,1974 Hi,- AN LAELY PQge Seven 1914 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven _________________________________________________________________________ U U WANTS TO PLAY GUARD split wide to th te leftJ Brt c oBkrcott Hawkeye timperioism. a mat (Iyfasty forms PE# L UUALYTUN1o Iowa City as a place here the bigdelo Saturaynight is standing out in the field, watch- ing tecrsak ree Tis is a misconception of course. Iowa suffers just like the rest of the country from the febrile sports-madness of the '0s And since fe sane sports entrepreneurs would locate a major league franchise within 10 miles of the place this hys- teri has focused disproportionately upon Hawkeye athletics. Iowa has never consistently fielded contenders in football or basketball. Forest Evaheski had some great gi teams grd lightly more then a decade ago, but even he couldn't keep it going, and he finally left under fire Bump lliot,Ea shevs's sucessor, has alead hired his ssecond football cachl If tradition couns for anything in the traditionalist Ce Bet, in aboutthe years Bump will be back o the Unable to maintain a successful maor sports program. the Hwkee have chosen to emphasize a usually-minor sport with deep roots in the agrarian American Midwest - wrestling. Iowa currently ranks either second o third nationally (depend- ing o whether you liste to local partisans or the Amateur Wetling News), and if Dn Hom had enoughknw to sht up in his match against Mchigan's John Ryan, the Hakeyes would nuetoably be o topa. They'll get there soon enough. Iowa has decided to do evey- ti gpor within itspoe to buy itself a lock-hold on the INCAA wetling cshas hip_ Hakee mat mentor Gary Kurdelmeier has collected eight -count 'em - eight assistant coaches, including the near-in- vincible Dan Gable and -timeN CAA18-on champion Don Sherman- Wrestling gets first call on the 13 tenders the Hawk- eyes can hand outevr year for their entire mior sport pro- gram. Motiprant'ly, urdelmeier has the support of the local fan ndmda - something every coach needs to run a championship prgram. Barring uatter disaster Iowa's going to make it Aparallel w th baseball This will be trgc. The tack Iowa has used in its drive for wrestig mran eflets inherent srctrlflaws within the Aeian sportsscn which, although they may sere the short-rint interests of some participants, under- mine teln-u interests of everyon. Buying championships is nothing new. 55 yeas ago, the New York eeYaYk launched themselves to the top of the American League by purchasing the Boston Red Sox' best plavers-includ- ing such stalwarts s Home Rm Baker, Carl 'Mas, Babe Ruth and Deacon Scott-from oner Harry Frazee, who was energet- ically gigbnrupt o Broadway. Doilars fuled the Yankee dynasty. When holes developed in the stin e up, the :rn Bombers were able to pur- chase such people a Tony Laie and Je DMaggio from the Pacific Coast League, and to I theirnr league no sys- tern AAAte~sIn Newark and Kansas City - with the bs players mnycudbsy' It prved to be disasters for baseball- The truly outstand- in athltes- the people comobinng top physical skills and the desire to do anything necessay to win - didt have that much to: look ftwar to if they couldn't sig with New York. For a hoe while, theyhokdp with other bsball clubs, maintaining a genally high level of competition throughout the sport, but as soon as other professional sot opened sot up, offering an al- t~rative t the Yankees for thosewh wanted to be cham- pious, the best athletes turned aay from the diamond. To illustrate: 25 years ago, when such men as Jackie Robin- son, aci Jensen, Tedl uszewki and Paul Giel had a shot at eher bcall o football, they chose bsball. Since then, the NFL has emerged as a league with just as much prestige as the baseball major leagues. Now when peole like Mie Garrett and Brad Vpan Pelt are confronted with choices beween baseball adfootball, they almost invariably head for the gridiron Down thea slippery slape