Fridoy, February 23, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nin- Fridy, ebrury 3, 973 HE ICHIAN AIL -, _ . . BLUE FAVORED: Matmen set for title By JIM ECKER Brown finished second in the Big Editor's Note: This is the second Ten last year behind three-time1 in a two-part series evaluating Mich- igan's prospects in the Big Te NCAA champion Greg Johnson, a wrestling championship. Spartan no longer on the scene. Competition begins today in the 126-Billy Davids Big Ten Wrestling Championships, After several battles with excess being staged this weekend at the baggage, Davids appears ready University of Minnesota. for a shot at the title. The Hazel Yesterday, we highlighted Mich- Park junior recorded a S-2 loop igan's outstanding dual meet sea- mark including a split at the heav- son and explained the inner mecha- ier '34 division. nisms of the tournament. Today With MSU's defending 126-lb. we take a weight-by-weight look champion Pat Milkovich injured, at the ten classifications and Davids sees Minnesota's Jeff Lam- evaluate Michigan's prospects on phere and Wisconsin's Jim Abbott an individual basis. as the roadblocks to the top. Dav- 118-Jim Brown ids blew his match against Lam- The sophomore from Akron com- phere on a careless, last-second piled a 7-2 conference record, with: takedown while he nosed his Bad- one of the losses coming at 126. ger foe 7-6. i 4 dailly sports NIGHT EDITOR: clash, ned Ritzman, the husky Hawkeye has departed for lighter pastures. Look for Holm battling Hubbard at 150 or Mendrygal at 158. The Gophers' Joe Schleitin remains to cause trouble, along with Michi- gan State's Bruce Zindel and Wis- consin's Ed Vatch. Ritaman beat the Spartan but hasn't wrestled the Today in Sports Track-The Michigan Open Fresh off a 74-57 trouncing of Michigan State last Saturday, Michigan's trackmen will host the Michigan Open here Friday night in Yost Fieldhouse. The meet will be a final preparation for the upcoming Big Ten Championship meet to be held at Pur- due. Most of the competition will be offered by Notre Dame and Eastern Michigan. Several other small colleges will be making appearances. Eastern will be featuring the talented Stan Vinson in the 440-yard dash and mile relay. Vinson is noted for his famous "pulling the whistle" routine. Several times this year Vinson has come from behind, pulling alongside his opponent, raising his hand in the air, and then spurting past, much to the delight of the Eastern fans. Vinson and the rest of the mile relay team will offer a strong challenge to Michigan's Kim Rowe, Greg Syphax, Eric Chap- man, and Al Cornwell. Field events will start at 6:30 p.m. and running events at 7:00. Admission is free with a student ID card. * * * Lowly dekers travel to Tech Michigan's hockey team (that's right. Remember Rick Mal- lette, Robbie Moore and company), sporting a not-so-nice 4-25 record, invades Houghton and Michigan Tech for a two-game series this weekend. Possessing ea 19-11 slate through the campaign and a 12-10 WCHA mark, Tech has been paced in the conference by the scor- ing punch of Mike Zuke, with 15 goals and 19 assists for 34 points and Graham Wise (15-11-26). Tech's defense, bolstered during the campaign by Wayne Pushie, Jim Nahrgang, Bill Prentice and Bob Lorimer could constantly give Michigan's impotent offense fits during the weekend. Goaltending ranks as another of Michigan Tech's strong suits. In 10.3 conference games, Jim Warden boasts a respectable 4.1 goals against average. The back-up netminder, Rick Quance, has participated in nine WCHA affairs, allowing 3.9 red-lighters per game. If nothing else exciting happens in Houghton this weekend, if the Wolverines drop both games, at least they will all be able to meet their new coach, Dan Farrell. Blue gymnasts visit Indiana The Michigan gymnasts face their final dual meet of the season tonight as they travel to Bloomington to take on Indiana. Tuning up for the Big Ten tournament next month, the Wolver- ines will be handicapped by a rash of recent injuries. Jean Gagnon will definitely miss tonight's action as he is nursing a slight shoulder separation. All-arounder Bruce Keeshin is a questionable performer with his pulled arm muscle. Bob Johnson is expected to see limited action for the next few days and Pierre Leclerc finds himself nursing a nagging elbow prob- lem. Indiana has proven to be tough this year, defeating Minne- sota in a dual meet earlier after the Gophers had beaten Michi- gan. Their top combination is the rings team averaging, over 28.0. According to Loken, "the seniors really want to win this one, it being the last dual meet of their careers. We are going down there to win and we hope to come back with a 7-2 record." GEORGE HASTINGS Badger. 