Thursday, October 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever Thursday, October 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY page Sever 82 in a1 .t Your game atrocious? . . . ..Avery tried hypnosis chess by dan boyk WHEN 13-YEARS-OLD, and in eighth grade Robert Avery liked chess a lot; now 25 years old and three years out of Columbia, Avery is a full-grown chess fanatic. He studies Russian so that he can read Russian chess litera- ture; he went to a hypnotist regularly to help eliminate over- sights from his games (Avery claims it worked); he has a fine chess library and subscribes to publications from around the world. When he plays in tournaments, it is almost always in the East, where the competition is toughest and the opportunity for learning the greatest. Avery's games reflect his careful and thorough approach. They are solid positional struggles, in contrast to the wild Morphy-like games favored by most young players. Only recent- ly has Avery realized the importance of tactical play, admitting, "90 per cent of all games are decided by tactical errors." As part of a new drive to sharpen his tactics, Avery likes to read the German book Lerne- Kombinieren, which contains hundreds of sharp problem positions taken from tournament play. (Winning Chess is an easier and English book of the same type available in paperback.) Avery's official rating is just below master; a good result in his next tournament will give him that title. In the following game watch Avery rip apart Greg DeFotis, a Chicago superstar. DeFotis is a brilliant young player, now among the best in the country. In this game he never has a chance. 7 . .. P-QN4 followed by 8 ... Black has run out of retreats P-QR3 is a pawn ,gambit made popular by Grandmaster Pal . Benko. The idea is. for Black to swing his KR to QN1 and with NY each rook on an open file, and the KB on the long diagonal, Black will regain the pawn in a favorable position. By posting knights at QNS and QB4 and a bishop at QB3, White foils Black's plan. With 20. P-B4 White begins his own aggression, :ie* t' . a consistent relentless consum- ing of space pushing Black up against the wall. It is especial- ly pleasing that White wins with the extra passed pawn that wasv 3ffered- by the opening gambit. After Black's 25 QB Afte Blck's25 .. - - Goph By JIM ECKER The year is 1903. In Washing- ton, Teddy Roosevelt thinks evil thoughts about the Northern Se- curities Company. In New York, Pulitzer and Hearst fight their newspaper circulation wars. In Ann Arbor, the Michigan football team sulks. One of Fielding H. Yost's great Point-A-Minute machines had just returned home after absorb- ing a 6-6 tie with Minnesota. Worse yet, Michigan left its large stone water jug in Minneapolis. The Wolverines ask for it back. The Gophers retort,"Come and win it back." And that, history fans, is the origin of the battle for the "Little Brown Jug." You can look it up! Saturday afternoon's Michigan- Minnesota game marks the 63rd renewal of this classic series in which the Wolverines command a 38-21-3 lead. This weekend is Homecoming for Michigan, with the success of Saturday's activities resting with a royal couple. Parade officials claim their "Homecoming Queen" will de- light gay libbists wherever they are. Minnesota coaches hope their "King" will do the same for Gopher fans. That's John King, the Big Ten's second leading rusher and scourge of Iowa Hawkeye supporters. Last week, the 6-1, 210 lb. junior made a success of Coach CalStoll's "no-huddle" offense. TheHarvest,rAlabama native reaped 173 yards on 29 rushes and scored four touchdowns in Minnesota's maiden triumph of 1972. Stoll figures it was about time for a change, after the Gophers I had dropped their first five games. He inserted the no-huddle technique because "there are' MICHIGAN FIFTH ers grab for daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: FRANK LONGO tactical and psychological ad- vantages to it." Defeated Iowa Coach Frank Lauterbur complained "it was completely unexpected and it ob- viously upset our timing and apparently took away our con- centration. Minnesota's style~ of. attack makes the hurry-up offense pos- sible. The Gophers are basically