THE MICHIGAN DAILY daily sports NIGHT EDITOR:' PHIL IBROWN I Daily-Peter Dreyfuss BILLY HARRIS (80 above left), hauls in one of four catches against Navy in his greatest perform- ance of the year. But his most crucial reception was against Indiana last Saturday, when he took a touchdown aerial from Dennis Brown to give the Wolverines their winning points in a 27-22 victory. SNARES A BOMB: Harris catch keys Indiana win U.S. SW MEXICO CITY RP) - United States swimmers continued to dominate t h e i r specialties in Olympic competition yesterday, collecting six more medals includ- ing two gold and scoring their fourth 1-2-3 sweep of tile Games. Meanwhile, the Americans wrap- ped up two gold medals in yacht- ing and another silver in shooting events. Doug Russell of Midland, Tex., started the American swimming sweep with a :55.0 clocking for the gold medal in the men's 100- meter butterfly, whipping across the finish line just ahead of team- mates Mark Spitz and Ross Wales. Spitz, of Santa Clara, Calif., a bronze medalist in the 100-meter freestyle, took the silver award and Wales, of Youngstown, Ohio, cap- tured the bronze. Russell's time matched the Olympic mark he set in the trials of the new event. Spitz was clock- ed in :56.4 and Wales in :57.2. It was the first time Russell had ever beaten Spitz in a race. "I thought I could beat Mark," Russell said, "and I was deter- mined to do it tonight. I was swimming for the United States and if I had not got a medal, I would not have returned to the United States but I would have gone to some desert island." Previously, the United States had finished 1-2-3 ,in the men's 200-meter individual medley and the women's 100-meter freestyle and 200-meter 'butterfly with America's Ellis Daniel of Elkins Park, Pa., and Sue Shields of Louisville, Ky., taking the silver and bronze medals. Miss McClements' winning time was 1:05.5 with 18-year-old Miss Daniel finishing in 1:08.8 and the 1-year-old Miss Shields across in 1:06.2.' Holland's Ada Kok, world record holder in the event with a 1:04.5 finished fourth in 1:06.2. America's 800-meter men's free- style relay team gave the U.S.A its 11th swimming gold medal with Yale's Don Schollander swimming the anchor leg for its victory over Australia in 7:52.3- two tenth of a second off the world record. The Soviet Union was third. The world mark was set by an- other Schollander-anchored team in the 1964 Games at Tokyo. Buddy Friedricks of New Or- leans finished first in yesterday's final Dragon class race, officially sealing the yachting gold medal he had clinched on Sunday. Skipper Lowell North of San Diego, Calif., and crewman Peter Berrsett of Seal Beach, Calif., took the Star class gold, wrapping it up with a first place finish in the final race after clinching it on points Sunday. Michael Page of Briarcliffe, N.Y., won a bronze medal in yes- terday's equestrian competition with the United States team claiming a silver. Tennis ace Ashe' sparks local exhibitio By BILL DINNER Anti Arbor tennis fans were given a rare treat Sunday when the top three members of the U.S. Davis Cup team joined forces with the Michigan tennis team and presented a fine exhibition. A small, but select and knowl- edgable crowd of about 2500 got a good idea of the great abilities of the Davis Cup team's members. In the opening match. Charles. Pasarell, ranked number one by the USLTA, combined with Michigan sophomore Roman (Cholo) Al- monte against Michigan doubles "champs Pete Fishback and Brian Marcus. In the main match, reigning U.S. Open champion Arthur Ashe faced Clark Graebner, who was a semi- finalist at Forest Hills. Graebner has been out of action for the past two weeks with a strep throat and showed little enthusiasm. . Ashe, who is at his worst on in- door courts, was especially both- ered by the glare from the ,lights. He summed up his opinion of the courts in two words: "Simply ter- rible!" Possibly the best show was taking place on the sidelines, how- ever. The ball boys rounded up for the match were young and in- experienced. There were plenty of balls around for Ashe and Greab- ner to use, but the ball boys never seemed to have them. Graebner, usually the first to be- come upset, remained calm dur- ing the first set. Ashe, already' troubled by the lights, was further disturbed by the boys and gave the first set to Graebner, 6-3. In the second set Graebner couldn't stay calm as the boys destroyed the remnants of concen- tration. But Ashe had apparently decided that the ball boys had to be a joke, so he ignored them the best he could as he whipped Graebner 6-1. In the deciding set action picked up on all fronts with the boys