_._.s._,._ .__a_._._. "E4 TTl L! f'L'7M I I Ml EPAREFOR * * * r ECF *FLEX NAT' L iE 0.a&0ENT.B'5D a S - FLEXIBLEPROC and US * -1. 1945 PAULINE e.4 ;Y E ANN ARBOR, MI. 48103 * 662-3149 Southfield-354-0085 *. TEST PREPARATiON SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 * 0 0N .4 ++ 3 . t . p I uesday, L'ecemper L, I V /. TIED FOR THIRD IN WCHA: leers s lit with Denver { 1 Students. e ae Io BeShs . t You (n ae fer e SGC will be interviewing for the following positions: SGC Student Insurance Committee f Research Policy (grad student only) Director of Personnel Permanent Interview Board (grad student only) INTERVIEWS for these committees will be held TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, Dec. 2nd & 3rd. Need more informa- tion? Stop by SGC, 3rd floor of the Union; sign up for un interview and pick up an application. By PAUL CAMPBELL A tradition of close games be- tween Michigan and Denver continued this past weekend, as the pucksters nipped the Pio- neers 6-5 on Saturday after dropping a 3-2 decision on Fri- day night. However, another tradition was shattered. The Wolverines' Saturday win was their first in over five years on Denver ice. "I'm happy anytime we can win on the road," said Michigan coach Dan Farrell, "that goes especially for winning in Den- ver." FARRELL was alsobhappy that his team is now back at full strength. Pat Hughes and Gary Morrison, both of whom had missed considerable action because of knee injuries, were back in uniform against the Pioneers. Morrison made the most of his return early in Friday night's game, as he scored his first goal of the season less than two minutes into the contest. Denver responded with two unanswered tallies to take the lead, but Kris Manery knotted the game early in the second period. Then Gordon Gibson scored a breakaway goal at 13:03 for Denver. THE PIONEER lead stood up throughout a scoreless third period. The Denver defensemen sparkled, as they only allowed the potent Michigan attackers only six shots on goall.- Michigan broke quickly again on Saturday, getting goals from Angie Moretto and Dan Hoene sists to lead Michigan 'in sco in the first two minutes of the ing in the two game series. game. I The split leaves the Wolve This time the Blue sustained ines in a four way tie for thi the attack, as Moretto added in the WCHA. Their 5-3 reco] another first period score and is matched by Minnesota an Manery and Dave Debol found Collorado College, while D the range in the second session. luth has as many points despi two more losses. Michigan Te The Wolverines then had toswpNorDaetgabs hold off a furious Denver rally pe t 2 Dame to grab s in the third period, as the Pio- ndplace with1ps. ich gan St., who takes on Michiga neers scored three times to on- in a Home and home series th ly one for Michigan. weekend, beat North Dako GREG FOX netted four as- twice to stay atop the pack. or- er- ird rd .nd )c- te cch ec- ti )ta. l- portS of th Diy Gyrnnasti e'wm Michig-m's gymnastics squad managed to 'fare fairly well" in the words of Coaxh Newt Loken during last weekend's annual Midwest tournament. O1er 100 gymnasts performed in every event of the tournament, inclding many former national cham- pions. No team score was tabulited. Top Wolverine performers were Bob Darden-fourth in the high bar, Mason Kaufman-fourth on the trampoline, Chuck Ven- tura-twelfth on the pommel horse, Chuck Stillerman-tenth and Randy Sakamoto-twelfth in the floor exercise, and John Cor- ritore-eleventh on the parallel bars. Loken did not enter all-around competitors for the Mid- west meet in preparation for the Ball State Invitational this weekend. Every school in the Big Ten was represented and the meet enabled coaches to get a sneak preview of conference compe- tition before the Big Ten Invitational next January 10. "It was one of those big meets where you evaluate every- body," Loken said. Five Wolverines tabbed A 1-conference byAP I The Big Ten champion Ohio along with Wisconsin's Billy' St:te Buckeyes and runnerup I Marek were together for the ,dichigan Wolverines dominated second straight year. the 1975 All Big Ten football The newcomer to the back- team selected by the Associated field was tailback Gordon Bell. Press. Seven Ohio State players Bell, who led the Big Ten in were named to the first team, rushing, replaced Indiana's while five Wolverines were Courtney Snyder from last chosen to fill the first 22 spots. year's picks. al The only non-senior to make The oacKfield consisted of athe first team on offense was seniors and was a near repeat wide receiver Jim Smith of of 1974. Archie Griffin and Cor- Michigan. nelius Greene of Ohio State Joe Smalzer of Illinois was front line were: teammate Dan Jilek, Nick Buonamici of Ohio State, Keith Simons of Min- nesota, and Blane Smith of Pur- due. The linebacking crew con- sisted of Michigan's Don Du- fek, Ohio State's Ed Thomp- son, and Donnie Thomas of Indiana. The only area on defense lacking a Wolverine was in the defensive backfield, Ohio State's Tim Fox, Tom Hannon of MSU and Northwestern's Pete Shaw -MICHAEL Griffin prepares for Heisman L WILSON The great new Hewlett-Packard HP-21 Scientific Pocket Calculator. Price reduced to only $100. l- 1>A true scientific calculator with 32 ntions and opera ions. icluding re iciun ular/polar con' ersIons. regit er 11ithnetic. two