177-John Ryan Ryan built a 4-2-1 conference 134-Jeff Guyton standing before missing the last Guyton's Big Ten setbacks were two meets with a strained should- administered by Indiana's Bill Wil- -_ letts and Iowa's Brad Smith, but For a humongously interesting Andre Allen from Northwestern look by Bob Heuer at the fine looks like the man to beat. Guyton art of recruiting flip back to claims he never should have lost Page Seven. to Smith and thinks MSU's Conrad j Calendar, Purdue's Bill Andrew and Illinois' Andy Passaglia will be er. The Detroit Catholic Central Icompetitive. Guyton decisioned product placed a surprising fourth the last three in close bouts. in the Big Ten tourney last year. 142-Bill Schuck His chances of improving his fin- i zish are not overwhelming The battle in the 142-lb. division g is for second place behind MSU's 190-Dave Curby Tom Milkovich. The defending Big The quiet man from Ann Arbor Ten and NCAA champion wrestles established himself near the top here and stands the heavy favorite of the powerful bracket with an for a repeat title performance. 8-1 league report. Curby looks for revenge against Iowa's Fred Pen- 150-Jerry Hubbard rod, the man who left the sole The all-time Michigan dual meet black mark on the sophomore's record holder and two-time Big slate. Ten champ seeks his third con- Illinois, Minnesota and Michigan: secutive conference crown. Statesoffer outstanding 190 pound- Hubbard reasserted his domina- ers in Palmer Glass, Evan John- tion of the 150-lb. bracket with a son and Scott Wickard. Although 9-0 league record, although two "Curbs" beat them all, each vic- tight victories do appear on his tory came by a single point. A score sheet. top seed is possible. Tough comp R e "Hub" edged Purdue's Darr Dil- is a surety. worth in a sluggish performance Heavyweight--Gary Ernst DETROIT (A") -I and took his closest competitor, Gary Ernst developed into the Dionne scored thre Rick Lawinger (Wisconsin), 3-2 Big Ten's outstanding heavyweight power plays andt last Saturday in a battle for the this year. The closest anyone came sisted, as the Red tournament's top seed, to Ernst was five points, an indi- the National Hocke3 158-Mitch Mendrygal cation of the Saline native's com- leading Montreal 1972's defending champion rates plete domination of the field. last night. a slight favorite for a repeat title Michigan State's Larry Avery Guy Lafleur open this year. The Wolverines' cap- could be Ernst's sole source of for Montreal with tain posted a solid 8-1 federation competition. Iowa's Jim Washeck of the first period record, with the only loss levied and Minnesota's Dave Simonson onne came back to by Northwestern's Leo Kocher. The rate outside chances at preventing 15:33 on a powerI Detroit native deserves his divi- 1972's fourth best conference Jim Roberts scc sion's top seed, with Kocher, Io- heavyweight from officially be-' the seco erio wa's Jan Sanderson and Minne- coming 1973's main man. tiensefore Deiod sota's Dan Chandler the closest The Wolverines obviously have nd knotted t sonn pursuers. the horses to go all the way, to er. Then at 7:43 165-Roger Ritzman take "The Big One". Defending ahead on another p Ritzman's injury - riddled ca- champion Michigan State, riddled his 31st tally of the reer continued this year when a by graduation and injury, prob- more than his goal bruised sternum forced the DeKalb ably won't finish higher than as a rookie. senior to the sidelines early in the fourth. season. After returning he won Iowa possesses the best shot at thYvan Cournoyer four of six 167-pound matches, with derailing the Wolverine Express, hovlich pass past the setbacks coming in