a rushing team, operating from a 'veer" or triple-option offense. Runsare easy for the quarter- back to call. Take an example. Minnesota lines up against Michigan in a standard pro set. King places himself 3% yards behind quarter- back Bob Morgan. Freshman halfback Doulg Beaudoin crouches several steps to King's right. All Big-Ten receiver Doug Kingsriter splits left, Keith Fahn- horst is tight right. Flankerback George Honza flanks right. At the line, Morgan barks "blue-89, red-26, green-99." Min- nesota knows the key word in this sequence is "red." The num- ber following red is the play. Twenty-six denotes a fullback run off right tackle. The "two" means the number two back, in this case King. (The quarterback is one, fullback two, halfback three, flankerback four in our hypothetical system.) The "six" tells us where the play is going. The gap between the center and right guard is the two hole; guard and tackle four; tackle and end six; outside end eight. So in this case, King gets the ball and runs behind the blocks of right tackle Dennis Maloney and the 6-6, 240 lb. Fahnhorst. Beaudoin leads King through the hole, looking to clear out a fill- ing linebacker. So that's it. Blue 89, red-26, green-99. King gets the ball and he's off in pursuit of Ernie Cook's all-time Minnesota rush- ing record of 881 yards. King currently is 277 yards shy with five games to go. Morgan and Beaudoin do more than hand off and block, how- ever. Morgan, Craig Curry's un- derstudy a year ago, is a hard Punner who ranks tenth in the conference in rushing. Beaudoin stands eleventh, mostly on the strength of his 135-yard perform- ance against Iowa. Minnesota's defensive squad does use a huddle. Close inspec- tion reveals the likes of several stalwart Gophers who have stood the strain of successive thrash- ings from the offensive lines of Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas and Purdue. Prominent Gopher defenders include linebackers Ollie Bakken and Tom MacLeod and corner- back Greg Engebos. Those three are the leading tacklers for Min- nesota. Steve Neils, Keith Simmons and Clayton Scheurr key the de- fensive line which yields an aver- age of 206 ground yards per' game. The trio has collaborated on 103 tackles this fall. Simons is a local product, hail- ing from the small town of near- by Belleville. The freshman tackle always "wanted someday to come back to that (Michigan) stadium on a team that would beat Michigan." Coach Stoll thinks his Gophers have a shot on Saturday, but admits it's a long one. "Beating Iowa gives as a 200-fold better chance to beat Michigan . . . They (Michigan) play the way football is meant to be played. Unless we play error-free and enthusiastic football, it will be difficult for us to win." The element of surprise in- herent in the "no-huddle" offense is gone now. But an innovator like Stoll, desperate for anything that works, might have a dif- ferent device cooked up for Mich- igan. If not, prospects of extend-k ing Minnesota's six game losing streak against the Wolverines are excellent. AP Photo Not this time MAPLE LEAF'S Gary Monahan misses a shot on goal as the puck sails past the net in the first period of play of the Toronto-Minne- so tagame. As it ended up the Leafs didn't need that one as they went on to win 4-3. CAGERS HEALTHY: Orr begins drills on defense White: Avery 1. P-QB4 2. N-QB3 3. P-Q4 4. P-Q5 5. P-K4 6. B-K2 7. N-B3 8. PxP 9. 0-0 10. BIP' 11. N-Q2 12. NxB 13. P-QR4 14. N-B4 15. R-K1 16. NXN 17. B-Q2 18. B-B3 Black: DeFotis P-KN-3 B-N2 P-QB4 N-KB3 P-Q3 0-0 P-QN4 P-QR3 PxP B-QR3 BxB Q-N3 N-R3 Q-NI N-B2 QxN Q-N2 Q-R3 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. Q-Q3 P-B4 P-K5 P-R5 QR-Ql Q-K4 P-KN4 P-B5 NxP N-B6 PxR PXB R-K2 QxR P-R6 Q-K4 Q-N7 R-KB1 K-RI KR-N1 R-N6 N-Q2 N-B1 R-Q1 R(6)-N1 Q-BJ QPxP R-Q3 RxN BxB R-N7 RxR QxQBP Q-B2 P-B5 Q-B5 Q-K6ch Resigns By DAN BORUSt Although . the reaction has not1 been the same at Maryland wheret Lefty Driesell and the hoop-hungry: fans turned up to watch a mid-, night scrimmage to honor the of-< ficial start of basketball practice, the Michigan Wolverine squad has been hard at work, pointing toward the Big Ten title. With practice a week and a half old, the Wolverines are