trig operiI n I mudes I Full display formatting. Select fixed- r tlkdclmal 01r scientific nota ion nwith display rounded to desi red nunmhe i A declimlal Places. x liP's error-saving RPN logic systeni with 4-memory stack. . Traditional IP quality craftsmanship. fa : New, smaller size. 1An unbeatable price/performance /T 1est the new 11 - 't2 today right in our store. See #{)1" vourself fhow muIch per- y~r ,tformnanecevou canl tke home for uii SSINt Ohio State's Archie Griffin, bidding to become the first two- time winner of the Heisman Trophy, has been told to book a flight to New York that would get him there in time for this afternoon's announcement of the 1975 Heisman winner, the Associated Press learned yesterday. The 5-foot-9, 182-pound senior finished the regular season as the nation's seventh leading rusher with 1,307 yards on 245 carries. But he fell 121 yards short in his attempt to break the all-time collegiate rushing mark of 5,297 set by Howard Stevens in two years at Randolph Macon, a College Division school, and two years at the University of Louisville. FLICK of the FOOT a multi-art dance concert Dec. 4, 5, &6 8 p.m. Schorling Aud. $1.50 chosen as the best tight end. Other members of the offensive line were: Center Paul Jasinskis of Northwestern, tackles Rod Walter of Iowa and Scott Dan- nelley of Ohio State, guards Ted Smith of Ohio State and Terry Stieve of Wisconsin. Wolverine Tim Davis was the only repeater on the defensive squad. Along with Davis on the were named to the first team's, -AP defensive backfield. - - Other Wolverines honored were: defensive lineman Greg Knight sies NCAA Morton and linebacker Calvin O'Neal to the second team. Re- Indiana basketball Coach Bobby Knight has filed suit against ceiving honorable mention were: the National Collegiate Athletic Association, challenging its 10- Jim Czirr, Mark Donahue, Walt player limit on traveing basketball squads, a spokesman said Downing, Rob Lytle and Jeff yesterday. Perlinger. Knight filed the suit against the NCAA last Friday in Monroe 4 n,, , Cper.n . .. (rt i , ln riooic.,ngw nlie . ..ng rinmary UlriChs Books Inc. THE -5TOKE -OFFE { ~SUPER. SALE' X-MAS SYES FOLKS, WE'RE HAVING ANOTHER SALE ! Everything's 20% OFF. That means our 0 TURQUOISE PRICES are the lowest of r any place around! So ... Stop by and , do your Christmas shopping early! THE STONE SHOPPE 1103 S. UNIVERSITY 662-6054 OPEN TILL 9 P.M. MON. THURS., and FRIDAY SUNDAY, 12-5 P.M. TILL XMAS j{yg County Superior Court in Bloomington, seeking a preliminary injunction against the restriction, imposed last August as an economy move. ________--AP Griffin heads AP A-merica squad Archie Griffin was one of four Ricky Bell, who led the nation EM repeaters named to the Asso- ciated Press 1975 All-America team, yesterday. Griffin of Ohio State gained over 5,000 yards in his career as a Buckeye. Other repeaters from 1974 were: cen- ter Rik Bonness of Nebraska, defensive end Leroy Cook of Alabama, and defensive back Pat Thomas of Texas A&M. Joining Griffin in the back- field were a trio of West Coast p a y e r s. UCLA quarterback John Sciarra, who led the Bruins to their first Rose Bowl in 10 years, USC running back SERVING ANN ARBOR SINCE 1939 ANNBARBOR CLOTCNG TAI mwmmwmm=wm .wmmmmwwm SIZES T 60 FEATURING FEAOHNNY CAl JO BOTANY 500 p V-LINE LIE MAJOR CR r0 RSON Q CRICKETEER 662=5187 SMcGREGOR EVI L HAGGAR EDIT CARDS ACCEPTED " 211 S. MAIN * ANN ARBOR in running with 1,875 yards, and California runner Chuck Muncie, who broke every school rushing, all-purpose running and scoring mark, were named to the first team All-American backfield. MISSING FROM the first team selections were any Mich- igan players. Middle guard Tim Davis was the only Wolverine to make the second team. Tail- back Gordon Bell was selected for the third team backfield. Three Wolverines received hon- orable mention; wide receiver Jim Smith, defensive end Dan Jilek, and wolfman Dan Dufek. The rest of the first team offensive selections included: tight end Mike Barber of Loui- siana Tech, who made the Little All-America last year when his school was a member of the NCAA's College Division, wide receiver Larry Seivers of Ten- nessee, tackles Mark Koncar of Colorado and Bob Simmons of Texas, guards Randy Johnson of Georgia and Ted Smith of Ohio State. On defense, Oklahoma's bruis- ing Selmon brothers, Leroy and Dewey completed a family sweep of All-American honors. In 1973 older brother Lucius was named to the squad. Leroy is a 256 pound defensive tackle, while Dewey is a 257 pound nose guard. THE SELMON brothers were joined on the 1975 squad by teammate Jimbo Elrod, a de- fensive end, which gave Okla- homa three positions on the de- fensive front five. Joining Okla- homa players and Cook on the front line was tackle Steve Nie- haus of Notre Dame. The linebacking corps consist- ed of Greg Buttle from Penn State, Sammy Green from Flo- rida, and Ed Simonini from Texas A&M. Along with Thomas in the de- fensive backfield players named were A r iz ona ,State's Mike Haynes, and Navy's Chet Moel- ler. Excluding Davis, no other Big Ten player made the second team. On the third team, offen- sive tackle Rod Walters of Iowa, defensive tackle Nick Buonamici of Ohio State, and defensive back Tim Fox of Ohio State were selected. 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