Page Six I HE MICHIGAN DAILY .>aturdav. Uctober 13, 1913 E CD La vc.. a, x.x.w x.v ' V tx ilr . -- r r . Bruised Blue storm ] By MARC FELDMAN EAST LANSING - Like Army- Navy, Southern Cal-UCLA, Texas- Oklahoma and the others, foot- ball afficionados in this part of the country are told every year to throw out the book, cast aside past1 records, and concentrate on emo- tion when the bitter rivalry be-' tween Michigan and Michigan State is renewed once again each au- tumn., For once, a couple of weeks ago, Live TV For those of you not able to attend today's titanic football struggle in person, the Michigan- MSU battle will be telecast live on channel 23 or for cable view- ers "cable channel K. As usual, the taped replay of today's en- counter will be telecast on Cable 3 Sunday night at 8 and again Wednesday night at 8:30. that didn't look like the case. Michigan had just dealt R o s e Bowl nemesis and highly regard- ed Stanford a demoralizing 47-10 defeat while the Spartans h a d bored regional television viewers with a totally uninspiring 14-8 win over a Syracuse team that will pro- bably win the "Worst Club in Ben Schwartzwalder's 25 years" award hands down at the conclus- ion of the 1973, campaign. Finally, a nice easy win over the Spartans. Nofhing to wor- ry about. Just another mechan- ical victory. But, now, just a few short weeks afterward, thereI are murmurs all over the State that Michigan can be beaten by daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ROGER ROSSITER Denny Stolz' upstarts. a G i I is f also need some points ourselves." Hailed as the best MSU signal- caller since Jimmy Raye, Char- lie Baggett lends, a degree of versatility to the Spartan at- tack with his running and throw- ing ability much in the same way Dennis Franklin does for the Wolverines. Baggett owns about sixty per cent of the Spartans' total offense1 figures with an average running and passing total of 115 yards per game. He is the Spartan most cap- able of the big play and the man Michigan will have to stop to win today. Because of all the injuries on the offensive line and the uncertain status of All-Big-Ten quarterback Dennis Franklin, Bo Schembech- ler doesn't talk like the coach of an undefeated, untied, fourth-rank- ed football team playing a 1-3 unit under a rookie coach. "The strength of the Michigan State team is defense and kick- . La n si n 3rdAn ear-yISale I aiisiin 0TrkihArs&9it OCT. 15-OCT. 22 ing. Our strengths are their in the first half by a combined SHEEP SKIN MAXI COATS-$150-Now $120 strengths., The game may boil total of 199-13. SHEEP SKIN CAR COATS-$125-Now $95 down to whose offense can move The SpHANDMADE JEWELRY, PUZZLE RINGS & MEDALIONS the ball best and who makes thenumber o gaes have beene u HANDWOVEN RUGS, KHILIANS & REAL FUR.TASIA TAPESTRY least mistakes. Our offensivejs bored a125-1e2eendut GENUINE TURKISH FERRY CLOTHES & TOWELS problems are similar to theirs."Icored, 125-102, 0 compsite defcin i h HAND EMBROIDERED BLOUSES, SHIRTS & JACKETS Both coaches dwell on avoiding ping 56-2 comte dit in te HANDCRAFTED CHINA TILES, WALL PLATES & VASES S Bomitha hes dpaigcoet h first four contest this fall. PLATES mistakes and playing close to the ially before a hostile audience,, a HANDMADE COPPER, BRASS & ALABASTA WORK f vest conservative football, b ut halftime lead will be a must for the ANTIQUE GUNS & DAGGARS spirited, traditional battles in Wolverines this afternoon. . Prices14-1/OFF We have a Loy-away Plan packed stadia tend to be decided by, if not fluke plays, punt re- Any team, whether it be in tug- FOR $10.OR MORE PURCHASE, A FREE GIFT turns, end-arounds, interceptions, of-war or football is only as strong 215 E. Liberty-10 a.m.-6 p.m.