Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 14, 1971 BETTORS DELIGHT: U-m,- Favorites claim Big Ten openers 0 By MIKE OLIN cats against " the ,Wolverines of for the remainder, mostly on well backer Gail Clark, the State de- ! In afterthought, opening t h e Michigan. Alex Agase's cinderella executed option plays. fense limited the Illini to 117 yards Big Ten football season with con- team of 1970 had hoped to make Ohio State picked up a total of net rushing and allowed quarter- ference games wasn't as bad as a run for the roses this year, but 402 yards on the ground. Full- back Mike Wells to complete only most of the coaches thought it Michigan's overpowering defense back John Bledsoe, another in a 5 passes for 33 yards. In addition, would be. i held tight until the offense jell- long line of Buckeye backfield the defenders dumped Wells for With most games marred by ed late in the first half, throwing workhorses, blasted for 151 yards losses five times. numerous mistakes, the preseason a monkey wrench into Northwest- and two touchdowns through the The only real bright spot in favorites in general managed to ern's plans. small Iowa defense. The scores Michigan State's offense was tail- make fewer of the costly blund- The result was a 21-6 Wolver- came on runs of three and 11 back Eric Allen. Allen carried the, ers than their less illustrious op-ine victory that saddled the Wild- yards. ball a record tying 37 times while ponents to triumph in their de-' cats with a loss they surely can- After the game, Woody Hayes gaining 104 yards and scoring the buts, not afford. was reputed to have called h i s Spartan's only touchdown on a The weekend's most crucial con- The surprise, or rather, t h e team's play, " . . . a new style of six yard scamper with 8:34 left in test pitted Northwestern's Wild-Inon-surprise of the week was the football we started this year . . ." the game. Borys Shlapak rounded manhandling Iowa's Hawkeyes re- The sarcasm is apparent. out State's scoring with a 48 yard' / oim n e ceived from Woody Hayes' Buck- Turnovers were the name of the field goal late in the second quar- eye protegees. game in Saturday's go round be- ter. Ohio State, led by quarterback tween Michigan State and Illin- The rest of the offensive unit Don Lamka, ran up 52 points to ois, won by the Spartans, 10-0. couldn't seem to get going as" Iowa's 21. Lamka, a reserve de- The two teams lost the football Spartan drives stalled on the Il- fensive back the past two seasons, 11 times on fumbles and f o u r linois 31, 21, one, 26, 25, 13, .12,; Powas finally given the Buckeye times on interceptions. 21, and seven yard line. reins, and he proceeded to show The Spartans, who recovered The Michigan State quarterback that he deserved them by ripping seven of the fumbles, had to rely situation, as a result of the poorI atoff four touchdowns including on their defense as the offense offensive showing, is also some- Srunsof 21 and 19 yards. sputtered for most of the after- what muddled. Starter Mike Ras- inee I'l- e Lamka accounted for 160 yards noon. mussen was able to complete only personally. He completed five of- Led by tackle Ron Curl, middle three of 12 passes while his re- seven passes for 60 yards and ran guard Ernie Hamilton, and line- placement, George Mihaiu c o n- !_____- --_-_-nected on seven of 11. Coach The first score came when de- fensive back Mike Perfetti pounc- ed on an Indiana fumble at the Hoosier 30 only 34 seconds into the game. Ernie Cook plunged over from one yard for the score in what proved to be the only points Minnesota needed. The other three Minnesota scor- es came on passes from quarter- back Craig Curry of 11 yards to Doug Kingsriter, 13 yards to Ke- vin Hamm, and 11 yards to Cook. A 39 yard field goal attempt, wide by inches, was the closest Indiana came to scoring, although they penetrated inside the 30 four times during the course of the game. In the only non-conference game of the weekend, Wisconsin, led by Rufus Ferguson, rolled over Try. Try hard. The only thing we can think of is what we make. The Swingline "Tot 50" Stapler. 98¢ in 1950. 