Frxdoy, Februor/ 20, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Friday, February 20, 1 S175 THE MICHIGAN DAILY woooow Tankers hold slim By PAUL CAMPBELL Amazing performances in tl first two events and the last lay led Michigan to a slim le over defending champion Mi igan State in the first day the Big Ten Women's Swimmi and Diving Championships Matt Mann Pool last night. The Wolverines, who amass 156 team points to the Spartan 141, served notice in the ope ing 500 yard freestyle that th will be very unobliging hos Not only did freshperson supe stud Katie McCully win t event in a time of 5:03.05 (bc a meet and school record), b teammates Kathy Knox a Chris DenHerder finished se ond and third, respectively. Debbie Bervitz and Lau Team Standings TEAM P MICHIGANh Michigan State1 Indiana1 Wisconsin Minnesota! Illinois Purdue Ohio State Northwestern Iowa -- he re- ad .ch- of ng at ed ns' en- ey ts. per- j he ith Adamson proceeded to finish gest upset of the night in the set-studded meet came in the one-two in the second event, the 50 yard freestyle. Faced with I one meter diving. Jane Man- 100 yard breaststroke, to give the looming presence of Ann chester, d e f e n d i n g national Michigan an amazing 72 points Emmenecker, Ohio State's na- champion, from Michigan State, after the race. tional collegiate record holder held a secure ,eight point lead Michigan saved it's most at that distance, Margaret led after the required dives. But it amazing feat, however, for all the way and brought home was not enough, as both Carol the evening ending 200 yard a victory in the time of 25.2 Lindner of Indiana and Peggy freestyle relay. Kathy Lin- seconds. Emmenecker had to Anderson of Wisconsin passed genberg and Connie Ortega struggle to finish second, nip- Manchester in the optional pro- joined McCully and Knox to ping Illinois' Mary Patterson by gram. Lindner's score of 424.55 Mcrully aynrh dnoxto only one one-hundredth of a points set yet another meet and run away from the field with second. conference record. a clocking of 1:39.21. That sefn u i tnfereterabird.l time is less than one half sec- The final surprise of the up- Despite their ability to pull ond off the time that won last I year at the National meet. . lead off the major upsets, Indiana suffered because of a lack of depth and stands well back in third with 106 team points. Wis- consin with 91 and Minnesota with 90 are the only other teams that could threaten for the top spots. Competition resumes tomor- row, with five individual and two relay titles up for grabs. Preliminaries will be at 11:00 a.m. and finals at 7:00 in the evening. E 4 TSL,., ,..,:.2.41., .,C fl, .. - A+ 1.-- Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN MICHIGAN'S IATIE McCULLY (L), Kathy Knox (R) and Chris DenHerder (C) celebrate after taking first, second and third place respectively in the 500-yard freestyle in Big Ten Championship action last night at Matt Mann Pool. HOST BADGERS THIS WEEKEND but nd ec- ra TS 156; 1411 106 91 90, 441 36, 35 20 19, The middle of the meet, how- ever, was characterized by Michigan S t a t e' s impressive depth and a string of four suc- cessive upsets. The Spartans, who have won t h r e e consecutive conference titles, got points from 12 dif- ferent individuals in the other four events. "They're real strong," com- mented Michigan coach Stu. Issac. "Don't let anybody tell you that they can't win here. It's going to be real exciting- no way of knowing who's going to win." Two Michigan State swim- mers also engineered an im- pressive upset in the 100 yard butterfly. Sue Tilden and Vicki Riebeling beat the odds and favorite Sara James of Min- nesota as they finished one-two, respectively. James also came up short in the 200 yard backstroke. Despite having a preliminary time that was a full five sec- onds faster than anyone else entered, James was beaten cleanly by Indiana's Domi- ique Amiand. Another Hoosier, Margaret+ Roembke, pulled off the big- IV l from By DON MacLACHLAN Three of Michigan's top foot- ball recruits said yesterday that they did not consider en- rolling at Michigan State be- cause of the three-year proba- tion placed on the school. Coach Bo Schembechler land- ed nine prep gridders from the State of Michigan over the last two days. linebacker Jeff Bednarek from Trenton, split end Mike Har- din from Detroit Central, tack- les Mike Leoni from Flint Pow4 ers and Chuck Hetts from Tay- lor Truman, and Kochanski from Birmingham Brother Rice. THE additional four pros- pects are running backs Mike Jolley from Southgate Aquinas, Ralph' Clayton from Redford, and Tony Leoni, Mike's brother, from Flint Powers. Linebacker Keith Gilmore from Highland Park also signed his letter of intent. lta te be one of the top five teams in the country for the next four years," said Bednarek. Hardin, 6-2, 185, turned down various other Big Ten schools including Minnesota, Purdue, Wisconsin, and'Michigan State to enroll at Michigan. In addi- tion to being a split end, Hardin can play as either defensive back or a kick return special- ist. Hetts, 6-5, 233, is extremely agile for a big men. He turned away numerous recruiters be- cause he was sold on Michigan. recruits snica lers look toward playoffs By JOHN NIEMEYER igan State and Minnesota each Offensively, the Badger lines the Debol-Hughes line as the The Michigan hockey -team split with one of the bottom are still up in the air, with sev- the left wing. Kip Mauer will will try to return to the winning three teams in the league. eral players seeing lots of action move back as the center for willktry teurn tot ihe Both Michigan and Minnesota at each position. At center, the Manery-D. Lindskog line. track as they entertain the drpeaparterviu MkeE es'-g Badgers of Wisconsin in Yost dropped a pair the previous Mike Eaves, Dave Herbst and Russ Blanzy will see some' Ice Arena this weekend, at- weekend to open the door for Dave Lundeen normally all see action this weekend as he tempting to avoid the losses then fourth place Michigan some action. will center the third line of that have been plaguing the State. Herbst, who had an outstand- Bill Wheeler and Gary Mor- WCHA's top contenders as of Again this weekend the Wol- ing game last Friday will have rison. late. verines are not facing a power- to, sit out tonight after being Senior Don Fardig will cen- Two weeks ago Michigan 'was house team in Wisconsin, which ejected for fighting on Satur- ter the fourth line with Mike in the position to'move very is holding down last place in day. Eaves is a questionable Coffman and Dan Cormier on close totion o the WCHA. The Badgers, how- starter this weekend after ag- the wings. in the conference. Since that ever, knocked off Minnesota 9-3 gravating a back injury Friday This series is important for time however, they have lost last Saturday and lost a close night and then returning Satur- both teams. A couple of wins three out of four conference one in overtime Friday to the day night only to take a stick in Ann Arbor could boost the games and are presently in a: Golden G o p h e r s. In recent in the mount resulting in a Badgers out of the cellar. Wins, five way competition for three weeks they have shown much gash that required 5o stitches. for the Wolverines could put of the four home playoff berths. improvement going 2-3-1, losing Rounding out the Wisconsin them in great position for mov- Only Michigan Tech has clinch- only one game by more than lines will be wings Tom Ulseth, ing into second place in light of ed a home playoff. one point, 5-3 to MSU. They Murray Johnson, Mike Meeker, their coming games with the, While Michigan Tech has also scored a 5-1 victory over Rod Romanchuk, and Mark number two and three teams, been winning consistently, the Michigan Tech.. Capouch. Michigan State and Minnesota. number two, three, and four The Badgers' biggest problem Minding the net will be Mike Michigan out - personnels the; teams are falling over each this season has been the loss Dibble, a sophomore from Min- Badgers and also sports the other trying to give one an- of some key personnel to the neapolis who also shares the better record. The Wolverines other the number two spot. U.S. Olympic team, including captain's responsibilities with are currently fightng a bout Last weekend Michigan, Mich- head coach Bob Johnson who Eaves,.Lundeen,and Norwich. with the flu, wiich could make is on leave of absence for the The Michigan lineup has it difficult for them to- skate forc year. The coaching duties have, seen some major changes this three full periods two nights in WCHA Standings been picked up by Jim Roth- week. Forward Ben Kawa has a row. Considering the flu andi well, who has seen some bright been moved back to defense, the