100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 15, 1977 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-03-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Tenn.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, March 15, 1977

Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY

MICHIGAN SHORT BY ONE
INTRODUCiNG..."
ORIGINAL PAINTINGS I te
- By ALAIN PAUZi E
MARCH 6-APRIL 2 )! By ERNIE DUNBAR by the Wolverine qgiartet of
Michigan fell a mere one Doug Hennigar, Dave Furst,
BORDERSSECOND STORY!point short of successfully de- Jeff McCloud and James
fending its indoor track title, as, Grace wasn't enough. The Illi-
, A r vIllinois nipped the Wolverines ni only needed their second
r ,*\LLL Y 58-57 in the 67th annual Big Ten I place to trounce -Michigan's
indoor track championships dreams of back-to-back titles.
ALSO EATURING held at the Track/Tennis Build- Indiana slid into third place
* ORIGINAL GRAPHICS ing March 4-5. with 47 points and Wisconsin
ERTE, ROCKWELL, DALI, I The team championship rest- racked up 30 points for fourth.
JABLONSKY, LEBADANG, COOPER, ed on the outcome of the mile Michigan State was fifth with 29
BONNEFOlT relay, as the Illini held a slight points.
* ARTPOSTERS LEDU ,54-51 lead heading into the meet "I think we had a good ef-
BARNET, CALDER, DUPRE, concluding event, fort," Michigan coach Jack
t FOLON, MIfLTON, PETERS, cnldn vn.3Hre adfloi h en
H UNDERTWASSER But even a 3:15.01 victory Harvey said following the meet.
" CUSTOM FRAME SHOP --_- - - "I just hate to lose, especially
* AND MICHIGAN'S MOST COMPREHENSIVE by one point.
ART BOOK SELECTION INTRODUCING: "I can't think of any place
E DWA R D where they (Illinois) really
B ORDE RS BOOK SH OP PROFESSIONAL surprised us," Harvey con-
PROFESIONALtinued. "We knew where they
303 S. STATE, ANN ARBOR HAIRSTYLIST' had people and they came
Open Till 8:30 P.M. Mon. Thru Sat., 12-6 Sun. ) ,for men & womenh pn y -
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _appts. 668-9329 iii ____ ___
-TRY DAI LY CLASSI FI ED)S Dascola Barbers
Liberty off State I CE
CAMP SOMERSET FOR GIRLS

.

track crown

through where they had
them."
The deciding factor in the,
meet was the presence of Illi-
nois' Charlton Ehizuelen. The
senior from Nigeria won his
fourth straight Big Ten titles
in the long and triple jumps,
with leaps of 25-9 114 and 52%h
respectively. He also placed sec-
ond to Michigan State's Randy
Smith in the 60-yard dash, to
rack up 16 points for the Illini.
Michigan long jumper James
Henry was a surprise second
place finisher, as the freshmanj
soared 24-8 1/4.{
In what had been billed as
one of the most exciting
events of the meet, Illinois'
Doug Laz outvaulted Michi-
gan's Jim Stokes to establish
a new Big Ten record in the.
pole vault with a leap of
17-3/4. Stokes took second in
16-6.
The only other Big Ten re-
cord came in the mile, as Wis-
consin's Steve Lacy cruised to
a 4:01.39 victory. Michigan's
Steve Elliott finished fifth in
4:06.14.
The Wolverines counter at-
tacks to the Illini's victories
were Furst in the half-mile and
Andy Johnson in the 1000-yard
run.
Furst won his second consecu-
tive Big Ten title, but had to
fight a head cold to do it.
"I've never been so sick in
my whole life as I was these
last few days," Furst said after
winning his specialty in 1:51.93.
"I've had the worst head cold
I've ever had. As a result, I
didn't have the confidence I
MOELL

needed, but I just gave it every-
thing I had."
Johnson also had a head cold
the week prior to the Big Ten
meet, but felt his condition
didn't play a factor in winning
his race in 2:09.28.
Coach Harvey received a sur-
prise third pilace finish in the
1000 from sophomore Jim
Baumgartner.
"Furst in the half-mile got us
back into it," Harvey com-
mented in reference to the see-
saw meet. "But the 1000 with
Johnson and Baumgartner real-
ly gave us a lift."
Whatever momentum" the Wol-
verines may have picked up
after the 1000 was stopped
quickly, as Illinois Olympian
Craig Virgin ran away from the
three mile field in 13:28.19.
Michigan's Billy Donakowski
was a distant second in 13:36.61.
Besides anchoring the Wol-
verine's victorious mile relay,
Grace ran an impressive 440-
yard dash to place second in
48.6 to Illinois freshman Clif-
ton Hill.
Relay leadoff man Hennigar
combined a fourth place finish
in the 60-yard dash with his sec-
ond place clocking of 30.75 in
the 300-yard dash.
Michigan came through with
two places in the 70-yard high
hurdles. Chucky Crouther paced
the attack with his second place
time of 8.59 and Arnett Chis-
holm followed Crouther in 8.63.
Shot putter Randy Foss
cranked outathird place throw
of 55-9 1/4 and freshman Mike
Hetes turned in a fifth place
toss of 54-2.