Justifiably or otherwise, professional football has been able to sell itself to young athletes as a wide-open competitive free- for-all where any lad born in a long cabin can grow up to quar- terback the Spr Bow champion. Baseball, by contrast, retains anaura of the era of gas lights, corner saloons, and Robber Barons loading the dice. Baseball's image is a direct cone- quneof the f ears during wichs the Yankees held the vanial trump cards, bovgaht oumt the casino, and stacked the deck in their on favor. Good athletes, to their credit, event- uallyv decided yd prefer to play in an honest house. Another innont armd t of the Yankee dynsty ws thit n~ny mestablished fra"hiss were undermined. The oar- test trism of the business holds that fans will support win- ning teams more than they will back perpetual losers. With weakened finances, the rebu3ilding iob is even more diffi- cult and until it's done, the f-ns will continue to stay aw ay ..or to use elsewhere the money they'd normailly spend on baseball. Te moverofthe Gint"ad. oderstoCifrna - ?-haened hlvafter the footbll Giantsput-togeter a charsmatic se M kn on7ey but Horace Soe~ n atrOMleke fuill l how th e trend-lines were going . . and got out of twns ofteur wr estigi. h vn fad'atb tIw' rayn S - l :. _. .° _ i JO LRt . 4 2>,ore l e am e fa tos: t at hi b se al w ud 'work 'th. to: By JOHN KAHLER Feimn pBrle% -,hos undobtWay tna atr it beaneigh;rous to he Miuhigad coache s ha no N .:e a reluctant ballplayer. But that is so. "I rea ldin't want to play frwaOrd," con fesses Britt. "I doni't w.ani to be typned by, a- EtaI-ot.r m n y- e_ ntn : re and a guad for team daily sports NIGHJ T EDITOR:) JOHN K.HLER w.hy I decided to enroll here," Britt explains. "I didn't w"ant to go out of state. and if I staved in the state I wanted to play- Big Ten ball. I had considered Iowa for a while-they needed a quard-but that was out of the question. ande- me ihEne adLoc oErnie : Johsn n oh oca coaches were O.K.mand The fa;~i :e w e -e n.IBtwhatrell "Wolidd asfterhancerota "Isasn too vdhiffivlt oestn tpcs ereadhebutppnt tobu? ef0fort one of the fire. Actually-. Way- man is a big 6-2. He jumps well and is very strong. We knewv he could handle himself well under there." to :ikalte time .that e'_i ther," ote :t. Ihave7t dongal te thr higswel and s r enin ard erm, ai: " do' to iToeagame ti-i ig ht Iavneonoutpltooer muon If oigagdainst.Te ota has towwin, cnd 'gtoedowey Akbogwdferen betwee n this rearics team cand ak ears that' Tes thsrear."in' ae e prctce Bi'ryo as Lihtin hardestes Got a yearning for the "Good olf days"? Let Rockin' 650 WRCN help! 7 a.m.-4 a.mn. doi.y WRCN-' Where music from the post is present. J REQUEST LINE: 3-3535 r o t 'X! FOR YOUR VALENTINES HAND MADE y^niqe. taut iul G:iqts VERY REASONABLE PRICES; Turkish AXrts & Gifts 215 E. LIBERTY na Sms x NOTICE Non-Native Speakers of English All Speakers of English asca econd Languacg& Are Invited to Take Part in on Experimnental Test of English Lcnguage Proficiency to be Given in RACK-j HAM LECTURE HALL AT 7:00 P.M. ON THE 6th j OF FEBRUARY. You Wi![ Receive $5.00for Approx-I imotely 1I ,-2Hours of Your Time. If Interested Yo-uMut Call and Register at the Following NumT- ber: 76-416on o before February 6th.' ~No LI tudntsCurer~~y Eroled n te IteniveEnglish I Professionalt League Standings 1tlantic Dini~nor W L 1oS'; o3n 27 11 Per ladelphia l13S3 rlanra 2 ?3 C lelad , :19,4 Wte:rn Conference Mfidwest Divi~fon Chicago 44 i? Y 18 Dletroit 3^ 19 K.C-Orn aa'2136 Pacfi c DiSv ,on ew York 16, Phoenix ?+? Atlantra 121, Capital 163 I Milwaukee 1A2. Cleveland 8' Phoenlix at cap ital Chic.ago vs>. RC-Omaha3,at Omaha Portlan d at Seattle 1NHL Pct. GB .5 5 .417 3 3223 23 Mountreal 3 N.Y. Rangers 25 Toroto Buffalo 2 Det roit ?19 N.. Isanders 14 Vancouver 1 Phil1adelphia 31 Chicag~o 24 Los Angeleq 18 'Minnesota 13 Pit! sburgh 14 Calif-ornia 1+i L T Pc-. , 10 3-' 23 6 50~ =3 13 41 11 4 _ 62 3672 GF 211 1-- 186 182 16-4 161 13? 