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September 22, 1971 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-09-22

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Page Ten

FHE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, September 22, 1971

utstanding new
SPengUins now at
vaapus bookstore
THE NON-MEDICAL USE OF DRUGS: Interim Report
of the Canadian Government Commission of Inquiry. A
very human survey of today's drug scene in all its aspects.
Considers alcohol and tobacco as well as marihuana,
hashish, LSD, heroin; and "speed," and concludes with
some surprising recommendations. $1.65
THE SACRED PIPE: Black Elk's Account of the Seven
Rites of the Oglala Sioux. Recorded and edited by Jo-
seph Epes Brown. The ancient religion of the Sioux Indians
as disclosed by the only qualified priest still alive when this
material was gathered. Shows how the Sioux have come to
terms with God, nature, and their fellow men. $1.45
BORN IN TIBET. Chrgyam Trungpa as told to Esm6
Cramer Roberts. With a foreword by-Marco Pall/is. The
early life and escape from the Chinese communists of a
young tulku of Tibet. His story reveals a deep Buddhist
compassion and spirituality. $1.95
HAVANA JOURNAL. Andrew Salkey. A firsthand account
- by a Jamaican novelist - of the effects of the revolu-
tion in Cuba on bureaucrats, merchants, intellectuals,
housewives, and peasants. $1.65
AID AS IMPERIALISM. Teresa Hayter. A highly controver-
sial critique of the role of foreign aid in Latin America,
$1.45
AGONY AT EASTER. Thomas M. Coffey. A minute-by-
minute report on the bizarre and tragicomic- events of the
1916 Irish uprising. $1.65
THE CHICANOS: Mexican American Voices. Edited by
Edward W. Ludwig and James Santibanez. An anthology
of writings by and about Mexican Americans. $1.95
PENGUIN BOOKS INC
7110 Ambassador Rd.. Baltimore, Md.21207

Adgers s 3luC

og' tag

i

By BOB McGINN
Believe it or not, the Univer-
sity of Wisconsin has a good foot-
ball team. Folks in Madison were
beginning to deem this an impos-
sible feat, for since 1963 the Bad-
gers have won just 15 football
games. The drought could be over.
Wisconsin, on the heels of its un-
expected deadlock with highly-
regarded Syracuse, is not to be
taken lightly.
Second year head coach John
Jardine, for five years an assist-
ant under offense - minded Tom-
my Prothro at UCLA, has nine
starters returning from his offen-
sive unit which was explosive in
last year's late stages. Included
among the nine starters are all
of the regular ends and backs,
For the student body;
by
7CLevi
Farah
Wright
Leea
Male
State Street at Liberty

In 1970 the Badger offense lackedI
consistency, but an indication ofI
the offense's strength this yeari
was their 400-yard total offense
figure against Syracuse.c
The Badgers return only fourc
starters defensively, however, thus
leaving several question marks.I
Jardine started four sophomores1
on defense in the opener against
Northern Illinois, always a risky
situation. .
Heading the list of offensive re-
turnees is the Big Ten's leading
passer a year ago, Neil Graff. He
is a two year regular who should
eclipse many Badger passing (
standards. Graff was interceptedI
a mere four times last season.
Rudy Steiner, a junior, is an im-
pressive back-up.
The Badgers are blessed with
outstandingetalent in the offen-
sive backfield. Unique tailback
Rufus "Roadrunner" Ferguson,,
only 5-6 but extremely quick and
exciting, gained 588 yards last
year and is a constant threat.
Most observers felt that Fergu-
son's running mate at fullback
would be Alan "A-Train" Thomp-
son who had a sensational sopho-
more campaign before having knee
trouble in 1970.
Even though Thompson is ex-t
periencing no knee trouble, junior
Gary Lund is Jardine's starting
fullback. His coach praised him,1
saying, "Gary does everything
well He's the one man whom I've
had to say the least to because
he's made the fewest mistakes."'
Pass receiving is another Badger1

plus. The tight end is senior Larry
Mialik, who ranked third last year
in the Big Ten with 27 catches.
Seniors Terry Whittaker (15
catches) and Albert Hannah (10
catches) are the wide receivers.
Three juniors - spit end Tim
Klosek, flanker Mike Haas, and
tight end Tom Lonnborg - pro-
vide adequate depth.
With three starters returning in
the offensive line, guard Roger
Jaeger and tackles Keith Nosbusch
and . Elbert Walker, Wisconsin's
running backs should have open-
ings. Guard Bob Braun and cen-
ter Mike Passini complete the
front wall, which averages 226
pounds per man.
Bears unload
ve-t linebacker
CHICAGO (P) - The Chicago
Bears traded veteran linebacker
Lee Roy Caffey to the Dallas Cow-
boys for an undisclosed d r a f t
choice in the National Football
League transaction yesterday.
Cafey, 30, was acquired by the
Bears from the Green Bay Pack-
ers in a trade after the 1969 sea-
son and played in all 14 NFL
games last season.
He lost the starting right line-
backing spot to Ross Brupbacher
this season and was demoted to
the Bears' taxi squad.

Although the Badgers shut out
Northern Illinois 31-0, in a game
Jardine described as "no awesome
test," the defense is suspect. Only
one lineman, Mike Mayer, and one
linebacker, Dave Lokanc, return
from 1970's front seven. Jim Schy-
manski, a sophomore tackle, drew
praise from Jardine for his play
in the opener. Still, the hapless
Huskies of Northern Illinois could
muster only 41 yards rushing
against this untested crew.
In the defensive backfield the
situation is considerably brighter.
Two returnees, Neovia Greyer and
Gary Buss, along with track star
Greg "Grape Juice" Johnson are
fine players. Greyer's nine inter-
ceptions of a year ago placed him
3rd in the nation. Promising jun-
ior Milt Habeck completes the
secondary.
The kicking game is first-rate,
with Jaeger handling the place-
kicking and John Krugman doing
the punting. Jaeger has connected
on 12 of 20 field goals and 34 of
39 extra points in his career.
A final factor in Wisconsin's
lofty hopes is its schedule. The
Badgers don't face Michigan, a
fact thatmustaimmeasureably
comfort John Jardine. Saturday,
however, the Badgers host rug-
ged LSU and the result should
cast more light on the role Wis-
consin will play in the Big Ten
race.

-Associated Press'
Please help me I'm falling. .
Steve Owens of the Detroit Lions brushes away the steadying
hand of Viking foe Ed Sharockman (45) on the way to a six-
yard gain. The exciting action took place in the third quarter of
Monday night's Detroit-Minnesota tussle.
r

CHANCES ARE SLIM:

I

Gophers root for glory

EOT M DR ASH
PROGRAM of JEWISH STUDI ES

..i

.

Hebrew for Beginners,
Intermediate, Advanced
Hebrew Speaking Club
The Jew in Modern
Literature
Basic Judaism
Biblical Literature

Contemporary Crises &
Jewish Law
The Holocaust
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Hassidic Philosophy
Martin Buber
Israel Experience Group

By CARY FOTIAS
The University of Minnesota,
under Coach Murray Warmath,
is looking forward to a produc-
tive football campaign. Warmath,
entering his 18th year, directed
the Gophers to a 3-6-1 record in
1970, but three of these losses
came to nationally - ranked pow-
U-M
RIDING CLUB
MASS ORGANIZATIONAL
MEETING
Mon., Sept. 27-7:30 P.M.
UNION BALLROOM
ALL ABILITIES WELCOME
769-3364

Late registration will take place
at Hilel-1429 Hill St.
Registration fee of $10 covers all courses
On Mona & Wed. at 7:00-8:00 P.M. or any day 9-5
For more info call
Rabbi J. Poupko, 663-4129-1429 Hill St.

ers Ohio State, Nebraska and
Michigan.
Minnesota's strength lies in its
offensive backfield where it has
seasoned veterans in quarterback
Craig Curry and fullback Ernie
Cook, both seniors.
Curry was the Big Ten's total
offense leader last year, while
power runner Cook averaged over
four-and-a-half yards a carry as
he topped the Gophers in scoring
with 44 points.
The remainder of the running
duties are divided among senior
John Marquesen, juniors George
Honza and Jim Henry, and new-
comers Paul Rudolph and John
King. Honza is also an excellent
pass receiver and alternates at
flanker with placekicker Mel An-
derson. Handling the tight end
position is Doug Kingsriter, and
Keven Hamm starts at split end.
Up front the Gophers have Jack
Babcock and Bart Buetow at the
tackles, Vernon Winfield and Paul
Tollefson at guards, and rookie
Dale Hegland along with junior
Bob Veldman sharing the center-
ing chores.
The defensive unit is spear-
headed by 6-2, 240 pound All-
American candidate Bill Light.
Light, middle linebacker and cap-
tain of the team, is flanked by
seniors Ron King and monster
man Mike Perfetti, who doubles
as a punter. Sophomores Scott Ir-
win and John Krol play the tack-
les, with Tom MacLeod and Tom
Chandler manning the ends.
1

I

'WHAT IS THE
-an all-campus orchestra!
-sponsored by MUSKET
and G&S!AT4
-performing 3 hit shows!
DON'T MISS THE MASS MEETING
SEPT. 26, 8 P.M.-ASSEMBLY ROOM-UNION
UNIVERSITY THEATRE ORCHESTRA

42

Minnesota opened the season at
home by conquering Indiana 28-0.
The Golden Gophers never ad-
vanced the ball past the Hoosier
47-yard line under their own
steam, but were able to cash in
on four Indiana mistakes. They
converted a fumble, a fumbled
punt, a blocked punt, and an in-
terception into touchdowns.
Curry threw for three touch-
downs and Cook plunged one yard
for the other. Alderson was the
defensive standout as he inter-
cepted two passes, running one
back 53 yards to set up a score.
The Gophers then journeyed to
Lincoln for an encounter with
number one-ranked Nebraska. Al-
though they lost 35-7, Warmath
was proud of his players, because
of the aggressiveness and deter-
mination they displayed.
He felt that "the teams' failure
to score late in the first half with
the ball on the Husker ten was the
turning point." Instead of go-
ing in tied af the half, the Go-
phers trailed by 14, as Nebraska
halted their drive and marched to
a touchdown.
Warmath praised the play of
linebackers King and Light, along
with that of offensive tackle Bue-
tow. He was also happy with the
way the team put together two
80-yard drives, although they
didn't score on the second one as
they fumbled in the end zone.
Warmath feels his team needs to
develop a bit more consistency and
also cut downon the frequency of
costly mistakes. If Minnesota is
able to fulfill these objectives, the
battle against Michigan for the
Little Brown Jug in Memorial Sta-
dium on October 23 could prove
interesting.
UM BARBERS
Keep Your Image
GET A SHAG
Michigan Union

14

I

f- ___ _. ___. ___

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made fresh
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1Oc each
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Senator William Proxmire OF WISCONSIN

ie reads a book
i40 minutes

u ,irl i ttn tttl

Watching Senator Proxmire's hand fly
overthe pages (his hand acted as a puc-
er) you can't believe that he's actually
reading. He must be skim ming.
But he's not.
Bill Proxmire can read the average novel
in a little under 40 minutes. Even- on'the
toughest material he rarely dips below
1,000 words per minute.
Moreover, he can comprehend and recall
what he's read - right down to the
snallest detail
Fill Proxmire is not a genius. Nor is he a
naturally fast reader. He learned this
revolutionary technique of rapid reading
in the'Evelyn Wood course.
The Senator was one of our better stu-
dents.He started the course at about 600
vords a minute and increased his rate 4

times. Our average student begins at 300
words a minute and graduates at speeds
over 1,500 words a minute.
You can do this, too
Reading dynamically is often like watch-
ing a movie. You have no sense of read-
ing words. Sometimes your involvement
is so intense that it's as though you're
actually there, watching the action take
place.
Take a free Mini-Lesson
In 60 minutes, over 80% of our Mini
-Lesson audiences increase their reading
speed. Just a little, but enough to know
what it's like. At the Mini-Lesson, you will
find out how the Evelyn Wood technique
handles difficult textbook material. How
it improves memory and concentration.
And, how it makes reading Q pleapure
instead of a chore. The Mini-Lesson is one
hour that could change your i ito'

Call 764-0558

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