.Page Eight IHE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Eight iHE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 30, 1971 Longhorns steer Southwest drive PITCHING IS KEY: Orioles, A's poise for combat By THERESA SWEDO In these opening weeks of col-I lege football many bright stars in the Southwestern Conference have dimmed, but the lone star of the University of Texas shines on and on. In their debut game the Long- horns defeated the UCLA Bruins by a score of 28-10, disproving ominous rumors that their flock of sophomores might prove to be too green for an effective per- formance. In the UCLA game, the Long-: horns used some of the playingj features they are famed for, in-, cluding the Wishbone-T offense. son rhetoric as being one of the brightest of the Longhorn stars, The speedy split end is known to run the 100 in 9.6 seconds. The Longhorns are a noticeablyj young team this year, with 25 sophomores. These men have re-! placed a group of seniors, fifteenj of whom were starters. Besidesj game but to the crown at the end of the road. One reason for Royal's optim- ism is the downfall of the Ar- kansas Razorbacks to the lowly Tulsa Hurricanes, 21-20. T h e Razorbacks built up a 20-0 half- time lead behind the leadership of quarterback Joe Ferguson, a n d Besides the lack of a good quar- For Texas Tech, the 28-0 de- terback, the Owls don't have very feat to Texas dampened h o p e s good protection in the way of for a 1971 title under second year blocking, since two of the b e s t coach Jim Carlen. hl'e*er """n" l "" PP "nr R. nn I taoe ist - <~ uUJ4.Lt-l...lieu iIS ±1, vLi4 Moore, other standouts tight end Rick Davison, Cannon at rover, Glenn include proceeded to blow the whole thing B r u c e via overconfidence and costly mis- Gaspard takes. Razorback Coach Frank at linebacker and Craig Arledge a't defensive end: One of the bright spots of ex-, perience on a young team is on the Longhorns' offensive line. The Broyles can be comforted in the knowledge that his team did roll up impressive victories against both California and Oklahoma State. Perhaps it was just a bad day - for everyone. The Rice Owls are a Texas foot- ball team which has plenty of problems, a new coach, and a new emphasis for playing. I Quarterback Eddie Phillips, who' has since been injured and re- placed by Dennis Wigginton, wasj more successful in running t h eI option around the ends in t h a t game rather than passing to soph-' omore receiver Jim Moore. Moore was heralded in pre-sea-I 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- ven. Refreshments are Laura's Grandmother's soup w/rice, barley, little meatballs and homemade breqd w/real butter. THURSDAY AT 8 P.M. South Quad, West Lounge No musical knowledge ne.eded EVERYONE INVITED further info: Sue, 764-7894 John, 482-5858 veteran position ior right tackle 6-4, 250, the only er on the line. He will be a is held by jun- Jerry Sisemore, y returning start- prime factor if Waidemon are out with knee in- juries. As if that were not enough troubles for one team, the de- fensive line is even worse than any other headache picked at ran- dom. The men playing those posi- tions are young, small, inexper- ienced, and they need to toughen up. The overall lack of leadership on the Rice team tends to cor- rode the very will of the team to win. However, all is not dark. Rice has a Southwestern Conference standout in Rodrigo Barnes at linebacker, the top defensive back in the SWC, Mike Tyler, and one of the best running backs in Staehle Vincent. Teas A & M has also been hav- ing their problems. This past week they were solidly trounced by the Nebraska Cornhuskers 34-7. With troubles in defense, the Aggies don't seem to be too much of a problem for the Longhorn on- slaught. Texas succeeds in capturing the This emphasis has changed Southwestern Conference crown from. a running game to a passing again this year, game, if anyone can find a quar- feather terback that can pass. All this has This would be another feather come about because of a new in the cap of Coach Darrell Royal, coach, Bill Peterson, formerly of whose teams over the last 14 years Florida State. In his search for have captured 7 SWC titles and a quarterback Peterson has come 3 national titles. Royal has the up with Bruce Gadd and Philip philosophy of championship, and Wood, neither of whom are out- he doesn't look from game to standing. the ann arbor film cooperative announces The New Film School Last year Carlen