Ice Hockey vs. Western Michigan Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Arena SPORTS Fiesta Bowl Tickets On Sale Today and Tomorrow 'M' Ticket Office t The Michigan Daily Tuesday, December 3, 1985 Pag9 GRAPPLERS FACE 'TOUGHEST COMPETITION' Frosh Wyland takes title lBA 5^ By SCOTT SHAFFER Although only one of his wrestlers captured a title in his class, coach Dale Bahr was pleased with the Wolverines' showing in the Northern Open at Madison, Wisconsin on Satur- day. "This was the toughest competition we've faced this year," said Bahr of the meet. Several post-collegiate Olympic hopefuls competed as well as highly ranked Iowa State, Wisconsin and defending national champion Iowa. THE LONE Michigan champion was freshman Doug Wyland, who defeated two Hawkeyes en route to the 118-pound championship. "Doug's been coming on like gang-busters," said Bahr. "He's stamped himself as one of the nation's top freshman at 118." Wyland, a Pittsburgh native, pinned Iowa's John Regan in the semifinals before defeating Regan's teammate Steve Knight 9-5 to earn the Northern crown. Wyland added to his accomplish- ments in practice yesterday by beating William Waters two-out-of -three to earn the right to represent the school in the Las Vegas In- vitational on Friday. THE ONLY other Wolverine to make the finals was Scott Rechsteiner. The 190-pound Rechsteiner won four matches before losing to Iowa's Duane Goldman, ranked second in the nation 10-1. "Scott just hammered everyone in sight until the finals," said Bahr. Three other members of Bahr's team finished in the top six in their divisions. Kirk Trost, the country's top ranked heavyweight had won three straight matches before he wrestled 360-pound Refrigerator-like Gary Albright of Nebraska in the semifinals. TROST, who weighs 220, held Albright to a 1-1 draw, but lost the match on the referee's decision. Trost was then beaten by a 350-pound Olympic hopeful, Matt Ghaffari, and was forced to settle for fourth place. Kevin Hill also garnered fourth place honors for the Wolverines. Although he lost to Wisconsin's Terry Manning 3-1, the 167-pounder proved to Bahr that he could "go with Iowa's and Wisconsin's best." Waters compiled a 4-2 record, good for sixth place in the 118-pound division. "William did a great job. It's important for him to go out and take charge," said Bahr. TWO KEY grapplers, John Fisher (134 pounds) and Joe Pantaleo (158), were kept out of action because of in- juries that they sustained November 24, in the Ohio Open. Pantaleo, who hurt his ankle, has resumed practicing, but Fisher has not been so lucky. Ranked third in the NCAA, Fisher was picked as the nation's top freshman last year, but his injured shoulder may need surgery. Bahr said that a decision will be reached shortly. Summing up his squad's perfor- mance, Bahr was not fazed by the scarcity of Wolverines in the finals. "Many of the nation's top wrestlers were here," he said. "Take away the post-collegiate ones, and our guys are beating the people they need to in or- der to finish in the country's top eight." The rest of the team is now preparing for the Vegas Invitational. The two day event will be held at the Showboat Hotel and will feature ap- proximately 45 teams including Wisconsin, Iowa State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. UPI Football Poll Michigan remained amidst the top college football teams in the nation as they held onto their number five ranking in this week's UPI college football poll. The top five teams all stayed intact with Penn State at the top. The Nit- tany Lions received 37 of 39 first place votes. Alabama made the biggest climb, going from unranked to 14th. Auburn, the team Alabama defeated last Saturday, fell from sixth to 15th. Nebraska, the Wolverines' op- ponent in the Fiesta Bowl, moved up from eighth to sixth. Tons o' fun ~~LU~ U Inspired by the fame of Chicago Bears' rookie William "The Refrigerator" Perry, these women formed "The Refrigerettes." The cheerleading crew, created by Chicago restaurateur Rich Melman, consists of women weighing over 200 pounds each. [TO SERVE YOU WE'LL NEED. SOME DIRECTIONS. ROAD TO SUCCESS S CHAPT ER 11 Wyland ... captures title Rechsteiner ... loses in finals PROSPERITY _ I CCHA Scorecard WMPL HOCKEY POLL 1. Wisconsin (7) ............. 2. Denver (2) ................ 3. Boston College........... Minnesota-Duluth ....... 5. Bowling Green (1) . 6. Minnesota ......... 7. Michigan State ......... 8. Northern Michigan . Yale...d.................. 10. Harvard .............. W L 11 5 11 3 9 3 12 3 12 4 10 4 10 5 9 4 4 1 3 1 T 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 Pts 22 22 19 25 24 20 21 19 8 6 Pts. 22 19 17 16 16 13 12 10 3 Goaltending GP GA J. Shawhan, LSSC ....... 