Page 10-Tuesday, December 6, 1977-The Michigan Daily CHURELLA CAPTURES HONOR: Grapplers pinned at Lehigh meet By BOB WARREN The Michigan wrestling team, held together with thread, bandages and heart struggled through a very rough weekend in Pennsylvania last week- end. After a 31-10 loss to Lehigh on Thursday evening, the grapplers finished seventh out of nine teams at the Penn State Invitational tourna- ment. The Lehigh dual meet could have been closer than the score shows. Seniors Mark Churella and Karl Briggs won their matches with superior decisions. Injured Todd Schneider came very close to win- ning his match.' "Schneider got screwed out of at least six points from what we could tell," screamed Michigan coach Bill Johannesen. "After the first hold of the match he was hurt and had to use all but one second of his allotted injury time. He fought back to within 472 and should have gotten some points on a reversal." "SCHNEIDER SHOWED a lot of heart as did the others who wrestled," Johannesen added. "We were impressed with the style of our younger wrestlers," commented as- sistant coach Cal Jenkins. "(Steve) Frazier, (Bill) Petoskey and (Bill) Konovsky looked good this week- end." After Lehigh, Michigan had to pull itself together for a two-day tourna- ment at Penn State. Lehigh won this meet also with a 1101/2-107% margin over Penn State. The meet was decided by the last match. Michigan, which finished with 59/4 points, did have one highlight from the tournament. NCAA champion Mark Churella won his final match, 22-2, to win his weight class, the outstanding wrestler award and a $300 watch, which he gave to his father-in-law. JOHANNESEN HAD some choice comments about the officiating this weekend. "The refereeing stunk. The same guy officiated at both meets and used two different rulebooks. Schneider gets hurt with an obvious illegal hold at Lehigh, but this guy lets it go. At Penn State, Churella uses the same hold and has to break 'it. What gives?" What gives, is that Michigan got through a rough weekend at an unfortunate time. Michigan hosts California Polytech before the se- mester break before it can rest up and recuperate. "If we had our starters this weekend we could have won at Lehigh, and maybe even at Penn State." Icers, cagers climb in p oils From Wire Service Reports .The Michigan hockey team, on the strength of a sweep over Wisconsin, jumped from fourth to a tie for second in the WMPL radio station- poll of coaches. Meanwhile the Michigan basketball team moved from 13th to ninth in the AP top twenty. .., 1. Denver (10) 2. MICHIGAN Tie Boston U. 4. Wisconsin 5. Bowling Green 8. Minnesota 7. Clarkson 8. St. Louis 9. Boston College 10. Brown 11-1 11-3 4-~0 9-4-1 9-4 7-5 5-4 7-4-1 4-1 3-1 points 100 83 70 41 34 28 27 19 15 -=^_ FREE-STYLERS DOMINA TE MEET Tankers drown /NO LEE- Year End Sa/ 20% OFF on $10 or more purchase 407 N. Fifth Ave. (inside Kerrytown) By TOM STEPHENS The Wolverine swim team opened its season last weekend with a pair of meets in Toronto. The tankers start- ed off Friday with a 67-30 victory over the University of Toronto and competed Saturday and Sunday in the Olympia Club of Etobicoke (OCOE) meet against club teams from all over Canada. Swimming coach Gus Stager was mildly disappointed by the results of the first meet, despite Michigan's fairly easy victory. off On All Perfume, Colognes And Make-Up In Our Cosmetics Department. MARSHALLS 235 S. STATE At E. Liberty "I think we found ourselves in a situation where we wanted 'honest performances'," said Stager, "but some of the swims were really not that good." He attributed most of the poor performances to the long trip and the lack of a really strong opponent. Mic , igan's only double winner Frida was Fernando Canales in the 200- a d 500-yard freestyle. Ca Iles led a corps of Michigan freestylers who dominated the meet, winning at every distance and plac- ing 1-2 in the 50-, 200- and 500-meter events. Other winners were Tom Pederson in the 50 free, Bob Murray in the 100, and John Slykhouse in the 1000. Larry Schroeder, Murray, and Slyckhouse placed second in the 50-, 200- and 500-meter events respectively. Michigan had winners in the other strokes as well. Kevin Morgan in the individual medley, a 1-2 finish by Paul Griffith and Bill Mills in the 200-butterfly, and a victory in the freestyle relay by the team of no c ovor 1/2 ric m drinks for Foronto Canales - Murray - Griffith - Slyk- house rounded out the winners for Friday. At the OCOE Invitational it was a different story. The Wolverines' only winner was Canales in the 100 