Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAM' Tuesday, September 19, 1972 PageEigt TE MCHIAN AIL .. ..............: r ...:. asve...r: Thursday, Sept. 21 7 P.M.-WATERMAN GYM Meeting and Demonstration U of M Tae Kwon Do Club KOREAN KARATE Contact Jackie at 764-3824 or Rich at 764-3624 FOUR-WAY RACE: A CCs By BOB SIMON Our league is as evenly bal- anced as any league in the coun- try, vowed Clemson coach, Hootie Ingram. It's true, the At- lantic Coast Conference title won't be decided until the final game and any one of four teams could be the victor. Last year powerful North Caro-d lina went unbeaten in six tries against conference foes to earn top honors. It won't be so easy in 1972. The Tarheels will probably be the only ACC team which is not improved. They lost eight de- fensiv6 starters from last year plus their whole offensive back- field. The young backs will find :plenty of help when looking for ...., nnnn rnnmnff~4i'n civ,,n m.n 1uads Ron Rusnak, Jerry Sain, and F Siegler-all of them All-Confe ence last year-are returnini Before the season Dooley w; expecting the return of tailba< Ike Oglesby, hampered by h cramps last year, to boost tl offense. Now sidelined with charley horse, however, it doubtful Oglesby will be able regain the speed he exhibited the start of last season. Clemson could be the team overtake last year's chamr They finished second in the co ference in 1971 with a 4-2 recor Ingram feels that the san record might be good enough win this year. "I wouldn't 1 surprised if two losses take. tl title," he predicted. The Tigers defense is solid wi the return of their defensi' I attle for backfield plus star defensive "They'v tackle Frank Wirth. A 13-0 win the las over Citadel in their opener was can't pr adequate proof of that. Citadel seasons had the fourth bast offense in Lastv the country last year. Unfortun- posedly ately for Clemson fans the of- State se fense is not as capable as its title re defense, leaving it up to the Terps a defense to keep the team in the ness on race. starting Last year, Duke was troubled The by the tremendous schedule it often ti ,was faced with. The team got by Al Nevi the tough non-conference opposi- passing tion and was ranked 14th in the this ye nation before conference play be- 22 pass gan. ACC's p However, the early games took opener. their toll as lack of depth forced Frank some players to play both offense those p and defense. Injuries andpure was na exhaustion resulted in a disap- the wee; pointing 2-3 conference record. .i.i Coach Mike McGee feels this Virgir year will be different. The Blue from t Devils may have found a fine fered a quarterback in Bob Albright, a last ye junior college transfer. He com- The o pleted eight of 13 passes last veteran week as he took over for injured running starting quarterback Mark John- rison D son. back, h With stars like defensive tackle aration Ed Newman, a pre-season All- son of1 America candidate, and taiback George Steve Jones, Duke could take it over. all this year. The tough early Wake season games may be just what third be this young team needs to get sey and ready for the ACC struggle. Larry H Predictions of a title for Mary- of the land are a little hard to believe their qu for Terrapin followers. As new probabl head coach Jerry Claiborne, a Demon Bear Bryant p r o t e g e says, forget. ti tle *e won only nine games in t five years here. We redict a title before the starts." week's 24-24 tie with sup- weak North Carolina eems to indicate that a sts in the future. The re still plagued by inept- defense as Claiborne is six sophomores. Terp offense will score .his season. Quarterback lle led the conference in last year and started out ar by completing 17 of es for 217 yards as the player of the week in the Sophomore split end Russell caught seven of asses for 86 yards and med ACC sophomore of k. nia still has not recovered he embarassment it suf- t the hands of Michigan ar. ffense is adequate, with a offensive line and star back Kent Merritt. Har- avis, last year's quarter- as a slight shoulder sep- and George Allen, Jr., Los Angeles Rams coach Allen, may have to take Forest has the nation's est punter in Chuck Ram- the ACC's leading rusher, Hopkins. The loss of most defensive backfield plus uarterback, however, will y result in a season the Deacons would rather 4 running room. vziensive linemen - ., LEV ) AKT AP Photo GEORGIA'S JIMMY PAULOS (20) fumbles at the end of a short run as Baylor's Paul Savage eyes the ball. Georgia managed to recover the ball and continued to dominate the game, defeating Baylor, 24-14. u 16 ( i mAlE --.,.,r , -_ _ _.._ ... ; - .