in fine phy- sical condition. So fine in fact that the coaching staff has forgone the conditioning exercises normally as- sociated with the first week of practice and chosen instead to con- centrate on last year's primary weakness-defense. Head Coach Johnny Orr is de- lighted with the way things have -I - -- JI - -- -a - a -I I I Chicago's almost senior master Andrew Karklins won the Continental Open held in Detroit last weekend with a score of 62-. Ann Arbor players Sid Groeneman, Abe Ellenberg, and j Lou Schwartz were also among the prize winners. * * * Fischer might play a "friendly match" with the Brazilian Henrique Mecking. Reportedly, a $200,000 guarantee demand by Fischer is slowing things down. All of the Ann Arbor bookstores have more chess books since the Spassky-Fischer match. Be sure to check out Bor- der's outstanding selection. * * * " Once again the USSR won the Chess Olympiad, but this time it was a close call with Hungary only 2 points (out of a pos- sible 60) behind. Third was Yugoslavia, and far back tied for eighth was the United States. The 5th Lansing Tornado Open, a one day four round event, will be held this Sunday at the Lansing Y. Entry fee is $7 and USCF & MCA membership. Deadline for entries is 9:15 A.M. Sunday. ....s... ............ Professional League Standings uAornnusKers iop tots NEW YORK (.P')--If there is a The Wolverines are also fifth in chore more difficult in college total defense, surrendering 212.8 football than stopping the Nebraska yards per game, and are eighth offense, it might be moving the in passing defense with 85.3 yards ball against the Cornhuskers, who average. are ranked among the top 10 in On offense, Michigan ranks all four defensive categories. ninth in the country in rushing, The Cornhuskers are first in total having run for 300.0 yards per defense with an average of 168.7 game.. yards per game, sixth in rushing * with an 88.5-yard average, fifth in UCLA has ended Oklahoma's 14- passing with a 80-2-yard average week reign as college football's and third in scoring with a 5.7- rushing offense leader, according point average, National Collegiate to figures released Tuesday by Sports Services reported yester- National Collegiate Sports Service. day. Oklahoma also slipped from the, Southern Methodist is No. 1 top of the total offense and scoring! against the run with 62.8-yard charts, giving way to Arizona State average; and Notre Dame's aver- and Nebraska, respectively. age of 69.8 yards is the best UCLA gained 522 yards rushing against passing. against California while Colorado Michigan, ranked fifth in the held Oklahoma to 163, lowest total nation, has the lowest points since the Sooners adopted the Wish- average in points against, 5.0. bone attack. That gave UCLA an J{ri yy '{ 1V}4'+ . .hi ?% ,..yy M ............. . ..:"::a' . r:.i... ''S e. Lt.{{ ft.:}f:'.Y . VS :1Y 1 :...¢.Y:.t.: sburgh 5 3 0 10 32 22 N HL Standings 12519 Minnesota 3 4 1 7 23 22 East jLos Angeles 3 6 0 6 28 36 W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 2 3 2 6 19 22 Montreal 5 0 3 13 28 14 Atlanta 2 5 1 5 13 30 Detroit 6 0i2311St.Louis 133 51721 kBuffalo 4 1 2 12 32 14 California 1 5 1 3 16 26 iI delense transpired thus far. ' "Henry Wil- average of 381.7 yards per game to more (last year's ace at guard and 380.8 for Oklahoma. forward) is in the finest condition T~ -+- F ,«R .f1.7 7 hP ha d rrnriA otci In total offense, Oklahoma drop- ped to third with a per game aver- age of 474.8 yards, behind Arizona State's 497.3 and Nebraska's 480.8. Oklahoma's 20-14 loss to Colorado dropped the Sooners to a third- place tie in scoring with Southern California at 42 points per game. Nebraska's 56-0 rout of Kansas on the heels of a 62-0 slaughter of Missouri gave the Cornhuskers a' 49.7 average while Arizona State took over second place with a 46.3 average. e as ever reporte to us in, Orr intoned. All prospective starters seem to: mirror Wilmore, the co-captain in this regard. Ken Brady, who has lost 30 pounds, seems to be play- ing with the aggressiveness that marked his sophomore play at center. And Joe Johnson, the sopho- more guard, seems to have put aside any ill effects of the wound he suffered this summer. Wilmore, who has