Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September, ;13, 1970 "age Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 13, 1970 a 1 BO NOT HAPPY 3 LIKE MUSICAL THEATER? Asst. director costumer properties make-up' program design MUSKET the all campus musical theater company NEEDS YOU!"' Teamgoes through final scrimmage Light designer set designer set builder stage manager program ads light &'sound technician publicity artist manager (4) secretaries distribution communication (2) tickets & ushers treasurer asst: chairman By MORT NOVECK The Michigan football team held its final preseason scrim- mage yesterday afternoon at the stadium in preparation for the season opener next Satur- day against Arizona and except for some individual bright spots it was nothing to get aroused about. Unfortunately, head c o a c h Bo Schembechler was aroused, and it wasn't because he spot- ted a pretty girl on the side- lines. It was, rather, the poor showing of his offensive unit, which was definitely not in peak form. Schembechler de- clined to talk to the press, after the workout and instead relay- ed the message, "no comment", through an aide. The final score of the work- out was 34-0, which doesn't really sound too bad until real- izing that the second. string scored not at all. that the de- fense was responsible for 6 of the. points, and that the first string got some of its scores be- cause it received the ball in ex- cellent field position. Beginning the scrimmage with the second string, the of- fense had trouble moving t h e ball until Don Moorhead and the first string came in. They immediately began a good drive, but tailback Lance, Scheffler fumbled inside the 10 to re- turn the ball to the number two unit. The second string in turn lost the ball almost immed- iately aid the first string fin- ally got on the scoreboard as Billy Taylor punched in f r o m inside the one at 4:22 of t h e first quarter. Taylor, who was one of the few players to have a good day, put the front line on the board again with a three yard carry with :57 seconds left in the first half. Glenn Doughty, participating in his first contact drill, al- most put another score on the board before the half ended as he took a pitchout from Moor- head and, reversing field sev- eral times, put on a great exhi- bition of, broken field running only to be brought down as he slowed to let his blocking form ahead as the clock ran out. Quarterback Moorhead was > responsible for both second half scores by the offense as he scrambled two yards for the first and passed seven yards to Bill Beiutti, who made a fine catch in the endzone, for the second. Ed Moore and Mike Keller combined for the defensive score. Moore blocked a punt at the 35 and Keller picked the ball up at the 11 and scampered in for the score. Bill Hasl tt provided another defensive high- light when he made the work- out's only interception in the fourth quarter. Iaylor wts the leading rusher for the offensive with 103 yards. He was followed by Doughty, who saw limited actidn, with 48, and Preston Henry with 47. Moorhead wound up with a big zero net yards and reserve Jack McBride rushed for a negative 23. Billy H4arris scrimmaging for the first time, and Mike Oldham each had four receptions, for 44 and 43 yards respectively, but Doughty led the receivers with 3 for 64 yards. In all, the offense rushed for 203 yards and passed for an- other 269. Defensive halfback Bruce El- liot was the only casualty in the action"as he sustained a shoul- der bruise, the extent of which is not yet known. Petitions Available---UAC Office---2nd Floor Michigan Union DUE TUESDAY, SEPT. 15, 1970 AT 5:00 P.M. 1 95% of the Reading Population Reads Only 250 to' 300 Words Per Minute or Less Rosewall, Roche win in U.S. tennis semis SI . r ; ! j I G DOWNTOWN HONDA 1 1' Is NoDifficult to Learn Those who completed courses held this past year at the Bell Tower Hotel achieved speeds of 800 to 2000 w.p.m. with the same or increased comprehension they hard at their slower reading rates.1 I I I I1 USEE HOW EASILY YOU AN: -save hours, use your time more efficiently -learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now -improve your comprehension and increase your enjoyment of reading material r b _. ,. , 8 3 a r " , '. .. f Y CYCLES * PARTS * ACCESSORIES