*I Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 20, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE BAGELS FOR BRUNCH BUNCH STRIKES AGAIN! Robert J. Harris Mayor of Ann Arbor "The Mayor Looks at National Elections" Following Lox and Bagels Brunch (eat for 75c, listen free) 11 A.M. SUNDAY, OCT. 22 at HILLEL, 1429 HILL Future of hockey falls with fres hen By JOEL GREER With the season opener only two weeks- away, the Michigan hockey team has entered its most crucial training camp in years. Since last May's graduation completely decimated the de- fensive corps, Coach Al Renfrew has been busy preparing fresh- men for a number of open posi- tions. Indeed, if this year's Wolverine team hopes to resemble the last one, the freshmen will be re- sponsible. Last season, a strong group of seniors were complemented by some heady freshmen in a 16-18 overall performance. The Wolverines were unstoppable at home en route to a berth in the WCHA playoffs and a sixth place league finish. But a dismal road record hampered Michigan all year and eventually spelled the difference in the playoffs at North Dakota. Michigan dropped the two-game total goal series, 5-1 and 10-2. The 1972-73 squad does not have the balance of the last one as only five upperclassmen re- turn. "We'll be a freshman-sopho- more team," warns Renfrew who is entering his sixteenth season as the Michigan mentor. But he has made no attempt to compare this edition of the Wolverines with the last one. at a on State St. LAKELAND HRuggers piay Lions;o Chicago club poised. By CHUCK DRUKIS weeks from his hooker post. Lar- The Michigan rugby football cluo ry Lucarelli, another experienced will face its toughest competition hooker, will fill in during ,Lukaski's of the season when it journeys to absence. The rest of the backrow Chicago this weekend to battle the will remain the same, with Quint Lions, the best city club in the mid- Lawson and Chris Penoyar at se- west. cond row, Vern Plato and John The Blue have faced the Windy Anderson at the wing forwards, City contingent during the Labor and Walt Holloway at number Day weekend in the Windsor Bor- eight. derers Tournament, and limped The Blue's backline will have away with a 21-3 setback. Chicago two major changes - Todd Patter- ended up losing to Central Indiana son at fly half and John Braun at i in the championship game while fullback. Braun will be making his, Michigan captured third over first start for the Blue while Ross Cleveland. Vickers is out for a week w i t h The lineup set to, face the Lions pulled groin muscles. Saturday will however be bigger The remainder of the backline than the one in Windsor, but will consists of Cleland Child at scrum be less experienced in the back- half, Rory 'Connerand John field. Bohlke at the centers, and Brad Mammoth John McManus will Whitmore and Ron Smitha at the return to the Blue as prop, afterw a verysimpressivetstint, on the Chicago enters the contest with Gold last week, with prop Gary Cangetertegularesonwre- Anderson. Hank Lukaski, after suf- an undefeated regular season re- i Anfern Hankvere Lukis ats- cord of 6-0, having piled up impres- ferinxg a severe hip bruise against sv itre vrteId es MSU, will be out for at least three sive victories over the Indy Reds, Wisconsin, NCAA champions Pal- Probably Renfrew's biggest concern is finding an adequate replacement for Karl Bagnell in goal. Bagnell had minded the nets for the last three seasons and the two returning netminders have yet to gain a single minute of experience. Sophomores Roy Bolles and Terry Lajeunesse have been joined by freshmen Robbie Moore of Sarnia and Henry Thon of Trenton. "All of them have had their moments," assesses Ren- frew, "but right now Bolles and Moore have the best chance at the job." The defense was the hardest hit by graduation as regulars Brian Skinner, Punch Cartier and Jerry Lefebvre have now departed. But Renfrew anticipated this problem and recruited heavily during the off season. Sophomore defenseman Pete Dunbar, who played in spots last year, suffered a broken foot dur- ing the first week of practice and will be unavailable to the team when the season opens November 3 with North Dakota. With sophomore Randy Tru- deau the only returning defense- man Renfrew .expects freshmen Greg Fox, Tom Lindskog and Gordie Cullen to step right in. All three, incidentally, have the credentials to do so. Fox was an all-league selection playing for the Kelowna (British Colum- bia) Buckaroos, Lindskog helped his Red Deer, Alberta team into the Canadian finals, and Cullen 'starred for Toronto's Wexford Raiders. Injuries have