Friday, November 1, 1974 " THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Eleven Friday, November 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven A Mic an icers host Badgers By DAVE WIHAK measured by last year's com- Farrell will be going with a bined goals against average of lineup that Wisconsin scouting The Michigan Wolverines be- 3.50. Johnson calls them "po- reports call "well balanced." gin their 1974 WCHA play when tentially the best pair of net- In goal is Moore, who has suf- they host the Wisconsin Badgers minders in the league." Con- fered all week long from an tonight, 7:30 at Yost Ice Arena.' sidering the significant reduc- aggravating knee injury, but For the Wolverines it will be tion in scoring power from last who is ready to go for to- their third game this season d year, the goaltending will have night's game. On defense will they won their first two 7-1 and to be very stingy if Wisconsin be juniors Greg Fox and Tom 4-2 over Ohio State. The Badg- hopes to beat Moore and the Lindskog, sophomores Dave ers have played four games so Wolverines. Shand, Greg Natale, and Rob far, including two victories over;Palmer, and freshman Jahn Vermont in exhibition action, How does Dan Farrell see Pal , and a split with Notre Dame. .thhesituation?"esWirconsnnes Despite the fact that the sea- style has been speed and The forward lines are center- son just began, this upcoming strong skating in the past," ed around Moretto, DeBol, and series is very important for the he observed, "but they've got Hoene. Hoene and DeBol are Wolverines. new people this year, so it's freshmen and the fact that hard' to say what to expect. they're playing shows Farrell 's The strength of Wisconsin If we play our game, and if confidence in them. this year is a mystery. Last we play up to our potential, On a more unfortunate note, year the Badgers finished four then we should have two good Captain Randy Trudeau and points ahead of Michigan in games.,, Doug Lindskog will be sit- the league standings, and ting out one game suspensions largely because they had Penalties could also play an for fighting, in accordance more experience than the important role this weekend, with NCAA regulations. The Wolverines. This year they Dan Farrell voiced the opinion fighting occurred in Satur- lost three starting centermen, that "we must stay out of the day's Ohio State game. their leading scorers, to the penalty box in order to be ef- In the final analysis this ser- pros, Dean Tallafous, Gary fective against Wisconsin." The ies should provide fans with Winchester, and Dennis Olm- Badgers have scored twice on WCHA action at its best, and stead. power plays in four games, the outcome rests on how well coach Bob Johnson whereas Michigan has given up the youth of the Badgers can As Badger hB Jn'just one goal over a large span stand up to the overall experi- such a situation where we've of penalty time.eneothWlvres had so many young players in On the other hand, -Johnsonj At the same time, the series key positions." If there is a stressed his worry over penal.! should expose some of the Mich- weakness in the Badger team ties, "Our penalty killing team igan frosh to WCHA pressure. Sas been having itsn roblems." Coach Farrell was enthused at I : : OPEN 24 HOURS ATTENDANT ALWAYS ON DUTY MR. STADIUM COIN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 1958 S. INDUSTRIAL South of E. Stadium Blvd. 668.7928 104 L- Elect RON STRAUSS COUNTY COMMISSIONER, DISTRICT 14 "My Democratic opponent-Kathy Fojtik-disapproves of having a student on the Board of Regents. She an- gered many students when at the Democratic conven- tion she voted against student activist David Faye for such a post; and he lost because of her support of another candidate and non-student who was involved in past corrupt practices of student elections and stu- dent government here." VOTE STRAUSS NOV. 5 BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE DEMOCRATS FOR STRAUSS. PAID FOR BY THE PEOPLE FOR STRAUSS. MELCOR SC535 " fully scientific " memory t common log 0 two-level 0 natural log parentheses " * sin, cos, tan *'ten-digit i arc functions plus scientific notation " sq root Ssquare rechargeable inverse 0 degrees & radians J " change sign , x exchange y pi automatic constant ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL SCIENTIFIC CALCULATORS IN PRODUCTION ONLY univerity cellar $109.95 7', $ [in the unijonlbasemet WASHERS & DRYERS NO WAITINGI in respect to Michigan it is ex- perience. The Badgers will dress no less than eight fresh- men, whereas