Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 9, 1969 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 9, 1969 U I c AGC By JERRY CLARKE Anyone in the Middle Atlantic states this summer who saw a hag!ard ean wandering around with a lantern probably thought they had spotted Demosthenes in his search for an honest man. But what they probably saw was an Atlantic Coast Conference .ootball coach desperately look-' ing for a quarterback. Of the eight teams in the con- ference, only two, South Carolina and Duke, return proven signal- callers. The rest of the coaching! staffs have been doing everything possible to come up with someone to guide their attacks, some with little success. Paul Diet/.el, coach of the: oache South Carolina team can sit back and watch the scramble from an enviable position. Tommy Suggs was a sophomore sensation on a 1 team that came on strong late in, the season. He is but one of the 31 lettermen Dietzel has ready for the upcoming campaign. Suggs will be throwing his pass- es to Fred Ziegler, last season'sj All-ACC flanker. Warren Muir, a superb fullback who led the squadI in rushing is another returnee.' The freshman team was undefeat- ed and will contribute to the over-I all depth. The only cloud on the Gamecocks' horizon is a punishing schedule that includes Georgia, Florida State, VPI, and Tennessee. Leo Hart will again guide the look for quarterbacks Duke attack, and few teams have better passers. Sixth in the NCAA in total offense last season, Hart has three of his top receivers back. Proven fullbacks Phil Asack and Don Baglien key the running game, aided by the threat of Hart's passes. Coach Tom Harp has his problems with a leaky de- fense that he hopes to rebuild with ATLANTIC COAST 1968 Conference Standings North Carolina -St. 6 1 0 Clemonson 4 1 1 Virginia 3 2 0 South Carolina 4 3 0 Wake Forest 2 3 1 Duke 3 4 0 Maryland 2 5 0 North Carolina 1 6 0 Only one offensive back, lead-i ing ground gainer Charlie Bowers, returns, so Edwards will have toI revamp that unit. Darrel Moody saw little action last fall, but will have to hold down the quarter- back slot. It should be the same solid, unspectular type of team as last season's champions. Clemson's v e n e r a b I e coach Frank Howard is looking for a comes through at quarterback, there will be few points on the scoreboard this fall. Even talented kicker Don Hartig cannot score if the team doesn't get him close enough. Tar Heel fans still look to the future. Wake Forest's new coach, Cal Stoll, moans the loudest about thv loss of his quarterback. Freddie Summers led the offense to an pair of lines as well as a new average of over 21 points a game, quarterback. Ray Yauger, a pow- although the team only won twice. { erful fullback, and Frank Waters, Although 13 starters return, they a veteran flanker, will key the of- will be nondescript without Sum- fense, but will not move the ball mers' leadership. Jack Dolbin and unless Howard finds somebody to Ron Jurewicz are adequate run- Nine starters return from the worst defense in the conference to at least give Maryland some depth. Stellar quarterback Alan Pastrana graduated, as did top rusher Billy Lovett. A mediocre backfield will operate behind a veteran line. The defense will be better, but there is room for much more improve- ment. New coach Roy Lester will find it hard going to improve at all. Virginia lost its entire starting backfield, including star runners Frank Quayle and Jeff Anderson. Quarterbacks Danny Fassio and Brian Kitchen will handle t h e quarterback position, but the glory this season will come from defen- sive ends Tommy Patton and Al Sinesky. George Blackburn, ACC coach of the year last season, will have to work a few miracles this one. sophomores. Rookie defensive back Rich Searl and All-ACC lineback- er Dick Biddle will have to carry most of the load if the Blue Devils are toimprove. Despite the loss of ten starters, defending champion North Caro- lina State will look much as they did last year. Earle Edwards smiles at the mention of Ron Carpenter, his All-American pros- pect at defensive tackle. Junior Jack Whitely was sensational last year, and will help insure a stingy defense. block. A veteran defensive back-' field will help some, but the de- fense was decimated by gradua-I tion. Unless sophomores come1 through this fall, the Tigers will! not roar in their usual manner. 