-761-5554 C and the like. l as its weakest link. For both teams The old reliable 80 yard march in jammed-packed Spartan Stad- > in 15 plays will not likely be the mm, that foible is the offensive-_- -- tempo of this afternoon's battle, line. For that very reason, t h e but some points will be scored. trench warfare may decide the out- come. If either maligned line can P"movesome people", victory for The Michigan invasion of that side may be in the offing. The injury plague has hit Ann Arbor and resulted in very unim- pressive wins over meager foes while the Spartans have tussled with two excellent teams, a n d walked away smiling, though beat-, en. MSU played UCLA even for Hover 59 minutes in losing to the'E Bruins, 38-21, two weeks ago andI gave powerful Notre Dame t h e fight of its life before bowing, 14-{ 10, last Saturday in South Bend. I Well today's the big showdown1 and though it seemed impossible three weeks ago, a tight battle iss anticipated. For some strange rea- son, mostly a combination of in- jury and the eternal optimism that radiates from East Lansing, the, ' teams look fairly ven in theirI assets and liabilities, and offenset does not look to be the strength of I either club.t MSU mentor Stolz has no illus- ions of running all over the Wol- verines today. He still contends,; as he has from the beginning of I the season that "our biggest con- cern is getting steady improve- ment from our offense, and not turning the ball over to Michigan{ with good field position. But weE TIE LINEUPS MICHIGAN MICHIGAN STATE Offense (27) (78) (69) (51) (65) (73) (83) ( 9) (31) (44) (43) (91) (97) (56) (71) (39) (59) (33) (35) (45) (25) ( 6) Keith Johnson (170) Curtis Tucker (240) Gary Hainrihar °(223) Tom Jensen (220) Dave Metz (235) Jim Coode (245) Paul Seal (218) Dennis Franklin (180) Ed Shuttlesworth (225) Chuck Heater (200) Clint Haslerig (194) Walt Williamson (224) Jeff Perlinger (235) Tim Davis (200) Dave Gallagher (245) Don Coleman (217) Steve Strinko (235) Carl Russ (215) Don Dufek (195) Dave Elliott (170) Barry Dotzauer (162) Dave Brown (188) SE LT ( LG C RG RT ( TE QB ( FB TB WB { Defense 42) 79) '67) 52) '68) 74) (80) 116) (45) ( 1) (21) (93) 79) (47) 88) (91) 49) 97) 14) 36) 29) 27) Mike Hurd (179) John Ruzich (242) Greg Croxton (230) Bob Mills (227) Charles Wilson (219) Phil Smolinski (227) Jim Cordery (226) Charlie Baggett (187) Julius Askew (225) Mike Holt (175) Dane Fortney (178) Tom Kronner (230) Jim Taubert (256) Ron Kumiega (189) John Shinksky (230) Mike Duda (207) Terry McClowry (215) Ray Nester (238) Mark Nieson (184) Bruce Harms (196) Bill Simpson (183) Paul Hayner (187) LE LT MG RT RE MLB OLB Wolf DB DB S ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Eligible Br 'harriers hi in Notre Dr By MIKE LISULL special To The Dailyj SOUTH BEND - Similar to the demise of Sam Clements, the re-I ports of Keith Browns ineligibility were greatly exaggerated.! 'Brown who had hovered along the edge of ineligibility since the beginning of the semester got the final word yesterday, one hour be- fore the start of the Notre Dame Invitational just in time to run' the best race of any Michigan har- rier this year. But with the burden of worry off his mind Brown responded in championship style. He took the lead early and held it for most of the race, but in the end his lack 'of good condition and the power of All - American Gordon Minty did I him in, as he finished a strong sixth with a time of 23:56. "I didn't think I could beat him (Minty), but I wanted to stay in front as long as possible," Brown said. While the return of Brown was the high point of the day, the most outstanding performance maywell have been the running of frosh Greg Meyer. Meyer who has been the most I consistent of any Wolverine har- rier was spiked about a quarter of a mile into the five mile jaunt.I The cut, which went through his little toe required two stitches to heal.. However, the operation did not take place until Meyer ran the five mile course bleeding all the way to a twelfth place finish, and a time of 24:08. While Brown and Meyer were' doing the spectacular, Jon CrossI just ran a good solid race. Cross came in 28th with a time of 24:40; but in a meet as competitive as this, one it was super. Cross Coun- I try coach Dixon Farmer remarked that he felt "Jon has gotten his confidence" after two solid back to back