^ f - -- -_ - .= . ' --- ..._......r l. SAM'S STORE Texas By JIM ECKER All eight member schools of the1 Southwest Conference are in ac- tion this Saturday in non-league games. 14th ranked Texas (0-0-0) enter- tains Miami (Fla.). The L o n g- horns depend heavily on their wishbone offense. All-America running back Jim Bertelsen has graduated, but tackle Jerry Size- more, himself an All-America per- former, is back to anchor an ex- perienced offensive line. Texas Coach Darrell Royal has converted Allan Lowry, an All- SWC defensive back, into the start- ing quarterback. Experienced run- ners include Don Burrisk and Den- nis Ladd. Miami, also relies predominantly on its running attack. Hurricane Coach Fran Curci claims t h a t Chuck Foreman "will be the great- est running .back in the nation" thisI year and that he deserves Heisman consideration. Joining Foreman in the back- field are Woody Thompson and Coy Hall. John Hornibrook retains his 1971 quarterback position, but is being pressed by three less ex- perienced men. Linebacker Harold Sears is in charge of the Miami defense against the Longhorn wish- bone. Arkansas is at home against Ok- lahoma State. The Razorbacks re- volve around Heisman Trophy can- didate Joe Ferguson, their stellar signalcaller, Coach Frank Broyles gives Fer- gnson a free hand in running the offensive show which includes the SWC's first and second leading re- ceivers in, split-end Mike Reppond and flankerback Jim Hodge. Tal- ented running backs include Jon Richardson, Dickey Morton and Mike Saint. Oklahoma State operates behind an experienced quarterback in Brent Blackman. Blackman's pass targets include Reuben Gant and Steve Pettes, while Junior college transfer Archie White provides some backfield speed. Tee 'Pokes defense is spearhead- ed by end Jay Cruse, tackle Bar- ry Price, and middle-linebacker Cleveland Vann, a converted full- back. Undoubtedly the toughest t a s k awaiting a SWC team this Satur- day throws Texas A&M against Charlie McClendon's rugged LSU Bengal Tigers. Aggie Coach Emory B e 11 a rnd banks on an experienced offensive line to make good things happen. Senior quarterback Tex J a m e s has an accurate arm and a fine aggregation of runners. On de- fense, linebacker Grady Hoermnn and tackle Boice Best are out- standing. McClendon alternates quarter- backs Bert Jones and Paul Lyons. Andy Hamilton is gone from a surehanded fleet of receivers which CLOSE RACE LOOMS favored in SWC returns Chuck Williamson, Jim-my LeDoux and Joe Fakier. Gradua- Lewis Thomas, a UCLA transfer, are the qujprterbacks of this high- 207 E. LIBERTY race ., tion also grabbed All-America scoring oitfit. Cornerback Tommy Cnssanova b1it Coach Bill Tohill'ยง Texas Chris- the rest of the Bengal Tigers' de- tian sqiipd plays Indiana this Sa- fense is experienced. tirday. The TCU quarterbacks are SMU, 56-10 victors over W a k e Kent Marshall and Don Howard, Forest on Saturday, are ready to while Mike. Luttrell is the Horned unleash running sensation A 1 i n I-ogs' main runner. The defense Maxsons against Coach D o u g is anchored by tackle Charlie Dav- Dickey's Florida Gators. Maxson, is and linebacker Tookie Berry. scooted for touchdowns of 13, 1., one, and 11 yards against WFake Forest. Mustang Menton Hayden Fry has replaced Gary Hammond with a couple of capable field generals inn ford "Pancho"'Clark, Randy Goss, and freshman sensation W a y n e By The Associated Press Morris are also key performers. Southern California, following The 'Ponies defense returns seven their 51-6 rout of Oregon State last starters, including Second Team weekend, remained on top of the All-America Bob Popelka. pack yesterday 'in the Associated Florida's Gators lacly depth and Press college football poll. Okla- a consistent passing attack. Their homa moved into the No. 2 posi- best player, ceniter Mark King tion with an impressive opening- starts the action for quarterback game victory. Chan Gailey and runners Vince It