Friday. September 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven 1 I WILD'S CASEY INJURED: 17 mk- -7 - r ran1 11n1 gets QB t it By JOHN PAPANEK Sophomore Dennis Franklin be- came Michigan's number one quarterback yesterday, after his chief adversary for the job, junior Kevin Casey injured his knee in a scrimmage Wednesday. Casey will be lost to the team for "a minimum of three to four weeks", according to coach Bo Schembechler, whose Wolverines have been plagued by injuries throughout the spring and fall. In Tuesday's practice, wingback Larry Gustafson, a solid ball car- rier, receiver and blocker dis- located his shoulder and will also be out of action for three or four weeks. Add to that list the first and second string defensive right ends, Don Eaton and Larry John- son, tight end Greg DenBoer, full- back Rich Iaminski, and regu- lar wolfback Geoff Steger, to make an injury list that spells problems for the Wolverines. In the spring game last April, Casey led the winning team, but Franklin excited the crowd with a lightning like 37-yard scramble and a 60-yard touchdown bomb to Veteran Tom Kee returns to his speedster Gil Chapman. wide linebacker spot and sopho- Franklin and his backup, junior more Craig Mutch, who missed all Larry Cipa ran through grueling of last season, will start at middle passing drills yesterday, with linebacker. His backup is Steve Cipa the sharper of the two. Strinko, a 6-3 235 pound sopho- "Franklin is our number one more, who Schembechler says is man and we told him so, looking better every day. Schembechler said. "He's the The secondary will have Randy fastest quarterback I've e v e r Logan as its only returning regu- coached, and I think a lot of you lar, and he will be playing a new will be surprised at some of the position: wolf back. Tom Drake things he can do with a football." will be the wide side halfback, "It's a darn shame about Casey. Dave Elliott will play the short He came back ready to plav and side and sophomore Dave Brown ndd and 6-6 Paul Seal and 6-8 basket- baller C. J. Kupec will man the tight end spot. Grid captains named Coach Bo Schembechler an- nounced yesterday that seniors Randy Logan and Tom Coyle have been elected co-captains of the 1972 Michigan football team. Logan, who will captain the defense, was the regular short side halfback last year but moves to wolf this season, re- placing the injured Geoff Steger. Coyle, a native Irishman. has been the regular right guard for two years. He was a Sopho- more All-America, and second team All Big Ten last season. Alan "Cowboy" Walker, Billy Taylor's backup tailback last sea- son who rushed for 403 yards and five touchdowns decided to quit football and leave school. He left his job to speedy junior Harry Banks, who will be running be- hind powerhouse fullback Ed Shuttlesworth. The wingback position suffers from the loss of Gustafson, but Clint Haselrig and Chapman should fill it adequately. had been having an excellent fall." li r Schembechler also announced the rest of the lineup that would start in next Saturday's opener against Northwestern in Michigan Stadium. The defense will be missing seven starters from last year's team that finished second in the nation in total defense. The Wol- verines will start Clint Spearman; and Don Coleman at the ends, Fred Grambau and Dave Gallag- her or Tony Smith at tackles and Greg Ellis at middle guard. i t ,,.1 MILBURN, MATTHEWS WIN: Yanks By The Associated Press MUNICH-Rod Milburn tied the world record of 13.2 seconds in winning the 110-meter high hur- dles gold medal, while Vince Mat- thews led a 1-2 United States charge in the 400-meter dash at strike assuring the United States of at least a third Olympic boxing bronze medal. Anatolv Bondarchuk of Russia set an Olympic record of 247 feet, 8 inches and won the gold medal, in the hammer throw. goes at safety. The offensive line will be miss- ing Reggie McKenzie and Guy Murdock, but will be strong with veterans Tom Coyle at right guard, Jim Coode at quick tackle and Paul Seymour, switched to strong tackle from tight end. Mike Hoban will be the left guard and Bill Hart takes over the center spot. Franklin will have plenty of speed and plenty of size to