f

AP Photo

-

Your last 2 years
at Uof M
can be your
firs t 2 years
of management.
Why wait until y o u r e out of
college to get practical manage-
ment training? Army ROTC is
possibility for anyone having tw-
years of undergraduate or graduatE
work remaining. And leads you to
an Army officer's commission upon
graduation.
New Armry o ff ic e rs tike' on
instant leadership resprnsibility.
They have to manage people and
handle money and equipment. They
have to make more important plan-..
ning decisions t hi a n most young
executives.
So whet. Ary ROTC students
r e c e i v e their undergra duattor
graduate degree, they enter active
or reserve duty fully prepared for
these management challc'nrc"S.
If you'd like to be ettiiw man-
agement experience after :olcege,
while others are gat t ii ig nait «ge-
mnt t rainil, a pl 1 iou the A ry
ROTC 2-year progtrall by April 1.
ARMY ROTC.
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.

CAMP COBBOSSEE FOR BOYS
IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE
Top salary, accommodations and bene-
fits to experienced counselors with ex-
pertise inany of the following Swim-
ming (WSi) Sailing Canoeing Water
Skiing. Scuba iving Archery Rifeiry
Tennis Golf Teamsports Fencing
Gymnastics. Crafts & Woodworking
Dramatics Tripping. photography
Ham Radio Riding {English) Call or
write or information & application Act
now our openings fill quicklyi
Mrnimum Age Required 20
CAMP OFFICE, Dept. 30
225 E. 57 St., NY, NY 10022
(212) 752-5853

Second ay bles
l eave g rapplers 4th
By PATRICK RODE
There are good days and then there are lad days. The
Michigan wrestling team found this to be true in the Big Ten,
tournament on March 4th and 5th where they eventually fin-
ished in fourth place, behind Iowa, Wisconsii, and Minnesota.
Wolverine Coach Bill Johannesen viewed the tournament
as a battle with Wisconsin and Minnesota for the second place.
finish. After the first day of matches things looked good for

p

CHARTERS
AIR ONLY FROM DETROIT

Michigan with seven wrestlers
solation matches.

ER REPLACEMENT NAMED

Amsterdam
Frankfurt
Honoluiu
Italy
London
Munich
Warsaw
Zurich

from $289
from $309
from $299
from $399
from $329
from $309
from $381
from $359

Gymnasts third in Big Ten

ADVANCE BOOKING
NECESSARY
WEEKEND SPECIALS
Montreal from "$99
N.Y. City from $158
Toronto from $51
Las Vegos from $175
All Prices Based On
Double Occupancy
The n F:"iendly Tour Store
On The Corner
GROUP TRAVEL 3
&65 -6122
601 E. William
(Corner of Maynard)
Ann Arbor, Mich. 48108
- - - ....r..

C t . Put r N :i, }I> r iJ Ic
:l tiO ic)11 i (A f .= . r
764240 2-10

Two individual Big Thn titles ence title as the Wolverines
and five NCAA qualifiers provid- captured third .in the Big Ten.
ed the good news for the Michi-- DEFENDING champion Min-
gan men's gymnastics team in nesota left the rest of the con-
the Big Ten Championship meet tenders in its wake scoring
held last weekend at Minneapo- 422.75, far ahead of Illinois'
Is. 405.85 and Michigan's 404.2.
The bad news was provided by Individual championships by
the host Gophers and the fight- co-captain Chuck Ventura on the
ing Illini. These teams dashed pommel horse, and by John Cor-
Michigan's hope for a confer- ritore in the parallel bars high-
"I HAVE CALLED YOU BY YOUR NAME"
BROTH E RS OF
H OLY CROSS
Responding through educational, health,
social, pastorial and other
service ministries.
Br. Thomas Maddix, CSC
Box 308, Notre Dame, IN 46556
There IS a difference!!!
PREPARE POR:
MCAT@ DATA LSAT@ SAT
GRE GMAT OCAT "VAT
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrella of test-
ing know-how that enables us to after the best preparation
availsb/e, no matter which course is taken. Over 38 years
of experience and success. Sniall classes. Voluminous
home study materials. Courses that are constantly up-
dated Permanent centers open days, evenings & week-
ends all year Complete tape facilities for review of class
lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make-ups
for missed lessons at our centers
ECFMG @ FLEX
NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS
Flexible Programs & Hours
Write or call:
1945 PAULINE BLVD.-
0 ANN ARBOR 48103 MP
O'ide NY StateOnly 86-3-49 VEDUCATIONAL CENTER
CALToil Fir!e 80021984
Ceten mi, r UiS Coes and Lugano.5witteian TEST PREPARATION
SPECIAUSTS SINCE 1938

