*Sunday, September 13, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven 4Sunday, September 1 3, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Plunkett, Indians By The Associated Press,' FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Stan- ford's defense,. its back against the wall, shanghaied Arkansas quarterback Bill Montgomery on, a fourth down at the Stanford ,our yesterday to lieserve a 34-28 victory. * Stanford's Jim Plunkett befud- dled the fourth-ranked Razor- backs' defense with short passes to his running backs as the In- dians raced to a 27-0 lead midway in the second period. Montgomery, ineffective through most of the first half, had rallied the Razorbacks by turning two fourth down plays into touch- downs. When Arkansas tailback Bill Burnett leaped into the end zone midway through the fourth period, the Razorbacks pulled to 34-28. Less than two minutes later, defensive end Rick Kersey recov- ered a fumble at midfield and Arkansas had one last chance. I The drive reached the Stanford' five and on fourth down and less than two yards to go, Montgomery' sprinted to his left, cut up field, and was knocked down a foot from a first down. The Indians happily watched the final 22 seconds tick away. I Plunkett connected on 14 of 30 passes during the first half, but' was 11 for 17 at one point. When Plunkett wasn't throw- ing, he was handing off to 220- pound Hillary Shockley, who scored three touchdowns on runs of 43. 2 and 1 yards. The Indians'- upset dailly sports Hogs in two series of plays, Then UCLA went from its own 37 to the end zone where reserve back Randy Tyler fumbled the ball. * * * 4amecocks crocked ot ya an to 61-.I ATLANTA, Ga. - Sophomore her touchdowns came on a 61- NIGHT EDITOR: Eddie McAshan, first black quar- rd punt return by Eric Cross d a 17-yard pass from Plunkett BILL ALTERMAN terback at a major college in the id en7-yadRpas r PlukettSouth, engineered two s e c o n d i en R half touchdown drives yesterday Halfback Joe Orduna, back in as Georgia Tech opened its foot- ide trumped the Husker lineup after a year's ball season with a 23-20 victory BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - San absence for knee surgery, scored over 17th ranked South Carolina. BIMNHAAa ,Sf am t of th i tn indwns r I I Ti r on this and that It occurs to-me ... eric siegs THAT THOSE WHO TALK so earnestly about the lack of in- centive on a team that can't go to the Rose Bowl should look back at what happened here 20 years ago. The 1947 Michi- gan team went 9-0, won the conference championship and went to the Rose Bowl. The 1948 team, which couldn't go to the Rose Bowl, went 9-0, won the conference championship and was ranked number one in the country. That some coaches, including, Bo Schembechler, want the Big Ten to allow more football tenders because of the 11th game, which starts next year. That the Wolverines have been attracting more than their. fair share of professional scouts.,The scouts say they like to get a look at the players in practice situations early in the sea- son, where they can judge a player on "the basics." Inciden- tally, one well-known pro superscout who stopped in at prac- tice late last month ratesDon Moorhead as one of the top- four college quarterbacks in the country. ,That if you don'tthink Michigan State is nostalgically looking back to their days of greater gridiron glory, con- sider the lead item on one or their latest press releases. It reads: "Michigan State's 28-game football winning streak of 1950-53 was the 10th longestin the first 100 years of-the sport. That Michigan's high spot in the preseason polls doesn't leave Schembechler especially enthusiastic, nor especially cold. "The polls probably mean more to the players than they do to, me," he says. "'I've been looking at polls for 17 years and I know they don't mean much." That