Wednesday, February 23, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever Wednesday, February 23, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Seven 2ND BIG TEN TITLE EYED p I I I I Stokes vaults over all Season Basketball Stats G-S FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pet. Avg. St. PF-D Avg. Green Hibbard Grote 22-22 23-23 1../" T By ERNIE DUNBAR ships, and added the outdoor vaulters su If there was an award for titles his junior and senior "If you the most consistent Michigan year. it'll just th track performer, polevaulter Last season he became Big runway," Jim Stokes would be the odds Ten indoor champion, jumping the higher on favorite to take the honor. 16-6 in Madison. Even with all stiffer the Stokes has claim to both the this success, Stokes is by no give you m Michigan indoor record of 16- means satisfied to sit back and top of the 6%, and the outdoor record of count his medals. MOST P 16-6. "I'd definitely like to get over polevaulte HIS CREDENTIALS so far 17-4 this season," commented all the tec this season include a new var- Stokes. "I could've done it a ter to p sity indoor record set in the long time ago, but I'm just hav- jump. But Spartan Relays (16-6%), plus ing super practices and then clearingt first place honors infour of the not putting it together in the much a m x M#five meets he's competed in. meets. physical. The junior from Flint is no me"Iseither run a little faster "The ha newcomer to polevaulting, tak- or do things a little bit more when. I w } jing up the event when he was in rushed, and is doesn't work. vault was fifth grade. ANOTHER PROBLEM the remarked "I saw a few meets on T.V. mechanical engineering student main key and some of the older kids in has encountered this season is "Getting DON ADAMS of the Buffalo Braves bends back to retree ,my neighborhood used to trying to find the correct pole. tice is als lONAD AMSoftnht'same thave Phoenixacen jump," Stokes said. "I'm just getting stronger like a hu a rebound in last night's game with the Phoenix Suns. Den- "I started in my backyard, and quicker and I think I'm just come out nis Awtrey of Phoenix (21) has his own designs on the ball jumping into a pile of straw. It a little bit too big for my pole," hurdles an however. The Suns' effort came up short though as Buffalo was pretty shaky." Stokes said. "I have a new running ha nipped them, 11S-114. Since his early days in the pole ordered, but it hasn't come loaf on t sport, Stokes has racked up in yet." back ont an impressive list of awards. While selecting the right never goin DURING HIS high school ca- pole might seem trivial to the bar." reer, he vaulted to three uneducated track fan, Stokes IN ANA DD 7 LOGICstraight indoor state champion- feels it's very important to the technique, McCULLY, HUGHES LEAD TANKERS; By RICK BONINO 4 f uccess. get too stiff a pole, hrow you back on the he commented. "But r your attempt, the e pole must be to more spring up on the, vault." PEOPLE watching a r might marvel at hniques he must mas- roduce a successful ut in Stokes' case, the bar is just as ental struggle as it is ardest thing for me was learning how to to be aggressive," Stokes. "That's the right there. motivated for prac- o a problem. It's not rdler where he can and loaf over the nd still look like he's calf way decent. If we he runway, we land the runway. We're ng to make it over the LYZING his jumping Stokes feels that Robinson...... .. 23-23 Thompson...........23-10 Baxter.......... ..22-1 staying calm is one of the ma- Staton..............23-13 jor keys to success. Hardy.....22-0 Linar...... .........19-0 "I'm pretty psyched by the er en..........19-0 time I get on the runway, said Lozier ................13-0 Stokes. "But I just try to re- Jones... ........ 8-0 lax. If I can relax, everything Team and others will come along all right." . MICHIGAN .............23 While traveling around the Opponents ..23 country to various meets, AVERAGE MINUTES P Stokes finds his talent as a pole- 28:09; Robinson 27:37; statoi vaulter a slight disadvantage. BLOCKED SHOTS: Thon "WHEN WE fly to meets it's Staton 7; Green 6; Bergen really a hassle," said Stokes. nen ts 60. "A lot of the times the bag- inson 1. Totals: MICHIGAN gage people don't want to take my poles.gItttakes quite a bit of convincing to get them to putee DLbt"V them on the plane." T When the Big Ten indoor C T championships roll around in STU two weeks, Stokes will be bat- STUDENT tling Bob Crites of Indiana and Doug Laz of Illinois, who both have better vaults than Stokes. Et F But if his past record is any Appearing Thru Th indication of his success under MIGHTY JOE pressure, Jim Stokes just might 994-5350 be standing on the victory4 stand with his second Big Ten championship. 