also plagued the efficiency of the forward lines. Sophomore Gary Kardos, senior Roy Ashworth, and freshman Don Fardig have all lost im- portant training time. However Michigan lost very little up front as only Bernie Gagnon and Bucky Straubgrad- uated. Gagnon led the sometimes weak offense with 28 goals while Straub finally came into his own last season with 11 league tallies. Nonetheless, senior Michel Jarry who was Michigan's sec- ond leading scorer with 11 league goals and 28 assists will be back along with fellow seniors Rick Mallette and Gary Connelly. Bob Falconer, who had an ex- plosive second half at left wing is tne squad's only returning junior while eight sophomores are back. Up front soph Paul-Andre Paris will be joined by classmates Randy Neal, Frank Werner and Gary Kardos. Moretto played with Cullen in Toronto and was one of the leagues top scorers. Montreal's Pierre Sarrazin will be counted on along with former Detroit Junior Wing Don Fardig, Paul Miller and Dave Wihak. Don Dufek, who is also pur- suing a football career should be ready by the first of December. Playing their largest league schedule in history, the Wolver- ines will battle loop foes 30 times with 16 encounters a) home. Denver, Colorado and Duluth will entertain Michigan only twice this season while the remainder of the league teams will face the Wolverines four times each. Over the Christmas break, Michigan will compete in the highly successful Great Lakes Invitational at Detroit. National champion Boston University and Ivy League power Harvard will represent the East while Michi- gan Tech will join the Wolver- ines in representing the West. . The WCHA has injected two changes into the rulebook for the 1972-73 season. Body checking, which previously was not allowed in a team's offensive zone, now becomes legal on the entire ice surface. The only other change enlarges the faceoff circles from a diameter of 24 feet to 30. r I AP Photo 'Dr.J is back ABA All-Star forward Julius Erving announced yesterday that he will play for the Virginia Squires again this season. 4 U.S. VS. INDONESIA: Badminton clubs clash High-flying leather SAVAGE COLT.. . A high flyer that's com- fortably at home on the ground, fashioned of mellow, lightweight Savage cowhide. Zipper fly front with double ring tab closure at the neck. Full lining and oversize collar of 100% wool shearling pile. Turned up at cuffs and bottom. You'll power up to a new high just by trying it on! $100.00 MEN'S FASHION CLOTHING 310S. STATE Hillel Foundation Presents "The Shop On Man Street" Directed by Jon Kadar and Elmer Klos Starrina Josef Kroner and Ida Kaminska ACADEMY AWARD FOR BEST FOREIGN FILM 1965 " . Totally without preten- sion with two great performers creating unforgettable portraits, it stands as one of the finest films of our time, for all time." --Judith Crist 8 p.m. SAT., SUN., Oct. 21-22 at HILLEL, 1429 Hil 50c admission mer College, and last weekend they came out on top in the City of, Chicago Tournament. If Michigan hopes to win, they are going to have to do it by tak- ing advantage of the Lion's virgin backfield, which has five of its seven starters incapacitated with injuries. I end ci winding and date mt~inding 31 TELLS THE DATE ® \AUTOMATICALLY Stainless steel, Water. resistant case Powered by gravity, the Ladymatic winds itself as you wear it ... telling the exact date as well as the exact time. To assure peerless accuracy, the high- precision Omega Ladymatic movement undergoes 1497 quality-control inspections. For a lifetime of proud pos- session we recommend the modern Omega Ladymatic. Authorizcd Omega Agency... the Watch for a Lifetime of Proud Poaaseion JEWELRY AND FINE WATCHES Ask for free Omega Style Brochure By MARK RONAN Chance to mention an enthusias- tic infatuation with the game of badminton and observe the reac- tions of those about you. Ah yes, badminton the diversion of the quaint and those otherwise in need of counseling. Good old badminton, an uncertain combination of tennis and f 1 y- swatting which numbers wind, overhanging branches, and free- swinging teammates among its in- herent difficulties. In reality, however, those who know and avidly play badminton, recognize that it is a valid sport in every sense of the word, which resembles backyard badminton about as much as the San Diego Padres resemble a baseball team. Shortly, the general public will be presented with an excellent oppor- tunity to witness the true nature of badminton and thereby lay to rest their erroneous impressions. Next Monday, October 23rd, at 7:30 p.m., in EMU's Bowen Field- house, there will transpire a