rivaling the players for top billing. But the match was won by the players as both Graebner and Ashe found the feel of the court. Ashe equaled Graebners powerful serve and beat him with' beautiful net strokes to take the third set and the match 6-3. In the final match Graebner and Pasarell teamed up against simmers on Olympic I - NFL Standings Western Conference Central Division W L L DETROIT Minnesota Green Bay Chicago Co Los Angeles Baltimore San Francisco Atlanta 3 2 3 3 2 3 2 4 astal Division 6 i0 5 1 3 3 1 5 T 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a a By JOEL BLOCK Billy Harris did not have a very good' game against California. Several passes were thrown his way, some right in his gut; but he dropped them all. In the following three games against Duke, Navy and Michigan State, he ran the shuttle run be- tween the sidelines and the Wol- verine huddle. He was a primary receiver, but only of Coach Bump Elliott's messages to quarterback Dennis Brown. And for most of Saturday's' game with Indiana, Harris must have thought he was still playing delivery boy. For three quarters they didn't even look at him, much less pass to him. Then with less than five min- utes left to play in the game Harris ran his familiar "steak" pattern into the Indiana end zone. This time the ball , was there to greet the junior end and this time he caught it to give Michigan its blue chip security touchdown and eventually/a, 27-22 win. The play was no classic in grid- iron history; hell, Jim Seymour of Notre Dame could show you a score of ABC videotapes of recep- tions, each longer and classier than the 36-yarder Harris caught. But that pass, besides being a personal victory for Harris, was good example of what Michigan is doing this year that, they haven't done in the past three. It was the clincher, the knock- out, the last piece of sod on the opponent's grave. Michigan is no longer running scared in the fouth quarter; they are, in effect, kicking the other guy when he's down. The Wolverines finished off Michigan State in a similar man- ner last week. Behind by one point in the fourth quarter, Brown used a helter-skelter version of Mich- igan's "pro zip right curl" to con- nect with Jim Mandich on a 53- yard scoring toss. The Indiana game also showed that Michigan's depth problems are mostly on paper, not on the field. Elliott was forced to use, soph reserve Tim Killian in place of starting left linebacker and defensive captain Tom Stincic when Stincic was kicked out of the game for roughness. Killian moved right into the linebacking spot as if he played there all his life and made 10 tackles in the second half in addi- tion to calling the defensive signals.r Other rookies have replaced in- jured starters with equal ease and proficiency. Dick Caldarazzo has, moved in Xor Bob Baumgartner," redshirted with a knee injury, at left' guard. Henry Hill has taken over for Gerry Miklos at middle- guard. Cecil Pryor has switched from a linebacker to a defensive end to replace Jon Kramer, lost for the season. But there were times on the field Saturday when Michigan was caught with its pants down. In- diana quarterback Harry Gonso called several variations of a "throwback" pass play which had the Wolverine defenders going one way while the pass was going an- other. Michigan cornerback G e o r g e Hoey was burned badly on one of .the throwback plays,, a 17-yard touchdown pass from Gonso to halfback Bob Pernell. Hoey said in the locker room afterwards that he made two mistakes on the play; one, he was lured inside by an- other pass receiver and neglected his outside duties; and (2) once he recovered and took a shot at Pernell sweeping the end, he mis- judged the unfamiliar, wide white out-of-bounds stripe and tried to butt Pernell out of bounds. This failed miserably because Pernell was several yards from the sideline and Hoey just moved him a little farther outside. Still, the razzle-dazzle "inno- vative" football which worked for the Big Red so much last year, failed to mesmerize the Wolver- ines this time. Least of all, an end named Billy Harris. Eastern Conference Cleveland 3 3 New Orleans. 