Wednesday, November 29, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Arizona woos M' Pucksters drop two grid ass'to Young E I i i i F' By J Jim Youn defensive c may be on Michigan to ing job att zona. Young fle for an inter letic Direct took that po after servin Director at One of St Arizona Ath pluck assis Fred Snowd and now he Young, who of the natio teams in th OHN PAPANEK young man, I've known him in the ag, Bo Schembechler's ;past, but not too well." - :oordinator ,since 1964, ly But Strack and Young have' the verge of leaving made it clear that other people are - iaccept a head coach- being interviewed for the job. the University of Ai- JAmong the names mentioned arer Dan Reeves, player-coach of the ew to Tucson Monday NFL Dallas Cowboys, ex-Balti-- view with Arizona Ath- NIGHT EDITOR: more Colts coach Don McCaffer- or Dave Strack, who BOB HEUER ty, USC assistant Dave Levy and st less than a year ago San Diego State head coach Don g as Associate Athletic Coryll. --j Michigan. The vacancy in the Wildcats' But the announcement of track's first moves as head coaching job appeared after Strack's choice is expected within hletic Director was to the resignation of Bob Weber, who a week. tant basketball coach was told by Strack before the sea- Young joined Schembechler at! den from Ann Arbor, son began, that he would have to Miami of Ohio in 1964. He played" is strongly considering "produce a winning team or else." on Ohio State's national champion- has engineered some Arizona ended up its Western ship team of 1954 and transferred n's toughest defensive Athletic Conference season with a to Bowling Green where he play- e past four years. 4-7 record. ed on the 1956 Mid-American Con- "They .(Arizona) contacted me ference championship team.Y for the first time Thursday," He was an assistant coach at Young said yesterday, "although Findlay (Ohio) College and Bowl- AP Photo I had an idea they were interested ing Green before coaching football No blood, no foul in me before that." at Limaw(Ohio) Shawnee High DAVE BING COULDN'T get over, under or around Portland Trail If he did get the job, the man School, where he established a, Whose defenses at Michigan over 23-game winning streak in 1963 Blazer Rick Adelman, so he went through him. Bing's Detroit the last four years have yielded an before joining Schembechler at Mi- Pistons went through Portland to the tune of a 120-116 victory. Bob " aaverage of 8.3 points per game, ami. Lanier tossed in a game-high 48 points for the Detroiters. would have no second thoughts about leaving. "Arizona has the potential for GOES TO ANGELSI having a terrific football pro- gram," he says, "and I'd like to !0 . be part of it." Young has been'consideredfor Frank !iobinso traded other head coaching jobs since coming to Michigan in 1969, among e them Virginia and Minnesota. This HONOLULU G)-The Los An- day. for the Dodgers and was a 20-game time, it was a phone call from geles Dodgers traded veteran slug- Accompanying Robinson to the winner for them in 1969. Strahler Schembechler to Strack that first ger Frank Robinson and four Angels are pitchers Bill Singer I was 1-2 with a 3.26 ERA in limited threw Young's hat into the ring, other players to the California and Mike Strahler and infielders service with Los Angeles last year. "I have great respect for Bo Angels for pitcher Andy Messer- Bill Grabarkewitz and Bobby Val-I Grabarkewitz batted .167 with Schembechler," Strack said, "Bo smith and third baseman Ken Mc- entine. four homers and 16 RBI in only 53 called me and I agreed to talk to Mullen in a seven-player trade at The seven-player swap took 16 games for the Dodgers, spending im Young Young. He (Young) is a bright baseball's winter meetings yester- hours to negotiate and was com- much of the time on the injured ____ __ __ ____ ___ __ list. Valentine batted .274 with three _ _--pleted early yesterday morning by hod BI. OSU WINS Angels General Manager Harry, omers an 32 RBI. IN UDalton and Al Campanis, player McMullen, the Angels' regular personnel director of the Dodgers. third baseman last year, hit .269 "We're giving up an outstanding with nine homers and 34 RBI's. ll Wepitcher to add punch, speed and It marked the second time that B lue ruggers blow'finale versatility to our