980 in 1971. And it still comes with 1000free staples and a handy carrying pouch. It staples, tacks and mends. It's unconditionally guaranteed. It's one of the j world's smallest staplers. And it's the world's biggest seller. Could be that's why it hasn't gone up in price in 21 years. If you're interested in something a little bigger, our Cub Desk Stapler and Cub Hand Stapler are only $1.98. Both Tot and' Cub Staplers are available at Stationery, Variety and College Bookstores. The Swingline "Tot 50" 980 in 1950. 980 in 1971. If you can name something else that hasn't gone up in price since 1950, let us know. We'll send you a free Tot Stapler with 1000 staples and a vinyl pouch. Enclose 25# to cover postage and handling. I" ~WITH j Duffy Daugherty now must choose between those two and Frank Kolch for the starting nod against Georgia Tech on Saturday. In the weekend's fourth c o n- ference game, Minnesota blanked Indiana 28-0 in Minneapolis. All four of the Gopher touchdowns were set up by the .defense. { f i Northern Illinois at Madison, 31- 0. Ferguson streaked four and 42 yards for Badger touchdowns against the Huskies. Northern Illinois, in its first start ever against a Big Ten team could not get its offense moving as the Badger defense held them to a total of 184 yards for the day. The other Wisconsin scores came on an 85 yard punt return by Greg Johnson, a six yard touchdown gallop by reserve quarterback Rudy Steiner, and Roger Jaeger's 26 yard field goal. -Daily-Sara Krulwich BEHIND THE solid blocking of the Wolverine offensive line, Mike Casey (12) hands off to Ed Shut- tlesworth (31) during last. Saturday's contest against Northwestern. Shuttlesworth blasted for 33 yards in helping the Wolverines to a 21-6 win over the Wildcats. CORNHUSKERS NO.1: Mchign holds 4th spot in AP I BAROQUE ENSEMBLE SECOND ANN ARBOR SEASON All Concerts in St. Clare's Church--2309 Packard SUNDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10, AT 8:00 Telemann-Overture, Suite, and Conclusion in Bb major for two oboes and strings U'J.J. Quantz-Trio for flute, recorder, and continua (Allen War- ner, baroque flute & MarriannerMilks, recorder) J.S. Bach-Violin concerto in A minor (Michael Avsharian) SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20, AT 8:00 Sammartini-Concerto in F for recorder (Marianne Milks) Schmeltzer-Sonata for two scordatura violins Boismortier-Concerto for flute, oboe, bassoon, violin, and continuo J.S. Bach-Trio Sonata (S. 525) for guitar and harpsichord Telemann-"Water Music" for flutes, recorders, oboes, bassoon, strings, and continuo SUNDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, AT 8:00 Biber-Two sonatas for seven strings J.J. Fux-Sinfonia No. 2 for two oboes, bassoon, and strings S Marin Marais-Suite in C for flute, violin, and harpsichord J.S. Bach-Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 (Marianne Milks and Eric van der Schalie, and Michael Avsharian) SUNDAY EVENING, MARCH 19, AT 8:00 Schmeltzer-Sonata for seven Telemann-Suite in A for recorder & strings (Marianne Milks) Couperin-Le Parnasse (Apotheose de Corelli) Vivaldi-Concerto for three violins, strings, and continuo (Charles, Evelyn, and Michael Avsharian) SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 8, AT 8:00 The audience may choose (by vote) from the season's repertoire Season Ticket Only $6 and Available Now at Liberty Music Shop or by Mail at 1817 Dexter Ave., Ann Arbor 48103. Single Tickets at $1.75 May Be Bought Two Weeks Prior to Each Con- cert at Liberty Music, Hadcock Music, King's Keyboard House, or at Door. i l ' llii Gridde Pickings Hey you, freshie sulking in your dorm room, wanna impress that tough looking bod you sat next to today at lunch? Afraid your anemir 5-foot-6 physique won't exactly help when you put the moves on her? Cheer up. The 420 Maynard Street Lonely Hearts Club has taken pity on your desperate plight and has come up (as it has for the past gor knows how many years) with the answer to your heart rending prob- lem. Yes all you horny boys (and girls) out there, knock 'em dead in the quads with your knowledge of football and win a free pizza to boot by picking (and winning?) our weekly Gridde Pickings contest. All you have to do is pick the winners in our 20 biggies of the week (includnig score in the Michigan game as tie breaker) and