Thursday, September 14, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine I Thursday, September 14, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Wildcats enter unpredictable season NORTHWESTERN WILDCAT halfback Stan Key (31) circles left en igan All-America safety Tom Darden in last season's crucial open returns to bolster Wildcat hopes in this year's opener at Michigan, tion will be sorely felt by the Wolverines. Cornhuskers, Colorad of Big Eight pigskin C By FRANK LONGO One other position appears "This has got to be a rebuilding strong for Northwestern-defensive year," says Northwestern football tackle. Jim Anderson; All Big Ten (earu Iv coach Alex Agase, which has to two years in a row, is one of only r rank as one of the understate-- two returning starters on the de- ments of the past fortnight. The fensive line that pushed North- Wildcats, Big Ten runners-up in western near the top the last two r 1970 and '71, should be right in seasons. Anderson, named a co- the midst of a four team fight to captain along with Lash for the NIGHT EDITOR: escape the league cellar this year. 1972 season, was also his team's CHUCK DRUKIS ; lack of experiencemost valuable sophomore in 1970I Start with a lack of experience and most valuable junior in 1971, (only 22 lettermen return including Not a whole lot can be said about seven starters), add little depth and is gunning for more individual the rest of the squad as far as (only three of 22 positions have a honors this year. outstanding achievements go. For letterman as a back-up), continue with the graduation of one of the, best defensive lines in the con- ference, and wind up with the loss .of both the All-Big Ten Quarter-; !back (Maurice Daigneau) and theF league's leading receiver (BarryI . Pearson) and you'll agree that it By The Associated Press with an infield hit, loading the will take a few magic tricks to NEW YORK-Boston broke Rob bases. pull the "Purple Haze" back up Gardner's no-hit spell with a four- Ben Oglivie's forceout bouncer' . to First division level, run fifth as the Red Sox beat the drove in the first run of the inning < .{.. . Actually, Northwestern probably New York Yankees 7-2 last nght and Doug Griffin laid down a safej will not be quite that bad, but and maintained their one game bunt for the second tally. Pitcher .must still be put in the dark, dark d the tight American League Lynn McGlothen, 7-5, then bunted horse category as far as influ East baseball pennant race. for a base hit to load the bases ing the race goes. The loss dropped the Yankees again and chase Gardner. . The key could very well be the ,1 games off the pace into a thi Reliever Lindy McDaniel gave up ack spot, which this week I the inning's final two runs, one on; Daily-Sara Krulwich was awarded to senior Todd Som- Gardner, 7-3, had a perfect game an infield error and another on d just beyond the grasp of Mich- ers, who spent the entire fall prac- for four innings before issuing a Louis Aparicio's grounder. ner won by Michigan 21-6. Key tice schedule warding off the ta- leadoff walk to Rico Petrocelli.p' while Darden's loss to gradua- ents of sophomore Mitch Anderson. Carlton Fisk singled for the first The Yankees chased McGlothen Anderson had been hailed as a hit off the Yankee lefthander and on Felipe Alou's two-run double in - - ----first-rate prospect through the Andy Kosco then came through the seventh. But Bob Veale came1 spring term, and kept it up all the liE u..way to last Saturday's final scrim- .o h dea ist mage, when he engineered threeridde Pickings first team's 50-6 win over the re.. G r d e P c ig se o d half scoring drives in the frt t a ' 06 w n o e h e serves. The Daily Libels suffered but yet another key blow yesterday 1o teLUers But the decision was made to go when it was announced that rookie flash 'Big Tex' Stuck had been with Somers, most likely on the mobbed and