3 0 3 184-385 177-309 89-200 79-162 78-143 70-139 59-132 40-86 8-12 11-27 2-11 0-9 0-1 .478 .573 .445 .488 .545 .504 .447 .465 .667 .407 .182 .000 .000 84-104 94-145 50-71 61-77 33-45 33-48 23-35 13-23 2-2 7-13 4-5 1-4 0-0 0-1 405-573 .808 2.9 45 51-3; .648 12.7 31 81-1 .704 3.1 46 72.'2 .792 5.2 12 48-1 .133 3.9 11 90-2 .689 1.7 29 39-1 .657 3.2 24 66-2 .565 2.6 1 26.6 1.000 1.1 0 3-0 .538 1.8 5 25-0 .800 0.9 1 6-6 .250 0.9 1 2-6 1.0 0 0-0 .000 5.5 .707 43.2 193 473-14 .705 38.6 92 500-34' 20.5 10. 9.0 9.5 8.2 7.9 6. 4.2 1.9 1.5 0.6 0.1 0.0 86.9 73.t 797-1616 .493 697-1464 .476 304-431 LAYED: Hubbard 34:06; Green 33:48; Grote n 23:42; Baxter 17:12; Thompson 16:41; Hardy 2:02; Lillard 1:00; Lelich 0:04. -pson 17; Hubbard 12; Hardy 9;; Roblison 7; 3; Baxter 1; Jones 1: MICHIGAN 63; Oppo- Green 13; Hubbard 11; Hardy 9; Statof 7; Rob- 54; Opponents 18. ONIGHT Is: DENT NIGHT T ADMISSION ONLY 5O AT 0I) CIIANCE ursday: E YOUNG-Blues Guitarist 516 . LIsatTY wonuer women star o' SAY P Y hFT ti' LAP 100 TP YOU ARE ENTERING A WORLD WHERE FANTASY IS FACT, WHERE THE BIZARRE BECOMES NORMAL AND SATIRE IS THE ORDER OF THE DAY. YOU ARE IN . THE BONIN-OZONE ... Garry Grappler kicked the cat one last time and slumped down on the couch. Weight-cutting always made him grouchy. "What'm I doin' here?" Neil Young oscillated in the back- ground, echoing Garry's tormented thoughts. "What am I doing here? Why am I busting my butt every week, starving and hurting, just so I can go out and do some- thing that nobody but me seems to care about anyway? Why couldn't I have been a basketball star, or a football hero, or ..." And Garry Grappler dozed and dreamed .. . .. . he was racing downcourt on the front end of a three-on-one break. DUNK! Michigan by one, thirty seconds left. The fans roared and the cheerleaders gyrated suggestive- ly. Cheerleaders! That's one thing the matmen never had. But wait . . . we're in a stall, and they're shouting, "Rebound that basketball!" Odd. And they sure pick some inopportune moments for some pretty dumb stunts. Like that last shtick during the time out with the score tied. Visions of cheerleaders on skates flashed before his eyes . . . Garry knew some of the audience could care less about the cheerleaders. These were the pro scouts, the men who held the key to his future. What a rush! Wrestling never offered a future. Then it came, like a deluge. You need an agent, son? . . you'd go hardship, Garry? You'd desert us? . . . what, there's a big mess in the courts? There might not even be a draft? And what if I simply don't make it? I'm not prepared to do too much else, Garry thought. It's a lot harder to play student during a thirty-game basketball season than a fifteen- meet wrestling schedule, particularly with all that added attention and pressure. Frightened, helpless, Garry began to run ... around right end. 15 . . . 10 . .. 5 . . .TOUCHDOWN! Even more fans and cheerleaders roared in appreciation as Garry moved the Wolverines out to a 7-0 lead against Archrival State. This is the life, Garry bubbled. National television and every- thing. And these coaches even want me to eat all I can! Suddenly, things went sour. Garry was making all his cuts, but the holes just weren't there. His yardage total grew about as quickly as an adolescent's mustache. This isn't my fault, but it sure makes me look bad, Garry lamented. Jeez, I never had to depend on anyone else when I was wrestling . . . Post-game. The locket room. Wait, who are those strange people wearing suits and carrying notebooks? Reporters? Garry had heard of them, but rarely saw them during the wrestling season. No one in the media had cared about him then! Hold it, though. This is the tenth time some overweight goon has asked me the same dumb question! And it's not just after games. They're bugging me all week long! Don't they know I have my own life to lead? Something behind Garry's eyes exploded. They were all chasing him, the fans, the cheerleaders, the scouts, the agents, the writers. Holy Westworld! This whole scene has gone bizarre, Carry thought. He fought and clawed, kicked and scratched, to reach the edge . . . and fell . . . . . . onto his threadbare carpet with a jarring thud. Garry opened his eyes. Hell? Cluse. Just his apartment. Garry stood, rubbed his eyes and elbows, and felt a grin grow beneath his nose. "They can have it!" he declared to the empty room. "Some of it was fun, but they can keep it! I didn't realize how good I really had it!" Garry bent down to his newly-awakened feline friend, who instinctively yowled and began to scamper away. Shooting a double, Garry grabbed the cat and cradled it in his thick arms. "Don't you see, Dingle?" Garry waxed philosophical. "It's like that old bit about the tree falling in the forest with no one there to hear it. Just because no one seems to care about what I do doesn't cheapen it. It's still real . . . it's about as real as you can get!" The clock chimed, ending Garry's soliloquy. Whoa, I'd better: get to