11' 1h? 143 131 135 154 131 133 Ga 13? 1134 154 131 1'71 26 159 188 1"0 133 148 158 1S2 1F5 224 R. C. PLAYERS Present THE DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS G. B. Show THE SANDBOX Edward A/bee East Quad Auditorium COME' ON DOWN . . 8 p.mr. Admission $1 ............... - SAILING PAS T a star'tle a;uki. tWvman Bri-t drives for an ea'a C -"t±:nti s wopoints aontSuhr Ilri.Tog nly-,6-2. Briti's a leaper, and for th i reaso hehsben pT 3layingorwrard, in- stead of his favorite pcsitio, gua:rd. Hiouston 116. Los Anzeles 112, overtime Chicago 1(41, Boston 928 Proit at Portland, inc. Seattle at GolIden State. inc. Today's Games Buiffalo at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Atlanta Boston at Milwaukee Blue women cagers Yesterday's Results YA 1slandert 6. Minnesota 2 Montreal 3, St. Lours 3 Today's Games Detroit at Toronto Mon.rtreal at Minne-ota \_ZY.0islnders at N.Y. PRanrs75 Buffalo6 at Los Angeles vanIcouv9er at California Atlanta at Chica_,o 41 $2.50 w F T+ s s T s w s : e s see on the air-LIVE! wrW fall to By LESLIE RIESTER A scrappy M i c h tg a n team battled Western Michigan Un:- "ersitv to the end before s ''- cumbing 5~-46 in women kethail action .as ~ Led b:,' center Ann Platte's points ano 16 re~o~"~ WMU held off Wol'.'ertne rall.es .0 the second and fourth qaarter~ to oreser'e the ; tctor': IN THE FIRST va r. an overconf:dent Bronco team n'.aie numerous mistake;, b u t the tense Wolvertnes could only cap- italize once and XX'estern lumped to a lead it never gave on Down 24-10 in the second quar~ ter. M:chigan manaaed to ~hake WML' momentar A"w :th a zone press. Wol"eriie center ~ner' I Sza d'. ca :gh: f:re ano oun'v'e~. s:x points as M:chigan nnrro~xed the margin to :eo, 23~I~ a: h~ t.me. Freshman L."d Soerv' c.~me off the hench :n the secooc q~~o'- ter after Sazdv collected her fourth foul. HMd:nz her own agatost the taller Brn~c team, Se'.'ertn snared 14 ceo ~jnds and added eigh' po nt~ as the Wo> ver:nes refused o d.e MICHiGAN USED a zone pres; througho't most ot the gume, but a well-disctoltned W.M~U team quickly broke the ~re~ Yr e..~. baskets. The Broncos u~ed ti'~tr he.aht advantage well, with &l center Anne Platte cleaLog the boards and starting an e;:ecti'.'e break Lydia Sims con::nued her fine floor play. d:rectiog the Mach- tgan attack and hound:ng WMU .nto turnovers. S-ms ~gn.ted toe Wolverines' fourth quarter ra.~. Western eQ aan,~oee~n :rll:ed :: cut W.MU's lead bac~ DESPITE MICHIGAN'S ia>- e:t~rt. the Wl;er~nes culd eep Platte and Lode Plec K t~e boards, and the Bronco ~ break f:oallv hur:ed \Lch- S.m; acain led M:ch~g~n ;v::n h oo:nt~ ;th:le ozad'~' chtpned in 12 coc 5e ertn S WMU s Anne P.~:te t.ok gime honors wtth 17 oc:nts. tea m buy a bcet as L's rsity Reseve on -l7 ShIcaeAm five poits Listen to the action on 650 AM in your dorm, and COME ON DOWN 341 S. MAIN ST. ANN ARBOR 769-5960 EDUGElj- MSU WMU: Skiers miaster slalom r rrrl w Jerusalem the Golden: <- ace ohthiedmnscand wo- K-del-h The enmweredgaid out MISU for team honors by one point. Ann Edwards took third place, with Deb J. Lewis 'fourth and Annette O'Malley seventh, In ' Sunayspiant;.slalom vic:- toy ihgnsGaryEEdwards finished firs withPat uno and Chris Fleming takin g seventh and eihhplaces to compl-et.e thne M.ichigan w-.as sec-ond as Deb. J. Lewis finishedthird and Ann Ed- gan~ women ere able to pick u their faster tam time. The historicl re''igious, and architec.urol: canrce oftheeEteralc ty inthe traditions daim, hritiaity an Isam sigifi of .Ju- Jerusalem in the Christian Tradition PROFESSOR D. NOEL FREEDMAN WED., FEB. 6 8 p.m. Drecor o Proram n Stdiesin Re!'io Modern Language Building-Lecture Room 2 ____ FUTURE WORLDS ATTENTION A rC rCD LECTURE SERIES peet DR. HUNTER S. THOMPSON .O~rlC ~ A..r~c 'Far ad Lath g o The Sacred Monu- TURF.1 ments of Jerusalem8pm A __LLSTRATE- LTRE pm PROFESSOR OLEG GRABAR Angell Holl-Auditorium 8 i GREATEST FORUM ON EARTH TEACHING HISTORY: I I I I