Ohio State's venerable old gridiron mentor W. W. Hayes wouldn't even mention Michigan by name when the Buckeyes held their annual picture day last month "That team that beat us last year should be good again this year, too," he said. But, probably much- to Woody's chargin, the Wolverines haven't gone away just because he ignored them and neither has last year's 24-12 defeat. That Dick Caldarazzo and Jerry Imsland, two members of last year's varsity te'am, probably hold the record for the t shortest tenure of any assistant freshman football coach in the country. They held their .positions a little over one day, before they quit. That only three Michigan players have won the "Most Valuable Player" award twice since its inception in 1926.' Two, Ron Johnson in 17 and '68 and Tom Harmon in '39 and '40, wyre halfbacks. Ralph Heikkinen, who won it in 37 and '38, was a guard. ' That Michigan's ticket manager has nothing but praise for students and after four hectic days of ticket distribution. "It was the smoothest distribution since I've been here," he says, "and the credit belongs to the students." That, in the words of physical education instructor supreme Wally Weber, "pound for pound" Michigan wolf- back Frank Gusich could be the toughest player in, the conference. Last year, Gusich, who weighs 187, amazed people with his guts, playing the entire year with a broken wrist. This year, he has amazed people with his tackling -ability. That the Big Ten, which likes to boast of its grand old heritage, sometimes confuses tradition with intransiglence. A case in point is the conference's persistent refusal to allow freshman football players to report for pre-season conditioning drills before the start of the academic term. The' conference powers that we are so afraid of giving someone a slight ad- vance by changing a rule that they prefer to stand pat and leave things as they are. The joke of the whole thing is that the freshman are used mainly to practice with the varsity, and any advantage that would come from allowing them to report early would be evident only in the first couple of games, which are non-conference contests. That if the talent-laden Michigan Basketball team can muster half the enthusiasm of their always effervescent coach, Johnny Orr, they might really go places. "Wouldn't it be great," Orr speculated the other day, "if Michigan won conference championships in football and basketball in the same year." I "I w °of one u clw. Cunningham, running at better than 10 yards a clip,, led third- Another Nebraska TD show- ranked Southern California to a cased Johnny Rodgers, a 5-10' 42-21 footbal victory over Ala- sophomore, who shared a 61-yard bama last night an'd ruined the scoring pass from Tagge, and re- Crimson Tide's ambition of vault- peatedly showed breakaway po- ing into the Top 10. tential. Cunningham and a covey of It was the first meeting of the other talented backs ripped the schools, and the game was olayed Tide defense apart to hand Ala- before 66,103 on the new artificial bama Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant turf of Memorial Stadium. his third straight defeat, the first * * * time that has happened to him since he took over at Alabama in UCLA squeaks by 1958. CORVALLIS, Ore. - UCLAs Quarterback Jimmy Jones, join- CORVADLItOerCA s 1 ing in U88's running, directed the Dennis Dummit overcame a relentless attack that kept dthe stubborn Oregon State defense in Tide off balance throughout. the second half, throwing t w o Alabama had, defeated Southern scoring passes as UCLA won a Cal in their only two previous Pacific-8 football opener 14-9 yes- meetings, the last time in the 1946 terday afternoon. Rose Bowl. UCLA drove inside Oregon * * State's 20-yard line four times in, Nebraska rolls the first half. But each time the Beavers repelled the attack. LINCOLN, Neb.