practice, he realized. Dropping Dingle and grabbing his gym bag, Garry ran out to join all those other athletes - the gymnasts, the thinclads, the swimmers, all the women - who still competed for that most important audience of them all., SAY GOODBYE TO THAT WORLD OF SPOOF AND SHADOW, OF TWISTED TRAPPINGS AND SERIOUSf SEEDS. WE ARE LEAVING . .. THE BONIN-OZONE ... By JAMIE TURNER Last Thursday, Friday and1 Saturday the Michigan women'si swim team set 11 Big Ten rec- ords in winning the Big Ten championships for the secondr straight year. Of the 11 recordl times, Katy McCully or Lori Hughes personally accounted for seven and assisted on two oth- ers. When talking to two of coach Stu Isaac's "'Wonder Women", it becomes obvious that the long hours of work have paid off in their minds. BOTH swimmers came from! the Kalamazoo area, McCully from Norris High School and Hughes from nearby Portage Central. with both having to fight similar obstacles to im- prove themselves. "We didn't have a team whenj I was a sophomore (in high school)," said McCully. "I swam mostly in summer country clubs and during the year at the 'Y' l "I came here primarily nor Cully swam in seven events last the school itself," revealed Mc- weekend - in every one she Cully. "I wasn't necessarily' counting on swimming here." t "'I CAME HERE for swim- ming because I didn't really know what I wanted t be," , commented Hughes. "I know ] that Michigan had the hest swim program (having finished first in the Big Ten's last year)." Another area of quick agree- ment was the subject of their coach, Stu Isaac.] "He's really good," exclaimed McCully. "He works real hard and treats everyone fairl, not just the ones who are doing well at the moment." "HE MAKES us do thing: in practice thatare good for us," added Huighes, "even when we don't want to. I guess you.could, say he has authority." The day of a swimmer is a; grinding one. Four hours out of every day must be turned over to nnt-tfopnti dri cihtC D iwnar either came out with an individ- ual Big Ten record (five) or a team relay record (two). During all this, Hughes wasn't exactly standing still. She won four events (two relays, two in- dividuals) in five record times. The fifth came when she broke the Big Ten record in the 200 butterfly preliminary, tnen fol-I lowed that up with a record in the finals that was two seconds faster than her own time. While Hughes {basked in the; warm feeling of her accomplish- ments, McCully took a view that1 is more in keeping with Michi- gan athletics. "I was just glad that we wan the Big Ten's, and espezially that we beat (Michigan) State," stated McCully. OFF YOUR FIRST PITPHF~D OnY Y PRET 120 our Birthday! 'ZEL BELL E. iUberty 6i.4470 and AAU clubs.,, j h esv hspt ev and AU lub."to praciice ana weigns. uurng Like McCully, Hughes, "start- demn so this puts a heavy ed early. about when I was sev- demncand the swimmers aca en and I went to the 'Y' and the ! m ads iife. Ya.it wudnobably be Midwest's Larest Selection of European Charters Canadian and U.S. from $289 CALL 769-1776 -.Great Placres 2 TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor 4 AAU as I got older." bette 1if I i'h " I ORIGINALLY went to better "f I di t h P o r t a g e Northern (Highcho School)," Hughes said. "In fact, BUT IT'S ALL when I got to Northern, they when it ends with didn't have a swim team, so awi bunch of us got together and imtS._ made up ahoolem that represent- UPI To McCully. a sophomore, s tne eldest of the two with Hughes Tem By The U being a freshperson. With just T1esan FrancIsco (37) this year being the first that 2. Kentucky (1) Michivan offered scholarships to 3. MICHIGAN (1) women swimmers, the lure of' 4. Nevada-Las Vegas college differed for the two.- 6 U.C.L.A. ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ 7. Arkansas 8.North Carolina 9. Wake Forest S C O R ES 10.Louisile ____________11.__ Alabama 2.Providence NBA 13. Syracuse N.Y. Knicks 119, New Orleans 102 14. Utah Buffalo 115, Phoenix 114 15. Creighton COLLEGE BASKETBALL 16. Minnesota Louisville 95, NE Louisiana 65 17. Cincinnati, Maryland 81, Wake Forest 80 18. Detroit NHL 19. (tie) Houston Washington 3. Pittsburgh 1 Oral Roberts ave to go to said with a! worth whilei victory. Mc- p20 JPI Paints 25-0 387 20-2 295 20-3 278 22-2 204 19-4 170 20-4 144 24-1 143 18-4 106 20-4 103 19-4 90 19-3 50 22-3 46 21-3 26 19-5 25 21-3 20 20-3 14 19-4 13 22-2 12 22-6 11 20-5 11 I w rmm" I A~OP~1f AfA tf ~ I. la i' I s" w.aas++. rj w.+u v a .. v a s.bu . ..sas" v....i v. vu r.rv v +. WEDNESDAY SPECIAL ALL YOU CAN EAT! Homemade Baked Lasagna PRETZEL BELL Restaurant 120 E. LIBERTY Thursday FRIED SMELT Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And you'reeating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? I nterested in the LAW? q SD ... and in a career? 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