THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sund©y, September 6, 1970' Sunday. Seotember 6. 1970 ~ II E FOR UNIVERSITY PEOPLE WHO CARE WE NOW HAVE 4 SHOPS TO SERVE YOU 0 ARBORLAND * MAPLE VILLAGE * LIBERTY OFF STATE * EAST UNIV. OFF SO. UNIV. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Bo unimpressed by scrimmage SGET, AltENTION t DONTOWN HDA By MORT NOVECK Michigan's football team held its first scrimmage of the season yesterday afternoon at the sta- dium, and while the offense man- aged to amass 27 points Iagainst the defense, head coach Bo Sch- embechler was not excited about what he saw. "The defense is progressing as we h a d holed," he commented, "but the offense is not keeping up. Schembechler's main source of concern with the offense was with its running game. Except for a few good runs by quarterback Don Moorhead, tailback Preston Hen- ry and rare flashes from the same Billy Taylor that played last year, the offense had trouble moving the ball on the ground. THIS DIFFICUTLY is not due to a lack of ability apcording to the coach, but rather to a lack of practice due to numerous injur- ies in the offensive backfield. Tailback Glenn Doughty did not play at all and Taylor sat out the last part of the scrimmage with an injured foot. Tailback Lance Scheffler, who was injured in 1 a s t Thursday's practice, missed the entire scrim- mage as did wingback Randy Lo- gan. Fullback Fritz Seyferth and wingback Greg Harrison 'were in- jured during yesterday's drills and missed the later stages. "We hope to develop a running a t t a c k," Schembechler stated, "but we can't have that until we get our backfield. There w e r e, however, a few happy moments amid the gloom. Bill Berutti, who has been switch- ed from quarterback to wingback twice already, impressed the coach with the job he did after only three day's, practice at wingback. SCHEMBECHLER WAS pleased with the work of tailback Henry of whom he said, "Henry really kept us in there." He was also pleased with the way Paul Star- oba played. "Staroba dropped the first pass and I thought here we go again," Schembechler com- mented, "but he came back and did a good job." Offensive blocking has been a concern of the coaches since prac- tice started, but it neither impres- sed nor depressed t h e m today.. "We didn't really have it tested today," Schembechler stated. WHILE HE THOUGHT the de- fense was progessing, Schembech- ler was far from satisfied. "We really missed Tom Darden on de- fense today," he mentioned. After yesterday's scrimmage the team gets today off before re- turning for two sessions on Mon- day. If enough players are healthy the squad will scrimmage again on Wednesday and t h e n again next Saturday. CB 100 -Daily-Sara Krulwich PRESTON (44) HENRY slashes toward the line. Playing at tail- back in the Wolverines' scrimmage yesterday, Henry was one of the few bright spots in the running game. Henry replaced Glenn Doughty, who has an injured knee. 'CYCLES * PARTS . ACCESSORIES 4 310 E. Washington Ann Arbor BIG ONES GET AWAY: Cagers recruit needed guards. Underground at Shalom' House Sunday, September 6 4-6:30 p.m. Israeli and American Folksingers Free Coffee Free Coke 6:30-8 p.m. Deli at The Cellar Fine Music Atmosphere 8 p.m. MIXER LIVE-BAND: THE LEAVES OF GRASS $1.00: NON-MEMBERS FREE: MEMBERS Te Cellar By AL SHACKELFORD Take one All-State guard from column A and another from col- umn B. Order one 6-8 high school All-American from column C and . .. what, you say the 6-8 boy can't get into Michigan? And that 6-5 guard, "the best schoolboy player on the eastern seaboard," and you say he can't get in either? So the 6-8 center ends up at Northern Illinois, the 6-5 guard is grabbed off by New Mexico, and Michigan has a competent but relatively uninspiring year in bas- ketball recruiting. Michigan's recruiting strategy for the summer was to get the guards to go with the big play- ers recruited last year: Henry Wilmore, Ken Brady, Ernie John- son, John Lockard and others. As Johnny Orr says, "Our big play- ers are good enough; we needed guards." AND THE, RECRUITERS got the guards, namely 6-2 T e r r y Tyler of Dayton, Ohio; 6-3 Jim Taormina of Pennsauken, N.J.; q-2 John Bridge of Opalocka, Fla.; and 