PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, FR EE posterifor your room! Beban, By The Associated Press __ Stabler W~DAA~7;. ~ ~ -'- t~f~ "K"'s____ -"' ;M4 4 n ' n I 4 Y ar;i dr5 W +. ;v b'e~t1 . R parrya; wo . .b vr grrtd A iU? A jT r M+,4 f c, 7 .BEER. b. a"" ',1 n A t4)IN i4W4 'C"'? vr'rIN BIG~ ......,, .. ..,,.,., .. . . . .. . . . . ........ A. ''A ".ii ....:.: >5, i" t F'4C, n'.. . . . '; :'v '",,,,,x++.:;;;:;:. f .C .r, : ,j :, % '',: ~i>.;i ksr-Ck4 nutty. sC..d ..x... K-:. ea a . { R If most pre-season publications are right, you could hand the Heisman Trophy to UCLA quarter- back Gary Beban right now. He's a powerful candidate. But there's many a third down crisis between now and the award- ing of 1967 individual college foot- ball honors. Before the All-Amer- ica selectors come to write down any names, keep an eye on such starry candidates as Super Bill, Stampede, Golden Shoes, Barri- cade Bill, Yazoo, The Human Hammer, Orange Juice, Calamity and The Spoiler. The Bruins' Beban, bounding back from the broken right ankle which kept him out of the South- ern Cal finale last season, is a smart field general who can pass short or long from the pocket or on the move. And he runs like a man possessed. Gary has 3,770 total offense yards to show for two years. Used only 10 minutes in the spring game,1Beban played just long enough to complete three passes1 he tried and carry six times. The Tennessee-UCLA game at the Los Angeles Coliseum Sept. 16 will provide a fine comparison between Beban-who some pro scouts feel is better than 1966 Heisman Tro- phy winner Steve Spurrier-andj the Vols' fine Dewey Warren. Notre Dame and Michigan State have some mighty fine' quarter- back talent in junior Terry Han- ratty and senior Jimmy Raye, re- spectively. "Super Bill" Bradley, assuming he can shake off the injuries which dogged him as a yearling, could steer Texas to great heights. He can run, pass, receive, return kicks and punts for a 42.5 'yard average. Florida's Larry "Stampede" Smith is a 6'4", 216-pound half- back who was a sophomore sen- sation with promise of more to come. Oscar "Golden Shoes" Reed of Colorado State adorns the cov- er of the NCAA Football Guide as testimony of the esteem in which he's held. Kent State's Don "The Human Hammer" Fitzgerald returns after being barely beat- en out for the major college rush- ing crown in 1966. 1 Lead Si nelius Davis of Kansas State, Cot- ton Bowl MVP Kent Lawrence of Georgia, Dartmouth's darting Gene Ryzewicz and Nebraska's Ben Gregory are examples. Like- wise Arizona's transfer, Ron Gar- din. McVey, a 9.5 sprinter, left the track team long enough to ap- pear in just one spring scrim-j mage. He touched the ball nine times, covering 236 yards includ- ing a 97 yard kickoff runback. It is a vintage halfback year. Behind Apisa and crushing Larry Csonka of Syracuse at full-, back are Colorado's Wilmer Cooks, Duke's Jay Calabrese, Georgia's Ronnie Jenkins, Indiana's Mike, Krivoshia, Purdue's Perry Wil- liams and USC's Mike Hull who has a gaudy 6.7 rushing average. Other quarterbacks to note in- elude Alabama's Kenny Stabler, Danny Holman, San Jose State; : Dick Vidmer, Michigan; Kim King, Georgia Tech; John Eckman, Wi- chita: Ed Podolak, Iowa; Gary Pajcic, Florida State; Mark Reed, Arizona; Steve Lindell, Army; Ron r. & Burton, Colgate; Bobby Duhon, rity - Tulane and Ed Hargett, Texas A rity -& M. he Tide Receivers - Richmond Flowers, earlier Tennessee; Dennis Homan, Alaba- ma; Jerry Levias, SMU; Freddie Hyatt, Auburn; Haven Moses, defensive San Diego State; Richard Trapp, ansational Florida; John Wright, Illinois; our. That Larry Gilbert, Texas Tech; Bill ohn Per- Anders, Ohio State; Jim Beirne, en, guard Purdue; Ron Drake, USC; Doug back Bob Flansburg, Washington State; tegory. Reggie Rucker, Boston U, and Mac ,an State Haik, Mississippi. a, end Al Centers-Bob Johnson, Tennes- Przybycki, see; Mike Murphy, Duke, and Bar- ard Tony ry Wilson, LSU. d George Offensive guards - Henry Da- evel. And vis, Grambling; Ray Phillips, Clyde Lee Michigan; Dave Tsaloff, Miami of e ran for Ohio, and Utah's Norm Chown. Defensive ends - Tom Hend- ck crop is ricks, Miami; Mike Ford; Alaba- n's War- ma; Mike McCaffrey, California; 3owl MVP George Foussekis, VPI; John Gar- Sun Bowl lington, LSU, and Bob Stein, Wyoming, Minnesota. now, Gar- Defensive tackles-Jim Urbanek, .nia, Cor- Mississippi; Dennis Byrd, North Carolina State; Bill Stanfill, Geor- gia; Greg