had more suc- I rwardthan at guard, has been playing the guard slot in great Campy Russell to move to practice and Orr has indicated that forward, teaming with either John he will start the season there. "We Lockard or Ernie Johnson. were worried about his defense, As a result of the new set-up in not his point production," Orr com- basketball at Michigan, freshmen ments, "and now we feel that he are currently practicing with the can really play defense when he varsity squad. Orr was not par- wants to. ticularly happy with this move, "This whole team can play de- citing the pejorative effects op fense," he continued. player maturity and morale to his This move will allow freshman opposition. GUILD HOUSE Friday, Oct. 27th-Noon Luncheon 35c k RICHARD KUNNES, M.D. (Instr. Psych., U-M Med. School, Washtenaw County Health Dept.) "Threats to Our Mental Health" SERIES: "THREATS TO OUR COMMON LIFE" THERE WILL NOT BE A DINNER FRIDAY EVENING. VOTE SALLADE Prosecutor m"DrE NEW Boston New York Buffalo P'hiladelp] Baltimore Houston Atlanta Cleveland Milwaukee Chicago Kansas C Detr~it NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L 8a0 6 1 2 6 hia 0b7 Central Division 4 3 3 3 3 4 1 7 Western Conference Midwest Division e 6 1 3 3 City-Omaha 2 3 2 4 Pet. 1.000 .857 .250 .000 .560 .500 .429 .143 .840 .500 .400 .333 Pacific Division Los Angeles 6 2 .750 - Golden State 3 1 .750 1 GB Phoenix- 3 2 .600 1y2 - Seattle 3 3 .500 2 1 /2 Portland 1 6 .143 4V2 6 Yesterday's Results 71' Cleveland 113, Philadelphia 108 Baltimore 115, Detroit 105 - Milwaukee 109, Buffalo 92 1 Los Angeles 112, Houston 107 3 Atlanta at Seattle, inc. Only games scheduled Today's Games -- Milwaukee vs. Kansas City-Omaha at 22 Kansas City 3 Chicago at Golden State 3y.2 Only games scheduled N. Y. Rangers 5 3 1 11 32 25 Boston 4 4 0 8 31 33 Vancouver 3 5 1 7 26 39 Toronto 3 4 1 7 22 27 N. Y. Islanders 1 5 0 2 13 23 Yesterday's Results Toronto 4, Minnesota 3 New York Rangers 6, Philadelphia 1 Boston 2, Buffalo 2 ....*....,..***..*.....r.. "J:: 4". : r iti { " .ti' .1 . : :f i .h. j { ;r,:. y ;'{f. , ::: }} rr'i" 11: 1;. ' J.ti f ' .h' Ci . Jy: : Jr, ": : :! LING LEE Chinese F& and Groceries 407 N. Fifth Avenue In Terrytown Market by Farmer's Market Fresh egg rolls daily. Peking duck with pancackes and others by special order. od rice (ham,r or shrimp) ' s: Wanton drop on .Oil ~: 11 Football Ticket Exchange for the Michigan-Minnesota game Come get the ticket you wont in the Michigan Union Lobby FRIDAY, Oct. 27-ffrom 1-5 p.m. BUY - SELL - EXCHANGE * WASHTENAW COUNTY has the second highest serious crime rate in Michigan, while our law en- forcement priorities emphasize petty and victimless crimes. * GEORGE SALLADE believes that changing law enforcement priorities will combat serious crime and reduce the chance that you will be victimized BY ANYONE. VOTE SALLADE FOR PROSECUTOR NOVEMBER 7-DEMOCRAT Paid Political Advertisement MADE AND BOTTLED BY BRONTE CHAMPAGNE AND WINES COMPANY. INC. AT THE BRONTE VINEYARDS. HARTFORD. MICHIGAN WINE A career in law 1 0@0* 1 mm TAKE OUT DAILY No. 1. Peppersteak No. 2. Sweet & sour pork No. 3 Friedi bacone No. 4. Soups & egg Hot dinners served or take out home game Fridays OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. :{;r.. r v v.".r: ,r x: ".","::.v w:: ...:.tea:. .L: n ifiF li titrrr." S r4."aye. ,..."r: r r:: r. ..... < S:Fi :.... ... Join The Daily Ad Staff for a PLEASANT; DIFFERENCE at ANN ARBOR'S New Mexican° YOU'RE iNVITED To ORVILLE'S "COMING-OUT' TRTY... // e 4Scam... Y _/RS/ 0 without law school. When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers-work which is challenging, responsible and intellec- tually stimuating. Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Para- legal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice - and a higher starting salary than you'd expect as a recent college graduate. Here is a career as a professional with financial rewards that increase with your developing expertise. If you are a student of high academic stand- ing and are interested in a legal career, come speak with our representative. Contact the Placement Office. A representative of The Institute w.;ilisit v;. ~ . rlrvmnam nnr- poet4 i i I o'.