PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .%ArrTlUnAV t*Wrr-nUVV 99 I49Iq THasa y CHVal VllV I .V tAIZ.yILyJ~A.JRa~Lpk~ AlUjKl-)A V, VU'1'UBLIL ZIS, 1967 I NATIONAL OUTLOOK: VoIis By BOB LEES A look at this week's football polls shows that the power in the nation now rests in the South and West. On that basis, the bal- ancing point should be some- where west of the Deep South; and, give or take a few miles, that's where today's big game, Louisiana State at Tennessee, is found. Actually, Knoxville, Tennessee, has to stretch a point to fit that geographical definition. But the fourth-ranked Volunteers, after last week's whipping of Alabama, are still pretty much in the clouds, Holding the Tide's vaunt- ed offense to a mere 13 points, Tennessee showed again that its gutty defense, led by safety Bill Await Tiger Attack and linebacker Nick Showalder, is which won its first game last 3-2, but the victory side includesI one to fear. week after five losses, three of a squeakjr over sixth-ranked But LSU won't back down from them shutouts. USC, moreover, is Georgia. Despite the partisan the Vol challenge. The Tigers sixth in the nation defensively crowd, however, McVea and com- have a 4-1 record, their only loss with regard to allowing points. pany should triumph. being a two-point defeat to Mi- Look for the Trojans to have Wyoming, also undefeated andj ami of Florida, and quarterback little trouble gunning down the ranked number eight, visits an{ Nelson Stokely leads a potent Ducks. Arizona State team which has al- ground attack. Unbeaten and third-ranked ready scored 28 touchdowns in Yet Tennessee was able to beatE Colorado should likewise fare well six games. Max Anderson, fourth Alabama with a third string Clid h dIws el h a n sifu Alabma wth thid stingtoday in their Big Eight clash in the nation in rushing, has led quarterback, and with Dewey with Oklahoma State, but the the Sun Devils to a 5-1 record. Warren slated to return, the other Western powers might not But quarterback Paul Toscano, Tiger defense should be declawed. have it so easy. fourth in total offense, helps Wy- Juice oming keep pace with tosses to Southern California, mean- Ninth-ranked Houston, riding Gene Huey, Hub Linsley, and while, has continued to outclass on the elusive mastery of full- flanker Vic Washington. The everyone in sight, and this week back Warren McVea and a sec- Cowboys also boast All-American should be no exception. The top- ond-ranked offense which has kicker Jerry Depoyster with his ranked Trojans, with O. J. Simp- ground out 430 yards per game, 55-yard field goals and 81-yard son running and passing his way will be hosted by the Rebelsof high scoring is generally the rule: to every offensive record, will be Mississippi. Ole Miss; who beat and with the home town crowd entertaining an Oregon squad the Cougars handily last year. is on their side. ArizonStiust THE VANDA..S AND THE BhtiOKE Nil IAII ...DIouig Hellei ..r 'awxeis cek Replay; Crossers Ml/eet Irish Announcing the new.... SPECIAL OFFER to all residents of EAST QUAD 5" .. SMALL PIZZA 100 MEDIUM$150 LARGE 00 any one item -2 30c for each additional item OFFER GOOD OCT. 30-NOV. 2 Call 761-1111 for fast free delivery -FAS1E= DMIND vat uiictt aauc~~, X o u a u u U t might pull an upset. Bulldogs Prime Other games involving ranked schools involve a return to the Southland. Georgia, bidding for the Southeastern Conference crown and a prime bowl slot, should have little trouble main- taining its number six ranking against winless Kentucky. But North Carolina State might find the going a little rougher in its grudge match with Duke. The big game in the East pits Penn State against the Orange of Syracuse. Penn State may be only 3-2, but their two losses have been by a total of three points to Navy and UCLA. Quarterbackj Tom Sherman, listed among the nation's offensive leaders, has thus far passed the Nittany Lions to a fine year offensively. Football Morality: 'Murray, Bump,KAra, Duffy For the football nut who believes his sport has everything, it now has everything plus. A real live moral issue has popped up. This is, the case of the coach who piles on points when he has the opposition beaten. The whole problem comes to a head today, when Michigan goes up against Minnesota, while Michigan State visits Notre