5-11 Mike Weaver from De- troit Northwesterin. These four guards are the only players re- cruited who are on scholarship. Michigan's basketball hierar- chy also got an unexpected but welcome surprise when Sam Brady, a flashy 6-4 star from Pon- tiac Catholic, entered Michigan. If Brady can find his way through the maze of academia, he will pep up the roumdball program here like an amphetamine. "The big one that got away" from recruiters this year is that mysterious 6-5 guard previously mentioned, supersmooth , John Williamson of New Haven, Conn. Williamson had the recruiters sal- ivating and nuzzling their game films in heated anticipation, but, unfortunately, he could not' live up to Michigan's high academic standards. THE OTHER mystery man is 6-8 Jim Brady from East Chi- cago, Indiana, who also couldn't cut the mustard academically. Almost any year, however, might look a trifle gray after last year's super-crop of recruits which in- cluded last year's leading fresh- man scorer, Wilmore, and the others. SO A RUNDOWN of this year's plums: -Tyler was an All-Stater who led his team to the Ohio "state championship while averaging 17.2 points a game. He can be charact- erized as a team leader, real gung-ho type. -Taormina teamed- up w i t h Dave Strack, Jr. (and ain't it a small world) to lead his Staunton Military Academy squad to many victories and a sublime state of euphoria. He scored at a clip of 20 points a contest while also pick- ing off a healthy 13 caroms a game. -Bridges, like Tyler, led his Steak and Eggs f $.2O team to the state championship in Florida while firing in 24 points a game. --Weaver teamed with back- court partner Mike Robinson last year to give Northwestern t h e superb guardtcombination which enabled them to hand Detroit Ket- tering its only loss in Detroit City League play. Other notable players in iMch- igan's freshman fold include Dave Clancy from oPntiac Northern, Dave Witten from East Lansing, and Doug McKenzie of Warren. Fitzgerald, who led a double life as a schoolboy basketball and football star. THIS YEAR'S recruits may eventually become known as those grabbed in the "year between:" Wilmore et al recruited last year and next year Michigan will go after such mind-blowing prospects as Lindsay Hairston of Detroit Kettering; Charles Cleveland from Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Henry Williams of Norristown, Pennsyl- vania; and finally,sand most signi- ficantly, Campy Russell of Pon- tiac Central. Russel has, at dif- ferent stages of his career, been compared to Lew Alcindor, Calvin Murphy and Baby Huey. So, fans, Michigan got' its guards and the basketball revival is moving along right on sched- ule. Notre Dame and Austin Carr move into the Events Buildings December 1 to open the season; who knows, maybe we'll all get to hear the band play "Friendship Train", again and listen to t h e sound of Gladys Knight and the Pips turning over in their figura- tive grave. TV RENTALS $10.50 permonth NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS .1 1 662-5671 Gonzales defeated in' pen Tennis FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (P) - Nicola Pilic, a tennis gypsy from Yugoslavia with a temper almost as quick as his racket, cut down Pancho Gonzales 4-6, 6-2, 7-6, 7-5 in the third round of t h e U.S. .Open Championships yesterday, and then apologized. "I am so sorry, Pancho always is my idol," said the tall good- looking circuit rider from behind the Iron Curtain. "I win because I am 10 years younger. Pancho is not as strong and as fast as he once was." Three of America's principal threats - Arthur Ashe, Jr., Stan Smith and Clark Graebner - en- tered the fourth round along with Pilic, Tom Okker of Holland and Roy Emerson of Australia. A fourth, Cliff Richey, p l a y s his third around match today as does favored Rod Laver of Australia. Graebner, New York paper ex- ecutive, won a three-hour slam bang battle from Bill Bowrey of Australia 6-3, 4-6, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4. His clinching break came in the hotly contested ninth game of the fifth set. h u l d a t t e d a n g e held this Tuesday, September 8, at 7:00 p.m. The meeting will be in the basement of the Ath- letic