do it better than anyone else, and you have won, guaranteed, a Cottage Inn pizza. Not guaranteed is that knockout in the lunchroom. But, dare to Struggle, dare to Score! II(1 1. Virginia at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Michigan State at Georgia Tech 3. Kentucky at Indiana 4. North Carolina at Illinois 5. Iowa at Oregon State 6. Minnesota at Nebraska 7. Northwestern at Notre Dame 8. Wisconsin at Syracuse 9. Purdue at Washington 10. Villanova at Toledo 11. Texas at UCLA 12. West Virginia at California 13. Tulane at Georgia 14. Texas A&M at Louisiana State 15. Houston at Arizona State 16. Florida State at Miami (Fla.) 17. Boston University at Colgate 18. Missouri at Air Force Academy 19. Wyoming at Colorado 20. Wittenberg at Western Kentucky By The Associated Press Nebraska's defending national champions climbed back atop the AssociatedrPress college football 'poll yesterday following an im- pressive opening game victory wihle Notre Dame, the preseason leader, was idle and fell to second place. The Cornhuskers of Nebraska trimmed highly regarded Oregon 34-7 Saturday and received 31 first-place votes and 931 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters partici- pating in the first regular season poll. The Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, who open against North- western this weekend, pulled down 10 top votes, with five going to third-ranked Texas and two each to No. 4 Michigan and No. 7 Au- burn. Notre Dame received 829 total points. Rounding out the first five were Texas, 672; Michigan, 630, and Ohio State, 546. Texas opens Sat- urday against UCLA while Mich- igan downed Northwestern 21-6. Ohio State buried Iowa 52-21 and jumped from 11th to fifth, the only change among the five. leaders. The rest of the Top Ten con- sisted of Arkansas, up from sev- enth to sixth; Auburn, which hasn't played yet, down from sixth to seventh; idle Tennessee, still eighth; Alabama, up from 16th to ninth, and idle Oklahoma, still 10th. Arkansas crushed California 51-20 and Alabama turned back Southern California 17-10. The latter game dropped the losing Trojans from fifth all the way to 17th. The only other team HUMAN RIGHTS RADICAL INDEPENDENT PARTY OPEN MEETING Tonight, 7:30 p.m., S.A.B. to leave the Top Ten was Louisi- ana State, a 31-21 loser to Colo- rado, ninth last week and unranked this weekh. Georgia heads the Second Ten, followed by Colorado, Stanford, Penn State, Syracuse, Arizona State, South'ern Cal, Michigan State, South Carolina and Houston. The Top Twenty teams, with first- place votes in parentheses, records and total. points. Points tabulated on basis of 2-81 1 2-1--9-7-6-5-4-3-2- 1. Nebraska (31) 1-0 931 2. Notre Dame (10) 0-0 829 3. Texas (5) 0-0 672 4. MICHIGAN (2) 1-0 630 5. Ohio State 1-0 546 6. Arkansas 1-0 641 7. Auburn (2) 0-0 437 8. Tennessee 0-0 364 9. Alabama 1-0 314 10. Oklahoma 010 265 11. Georgia 1-0 229 12. Colrado 1-0 194 13. Stanford 1-0 167 14. Penn State 0-0 123 15. Syracuse 0-0 99 16, Arizona State 0-0 95 17. Southern California 0-1 70 18. Michigan State 1-0 60 19. South Carolina 1-0 58 20. Houston 1-0 46 Others receiving votes listed alpha- betically: Air Force, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisiana State, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Northwestern, Pitt, Purdue, San Diego State, Toledo, Tulane, UCLA, Wake Forest, Washington. I BOWLING LEAGUES FORMING SIGN UP NOW! MICHIGAN UNION LANES OPEN NOON MON.-SA., 1 P.M. SUN. Dept 6 32-00 Skillman Ave., long Island City, N.Y. 11101 - i 1 Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY FALL TERM of the "'R a s 'u h ! ;'4 . ./3g v 74 r' y s ' ' 1r x^ .. y ri i , = Y t" ;i i sABA to draft star collegiates By The Associated Press " WASHINGTON - Controversial Denny McLain said yesterday he was tired of being accused as the cause of alleged dissension on the Washington Senators. In a telephone call to Radio Station WWDC, which carries the Senators' games, the 27-year-old pitcher said he has not found any dissension on the club, but added that if there was any, it could have been caused by news stories quoting unidentified players. He specifically criticized Sunday stories by George Minot of the Washington Post