1 Gayle Bomar, an outstanding; quarterback on a poor team, grad- uated from North Carolina. BillC Dooley's TAr Heels are in a deep hole, with only three starters back on defense. Unless Paul Millei AERO FLYING CLUB is accepting membyers now FLY FOR LESS The least expensive way to learn ners, but senior David Connors, a transfer from Purdue who once backled up Bob Griese, c annot come close to replacing Summers. The defense is experienced, but it gave up too many points 1 a s t season for that to console Stoll. ART PRINT LOAN Liven up your room-rent a print from Art MASS MEETING TUTORIAL PROJECT Tuesday, Sept. 9 7:30 P.M. 3rd Fl., Conference Room Radical Film Series PRESENTS HISTORIA DE UNA BATALLA Distributed by Newsreel A documentary by Manuel Octavo Gomez about the illiteracy, campaign in Cuba in 1961. It shows the young people going into the countryside to teach, and their successful return to the city. The footage is juxtaposed with The Bay of Pigs disaster of 1961, which serves to heighten the heroic struggle of the Cubans to build a new society. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th 78-9-10-1 I Admission 50c CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard Print Loan for a semester or year. 3511,3516 Tuesday 3-5 Wednesday 3-5, 7-9 Thursday 7-9 Friday 3-5 SAB zi:= Camel Race A camel sponsored by the Mustang Ranch near Sparks, Nevada rushes in hard at the wire to nose out his adversary. The event was a revival of competition begun in 1866 between camel drivers who used to haul salt across the desert to Virginia City gold and silver mills. JOIN COLLEGE REPUBLICANS! at Diag Table Monday-Thursday FIRST MEETING Thursday, 7:30 P.M. Michigan Union, Rms. K, L, M, N Belt Midrash of Ann Arbor PRE-REGISTRATION FORM Name Campus Address Phone Number_ (Check those courses which are of interest to you, fill out the above form, and mail to Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbior) FOR MORE DETAILS CALL 663-4129 1. HEBREW FOR BEGINNERS-Mrs. lana Mueller. 2. HEBREW FOR GRADUATES OF BEGINNER'S HE- BREW-Mr. Alan Krashny. .,. 3. READINGS AND CONVERSATION IN PROGRAM- MATIC THOUGHT IN HEBREW-Mr. Krashny and staff. 4. BASIC JUDAISM-JEWISH ETHICS-Rabbi Gerald Goldman 5. READINGS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT-Rabbi Mer- vin Tomsky. 6. AN ADVANCED SEMINAR IN JEWISH HISTORY AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION: PALESTINE 1926- 1956-Mr. Joseph Katan and staff. 7. A SURVEY OF JEWISH COMMUNITIES IN EUROPE AND AMERICA: A MODERN HISTORICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE DIASPORA- fMr. Michael Harrison and staff. .8. PERSONAL WORTH AND COLLECTIVE IDENTITY --Mr. Joseph D. Ben-Dak. 9. INTRODUCTION TO MODERN LITERARY YIDDISH -Dr. Charles Krahmalkov. 10. INTERMEDIATE MODERN LITERARY YIDDISH - Lecturer and time to be announced. 11. INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH MUSICOLOGY - lecturer and time to be announced. 12. INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH ART-Lecturer and time to be announced. 13. RESEARCH AND READING: individual preparp- tion of Research papers with individual guidance and availability of Beit-Midrash staff. 14. HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB-For those who can converse in Hebrew there will be a Hebrew can- - Join the NBT student happening " At National Bank and Trust we go out of our way to make things happen for our student customers with their special banking needs. Some banks think of students as just the numbers of their checking accounts, but at National Bank, we don't forget we work with people. We offer stu- dents a full line of services including: BUDGET CHECKING ACCOUNTS--10c a check, paid for ahead of time in books of 25, so you don't have little dimes to keep track of (like at other banks), and there are no other service charges. 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