3 3 St. Louis 3 3 Pittsburgh 0 6 Capitol Division Dallas 6 0 New York 4 2 Washington 3 3 Philadelphia 0 6 Sunday's Results Green Bay 14, DETROIT 14, tie Chicago 29, Philadelphia 16 San Francisco 26, New York 10 New Orleans 16, Pittsburgh 12 Dallas 20, Minnesota 7 Cleveland 30, Baltimore 20 St. Louis 41, Washington 14 Los Angeles 27, Atlanta 14 AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W L New York 4 2 Boston 3 3 Miami Z 3 Houston 2 5 Buffalo' i- Western Division Kansas City 6 1 San Diego 5 1 Oakland 4 2 Denver 2 4 Cincinnati 2', Sunday's Results Boston 23, Buffalo 6 San Diego 55, Denver 24 Miami 24, Cincinnati 22 Kansas City 24, Oakland 10 New York 20, Houston 14 Pct. .600 .500 .400 .333 1.000 .833 .500 .167 .500 .500 .500 .000 1.00 .667 .500 .000 Pct. .667 .500 .400 .286 .167 .857 .833 .667 .333 .286. T 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 --Daily-Eric Pergeaux REIGNING U.S. OPEN and U.S. amateur tennis champ Arthur Ashe delivers his big serve in his singles exhibition match with Clark Graehner at the Events Building Sunday. Ashe, Graebner, Charlie Pararell, and Don Dell-all members of the Davis Cup team-performed with Michigan varsity players in the fund- raising show. - - - - - -- --- I I Want to move up fast in aerospace/electronics? Hughesiswhere the action is. HUGHES HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY y, GUESTS? Do them a favor. Put them up at Bell Tower Hotel, then join them on the town after the game. Bell Tower Hotel-bigger than before, elegant new rooms and suites-the only great hotel in campustown.Near where all the action is! Reservations? 769-3010 BELL TOWER HOTEL 300 S. Thayer Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 I 4= You can go forward, go fast, go far.. .at HughesFieldService&Support Division. If you are seeking a stimplating assign-_ ment where ydu can get in on the ground floor of the rapidly-expanding aerospace/electronics field, capitalize immediately on your background and training, and progress quickly toward your career goals-Hughes Field Serv- ice & Support Division in Southern California will welcome your inquiry. Some current fields of interest include: the customer at operational sites. Re- sponsibilities include: providing main- tenance, operational and technical assistance; formal and informal on-the- job training; logistic assistance and the investigation and solution of equipment problems experienced in the field. Re- quires a Bachelor's degree in E.E. or Physics. Experience with military fire control, radar or communications systems is desirable but not mandatory. MAINTAINABILITY ENGINEERING training devices, plan field training pro- grams and prepare courses for use at customer bases. Requires a Bachelor's degree in E.E., or Physics. Experi- ence in preparing and presenting technical electronics material in the classroom and laboratory is highly desirable but not mandatory.; ENGINEERING WRITING Specialists in printed communications convert complex engineering data into simple, accurate, illustrated support. DESIGN ENGINEERING Openings exist for Electronic and M chanical Design Engineers in the deve opment of Trainers & Simulators andi the design of checkout and test equip ment for latge missile and aerospac systems. These responsible position require interest and/or experience i such design areas as: analog circuit digital logic, switch/ relay logic, electr mechanical packaging, infrared tes ing, inertial guidance and Command Cont rol systems. Responsibilities will include all phases of design ando dev eIopment from, concept to ..During design phase, positions involve publications, including technical man- e- analysis of the feasibility of built-in, self- uaIs, orders, brochures, sales proposals, l- test features, application of automatic etc. Fields of interest include: digital/ in checkout equipment, standardization of analog computers, display P- circuitry design, minimization of ad- systems, digital and e justment and alignment requirements sand packaging of the' product. During in system development, assignments will / Ind involve production of a complete set of - integrated logistics support doc-' uments for use as planning guides.Requires BS.degree n E. E. or Physics. voice satellite com- munications systems... Band many others.Requires ind EB..E.grorinEPhysics.ics CAMPUS INTERVIEWS ..f1 ~sarr.- dr. I "U'AD IF YOU HAVE * "A BETTER IDEA," 4r PHILCO-FORD-k IS THE PLACE " e TO, HAVE IT You are going to be responsible for tomorrow's world, why shouldn't you contribute to it today? Philco-Ford is people oriented. .. we will give you room to roam.... to discover yourself ... and to take a personal part in the vital decisions that can change the state-of-the-art and the state of civilization. Come and talk to us about your future ... or write to College Relations, Philco-Ford Corporation, C & Tioga Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. 19134. PHILCO-FORD WILL BE HERE ON THURSDAY, OCT. 24 DIVISIONS: Aeronutronic ' Appliance - Communications & Electronics Consumer Electronics + Education and Technical Services - International"- Lansdale -Microelectronics - Sales & Distribution - Space & 3 !. , I I