castrated by his teammates. Coach 'Long Joyn' Papanek basis of his game experience, refused specific comment on the matter saying only that Stuck had tion has been noticeable by its ab- limited as it is. Four of his eight been warned previously about his overlooking of the LIBELS in the sence. pass attempts in relief of Daigneau The other five teams will pro- last season were intercepted. weekly grid polls. bably win their non - conference I sesn wet teepth For you faithful fans you can breathe easier The Maynard men games and go through the sea- If Somers can get the ball in the did receive 31 votes, good for a tie for the twentieth spot. The Daily son wishing they were in another the Wildcats can pick up some (and Stuck) regrets the error. league. valuable yardage this year. They When you bring your sympathy cards in to the big fellow why not Iowa state comes off an 8-3 1971 have two fine pass-catchers in bring in your Gridde Picks for a chance at a free Mr. Pizza pizza. mark, but shuffling in the back- tight' end Steve Craig and split field may give the Cyclones trou- end Jim Lash. 1. Northwestern at MICHIGAN 14. Washington State at ble. George Amundson, who gain- Craig, a member of the All Big (pick score) California ed 1316 yards rushing last year, Ten Academic team last season, 2. UCLA at Pitt 15. San Jose St. at Stanford moves to quarterback; while Jer- is a tremendous blocker with size 3. South Carolina at Georgia Tech 16. Baylor at Georgia ry Moses, who was shelved for the (6-3, 230), speed and sure hands 4. Penn State at Tennessee 17. North Carolina at Maryland entire '71 season with a broken to help. A junior, Craig has all 5 Toledo at Eastern Michigan 18. Virginia Tech at Virginia foot, replaces Amundson at tail- the tolesooataEgreatrtighthend.19. Villanova at Kentucky back the tools of a great tight end. 6. MSU at Illinois 20. Brockport State at Kansas State has plenty of of- fifth leading receiver in 1971, and 7. Minnesota at Indiana Slippery Rock fensive punch with their Denny was also named to the Big Ten 8. Iowa at Ohio State Morrison-to-Henry Childs aerial all academic team. A starter since 9. Bowling Green at Purdue show. But a questionable runmng his first varsity game in 1970, 10. Northern Illinois at Wiscon- attack and leaky secondary may Lash is within striking distance of sin keep the Wildcats down. the school records for receptions 11. Arizona State at HoustonC Kansas also has a potent pass- and yardage set last year by Pear- 12. Wyoming at Air ForceCC ing attack behind junior quarter- son. 13. Duke at Washington back David Jaynes. The Jayhawks - -__bv o fi e a k l d by Z e ll Y O A have a bevy of fine backs led by , O fullback Delvin Williams. An im- potent offensive line however, will~ keep the yardage down.A chemy, Astr0 * Oklahoma State has an experi- , enced quarterback in second-year aicPar man Brent Blackman and a strong offensive line. The gaping holes here are in the running attack and fWIarrnbintirc and F yr cucu i.."Utt DETROIT - Detroit rallied for five runs off Dave McNally in the fifth inning last night, three on a homer by Frank Howard and one on a balk by reliever Doyle Alex- ander, to overcome a four-run deficit and give the Tigers a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The triumph kept the Tigers one game behind Boston but moved them from fourth to second in baseball's tight American League East race. Detroit took a 1-0 lead in the first on a walk to Bill Freehan Pete Wessel mans the left cor- nerback position at 6-1 and 188, while Greg Swanson, 5-10, 175, takes over at strong safety. The defensive line finds Ander- son and Dale Mize at the tackles. Mize, 6-2, 242, played only seven minutes all last year. Frank Bliss, 6-3, 236, and Jamie Summerfelt, 6-2, 236, are the ends. Rounding out the defense are linebackers Al Draper, 6-1, 208, and Steve Anenen, 6-0, 203. the most part