Page ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 34, 1972 Pa~e f~n THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 30, 1972 w *1 PREPARATION FOR BOARD EXAMS MCAT DAT GRE ATGSB LSAT - Preparation for tests required for admission to graduate schools. * Six session courses. ' Local Classes, small groups. Defense remains vague STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Call (313) 354-0085 * .. '.> T IN PERSON! I THE FABULOUS 4 MAGICIANS OF BASKETBALL C CRISLER ARENA SATURDAY, APRIL 8 2:00 P.M. ," Tickets on sale at the! UM Ticket OfficeE 1000 South State (662-3238) > Mail Orders accepted. All seats reserved. $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00. UM students and staff with ID $3.00 "t$i.. ... . :Y. 'i'' ')( rvit~l , n v-4.4v4.. By RICH STUCK{ A sign in the Michigan locker room greets this year's gridiron hopefuls with a reminder of the mighty defensive prowess dis- played by the 1971 unit: Michigan: First in the nation' against the rush, first in the na- tion against the score, and second in the nation in total defense. Defensive coordinator J i m Young, who has masterminded the Wolverines to two straight Big Ten total defense crowns, now faces the task of molding a co- hesive team from a storehouse of fourteen returning lettermen and a host of talented and anxious sophomores-to-be. The least of the defensive wor- ries lies in the 'pit,' where three of the five returning starters are slated for action on the interior line. This should make Michigan TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month X4O DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 tough against the inside rush. day, but snowy weather moved Greg Ellis and Walter Sexton that up to this afternoon. Clint will man the middle guard posi- Spearman, last season's backup to tion. Ellis started last season Carpenter at the rush end, will ahead of Sexton but the latter is probably move up to the first expected to give Ellis a real fight team, at least until big C. J. Ku- for the job. pec has learned the ropes well enough for a shot at the job. Flanking these two at the tac- Junior Larry Johnson, fully re- kles will be four solid Rose Bow; ;covered from an injury that returnees. Senior Fred Grambau, seved him a good pat who might receive some All- shelved him for a good part of America mention in the fall, firm-;lsyaw battlewD nior J~.two-year letermanDo Ean ly holds down the left tackle job. the offend position His backup will more than likely The linebacking corps is loaded be junior Doug Troszak. Dave with talent and size; the only Gallagher, who was named to the prhbleno ugnd ;hsonty first team of a sophomore All- will be to wait and see how the America squad last season, is counted on during spring drills to make an adjustment from left to right defensive tackle spot. Big Tony Smith will likely back up Gallagher and play a starting po- sition in the goal-line .defense. candidates react under game-like conditions. Tom Kee returns at one spot, as his experience gives him an edge over strongman Jo- van Vercel. The hole left by vacated All- America Mike Taylor is formid- ability in his attempt for a start- ing post. The defensive backfield returns only one starter from its rela- tively weak unit of 1971.: Although the margins of victory last year were large enough to give the sec- ond string sufficient experience, the real problem will be a lack of depth. Randy Logan heads the backs as the only returning first-liner. He will probably be backed up by either Roy Burks or Doug Mc- Kenzie. McKenzie was out with a back injury last year and spent the season as a graduate assist- ant. One spot where the Wolverines won't be hurt too much by the loss of a graduating senior is at wolf man. Where Frank Gusich has left Geoff Steger has stepped in during the spring workouts and will be tough to oust. His backup man is Dave Zuccarelli, who is starting his third season in his third different position. Also in the picture is gutty little Jim Johnston. Dave Elliot is being tried at safety, but his latest knee injury leaves him a big question mark. He hurt it last Saturday and his state is still uncertain. Talented Dave Brown and punter Barry Dotzauer are also, very much in the running. So, Michigan's proud defense will