-Ninth-ranked But Dummit directed a scoring Nebraska, combing the sharp pass- drive which started after the se- ing of quarterback Jerry Tagee cond-half kickoff at the 20-yard with the running of a bevy of fleet, line. It took 11 plays and right backs, overpowered Wake Forest end Bob Christiansen took it over 36-12 yesterday. in the football- on a nine-yard pass play. opener for both teams. OSU could not get a first down , 1' Kevin McNamara scored t h e touchdowns on runs of five and < two yards, the first capping a short 29-yard drive in the third quarter that followed M i k e Wy- song's 43 yard punt return. In the drive that put Tech ahead to stay, McAshan completed four passes for 46 yards, the last a 20- yard screen pass to Steve Harkey that carrier to the Gamecock five. Two plays later McNamara scored with 14:09 remaining in the game. METS KEEPS PACE Bucs I By The Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates, with the New York Mets ready to pass them, clung to a ninth-inning lead and retained their half-game edge in the hectic National League East race yesterday by dropping the Chicago Cubs 5-4. With the Mets already in the clubhouse with a 3-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals that pull- ed them briefly even with Pitts- burgh, the Pirates went out and downed the Cubs in a twice rain- delayed, nationally televised ten- sion-packed contest. The victory also moved the Cubs two games back, thwarting their 4bid to pull into a second place tie. It also temporarily halt- ed Ferguson Jenkins' bid for a fourth straight 20-victory season. Jenkins, 19-14, wasn't around when the game was decided in the ninth, which the Pirates entered 'leading 2-1. Consecutive homers by Willie Stargell, his 29th, and Bob Robertson, his 25th, brought home three runs and made it 5-1. . old o But the Cubs drove out Bob1 Moose, 10-9, with two singles and Jim Hickman's 31st homer in the bottom of the ninth, and had the tying run on second with one outw before' Dave Giusti got Ernie Banks on a pop up and struck out Paul Popovich to end the game. The Mets had won their seventh game in nine outings earlier when Jim McAndrew, 10-11; hurled a' five-hitter to outduel Jerry Reuss. Cleon Jones tripled in the fourth and scored oi Donn Clendenon's sacrifice fly, and Ken Single- ton hit a sacrifcie fly and Tom Foli singled for two runs in the eighth. In other National League af- ternoon games, Montreal nipped Philadelphia 4-1 on two-run ho- mers by John Bateman and Jim Gosger and San Francisco blasted Los Angeles 8-3 behind Willie Mc- Covey's two-run homer and two- runiingle. In the American League, the Chicago White Sox stopped Min- nesota 5-3, Oakland n u d g e d Kansas City 3-2, Cleveland trip- Cu bs ped the New York Yankees 4-3 in 11 innings and Detroit downed- Washington 6-4. Gail Hopkins and Syd O'Brien hit homers and Bobby Knoop doubled in the two decisive runs in the eighth as the White Sox ended Minnesota's four-game winning streak. Mickey Stanley bunted safely with the bases loaded, And ano- ther run scored on a wild throw on the play as Detroit broke an eighth-inning deadlock. Visiv :::v ~_ ";?;':r;.y- ::": Associated Press A CLOUD of dust wasn't enough for St. Louis' Julian Javier as New York third baseman Tim Foli prepares to put the tag on him in the fourth inning of yes- terday's game at Shea Stadium. The Mets won 3-0 to remain one-half game behind the Pitts- burgh Pirates in the tight Na- tional League East. TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 L/ f Wicker W Willow~ ,mil',. ,} {" r.'r,{ .,4 . ' YY :"r 'N"r :N.".'^lX:ri" :1 ::::"" 'J ti"H +rl'rt,.'r.::.:: ::H. ............ ' , 'r' fe YS@M!.":3CJ0+7 K .AG ':Y r:S:v.SA.'" :{i ".ti .Cl' . '+vr.... v...:.;..r. r .."rr r':r':.' 1{ $Y::% : :"2"?.r:':":; >.r .":}.i,:i: :S{4:":: z$_ I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Cleveland Washington W 94 81 f 75 70. 