Dame. The Wolverines are in the classic position. Last year, ignoringj their own tradition of keeping the score down so as not to em- barrass the opposition coaching staff, they scored 49 points in shut- ting out Minnesota. Then, Michigan was solid against a Gopher squad that had no offense, and on that day at least, no defense either. This year, Michigan is forecast to- pay through the nose in the grand old style. Minnesota is loaded. They found a passer last week. Coach Murray Warmath is angry over last year's game. The team is boiling with'the idea of revenge. The Wolverines, Bump Elliott and the other coaches, already down in the dumps figure to be embarrassed. So much for the model situation. The MSU-Notre Dame issue is much more complicated. At stake apparently is the repu- tation of Ara Parseghian as an ethical football coach, one who plays by these "gentleman's" rules governing the sport at least most of the time. Strike one on Ara was when he violated everybody's sports- manship code when he went for the tie last year against MSU. No matter how bad a tie seemed in a situation like last year, it was made infinitely worse by the fact that at the end of the game, he made no effort to find out which team was better. MSU was given the right to be bitter forever for being tied by a quitter, and taken advantage of in the polls because Notre Dame has national appeal and MSU is a state institution. Strike two was the propensity first displayed last year to smash a weaker team to wipe out the memory in the heads of the sportswriters of a troublesome result the previous week. The first victim was Southern California last year after the tie. LUSC had just been hit by an eligibility crisis on top of some late season injuries. Ara took advantage. After Notre Dame lost to Purdue this year, they followed it up with a 56-6 decision over hapless (hopeless), helpless Iowa, and the revenge of USC preceded a 47-7 squeaker over scandal-racked Illinois. This brings us right to today's game, and whether it becomes strike three on Ara will be debated for years. It starts with whether Coach Duffy Daugherty at MSU is dig- ging his own grave. Hit by a fantastic number of injuries, he sus- pended six members of his tea min what some have called a drive for Ara's sympathy. Then Ara made it much worse for himself by opening his big mouth and releasing the supposedly confidential list of those suspen~ded. The relative strength of the teams is now unbelievably unbalanced. Notre Dame has the power to smear State all over the street. State, was never very strong, losing two games when they were healthy. The Irish were beaten twice by superior efforts. The new point here is that Ara probably has nothing to gain, either in the polls or anywhere else, by pouring it on now. The excuse is taken away. Assuming the gentleman's agreement is right, Ara has no reason to take advantage of Duffy's position. If he believes it is wrong, he will be prepared to be repayed if he ever has a bad recruiting year. Ahhhh, what the heck. Watch Michigan State win in the "upset of the century". IBy PHIL BROWN Michigan's ruggers, presently holding down second place in the Western Division of the South West Ontario Rugby Union, will be out to improve on their 2-2-0 record today as they meet Wind- sor Blackrock at Ferry Field. Blackrock, the league's third- 17-0 drubbing by Michigan earlier this year, and has won only a place team, was the victim of a single game (over last-place Mich- igan State). The ruggers have enjoyed a fine season,sdespite the two con- ference losses. Unbeaten by an American team, they defeated Indiana, ranked fifth in the coun- try last year, a week ago. Constant The club has played either three or four games each weekend, giving every member a chance to compete against teams from other schools. Nearly sixty players saw action against Indiana and Wind- sor, as the club won three of four games. Michigan's 'A' team will face the Blackrock squad at 3 p.m. in the old stadium behind the intra- mural building. An intrasquad game, between the graduate and undergraduate members of the club, will precede the 'A' contest. There is no admission charge, and all who have never seen rug- by played are encouraged to at- tend. Windsor Michigan B.ackrock Michigan State Crossers After dropping a 7-3 