Wage Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 7, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Buckeyes lead AP poll Seymour out indefinitely By The Associated Press Ohio State's loaded Buckeyes are favored to roll on to a sec- ond straight national collegiate' football championship. With 40 lettermen. including 18 of the starters in the 27-16 vic- tory over Southern California in; the Rose Bowl, back and battling for positions, the Buckeyes are so deep that they had to be an over-' whelming choice to be number one again in the Associated Press' an- nual pre-season poll. Twenty-six of 33 sports writers and broadcasting experts in the national panel picked Ohio State riding a 14-game winning streak, for the championship honor in col- lege football's centennial season. The Buckeyes are deep and talented and so are the teams picked to finish right behind-Ar- kansas, Penn State and Texas-- in what shapes up as one of the most exciting seasons in years. Top pre-season honors went to the four winners of New Year's Day Bowl games. Now they'll have to prove it on the playing field. It won't be easy. Arkansas, 16-2 conqueror of un- beaten Georgia in the Sugar Bowl, was picked for second. Penn State, unbeaten now in 19 straight gans and 15-14 winner over Kansas in the Orange Bowl, was the third choice, and Texas, which blasted Tennessee in the Cotton Bowl, vas the No. 4 selection. Picked to move up were '_)kla- homa, 11th last season. Hovmon. 18th and Mississippi, which was unranked. Mississippi is an outstandiig ex- ample of what's coming up in the new season. Ole Miss walloped Vir- ginia Tech 34-17 in the LibertyI Bowl but still didn't make the Top 20. But the Rebels, like Ohio State, have 40 lettermen back for an- other campaign. The Top 20. with first place votes in parentheses. Points awarded for first 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9- 8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Ohio State (26) 611 2. Arkansas (2) 420 3. nn State (3) 390 4. 'Texas (1) 343 5. Southern California 290 6. Oklahoma 264 7. Houston (t) 231 8. Georgia 219 9. Mississippi 211I 10. Missouri 209 11. Notre Dame 204 12. .Michigan State 148 I3; Alabama 120 14. Indianta 98 15. Tennessee 67 16 Stanford 53 17. LUCLA 52 18. Purdue 42 1. Minnesota 40 20. Auburn 31 Other teams receiving votes, listed at- phabetically: Air Force Academy, Art- ?ona State. Colorado, Florida State, Kansas, Kansas State, Kent State, Louisiana State. Memphis. & i a m i , Fla., MICHIGAN, Nebraska, North Caro- linia State, Ohio U.. Oregon State, Richi- mond, South Carolina Southern Meth- odist, Syracuse, Virginia Tech West' Virginia, Wyoming. 1 By MORT NOVECK Defensive end Phil Seymour be- came the first major Wolverine casualty as the Michigan football squad held what Coach Bo Schem- bachler described as an unsatis- factory scrimmage yesterday in the rain. While the extent of Seymour's injuries are not yet definitely known, it is feared that he will be lost for at least four weeks and possibly for the whole season. Schembechler considers the loss serious saying. "It's not very good if we lost players of this caliber. That's the risk we're running by holding scrimmages, but we have to have them." Though he is concerned with the loss of Seymour, Schembech- ler had other reasons for beingL dissatisfied with the session. Though from a superficial glance .it appeared that the offense had no trouble moving the ball, the coach was not at all pleased with its performance. He attributes their success against the defense to the play- ing conditions, which despite the advantages of Tartan Turf, were less than ideal. It seems that the artificial turf is as slippery as rass whon it glts wet and bath sides had traction troubles. This s harder on the defense as they d-n't know their moves until the offense makes their's and quick cuts were virtually impossible. One of the offensive problems which the coach was concerned with was the blocking by th- of- fensive interior line. This is a problem which he acknowledged earlier and so far nothing h a s happened to solve it. A major cause of the lines prob- lem is the center position. Three of the five centers on the roster are injuried. The other two are sophomores who have not yet mastered the technique of snap- ping the ball and then blocking. Schembechler admits that this is going to be a problem as he doesn't know when his other cen- ters will be combat ready. The offensive backfield w a s also unimpressive yesterday with the exception of quarterback Don Moorhead. Moorhead, who h a d several good runs despite the wet field and appeared to be master- ing the quarterback option, had a "real good day" according to RENT STRIKE mGASS MEETING Phil Seymour (91) poises for ( tackle Newconi 'e, Roche win; Ashe trails Laver, 2-0 Ro Schemrnbechler Schembechler. The same can not be said for the rest of the back- field. Though the defense w a s slipping and sliding it still w a s able to catch the ball carrier be- hind the line of scrimmage on several occasions. MONDAY, SEPT. 8 8:00 P.M.-Union Ballroom Organizers Workshops FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (A, - John Newcombe and Tony Roche, two young products of Australia's tennis assembly line, kept their footing and their poise in rainy, slippery conditions yesterday and striked their way to the semifi- nals in the $137,000 U.S. O p e n championships. Sept. 9, 10, 1 1 at 8:00 IN THE S.A.B. FOR MORE INFORMATION: CALL 763-3102, VISIT 1532 S.A.B. READERS NEEDED Readers and or assistants for library work are needed by blind students. Volunteer or for pay. May specify preferred reading areas (e.g. French, technical material) , and wheth- Newcombe, 25, needed only 13 minutes and the benefit of a questionable line call to finish off fellow countryman, Fred Stolle, in a match halted after 3 hours Friday by darkness. The final score was 7-9, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 13-11. Then, after a delay of two hours and 35 minutes because of a heavy shower, Roche, 24, took the rain- soaked center court at the West Side Club to erase Earl "Butch" Buchholz of St. Louis 6-1, 9-7, 7-5. Favored Rod Laver, playing hide and seek with the raindrops, won the first two sets 8-6, 6-3 and was t i e d at 12-12 in the third when darkness halted his dramat- ic, slashing, semifinal duel with defending champion Ashe. The Laver-Ashe match will be completed, starting at 1 p.m. Sun- day and the winner will go against one of two rugged young Austra- lian pros, John Newcombe or Tony Roche, who came through delayed quarter-final tests. Laver, a frail-looking little red- head dangling from a left arm as big as a wagon tongue, was look- ing for his 29th straight match victory and moving within a step of his second grand slam. er wish to read tact: Student in person or for taping. Con- Affairs Counseling Office, 764-7432. " ak Ip -Daily-Richard Lee Sportswriter, girl wed The Sports Staff offers its congradulations to Tom and Pat Copi upon the taking of their nuptials yesterday at the Depot House. Tom has been a long time sports photographer and occasional writer, while Pat has served in the capacity of news editor and moral supporter. We honor their divine union. HOMECOMING '69 MASS MEETIN TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 16th 7:30 P.M. before she goes from UNION BALLROOM f . . S - l A V;9'Ntv I to l-' ~ ' ,/j', " 'h 'n ____ f 1 X . jl _l { i r .. ,,4 ( , __ "j'I/' Q ' x ' t y 71: I Just drop a fifm cartridge into a KodalInstamatic camera and save Carol before she starts - r I t . 0.. . ~ ! ' I A y I. .. K W II