was USC's second straight Kendrick, Lenny Lucas and Andy week at the top of the rankings Summers. since replacing Nebraska, the 1972 Bre-season favorite. Oklahoma rose Baylor operates from the slt- from fourth to second after trounc- I behind junior signal-caller Ran- ing Utah State, 49-0. Despite a 57- Brian Kilgore carry the ball while 14 battering of Cincinnati, Colorado All-Conference end Roger Goree slipped from second to third. Ohio does his best to hold the defense State dropped to fourth place de- s tohthed spite a 21-0 triumph over Iowa. togethesorCTennessee claimed fifth place after Missouri Coach Al Onofrio U s c s decisioning Penn State, 28-21. Quarterback Ed Johndrow and ball ULonits secondtconsecutive carriers Jack Bastable, L e r o y. UCLA won its second consecutive Moss Mie Fik, nd Dn Jin-contest, and climbed from eighth Moss, Mike Fink, and Don John- to sixth. Idle Alabama succumbed son. The Tiger defense nas t e n to seventh while lSU gained the new faces plus holdover middle-tevhth twith a i the guard Bob Orsi. eighth spot with a 31-13 victory over Pacific. Nebraska grabbed the Texas Tech travels to Albuquer- poll's ninth notch with a 37-7 romp que to play the New Mexico Lobospolsnnhnth iha3- rm Coach Jim Carlen'sRed Raiders over Texas A&M. Arizona State, crushed Utah last Saturday 49-2 a 33-28 victor over Houston, ousted bruhehdUahasterSaktJueBranPenn State from the top ten. behind quarterback Joe Barnes and.......... 4.. 1 .-.} ") - Rn Q i i T rl f ri ., -- . ........ "' -- .-./ NIKON CANON MINOLTA I OWNERS Michigan Union Bowling. LEAGUES NOW FORMING LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP OPEN 11 a.m. Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sun. ARE YOU A FORMER PILOT STUDENT STILL INTERESTED IN BEING A PART OF THE PROGRAM? Party Sunday, Sept. 24 at Alice Lloyd CALL 764-1 179 or 763-4672 So we'll know you're coming. I 4 c E I i iI I t b s" lE b I i gomm af 3m34m 3s-t .53 130mmm ff 3. 35mm".8 Vivitar AUTOMATIC LENSES WIDE ANGLE, TELEPHOTO AND ZOOM At these low, everyday competitive prices: 4 - VIVITAR 20mm Ff3.8 Automatic ------- $115.00 VIVITAR 28mm F/2.5 Automatic $ 72.00 tailback George Smith. Doug "Bruiser" McCutchen plays iull- back. Coach Rudy Feldman's WAC squad is offensively explosive. The Lobos' rushing attack ranked se- cond in the country last year, is led by the powerful legs of hnaf- back Fred Henry. Bruce Boon^ and .Billboard The Ann Arbor R.F.C. will sponsor a group of rugby movies at Mackinac Jack's tomorrow at 7 p.m. The films will) feature' the British Lions, the New Zea- land All-Blacks and the N e w Zealand Maoris among others. Workout for those men a n d women interested in cheerlead- ing for the U of M basketball team will be held today and to- tomorrow from 6:30-8:30 at the Chrysler Arena. Final tryouts will be at 7 p.m., Sept. 21. The Top 20 The Top Twenty teams, with first- place votes in parentheses, season re- cords and total points. Points based on 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Southern California (28) 2-0 920 2. Oklahoma (11) 1-0 840 3. Colorado (7) 2-0 769 4. Ohio State (2) 1-0 622 5. Tennessee (2) 2-0 615 6. UCLA 2-0 490 7. Alabama 1-0 463 8. Louisiana State 1-0 392 19. Nebraska 1-1 377 10. Arizona State 2-0 190 11. Penn State 0-1 180; 12. MICHIGAN 1-0 162, 13. Notre Dame OtO 156 14. Texas 0-0 109 15. Washington 2-0 86 16. Georgia 1-0 59 17. Florida State 2-0 58 18. Michigan State 1-0 54 19. Stanford 1-0 50 20. Mississippi 1-0 38 DAILY LIBELS 0-0 38 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Air Force, Arkansas, Auburn, California, Dartmouth, Georgia Tech, Indiana, Iowa State, Louisville, North Carolina, North Carolina State, San Diego State, Southern Methodist, Texas Christian, Toledo, West Virginia. VIVITAR 35mm F/2.8 Automatic ----------- $ 54.00 VIVITAR 100mm F/2.8 Automatic--$ 57.00 VIVITAR 135mm F/3.5 Automatic $ 49.00 VIVITAR 135mm F/2.8 Automatic$------------- 64.00 VIVITAR 200mm F/3.5 Automatic --- :.----$ 80.00 PLEASE-Do not confust these with interchangeable mount lenses. These are rigid mount, fully auto- matic Vivitar lenses made specific- ally for your Nikon, Nikkormat, Canon, Pentax, Konica, Mamiya, etc. 2 DAYS Left of Sole at WAHR'S BOOK STORE 316 S. 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