inexperienced play- the spring game as the leading ers plug the gaps made from grad- rusher and "will play a lot," as- uation, although coach Agase still sures Agase. maintains the ever present opti- The offensive line is sturdy, al- Smism.though not tremendously huge, Johnny Cooks, 6-0, 190, senior, with Dave Glantz, 6-5, 270 leading was the team's top running back the way at tackle. Donnie Haynes, when he fractured an ankle last 6-0, 229, and Paul Hiemenz, 6-2, 213, fall, and is back at full speed. man the guard spots, with Dave Jim Trimble, a 6-2, 217 sophomore Dybas, 6-2, 229, at the pivot. Larry will handle the fullback duties. Mishler, 6-2, 225, moved over from Trimble, son. of the ex-Philadelphia guard to fill the other tackle spot. Eagles coach, gained 84 yards in Steve Harris, a 5-10, 165 junior, has the dubious job of replacing Pearson at the flanker position, but Agase considers him excellent. On defense, Mike .Varty, a 6-2, 215, junior linebacker (from Detroit Austin, for all you local folk) reaps the most praise outside of Ander- in to put down the rally, getting son. The rest of the defense is the last two outs with a man on relatively inexperienced except for second base. right cornerback Greg Strunk, 6-0, * * * 184, and free safety Bob Beutel, a O rinl sLC nlc d 6-1, 185 senior. By BOB HEUER Despite a jolt from the upstart Pacific Eight last week, the pow- erful Big Eight must once againj rank as the premiere football con- ference in the nation in 1972. Defending national champion and number one ranked Nebraska was knocked off by UCLA, 20-17 in their opener; while Colorado had their hands full with Pac-8 weak sister California, before gaining a 20-10 decision over the Golden Bears. Still, after one week of compe- tition, Three Big Eight squads re- side in the top ten. Colorado is ranked second, Oklahoma, which opens Saturday, occupies the', number four spot, and Nebraska slid from first to tenth. The league will have to play some great football to surpass their 1971 showing when Nebras- ka, Oklahoma, and Colorado fin- ished one, two, three in the na- tional polls and four teams made bowl appearances. With Nebraska's opening day loss, the title race was thrown wide' open. Whether or not new- comers to the qua-terback job can perform are the big questions marks for, Nebraska and Okla- homa. The Cornhuskers saw their 32 The Colorado Buffaloes, seeking their first conference title in 11 years, lost only to Nebraska and Oklahoma last year, and should be even better with tailback Char-' lie Davis and quarterback Ken Johnson returning. Davis rushed for 1386 yards in 1971 to earn sophomore back of the year hon- ors; while Johnson netted 1126 through the air. The Buffs have some problems in the receiving and secondary. departments, but a newly instal- led 4-4 defensive alignment which utilizes seven returning lettermen will be tough to penetrate. Oklahoma coach Chuck , Fair- banks is not satisfied with his sec- ond place finish in both the Big Eight and the polls in 1971. "Bet you can't tell me who the guy was that flew the airplane after the! Wright Brothers," commentedI Fairbanks. Big Eight Pix 1. Nebraska 2. Colorado 3. Oklahoma 4. Kansas State 5. Iowa State ' 6. Kansas 7. Oklahoma State 8. Missouri i I I and a double by Howard. But Terry Crowley's solo homer in the second tied it and then Boog Powell blast- ed a grand slam homer in the third off winner Joe Coleman, 16-13, for a 5-1 Oriole lead. Powell belted- his homer after :, singles by Don Buford and Merx Rettenmund, plus an error by Dick McAuliffe on a force play. The Tigers' big rally began with> a single by McAuliffe. Then Free- han walked with two out and Howard unloaded his first homer as a Tiger and 10th of the season. . .. Willie Horton singled and Mickey; Stanley walked off loser McNally, 13-19, before Aurelio Rodriguez singled in a run. Then reliever