one per- albeit a slight one. Michigan has Roy Edwards at 3 sonally forgetable weekend against the depth and the scorers for a period. Iowa and Minnesota. championship. Goal Number Two, p Although Iowa's ,Dan Holm pin- I the Big Ten title, nears reality. Montreal has only Frosh cagers fizzle to end season, 79-48 By JOHN KAHLER Cheeks finally fell on the ball, as The Michigan Freshman basket- the referee whistled the action to ball team ended its first season on a stop. The entire sequence earned a low note as Glen Oaks Commun- a round of applause from the ity College methodically squelched crowd of 61. the Baby Blue by a score of 79-48 As the period ended, Michigan's last night at Crisler Arena. offense died and Glen Oaks ripped The game commenced with Hen- off ten unanswered points. GOCC ry Wilmore operating the score- lead 40-24 at the half. board and Michigan playing a te- nacious 2-1-2 zone, and it quickly In the locker room, the Glen developed into a rebounding bat- Oakers finally figured out they had tle, with both teams as cold as the a 3-4 inch height advantage on weather outside. Michigan. As a result, they came The Freshmen stayed even with out in the second half sweeping their taller opponents in the re- the boards clean. Michigan con- bounding battle, with Scott Mason tinued to shoot poorly, and the playing a strong game. Most of combination proved fatal. this effort was wasted, however, Coach Richard "Bird" Carter as Michigan could not convert their called the key to the game the offensive rebounds into points. shooting by both clubs. "We went GOCC held on to a six point lead cold while they were consistent. and all efforts to reduce it were This game was typical of the futile. problems we have encountered Late in the period, Reggie playing Junior Colleges, where the Franks of Glen Oaks missed a players are recruited to play bas- shot. The rebound bounced off sev- ketball." eral players, none of whom could Catrflthseonwsauc control it. Finally Michigan's Cam- Cart felt t seo wsa su eron Cheeks grabjed it and headed cess. "First, because of our di- toward the Blue basket, only to viduals. I can't say enough for oethe ball to two GOCC plaers,. them. As for our team, we were a But they didn't want it either, and winner the first time out. The Bu _te _ddtwntitethradteam constantly improved. We beat Daily Photo by DENNY GAINER Hubbard hustles DIONNE BGS THREE Wings tie Montreal Detroit's Marcel last 25 games and Detroit only one e goals, two on of its last 11. the other unas- * * * Wings held off;Sabr tr y League's East res tounce Canadiens 3-3 BUFFALO (0) - Norm Gratton, a recent addition to the Buffalo ;ned the scoring lineup, scored the go-ahead goal in nedthescoingthe second period as the Sabres de- a goal at 4:23 feated the Vancouver Canucks 3-1 d and then Di- last night in National Hockey tie the score at League action. lay. Gratton's goal was his third in four games after coming to Buffalo from the Atlanta Flames. The tri- jumph was Buffalo's fifth straight game without a loss and extend-' ed the Sabres' lead over Detroit to four points in the battle for fourth place in the NHL's East Di- vision. some fine schools and only got blown out a couple of times. I enjoyed it. And I feel the fellows enjoyed it, too." The scoring for Glen Oaks was balanced, as three players had 14 points and two netted 13. Scott Ma- son led Michigan scorers with 18 points. Bill Burress, with 10, was the only other Wolverine in double figures. The team finished with a 6-4 re- cord for the year. Next season, holds the possibility of freshman games with similar non-scholarship teams from other Big Ten schools, as the idea of intercollegiate ath- letics for the average student was the true winner this season. NHL Detroit 3, Montreal 3 (tie) Buffalo 3, Vancouver 1 Pittsburgh 2, NY Islanders 1 ored at 1:36 of Ifor the Cana- & stole the puck re a minute lat- he put Detroit power-play goal, season -three total last year gaverMontreal g a Frank Ma- Detroit goalie :16 of the final y lost two of its r TSKI E CLEARANCE SALE! skis parkas bindings sweaters boots pants 20-40% OFF MON.,HUR ., BANKAMERICARD 2455 SOUTH STATE FR.