45; 4. M - Werner (Hughes) 7:32; 5. UMD high of 52.9 which he set last week hadf held an 18 point edge, only to wind -- Milani (Campe) 13:00 PP. against Minnesota. while up losing the game by two. Both SECOND PERIOD Gus Ganakas and Johnny Orr hope SCORING: 6. Milani (unassisted) The Wolverines outscored the Illino the situation will be different this 2:59; 7. Kiryliuk (Haakstad) 8:35. Illini and the Hoosiers in five of On time. SCORING D. MPHuhesI(T.OLind- the six events. Illinois edged Michi- verin The remainder of the confer- skog) 2:48 PP; 9. M - Trudeau (unas- gan in the pommel horse by a 26.6 Rich ence schedule lacks glamor. Indi- sisted) 4:13; 10. UMD - Powell (R. to 26.15 score for the only event Pierr ana and Wisconsin should rout Jones) 8:03; 11. UMD - Milani (Cam- in which the 'M' gymnasts failed 9.05 Iowa and Minnesota, respectively, e 15:05; 12. UMD - Milani (Campe, t0 finish first. Michigan's Jerry andt IowaandMinesoa, rspetivlyLangevin) 16:39 PP; 13. UMD -- New-lealscrsinteid while Ohio State and Northwest- ton (McDonald, Haakstad) 17:10; 14. M Poynton led all scorers in the side On ern prepare for their trips to Ann -- Kardos (Manery, Dufek) 19:01. horse with a 9.25 mark. led a the inSAVES: 1 2 3 T I h lo xrie e os n Arbor by battling each other in Moore(Mich) 15 10 12 37 In the floor exercise, Ken Gosse ing Columbus. Mrazek 11 13 14 38 of Indiana and Bruce Medd of score By CLARKE COGSDILL Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-The Michigan mat machine secured its claim on the number one position in the wrestl- ing world by overcoming Iowa 21- 16 before nearly 7000 disappointed Hawkeye fans here last night. But this was no cause for elation in truth there are 10,000 forms of defeat which would have been more satisfying than this victory. Iowa lost the match when Don Holm, a surprise entry at 167-lbs. against Wolverine John Ryan, was disqualified at the end of the period for using profanity. Ryan, who had just put together his best two min- utes; of the season was ahead 2-0 at the time but if the match con- tinued there was little doubt but that Holm would have turned it around. "Ryan dominated that period," affirmed wrestling c o a 'c h Rick Bay, "and I think he would have done it." That's hard to believe. Also hard to believe were the subpar performances of Maize and Blue mainstays Bill Davids, Rob Huizenga and Dave Curby. All of whom bit the dust and deserved to. "They out wrestled us-no doubt about it," the stern Bay admitted. "It's a shame that a big meet like this had to be decided that way. "But I'll tell you this, that referee made the guttiest decisian I ever saw when he ejected Holm in front of that hometown crowd." Disappointed Hawkeye mentor Gary Kurdelmier moaned that, "The penalty was entirely out of proportion with the offense. I agree that things like this have no place in wrestling, but I don't think it was serious enough to warrant disqualification. "My guys hate Michigan wrestl- ing style-the stalling tactics, and putting in the legs. I can under- stand how they could lose control out on the mat." In a way, Holm's ouster was a fitting climax to the bizzare hap- penings surrounding this match. Following a week of inflamatory publicity allegedly intended to drum up the crowd-including di- rect pressure on the referee exert- yI ed through the local media-Iowaj ATTENTION introduced specifically for this meet a gigantic 45 by 45 foot mat,' A DVE RT ISE RS! specifically intended, according to an Iowa spokesman, to prevent Let your voice reach Michigan wrestlers from using the the student body edges of the mat whenever they got in difficulty. Add WRCN-AM 650 Unfortunately, the result of this1'toyo kind of foolishness is that the' per-y formances of the wrestlers are ob- Promotional Campaign scured by the petty politicking of 763-3501 their elders. Jerry Hubbard's pin of Iowa's freshman Tony Cordes would ordinarily have been con- sidered as the sort of clutch per- UM E J S formance a team captain is sup- Su JOS posed to provide when his squad Guys & Gals needed for summer gets in trouble. employment at National P a r k s, When Hubbard stepped out on Private Camps, Dude Ranches and the mat, the team score was tied Resorts throughout the nation th ,sixallandtheOver 50,000 students aided each at six all and the possibility of year. For FREE information on Wolverine defeat in the following student assistance program send two matches loomedhmenacingly, self-addressed STAMPED envelope Hubbrd'spin the olvrine toOpportunity Research, Dept. s pin gave t verines sJO, 55 Flathead Drive, Kalispel, some