12-Sunday, September 9i 1979--The Michigan Daily Wildcats submit to Wolverine machine (Continued from Page 1) ther hampered the rebuilding of the e. Of the four, Schembechler is op- iistic that Paris and Powers will urn to action soon. rhree plays later, Michigan was first d goal-to-go on the two-yard line. ckey then ran the ball for a TD put- g Michigan on the scoreboard for the st time this season. RETURNING placekicker, Bryan rgil notched the conversion point to ake the' digital scoreboard read chigan 7, Northwestern 0. The ex- rienced senior kicked six more extra ints during the game. Undisputedly, Michigan's most ex- ing score of the 60 minutes of action rme with 1:48 remaining in the first arter. The 6-0, 172 Carter broke loose For more sports see pages 10 and 11. a 78-yard run and Blue touchdown, tting Michigan ahead by the score of 0. ['he wide receiver from Riveria ach, Fla. stunned the crowd with his autiful run as he gracefully floated in r Michigan's third score of the game. [is performance did not surprise e," said Schembechler after the ie. Yet the young speedster, who n three punts for 83 yards and took o kickoffs for 42 yards, was nervous admitted afterwards. CARTER DISPLAYED much more thusiasm abouthis day than did his ach. "Coach Bo was telling me about ing nervous about it (his first game) frpnt of 105,000," commented Carter, ut he was about the only one on my side, y' know, not to be nervous," he continued. The fleet-footed receiver chose to play his college football at Michigan over Texas because he wanted "to be on a winning tradition team . . . Rose Bowl," he said. Carter, whose longest run in high school was only 49 yards, described his thoughts as he broke open bringing the fans to their feet. "I thought about high school days back then, but it wasn't that easy then," remarked Carter. In response to a question about whether high school football was tougher than playing against Northwestern, Carter answered "yeh" CARTER SCORED his second touch- down of the game, Michigan's final score, when quarterback John Wangler, who started the second half, passed 12 yards to his receiver in the endzone with 4:00 remaining in the third quarter. The Wolverines scored three other times during the first half under the guidance of Dickey. Dickey, who passed well despite being slow on run- ning the option, left the field at halftime with his team ahead by the score of 35-0. Michigan raised its point total on their second series, moving the ball 81 yards in nine plays. The score came with 3:30 to go in the first quarter when Dickey rolled left and drilled his,'first touchdown pass this season to tight end Norm Betts in the endzone. The pass accounted for nine of the 68 yards that Dickey passed during the afternoon. MICHIGAN'S FOURTH score of the day came with 7:26 showing, on the clock in the second quarter. With first and ten on NU's 35, Dickey faked a pit- chback and rolled right and down the sideline for six points. Only 5:12 later, Dickey pitched out to Butch Woolfolk for another TD. The score consumed 65 yards in 10 plays, and came on a third goal-to-go situation to end the first half scoring. With Wangler at the helm in the third quarter, Woolfolk took a pitchback at right end, broke a tackle and went in to score his second TD of the game. Northwestern's only bright-spot of the afternoon occurred in the final quarter of the game when running back Dave Mishler scored on second down and goal-to-go from the one yard line. The TD consumed up 54 yards in nine plays. I Byout of theGlue By Geoff Larcom Daily Photos s FRESHMAM ANTHONY CARTER leaps to haul down a 12 yard pass from Michigan's John Wangler as Northwestern's Mark Adams (20) watches in the picture at left during the third quarter of yesterday's game. At right, a game official gives the touchdown signal as Carter celebrates his second score of the game, putting Michigan ahead 48-0. jening day.. . JL ... not much to say How good is the 1979 version of the Michigan Wolverines? Don't ask Bo Schembechler yet, he's not telling. Not after yesterday's business-as-usual 49-7 smothering of the Wildcats, which seemingly proved little to Schembechler and his coaching staff as to how far the Wolverines can go this year. As Bo entered the crowded press room, he anticipated the first question on the tips of the writers' tongues. "What does this game tell you about your team? Was the performance all you expected, Bo?" It's hard to evaluate the game from our standpoint. We'll have to wait 'til next week to find out if we have a ball club. Of course we're happy to win and happy to get a lot of people in the game," was Bo's prepared answer. Undoubtedly