-t0-8:30 MASTER CHARGE ] mile south of campus TUESDAY-I10-5:30 SATURDAY-10-5:30 accepted 662-7307 MEXICANCONNECTION lus $204 Detroi-Acapulco-Defroift admin. services 20 Guaranteed Departure Depart Detroit 3/2 at 8:00 p.m. Arrive Acapulco at 10:30 p.m.E Depart Acapulco 3/9 at 10:00 p.m. Arrive Detroit at 1:30 a.m. Modern Air round trip jet service, open bar, free drinks LAND $ 79 complete' I49). If land is desired, accommodations will be arranged with TEJ0 MEXICO at prices from $79. Includes transfers, baggage handl- ing, deluxe rooms, tour escorts, all taxes and services, plus much more. CONTACT Greg ,,, Students International 5 L a MINI-COURSE UNIVERSITY COURSE 317 Jf* a. Ye4 y'+ u4 t BEST JANSCH-Moonshine Reprise album MS 2129 Bert Jansch, pillar of Pentangle and veteran of 15 albums, has completed his eighth and most mellow solo LP, Moonshine. PATTERNS OF DOMINATION AND LIBERATION. FACT AND FICTION FOR THE THIRD WORLD COMMODITY FORM SOCIETIES AND THE LITERATURE OF LATIN AMERICA SYLVIA WYNTER, Prof. of Literature, University of the West Indies, Jamaica Visiting Lecturer, in Residence at the University of Michigan, March 12-April 5 LECTURE SCHEDULE-8 p.m. Wednesdays Room 2235 Angell Hall MARCH 14-Cultural 'Dualism': Theory as Ideology or Critical Consciousness in the Commodity Form Society. The concept and role of the theory of cultural 'dualism'-and its related definitions of First/ Third World social/cultural pluralism-in commodity form society which presents itself as other than it really is, in which 'reality deceives the subject.' MARCH -21-Nigger Minstrel/Nigger Monster, Noble Savage/Indio Bruto: Western Humanism, Plantation America, and the Role of the Stereotype. New World stereotypes of Blacks and Indians as intrinsic and necessary projections of Western humanism; Plantation America as an area of EXPERIENCE which laid bare the relation of exploitation underlying the fetishism of humanist freedom; and its insistence on the indivi- dual person. Use of stereotypes to conceal, evade, make invisible. MARCH 28-Elite/Mass, Settler/Native: The Colonization of Consciousness in Commodity Form Society. The elite class in neocolonial 'third world' countries exist, more than most elite, in a tension caused by the difference between what is and what ought-to-be. Its "ideological" pretensions are. therefore in even sharper conflict with the economic reality of its base; its degree of mys- tification is necessarily greater; and when the illusion breaks down the resort to force, to mil- tory rule, is inherent in the situation. As an elite class that is really the 'manager' class for an imposed economic and cultural system it enters a 'settler' relationship with the 'native' mass and its consciousness becomes 'colon'-ized a it attempts to colonize the consciousness of the masses. APRIL 4-Babylon Zion: Culture and Counter-culture in the Catacombs of Marginality. The reality of the lived experience of the marginal minorities of the First World and the ma- ority of the excluded masses of the Third World exists in direct antimony with and as a negation of the norms, values and assumptions both of the dominant affluent of the First World, and of the Third World elite who are the agents of these norms. These marginal masses live-in their ghettoes, yards, barriadas, favelas, shanty towns-the contradiction be- tween the infrastructure of the economic base and the superstructure of illusions which bol- sters the unjust and irrational mechanism of a system of which they are the victims. SYLVIA WYNTER Born in Holguin, Ariente, Cuba of Jamanican parents. Attended elementary and secondary schools in Jamaica, West Indies. Studies at London University and University of Madrid. Pre- sented papers "C.L.R. James and the Castaway Culture of the Caribbean" and "C.L.R. James and the Cultural Revolution" (the latter at the University of Michigan). Has written a novel The Hills of Hebron. Currently working on a critical study of fiction The Novel in the Third World and a ziography of Bustamante, a populist leader and National Hero of Jamaica. LITTLE FEAT-Dixie Chicken Warner Bros. album BS 2686 Drool over these tasty new pieces of finger-lickin' good music. 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