and Russ White of the Washington Star. Minot wrote: "While the Washington baseball team's future is being negotiated in the halls of finance, on the field and in the club- house there is growing dissatisfaction among the players." The Post writer told of McLain's differences with manager Ted Williams over his pitching the right-hander every five days instead of every four, as McLain says he would prefer. ** * " NEW YORK - The American Basketball Association an- nounced yesterday its hardship draft would be held here today. The ABA will have 10 players available to be drafted, including four who were drafted by the rival National Basketball Association. Tom Payne of Kentucky and Cyril Baptiste of Creighton, two of the four, reportedly have signed NBA contract§, Payne with Atlanta and Baptiste with the Golden State Warriors. Phil Chenier of California was chosen by Baltimore and Matt Williams of Utah State was picked by Cincinnati. The six others available include Mickey Davis of Duquesne, Ed Leftwich of North Carolina State, Mike Meade, Hartford, Allen Ra- phael,Northwestern, Anthony Reed, Murcer Community College, N.C., and John T. Bailey of Wagner. * * * 0 MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - The Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League acquired tight end Bob Brown and defensive back Nate Wright from the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday in exchange for linebacker Mike McGill, defensive back Dale Hackbart and an un- disclosed future draft choice. The Vikings moved quickly after losing tight end John Beasley for the season when he suffered ligament injuries in his left knee in an exhibition game against Miami Saturday night. Brown played with the Cardinals in 1969 and 1970, mainly on special teams. The 6-foot-3, 225-pounder played college ball at Al- corn A&M. Wright signed with St. Louis as a free agent in 1969 and has been I used as a kick return man and defensive back. McGill who played at Notre Dame, is in his fourth pro season after being a third-round draft choice of the Vikings in 1968. Hackbart, in his 10th year, wwas dropped to the taxi squad last week. He has played defensive back and linebacker for Minne- sota. Beasley, a five-year veteran from the University of California, was scheduled for surgery at a St. Paul hospital yesterday afternoon. ..--m ..... -..- ...- ---- ---- --- ---- VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS SWAGON WERKE FALL TUNE-UP SALE -COUPON WITH THIS COUPON A COMPLETE TUNE-UP INCLUDING PLUGS AND POINTS, VALUE ADJUSTMENT only 12.95 SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE AND WARRANTEED WORK a 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor-Phone: 662-2576 I GOOD FOREVER = r r r s r r a r s s"I 00 LOVE PROGRAM IN JEWISH STUDIES * BEGINNER'S HEBREW . ADVANCED HEBREW * INTERMEDIATE HEBREW e HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB 0 BIBLICAL HERETICS: Jeremiah, Job and Koheleth MARTIN BUBER: The Way of Man in the Teachings of Hassidism I AL Chances are you' on a desert island are, a little Love c To smooth, clean scent. To tint you cheeks, shadow y put a glow on you Love is cosmetics for the contempo Find them at " BASIC JUDAISM: This course is concerned exclusively with the Jewish religion, not culture, sociology, Zionism or the like * THE HOLOCAUST: Studies in Jewish Blasphemy. Is it possible to retain one s faith in God, man and history after Auschwitz? " CONTEMPORARY CRISES IN JEWISH LAW: Investigation of normative Jewish dictates on problems -such as war, peace, abortion, contracep- tion, labor management, government *THE JEW AND MODERN LITERATURE: Works by Babel, Potok, Roth, Koestler, Fitzgerald, Michener " ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT: Sociological, psychological, political evalu- ation of the conflict in the Middle East * ISRAELI EXPERIENCE GROUP: Multi media approach to the various forms of Israeli culture and art * HASSIDISM: An experience in the mystical heritage of Hassidic Judaism IL 'I never be lost I. But if you ever ,an help a lot. se, freshen, and r lips, blush your your eyes, and r face. s and fragrances rary young woman. r- - - -® REGISTRATION TONIGHT: TUES., SEPT. 14,7-9 P.M. I i I I