performances. After the top three, the results were a little less impressive. Bill Bolsters continues to come around Spartan Stadium in East Lan- sing will hit the airways at 1:30 p.m. over radio stations WAAM v 1600 AM; WPAG 1050 AM; WUOM 91.7 FM; WCBN 650 AM I c LASSI S yJ and 89.5 FM; and WWJ 950 AM. Both offensive lines are either in- C LSE B experienced or on the sidelines CLASSICAL with injuries and the defensive g RA RY corps are too tough for meat-grind- ing by either side. Therefore, the ^ "mistake-free" strategy may have Scholarly English to be abandoned in the second half. Ltions opposite definitive Whenever a close game is ex- Greek and Latin texts. pected, the team that gets on the The following are some of the board first has a decided ad- authors we have in stock: vantage. Michigan is a first half v Cicero team, and not used to coming Virgil from behind or being behind in ^ Plato the first place. While winning 14 Aristotle of 15 games in the past season Isocrates C and a fraction, the Wolverines Catullus, Tibullus & have outscored their opponents Pervigilium Veneris Euripides Petronius & Seneca 0 'Propertius ( own leads T Agsne== Terence h finishAgte Gorevidal Horace Ft---e i viteTacitus me viteOvidV but at miniscule pace. Bolster who Apuleius ran second behind Brown most of Xenophon last year was the fourth Michigan finisher but 62nd overall. Bolster's Marcus Aurelius time, 24:45 was only five seconds Piautus slower than he ran last year but lGree Anthology Bill must run a lot better if Michi-~reknoogy gan is to make a run at the Big Longus Juv ethPius Ten title. ' oeth Pius Fifth for the Wolverines and 76th Martial overall was steady junior Dave Homer Eddy with a time of 24:53. Eddy U Thucyides who took last year off has been o xaviera steady but he also must improve Tacitus to give Michigan a shot at the UoSalust money. Herodotus While Michigan was putting to- Callimachus gether their Big Ten squad with Epictetuk a fourth place finish and a team Menander total of 184. Wisconsin moved into Samervin the favorite's role for the Big Ten Lyra Graeca Championships. Wisconsn stunned Aeschylus the field by running away with the e Demosthenes meet, by amassing a total of only Aristophanes 81 points to runner-up Eastern Diogenes Laertius Michigan's 113.'0 Pausanias "Quite frankly Wisconsin shock- Lucan ed me," admitted Farmer who also Lysias reported that he was quite pleased G ee with his squads efforts. "The sixty second difference between our top v~ Cato & Varro five runners is the best we've doneurdGreek Mathematical Works this year, and this is also the best °rPlotimus we'ye ever done here at Notre Lucretius Dame," Farmer related. 4. Centiore S C O R E S 336 Maynard I 663-1812 COLLEGE FOOTBALL- - Miami, Fla. 15, Boston College 10 Houston 54, Virginia Tech 27 3 I; in,\ arIHCINEMA OPE ILY 2 iiON48.300.i .N IINT , PLA I MICHIGAN TAILBACK Chuck Heater (44) winds his way through fenders with Spartans John Shinsky (88) and Paul Hayner (27) Michigan victory. Hopefully the battered Michigan offensive line ing down the Spartans this afternoon. SDaily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI a host of fallen Michigan State de- in pursuit, during last year's 10-0 will have this kind of success mow- LEAGUE PLAY RESUMES: By ANDY GLAZER Hoosier quarterback Wi After 3 weeks of taking it on the should be able to shread chin from non-conference foes, the Minnesota secondary. H Big Ten resumes its annual battle ready completed 29 of for third place behind Michigan and for 315 yards against muc Ohio State."The talent is very well competition. distributed this year, and this should Purdue (2-2-0, 1-0-0)a result in many tough, close, ball- (2-2-0, 1-0-0)-Following la games. embarrassing 24-0 loss to This week's games are as fol- the Illini have an unsettle lows: ' at quarterback. Jeff H Ohio State (3-0-0, 1-0-0) at Wis- won the starting job in his consin (1-3-0, 0-0-1)-The Buckeyes ances against Indiana; will enter most of their games this fornia. But then two poor year as 30 point favorites, but not ances against West Vir, this week. Wisconsin's Badgers lost Stanford opened up thej to national powerhouses Nebraska and sophomore Jim Ko and 'Colorado by a combined total take over. of 7 points. PURDUE, meanwhile, Although the Badgers rushed for in the opposite direction. 548 yards last week in a 37-28 win ing upset by Miami of Oh over Wyoming, Coach John Jar- second game, the Boi dine said that the Badgers "will concentrate more on passing this week," because "Ohio State may _ Ose be too strong against the run." J lose , Buckeye opponents have managed 13 points in 3 games 3 pEitCKEY E putationam.Fr ~~~be getting to the Ba dgers. Jardine 1FfitnIk1i noted that at Thursday's practice session his ballplayers were "a little uptight" and that they "didn't By FRANK LON( catch the ball the way they usually' Don't listen for M do." No. 85 to be mentioned OSU, with Archie Griffin alone radio this afternoon in rushing for an average of 125 yards MSU classic. Wolverin per game, has a terrific running end Jim Smith, first fres attack. But the Badgers held Ne-1 play Michigan football braska to 145 yards rushing-178 inception of the newc below its average. Ohio State should rule, suffered an apparen win, but it won't be a runaway. er separation in yesterd Indiana (2-2-0, 0-1-0) at Minnesota noon's final drill in I (1-3-0, 0-1-0)-Perhaps this game Stadium when he fell to should be billed as Unpredictible tan Turf after missing vs. Predictible. Indiana lost to pass. f Illinois and Arizona and then came Smith, 6-3, 200, fronr out of nowhere to beattKentucky Island, Illinois, was rep and a very good, unbeaten West the Wolverines' 48-man1 in BigTen illie Jones gave powerful Notre Dame a tough the weak time before losing, 20-7. And last e has al- Saturday they crushed Duke, 27-7. 48 passes Iowa (0-4-0, 0-1-0) at Northwest- ch tougher 'ern (1-3-0, 1-0-0)-Under other cir- cumstances, the Iowa Hawkeyes at Illinois might be expected to relax this ast week's weekend. After playing Michigan, Stanford, UCLA, Penn State and Arizona, a d problem letdown for Northwestern would be lollenback natural. But the Hawkeyes didn't s perform- win any of those games, and as an and Cali- 0-4 team, they'll be playing hungry., perform- IOWA COACH Frank Lauterbur ginia and is worried about the passing com-' job again, bination of Mitch Anderson to patz may Steven Craig, whom he calls "the premier tight end in the country." has gone But he won't have to worry much. After be- Northwestern's in-conference un- io in their defeated status should go by the [ermakers boards Saturday. s yet another; !n should start startng NBA Detroit 122, Atlanta 105 Boston 118, Buffalo 112 Houston 106, Cleveland 99 NHL Pittsburgh 4, Atlanta 3 DAVID'S BOOKS NEW ADDRESS: 209 S. STATE-663-8441 25% OFF our bodies ourselves, summerhill, massoge, -ixtlan, tokien etc. 1 VOLUNTEERS FOR ISRAELI through Sherut La'am will begin leaving New York this Sunday All volunteers must pay their own transporta- tion ($450 round -trip from New York) and make a six month commitment. GO lichigan's on your the M- e split shman to since the eligibility nt should- ay after- Michigan the Tar- ga long n Blue laced on traveling lerig and Larry Gustafson. Has- lerig can also play in the' split end position, if needed. In other player developments, junior Dennis Franklin s h o u 1 d get the call at quarterback after sitting out last Saturday's 24- ,0 win over Oregon with a brok- en finger. Franklin practiced all week with the team, which in- cluded taking snaps from center. Senior tackle Jim Coode, af- ter sitting out the first four prac- tice sessions this week, dress- ed and worked out with t h e squad in yesterday's drills, and made the trip to East Lansing. I FSUNDAY I' BUFFET -' 2*25' salads, appeti zers, cold & hot dishes, chicken, beef. ootatoes4 i I I For Further Information, Call HILLEL 663-4129 ISRAEL discuss war at COFFEIHOUSE an open discussion with Israeli students and faculty on their perspectives on the war and I I i i1 Im