A Thursday, October. 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Thursday, October 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seveii Soph's aerials spark Aggies By SANDI GENIS 42 passes against LSU f o r 314 College Station on an academic ican, its Dave Elmendorf," said a yards and two touchdowns, both scholarship. professional scout recently of the "This is the tyete amdT s in the final quarter, to engineer Aggies' star safety. At 6-1, 198 going to get better," said Texas the upset. Of him, Stallings says, ANOTHER offensive s t r o n g pounds, Elmendorf m a d e alls A&M coach Gene Stallings re- "He's pretty good, for a soph," point is center Leonard F o r e y. Southwest Conference last f all, cently of his Aggie football squad a rather cautious statement con- Stallings calls him the finest and barring injuries, he seems 6 that takes on the Wolverines at!sidering the fact that James ranks blocker on the team and perhaps sure bet to repeat at his safety Michigan Stadium this Saturday.18th among the nation's quarter- even in the Southwestern confer- Islot. He's aggressive and fantas Indeed, until their 56-13 drubbin NIGHT EDITOR backs thus far, with 752 yards. ence. "He has the ability to stay, tically agile. i m e ee Despite the fact that split end with a block for a long time. He premierperformance lat cweek- AL SHACKELFORDHgh c y thaspte can really move the defensive man VRAIIYi e o edthtseetobe the case. _______________ Hugh McElroy is the lone blackcarelymvthdfnsemn VERSATILITY is a key word player on the Aggie squad, he is around." when speaking of Elmendorf, who FOLLOWING an opening 41-14 and we throw." Of late the throw- nevertheless a rather inconspicu- The rushing game however, ishas played some of his football at romp over Wichita State, the Ag- ing has b e e n particularly pro- ous member of that team. - un- a sore pomint for the Aggies as offensive halfback, where he com gies upset a strong LSU team with ductive for the Aggies, and it was til he steps on the field. Indeed, their minus 42 yards against LSU piled a 6.1 rushing average. HO a 17-point rally in the final quar- in that area that Stallings' re- were it not for the Aggie uniform indicated. Here too, lack of ex- was also elected to the all-confer . ter for a 20-18 victory, and the' cruitment efforts paid off, when he sports each Saturday, it might perience is a major factor, with ence baseball team, as well as Aggies seemed to be on the re- he acquired the services of Lex not be hard to mistake this 5-7 results being six fumbles thus far. Academic All-American in t h a bound from cast season's 3-7 rec- James. 175 pound fellow for the Aggie Defensively speaking, t h e Ag- sport. The Boston Red Sox were ord on the heels of Stallings' fan- waterboy. gies are a bit more experienced. so impressed by his ability that tastic recruiting campaign, a cam- DISPLAYING all\ the flamboy- Strangely enough, M c E 1 r o y"''After the LSU game," Stallings 0this summer they offered him , paign that yielded an undefeated ance that is indicative of his Cow- wasn't even a target of the Aggie reflects, I would have called $50,000 bonus to play for them, freshman team in 1968. boy movie star name, sophomore recruiting campaign of the past them pretty good, but after Ohio but he rejected the offer to play freshmanteamin 1968.boy mied tar name, soph e rcuin of the pt State, I'd have to call them bad." out his eligibility with the Aggies However, it was that very re-I James managed to hit on 20 of couple of seasons, but came to Hw_,__s__ryrDespite Stallings pessimism, how- much to Stallings' joy. He'll pro- cruiting campaign, resulting, n ever, there are several defensive vide the leadership we need for only four senior players on the UMPS MAY BALID: bright spots. our younger players. I'm just glad roster, that proved to be therAg- "If there ever was an All-Amer- he's back." gies' downfall when their rela--________ tively inexperienced squad ran n Iheadlong into the veteran OSU rt s a w1t ' i , " --SEK INR yu tam Wed ust idn't do;NE erTies threatened- -STEAK DINNERS In the words of Stallings, "We're NOW SERVING a young team. We just didn't do1 NEWYORK (k)-A threat of 1 Jr., is expected to be held tomor- At Reasonable Prices anything right against Ohio State. an umpire boycott of the baseball I row in Chicago. FILET-1.59 We had f o u r turnovers at the playoffs and World Series appear- tSIRLOIN-i.53 start of the second half and miss- ed yesterday. It also was reported that the ;Above Includes major l eagues had contacted In- A e -Daily-Eric Pergeaux HENRY HILL (39) leaps high in the air during action in the Michigan-Arizona game. All-America middle guard Hill will lead the attack on Texas A&M's soph flash Lex James in Saturday's game between the brutal Blue and rapidly-aging Aggies.- ridde Pick i i gs Roy Furd stepped off the' Greyhound, ,fn old maize-andblue gym bag in his hand and a cheap guitar slung over his shoulder. So this is New York City, thought Roy as he surveyed the endless parade of tenement buildings which stretched out in every direction, as far as the young country boy's determined blue eyes could see. The bus lurched from the 'curb and roared away, leaving Roy standing in a purple haze of exhaust: he watched it grow bug-sized in the distance and then reached into his snakeskin jacket for a tooth- nick- Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago 2, New York 4 Montreal 5, Philadelphia 4 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 3 Houston 4, San Francisco 3 Los Angeles at San Diego, inc. AMERICAN LEAGUE, Detroit 4, Cleveland 3! New York 4, Boston 3 Baltimore 6, Washington 2 Minnesota 6, Kansas City Chicago at California, inc. Milwaukee at Oakland, inc. ed a scoring opportunity." But regardless of the Aggies'' rather poor showing against the Buckeyes last. week, the squad is ripe with talent. "We don't have any secret plays," Stallings said recently of his offense. "We hit hard, we run Members of the Major League terational Leau upires abou ' Umpires Association are reported- ternational League umpires about ly asking $5,000 apiece for um- working the playoffs and Series pires working the playoffs and in the.event of a boycott. $10,000 each for those assigned to The umpires were paid $2,500I the World Series.I per man for the playoffs and. A meeting of the association $6,500 each for the World Series and its attorney, John Reynolds in 1969. fr ma . HOUSE N Baked Potato, Salad, and Texas Toast STEAKBURGER-.79 incluoes baked potato and Texas Toast 217 S. STATE ST Next to State Theater "Gonna get me a mojo," sang Roy nasally as he searched his ____ pearly whites for debris, "get me a pretty woman to scratch my turniip while I sleep." He would have tenishentthe song, bu someone SOO hulda ripe eggplant out oe a tenement Ryso h oie window ong, abv.D lt i Phi-Alpha DeltaPi, U of M School of Music priesents its' 2114 It landed with a splat on the toe of Roy's left hobnailed boot. "You people here ain't friendly," said .R_ aloud as he moved PP N I on down the dreary street. "Just ain't no place for a real country VIETNAM ORPHAN DRIVE P man to go these days," lamented Roy as his footsteps echoed on the early-morning sidewalk. Passing a small advertising agency, Roy almost missed the sign O ctober 2 H ilt A ditori n it in the window. It read: "Win fame and fortune as a pigskin prog- nosticator; make your Gridde Pickings, get them ,to the Michigan 1. Daily by midnight Friday, and win a free Cottage Inn pizza." Michigan Chamber Ensemble University Men's Glee Chub Un His stomach growcng. Roy shifted the toothpick his mouth Friday, Oct. 2-8-12 P.M. and entered the agency. Here was something a real country mans SOLOISTS: Elizabeth Mosher Kraus, Eva Likova, Ralph He could do. UNION BALLROOM McCollum and Willis Patterson The guest picks this week were masterminded"by Bob DeSpirito, CONDUCTOR: Theo Alcantara who holds the enviable position of head grid coach at Slippery Rock. Music by the Leaves Of Grass SONGS from The Most Happy Fella, Kiss Me Kate, Carousel, 1. Texas A&M (14) at MICH- 11. Navy at WASHINGTON West Side Story plus several all-time, light, orchestral favorit IGAN (28) 12. Kansas at New Mexico-pass Psychedehc Light Show GENERAL ADMISSION $2.00 2. Syracuse atILLINOIS 13. Oregon State at SOUTHERN 3. WEST VIRGINIA at Indiana CALIFORNIA Tickets only available at the door on the evening of the concert. Door 4. IOWA at Arizona 14. NORTH CAROLINA at ADMISSION: 25c at campus sales booths Proceeds to School of Music scholarship funds 5. NOTRE DAME at Michigan Vanderbilt 50c at doorI State 15. Auburn at KENTUCKY Posters and musical scores for this program provided by the Old Heid 6. Minnesota at NEBRASKA 16. Alabama at MISSISSIPPI 7. Southern Methodist at 17. CALIFORNIA at Rice NORTH WESTERN 18. Rutgers at HARVARD ....-....-..-- ----_ 8. DUKE at OHIO STATE 19. OREGON at Washington S9. PENN STATE at Wisconsin State O n T eaIy S o t t f 10. Purdue at STANFORD 20. St. Peter's at FORDHAM I_ . _. . - - - _ -- - -- - - -' 3 00 pm. versity Symphony Orchestra erbert, John Show Boat, es. s open 7:15 P.M. elberg Restaurant Carpenter nails patella Michigan defensive end Butch Carpenter, who injured his knee during Tuesday's practice, under- went surgery yesterday and will be lost to the team for the remainder- of the season. Carpenter, who saw quite a bit of action behind starters P h i I Seymour a'nd Mike Keller, will be replaced by Clint Spearman. a 6-3, 213-pound sophomore from Hamilton, Ohio. Carpenter is the fourth player to be lost for the season because of injuries. Running back Cowboy Walker and quarterback L a r r y Cipa were lost before .the start of the season and back-up tackle Jim Coode was lost this week. Billboard Michigan's varsity ice rink opens for public s k a t i n g this Sunday. The Michigan Colliseum will be open Sunday from 3-5 p.m. and also will be open from 1-3 p.m. every Saturday that Mich- igan does not play a home football game. Michigan meets Texas A&M this Saturday. Michigan students, faculty and staff can use the rink on Monday and Thursday from 8 p.m. until 9:45 p.m. WANTED! Chairman for ART PRINT Petitions-UAC offices 2nd floor Union 3 i SPECIAL SKI PACKAGES KRYSTAL LTD SKI PACKAGE Krystal Wood skis (1 year unconditional guarantee) ; Koflack 5 buckle plastic boots; Tyrolia or Cubco bindings; Barrecrafter aluminum poles; all installed and safety checked 95 f only$S NEW!! 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