Schembechler would have preferred a slightly tougher tuneup fornextiSaturday's fracas with Notre Dame than what the Wildcats provided yesterday. From the opening kickoff it was clear that here was a team which just wasn't going to move the ball against Michigan. Nor was it going to stop the Wolverines in their tracks once they took possession. In fact, after Anthony Carter busted away on his 78-yard scamper, there seemed little reason to play on, save to give untested players needed game time. But despite the difficulty in evaluating his squad, following a 42-point win over a team which has won just two games over the last three years, Schem- bechler appeared fairly light-hearted following the game. So you feel he must have liked some of what he saw out there, starting with his quarterback situation. "Dickey and Wangler both did a good job. I've told you that quarterback is not a problem," Schembechler said for the umpteenth time this week. Bo set at QB And, indeed, there appeared little dropoff in effectiveness when Wangler took over the signal-calling reins in the second half. B.J. Dickey completed six for eight in his first college start, and then Wangler came in to nail down five of his six passing attempts. In all, Dickey threw for 68 yards, while Wangler gained 67 through the air, with both throwing a touchdown toss. So after one game, it appears the biggest problem Schembechler has is deciding who to play, and that, any coach will tell you, is no problem at all. Nor will Bo worry about his receiving corps, perhaps the most talented he's had in his decade at Michigan. "Our receivers could be our best ever. They have the most speed overall and the best hands of any group we've had," Schembechler said. The newly-crowned dean of Big Ten coaches had to be particularly pleased with the game of Anthony Carter, the highly-touted freshman from Florida. Carter caught two passes for 27 yards in addition to his breathtaking punt return, where with pure speed he simply broke away from the bottled-up Northwestern coverage. The early success should be a great tonic for the 160- pound whippet, who narrowed his choices down to Texas and Michigan before opting for the Big Ten school. But with Notre Dame about to rear it's highly-rated head on the horizon, the prime offensive headache for Schembechler remains the offensive line, or what's left of it after injuries have taken their toll. Injuries hobble line To lose mainstays John Powers and Bubba Paris for the beginning of the season is rough enough, but backup tackle Dan Kwiatkowski is hobbled as well at present along with backup center Tom Garrity. Schembechler is bringing Powers and Paris along slowly, not wishing to jeopardize either of their futures. Both are in excellent physical condition as a result of the rigorous conditioning programs they've been on while recovering from their khee operations. The patchwork line moved the Wildcat defense almost at will, as it gave little of the resistance which the Irish should bring to town come Saturday. And, for a while it appeared as if the Wolverines might really be in a hole, with Captain John Arbeznik limping off after aggravating his sore knee on the Wolverines' second play from scrimmage. C .hawhnnin necaehi. ar mrd willmhhaek StrdCay rnhowever. "If AFTER ONLY SIX DAYS TO PREPARE Richter pleased with band s debut By DAN PERRIN While Michigan coach Bo Schembechler was rattling off quotes about how it was impossible to evaluate this year's football team by looking at* yesterday's 49-7 thrashing of lowly Northwestern, newly-appointed Michigan Marching Band Director Glenn Richter was saying the opposite about his troops. Richter, tabbed to succeed the legendary George Cavender at the tender age of 30, was ecstatic about the band's first show, of 1979 (Richter's first ever at Michigan), which came just six days after their first rehearsal. "I'm pleased," Richter said. "What we asked them (the band members) at the beginning of the week was to take the best parts of the rehearsals, work hard in the rehearsals and then plug those into the perfor- mance. "And that's what they did," continued the Texas graduate. "The whole idea of rehearsing is to get it up to a performance level and put it all together on Saturday. They performed where they should've per- formed today and they should continue (t get better." Most people don't realize that's quite an accom- plishment. Preparing a marching band of 215 for a season-opening performance in less than a week is no easy task. It's even more difficult when the director is new and over half the bandsmen are freshmen. It takes a heckuva lot of extremely hard work, cooperation, concentration