have to use its spring drills to develop some needed depth, and some leadership from the juniors to guide the young de- fense. Elliot's comment about the status of his knee seems to also apply to the staus of the 1972 de- fense: "We'll just have to wait and see." .While the middle of the line able but there are several hope- is well-stocked with first-line tal- fuls chomping at the bit for their ent and depth, the end positions chance to start. Coming offa knee are another matter altogether. operation, Craig Mutch will have There appears to be sufficient tal- to prove this spring he has the ent to do an adequate job of re- mobility needed to play. placing Mike Keller and Butch Highly-touted sophomore Steve Carpenter, both this year's crew Strinko will join Mutch in a bat- is untested. tie against sophomore walk-on The coaching staff had hoped Carl Russ, who could be the real to put the candidates through a surprise of the spring. Russ has full two-hour scrimmage yester- shown great aggressiveness and I DAVE GALLAGHER (71), an All-American last year as a sopho- more, will face his opponents from the defensive tackle position this year. leers fete team-mates Bernie Gagnon and Karl Bag nell were named last night as the most valuable players on the Michigan hockey team for 1971- 72. -led the Wolverines in scoring I -n Man Adapting to the Small Planet SEMINAR SERIES presents DR. ALAN WATTS A Philosophy for a Culture in Harmony with the Environment COMING IN APRI L THE NEW The voting, which was con- ducted among the players during the trip to North Dakota for the WCHA playoffs, ended in a tie for only the second time in the eigh- teen years that the Hal Downes Memorial Trophy has been award- ed. Gagnon, a senior right winger, 1972 MICHIGANENSIAN with 35 goals and 61 points and goalie Karl Bagnell, also a senior, played every game for Michigan. Bagnell made 1086 WCHA saves to lead the league and totaled 1305 for the year. Named as captain for next year's squad was Rick Mallette, a junior from Montreal. A 5-6, 150 pound center, Mallette was named the team's most improved player during his sophomore season. This year the Alton D. Simms Memorial Trophy for the Most Improved Player was awarded to Bob Falconer, a sophomore from Forest, Ontario. Falconer increas- ed his point-production by 15 points over 1970-71 and developed into a hard hitting, hard skating winger. Finally, the outstanding fresh- man of the year was Randy Neal, a 5-8, 160 pound center from To- ronto. Neal tied for third place in team scoring with Paul Paris at 33 points; netting 10 goals and contributing 23 assists. Termpaper Arsenal, Inc. Send $1.00 for your descriptive catalog of 1,300 quality termpapers 519 Glenrock Ave., Suite203 Los Anqeles, Calif. 90024 (213) 477-8474 477-5493 "we need a local salesman" 4 THURSDAY, MARCH 30-7:30 P.M. RACKHAM AUDITORIUM ADMISSION FREE Sponsored by: Enact Ecology Center, Community Organic Garden, and U of M School of Natural Resources -- t City buses 0 Low income-housing Human rights " Environmental protection " Minority group employment " Housing code enforcement " Park & recreation programs " Child care " Police-community relations I Democrats on City Council have started real city programs for all of these concerns. Some small, some not so small. But with real money and real plans. Your help is needed to continue. VOTE FOR REALITY ON APRIL 3 RE-ELECT JACK KIRSCHT * FIRST WARD " DEMOCRAT Paid Political Adv. U Mike Morris on Ann Arbor: HOUSING AND TENANTS RIGHTS The most original journal of ideas on the American scene of recent years. - Prof. Robert Nisbet, U.S., Riverside ' rough beast " Politics without ideology " Social commentary " Committed only to the truth " For community, family, the permanent values Rough Beast is one of the most exciting and stimulating periodi- cals of our time.-Prof. George Carey, Georgetown Rough Beast is much more than a newsletter. Subscribe now. 12 issues for $6. ROUGH BEAST 1522 Conn. Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 I enclose $6 for 12 issues Name Address City/State Zip 1 1 I University Faculty, Director of the U of M Debate Team Clinton School PTO President Winner of the University's Distinguished Service Award Past President of the Georgetown Homeowners Association AO U ~ r