Saturday, October 7, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY !'age beven Saturday, October 7, 1 97~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Middies set to walk Wolverines' plank By GEORGE HASTINGS As he prepare# to do battle with Navy this afternoon at Michigan Stadium, M i c h i g a n coach Bo Schembechler's m a j o r problem may not be on the other side of the field. The miracle that Bo will have to pull;off is convincing his team that they really have a game today. SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: BOB HEUER and BOB McGINN Penn ;state and Boston College Wolverines have all their many scores may be a bit deceiving, fine defensive ends healthy, and since both those teams are appar- this will give Schembechler a ently not what they were cracked 1 chance to keep his front line fresh. up to be. Middle guard Greg Ellis will also The Michigan squad managed to be back in action after sitting out stay away from any new injuries most of last week as a result of this week and are in as good phy- being thrown out of the game in sical shape as they have been all the first half. year. Qverall, the Wolverines are again Schembechler is expected to go a prohibitive favorite, picked by 24 basically with the same lineup points or more on some of the bet- which overpowered Tulane last ting lines. Unless some quite un- Saturday, and even if some of the foreseen circumstances occur, the individual players may be just Maize and Blue should extend their peeking a, little ahead to Michigan 1972 record to 4 and 0 without any State, they should have few prob- problem. lems. A ;- Typically, ever since last Satur-I day, Schembechler has been con- _ centrating on just that. "Navy has of the Wolverine line is to go right overrun-as yet. Schembechler re- dayts,"he has be en saying. against Michigan's strength, so the calls last season's Michigan-Navy "They're vastly improved offen- Navy may have to take to the air, contest, in which, he says, "We sively, and will give us difficulty an area in which they are not as had very great difficulty moving on defense." strong as they would like to be. the football." Quarterback Fred Stuvek has In fact, in that contest the Wol- met with some success via the pass verines mounted very little offense The Michigan-Navy game be- this year, but he has also been in the first half, and it took a few g: p.m. EST and will quite prone to the interception, breaks and a last-second touch- be broadcast over radio stations and the Wolverine secondary may down to make the halftime score WAAM 1600 AM; WCBN 89.5 FM; add to its already impressive total 15-0. However, in the second half AG 1050 AM; and WUOM 91.7 of pick-offs. The receiver to watch Michigan came on for four touch- for the Middies is tight end Steve downs and a field goal to make it Ogden, who has nabbed ten tosses a rout. But although those who have already this season. However, the improvement in heard Schembechler's appraisals of The Navy defense's only real star Navy is probably far short of what the Wolverines' weak foes in past is linebacker Chuck Voith, but the it would take to come up with an years understandably m a y be unit as a whole has not been badly upset over the Wolverines. The skeptical, this time he may' have a point. For the Navy team of THE LINEUPS 1972 is apparently a far cry from the Midshipmen squads which have' gone 8-34 over the past four years. Offense This year, in fact, the Navy team M ICHIGA NA actually Chas a winning record- I .ZICHI AN NAVY two wins and one loss, to be exact: (15) Bo Rather (180) SE (85) Jack Forde (160) The Navy offense especially, close Ji to non-existent last year, has blos- (73)im Coode (235) LT (52) Max Legg (245) somed into a powerful force. (61) Mike Hoban (232) LG (62) Bob Johnson (240) The improvements in the Mid-! (56) Bill Hart (227) C (74)Carl Halbreiner (215) shipmen have shown up on the (60) Tom Coyle (233) RG (70) Don Montgomery (250)1 scoreboard. Last year the Middies (77) Paul Seymour (250) RT (71) Leonard May (240) were bombed by Penn State 56-3(83) Paul Seal (213) TE (80) Steve Ogden (210) and Boston College 49-6, this year~ they held the Nittany Lions to a ( 9) Dennis Franklin (185) QB (15) Fred Stuvek (185) 21-10 victory, and then just last (31) Ed Shuttlesworth (227) FB (38) Andy Pease (195) week upset the BC Eagles, 27-20. (43) Clint Haselrig (182) WB (33) Albert Calland (195) The other Navy win came over (20) Harry Banks (177) TB (24) Dan Howard (170) William and Mary. The reason for the Navy success D this year has been the develop-Defe ment of a strong running game. (96) Clint Spearman (223) LE (75) Wes Bergazzi (210) Coach Rick Forzano has a big, (92) Fred Grambau (234) LT (76) Glen Nardi (225) veteran offensive line which has (68) Greg Ellis (23) MG (69) Charlie Voith (200) been opening a lot of holes. (71) Dave Gallagher (230) RT (77) M O'Shaughnessy (230) To run through them, Forzano(71) DaneCGle rn(20) RE 7)BObSharhes(20 has found junior Dan Howard. (39) Don Coleman ( 10) RE (65) Bob Willard (210) Howard was named Associated (34) Craig Mutch (203) MLB (34) Mike Behrent (210) 1 Press back-of-the-week last week (37) Tom Kee (215) OLB (82) Charles Miletich (195)P after an incredible performance i I (41) Randy Logan (192) Wolf (79) Jim Garban (195) which he gained 239 yards and (25) Barry Dotzauer (162) WHB (44) Pat Virtue (170) scored two touchdowns against (25) ry Borks (1 2) WHB (44) Pat rtue 10 Boston College. (8) Roy Burks (185) SUB (45) Gary Rhoads (180) However, to run at the middle ( 6) Dave Brown (185) S (47) Charles Robinson (170) One thing which may add a bit of interest to the game should .the Wolverines get far ahead early, will be the tendency Schembechler displayed against Tulane last week to experiment with new players and new plays on offense. In the fourth quarter against the Green Wave, Schembechler found that he has a reliable back- up tailback in the person of sopho- more Chuck Heater, who blasted for 51 yards in only seven carries. He also turned loose his second- string quarterback Larry Cipa to try some passes. Cipa proved that the Wolverines can go to the air if they have to, completing 3 of 3 for 34 yards and driving Michigan to another score. Another player who Schembech- ler got into the action for the first time late last week was wingback Larry Gustafson, who in presea- son was a leading candidate for starter at the positionuntildan arm injury sent him out of action. Schembechler, who has vowed that he will have more varied cap- abilities thi, vear on offense, will probably make use of late game time today to prepare more options should the Wolverines be forced out of their normal patternsj in any future contests this season. On defense, the Wolverines' sec- ondary has looked better everyj week, and the young Michigan' starters have shown nothing to in- dicate that they won't be able to! easily handle the unimpressive Navy passing attack. The Michigan defense against the rush, again one of the nation's best, will be challenged by Howard and Co., but should meet the test.1 For the first time this year the And if Bo can get all really fired up about the could be a runaway. his boys game, it Polomen sweep Freshman Rich Yawitz scored three goals and Larry Day, Rich Dorney, and Steve McCarthy added two apiece to pace the Michigan Wolverine water polo squad to a 11-7 upset win over conference champion Indiana last night. Junior goalie Stu Isaac was outstanding in the nets, stopping several Hoosier breakaways. Earlier, the Wolverines thump- ed Michigan State, 25-4. A rematch between the same two teams will be held this morning at Matt Mann Pool starting at 10:30 a.m. Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Heater on the move BETTORS NIGHTMARE Sectional rivals pa By RON PARSON Unlike last week, where Okla- homa and Nebraska, among others crushed t h e i r opponents, - this week's schedule includes a host of games between evenly matched teams. Of course no one can pre- dict the future and anything can happen when two teams take to the gridiron, but there is good exciting football in store for to- day. On the coast, USC (4-0), the num-1 ber one team in the nation, goes E ILLINI SET AMBUSH Spartans butt1 CHICAGO (MP) - After three 'back, while simplifying offensive rounds of mainly nonconference patterns. action, the Big Ten again has tak- Junior defensive cornerback en its lumps for a composite 8-13 Mark Niessen is expected to re- record. The ratio figures to be place senior George Mihaiu at about the same on the last Sat- quarterback, although Daugher- urday before the conference be- ty has refused to confirm who'll gins its all-in-the-family warfare. start. Niessen, listed as a quar- Michigan State, on a downhill terback, worked out at the post slide by football Coach Duffy all week. Daugherty's admission, tries to- day to make a stand against fa-' vored, powerful Notre Dame. a En Foouuisl To stop the threat of coach Ara Parseghian's sophomore - studded, shock troops, Daugherty has re- Willie Townsend, Mike Creaney sorted to juggling several line- and fullback John Cieszkowski men and, probably, his quarter- ave caught 18 of Tom Clements' _____________21 successfully attempted passes and are expected to be a threat G ' a Saturday. a The winless Illinois football team got its first bit of good news in le ad 1 e t three weeks with a report star quarterbackMike Wells will be able to face solidly - favored Penn __tState today. 