recent success of Wisconsin,4 W L T PTS spots despite his team's unfor- the position he started the nothing is certain at Yost this Mich. Tech 19 7 0 tunate record. season at. Don Dufek will-join weekend. "DUE TO the loss of1 sion exposure and bowl a ances for the next three I was not interested it Michigan State program,' all-state center Mark Kc ski, one of the new Wolver Schembechler signed on end, two linebackers, thre ning backs, and three in linemen, including five al ers. Among the all-staters leveland- 1, 11l2-94 Campy and( 'feat Portlamt televi-' ppear- years, n the CLEVELAND {A - Formeri Michigan star Campy Russell1 scored 18 points, 14 in the sec- ond half, and the surging Cleve- land Cavaliers trounced the Portland Trail Blazers 112-94 for their seventh straight Nationall Basketball Association victory. The triumph, Cleveland's 13th in the last 15 games and a club record, ninth straight home vic- tory, moved the Cavaliers one game ahead of the idle Wash- ington Bullets in the Central Division. The Cavaliers led 53-47 at thej half and increased the margin to 82-67 after three periods. I Cleveland built the first of several 21-point leads by scor-{ ing the last six points o third quarter and the fir of the final period, m ahead 88-67. Dick Snyder added 17 p Chones 15 and Jim Brewer ped in with 14 points a rebounds for Cleveland. S Wicks led Portland wit points. Sexuality & A DR. MAT Friday, A.B.C. room Washtenaw Interm School District 1819 $. Wagner Rd Ann Arbor Mich. State Minnesota MICHIGAN Notre Dame Colo. College Minn-Duluth' Denver N. Dakota Wisconsin 16 15 14 12 12 11 10 10 8 10 10 12 12 13 15 16 16 16 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 32 31 28 26 25 22 20 20 18 One of those bright spots is defenseman Craig Norwich who is also the team's leading scorer. The 5'11" sophomore from Edina, Minnesota has scored 11 goals and added 24 assists while playing some out- standing defense for Wiscon- sin.r The other top defenseman is' Norm McIntosh, who Rockwell regards as an outstanding de-i fenseman. The defense is round-; ed out by Bob Suter and Brad Mullens. . "'said The signings have not been ochan- "Bo Schembechler is a hell- confirmed by the athletic de- rines. uva guy and none of the other partment. Normal policy is to e split schools have the class of Michi- wait until all recruits have been e run- gan," said Tony Leoni. signed before making a formal iterior Tony, at 6.0, 195 pounds is. announcement. 1-stat-, hopeful that his brother Mike High school All - American at 6-3, 240 will open holes up quarterback Mike Marshall are for him in the future. "I didn't from Detroit Southwestern will want to bother with the proba- announce his decision Monday, tion problem at MSU," he add-, but reportedly is swaying to- ed. ward Michigan. Kochanski, 6-3, 235 felt "M ich- , = : r0=ina e>m igan has a better academic program than other schools, THINK and I really want an opportun- f the ity to play in the Rose Bowl." ^ SPRING I st six He is an excellent baseball aoving pitcher but plans to devote all his time to football at Michi- points,' gan. IT O I A chip- nd 13 BEDNAREK, 6-4, 227, is ex-. idney tremely quick for a linebacker. th 23 "I like the coaching staff and players, and Michigan should ( P A T Special People-ELOWTAIL ,WORKSHOP 1 MON DAY T TRIPPE-Facilitator FEBRUARY 23 and 24, 25 Feb.20 at 1:30 4.M.2to P.M. U.M.C.9E.C. iediate sponsored MICHIGAN . FREE REFRESHMENTS Info: 763-2374 'BAUNION f-< 5,000 Lush Plants y on A fition" 4 fresh from Florida aptation of the Book of Job) 4e fr Florida p n o e ^ 40 VARIETIES l NALD OPPERWAL I GREEN YOUR HOME ^- CAMPUS CHAPEL ^ a place for people Fy . 1236 WASHTENAW one block north of South University and Forest 'S BAR-B-Q-PIT 6" POT DETROIT ST. Areca Palm.. $0.00 c41' POT :ialty), SHRIMP, SEAFOOD NorfolkP . $2.50 4-Bar-B-Q and Fried jPn I Many 3" Pots atO96c elude Fries, Slaw & Bread Sponsored bv: .20PickupsANN ARBOR WELLESLEY Pick DlvrSCLUB FOR Delvery SHLRHP TRAVEL TO TOLEDO Matmen prepare for Big 10 This Weekend's Games Wisconsin at MICHIGAN Minnesota at Colorado College Minn-Duluth at Denver Michigan State at Notre Dame North Dakota at Michigan Tech M en tumblers test routines, Spartans By ENID GOLDMAN ner and Nigel Rothwell to best The men's gymnastics team, a Spartan team led b/ Craig which registered a season high Maclean, Jeff Rudolph