Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 14,,19 M Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILYI WedInesday, January 1.4,.I.119 1 .M. p : i i I i 1 r I r IOWA, WISCONSIN LEAD PACK: By RICK BONINO stake. But our eventual goal is pears to havel to win the Big Ten, and the and consistency In college wrestling, he who Nationals if we can." meet success an laughs last indeed laughs best. Ntoasi ecn etscesa W h i l e Michigan wrestling! For example, last year's Pur- ing individuals coach Bill Johannesen and his due squad, possessing only a the big tournam e amryri t befew outstanding grapplers in The d e f e ni prou ofther 62 dal eetJoe Corso, Alan Housner and champion low~ showing so far, they realize that Bernie Barrile, s t r u g g 1 e d ranked first it those numbers will mean noth- through a dismal dual meet again this yea ing when it comes time to deter- seaeson and a mediocr sixth- stocked for bot mine conference and national place Big Ten showing. tion. rankings in tounrament action. However,, all three Boiler- While the Hav "The only purpose of dual maker stars placed. well in the tional championI meets is to prepare for the NCAA tournament, bringing the rest of their tournaments," Johannesen their team a ninth-place national comes back for said. "The dual meet record finish. returnees includ means something-pride is at I This year's Big Ten elite ap- tional champ, 150 et Big en le both the depth needed for dunl ad the outstand-' who can grab ent points. d i n g national va Hawkeyes, n the country r, stand well- h types of ac- wkeyes lost na- Dan Holm (158), starting lineup more fun. The de another na- )-pounder Chuck Tickets available through the PTP Ticket Office MEN- DELSSOHN THEATRE Mon.-Fri. 10 A.M.-1 P.M., 2-5 P.M. Call 764-0450 for more information. Yagla, and two national runers- up, Chris Campbell at 177 and Greg Stevens at 190. Add heavyweight John Bowls- by, 142-pounder Brad Smith and 126pounderyTim Cysewski and the Hawkeyes look formidable. Most observers think the Wis- consin Badgers have the best chance of dethroning the reign- ing champs. After stumbling to a sixth-place national finish last year, the Badgers are ranked third this year with eight re- turning starters. Wisconsin features its own national runner-up, 150-pounder Lee Kemp. Jim Haines at 118, Midland's champ Jack Reinwand at 126, Craig Horiswiull at 134 and 167-pounder Pat Christenson have all given Michigan wr'est- lers a hard time in the past. While the Hawkeyes and Badgers receive most of the attention, Johannesen isn't counting his seventh-ranked crew out of the running. "If Iowa and Wisconsin butt heads and.knock each other off,. and if we can do some knocking off of -our own, we could finish * .- DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS I- an B Van BovenShoes ANNOUNCES THEIR ANNUAL MEN'S and WOMEN'S BOOT and SHOE SALE SAVINGS OF 25% TO 50% ON OUR FINE QUALITY FOOTWEAR OPEN: 9:00TO 5:30 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 17 NICKELS ARCADE at HILLEL A Program of Jewish Studies HEBREW FOR BEGINNERS-Emphasis on conversation INTERMEDIATE HEBREW-Continuation of H-ebrew for Beginners HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB-Practice what you know MODERN HEBREW LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION-Best known short stories BASIC JUDAISM-An introduction to Jewish Religion and life JUDAISM-An examination of the Jewish Religion INTRODUCTION TO BIBLICAL LITERATURE- How to read the Tanach THE ARCHITECTURE OF JEWISH PRAYER- The structure and content of Jewish Liturgy ARABS, ISRAELIS, AND PALESTINIANS-A study of source material ZIONISM: Ideology and Movement-A study of the dream and it's development JEWISH HERETICS-An examination of the lives and thinking of prominent Jewish heretics CURRENT FICTION BY AMERICAN JEWS- Discussion of recent works by Doctrow, Paley, Roth and Richler POETRY OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE FROM THE BIBLE TO TODAY-A representative sampling MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT-A close reading of several recent Jewish Theologians