lighted the meet' for Michigan.
Ventura was the first Michi-
- gan gymnast since 1963 to place
- first on the pommel horse.
Other high points for the Blue
were second place finishes by;
all-arounder, Nigel Rothwell;
and ringman Scott Ponto, and a
third place by high bar special-
ist Bob Creek.
All three qualify for the NCAA
meet in Arizona next month,
along with Ventura and Corri-
- tore.
-JEFF FRANK
McOG'tney tops
defense
Michigan football coach Bo
Schemibechler named Bill Mc-'
Cartney as the new defensive co-
ordinator last week replacing
Gary Moeller who departed to
be head coach at Illinois.
"I'm really excited about the
new assignment," McCartney
said. "All of our coaches on de-
fense feel there is a challenge
to keep up the fine defensive tra-
dition that has been at Michi-
gan since Bo came here."
McCartney's new post places
him in charge of the inside line-
backers while Dennis Brown
takes over the outside lineback-
ers - McCartney's previous re-
sponsibility.'
" c~LD T ,..,es;,.At

'gaining berths in final or con-
"We wrestled super tlhe first
day," 'exclaimed Johannesen.
"Everybody thought we would
do well."
It was not to be however.
Michigan's second day effort
started out on a bad foot when
'Wolverine 158-pounder Brad
Holman famed to make weight
for the tournament. Holman
was fourth seed in his weight
class.
"I expect Holman could have
scored' 10 points, "remarked Jo-
hannesen. "Also, 1Minnesota
moved up because of it. It had
a compounding effect."
"The difference between sec-
ond and fourth was Holman not
making weight," he went on.
The results from the second
play were not the best .:her.
.The W'Av1 .eri-naes suzffered defeat
in all five consolation finals inn
which they had a berth. In the
championship finals, Michigan
won one mat-h oftwo.
Turning in that champion-
ship performance wias 150-
pounder Mark Churella. On
the way to that crown, Churel-
Ia broke the 16-year-old Big
Ten tournament record for the
fastest pin by one second. He
pinned his opponent in 29-sec-
onds.
Team captain Mark Johnson
was narrowly defeated in the
finals at 177 pounds by arch-
nemesis Chris Campbell of Iowa,
I 3-2. Of the four times these 1'i-
vals have met this year, Camp-
bell has won all the matches
except one which resulted in a
tie.
"Both Johnson and Camp-
bell had been warned for non-
activity on their feet," noted

"T HEE I 5 no question MOeI- Johannessen. "The ref was
ler was a great coach," Mc- just getting up to call stalling
Cartney said. "I hope all the (on Campbell, which would
defensive coaches together will have sent the match into over-
be able to compensate for his time) but he said he saw the
loss. By no stretch of the imag- towel coming in to signify that
ination can I do it on my awn." time was up."
McCartney, now in his fourth Other Wolverines that placed
season at Michigan takes over in the touirnament were Amos
the new position today when the Goodlow (126), Rich Lubell
Wolverines start spring practice. (134), Karl Briggs (142), Ed
-DON MacLACHLAN Neiswender (167), and Mitch
_____. _ --_-Marsicano (heavyweight). All of
them placed fourth -the cut-
*off for qualifying for the N CAA
IItournament.

HIAPPENI NGS at the:

SUDS FACTORY
Monday: PITCHER NITE
"LOTS OF PEOPLE, LOTS OF ACTION"
Wednesday: LADIES NITE LADIES ADMITTED FREE
-ALSO-
FRATERNITY N ITE
All Frat. members with Proper 1.D. Admitted Free
"PRICES REDUCED ON DRINKS"
Thursday: DRINK AND DROWN
"UNBELIEVEABLE LOW PRICES"
SEE U-M in the NCAA PLAYOFFS
on Our Gian#8' x 10' TV Screen
(Also Other Major Sports)
Friday & Saturday: HAPPY HOUR
7-9 P.M.-"PRICES REDUCED ON DRINKS"
1st 50 PEOPLE BEFORE 8 p.m. ADMITTED FREEt
EXCEF THURSDAY

B ILLBIOA RD
Basketball fans need not
7-worry .. the Johnny 'Orr
Show will continue to be tele-
vised on WXON TV, Chan-
nel 20. Beginning March 1i at
8:30 p.m. fans can tune in
for film clips from the open-
ing playoff game against Holy
Cross and hear Orr's com-
ments and predictions on fu-
ture opponents.

I

MONTESSORI
Teacher Training
Program
APPROVED BY THE
AMERICAN MONTESSORI SOCIETY
Seventh AERCO Summer Academic
Program for 8 weeks to be followed
by a nine month Internship
Experience. Students will be trained
in the Montessori philosophy and
teaching method, child development
and learning materials for pre-school
programs. Now at two locations.
AERCO 'Ithaca Program conducted on

"'i'.pcf Your Skiil"

soo

00 Pulsating

z

i

~ I U 'Si I I - m . - -, -. II

ft

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan