Thursday, September 17, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pnge Nine 177 , Thursday, September 17, 970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Arizona poses potential threat By RICK CORNFELD It was not the best of years for j Bill McKinley, A r i z o n a ' s All- daily American candidate at defensive end. Last spring, in his maiden ex-! cursion into politics, trying to re- verse the trend toward campus violence, hewas defeated by four NIGHT EDITOR: votes. AL SHACKELFORD3 McKINLEY, even William Mc- Kinley, is no longer a magic po- litical name. More sports, Page 7 The previous fall he was hob- bled throughout the football sea th esistnt praie~lBowl, where. the Wildcats lost to son with a persistant sprained Auburn. 34-10. ankle. To make matters worse, McKin- Immediately after that game, ley had to suffer through a dis- then head coach Darrell Mudra appointing season for the Wild- resigned. Mudra had transformed cats. Arizona, which play's Mich- a deteriorating football program igan here in the season's opener into a winner in two years. The Saturday, was 3-7 under rookie trouble was that he wanted more; head coach Bob Weber. control over the program than the The year before was one of the athletic department was willing toE greatest seasons in the history of give him. Wildcat football.nAn 8-2 season Mudra wanted to make the was climaxed by a trip to the Sun Wildcats big-time. He wanted im- --- rd frilitiec. ind he wntd l WEBER, an assistant coach ands former junior college coach-of-I the-year at Trinidad State in Colorado, was chosen to succeed' him. Weber made several changes in the football program. Perhaps most impoi'tant from the Arizona administration's view- point is the fact that he is much more of a public relations man than was Mudra. But besides that, whereas Mudra treated his play- ers permissively, Weber has a more traditional approach. Also, Weber has shifted Ari- zona's recruiting emphasis from junior college transfers to Arizona high school students. He has combed Arizona and come up with the best high school football players in the state. He has also gone into New Orleans and recruited black players which Tim Killian, Michigan place kicker, left the field yesterday after suffering a back injury. The extent of the injury is not yet known. had previously been ignored by all but small black colleges. The immediate result is this year's sophomores, who make up half the total squad. Arizona has attracted better' athletes than it has seen in almost a decade, a result of the Sun Bowl appearance and a difficult schedule, as well as Weber's recruiting efforts. THIS BIG, HANDSOME STUD is Bill McKinley, tri-captain and defensive end for Arizona and a politician to boot. Seems Billy ran for the student presidency of his school offering an alternative to "violence"; fortunately for Arizona politics, he lost by four votes. McKinley and Arizona will journey to Michigan Stadium Saturday for a game with mighty Michigan. ME---S, CUBSFA } METS, CU BS FALI ally picked to finish third in the Western Athletic Conference. ARIZONA uses a conservative style of play, emphasizing ball control and a strong defense. Wil- lie Lewis, who came on -strong at the end of last year, is a potential all-conference fullback. His big moment last year was a 64-yard sideline touchdown run against Arizona State. In practice this fall he has been impressive running up the middle. Joe Petroshus, a. highly-touted sophomore who had been sought after by many schools, was sup- posed to be the starting tailback, until he called for a fair catch in a non-contact scrimmage. A third-string player, perhaps under the impression that with Petroshus out of the way, his chances of starting would be greater, clipped him, and broke his ankle. The, culprit, whose name has not been revealed by the Wild- cats, still could not make the traveling squad. To take Petroshus's place, Ari- zona is alternating Bob McCall and Caesar Pittman, also sopho- mores. Pittman, one of the New Orleans boys, was electrifying in scr Saturday with touch- down runs of 70 and 12 yards. BRIAN LINSTROM is the quar- terback, and he is supposed to be one of the better quarterbacks in Arizona history. A poor. offensive line last year led to Linstrom's spending much of the season studying how the grass grows. With a strong rup- ning threat and two big offensive Last year, Arizona's traditionally strong defense was one of the worst in years. This year it should be better, with the return of de- feated politician McKinley at full strength and the addition of a few promising sophomores. Jackie Wallace, another of the New Orleans players, should be particularly impressive at safety. He's another of those players pub- licists like to compare to Jack Ta- tum of Ohio State. According toP defensive coach Fred Glick, Arizona may have the BESIDES STRONG d e f e n s e, another tradition at Arizona is to Bear Down. "Bear Down" has been an official slogan since 1926. That, for the benefit of Grade , B movie fans, was the year But- ton Salmon, student body presi- dent and football player, died fol- lowing an auto crash . His last words were a message to his teammates and they have inspired two generations of Wild- cats since. "Tell them to bear down." tackles, Linstrom may not be- best defense it ever had. Perhaps come so familiar with the Tartan it will only seem that way in Turf. comparison to last year's sieve. Steve Hurley, the place kicker, The major problem of the team set a school record with eight is inexperience and depth, but field goals last year. His 21 yard since Saturday will be Arizona's kick in the fourth quarter against first game, the lack of depth may Utah gave the Wildcats the game. not be too crucial. Bucs increase league lead pzve lcium si le WUIn eu the high academic requirements eased. And he wanted to control the program himself. Never a man to pay much at- tention to diplomatic amenities, his bluntness frequently got him into trouble. a Finally after his tremendous season in 1968, he decided to re- sign in hopes of forcing the Ari- zona administration to give him what he wanted. MICHIGAN ASSOCIATION FOR EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED CHILDREN PRESENTS* sThousand Cowns starring JASON ROBARDS Thursday, Sept. 24 Rackham Auditorium By The Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates won yes- terday and both the New York 'Mets and Chicago Cubs lost, boost- ing Pittsburgh to a two game lead over- both clubs in the tight Na-I tional LeAgue East race. Manny Sanguillen slugged three hits and scored twice in carrying' Pittsburgh to a 5-3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. Renko, 12-10, scattered five hits,' walked none and struck out two. Ted Simmons' homer ignited a three-run fourth inning which helped Bob Gibson record his 22nd victory as the St. Louis Cards do'wned the Cubs 8-1. 1 GIBSON, who now has won 11 of his last 12 decisions, held the Cubs scoreless on one hit until for the Tigers and Cesar Gutierrez doubled home a pair of runs. The win for the Tigers kept them in third place with a slim half game lead over the Boston Red Sox who were also victorious. The victory was /also important! to Lolich as it decreased consid- erably his chances of becoming the first Tiger pitcher in over two decades to lose twenty games. 7,& 9P.M. The tactic did not work, and Most observers expect the Wild- Mudra is now head coach at West- cats to improve on their poor rec- ern Illinois. ord of last year. They are gener- For ticket information: YMCA (663-0536) or Spe- cial Education Office (above Ann Arbor Bank at corner of South U and East U). Suggested contribu- tion $1.50 *To help support the tutorial program at Children's Psy- chiatric Hospital. Ron Santo's solo homer in the In of SANGUILLEN had a pair of fifth. ped Ho singles and a double and batted By the time Gibson had yielded ed San in a run as the Pirates built an the first Cub hit, Don Kessinger's was de early 5-1 lead off Philadelphia leadoff single in the fourth, the Califor right-hander Jim}Bunning. Cards had built a 5-0 lead and Diego Bob Moose went the first five chased C h i c a g o starter Milt nighta innings to get the victory. Pappas. City. The Bucs jumped on Bunning After Santo led off the Cub Spec for two runs in the first when fifth with his 26th homer, the, winner Matty Alou singled with one out Cards made it 6-1 in the sixth on League and scored on Al Oliver's opposite Gibson's second straight single, an Pittsbu field double, and Oliver scored on infield out and Torre's run-pro- tion of Sanguillen's single. ducing single. tent pi . After the Phillies got one run Torre slammed a two-run homer over t: back off Moose in the first on in the ninth for the final tallies. poor-pi Tony Taylor's double and Deron 'TeBlioeOilscice h Johnson's triple, the Pirates ad The Baltimore Orioles clinched The single runs in the second, third a tie for a second straight Ameri- menta] andil rn nncan League East Division title de- while1 The' Montreal Expos handed spite losing to Washington 2-0. in 196 Tom Seaver his seventh loss in his Rookie Bill Gogolewski and Dar- til l nwe obndfraf ur- tefa last nine games by defeating the old Knowles combed for a four-City f Mets 4-2 hitter, ending a seven-game win- heroes Montreal grabbed a 3-0 lead in ning streak for Baltimore. But henoe the third inning on a walk to John second-place New York lost 3-1 to:pennat Bateman, an error by Donn Clen- Boston, clinching the tie for the denon on Bobby Wine's bunt, run- Orioles. scoring singles by Mary Staehle and Jim Gosger and a -wild pitch AL KALINE'S lead-off homer by Seaver. triggered a six-run, fourth-inning explosion that powered the Detroit I ART SHAMSIKY'S solo homer, Tigers to a 6-3 victory over the first of two, with two outs in Cleveland, ending the Indians' the fourth gave the Mets their five-game winning streak. first run but the Expos retaliated Mickey Lolich and Tom Tim- with a run-scoring single in the merman scattered seven Cleveland sixth by Bateman to widen their hits, including Vada Pinson's 22nd lead to 4-1. homer. Jim Price also homered :..._...Lg.....