margin against anticipated 4,T 59901 setbacks. -YOU MUST APPLY EARLY- It proved decisive. Only heavy- This Student Assistance Program weight Gary Ernst povided nHas Been Reviewed by the weigt Gry EnstprovdedanyFederal Trade Comn'ission points for the Wolverines by virtue of his own efforts after Hubbard's triumph. Dan Brink put everything he had ie IF Of9 into his match at 158 with Hawk- fUW W eye Chuck Yagla, but it was sim-f- ply not enough to avert a loss by superior decision. Rob Huizenga wrestled his worst match of the year against Iowa's Jan Sanderso1, who completely solved Huizenga's normally baffling leg - wrestling sfip of the tongue slip of te to gue For anyone who wants 118-Jim Brown (M) dec. Chris t0 sing, play or listen to 126-Tim Cysewski (I) dec. Rich val. folk or old-time music. ley (M), 6-0 NX AHRN 134-Steve Hunte (I) dec. Bil Davids (M), 4-2 142--Bill Schuck (M) dec. Brad Sunday, Feb. 3rd, 3-5:30 Smith (I), 6-5un yFb3r,-53 150-J erry Hubbard (M) pinned Tony Cordes (I),'7:11 158-Chuck Yagla (I) sup. dec. Dan THE ARK-141 Hill St. Brink (M), 13-3TH AR -4 HilSt 167-John Ryan (M) won by disquali- fication of Don Holm (I) y-_ ___- 177-Jan Sanderson (I) dec. Rob Huizenga (M), 11-6DC 190-Chris Campbell (I) dec. Dave Hwt-Gary Ernst (M) dec. Jim Was- Bring Quick Results chek (1), 8-1 Daily Photo by STUART HOLLANDER ilel bars in yesterday's compulsaries of the mini Big Ten. In that Michigan maintained a sizeable lead. ackle compulsories igan led all scorers with 8.8 s with J. P. Bouchard of igan placing a close third! an 8.75. dd's score, however, did not t because Loken alternates week between Medd and e Keeshin in the all-around. d would have placed second nd Gagnon with a 50.7, but e Schutt of Indiana finished nd with 49.15 as a result of d's eliminationsand Keeshin 3with 48.05 points. the rings, the Wolverines [y outscored the powerful In- a team by a 27.15 score to . Gagnon and Landy Fernan- of Indiana led all scorers 9.25 points with Michigan's Neuenswander placing second a score of 9.2. vaulting, as usual, Michigan all the way. The Wolverines four men scoring 9.0 or better' the best either Indiana ora is could amass was an 8.95. the parallel bars, the Wol- nes garnered 27.25 points with; Bigras scoring a 9.2 and' re LeClerc and Gagnon scoring and 9.0 in finishing second third respectively. the high bar, Gagnon again all scorers with a 9.15 in lend- to Michigan's leading 26.30' e. ; Commenting on last night's per- formances, Loken modestly said, "The compulsories were very en- couraging. In another month, we'll be ready for Iowa and the Big Ten. Today's optionals start at 1 p.m. and if the Wolverines continue to perform as they did last night, the Michigan gymnasts will have an- other victory on its record. Refs bounce Lanier, but Pistons top Knik s By The Associated Press DETROIT - Dave Bing led the# balanced Detroit scoring with 18 points and the Pistons overcame the loss of star center Bob Lanier in the third quarter last night to defeat the New York Knicks 96-91 in a National Basketball Associa- tion game. The.loss ended the Knicks' four- game winning streak and marred Dave DeBusschere's farewell ap- pearance as an NBA player in his home town. It was the Pistons' seventh vic- tory in their last eight games, and their 23rd against just eight losses since Dec. 1. Schmidt, i1ini hit 6/ /7 fan By JIM ECKER Michigan concludes the first half of its rig- orous 14-game Big Ten season this afternoon against Illinois in a ballgame Coach John Orr terms a "must win" for his title-hungry Wol- verines. By drubbing "The Fighting Illini" today in Champaign's Assembly Hall, Michigan would remain in the thick of the conference race at 6-1 and also equal its victory total of a year ago when the Wolverines went 6-8 in league play. ILLINOIS HAS NOT been playing good ball lately, suffering from a confidence problem and a general lack of enthusiasm. But Orr doesn't view the encounter against Harv Schmidt's ballclub as a breather. "Oh, no" winced Orr. "Especially not down there." Michigan's coach conceded his ball- players possibly took Iowa too lightly last Saturday, contributing to the Wolverines' gen- erally sloppy play and narrow escape in Iowa City. The Orrmen will not be complacent again today, promises their chief. If Illinois suffers from an inferiority complex, their feelings are not totally unfounded. The 4-10 Illini enter today's game deep in the throes of a losing streak, with Michigan looming as their seventh consecutive conqueror. Senior guard Jeff Dawson and junior forward Rick Schmidt offer impressive scoring creden- tials, for