decision to Michigan State in the season opener last week, Michigan's la- crosse club takes on Notre Dame in South Bend today. The Irish handed the 'crossers a one-sided 8-1 loss when the two clubs last met in 1965. But the contest will be Notre Dame's first of the fall season, and Michigan is counting on the experience gained against MSU to give them the advantage. Today's game will complete Michigan's fall schedule, since La- crosse is primarily a spring sport. Lacrosse Spring Schedule: 4 W L T PF PA 2 U 2 34 18 2 2 A32 28 1 1 1 19 23 0 2 1 6 .22 GS t South West Ontario Rugby Union I March 30-31 T April 3 Bow April 6 Ball State April 10 April 24 Ohi at April 27 Cleveland Lac *Denotes Home Game ournament at MSU ling Green at Muncie Defiance* 1 Wesleyan t Delaware rosse Club* NBA ACTION: Celtics Smack Pistons* 76ers Smash Sonics 'I By The Associated Press DETROIT .J? The Boston Cel- tics remained undefeated last night as they routed the Detroit Pistons 128-109 for their fourth straight National Basketball As- sociation victory. Breaking a 23-23 tie late in the first period with seven straight points - five by Tom Sanders, the Celtics opened a 34-29 lead by the quarter's end and from then on never were in trouble. With John Havlicek dropping in eight points, the Celtics in- creased their bulge to 62-50 by halftime. 1rBI Ioa rd . The Michigan golf course will close for the season at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 31. All golfers should clear their lockers be- fore this date as the clubhouse will be closed until next spring. Then in the third period, Bos- ton turned matters into a rout by outscoring Detroit 24-7 in the first six minutes and subsequent- ly ledby as many as 32 points be- fore finishing the period with a 102-75 edge. In the quarter, Sam Jones was the big man for the Celtics with nine points. From then on, the reserves took over for both sides. Havlicek topped the winners with 22 points with Sam Jones adding 21 and Bailes Howell 19. Dave DeBusschere scored 26 for the losers, who now are 2-3 on the season. PHILADELPHIA - Hal Greer showed a hot hand for the fourth straight game as the jump shot artist led the Philadelphia 76ers to an easy 132-115 victory over the Seattle Supersonics in a Na- tional Basketball Association gam elast night. Greer scored 26, boosting his total for the last four games to 138 as the unbeaten 76ers won their fifth straight. It was the third consecutive loss for the Supersonics, who have won only one of six games in their maiden season in the league. Greer shot seven for 13 from the field and 12 for 15 from the foul line in the mismatch. The Supersonics, suffering natural growing pains, never had a chance as the defending NBA champions raced to a 17-2 lead. Seattle was held without a field goal for the first six minutes and was never in the game even though it cut the margin to 10 with a lot of garbage shots in the late minutes. 0 44 A hi r 4 Feeling lost in the crowd? Step up and be recognized pendent-start a Passbook at Ann Arbor Federal. Be inde- Savings Account. Receive high 4' earnings of 4.75%, paid and compounded quarterly, an effec- It's been replaced. tive annual rate of 4.84%. And, your funds, are instantly available for use when you need them. Come in soon-you'll find us at the corner of Liberty and Division... where you're always welcome. For the 19th consecutive year, we've replaced the bug. With another bug. To those of you who expected some- thing fancier, sorry. (The '68 looks just like the '67 crossed out above.) To those of you who now own a VW, congratulations. (Once again your model has not gone out of style.) To those of you who've been thinking .a n un ktwir . n n w nne nicethinkin. (They have bOilt-in headrests.) The windshield wipers are much more efficient. (They're larger.) Even the shifting is easier. (We put a decal on the window to show youhow.) All in all, we feel that the 36 nice little changes on this year's Volkswagen make it'the best ever. Of course, every year we build the "perfect" Volkswagen. And then we do a masterful iob of This ONE Solution .. . WETS CLEANS . SOAKS An antiseptic wetting, cleaning and sterilizing agent. Just a drop guaran. tees a smoother surface when in. serting your cnntact lenses Ende 'Ii A A /A / A Aml ^ l ^"AA I At IAInf AA IFn I ^A At