JEWISH RESPONSE TO THE PROBLEM OF EVIL-Why do the good suffer or the wicked prosper? th in the' Big Ten last year, ! appeared ready to break into the list ofconferencedfront-runners until they lost defending con- ference and Midland's champion1 Larry Zilverberg (158) to a practice injury.! The Zilverberg-less Gophers were thrashed by Wisconsin 12- 9, in a dual meet last w.ekend, but still have some capable performers who could bring tournament success. Mike MacArthur finished second to graduated Michigan star Jim Brown at 118 in the conference tourney last sea- son and stands as the Big Ten favorite at the weight this year. Minnesota's effort will also be bolsteredt by the return of 190- pounder Evan Johnson. Johnson placed second in the Big Ten behind former Wolverine Dave Curby two years ago but sat out last season with ailments. The rest of the conference race looks to be a scramble, though Johannesen cited a great- ly-improved Indiana squad as ready to move into the Big Ten's first division. The Hoosiers return a confer- ence champ, Sam Koman (134), who defeated departed Wolver- ine Brad McCrory for the honors ahead of them," Johannesen last season. While stroig at the said. lover weights, Indiana may The'Minnesota Gophers, seven- have trouble with *he big troys, according to Johannes n. Our old intrastate friends, the. MSU Spartans, have fallen from last year's third-place conference grace. Still, the spotty Spartans sport some tournament possibilities. Once again, the premier pas- turizer should be defending ra- tional runner-up Pat Milkovich. Other Spartan hopefuls include 177-pounder Jeff Hersha, fresh- man 190-pounder Shawn Wit- comb and the Rodriguez broth- ers, Dave and Steve; at 142 and 150 respectively. Northwestern's Wildcats, who dropped a 23-14 dual meet de- cision to Michigan last weekend, ' could also prove tough. Outstanding Wildcats include Pete Dombrowski at the middle weights, 142-pounder Alex Ric- cominni and 190-pounder Al Mar- zano. Riccominni decisioned Michigan's Karl Briggs,, 9-1, last weekend while Marzano pinned Harold King. The other conference chal- lengers should remain medio- cre in duals and will rely on a few key names for any tourna- ment respectability. Illinois' Fighting Illini, an- other team Johannesen singled out as improved, will rely main- ly on their lighter wrestlers like 118-pounder Gary Matlock. Only heavyweight Kevin Pancrantz, who also performs at piard for the Illini gridders, looks strong at the heigher weights. NEXT WEEK, WED. 3-5 p.m. 6:30-8:3Q p.m. A chance to be a better hustler! Free Instruction Pocket Billiards MICHIGAN UNION EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY l presents THE FOURTH ANNUAL HEALING Restoring health, wholeness, harmony, justice. In our culture, healing of mind, body, spirit and community are most often considered separately, for instance, through psychology, medi- cine, religion, and politics. Are there principles, processes, images, forms on which seemingly diverse kinds of healing are based? Canterbury House invites you to a series of discussions this term on "The Connections Among Physical, Psychological, Spiritual and Political Healing." FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1976-8 P.M. PSYCHIC HEALING STERN MORGAN, practicing psychic-healer 8:00 HERB TEA, 8:30 DISCUSSION 218 N. DIVISION STREET corner of Catherine and N. Division UPCOMING: February 13th Max Heirich on "Non-Western Medicine." March 19th: Dick Mann on "The Connection Between a Political Perspective and a Spiritual Per- spective" i WORKSHOP IN STUDIO AND ART HISTORY in FLORENCE, ITALY. MAY 3-JUNE 12, 1976 6-8 hours graduate 'or undergraduate credit For additional information or application blanks contact Office of International Studies, 330 Goodison, Eastern Michiian Universitv. Ypsilanti. 1'.' SERVING ANN ARBOR SINCE 1939 ANN ARBOR CLOTHING BIG TAII SI: ZES TO FEATURING Q JOHNNY CARSON Q CRICKETEER Q BOTANY 500 0~ McGREGOR Q V-LINE f LEVI Q HAGGAR MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED,* 662-5187 211 S. 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