Alexander balked as Stanley broke for the plate with,, Ed, Brinkman batting, and scored the winning ' run. IBO O IK S , 0. ~si.i:Y{riiY'S}.y ,."rl da, Tcrot logy Theosophy' l t h F dRB b Fridav-Saturdav ; game unbeaten streak ended anda their hopes for a third straight na- The Sooners will be hard press- tional championship set back se- ed to find a replacement for grad- verely by a last-minute UCLA uated signal-caller Jack Mildren. field goal. But a defense that The rest of the Sooner backfield, could outdo last year's unit, and howe er, which rolled up a record a veteran offensive line to corn- 5565. yards a game last year is plement the breakaway threat of back. Johnny Rodgers could keep them Heisman trophy candidate Greg atop the conference heap. Pruitt, along with Leon Cross-{ Middle guard Rich Glover who white and Joe Wylie, who sat out turned in 92 solo tackles last sea- much of the '71 campaign with in- son is probably the best at his juries will provide an unparalleled position in the country. Willie running attack. Dave Robertson, Harper at end gives the Corn- who will get the starting nod huskers two All-Americans in a against Utah State on Saturday, speedy defensive line where the may have little to do but hand off slowest man runs the 40-yard to that stellar trio. dash in 4.9 seconds. Monsterman The defense returns only four Dave Mason anchors a secondary starters from a sometimes shaky which sports three sophomores. 1971 unit and a passing combina- on defense. Missouri has been in a constant state of rebuilding since Dan De- vine left and this year should be no exception. The Tigers will do well to improve on their 1-10 1971 record, despite installation of a wishbone attack. Featuring: FULL BREAKFASTS GREAT HAMBURGERS FANTASTIC CORNED BEEF OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 7 a.m.-Midnight, GRILL OPEN 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Forest fires burn more than trees l.. STARTS FRIDAY NIGHT Buddy's World Famous PIZZA Lower Level-Michigan Union Major League Standings American League East W L Boston 74 62 Detroit 74 64 Baltimore 74 65 New York 74 65 Cleveland 63 76 Milwaukee 57 83 Wvest. Oakland 81 57 Chicago 78 60 Minnesota 69 68 Kansas City 67 69 California 63 73 Texas 52 84 Yesterday's Results Boston 7, New York 2 Milwaukee 3, Cleveland 1 Oakland 8, Minnesota 0 Kansas City 6, Chicago 4 Detroit 6, Baltimore 5 Texas at California, inc. National League East Pet. .544 .536 .532 .532 .453 .407 GB 1 11 12%/ 19 .587 - .565 3 .504 11%V2 .493 13 .463 17 .382 28 W L Pct Pittsburgh 88 48 .647 Chicago 75 63 .54 New York 72 64 .529 St. Louis 65 74 .468 Montreal 64 73 .467 Philadelphia 49 89 .35 W~est Cincinnati 85 53 .616 Houston 77 60 .562 Los Angeles 73 64 .53 Atlanta 64 75 .460 San Francisco 61 77 .44 San Diego 51 84 .37 Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 4 New York 11, Philadelphia 6 St. Louis 5, Montreal 4, 11 innings Cincinnati 8, Atlanta 6, 10 innings Houston 6, San Diego 5 Los Angeles at Sran Francisco, inc. . GB E7 - 3 14 9 16 i8 24 7 24%2 5 40 16 - 2 7%/ 3 11 2 m 21j2 2 24 % 3212 I ---i BElT MIDRASH I. II,,U~cc, U utJ vuDut5 u va~W MODERN LANGUAGE 215 S. 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S * with convenient carrying case "" zr "A S ., - ' {9 $r;., 54x70 Ovrad e. 40 9 9 ; INTERVIEWS for membership to the board of the Program in Jewish Studies Fall '72 Schedule of Courses Hebrew Language (all levels) Modern Hebrew & Israeli Literature The Individual and the State Basic Judaism The Jewish Ethical Imperative: a) The Ethics of Sexuality b) The Ethics of Imprisonment Martin Buber: The Man & His Philosophy The Jew in American Politics Flowers from Hell: A Survey of Holocaust Literature ANN ARBOR FILM COOPERATIVE will be held Sunday, September 17, at! 164 East Quad at 8:30 p.m. We're looking for OFFICE SPACE-Call 769-7787 ' ---- - -- GUILD HOUSE I I i 11