softballer in an age of blasting power, checked John Newcombe's big guns with finesse and blew t h e second -,seeded Wimbledon V champion off the ,enter court in 86 minutes 6-3, 6-4, 6-3. Then Roche; 25,} using a whirl- wind left-handed attack, shatter- ed the last American h o p e by crushing the aggressive Cliff Ri- chey of San Angelo, Tex., 6-2, 7-6 6- Rosewall and Roche will met for the title today and the $20,000 first prize. It is the ninth all-Australian fi- nal in 15 years. ,,Rosewall returns to the center court *here he start- ed this Aussie monopoly in 1956 -- 14 years ago - by beating Lew Hoad in the final. Australia is also heavily favor- ed in the women's division where Margaret Court ,seeking a tennis grand slam, defends her crown against Rosemary Casals ofSan Francisco. Today's finals will be nation- ally televised by CBS, 3:30-5:30 p.m. EDT. Rosewall was the darling of the sellout crowd of 14,481 at t h e West Side Tennis Club as he chopped down the 6-foot-1, hard- hitting Newcombe. Afterward in answer tdl a ques- ~tion, Rosewall said: I, think the Ken Rosewall of today c o u ld beat the Ken Rosewall of 14 years ago. It's, not. easy, to give away so many years. to 'younger play- ers. When you get as old as' -I am, you have to use other ways." .Rosewall broke Newcombe four times - in the eighth game of the first set, in the third gameof the second and in the first and list game of the thid. He finished off the match with a beautiful fore- hand cross-court placement. at a cost less than HALF that of other commercial reading courses offered in this area! Bring a book to a free, live demonstration of the reading skills which will be taught in a GUARANTEED course offered this semester. Demonstrations this week-Tues., Wed.,Thurs., Sept. 15,16,17 7:30 P.M.{ at the Bell Tower Hotel, 300 So. Thayer St., across from Burton Tower I 310 E. Washington Ann Arbor i I 'I a sound investment for people who count perfection first! TEAC A-7030 U STEREO TAPE DECK $74950 101 INCH REELS ... HALF TRACK STEREO ... 15 IPS There's only one way to buy a Stereo Tape Deck. Play it by ear. The TEAC A-7030 U rises to this challenge as nothing ever has at anywhere near its price. Incomparable excellence of performance is assured by a host of features. A Symmetri- cal Control System provides positive operation with foolproof tape control. Newly designed motors (2 new eddy current outer rotor motors for reel drive and a 2-speed hysteresis synchronomous motor for capstan drive) assure completely stable tape travel and accurate tape speeds. 15 and 7/2 ips speed, 112 track record, 1/2 and %4 track playback, 3-stage direct-coupled amplifiers, large VU meters, 100 kHz oscilla- tor . . . everything for minimal wow and flutter, optimum frequency response, dynamic range, highest signal-to-noise ratio. If you're a stereo sophisticate, you'll enjoy an audition. Ann Arbor Tae Kwon Do Association CO-EDUCATIONAL' TAE KWON DO (KARATE) s? };; t : ' r ,r.: ? ". J' " { :,vS ,1 l:' i }:9 :I ' "1 j 1j ti : f : . 'i,:;: +s ?: : 3:; .: ; :: yr i.SY i {. 4?: .tit 4 Demonstrations and Trainings MONDAY, SEPT. 14, 7 P.M.-Bursley Dining Hall WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17, 7 P.M.-East Quad, Room 126 THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 7 P.M.-Markley Dining Hall BE READY TO TRAIN AFTER THE DEMONSTRATION Training Schedule: BURSLEY-Monday, Wednesday, Sunday-7 P.M. EAST QUAD-Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Sunday-7 P.M. MARKLEY-Tuesday and Thursday-7 P.M. SOUTH QUAD-Tuesday and Thursday-7 P.M. INFORMATION-769-4619 CHANGING LIFE STYLES HI-FI BUYS Ann Arbor-East Lansing 618 S. Main Phone 769-4700 "Quality Sound Throuqh Quality Equipment" SEPT. 20 PSYCHEDELIC DRUGS and the SACRED TED KACHEL-Office of Religious Affairs SEPT. 27 THE COUNTERCULTURE HERB BRINKS-Grad BOB HAUERT-Office of Religious Affairs OCT. 10-11 FALL RETREAT: Biblical Views of Masculinity, Femininity, Sex Roles, and the Family REV. MELVIN HUGEN-Calvin Seminary * COLLEGE REPUBLICANS PRESENT: '':":"'FLenor (Candi Rep." :i iU date for U.S. Senate) r * AND OCT. 18 WOMEN IN SOCIETY OCT. 25 WOMEN IN THE CHURCH NOV. 8 HOMOSEXUALITY NOV. 22 GAY LIBERATION DEC. 13 CHRISTMAS CANDLELIGHT SERVICE COME PARTICIPATE LEARN 7:15 Sunday Evenings FOREST at WASHTENAW Bay Snit AT