Administration Buildingon the corner of Hoover and State Streets. IM sports begin this Tuesday with a manager's meeting at 8 p.m. for fraternities and 9:30 p.m. for independents. On Wed- nesday graduate student man- agers meet at 7:30 p.m. a n d Residence H all1s at 8:00 p.m. Meetings will be in the wrest- ling room of the IM $ldg. Sign up lists are posted at the IM Bldg. for frat tennis (be- gins Sept. 10), frat golf (be- gins Sept. 12), and independents, and residence hall golf (begins Sept. 13). Ii. ~i1 on this and that The ballad of a worried' man eric siegel. YOU WON THE CONFERENCE championship last year and are ranked among the top five or six teams in the country in every major pre-season poll in the country. You have 33 letter- men, including your quarterback and your top two running backs, returning. Your defense, which last year gave up an aver- age of only t points to seven conference opponents, figures to be even better this year.b How, in other words, could you possibly worry? You could worry. Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler, whose team fits the above description, is worried. Not just a little worried, a lot worried. What Schembechler is worrying about is injuries to a num- ber of key players, a squad that, number-wise, is quite prob- ably the smallest of any major college team i the nation, and a lack of practice time. Ask him about the progess of the offense, for example, and he'll answer you with one word: "disappointing." Ask him if some of the recent injuries to key players are an expected part of the game in the first week of contact drills, and he'll answer you with a' glum look and a shake of his head. "No, we didn't expect those injuries at all," he'll say. All of his worries are interrelated, but if you had to single out one major problem, it would be the knee of half- back Glenn Doughty. At the beginning of the year, it was announced that Dough- ty, who injured his knee last year before the Rose Bowl, was "fit and ready to go." Pchembecher, was never quite that op- timistic. "With an injury like that," he said, "you never know how a player can perform until he goes out in a game situa- tion and gets hit. "And," he added, "a running back who can't take a blow isn't much of a running back. There's no way you can keep him from getting hit." And so now Doughty is out with a strain of his injured knee.: And while the new injury is not serious, medically- speaking, it is serious enough to worry his coach. "The offense is not good right now," according to Bo, "and Doughty's injury has set us back real bad. If he's out much longer, he'll have an awful time coming back. He missed spring practice so lie was behind when he started this fall." When asked yesterday if Doughty will be ready to practice Monday, Schembechler answered, "He'd better be, if he's going to be ready to play, when the season starts." The injury to Doughty, who has missed the last three practices, hurts the Wolverines where they can least af- ford it - in the offensive backfield. The team had already been shorthanded there after sophomore running b a c k Cowboy Walker was lost to the team for the season earlier in theyear. It seems as if three out Qf every four players who limp off the field are from the offensive backfield. Lance Scheffler, Bil- ly Taylor, Greg Harrison, Fritz Seyfreth, and Randy Logan have all missed some practice Schembechler is quite succinct in sum- ming up the strategic effect of these injuries. "We haven't been able to have an offensive team together to practice," he says, "and it's hurt us." Schembechler, who likes a. hard running game, points out that "You need threeplayers at each of your running back positions." He points to last year's Rose Bowl game, when the Wolverines were forced to use third-stringer Lance Scheffler because of the pre-game injury to Doughty and Billy Taylor's injury during the game. Besides Doughty, defensive halfback Tom Darden, secon- string defensive tackle Tom Beckman and split end Billy Har- ris are all recuperating from injuries. That means that the team, which now has only 66 players on its roster, is down to around 60 for the situation-scrimmages that are so vital to a team's timing., With such a small squad, and with the freshmen not yet in condition to practice with the varsity, Schembechler has not been able to get in as much real practice time as he would like. The team has been so short-handed that Jim Betts,.the safety, had to work out at wolfback for a couple of plays the other day so the offense would have a full team to practice against. On top of it all, the team has had to curtail its two-a. day practices with the start of classes, and this has She- bechler worried, too. "We could use a lot more practice time," he says. "We need the work." Schembechler, of course, is noted for his pessimism.1 He would, one suspects, find something to worry about even if there were no injuries, no small squad and no lack of practice time. And while Schembechler's worries are certainly no fan- tasies, it perhaps should be noted for the record that.as late as the Monday before last year's opener against Vanderbilt, 10 players, including All-American Jim Mandich, were on the in- jured list. The rest is history. 4 V * Home of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation at UM 1429 HILL ST. Kunslier's Cunning! AT CAMPUS GRILL RESTAURANT 808 S. State St. Shoemaker ties ,mark * I r - I for turf victories 95% of the Reading Population Reads Only 250 to 300 Words Per Minute or Less I -ADVERTISEMENT- Reprint from The Michigan Daily, March 16, 1968 ST RIEA The eternal truths I IG of Pizza Bob 'Is Not Difficult, 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 had at their slower reading rates. SEE 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 atacost less than HALF that of other commercial reading courses offered in this area! By TOBE LEV OFTEN SOME PEOPLE go unnoticed just because their;lives are more humdrum and more usual than ours., Piza Bob, manager of Loy's Pizzeria at State and Packard, has never been in the public's eye. You might very well ask how a human being weighing nearly 300 pounds and standing only 63 inches high could avoid it. But there are no ballads about Pizza Bob, even though he rolls along as well as the Mississippi River ever did. Bob has a huge, immobile face which in democratic fashion greets little old ladies and hippie radicals and high school greases and two-headed-six-eyed-Hiroshima mutates with the self,-same "What'll it be?" No one, no matter how bizarre, will ever make Pizza Bob blow his cool. Like the proverbial tortoise, he works at the exact speed, whether two or twenty are jammed into hid little shop, HE IS AN inspiration to all of us hung-up, neurotic stu- dents. "Bob, our hockey team just lost 10-0." "That's okay it could have been 11." "Bob, I've been putting in a lot of time at The Daily lately." "I knew someone who worked at The Daily. He had a heart attack and died." "Are you kidding me?" "Hell no." "V7an .r-a n annrrt. nc ena-"7 # ht , T - - n n Kunstier' s Conspiring! DEL MAR, Calif. (P)-Blanked on his first four mounts, jockey Bill Shoemaker came through in the ninth and final race at Del Mar yesterday to tie Johnny Long- den's life-time record of 6,032 winners. , Cheered on, by 18,992 fans, the largest Del' Mar crowd in four years, the determined Shoemaker broke on top with Esquimal, the favorite, and made it a wire-to- wire victory in the 1 1/16 mile run on the turf course. Shoemaker will resume his ef- forts to break the record set by the retired Longden on Monday's Labor Day card withseven mounts. It had been a frustrating week for the 39-year-old Shoemaker and his supporters. On this sunny afternoon prior to the ninth race he had gone down to defeat on three other favorites. Esquimal declined to comment on the heroic victory.' Esquimal, a five-year-old geld- ing, is owned by Dr. Frank Di Flore and is trained by Farrell Jones. This is the first all-time record- tying race he has run. Shoemaker-tied the record with his 24,532nd mount in a career that began 21 years ago. His first victory was on Shafter V on April 20, 1949; at Golden Gate Fields. I.- I IS A KINSEY REPORT ON RELIGION POSSIBLE? "MOTHER, THE BLUE TITS ARE INTO THE MILK BOTTLES AGAIN." IS A KINSEY REPORT POSSIBLE? "HUSH FIONA, YOUR SISTER IS LISTENING." IS A KINSEY POSSIBLE? "BUT MOTHER-R-R!" IS? If your answer to these and other 'I 1i