I I Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday. November 2, 1968 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY _, ...,.... 7 ,,..,R. ..., ...N .. ..... +. .. .. Jay hawks seek Buffalo hl'* e PRAISES GIBSON: McLain modest Young winner" By JIM FORRESTER Hey there, sports fans! Brace yourselves for another fantastic Saturday as the nation's collegiate youth prepare themselves for those modern Arthurian tilts known as football games. This week's game of the cen- tury is the joust between the Buf- faloes of Colorado and the Kan- sas Jayhawks. The Buffalos have won four games in the current campaign and have been "chip-' ped" but twice - by California (remember them?) and number- ten ranked Missouri. Winning, though, was Colorado's way last weekend as the Buffaloes stampeded tough Oklahoma in a 41-27 upset. Colorado sports the Big Eight's leading offensive player in quar- terback Bob Anderson. Anderson ran for three touchdowns in a KENSINGTON MARKET They assembled in Toronto, the five best rock-men in Canada ..,recorded in Manhattan, in a prestigious series of sessions... proving the cream of Canada to be a very heady brew. single-handed stomp of th ers. On the season, the CU caller has tossed for 863 and six touchdowns while up another 455 yards + ground. The targets for the A BOB ANDERSON (11), Buffalo hope for an 'uns rence. Anderson leads th is what he will need to t of 45.2. e Soon- aerials have been ends M o n t e feat of the season. Kansas is the Huber and Mike Pruett. Huber has class of the conference and holds r signal caught 24 passes thus far in the down the number three spot in the 3 yards campaign, nine of which came in national ranking to boot. eating the losing cause to California. KU quarterback Bob Douglass on the But for all the hoopla surround- is nearly as spectacular as Ander- ing Anderson, Colorado will more son as he has passed for 734 yards nderson than likely suffer their third de- and eight touchdowns without an interception. The running game, though, is where Kansas does the most dam- age. Jayhawk ballcarriers have combined to average just over 300 yards per game on the ground. Far and away their most dan- gerous rusher is little Don Shank- line. The Senior halfback stands 5'9" and is a featherweight foot- baller at 177 pounds but runs at ... .the phenomenal clip of 7.8 yards "on each carry. The afternoon looks long for Colorado, who has been less than stingy with its rushing , defense giving up more than 200 yards in every game. To top all this off Kansas has scored more points this year than any other team in the nation, piling up 271 in six contests. It looks like Buffalo steaks for Kansas and cips for the boys from Boulder. Penn State meets its toughest COLORADO QUARTERBACK, is the challenge to date as it goes against et over Kansas in today's game at Law- Army at UniversityPuperby bN- he Big Eight in total offense, but points anced attack that features the op the Jayhawk's nation leading average running of halfback Charlie Pitt- man and fullback Tom Cherry. But the pasing game makes the offense go and tight end T e d Kwalick makes the passing go. Kwalick's statistics are not im- pressive - he has caught only A io -i 16 passes for one touchdown in the season's first five games. But Kwalick is so good that two, often three men have to fol- low him every place he goes. This allows quarterback Chuck Burk- hart to either throw to someone else or run the ball to where those three men following Kwalick are supposed to be. EETING S The Army, on the other hand, has offense also. They socked it to Duke last week for 57 points in Nov. 4 7:30 P.M. probably their finest performance i' of the year. Steve Lindell is one of the better field generals in the B rEast and Charley Jarvis is pro- on Ballroom bably the best fullback in that part of the country. The Cadets may pull an upset ~today and Eldridge Cleaver may t3 hzmfa~.. ;......pull one next Tuesday. They have about the same chances. Georgia, tied once against five victories, plays host to Houston's Cougars in a game that rates as a tossup. In their last outing Georgia showed some points but not enough of them to be impres- sive as theybeat weak Kentucky h