-i.s..:... ............. . .... Major League Standings ther games, Cincinnati nip- uston 3-2, Atlanta outlast- Francisco 10-7, Milwaukee feated by Oakland 4-1, and nia beat Minnesota 5-1. San was at Los Angeles last and Chicago was at Kansas ulation on the eventual in that tight National East race seems to favor irgh. The Bucs' combina- f hard hitting and compe- tching gives them the edge he weak-hitting Mets and itching Cubs. Cubs must rate as senti- favorites in the race: Pittsburgh took a pennant 0 and the Mets last year. o has not taken a league )r over 20 long years. Windy ans are eager to see their bring that long-awaited nt to their city. .1 AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB Baltimore 96 52 .649 - New York 83 66 .557 13 , Detroit 76 72 .514 20' Boston 76 73 .510 20/ Cleveland 72 77 .483 241 Washington 69 78 .469 26' . West Minnesota 88 60 .595 - Oakland 82 68 .547 7 California 79 69 .534 9 kansas City 58 88 .397 29 Milwaukee 56 92 .378 32 Chicago 53 93 .363 34- Yesterday's Results Washington 2, Baltimore 0 Boston 3, New York i Detroit 6, Cleveland 3 California 5, Minnesota I - ~Oakland 4, Milwaukee 1 Chicago at Kansas City, 2 games ppd. i a West Cincinnati 93 57 .620 Los Angeles 80 67 .544 San Francisco 79 70 .530 Atlanta 73 78 .483 Houston 71 76 .483 San Diego 58 91 .389 Yesterday's Results Montreal 4, New York 2 Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 8, Chicago 1 Atlanta 10, San Francisco 7 Cincinnati at Houston, inc. San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. 1114 13'4 201, 20' / 34 NATIONAL LEAGUE East W1 L Pet. Pittsburgh 79 68 .537 ! Chicago 77 70 .524 New Yo'rk 78 71 .523 St. Louis 71 78 .477 Montreal 66,82 .446 Philadelphia 66 83 .443 TV RENTALS $10.50 per month j NO DEPOSIT FREE DELiVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 Try Daily Classifieds; The Populist Party presents live and in revolutionary color: DON KOISTER A DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE-53rd LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT 210 Nickels Arcade-Ann Arbor, Mich. 48108 A REAL CANDIDATE FOR A REAL POLITICAL OFFICE, WHO IS SO GOOD YOU MAY HAVE TROUBLE GETTING YOUR MIND AROUND THE IDEA This is what Don Koster's campaign committee says about Don Koster: Strange Things Are Happening in Ann Arbor Politics You may have read in the past weeks of the amnesty-for-draft-resisters plank that the state Democratic convention passed. Don Koster, Democratic candidate for state representative from Ann Arbor, wrote that plank and helped to get it through the state convention. Koster also supports immediate and unconditional withdrawal from Indochina with reparations to be paid to the Indochinese, steeply graduated inheritance and in- come taxes to cripple upper-class control of their perpetual corporations, student-fac- ulty control of universities, abortion repeal, legalization of marijuana and other drugs, and MORE! THE TROUBLE WITH THE GOVERNMENT IS THAT IT'S TRYING TO TAKE OVER THE COUNTRY. Why is such a far-out dude running for something like State Representative? Well have you heard about the fact that they can put you away for 10 years be- cause of' a vegetable? What about divorce laws and and abortion laws? Were you aware that there were laws requiring the ouster of students arrested in demonstrations? Do you know where the sales tax comes from? Do you know who cancelled the Labor Day Goose Lake Festival? All these things come from a little known place called Lansing. The Monster does not just live in Washington, the Monster also occupies a place called the State Legislature where some gnomes sit around and pass laws which hurt us. The reason they can get away with it is because we have never paid any attention to t h e m and their funny little elections. Dig it. They can't get away with it if we get it together. /I GB 2 9 13 14 Interested in CHANGE? join THE PROJECT COMMUNITY PROJECTS Ann Arbor In-Schc'ol Project Willis In-School Project Black Liberation School Day Care Project Willow Run High School Project Willow Run Child Care Center Washtenaw Community College Project Half-Way House Project Maxey Boys Training School Girl's Group Home Tutorial Project Boy's Group Home Tutorial Project Washtenaw Co. Juvenile I III i I