and Joe! 213.50 last Saturday against the Shepherd. The Blue squad will' top ranked Indiana State Syca- be without the talents of co- mores, looks to continue a high captain Pierre Leclerc who is: level of performance when it competing in the Canadian Ohm- takes on Michigan State to- pic qualifying meet this week- night, at East Lansing. end. "I hope we don't let the score "Every meet is different. In against Indiana stand in itself," this one the individual w:!l be' stated senior high bar specialist depending more on internal Bob Darden. "If we're not -care- rather than external pressure," ful, MSU could really give us a said Poynton. "MSU is ju it not run for our money." the caliber of Indiana State." THE SPARTANS, however, THE WOLVERINES lost their are not considered to be na- first dual meet of the season,I tional contenders, as their high- and their first home contest By BOB MILLER The Toledo Rockets, not exactly a powerhouse in col- lege wrestling, will be Mich- igan's final opponent before the Big Ten championships. After' being dealt with upset- ting losses against Minnesota and MSU, a shellacking by Iowa, and a giveaway to Wiscon- sin, the matmen should be about ready to tackle Toledo and end a two game losing streak. Coach Bill Johannesen de- clined to label the match as a tune up for the biggie in Iowa City on February 28-29, but rather as "a filler on our sched- ule because we didn't want to go into the championship meet with only two weeks of solid practice." Toledo does have John Rob- inson, who, at 190 pounds is a former Michigan state cham- pion from Romulus. At 142 pounds is Brad Smith, along with his borther Virgil (150), are the Rockets other stellar t -f . i tf . i I 4 74 « f Badgers, and is expected to a 15-6 overall record (6-4 in start. However, Ed Neiswender the Big Ten). The latest poll and Steve Shuster will be side- places them 17th in the na- lined. Neiswender collided - in tion. Against the fifth ranked practice with a teammate and Badgers, Johannesen believes now sports six stitches over his that Wisconsin "was fortunate eye. Shuster is still bothered to leave Ann Arbor with a vic- by sore knees. tory." These indications of a Injuries will force Michigan resurgence in the matmen's to alter their lineup, as it has{ play will be tested against I been most of the year. Coach Toledo. Johannesen concedes that "if If Michigan is to have any wve are ahead by a sizeable clout in the Big Ten meet, they margin, we might even forfeit imust "mop up" against weaker our heavyweight event." This opponents. Toledo will give implies that Johannesen is con- them an opportunity to sharpen fident once again that despite their skills and regain the con- losing four out of their last .sixfidence they must have. outings, the wrestling team will "Col loqu (a dramatic ado by DO MORNING SUNDAY 10:15 a.m performers. Michigan captain Mark John- son is O.K., after suffering a minor head injury against the have things their way vs. To- In any case, the grapplers ledo. are to be commended for their In fact, Michigan possesses fine tshowing this year. Ann Arbor 'Cantata Singers MORRIS RISENHOOVER, Dir. Presents FAURE-REQUIEM BRAHMS-MOTETS Sunday, Feb. 22-4 P.M. First Congregational Church STATE AND WILLIAM STS. Adm. $2.50 Students $1.25 r P~ A Ii &O AD a~n MA/YCC . A1. Ie - DELONG 314 RIBS (Our Spec CHICKEN All Dinners in( Mon., Wed., Th., Sun. 11-2 6 Fri., Sat. 11-3 Nri est scores hover in the 195' range. Michigan, by virtue of its total against the Sycamores, is now ranked among the top five' in the country. "Supposedly there would be a let-down from last weekend," said co-captain Jerry Poynton. "But because we 'are working to reestablish our goals and build towards the Big Tens, I hone the team will be up f:r 't." Michigan State will be hnst- ing the Big Ten Championships March 26-27. Today's meet -will also provide the Wolveines with an opportunity to ')ecome ac- customed to the eqiprent at Jenison Field Ho6se. "We'll be here for the grand finale and it does give 'h4 meet more flRor." nnted Povnton. MICHGAN will need 'r'ng performan'es from -]i-arpind- ever in Crisler Arena last Satur- day to the Sycamores, who tal- lied a 214.90. % "We're just seeking to main- tain a fine level of perform- . ance," stated Coach Newt Loken. "BEST FILM- of Acadie~iy EONAEA BOARD OF RR inchTUdi ;k P OJL PICTU n JRE _\