the Wolverines will probably dress five." Johnson will be relying heav- ily on the veteran line of Dave Lundeen, Steve Alley, and Don Deprez to lead the offensiver threat, but he is also bankingI on freshmen Mike Eaves and Craig Norwich to "plug the scoring gap." Johnson has also been impressed with the poise and ability of freshman blue-I liner Ian Perrin, and with ther scoring ability of freshman' Mark Kapouch. One area of the game, where the Badgers have the necessary experience is in the goal.I Both Mike Dibble and Dick Perkins are fine netminders as Farrell in response to this spe- the possibility of culated, "We may have some fourth place finisht power play success. We've been and this weekend's experimenting, and I believe we should indicate the have the goal scorers to make quality. it operate." at least a this season, competition team's real Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN ANGIE MORETTO OVERPOWERS Ohio Stat e defenders and fires a shot off the post in last Saturday's action. Efforts like this earned Moretto four goals on the 'weekend, and Coach Farrell hopes his star center can play against Wisconsin in similar fashion. Farrell, in addition tot power play, has other weap he can throw at the Badg Aside from having prolific sc ers in Moretto, Neal, Man and Hughes, he also posses: perhaps the best goalie in lege hockey, Robbie Moore. Moore was named All Ame ican goaltender last yea With the return of a more m ture defensive corps and more offensive minded tea playing in front of him,t could be even better th year. the ons ers. cor- ery ses col- SPARKS HOOSIERS Sfn vd~er gets mark er- ar. By RICHARD FLAHERTY Michigan will blow the young la- Entering this week's game 1-6, team right off the field. If Bo Indiana will undoubtedly be up- were to leave in his first string,' set minded. The Hoosiers, hav- the point spread could be as m ing rallied 25 points last week high as 80. he against Wisconsin, are now Nevertheless, with the Big his looking to their defense. Ten's second leading rusher, THE REAL truth is that Courtney Snyder, the Hoosiers ------ are not a hopeless cause. V low / Defensive catalyzes prowess. reserves Snyder came from Ohio to Bloomington last year with All- Conference and All-State hon- ors. The six-foot, 194 pound half- back broke into Lee Corso's lineup midway into the '73 sea- son. As a fr-shman, Snyder car- ried 87 tiies for 424 yards and led the team with a 4.8 average norrnrvTha fr hmn nl sophomore to pass 1,000 career "Now we've got Michigan, the yards. His 762 yards so far second ranked team in the na- this season surpassed the 760 tion. It's a great opportunity to sophomore record of Ken St. bounce back." Pierre in 1971. : :::..:,:.:.:..:...... WITH THREE games remain- ing, Snyder is a cinch to pass P Ken Starling's second place sea- son total of 781 yards. H o w e v e r, the sophomore NBA would have to average 152 yards EASTERN CONFERENCE to acquire Indiana's best sea- Atlantic Division son total. John Isenbarger ores- Buffalo 4 2 .667 ently holds the record with 1,217 New York 4 3 .571 3a yards in 1969. Philadelphia 3 3 .500 1 Snyder's career total of 1,186 Boston 3 4 .429 1% places eighth onthe Hoosier Central Division record ,list. By the end of tihe Washington 7 1 .875 -- season, he is likely to move as vHouston 4 3 .571 231 high as third and still have two Alalta 3 4 .429 31 years of eligibility left. New Orleans 0 7 .000 61: Snyder is only 19 yards be- WESTERN CONFERENCE hind Archie Griffin's conferemce Midwest Division rushing leadership, 545 yards Kansas City-Omaha 5 1 .833 -- to 564. Detroit 3 4 .429 2% YEGIFN'}tr~c Chicago 3 5 .375 3 r YET, GRIFFIN'S stattstics MIwaee1 .7 are in a class of their own. As Milwaukee 1 5 .167 4 a sophomore his season .ntal Pacific Division was 1,577 yards, contributing Golden State 4 2 .667 - Seattle 4 3 .7 to a two year total of 2,114. The Los Angeles 3 3 .500 1 B'ickeye's freshman average of Phoenix 3 3 .500 1 78.8 yards per game and sapho- Portland 3 4 .429 1Y2 more average of 143.3 are ui- YESTERDAY'S RESULTS touchable by even Snyder's per- Cleveland 118, Detroit 101 formances. New York 93, Atlanta 90 Snyder presents the o-itside Hoto wn chane otan psetin aturav' By ED LANGE junior varsity contests are filled The undefeated Michigan var- with mistakes. The JV's lack of sity reserve squad goes after practice as a unit makes mold- win number three today when ing a cohesive team a. tough they entertain the Bowling assignment. Instead, much of Green Falcons at 1:30 p.m. in their time is spent simulating