SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, ]865 TNT MICUTG A N./ A nA iK i 7C . SUNDAY SEPTMBERl2,L195lei aflf'TE!A1T UbANU1H1L PAGE SEVEN Vidmer, Gabler Continue QB Battle m, Gophers Depend on Sophomore Strength, By GIL SAMBERG There are problems and then again there are problems. Yesterday's scrimmage at the Stadium made it clear that Bump Elliott has one at quarterback . the kind other coaches can only dream about. Dick Vidmer and Wally Gabler are making a legitimate horsel race out of their competition for' first regular-season bruises this year. "They were about equal today. Both of them did a real good job," said Elliott after the pounding was over yesterday. Although he has been leaning towards Vidmer thus far, he indicated that he still couldn't commit himself on who the starting field general would be against North Carolina. Long Drives Both Vidmer (the sophomore) and Gabler (the senior) gave him what he has wanted all along, sustained drives. Vidmer engineer- ed scoring marches of 70 and 65 yards, while Gabler took com- mand to bring the ball in from 53, 42, and 68 yards out. But scor- ing was certainly not the point of the practice, as a 28-man White team made up of the Wolverines' first offensive and defensive units (in away dress) took on everyone else in obviously unbalanced com- bat, and pulled out a 60-7 win. Vidmer took over quarterback- ing duties initially and went 70 yards in eight plays - including two 15-yard passes-ending with fullback Dave Fisher plunging over from the one. With 30 seconds left in the quar- ter Rick Sygar upped the total with a 47-yard punt return but missed on the point-after attempt. Sygar, doing most of the place- kicking for the Whites, again showed that the Wolverines are thus far lacking a strong field goal threat. "We are a little short on power," admitted Elliott. "Now, Detwiler does have the power, but practice has been shortened and he hasn't had any time at all to ping on the 19, Tim Radigan went in for a stint at fullback for the Whites. But he never got to touch the ball on that first drive, as Gabler fired two quick sideline passes to Jack Clancy, hit Det- wiler on the four, and rolled out and then in for the score. Vidmer went back in for the 16 yards in the typical dodging, weaving style which is such a con- trast to Gabler's. Vidmer's last TD march ended with an 18-yard run by Ward during which the exciting junior faked half Carl Legacki right onto the grass by throwing his left arm (holding the ball) out and then cutting inside the defender. Ward then side-stepped the safety on the four-yard line and went in untouched. Pullen Sees Action Jeff Hoyne, so far the Wolver- ines' top defensive end, saw limit- ed play because of a shoulder in- jury, and Tom Pullen, a 200- pound soph from Ottawa, Canada, emerged as the first alternate and got plenty of the experience which Elliott wanted for him. The third man working at end is Rocky Rosema. "I was a little disappointed in Rosema's play today," said El- liott. "But he has been making steady progress all week and he'll improve with experience. The other ends are pretty inexper- ienced also, and we'll be checking the films and grading each of them to decide in what areas they'll work." Overall, Elliott expressed some dissatisfaction, in that play wasn't crisp enough. "We have some ways to go on offense and de- fense," he commented. "We did get what we wanted out of this scrimmage though, and that's game experience. But we were de- fending against our own style of offense, and one of the problems can be that the players know their opponents too well.1 Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE FRATERNITY -Daily-Jim Lines QUARTERBACK CANDIDATE Wally Gabler fights for extra yardage in yesterday's scrimmage at Michigan Stadium. Con- tending with Dick Vidmer for the starting role, Gabler scored two touchdowns and completed five passes for 89 yards in the scrimmage. by GRETCHEN TWIETMEYER Last year's surprise team, Min- nesota, turned last place predic- tions into a 5-4 record good for a fourth-place tie with Illinois. With a rambunctious crop of sophomores to support star quar- terback John Hankinson this year, the Gophers could pull another surprise and be a major contend- er for the Big Ten title. Thirteen-year veteran Murray Warmath is the lone conference coach committed to wholesale platooning, mainly because of ne- cessity, for returnees include 23 lettermen but only nine starters, with gaping holes remaining at center, guard, and halfback posi- tions. Brightest hope for Warmath is Hankinson, the quarterback who broke virtually every Gopher pass- ing record as a junior last season. With 78 completions out of an at- tempted 138 passes, he ranks as one of .the best passers ever for Minnesota. Brown at End Top receiver and senior end Aaron Brown caught 27 of those passes for another Gopher record. His speed and power put him high on pro scouts' lists. Other lettermen receivers in- clude Ken Last, Kent Kramer, and Ray Whitlow. He