lineup," said Dal- Dalton has traded for Robinson. eton."Robiehtsur cup'sagod -Frank spent the first 10 years of ton. "Robbie has a couple of good his career with the Cincinnati Reds, REW WHITEHALL years left. He is a proven per- then was swapped to Baltimore former and an outstanding leader."Ithnws wapdoBlimr gan ruggers ended the me an s d ar where he led the Orioles to four tsour note as the Blue, I e k " p r s We have considered Messer- American League pennants in six 4 decision to Ohio State hsmith to be one of the best pitchers years. Dalton was player person- old were shutout 20-0 in the majors," Campanis said. nel director of the Orioles when s Saturday. FRIDAY Robinson, a 17-year veteran, that trade was made. ruggers stalwart de- HOCKEY-Minnesota, at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. batted .251 with 19 home runs and - -- gain hindered by a lack SATURDAY 59 runs batted in in his only sea- -- ------__ punch, a problem that son with the Dodgers. He was trad- THE DEPT. OF GEOLOGY chigan all season. "We BASKETBALL-NOtre Dame, at Crisler Arena, 2:00 p.m. ed to Los Angeles by Baltimore at SOUTH AND SOUTH ossession in the rucks, WRESTLING-Pittsburgh, at Crisler Arena, 4:00 p.m. the winter meetings last year. PRES1 handle the ball once HOCKEY-Minnesota, at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. He is the only man in major "The C o we just couldn't handle SWIMMMING-Big Ten Relays, at Columbus league history to have been votedTon g enough to score," ex- -- - -- Most Valuable Player in both the A Slide L disheartened Michigan crossed the goal line as they slip- Another overlap in the OSU back- National and American leagues is Penoyar. ped a wing forward into the back- field on the open side resutled in and has a career total of 520 homes, MR. BARR eyes generated the first field who in the resulting overlap another try and a 8-0 deficit for the runs. Research Geographer, Not. Geo afternoon on excellent passed out to his unmarked wide Blue. Messersmith was 8-11 with a 2.81 can Mt. Everest Expedition; F by the backs. OSU side wing for a try. The conversion With six minutes to go in the earned run average for the Angels Summit of Everest May 22, 1963 failed. game, Michigan finally began to last season and missed some play- 4 PM Wed. Nov. 29 Both teams exchanged missed move. An up and under fell into ing time because of a finger injury. .V. 71 0 It Epenalty kicks as the half ended 4-0 the Buckeye endzone but the: Singer was 6-16 with a 3.67 ERA in favor of Ohio. bouncing ball eluded a Michigan __The first 20 minutes of the sec- rugger who lunged for the ball as NBA ond half were just as frustrating it squirmed out of the endzone. Cleveland .4 for Michigan as the second half. The Blue drove back and man- 1o, Buffalo 94 Lawson through the Buckeye for- Chuck Holt recovered the ball afterk1Holt((coveqeutheebtlafte , Houston 90 wards resulted in good yardage, a tackle and passed inside to Lasting peace will never be achieved with- tion are ackno ollege Basketball but slippery footing prevented the Chuck Drukis who passed back out- 8 Toledo 96 Blue from advancing the ball in the side to Lawson for the try. The out a guide to truth. Because conflicting will end. abama 67B ad ack l io sonf. faiths in something for which there is no We admit ent. Mich. 84 (OT)I mauls after the tackle. conversion failed. fih nsmtigfrwihteei oW di By ROGER ROSSITER The Michigan hockey team took it on the chin twice last weekend, at the hands of the Wisconsin Bad- gers, 5-3 and 7-2 at the Michigan Coliseum. Oddly enough, Saturday night's 7-2 drubbing was the closer of the two contests as the Wolver- ines played their best two periods of hockey this year before col-I lapsing in the final stanza. Michigan carried the play to the visiting Badgers for the first forty minutes Saturday, displaying some tenacious forechecking and keen backchecking that disrupt- ed Wisconsin's patterned offense. DESPITE Michigan's spirited ef- forts, the Badgers banged home three goals before the Wolverines finally connected. Dean Talafous' goal with 6:47 gone in the second period with both teams a man short proved to be the eventual winner for Wisconsin. Just 1:20 after Talafous' goal, his first of two, Bob Falconer scored a shorthanded goal for Michigan, shortening the deficit to 3-1. Fal- coner tipped in a second rebound after Badger goalie Jim Makey robbed Randy Neal on a break- away. Makey kicked the first shot right back to Neal who swiped at the puck while lying on his face before Falconer whisked in to score. 