Illinois (18.6 and 20.6, respectively), but the Illini are basically a two-man team. Michigan's coaches geared Thursday's practice session to familiarizing their charges with Dawson and Schmidt's offensive tendencies, and the Wolverine players facilely assimilated the information. THROUGH FIVE BIG TEN games, Illinois' tries. Illinois' rebounding figures also tell an anemic tale. Schmidt and Rucks "haul" down but six caroms per game apiece, while Farnham adds five more. Overall, the Illini have been beaten off the hoards by a 47-38 average this year. Today's ballgame features Michigan's team concept of basketball against Illinois' one-two punch of Schmidt and Dawson. Although Campy Russell paces the Big Ten in scoring (22.6 ppg), the Wolverines certainly do not live or die with their star performer. (Michigan beat Indiana and Michigan State with Russell out on fouls.) All five starters make important contributions to the Wolverine effort. Center C. J. Kupec, who with Russell form a potent rebounding combo, collects kudos game after game for playing some of the Big Ten's toughest defense. Joe Johnson, Steve Grote and Wayman Britt, none taller than 6-2, give Michigan an extremely mobile and flexible lineup. With Kupec, a natural forward, playing center, and the ver- satile Russell employed at forward, the Wol- verines field the fastest, quickest lineup in the league. Back in early January Orr was forthrightly asked "Who's going to win the Big Ten?" "Come back in February and I'll tell you" laughed Johnny at the time. WELL, IT'S FEBRUARY now, but Orr still won't commit himself. When reminded of his prognosticatory pledge, Orr hedged. "I said come back in February and I'd tell you who the contenders are" joked Orr. "And you can look at the standings and figure that out for your- self." Aw, come on, coach. You said you'd tell who's Lanier was tossed out by referee Mark Schlafman with the third period less than two minutes old for protesting a foul call too ve- hemently, but the Pistons resorted{ to a balanced attack to win. Eight of nine men hit in double figures for Detroit. The Pistons, leading 82-76 going into the final period, saw their lead twice cut to two points, 'md with two minutes left had a three- point edge, before Bing eased the pressure by sinking four foul shots in the final minute. DeBusschere, a f o r m e r high school, college and pro star in' Detroit, collected16dpoints to share New York scoring honors with Earl Monroe. DeBus-schere will retire at the end of the season and become general manager of the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association. In exciting track action tonight in South Bend, Indiana, the Michigan thinclads trampled Bowling Green and Notre Dame. The final score was Michigan 67, Bowling Green 51, Notre Dame 44. John Mengelt added 13 points and Chris Ford and Stu Lantz had 12 each for the Pistons. * * * Bulls bust on CHICAGO - Jerry Sloan, hitting from long range, put an end to a final Kansas City-Omaha rally with four baskets in the final minutes to send the Chicago Bulls to a 99-88 triumph over the Kings last night in a National Basketball As- sociation contest. The Bulls moved to a 69-56 lead midway in the third quarter before the Kings caught fire and out- scored Chicago 14-2 in a seven- minute flurry. IRon Behaben pitched' in with nine points during the rally. BAGELS FOR BRUNCH BUNCH PRESENTS BAGELS, LOX, AND CREAM CHEESE AND SOME GOOD TALK ... FOR UNDERGRADS SUNDAY, FEB. 3, 11 A.M. HILLEL-1429 Hill St. FOR YOUR VALENTINES HAND MADE Unique, Beautiful Gifts Jewelry, Copper, Onyx (Alavaster), & China Work, Tapestry, and many other unusual items. VERY REASONABLE PRICES Turkish Arts & Gifts 215 E. LIBERTY (near Sam's) 761-5554 Remember Surfer Joe ? He's back in Ann Arbor along with Jan and Dean, the Crystals and the Surfaries. Now available for free! on Rockin' 650 WRCN "Where music from the past is present! Request line: 3-3535 generation is BACKI Pick up a copy at your local bookstore. AND, we want good poetry, prose, essays, music, graphics and photo- graphs for the SPRING ISSUE, featuring a long, visionary poem, the score for a string quartet, and the UM's first BLACK ANTHOLOGY, only one of its kind in a university lit. magazine today. SUBMIT, or come help us put it together Deadline: Feb. 5, but flexible (Advt. Rates available. 420 Maynard, Student Publications Bldg. or call John: 665-9888) PHI DELTA PHI the international legal fraternity ANNOUNCES its first annual COMBINED RUSH PARTY i AND N the axis of e Xros by WALTER SPINK Schocken--$10.00 our price-$9.00 n !', i I I