free. Although the team results weren't obtained, Stager called it a "great meet" and described the Canadian club teams there as providing "very, very fine competition." The tankers' next meet is this Friday at 7:30 p.m. with Oakland University at Matt Mann pool. First place in parentheses. Denver's easy 1-3, 8-3 victories last weekend over North Dakota helped the No. 1. team hold onto its ratings in the sixth week of the poll. The coaches gave Denver all 10 first place votes and 100 points. Michigan took over second place on the strength of its im- pressive 11-3, 7-3 wins over defending NCAA champion Wisconsin. The coaches gave the Wolverines 83 points to put them in a tie with Boston University for second place. Minnesota, Boston College and Brown showed up in the poll for the first time this week. R 1. Kentucky (23) 2. North Carolina (16) 3. Notre Dame (2) 4. Marquette (1) 5. UCLA (1) 6. Arkansas 7. Cincinnati 8. San Francisco 9. MICHIGAN 10. Nevada-Las vegas 11. Indiana State Tie Dailey Libels 12. Maryland 13. St. John's 14. Utah 15. Holy Cross 16. Louisville 17. Detroit 18. Syracuse 19. Kansas 20. Providence Games through Sunday. First place votes in parentheses. ecord 1-0 4-0 4-0 4-0 3-0 2-1 3-0 3-0 3-0 3-0 4-0 4-0 2-0 2-0 1-1 2-0 4-1 3-0 3-0 The Kentucky basketball team took last week off and the hiatus didn't hurt one bit. The Wildcats strengthened their hold on first place in the poll. Points 752 651 508 439 395 273 209 208 205 161 161 159 140 135 110 93 71 64 44 37 PART OF SIX-MAN DEAL: Bonds swapped to White Sox By The Associated Press HONOLULU - The Chicago White Sox acquired slugger Bobby Bonds from the California Angels yesterday in a six-player trade at baseball's winter meetings. Moving to the White Sox along with Bonds are two young players, outfielder Thad Bosley and pitcher Dick Botson. In exchange, the Angels acquired cat- cher Brian Downing and pitchers Chris Knapp and Dave Frost. BONDS, 31, batted .264 with 37home runs, 115 runs batted in and 41 stolen bases last season. He had declared his i i. Downing batted .284 in 69 games with the White Sox,_ sharing the catching duties with Jim Essian. Knapp, 24, was 12-7 with a 4.81 earned run average in his first full major league season. MEANWHILE, the Houston Astros sent former Detroit Tiger outfielder Leon Roberts to the Seattle Mariners for infielder Jimmy Sexton. Roberts came to the Astros in the trade that sent Milt May and Dave Roberts to the Tigers. (Leon) Roberts began his career with the Tigers in 1975 by hitting safely in 17 consecutive games. 7wednesday GREEK NIGHT and PIZZA NIGH' 611 Church (off S. University) intention to become a free agent at the conclusion of the 1978 baseball season and that was one reason the Angles were ready to, trade him. T The White Sox made similar deals last season when they acquired 995-5955 sluggers Richie Zisk and Oscar Gam- -ble, both of whom were unsigned :and left Chicago as free agents at the con- clusion of the season. Zisk subsequently signed with Texas and Gamble with San Diego. The Angles signed their own high- priced free agent last month, acquiring Lyman Bostock, and that made Bonds expendable. Calling all CLUBS By GUNNAR E. BERG SKI RACING The Michigan ski team opens its 1977-78 season with its only meet this semester at Crystal Mt., Thompsonville, Mi., on Dec. 17. Organized by senior co-captain Sandy Bacsanyi and Mac Jacob, the ski team will race slalom and, giant slalom. They are also organizing a cross- country ski team. A large fund raising event for the skiers will occur Dec. 9-12 when the ski team organizes the 8th annual Ski Swap. On Dec. 9, from 4-10 p.m.,, hundreds of people from Ann Arbor and the surrounding community gather at the Coliseum with ski clothing, and all kinds of ski equipment. On Dec. 10 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., all buyers will have a chance to choose from a large selection of goods. Part of the proceeds go to the ski team. CO-REC VOLLEYBALL Steve Makowski and the men's volleyball club organized a 16-team co-rec volleyball tourney held Dec. 3. The Midwestern Volleyball team from South Bend, Ind., won the A division while Short Stuff of Ann Arbor, composed of men and women from Michigan club teams, won the B. In the A division, The Court Jesters from Brighton was second while another Michigan team, Set City, tied for third. The team has one meet left this semester at Toledo, Dec. 10, and will unwind into a full schedule of meets next semester, including the Cereal City meet in Battle Creek. 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