27,Wells, whose split finger on his throwing hand sidelined the By BOB HEUER losses to Southern California and Fighting off some tough pinI Washington, will wear a spe- placements and a poor showing cial wrapping around the in- from the bottom of the line-up, the jured digit in the intersectional Michigan golfers took a five shot contest at Memorial Stadium. lead into today's finale of the Both teams boast good defenses, inaugural Wolverine Invitational with the Tab Bennett-led Illini Tournament, hard pressed to make amends for After 27 holes of play, the Blue a sputtering offense. ,linksmen sport a total of 832 Penn State's defense, hubbed strokes from their top seven play- I around linebacker John Skorupan ers. Michigan State is five strokes and end Bruce Bannon, also has back at 837, followed by Purdue at had to compensate for a butter- 839. fingered Lion offense guilty of 14 MICHIGAN CO-CAPTAIN Chuck turnovers, 11 on lost fumbles. er in total offense this fall. While Jaynes prefers to pass, the Jayhawks also field a steady; ground attack led by Jerome Nel- loins, Delvin Williams and Rob- ert Miller. The Gophers hope they. are fin- ished with injury problems at run-I ning back. Kevin Keller will start, with freshman Doug Beaudoin and senior Jim Henry in reserve. Quarterback Bob Morgan, has worked without benefit of an able halfback the last two weeks, thus cutting the efficiency of the Veer T option and running of fullback John King. Iowa was cheered by a solid" showing in last Saturday's 14-101 loss at Penn State. But winless Purdue 0-3 still is tabbed a one touchdown pick over the host! Hawkeyes as the Boilermakers make their first league start. Ohio State, 2-0, now apparently armed with a game - breaking freshman speedster in Archie Griffin, is rated by three touch-} lowns over California 1-3. How- ever, Buckeye coach Woody Hayes frets that the Bears "live by the forward pass and the big play." Also scheduled this afternoon is the Indiana-Syracuse game. John- ny Pont's Hoosiers (2-1) are slight underdogs against the Orangemen,j who were soundly thrashed by Wisconsin three weeks ago, 31-7. ruuer 'e Irish against the Stanford Cardinals (nee, Indians) who Michigan fans re-' member well. Coming off a convincing victory over Illinois, the top-rated Trojans are blazing a trail to the Rose Bowl. In their first four games the Trojans have amassed 188 points and allowed only 42 to the oppo- sition. Anthony Davis leads the rush- ing attack and the fine passing combination of Mike Rea and J.D. McKay, son of the Trojan coach, should make trouble for the Stanford defense. Stanford (3-0), the defending Dope charge hits Jabbar, Lucius .Alen DENVER {gP) - Kareem Abdu I Jabbar and Lucius Allen of the Milwaukee Bucks were freed on $200 bond each yesterday after be- ing held with two other men for investigation of possession of marn- juana. Police said two uniformed offi- cers stopped a car in downtown Denver on a routine traffic check and discovered the suspected mari- juana. The four were arrested un- der a law which makes first pos- session of one-half ounce or less of marijuana a misdemeanor. Capt. Harvey Snyder said they are to appear in City-County Court within 10 days to answer the charge. It carries a maximum pen- alty of one year in county jail ad. a fine of $500. Allen has been arrested twice before on similar charges in Los Angeles. Wayne Embry, general manager of the Bucks, said he didn't know enough about the incident to say what effect it would have on the players' status. He added, however, that it was his understanding that Jabbar's religion prohibits smoking o) any kind. Pac-8 champions are also unde- feated. The Cardinals have looked impressive and running back John Winesberry is one good reason why. Winesberry gained 136 yards and three touchdowns while quarter- back Mike Boryla passed for 228 yards and two scores against pre- viously unbeaten West Virginia. A atwntal F Ibal In the south, Alabama (3-0) will meet Georgia (2-1) in what should prove to be a good close contest. Terry Davis, the 'Bama quar- terback, directs the wishbone of- fense which has been very suc- cessful this year. The Crimson Tide, who last Saturday outlast- ed Vanderbilt 48-21, f e a t u r e. strong running backs Paul Sivey and Steve Bisceglia, along with Ellis Beck and Joe LaBue who make the wishbone so effective for coach Bear Bryant. Georgia has beaten Baylor and North Carolina with good perform- ances by quarterbacks Andy John- son and James Ray. No matter what, Georgia will have its hands full against Alabama. Another Southern Conference game features two undefeated teams, Auburn and Mississippi, both boasting 3-0 records with Ole. Miss having the hometown advant- age. Mississippi has a fine quarter- back in Norris Weese whoqmakes good use of ace receivers Burney Veazey and Bill Barry. On defense Mississippi looked very strong in the 21-0 victory over South Caro- lina in which the Gamecocks were held to only one first down.