did a good job with his team, finishing up with an 8-3 record. This year he has many of the products of his own recruiting campaign, which is bound to change the picture dramatically from last year. Defensively, Tech has been stub- born these days with the help of all-SWC linebacker Larry Mo-' linare. Offensively, quarterback Nap-{ per is respected by rival coaches, and the running backs are poten- tially dangerous. The Baylor Bears look unim- pressive considering their record of 0-10 last year. Southern Meth- odist and Texas Christian will probably strengthen their reputa-; tion this year as overrated teams who never win. Again, this year the sky over the Southwestern Conference' seems to glimmer with only one lone star, and that is in the strange shape of a longhorn. lt. reigns; i to eighth place but there was a change in the following positions. Western Kentucky, which romp- ed over Austin Peay 46-7, climbed to fourth, supplanting Montana, which dropped to fifth after a 38- 14 triumph over California Poly. Eastern Michigan, fifth a week; ago, fell to eighth on an open date, with Delaware climbing to sixth and Louisiana Tech to sev- enth.t The Top Ten teams, withfirst place votes in parentheses, won-lost records, and total points on a 20-18-16-14-12-10. 9-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 ratio:t an intense study of film-making -C4 Arkiansas K, EMU drops By The Associated Press Arkansas State, with a 20-6 vic- tory over Northeast Louisiana State, moved ahead of North Da- kota State yesterday in The As- sociated Press college division football poll. North Dakota State, which led to the first week's balloting, drop- ped to second place after a 16-5 squeak past South Dakota. The voting for the top position was so close, however, that only two points - 236-234 - sepa- rated the No. 1 and No. 2 teams. Arkansas State received the most first place votes - eight, compared with five for North Da- kota State - from the special panel of sports writers and broad-C casters who make the selection. Grambling, 20-16 winner over Arkansas AM&N, held to third By JOE PHILLIPS Charlie Finley, baseball's great- est goof artist and showman, has pulled off his ultimate c a p e r: championship baseball. On April 20th of this year, his Oakland Athletics jumped into first-place in the American League West and amazingly nonchalantly ran away with the division title. Beginning this Saturday, Char- lie will have, to outdo himself when his A's take on the w o r 1 d champion, nearly invincible Ori- oles from Baltimore. Rhetoric and Finley aside, there can be no ques- tion about it: these are the two best teams in baseball. Until the All-Star break, t h e A's were Vida Blue this, Vida Blue that and Vida Blue's powder blue Cadillac. But no more; even after Blue fell apart (victim of a strange disease, some say, that he caught from an overexposure to sportswriters and their typi- cally ridiculous questions), t h e A's continued to win. They've been playing good, hungry baseball bas- ed on solid pitching, speed a n d an adequate defense. Chuck Dobson carries a 15-5 re- cord into the playoffs while Cat- fish Hunter has won twenty games to help pick up- the slack from a shell-shocked Blue. The bullpen suffered a serious loss this week when it was an- nounced that Ron Klimkowski was named to replace sore-armed John "Blue Moon" Odom on the A's pitching roster for the play-offs. Hopefully, Roland Fingers a n d Diego Segui will help fill the gap for manager Dick Williams. Reggie Jackson has been play- ing the best baseball of his ca- reer and is currently tied for the AL home run championship with 32. Sal Bando should finish t h e year with 100 RBI's and owner Finley has nominated him for the AL's MVP award for his consist- ent play at third base. S u r e - gloved "Campy" Campaneris adds speed and clutch hitting to t h e Oakland attack. What can you say about t h e Baltimore Orioles? They're cool, relaxed, unexcitable; they're old er, more experienced team than the A's, and possibly a bit more complacent. They're boringly ef- ficient to boot. Dave McNally, Mike Cuellar, Pat Dobson and Jim Palmer have each won twenty games as Frank and Brooks Robinson continue to casually turn defeat into victory, While the A's are definitely a younger, speedier team, the Ori- oles must have the best defense in baseball with Paul Blair, Don Buford and Merv Rettenmund pa-j troling the outfield while Brooks and Mark Belanger suck up