scored the winning TD against Purdue last season, but he must make up a scholastic deficiency to be eligible. The strength of the traditional Warmath defense (fourth in the Big Ten last year as opposed to ninth in offense) will give way to a stronger offense due to the mass and experience of the line. Line Experienced Up front, playing the old fash- ioned two-way football, Brown, Last, Kramer, and senior letter- man Bob Bruggers will all return at end.Gale Gillingham and Don Rosen started at tackle last year and will probably retain the same status this fall. Both centers graduated, so Warmath switched Chuck Killian from guard to the center post. In the backfield only one re- turnee is available at each of the slots other than quarterback. Gopher halfbacks will platoon with juniors Ray Whitlow, Dave Coulburn, and Dick Peterson on offense. Hubie Bryant and Stu Maples will see duty on defense. Letterman Maples returns after a one year lay-off. At fullback, Jerry Newsom will get support from junior Joe Holm- berg and John Williams, a sopho- more. Question Marks The big variable, which looks notably optimistic this year, is the sophomore contingent. Though Warmath called the newcomers only "average," Gopher followers call them the best material for Minnesota in years. Highly rated rookie backs Hubie Bryant, John Williams a n d Gordon Condo, along with ends Bobby Lee and Charles Sanders comprise the major hopefuls. HILLEL SUPPER CLUB TODAY, 5:30 p.m. KOSHER DELICATESSEN See Friday's ad, or phone 663-4129 For Best Selection of Paper Back Books in Town Browse at FOLLETT'S State St. at N. University BEER-PIZZA-BANJOS L work on it. I'd suppose that this would be our next step, though." Gabler took over in the second quarter and climaxed his first set of plays with a 26-yard TD run which had so much blocking that he trotted the distance easily. After another drive stalled when Fisher was called for clip- third quarter and sparked a drive which ended with a fumble by Detwiler down at the 13, but which gave the soph a chance to show a little bit of everything. Starting from his own 32, Vidmer lateraled back to Ward, who out- ran a couple of linebackers around end and went for 20 yards. The next two plays saw the quarterback scramble for 19 and I KOSHER KO-OP Kosher Dinners Served Weekday Evenings and on the Sabbath at H I LLEL. DORM RESIDENTS participating are eligible for University rebates. For further information, call 665-4926 or 663-4129 Sponsored by B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation and National Council of Young Israel. W L Pct. Minnesota 91 54 .628 Baltimore 81 62 .566 Chicago 82 63 .564 Detroit 80 64 .556 Cleveland 77 65 .542 New York 71 75 .486 California 67 78 .562 Washington 63 81 .438 Boston 56 89 .386 Kansas City 53 90 .366 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 5, Cleveland 3 California 6, Washington 5 Minnesota S, Boston 4 Kansas City 3, Baltimore 2 New York 3, Chicago 1 TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Cleveland Minnesota at Boston Kansas City at Baltimore New York at Chicago California at Washington NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 9 9 10/2 12;/ 201/2 24 27 35 37 I BIMBO'S J r 11 I WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 t 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION, EASE PRESSURE-SAVE TIME-IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 parges an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature and, fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your required reading and in the additional reading you will want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning, the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY at" the Michigan Union beginning on October 12. Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method, and see it applied by U of M students who have recently completed the course. BRING A BOOKI Demonstrations will be held at the Michigan Union THURSDAY, Sept. 16 at 7:30 P.M. TUESDAY, Sept. 21 at 7:30 P.M. THURSDAY,Sept. 23 at 7:30 P.M. NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, W L Pct. GB San Francisco 81 59 .579 - x-Los Angeles 81 61 .570 1 Cincinnati 81 62 .566 13 Milwaukee 79 62 .560 22 Pittsburgh 78 67 .538 52 Philadelphia 73 68 .518 8Y2 St. Louis 70 73 .490 121/2 Chicago 65 79 .451 18 x-Houston 60 82 .423 22 New York 45 100 .310 38% x-Late game not included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 6, Chicago 4 Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2 Milwaukee 9, New York 0 Philadelphia 3, St. Louis I Houston at Los Angeles (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at San Francisco , Houston at Los Angeles Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Milwaukee at New York St. Louis at Philadelphia A K L .1 A NEW CONCEPT IN FRATERNITY APARTMENT LIVING Room 3-C. .. Union l 18964 Coyle St. Inc. Detroit 35, Michigan .11 wp At ATTENTION MUSIC LOVERS! Why .Pay More? 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