- Auburn looked poor in its first two -outings, but changed all that by pulling a stunning upset over fourth-ranked Tennessee 10-6 last week. Defense should be the name of the game with both teams show- ing good defensive strength. Florida State (4-0) goes against a young Florida team (1-1) with sophomore quarterback Dave Bow- don at the controls. Florida may surprise some people if speedsters Nat Moore and Vince Kendrick get loose. The two young running backs have been gaining a lot of yards in this young season. Oklahoma State (2-1) pulled an astonishing upset last week over third-ranked Colorado 31-& and should be ready for their game with Missouri (2-1) this weekend. The Cowboys have fooled the Big Eight experts this year. In their three past games the Cowboys have lost only one, a 24-23 squeaker to Arkansas. Missouri bases its upset hopes on a strong defense geared to stop the powerful Cowboy .rushing at- tack. Missouri has won two games, defeating Oregon and California, despite a 354-yard passing attack by California. They called on the defense which threw the Cal quar- terbacks for 125 yards in losses. MICHIGAN UNION BILLIARDS 'Till I a.m. Fri. & Sat. Special Rates 1-6 p.m. Sundays Billiard Exhibition Mon. 4 p.m. & 6:45 p.m. STEVE MIZERAK, JR. Ballroom-admission free Thurs., Oct. 12-7 p.m.-9 p.m. FREE INSTRUCTIONS AP Photo LUCIUS ALLEN PREPARES to leave Denver's Mile-High Airport after a most trying day. He and teammate Kareem Abdul-Jabbar were arrested yesterday on a charge of marijuana possession. Bucks' guard Jon McGlocklin walks to Allen's right. I host the C7 C72 $170:00 E I Burnham claimed individual hon ors for the day, firing an even par 36 to go with his morning round 77. "I could havetplayed better,' said Burnham after the round, but I'm happy to berleading." One stroke back of Burnham is Michigan Stater Tom Murphy Murphy garnered the number two spot witha 78-36, 114. Third, any other stroke back at 115, is Neil Spitalny, who engineered rounds of 79-36. "We were a little disappointed with the afternoon play generally,' said Spitalny, "especially with the fourth through eighth players.' Rene Desmarais holds down fourth place on the strength of his 79-37, 116; and Jon Dale shot a 76-43, 119. Four players, however, failed to break 120. Brent Baily and Craig Ghio both shot 121, while Tom Mc- Compouning the woes of Bob Blackman, who has had two suc- I cessive nightmarish season starts g/ since arriving from Dartmouth,I is the indefinite loss of star Illini By JANET McINTOSH 'fullback Mike Navarro. A wee bit of the fightin' Irish will green the turf of Palmer Field Led by Big Ten top rusher, this afternoon as the Michigan Rugby Football Club battles the Notre Rufus Ferguson, the flying fire- Dame Ruggers. The Irish tied with Michigan last year in tourna- plug, Wisconsin is rated a one- ment play and are a strong and hard-playing a bunch of rugby players touchdown choice over North- as you'll ever want to see. South Bend comes into this game with a sea- western. son record of 6-1, their only loss being to Central Indiana, an allstar The Wildcats, yet to crack up a team of no little reputation. touted passing game, cracked into the win column last week with Last year was Notre Dame's rebuilding year, so this year's team is 1 freshman fullback Greg Boykin composed primarly of experienced, seasoned undergrads returning scooting 43 yards for the go-ahead from last year's squad. Together they form a 'competent team, touchdown in a 27-22 defeat of well-seasoned in the fine art of rugby. Pittsburgh. Notre Dames scrum is not to be feared for its mammoth size The Minnesota Gophers, looking either, possessing only one rugger over the 200 pound mark. The for a duplicate performance from Irish Captain, Joe Hoffner does not consider their smallness a prob- a year ago, try for their first vic- lem. He says that though they're small, they're wiry and in most tory of the college football season cases succeed in wearing their opponents out and dominating the s today against Kansas. field in the final minutes of play. Minnesa' s 0-3 nde new Undaunted after their whopping 26-19 loss to Michigan last year, ,coach Cal Stoll, losing the last two-_ y, VALL 10 Speed Imported Bicycle FREE with purchase of new Toyota or "quality checked" used car For the Price* of 1 CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN Peter Cushing, Hazel Court A chilling drama about a man-made creature who spreads horror throughout the countryside. A terrifying journey thru the macabre world of fantasy. SAT. 7:30 p.m., SUN. 6:30 & 10:15 p.m. PARDON US During the Prohibition days Laurel & Hardy brew their own and end up in prison after selling a sample to a Federal agent. One of their funniest. Stupendously and hilariously produced in 1931. 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