every- thing hit to the left side of the infield.r If the Orioles have a weakness,' it's in their bullpen. Dick Hall, Dave Leonhard, Pete Richert and From a strategic standpoint, the play-off looms as a dead heat. Williams, known as a strict dis- ciplinarian when managing the Boston Red Sox, has brought the Athletics together. Unlike his pre- decessors. he has managed to avoid any front-office problems w i t h Eddie Watt are all established re- Finley and kept his brooding star lief pitchers but have suffered Jackson happy. terribly from a lack of work this year. The four starters have com- Weaver has virtually produced bined for over one thousand in- a dynasty in Baltimore and no nings pitched thus far and so the manager in baseball is cooler or Oriole bullpen has remained an'more confident than he. unknown commodity. The A's should give Baltimore a The A's know that to win they'll run for their money and, w h o have to knock out Baltimore's knows? Charlie Finley may pull starting pitchers and get s o m e something twisted like poisoning phenomenal pitching themselves, the Baltimore pitching staff or particularly from Blue. As Frank stampeding the Orioles dugout Robinson says, "If we can beat with his famous donkeys. At any Blue in that first game we'll get rate, it should be a relatively ex- them thinking." citing play-off. A Applications for the 1971-72 term are available at the Alley Cinema, 330 Maynard on Monday thru Thursday nights. Attention ALL GIRLS, Frosh.-Sr.; TRYOUTS FOR MICHIGAN'S BASKETBALL CHEERLEADERS will begin Monday, Oct. 11 7:00 p.m. at Crisler Arena Come dressed to cheer, and help lead the71971-72 basketball team to a great season. GO BLUE 1. Arkansas St. (8) 2. North Dakota St. (5) 3. Grambling 4. Western Kentucky (2) 5. Montana 6. Delaware 7. Louisiana Tech 8. Eastern Michigan 9. Eastern Kentucky 10. Tennessee St. Pts. 2-0 236 3-0 234 3-0 177 2-0 160 2-0 146 2-0 128! 2-0 -117 2-0 111 3-0 96 2-0 68 -Associated Press Join The Daily Staff Phone 764-0558 Ruined in wreck SCOTT PALMER, rookie defensive tackle for the New York Jets, suffered seven fractured ribs and collapsed lungs in an auto accident Monday night. According to Jet spokesmen, Palmer will be sidelinedfor at least six to eight weeks. The driver of the car, "tight" end Pete Lammons, suffered a shoulder injury but is expected to play Sunday. The accident followed New York's loss to St. Louis on Monday night. IRossignol Ski Package Rossignol Concorde skis; Koflock plastic buckle boots; Salomon or Tyrolia step-in bindings; Barrecrafter aluminum poles. SNOW! K-2 Package (175-180cm length only) K-2 XR-10 fiber glass skis; Le Trappeur plastic buckle boots; Solomon or Tyrolia step-in bind- ings; Barrecrafter aluminum poles. 4 $159.00 SAVE $50.00 $125.00 SAVE $44.00 Store hours: Man.-Fri. 12 noon-8 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. SPALDING FIBER GLASS OR ALUMINUM SKIS Regularly $140-$180 NOW 1/2 PRICE (Limited Quantities-1st Come, 1st Serve) 4EE.-$ 2455 5. STATE ST. Master Charge BankAmericard UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING, DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE ENGINEERING PRESENTS: THE APOLLO 15 ASTRONAUTS Caol. Lt. Col. Lt Col David R. Scott Alfred M. Worden James B. Irwin This little slpstick could increase your typing speed by two or three days. Students will be elated over a completely new way to correct typing errors: Liquid Paper's® new dispenser, slipstick. When you're typing the big one, the 30-page paper you've been sweating for weeks, that's when mistakes bug you the most. So you slow down. And the closer you get to the bottom of the page, the more you clutch up. Mess up now and you've got a whole page to retype. When you've got a slipstick handy, you don't worry about mistakes. One easy touch releases a special fluid that buries the mistake and leaves a clean new surface like the paper itself. So you type relaxed. And make fewer mistakes. On the big assignments, Liquid Paper's new slip- stick could put you days ahead. ASK FOR LIQUID PAPER SLIPSTICK AT YOUR BOOKSTORE OR ORDER DIRECT WITH THIS COUPON. rLiquid Paper Corporation 1 Dept. CS 9130 Markville Drive Dallas, Texas 75231 b' 1# f .::. ' y: . :: r': ... :,: ' hi. 14iiii::' ii;::%.!:::%::j}U r::::if:.?. ', Y myv .i}; : :.::'.4 .;}:....... .: 'W' .:: . i:: ?::$ if!Sv: ':. t,.. ::.. :.:._ ":'. n .. .. :. __ .£4:^...ii:. i:.: is }r .: gp{if.. .. ....::_v.vG::. s dt.. .:.s :.v. ±r... 5:. . .. ... ' ' I i i