bad- minton exhibition of the first mag- nitude. Competing in both singles and doubles matches will be the United States Badminton Team and the World Champion Indonesian' Team. Among the Americans are Tom Carmichael, Mike Adams, Pam Bristol, and Polly Bretske, all na- tives of Michigan. Chris Kinard, Number One rated men's singles player,andaDon Paup, formerly an instructor at MSU and presently top rated in men's doubles are slat- ed to participate. Still, even in such company, the principal figure of the evening will be, without doubt, Rudi Hartono of Surabaya, Java, a folk hero in his homeland, who has won t h e British badminton singles champ- ionship for the last three years and who is currently the top ranked player in the entire world. Before the initiation of the matches, an explaination will be offered in order to overcome the misunderstandings which have trouobled badminton in this coun- try and to facilitate understanding and appreciation of the action which follows, for it may prove both unfamiliar and surprising. In badminton, the fifteenth point is normally game point; yet, it is only the served who can score. He tallies a point whenever his op- ponent makes an errant shot or fails altogether to return. a shot. Matches between polished play- ers often require twenty to thirty minutes for completion, and though the score may be 15-2 or 15-4 and thus appear uneven, this is as often as not a function of the serving system which places the server im- mediately on defense. Perhaps of all the unexpected facets of badminton, the most re- markable feature of the game is its awesome demand on stamina and endurance. To many minds the pace of badminton and the lively top-tapping rhythms of a Lawrence Welk waltz are not easily disting- uished. A player might even play while popping old Larry's bubbles. However, such is not the case. A player may sometimes make forty separate shots in a rally for a single point. Unceasingly, he must be on the move. Because of the light structure of the shuttle- cock, a player may hide his in- tentions- until the last second and then, with a subtle motion of the wrist, may send it soaring toward the baseline or let it die just be- yond the net. One must constantly protect against all such eventuali- ties, and it is said that the game is comparable to soccer and basket- ball with respect to demands on energy. The American men players parti- cipating in the exhibition as mem- bers American Team were select- ed at previously held trials, and they will compete for the Thomas Cup, the Davis Cup of the bad- minton world. That world is in- deed large. In some countries, most notably Indonesia, Malaysia, and Japan, badminton might justifiably be cited as a national pastime. Competition for the cup begins in a short time, and the Cup will be awarded following the final matches in Indonesia next May. The best of a little known world is knocking on the door. See who's making the racket. ( I UAC DAYSTAR presents . . Gridde Pickings Once upon a time in the imaginarily real land of Bibbleworth lived a Crappitt named Rabid. Loved by none, admired by few and scorned by the Crappitt he loved, Rabid could stand no more, he decided to end it all. Can no one help Rabid? Does no one care? Stop everything. Hold the Presses. There is someone who cares. Super Tor, protector of the innocent, champion of Crappitts, and a hell of a nice guy cares. He'll save Rabid, but who will save Tor from the evil grubby clutches of the Demo Prick? Tor is in desperate need of a new name for his upcoming column (of mayonnaise). Can you help him? Send the name of a column with the word or letters TOR in it to 420 Maynard and win a Mr. Pizza pizza. Also keep those cards, letters and gridde pickings coming in for some more good grease. 1. MICHIGAN at Illinois (pick score) 2. Indiana at Ohio State 3. Wisconsin at Michigan State 4. Northwestern at Purdue 5. Iowa at Minnesota 6. Stanford at Oregon 7. Washington at Southern Ca!. 8. UCLA at California 9. West Virginia at Tulane 10. Texas at Arkansas 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Nebraska at Kansas Oklahoma at Colorado Kentucky at LSU TCU at Texas A&M Syracuse at Penn State Georgia Tech at Auburn Boston College at Pitt Navy at Air Force Maryland at Duke Schenectady Schnook versus DAILY LIBELS Overbeck Bookstore IS HAVING A CLEARANCE SALE OF [ MEDICAL-LAW and GENERAL BOOKS 25c and up CURRENT AND OLD EDITIONS-NEW AND USED AND OFFICE AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES 50% OFF f- A k Ir A iC%r I/" nA nn . A 1IA/C LEV1 S From SArYS STORe ? o .. iii I ~u u - ~ ~ * *wN: w Eu urBEL