7 15 N. Foster, MSU...........7 23 B. Essensa, MSU ........ 7 24 G. Kruzich BGSU.......10 39 R. Exelby, LSSC........ 8 33 K. McCaffrey, WMU..... 6 25 D. Sharpe, FSC.......... 7 23 B. Smith, Miami..........9 29 D. Kwilas, BGSU........4 18 B. Ryan, UIC ........... 10 47 Avg 2.52 3.14 3.44 4.00 4.04 4.17 4.33 4.41 4.50 4.65 Sav 127 172 177 326 186 169 174 202 114 253 Pct. .894 .882 .881 .893 .849 .871 .883 .874 .864 .843 __ CCHA Standings (Overall) W L T Bowling Green (12-4) ........ 11 3 0 Michigan State (9--1) ....... 9 4 1 Lake Superior (94-1) ........8 5 1 Western Michigan (106) ..... 8 6 0 OhioState (8-8)........ 8 8 0 Ferris State (8-7-1) .......... 6 7 1 Illinois-Chicago (610) ....... 6 8 0 MICHIGAN (5-9) ............ 5 9 0 Miami (3-12-1)............... 1 12 1 FRIDAY'S RESULTS Bowling Green 7, Miami 2 Ohio State 4, MICHIGAN 2 Michigan State 6, Illinois-Chicago 4 Western Michigan 9, Ferris State 3 RPI Tournament, Troy, N.Y. First Round: Lake Superior5, Alaska-Anchorage 3 RPI4,RIT2 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Bowling Green 4, Miami 2 Ohio State 6, MICHIGAN 5 Illinois-Chicago 3, Michigan State 2 RPI Tournament, Troy, N.Y. Consolation: RIT 10, Alaska-Anchorages RPI 3, Lake Superior 2 FRIDAY'S GAMES Bowling Green at Illinois-Chicago Ferris State at Miami MICHIGAN at Western Michigan Michigan State at Lake Superior Windsor at Ohio State SATURDAY'S GAMES Bowling Green at Illinois-Chicago Ferris State at Miami Michigan State at Lake Superior Western Michigan at MICHIGAN Michigan-Dearborn at Ohio State 1. Penn State (37)......11-0-0 2. Oklahoma (2) .......... 9-1-0 3. Iowa ................. 10-1-0 4. Miami (Fla.) .......... 10-1-0 5. MICHIGAN..........9-1-1 6. Nebraska .............. 9-2-0 7. Tennessee ...........7-1-2 8. Air Force .............. 11-1-0 9. Brigham Young .......10-2-0 10. Louisiana State ....... . 11. Texas A&M ........... 12. Arkansas .............. 13. UCLA ............... 14. Alabama .............. 15. Auburn............ 16. Ohio State ........... 17. Florida State .......... 18. Fresno State .......... 19. Maryland ............. 20. Arizona ............... 8-1-1 9-2-0 9-2-0 8-2-1 8-2-1 8-3-0 8-3-0 8-3-0 10-0-1 8-3-0 8-3-0 Pts. 581 517 493 480 425 316 292 274 250 197 193 126 118 96 82 51 38 29 21 20 PLEASE MAILINY U 13ttlj SURVEY TODAY CCHA LEADERS Scoring GP D. Dorton, WMU............. 16 J. Wansbrough, BGSU ....... 16 Paul Lowden, FSC ..........16 P. Ysebaert, BGSU ....... 16 S. Burnie, WMU ............. 16 Peter Lowden, FSC.......... 15 B. Jones, MICHIGAN ........ 14 G. Sweetnam, FSC........... 16 J. Madill, OSU............... 16 T. Thrun, WMU .............. 16 G 17 16 12 8 17 12 11 2 13 11 A 20 20 21 23 12 15 14 23 11 13 Pta 37 36 33 31 29 27 25 25 24 24 7 Barber Stylists Professional e Experienced NO WAITING! DASCOLA STYLISTS Maple Village 761-2733 Liberty off State.........668-9329 *************1***i********************************************************* y Represent an organization ... ... represent yourself * And EAT 'EM BY THE SACK!! Adelphi Delta Upsilon Present the 1st Annual WHITE CASTLE EAT OFF * Thursday, December 5 11:00 p.m. Nectarine Ballroom * Teams consisting of two contestants will compete to see who can finish 20 White Castle hamburgers first. Winners receive trophies and prizes from Ann Arbor merchants. * Dancing will follow. Registration fee is $10/team. Proceeds go to Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and American Cancer Society r9 REVIEW OF CLASSIFIED RESEARCH An ad hoc committee has recently been formed in response to a request by the Regents of The University of Michigan that the Executive Officers and faculty of the University reconsider the University's current policy on Classified Research. The ad hoc committee will be scheduling public hearings this term and early next term at which it will reeceive testimony from members of the University on the current policy. To allow the committee to become aware of the full range of opinion on campus, we invite interested parties within the University to prepare and submit to the committee written statements of their views. Statements tailored to the concerns raised in the Regents charge to the committee will be particularly helpful as the committee begins its work. The committee has been asked by the Regents to address at least three particular concerns with the current policy: 1) the time limit of approximately one year on restrictions on open publication of the results of research; 2) the language in Section 3, which the Regents find ambiguous, and 3) the procedures for implementing the policy. We invite your views on these and other concerns you may have about the University's Policy on Classified Research. Written statements should be submitted to: