'.Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 29, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I ARKANSAS UPSET: Starks sparks T ulsa victory IPy CHUCK DRUKIS I had lost to mediocre Kansas Yet that was the only bright spot Last Saturday the biggest mis- State. to the Tulsa attack. match between college football Arkansas, a massive and ex- Both starting running backs teams south of the Mason-Dixon perienced crew, was led by raw- and one of the split ends were line was played in Fayetteville, hide quarterback Joe Ferguson. A out with injuries. Arkansas. Or at least most critics Heisman trophy hopeful, Fergu- Nevertheless, Tulsa refused to expected it to be. son anticipated another tune up give up. An revitalized aggressive Arkansas, rated seventh in the for the upcoming game against Tulsa offense began to take over country, was expecting to addran- Texas. the momentum. Todd Starks cul- other notch to' Coach Frank Ferguson prompted the Razor- minated Tulsa's first successful the Razorbacks had rolled up - backs toward their seemingly im- offensive drive of the afternoon th, Razorbacshand dricoesup55rpending victory with three first with a scoring pass of 23 yards 0, 56-0, and 49-7 victories over( half scores, to Dave Stewart. the menial Tulsa Hurricanes in the past three years. Then, on a meaningless extra Moments later, a stunned Ar- The Razorbacks had climbed point after the Razorbacks third kansas team fumbled deep in to number seven with impressive touchdown, kicker Bill McClard their own territory, and Tulsa re- victories over California and Ok- had to pick up a bad snap from covered. Starks proceeded to lahoma State. Tulsa, meanwhile, center and threw an incomplete throw another scoring pass of 9 desperation pass into the endzone. yards to flanker Drew Pearson, Nevertheless, a jubilant Arkan- who hadn't played flanker since sas squad went into its locker he was 'in high school. Conse- F razier Aliroom with a 20-0 halftime lead. quently, Tulsa had struck twice The Razorbacks history to date within 1:55, and were back in the to mieet Inhad been one of playing a close ballgame. game with their opponents in the Arkansas was not, however, go- .11. first half, and then burying them ing to play dead. They took the in the second. Thus, with their kickoff and marched to the Hur- biggest halftime lead of the year, ricane 40 yard line, but were HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (R)-Yancey the Razorbacks were salivating forced to punt to Tulsa's 18 yard "Yank" Durham, manager of over their upcoming cakewalk. line. heavyw'eight champion Joe Frazier, The third quarter, however, did Once again Starks took the said yesterday that a return bout not transpire as contemplated. reins. After two major penalties The lackadaisical defensive effort against Arkansas and a sustained between Frazier and Muhammad I by Tulsa in the first half shifted drive to the Razorback 21 yard Ali probably will not take place to a dynamic unit, line, Starks connected with Larry before late 1972 or early 1973. All - American candidate Ralph Frey for his third TD, pass of "Ali says he wants four or five McGill plucked a Ferguson pass the quarter. near the close of the third quar- Sam Henry converted his third more fights before he gets back ter, and brought it deep into Raz- consecutive try, and Tulsa had re- in the ring with Joe," Durham orback territory. But a powerful bounded for a 21-20 triumph. said. "We're not going to be sitting Arkansas defense stopped a score A jubiliant coach, Claude Gib- on a 'fourth down play. son, called it "the greatest vic- around doing nothing. We prob- The start of the fourth quarter tory in Tulsa history!", while a ably will have a couple of fights restored a favorable fifteen-mile- dejected Frank Broyles summar- n, rcahv[c._ "n n-hm,.r winci to th e2mirnfcC.i.7.e an. ac c . r "n fbr " I) , t t t .j i Boardorders ngels to. pay Alex Johnson NEW YORK (iP) - An emo- $3,750. The estimate was made by ly by the clubs involved'. There was tional disturbance should be treat- the club. no discipline." ed no differently than a physical Walsh called the finding a A formal report issued by t h e ailment in baseball, an impartial "landmark discipline case." Players. Association, said the pan- arbitration board ruled yesterday "Either Johnson was or was el placed great weight on the re- in ordering the California Angels not responsible for his actions,", port of two psychiatrists - Dr. to restore full pay to their recal- the Angels' general manager add- Lawrence E. Jackson of W a y n e citrant outfielder, Alex Johnson. ed. "If he was responsible, then State University in Detroit, re- The verdict, which is binding, the suspension and fines w e r e tained by Johnson, and Dr. Jona- was termed a "landmark decision." than H. Himmelhoch of Y a 1 e Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said justified. University, retained by the Angels. Commissiner Bmodie Kuhnt saib If has judged not respon Both doctors, the association he had no immediate comment. sible for his actions then the 29 said, th"dcosexpressedh the view t h a t "The commissioner wants to club-imposed fines should have with axpriate treatment hn- read the report before expressing been ordered remitted." Miller, with appropriate treatment John- any reaction," said Monte Irvin b f th d son would be able to resume his of the commissioner's staffm objected to the assessment of the career." Dick Walsh, general manager of fines but lost on that particular not intended to suggest that play- the Angels, called it "totally in- count. ers may now avoid disciplinary consistent with the facts and com- "I don't think baseball ever had action by simply asserting t h a t pletely without justification." a ruling that fits into this pre- their conduct is due to emotional Marvin Miller, executive direc- cise framework," the players' exe- stress . . . but where highly qual- tor of the Major League Baseball cutive director said. ified and respected psychiatrists Players Association, said the find- "We have had other cases in find that a player is unable to ing was an historic one. the past involving disturbed play- perform because of an emotional "It means that a man who is ers - not that their cases were condition, he should be placed on emotionally disturbed is just as similar to that of Johnson - but the disable list rather than dis- ill as one who has sustained an the cases were handled intelligent- ciplined." injury or has an ailment," Miller . said. "He should not be suspend- CLOSE RACE: ed or disciplined. He should be * placed on the disabled list.r A player on the disabled list re- ceives full pay. Tio - seek Ai -Associated Press ALEX JOHNSON, errant California Angels outfielder, gained a moral and material victory yesterday as an impartial arbitra- tion board ruled that the Angels must pay him his salary covering the period after his suspension. Johnson was suspended on June 26 for not showing what his coach considered the proper attitude. s urseives. an- ioui Edna Lo Lyle nuz ricanes. izeu ule gaille as uu lluxe. KARAJAN ON ANGEL Angel .,; -w Karajan's 1911 Salzburg (olIa boralion 5-36//U SDL-3563 SBL-3595 Billboard The U-M paddleball club will hold an organizational meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 5 at 7 p.m. in the IM Building wrestling oom. Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad For the student body: Genuine E Authentic Navy IPEA COATS 1 $25 Sizes 34 to 50 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty "I can't exactly describe h i s feelings," the players' representa- tive added. "We mostly discussed his future. Alex has no doubts about his ability. He is concerned where he may be playing baseball next year." Johnson, 28, the American Lea- gue batting champion in 1970, was suspended by the Angels on June 26 for what they described as "not hustling and not showing the pro- per mental attitude." A player who has been with four teams - Philadelphia, St. Louis, Cincinnati and California - in his seven years in the majors, Johnson was benched 'several times during the-current season by Manager Lefty Phillips for failure to hustle. Once he accused teammate Chico Ruiz of pulling a gun on him in the Angels' clubhouse - a charge Ruiz denied. The two got into a fight at the batting cage last season and Johnson's wife apologized to the wives of some other players for his actions. In May, Phillips benched John- son for several days. Later Angels players failed to invite him to a team meeting after he had ap- parently loafed in chasing a fly ball, costing the team three runs. When he was suspended in June, his salary was cut off. The arbitration panel ordered the restoral of Johnson's salary for the rest of the season amounting to $29,970. But it upheld the 29 disciplinary fines totaling around SKI RACING CLUB MASS MEETING Wednesday Sept. 29-7 P.M. Union-Anderson 0 By BOB ECKINGER The Atlantic Coast Conference, home of the awesome (?) Virginia Cavaliers, is expecting a confer- ence race almost identical to last year's closely fought contest. North Carolina, Duke and Wake Forest are all considered contend- ers for this year's title with North Carolina given the preseason edge by sportswriters and conference coaches. With ten veteran defensive men returning, North Carolina should easily be able to match or better their second place finish in last year's conference race. In their three wins so far this season, two have been by shutouts. Contributing greatly to the de- fense's dominance are lineback- ers John Bunting and Jim Web- ster, whom coach Bill Dooley ranks with the best anywhere. Offensively, three of four back- field starters are returning includ- ing, at helm, quarterback P. Mil- ler. Don McCauley, the NCAA'., alltime single-season ground- gainer has graduated, but run- ning back Ike Oglesby appears destined to take his place. As a sophomore last year, Ogles- by gained 562 yards running be- hind McCauley. So far this sea- son he has picked up that pace, rushing for 175 yards in the Illi- nois game and catching a 58 yard TD pass from Miller. Wingback Lewis Jolley is also expected to bolster North Caro- lina's running attack. Duke, under new coach Mike McGee has piled up a surpris- ing 3-0 record so far this sea- son. After upsetting South Caro- lina 28-12, two weeks ago, they were ranked twentieth in the weekly AP poll. A major factor in Duke's vic- tories so far this season has been running back Steve Jones. Last year Jones set a school record at Duke with 854 yards despite missing two games. In this sea- son's opener against Florida, he continued from where he left off last year and yards. On THREE brand-new com- panion albums. Herbert von Karajan pays tribute to his home town's master musician. With the Berlin Philharmonic, THE LAST SIX SYMPHONIES OF MOZART have been re- visited-for Angel.. The association is brilliant. Indeed, one which would command the composer himself to speak in 1971 super-superlatives. Here then is great Mozart. Created out of Karaan's titanic discipline and dedi- cation to the music--and the Berlin's own unanswering interpretative knowhow. Angel has brought it all together on this trio of impeccably engineered recordings. S-36771I rushed for over 190 S-35430 S-35613 r 3, 35092K aln Cornerback Ernie Jackson has also been adding to the teams scoring. Against South Carolina, Jackson intercepted a pass for a 30 yard touchdown return and ran back a pass for 74 yards. Saturday's game against Stan- ford should prove a real test for McGee and his team. Wake Forest surprised every- one but their coach, Calvin Stroll, last year as they took the con- ference championship. Stroll, who is in his third year of coaching at Wake Forest, improved from a 3-7 record in his first season to a 6-5 record and the conference title the next. Instrumental in last season's success were quarterback Larry Russel and fullback Larry Hop- kins, who gained 984 yards for the Deacons. With Russel, Hopkins and three other all-league players return- ing, Wake Forest's chances of re- peating as conference champs looks good. They rolled to two easy victories so far this season until last week end when they were beaten by Miami in a non- conference game. Both South Carolina and Maryland are considered as hav- ing outside chances at taking the ACC title. South Carolina was looked up- on asan early league contender and was ranked 19th in the AP's first weekly college poll. But an upset loss to Duke has set ther back somewhat. The offense has been rather sporadic so far, looking. strong in their victories over N.C. State and Georgia Tech, but erratic against Duke where three different quar- terbacks were used in the attempt to score. If Coach Paul Dietzel's team is to be in contention, he will have to tighten up his offense for the bigger games. Maryland has compiled a 1-2 record thus far, with their lone win coming against N.C. State. Their offense is based around running back Art Seymere who gained 945 yards last year. Their defense, however, has been unable to contain the powerful teams and it is here where their ma- jor weakness lies. Clemson, North Carolina State and Virginia lie at the bottom of the league, with little hope of es- caping from those dismal depths. Not one of these teams has been able to compile a single win so far this season. - LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of Drug Help, Inc. will be held at 8:00 p.m., Wednesday, October 20 in the Michigan Union, Ann Arbor, Michigan. At that time election of Board of Directors will take place. 4 S-36772 5-35615 99 NOW ONLY - per disc Rossini Overtures (from William Tell, Barber of Seville and others) . Philharmonia Orchestra. S-35890 Sibelius: Symphony No. 2. Philharmonia Orchestra. 535891 Sibelius: Symphony No. 5; Finlandia. Philharmonia Orchestra. S-35922 Bartok: Music From Strings, Percussion and Celestra; Hinde- mith: Mathis Der Maler. Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. S-35949 I Thru Sunday, Oct. 3rd NEW FROM ANGEL Shostokovitch- Sym. No. 4 Moscow Phil., Kondrashin I Introducing stationery for people who think saving a tree is important. Earthnotes is 100% recycled quality stationery. It's made entirely from waste material. Trash. Using recycled paper saves trees, reduces pollution, and cuts down on waste. But recycling only works when there is a demand for waste material. And this demand is created only when people buy recycled products. By buying Earthnotes, and other recycled paper products, you create a market for recycled paper. And help to save more trees. Each box contains 50 Monarch size sheets, 30 matching envelopes and 30 "Save- a-Tree" stickers so you can spread the buy recycling message. It's available in white or pastel "earth colors". w and help save-a-tree Andrews / Nelson / Whitehead a 7 Lalght Street Nw New York, New York 10013 a Boise Cascadt Divieion HUMAN RIGHTS- RADICAL INDEPENDENT PARTY OPEN MEETING e Election of Steering Committee o Party Structure *Committee Reports Dvorak-Cello Concerto Du Pre, Barenboim Beethoven-Sym. No. 7 Chicago Sym., Giulini Mahler- Symphony No. 1 Chicago Sym., Giulini SDL 3774-- Verdi: Don Carlo complete opera-w. Caballe, Domingo, Verrett, Giulini cond. (4-record set) SB 3778- Sibelius: Kullervo a choral masterpiece, conducted by Paavo Berglund (2-record set) now only 99 per disc thru Sunday, Oct. 3rd POP SALE BARGAIN TIME! Selected Blue Note Jazz, Vanguard Folk, Supremes, Temps, 4 Tops, Blues, Classics, Spoken Word, AND MORE! 39 and less ! Bach Club This week's meeting will in- clude a short election of offi- cers and DONALD SOSIN, a "Daily" m u s i c reviewer who plays piano for silent movies at the Cinema Guild. Sosin will perform works of Bach, Schoenberg, and Beetho- yen. Refreshments are Laura's Grandmother's soup John Lennon-Imagine........... Aretho Franklin-Hits ........... Funkadelic-Macaot Brain........ 3.59 2.99 -1 an 'I I L.77 I 1nviEo hcnnn IP'- nFlaJ 'AInnI Ann FI C TACKV I I I