Michigan Stadium. The Wol- the varsity's upcoming oppon- verines' two wins came against ent, Notre Dame's highly touted Like Bo Schembechler's var- junior varsity. The Baby Blue sity squad, the Baby Blue's have looked impressive playing main strength lies in its strong almost error free ball. defense. The lack of prepara- THE WOLVERINES' play has tion doesn't hurt the defense as been a pleasant surprise for much as the offense, according coach Denny Brown since most: to Brown. "The defense is al- ways ahead of the offense," he pe r the lnge giesnainr o said. Brown attributed this fact had the longest gainer of he to the complexity of the offen- season with a 48-yard jaunt sive assignments. Defense is against Michigan State. mainly a case of "reacting t NTESM esn y the offensive assignments," he, der returned 16 kickoffs for 320 cntied. esyards, a 20-yard average. The continued, :rookie also fit easily into the "The defense does have as- screen - pass - minded Hoosier signments," asserted Brown, plans, catching seven passes for "but they are much different 31 yards. from the offensive ones. De- This year, the Hoosier h-ilf- fense is much more natural to back looks even more formid- play." able. In last Saturday's game THE JUNIOR varsity offense against the Badgers Snyder revolves around a strong run- gained 121 yards in rushing, his ning attack, headed by tailbacks fourth consecutive Big Ten Mike Smith and Joe Holland, game over 100. but quarterback Roger Bettis During the game the halfback can also go to the air effectively, also became Indiana's first Paul Moore is an excellent full- back and Dennis Richardson! - ~~ and Paul Truitt are capable SCO R ES Both Holland and Smith had excellent games against the NHL Irish, and they parallel the Philadelphia 5, New York 1 situation of their varsity coun- Montreal 3, washington 0 ternarts, Rob Lytle and Gordon St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc.) Bell. "They're completely opposite in their styles," Brown said. "They each do different things well." "Mike is more of a scooter but he can run inside with effective- ness. Joe Holland is a big, strong kid (195 pounds) who runs off tackle real well, but he can also go outside," Brown said. Over the past two THE BABY BLUE hope to up their record against a formid- Representatives h able Bowling Green squad that has won its only game this year, call votes. Rep. Bu a 7-0 conquest of Toledo. The Falcons, a member of the Mid- those roll calls for America Conference, "have everything to gain by coming up here and beating us," Brownr added. They "looked real good paid political advertisement against Toledo." The Falcons have an excel- lent defense, and offensively, - they resemble Michigan. Bowl- ing Green runs from the I for- mation and uses two tight ends. I "They are very sound both College Markelin ways," Brown stated, anticipat- ing a good game. AVEL MICH. UNION 763-2 NEW ORLEANS CAJUN VACATION JAN. 1-6, 1975 $208.00 triple $223.00 double INCLUDES: * Round Trip Air Transportation from Detroit on Delta Airlines ! Accommodations at the Le Richelieu Hotel in New Orleans * Round Trip Transfers from Airport to Hotel * Sightseeing Tour of New Orleans DEADLINE NOV. 11 For Further Details Contact Uj TRAVEL chance of an upset in Saturday'sI game. Coach Corso adequately sums up Hoosier sentiment. Since '72, Meraer of City and County Health Departments ACTIONS SPEAK ... FOJTIK NOV. 5-Democrat--DIST. 14 Pd. Pol. Adv. ANN ARBOR WINTER ART FAIR U. OF M. NEW FIELD HOUSE IN FERRY FIELD Entrance on State St. 10 oa.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 10-6 NOV.1-2-3 FREE ADMISSION over 150 artists & craftsmen 'I I I years the House of eld 1955 record roll Wlard voted 1791 of r a 93% record. -i - - g Sales Manager nnn Ie e ~one h terms is n ONO Ss ctr ~c5ee Da ee je , . ~' co °Ori~e vtercost e-e'stece r\P tkorem, dat yc . Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS VARSITY RESERVE TIGHT END Dave Harding snares a Roger Bettis touchdown pass against Notre Dame in the 14-6 opening season victory. These two freshmen are among a host of talented Wolverines that square off against Bowl- ing Green's reserve squad today. HOCKEY PLAYERS Skates, Gloves, Pads, Pants and Sticks AETNA is looking for an executive type indi- vidual to assume management responsibilities. Successful track r e c o r d and background in marketing life insurance to college students required. Five figure guaranteed salary plus I bonus arrangement. First year earnings should I - exceed C25.00.Please send letter of interest -A I