1 Don Fardig's goal at 9:28 of the second period put Michigan within one, 3-2, and the Wolverines did everything they could for the next ten minutes in a futile attempt to to push the equalizer past Mickey. The third period turned out to be one of utter disappointment for Michigan and sheer bliss for Wis- consin as the Wolverines helped the Badgers tally four unanswered goals. After Billy Reay, Jr., son of the Chicago Black Hawks' coach, notched Wisconsin's fourth goal, Michigan gratiously added the Badgers' fifth. WITH A delayed penalty call coming against Wisconsin's Dave Arundel, Michigan coach Al Ren- frew pulled goalie Robbie Moore for a sixth attacker. An inadver- tent Michigan centering pass, however, rolled almost the length of the ice into the empty Michigan goal. Arundel's penalty was then call- ed, but before it expired, Norm Cherrey picked off an errant Wol- verine clearing pass at the Mich- igan blue line and fired a high, hard shot past a screened Moore. That set the stage for Talafous' ernoon. Moore did not practice at second goal with less than a min- all Thursday, bait when the whis- ute to play in the game, which tle sounded Friday night he was ended the scoring, back in front of the Michigan net, FRIDAY NIGHT it was the Bad- apparently no worse for the ger owerpla tha splledthewear. Wol ries pday hathei fur Michel Jarry, who warmed up Wolverines' doom as the first four before Saturday night's contest, goals of the game came on power did not play a single minute, ap- plays, three of them for Wis- parently due to a case of the flu. consin. Frank Werner, also, suffered a Randy Trudeau opened the scor- knee injury during the third per- ing for Michigan, blasting a long iod of Saturday night's contest. His shot from the left point past Wis- status for this weekend's series consin's Dick Perkins at 9:44, but with Minnesota will likely not be exactly five minutes later, John determined until later in the week. Taft tallied the equalizer for the Badgers. Logan MVP The Michigan football team gathered for their annual ban- quet last night. They selected wolfman Randy Logan as the Most Valuable Player for the 1972 season. Bob Lundeen's goal with only a minute remaining in the first per- iod gave Wisconsin a lead it never surrendered. Wisconsin added two more goals in the first 4:10 of the second per- iod by Dave Pay and Lloyd Bent- ley before Michigan's Gary Con- nelly scored his first of two at 8:17" The third period saw Taft notch his second goal of the night for Wisconsin at 4:24 with Connelly following suit for the Wolverines at 10:02. Moore was his usually splen- did self both nights. in the Michigan net, making a couple dozen spec- tacular saves among his weekend total of seventy-five. "I never saw any of those goals," Moore said dejectedly after Friday's game. "I was screened on every one." THE FACT THAT Moore even played at all was startling enough since the plucky little netminder spent Wednesday night in the hos- pital after taking a slap shot on the head during practice that aft- DISAPPOINTMENT was notic- ably present after Saturday night's contest, a game which the players sincerely thought they should have won. "We played our best two per- iods of the season tonight," la- mented Randy Neal, "Then it all just fell apart in the third.", Penalties played a big part in the Michigan demise. "We're ? a chippy club," Neal added. "We always seem to lead the league in penalties." Cutting down on penalties and shoring up a leaky defense present the two tasks facingthe Wolver- ines if they hope to get untracked and back into the Western Col- legiate Hockey Association race. Although the Wolverines have lost seven straight conference games, they can still turn an about face and naildown one of the eight WCHA playoff berths. WCHA Standings ~ Michigan State Denver North Dakota Wisconsin Michigan Tech Notre Dame Minnesota MICHIGAN Colorado College Minn. Duluth W 4 4 5 5 4 3 1 1 1 l L 1 0 3 1 0 3 S S T Pts. 1 14 0 12 0 12 0 10 0 8 0 .8 0 S 