Pipes, Baylor: Richard Lee, Grambling; Doug Crusan. Indiana; Steve Thompson, Wash- ington; Joe Blake, Tulsa; Tom Domres, Wisconsin; Glenn Green- berg, Yale; Art Thomas, Syracuse; Ted Gibbons, Buffalo; Lance Ols- sen, Purdue, and Joe Greene, North Texas State. Middle guards - Granville Lig-, gins, Oklahoma; Wayne Meylan, Nebraska; Curly Culp, Arizona State; Chuck Kyle, Purdue; Dan Sartin, Mississippi; Gusty Year- out. Auburn; Greg Keller, Pitt; Blaine Nye, Stanford, and Holy Cross' Glenn Grieco. Linebackers - Adrian Young, USC; Joel Brame, Texas; Mike far Shower Reid, Penn State; George Bevan, LSU; D. D. Lewis, Mississippi State; Joe Rushing, Memphis State; Randall Edmonds, Georgia Tech; Ken Corbin, Miami; Don Manning, UCLA, and Bill Enyart of Oregon State. Defensive backs - Bobby Johns, Alabama; Frank Loria, VPI; Tom- my Trantham, Arkansas; Bob Amburlgey, Cincinnati; Dick An- derson, Colorado; Tom Garretson, Northwestern; Leroy Keyes, Pur- due; Harry Heatwood, Oklahoma State, and Stexe Luxford, Dart- mouth. Placekicker - Jerry DePoyster, Wyoming. Punter - Garry Houser, Oregon State. the kitchen eyie_ RICK STERN KEN "SNAKE" STABLER thrills the crowd - not a ra during an Alabama game last year. Stabler, kicked off th due to "procedural difficulties' with coach Bear Bryant this year, is back to try for All-America laurels. Take your pick of six colorful front-page blow-ups like this available now from your New York Times campus rep. See him to- day. And sign up for delivery of The New York Times at special low college rates. O. J. "Orange Juice" Simpson is the 9.5 sprinted who comes to Southern Cal, as a junior college transfer, branded the best ball carrier to emerge from the San Francisco area since Ollie Matson. At the University of Texas at El Paso, formerly Texas Western, lurks 6'5", 227-pound linebacker Fred "Calamity" Carr, who has the dashman speed and enthus- iasm for the hunt. "Barricade Bill" Dow is Navy's captain and defensive end and Bill "The Spoil- er" Staley is a 240-pound defen- sive tackle at Utah State. "Yazoo?" That's 6'3", 197-pound Jim Smith, a guitar playing Eng- lish major with a 9.8 clocking who patrols the defensive backfield at Oregon. Can't miss all-every- thing, say the Ducks. Like last year, when they fin- ished 1-2 in the country, Notre Dame and Michigan State have great material. The Irish best - without slighting Hanratty-may well be 6'5", 270-pound end Kevin Hardy and se 6'4" split end Jim Seymo leaves only linebacker J gine, safety Tom Schoe: Dick Swatland and half Bleier in the standout cat Besides Raye, Michig boasts fullback Bob Apis Brenner, tackle Joe P safety Jesse Phillips, gu Conti and defensive en Chatlos at the same le then there is halfback C who in one spring game 226 yards and five TD's. Nationally, the halfba especially strong. Housto ren McVey, Bluebonnet B Chris Gilbert of Texas,E MVP Jim Klick fromy Georgia Tech's Lenny Sn rett Ford of West Virgi Contact: MARK FRANKEL Box 241 Phone: 764-1817 Netters Advance at Nationals i ATTENTION STUDENT WIVES: By The Associated Press FOREST HILLS, N.Y. - Both men and women began first rounds in the National Tennis Championships yesterday, and all top-seeded players advanced-but not all will be around for the next round.' Third-seeded Tony Roche, the Australian who just won the U.S. doubles title with countryman John Newcombe, defaulted to ex- U.S. Davis Cupper Gene Scott of St. James, N.Y., because of a sore shoulder. Newcombe, top-ranked in the tournament, turned up with an ailment in his right leg, but managed a 6-2, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 triumph over 18-year-old Mike Es- tep of Dallas, Tex. Other first round action saw two members of Michigan's ten- nis squad gain victories, as jun- iors Pete Fishback and Dick Dell advanced to second round play. Fishbach, from GreatNeck, N.Y., defeated John Sharpe of Austral- ia, 5-7, 6-3,;6-4, 0-6, 16-14. Dell, meanwhile, had an easier time. The Bethesda, Marylander, defeated Ecuadorian Eduardo. Zu- lora, 5-7, 9-7, 6-1, 6-3-. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN offers a wide selection of excellent opportunities for full-time, permanent employment. Choose from a variety of interesting and rewarding positions including: " OFFICE (Secretarial-Clerical) * LIBRARY ASSISTANTS " DATA PROCESSING (Tab, Key- punching, Programming Systems) * ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS " NURSES (R.N. & L.P.N.) * X-RAY TECHNICIAN " MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS (Clinical & Research) " OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS " LABORATORY TECHNOLOGISTS These positions are in a variety of academic, re- search, patient care, and administrative units lo- cated on the Central Campus, North Campus, Med- ical Center & Willow Run. Salaries commensurate with education and exper- ience. Full fringe benefit program with wide oppor- tunity for promotion. Those interested in Full-time, permanent positions contact Central Personnel, 1020 Admin. Bldg., Phone 764-7280 or Medical Center Personnel A6001, Univer- sity Hospital, Phone 764-2172. Part-time or temporary applicants apply, Part-time Placement Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg. I I CAMPUS B-LEVEL 2 or 3 persons 1 bedroom Separate study Furnished-$185 THE' COLONY 731 Packard-near State 663-8866 ECONO-CAJI LABOR DAY TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS When there's a solid quartz boulder on your left, a spiny painful tree branch hanging over the right, and a three foot miniature water- fall straight ahead of you, it's best not to be on that particular river in a canoe. And if you are, you'd better act fast. I dropped my paddle, ducked my head and curled'up in the bottom on the canoe. Actually it realiy wasn't that way because you can't do it that way on a rough river or you won't get out dry. It does take skill. A least one experienced paddler per canpe and a good knowledgeof the jay stroke, the sweeps'and the draws. There is a spot like that on the Brule river way up in the North- western corner of the state of Wisconsin. The Brule is an excep- tionally rugged river because it is very, very narrow. and you have to go through many dangerous spots that you you could bypass on a wider river. It is also a gorgeous river, though not nearly as much of a wil- derness river as some of the others in the area. The banks rise steeply, up to 30 feet on either side, and $25,000 homes with elaborate over- hanging porches pop up every half mile or so. President Calvin Coolidge spent the summer of 1928 at an estate on the Brule built on an island in the middle of theriver and connected to land only by two old wooden bridges. There are a number of other buildings on the estate but a large wilderness area surrounds it and I wonder if the entourage of reporters and photographers didn't have to build fires and camp in the woods. The Brule is over 15 per cent fast water, which makes it a fine canoeing river. At one point you round a corner, only to find another corner with a ten foot brick wall on either side staring you in the face. Further on, there is another bend where the current is so power- ful that the canoe is almost inevitably carried into a bank of thorny bushes. The first time I took the, river, my bowman and I both ducked to avoid the bushes-and swamped the canoe. I became well acquainted with the Brule and other rivers such as the Namekagon by working as a camp counselor at a camp near Hayward for the past three summers. The Namekagon makes a good' beginners trip, fun but not par- ticularly dangerous. It is much wilder than the Brule. No houses for ten or fifteen miles and fauna of one sort or another are always popping out-deer, eagles, porcupines, muskrats, raccoons, not to mention hoardes of insects. The Federal government is in the irocess of designating a number of wild rivers to be preserved in their na- tural state and the Namekagon is one of those being considered. (Of course, against the background of Ann Arbor's textbooks and football games, or Detroit's burned out blocks, it seems ridiculous to talk about a bunch of rivers in northern Wisconsin. They are some- what beautiful though, and a canoe trip beats a football game 49-0 in my humble opinion. (Not that I'm trying to sound like Henry Thoreau. But the re- moteness of it is interesting, especially in view of the fact that 200 years ago, that's the way everything was around here. The change is no less than remarkable. (I told a friend of mine that I was going to write a column about canoe tripping. He laughed as cynically as I sometimes write, and snorted "Are you kidding me? The only thing they want to read about is LSD tripping." Which doesn't really matter, because the rivers are very happy anyway, regardless of the people that do or don't want to read about them) ! 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