THE ~MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 20, 1972 Page Eight THE .MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 20, 1972 I JUDGING TOUGH: Thomas B. Roth, O.D. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS NEW OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF OPTOMETRY AT PINE VALLEY OFFICE BLDG. SUITE 103 2500 Packard Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 973-1990 TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI * NATURAL TECHNIQUE DEVELOPS FULL CREATIVE ABILITIES f PROVIDES DEEP REST AND RELAXATION f LIFE EXPANDS IN FULFILLMENTt INTRODUCTORY LECTURE WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20-8 P.M. ANGELL HALL AUDITORIUM B for further info. call 761-8255 BElT MIDRASH PROGRAM IN JEWISH STUDIES Late Registration All This Week Cal 663-4129 or come to Hillel, 1429 Hill Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 6-7 P.M. " Hebrew Language " Basic Judaism (all Levels) s Martin Bober: The * Modern Hebrew and Israeli Literature Philos IPhUsoph " The Jewish Ethical Studies in Jewish -The Ethics of Mysticism Sexut The Jew in American -The Ethics of Politics Imprisonment . Flowers From Hell: A * The Individual and Survey of Holocaust The State Literature P aft-a By BOB HEUER The 1972 Olympic Games, be- gun amid the idealistic pagean- try of competition, only to be plunged into the stark reality of, death, have mercifully come to an end. Much was lost or over- looked in the terrorism and politicking that. marred the Mu- nich games, including the per- formances of 14 Michigan ath- letes who competed for their countries. Five nations were represented in swimming, diving, gymnas- tics, and track competition by Michigan athletes. The only medals taken were by divers Micki King and Dick Rydze and swimmer Bill Mahoney. King won a gold medal for the United States on the three meter springboard; while taking fifth place in the ten meter platform competition. Michigan's g o 1 d medalist also has the distinction of being the only woman station- ed in the University's Air Force ROTC unit. King's teammate Janet Ely finished fourth in both the spring- board and platform events. Ryd- ze, a 1971 Michigan graduate, picked up the silver medal in the ten meter platform. Dick Kimball, Michigan's div- ing coach and the personal men- tor of King, Ely, and Rydze was. also in Munich for the games. He had nothing but praise for the efforts of his trio, but was highly critical of the Olympic judging, citing continuous prejudice by the judges against American div- ers. One of the flagrant violators was an East German who per- sonally coached twoiof the com- peting divers. His decisions placed East German girls one, I I ru b medals two, three in the springboard event when they actually plac- ed third, ninth, and eleventh. King, who won the event placed fourth on the East German's list; while Ely, who took fourth, could muster only a ninth place finish in his estimation. Kimball was also somewhat} bitter over the judging in Dick Rydze's event. "Dick didn't miss a dive during the whole competi- tion," noted Kimball. Dibiasi (gold medal winner Claus Di- biasi) missed two, one very badly in the finals." Rydze was also hurt by judges from Italy, East Germany, and the USSR, all of whom ranked their own countryment ahead of Rydze. One change advocated by Kimball would eliminate a judge- from scoring a competitor from his own country. Conditions be- ing\ how they are, however, the pressure of some American jud- ges might also even things up. Michigan's third medal winner, Bill Mahoney, a 1971 Michigan grad, swam to a bronze medal as a member of Canada's 400 meter medley relay team. He swam the breaststroke leg of the race. Other Michigan swimmers to compete included Peru's Juan Bello, a classmate of Mahoney, who finished seventh in the 200 meter individual medley, and junior Jose Aranha who finished fourth and fifth in the freestyle legs of two relays. Aranha just missed qualifying for the 100 meter freestyle event, placing ninth in the semi-final heat. Byron McDonald, Mike Whita- ker, and Bill Kennedy represent- ed Michigan on the Canadian swim team. McDonald who grad- uated last spring, took sixth in the 100 meter butterfly. Breast- Gridde Pickings Now boys and girls. This is your seventh grade University of California test for mental immaturity, to be completed before midnight friday. Please keep your pants down until all instructions have been given. Please answer all the questions in part a before proceeding to part c. Omit part b. After completing part d, fold up part c so it will fly 20 feet. Do five push-ups. If you are over 6-8 and 240 pounds, omitI parts a,b,c and d and report to Johnny Vooden at Popeye Pavillion. He has already taken the test for you. However, if you are not that big proceed to part e. Attach two extra-strength napkins and Mr. Pizza will be there with two large pizzas. Enjoy. Part f and the pizza will come up momentarily. 1. MICHIGAN at UCLA 17. Bowling Green at Miami in (pick score) Ohio 2. Georgia Tech at MSU 18. Pittsburgh at Air Force 3. Notre Dame at Northwestern 19 Stanford at Duke 4. Washington at Purdue Boston State at Hofstra 5. USC at Illinois 6. Colorado at Minnesota 7. Oregon St. at Iowa 8. Texas Christian at Indiana F strokers Mike Whitaker, a senior this year and former Wolverine Bill Kennedy failed to qualify for their final heats. Michigan trackmen Godfrey Murray and Kim Rowe compete- ed for the Jamaican Olympic team. Murray saw his hopes for- a medal go down the drain when he lost his first heat of the 110 nieter hurdles. "The competition wasn't that stiff," said Murray, "but I made some stupid mistakes. My race was early in the morning and I really wasn't ready phys- ically or mentally." Murray had not hurdled com- petitively since the Jamaican Olympic tryouts, due to his coun- try's boycott of all the pre-Olym- pic meets. Rowe ran the fastest leg of his team's 1600 meter relay at 45.3 seconds. The team finished fourth in its heat, with only the top three qualifying for the next round. T h r e e Michigan gymnasts qualified for the Canadian Olym- pic team. None however actual- ly got to compete in Munich. Pi- erre Leclerc and Richard Bi- gras were left home when the Canadians decided not to bring their full complement of play- ers to the games. The third qualifier, Bruce Medd, broke his finger while practicing and was unable to enter the competition. PURDUE FALLS: IFu -mble, By CHUCK BLOOM, "That's the way the ball bounces" sounds like a tired cliche, but in the case of the Pur- due Boilermakers, it rings home with much 'truth. Last Saturday's loss to the Bowling Green Falcons resulted from eight bad bounces of the pigskin; three of which resulted directly in Bowling Green's scores. Using the wishbone offense for the first time, the Boilermaker backs fumbled the ball away six times to the considerably weaker Falcons. "We played awfully bad," said Purdue coach Bob DeMoss. "We were out-coached, out-played, out-everything. They were alert and we weren't." Purdue, however, was without two starters on offense. Halfback Darryl Stingley had been side- lined with a bad ankle and was considered one of the keys to the Boilermaker wishbone. Quarter- back Gary Danielson, nursing a sore shoulder recen'tly operated on, was withheld from the opener due to lack of contact. Danielson's timing is not right yet so we started (Bob) Bobrow- ski. We didn't go into the game planning to pass. We wanted to move the ball." I AP Photo AFTER THE shocking setback at the hands of Bowling Green, the Purdue Boilermakers will again play host this weekend, this time to a touted Washington Huskie squad. Bolstering the Huskie kickoff team is Calvin Jones (20) who ran this kick back for 40 yards in last week's 14-6 triumph over Duke. 1 9. Syracuse at Wisconsin 10. Georgia at Tulane 11. Navy at Penn State 12. Clemson at Rice 13. Lafayette at Colgate 14. Kentucky at Alabama 15. NorthCarolina St. at North Carolina 16. Mississippi at South Carolina jO$2.00 , WILD'S 341 South Main 0 Ann Arbor 769 5 S60 ANN ARBOR'S NEWEST, MOST EXCITINGy FUN SPOT OPEN 11 a.m. for LUNCH DANCING 8 p.m.,2 a.m. featuring VISUAL SOUND HE SHE sspellf Bowling Green opened the scoring on a touchdown pass by Reid Lamport following an er- rant Purdue handoff on their own 20 yard line. The Boiler- makers gathered their poise and posted a three-play 66-yard drive for a touchdown with fullback Skip Peterson racing to-paydirt from 40 yards out. After Purdue held the Falcons on the next series of downs and regained possession on a punt, the Boilermakers fumbled the ball away on the very next play at their own, 19. The Falcons moved the ball down to the sev- en of Purdue and had a second down and goal to go situation. As Lamport rolled out, he was jarred by the Purdue defense, thus loosening his grip on the ball. The ball squirted into the end zone some six yards away and a Falcon lineman fell on it for the touchdown. Purdue struck back to knot the game, 14-14, at half-time on a 17 yard scamper by Otis Arm- strong.' After a scoreless third quarter, the Falcons again capitalized on Purdue's misfortunes in the final period. puto me. The Boilermakers had Bowling Green pinned deep in its own zone with a fourth down punting situation on the Falcon 17. Mid- dle guard Greg Bingham put on a fierce rush on punter Ed Mc- Coy forcing him to kick the ball straight up in the air. Since the pigskin had not crossed the line of scrimmage it became a free ball, and it bounced amidst three Boilermakers back into McCoy's hands and he scampered to his 38-yard line for a crucial first down. The Falcons then proceeded to cross the 50 the only time in the contest andsdrove down to the Purdue 12-yard line. Freshman Don Taylor, who had yet to attend a class, booted a 17-yard field goal that proved to be the winning margin. Statistically, Purdue, outgain- ed the Falcons 244 yards to 212. Most of the Boilermaker attack was on the ground where the wishbone gained 204 yards rush- ing. But the statistic that hurt the most was the five lost fumbles and one interception. DeMoss was extremely disap- pointed in his offense. "I am disappointed in the breakdown in the backfield timing. It did not run like the practices we've had. - We had no clue to such bad ball- handling then. Last Saturday the wishbone ran like it was the first time we had scrimmaged." DeMoss learned last Saturday that ball possession meant a lot in football; the lack of which meant defeat. Human Rights Party OpnMeeting Thurs., Sept. 21 7:30 p.m. 304 S. Thayer (across from Hill Aud.) Plans for HRP vs. McGovern debate Free ride-call: 761-6650 Child care available THE Bach Club presents THURS., SEPT. 21 8:00 P.M. SOUTH QUAD, West Lounge DUO: Fealey/French Renaissance to present / A _ _. _ Racers Double Knit Flares by Moderate flare, flap back pockets, wide belt loops. ", RACERS"-5 colors in a basketweave double knit of 100% Dacron* polyester. $19.00. 100% DACRON* DOUBLE KNIT! *Du Por't's registered T.M. WJ~VA I