67 West 87 8 76 56 54 52 f L 51 64 70 70 76 77 57 65 67 88 89 93 Pct. .648 .559 .517 .517 .479 .465 .604 .552 .531 .389 .378 .359 G Minnesota Oakland California Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago -Associated Press JEFF KINNEY (35) crunches through the Wake Forest line for a short gain in Nebraska's season opener yesterday. The Corn- huskers went on to trounce the Deacons 36-12. S Cr E S '.'.*.}}r .-.s...... ... . SCORES?: Yesterday's Results Baltimore 5, Boston 1 Cleveland 4, New York 3, 11 inn. Detroit 6, Washington 4 Chicago 5, Minnesota 3 Oakland 3, Kansas City 2 Milwaukee at California, inc. Today's Games Milwaukee at California Oakland at Kansas City Chicago at Minnesota Washington at Detroit New York at Cleveland Boston at Baltimore NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 13 19 19 231, 26Y,4 71 31 321/ 351/2 GB 2 9 Philadelphia 66 80 .452 Montreal 63 81 .438 West Cincinnati 93 54 .633 Los Angeles 77 67 .535 San Francisco 77 68 .531 Altanta 72 75 .489, Houston 69 76 .476 San Diego 56 89 .386 Yesterday's Results Montreal 4, Philadelphia 3 Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 4 New York 3, St. Louis 0 Atlanta 5, Houston 3 Cincinnati at San Diego, inc. San Francisco 8, Los Angeles 3 Today's Games Philadelphia at Montreal St. Louis at New York Pittsburgh at Chicago Atlanta at Houston Cincinnati at San Diego Los Angeles at San Francisco 12 14 14 Y2 15 21 23 36 GRIDDE PICKINGS * Stanford 34, Arkansas 28 Georgia Tech 23, South Carolina 20 Navy 48, Colgate 22 Army 26, Holy Cross d Villanova 21,' Maryland 3 North Carolina 20, Kentucky 10 Virginia 7, Virginia Tech 0 Richmond 21, North Carolina State 6 Nebraska 36, Wake Forest 12 USC 42, Alabama 21 SUCLA 14, Oregon State 9 Florida 21, Duke 19 Kansas State 37, Utah State 0 Kansas 48, Washington State 31 Oklahoma 28, SMU 11 Mississippi St. 14, Oklahoma St. 13 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Florida State 9, Louisville 7" Clemson 24, Citadel 0 West Virginia 43, William & Mary 7 Grambling 38, Morgan State 21 VMI 13, Furman 9 Slippery Rock 40, Mansfield 6 . Michigan 41, Central Michigan 0 Missouri 38, Baylor 0 Air Force 45, Idaho 7 PRO FOOTBALL EXHIBITION Washington 17, Baltimore 14 Green Bay 34, Buffalo 0 Detroit 31, Cincinnati 14 New Orleans 20, San Diego 14 Cleveland 30, New York Giants 29 jAtlanta 20, Miami 17 St,. Louis 34, Kansas City 24 NEW IN ANN ARBOR "JUMBO" STEAK HOAGIE 1139 Broadway 769-3524 Pittsbui New Yeo Chicago St. Lou East W L Pct. rgh 77 67 .535 irk 77 68 .531 '75 69 .521 is 69 77 .473 G :: Q " : : *. i }. . : :" : {{ }":: C: : :v Extra Ig. Large Medium Small . Heavy I Perfect for A N- C Genuine Leather Hiats In handsome earthy colors S irks! ;! v' Trunks 31.00 -. 27.00 20.00 16.00 Buff Willow Apt. or Dorn $7.00 ^ h ai he casual air Natural Willow Cushion $9.50 orted C2oiors : 1 i hairBudh $1.30 Assorted fragrances and burners for t tir "i Ft.,.Y THETA DELTA CHI 700 S. STATE Call Fred at 761-5960 WE'VE GOT SOMETHING GOOD- AND GOOD THINGS ARE NEVER HURT BY KNOWING ALL THE FACTS. SO COME ON OVER AND FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF. .r" x" . THETA CHI FRATERNITY ,- invites pcalinterested in an inexpensive and rewarding campus life (total living expenses, which include room, Beautiful 2-pc. set in Ass board, and social activities for 2 semesters is $1100) the following Open Houses: Sun., Sept. 13-2-5 p.m., 7-10 p.m. Mon., Sept. 14-7-10 p.m. Tues., Sept. 15-7-10 p.m. at its house on the to xo tic , nceftbe andel' ..{,::i?::'"i::"ii:: F'ti:%r}irr'r'l.%}'r: vi}: :?!'". r;.::i;} Yfl :;" ?;:i r:r", y?:fir : :;: rf ,r,. ' ?f:4fr:J' ::x'4'::3:{'+.yf,:,:f1.".% T-i:A' :.;+1-qtr,': :ybq: ryv¢ "M :i-%-..x';. ;a.:.,. ;, :: vom it :; I IF 11 corner of S. Univ. and Washtenaw Ayes. a C:: : :'i:?iii::::' .::?i:: ,, ill