0 2 0 2 0 2 _____ji SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE Everyone Welcome! By AND The Michi season on a dropped a 8- while the G at Columbu The Blue fense was al of offensive plagued Mic could get p but couldn't we got it; v the ball long plained a captain Chri The Buck score of the ballhandling New York 107 Detroit 120, P Philadelphia K-C Omaha 9 Baltimore 108 Cc Mich. State 98 Texas 81, So. u Ohio U. 86, Ce Y AND THE CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES SENTS of Mt. Everest" ecture by, tY BISHOP graphic Society; Member Ameri- irst American Team to Reach 3. Rackham Amphitheatre Stih9 Pease wledged, the war spirit in man most disturbances stem from LOTS OF PEOPLE GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, Nov. 29 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM OUTSIDE ON THE TERRACE LOTS OF FOOD ,_..__ WILD'S MIDWEST OPEN: Johnson's win paces gymnasts By THERESA SWEDO Despite an unexpectedly crowded field, the Michigan gymnasts fared well in the Midwest Open this past weekend. A nation-wide number of schools, including New Mexico, Brigham Young and Iowa State attended the meet. Michigan's Bob Johnson won the parallel bars, the only Michigan man to place first. Monte Falb took fourth in the rings competition. Captain Ray Gura placed seventh in the all- around. Gura, a senior, is working on some new side horse techniques. The trampoline competition was less crowded than the other six gymnastic events. Not recog- nized by the NCAA, the trampoline event has been dropped by some school's gymnastics pro- grams. The event has been accused of being overly dangerous and too showy for a regular gym- nastic event. Sporting a fine trampoline combination, Mich- igan succeeded in grabbing four places out of the top ten. Chris Keene took first, followed by Rusty Pierce in fourth place. Mason Kauffman secured fifth and Mike Rowe ended up in the seventh spot to round out the Maize and Blue quartet. The two-day meet began with compulsories on Friday. Compulsories entail Olympic routines that every gymnast must complete in his event. In regular Big Ten competition compulsories count for one half of the team score. The op- tional routines make up the other half. On Saturday the optionals were held, finishing up with the finals in the evening. In an open meet such as this one, no winning team is chosen, but the top men in each event take home the awards. Independents also competed in this meet, representing some of the many gymnastic clubs around the country. Some good performances that didn't make the finals included Ward Black's 9.15 in floor exercise and Keith Martin's 8.65 on the rings. Loken refrained from making evaluations on perform- ances pending next week's Windy City Invita- tional results. proof have been carried down from primitive wrong but not that they all do. However, authorities to the present, their strong beliefs conflict or an accident are examples where have distracted us from a force of Nature, both sides suffer over the same wrong. So the reality of which reveals a personal guide. there is proof that all disturbance results Incredible as it may seem, people do not from wrong. This allness makes the disturb- cause pain or disturbing emotion. They ing force of Nature a perfect, self-evident wouldn't even if they could. Nor do they guide. Therefore, anyone can discover the create wonderful feelings. Emotion changes change of pain and emotion to be incapable between wonderful and terrible. Disturbance of error. occurs only with wrong situations and van- Test the persistent diverse force of Nature ishes as correction is made. Same with pain; affecting all life with the book, "Force Of it cannot be eliminated without altering con- Opposites" by Kenneth Charles. Available in ditions. Feelings change instantly or gradu- hard cover at $6.00 and paperback $2.50. ally as situations change. In short, when the Send to: International University Trust, 9842 cause and precise change of pain and emo- Atlantic Blvd., South Gate, California 90280. I STUDY IN ENGLAND FALL, 1973 "Students may now fill out applications for study at the University of Sheffield or the University of Keele, Fall term, 1973. Applicants who are enrolled in Education or intend to be in the teacher i I