and dedication. So, for Richter to be pleased with his squad's initial performance is good news, indeed. Keep in mind that this man has no Michigan background and was under a great deal of pressure to produce a top notch band in the manner that George Cavender and William Revelli had for the past 27 years. That's no job for the weak and timid. "It (one week) doesn't give you as much time as you would-like to get the discipline and fundamentals down and give the players' lips a chance to get con- ditioned," explained Richter. "It's kind of tough to do that all in one week. It's asking a lot." That it is, but Richter got the job done and done well. The band sounded like Michigan bands of the past, producing a sound that is envied all over the country, if not the world. Richter even surprised the alumni on the far side of the field with a solid- sounding rendition of "War Chant," a Michigan favorite by tradition. Richter's debut as new conductor was successful on all counts and he is quick to credit everyone involved with the band. - "You measure the success of a show by the way the students feel about it," Richter pointed out. "They should, after a long, hard week of work be able to come off the field feeling good about themselves and most importantly (feeling good) that they have been able to affect other people's emotions. "They've been able to entertain and execute to the best (of their ability). If they can come off the field smiling and happy about their performance, then that's best for everyone. "The students, rank leaders and graduate assistan- ts-they were the real keys," continued the en- thusiastic Richter. "I think the fact that the students and the staff worked so well together during the-week and were patient with one another made the real dif- ference.". With one game under his belt, the exuberant Richter hopes the pressure will lessen and the burden will lighten. "I feel a lot better personally and I think if I can get more at ease then the students willIbe more at ease," said Richter. "We've got a very ambitious program musically for the next show, but I feel like they (the band members) are going to be able to handle it well." No surprises G 'd MICH N'WEST'N 1st downs.................. 50/347 41/120 Passing (att/com/int)18/12/0 23/11/1 Passing yds................ 140 69 Punts (no/yds) ............ 2/41.5 9/35.8 Fumbles (no/lost).......... 5/1 0/0 Penalties (no/yds).........G5/75 5/22 SCORING Michigan ................. 21 14 14 0 - 49 Northwestern.............0 0 0 7- 7 SCORING PLAYS MICH-Dickey 2 yard run (virgil kick) MICH-Betts 9 yard pass from Dickey (virgil kick) MICH-Carter 78 yard punt return (virgil kick) MICH-Dickey 35 yard run (Virgil kick) MICH-Woolfoik 1 yard run (virgil kick) MICH-Woolfolk 3 yard run (virgil kick) MI -Carter 12 yard pass from Wangler (virgil -kick) NW-Mishler 1 yard run (Poulos kick) NORTHWESTERN att Dennis ......................... 9 M ishler ........................ 10 Cohn ............ ............... 9 Edwards...................... 6 Cammon......................2 Capstran ....................... 3 Strasser ......................... 3 PASSING MICHIGAN att comp Dickey .................... 8 6 Wangler ................... 6 5 Lee.....................4 1 y4s avg. 49 5.4 36 3.6 22 2.4 18 3.0 13 6.5 -5 -1.7 -13 14.3 int 0 0 0 1 0 RUSHING MICHIGAN Edwards ........................ Dickey .......................... Reid ,::::...................... Woolfolk .................... Clayton ......................... wangler ......................... R. Smith.................... hicks ...................... Lee . .................. ....... Ingram.......................... Cade................... .... att 8 9 9 1 2 2 2 3 1 2 yds 99 87 50 17 13 12 12 3 3 1 avg. 12.4 9.4 5.8 4.5 17 6.5 6.0 6.0 1.0 3.0 0.5 NORTHWESTERN Capstran .................. 14 1o Strasser.................. 9 1 RECEIVING MICHIGAN no Marsh ........................... 4 Carter........................ 2 Betts ............. I.............. 2 Reid ........................... 1 Clayton ......................... 1 Edwards...................... I1 Mitchell....................... 1 NORTHWESTERN Poulas ......................... 3 Sheets ........................ 2 sogan...........................'2 Hill..... .....................2 Kasprzycki ...................... 1 Dennis ....................... 1 0 1 io yds 52 27 14 18 22 195 1 2 23 6 5 yds 68 67 5 63 6 1p 20 15 9 18 22 5 2 10 13 10 2 6 5 Major League Standings (Not including last night's games) AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST NATiONAL LEAGUE EAST W , P o ... .I E- n 0 fiR fl '*' .& v:; X.X<>~'~W~ .X?.. .y0.r.Z.~ - ..'..,-. .&.,SA'~