throw the football to. Fleet Bo Rather returns to his split end position, gold When they stepped off the vic- tory stand and the boos andwhis- tles started, Matthews left the stadium twirling the gold medal around his finger. The official Olympic results service last night announced a new 400-meter freestyle swimming result with the gold medalist, Rick Demont of San Rafael, Calif., listed as disqualified and Aus- tralia's Brad Cooper moved to first from second. About 90 minutes after the so- called amended result moved, an Olympic spokesman said the In- ternational Olympic Committee ExecutivetBoard still planned to consider the matter today. The spokesman said the results serv- ice had put out the new result without authorization. At the end of the day's track and field events, the Soviet Union, with two victories in track and field and another in equestrian, still led the United States in gold medals, 30 to 26, although the Americans maintained an edge in the over-all count. The United States, which topped the Soviets in gold four years ago 45-29 and in total medals 107-91, had a total of 76 with four days of competi- tion remaining. Russia had 68. East Germany had a total of 63, of which 18 are gold. BIRDS WHIP TIGERS Bosox grab first place AP Photo BALTIMORE'S BROOKS ROBINSON sidesteps Detroit's Bill Freehan in the Orioles' 9-0 romp over the Bengals last night. The loss, coupled with Boston's win over New York, shoved the Tigers into second place in the torrid American League East pennant chase. " Blue Denim-Super Slims, Bells, Straights * Corduroy Jeans-Pin Whale, Brushed ItVarsitu hopI TTTN PAT WILD'S STATE ST. ON THE CAMPUS 1te OlympicGames yesterdy. Jim Forbes fired in 14 points Matthews, 24, from Brooklyn, and the United States' powerful N.Y., was timed in 44.7 seconds in defense clobbered Italy 68-38 to edging Wayne Collett of Santa give the Americans their 63rd Monica, Calif. Collett finished in straight Olympic basketball vic- 44.8.ttory and put them in Saturday Meanwhile, Renate Stecher of night's gold - medal game against East Germany completed a gold Russia. medal sweep of the women's Russia's defending champion sprints, winning the 200 meters in women's volleyball team won the 22.4, equalling the world record gold medal with a 3-2 victory over set by Chi, Cheng in 1970. She Japan. The scores of the games was the first girl to win the 100 were 15-11, 4-15, 15-11, 9-15, 15-11. and 200 dashes since Wilma Ru- The loss gave Japan its second dolph of the U.S. in 1960. straight women's volleyball silver Nadezhda Chizhova of Russia medal. The bronze was won ear- won the gold medal in the wom- lier by North Korea 3-0 on scores en's shot put with a world record of 15-7, 15-9, 15-9. heave of 69 feet, while Monika Mbod Zehrt of East Germany took the byMattews andCo88C ttole owngoe e w ervictory ceremony because the .dash in the Olympic record time crowd thought they were disre- of 51.08 seconds. Kathy Hammond spectful to the American flag. of Carmichael, Calif., won the sil- ver medal in the 400. As the U.S. national anthem U. S. light welterweight Ray played, both runners stood facing Seales of Tacoma, Wash., weath- sideways to the flag. Matthews ered two first round knockdowns had his arms folded. Collett had and came back to win a split deci- his hands on his hips. Neither sion over Andres Molina of Cuba, stood at attention. By The Associated Press BOSTON-Tommy Harper and Rico Petrocelli hit three-run hom- ers, pitcher Sonny Siebert a solo shot and Ben Oglivie a two-runI double as the streaking Boston Red Sox routed the New York Yankees 10-4 yesterday and climbed into first place in the American League East. daily sports[ NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK BLOOM With two out in the second, Doug' Griffin got an infield hit, Siebert singled and Harper drilled his 13th home run of the baseball season into the left field screen. Siebert triggered a four-run burst in the sixth with his home run and Petrocelli hit homer No. 14, again with two out, off Wade Blasingame following a hit bats- man and a walk. Tigers tamed BALTIMORE - The Baltimore Orioles scored seven runs in the first two innings and trounced the Detroit Tigers 9-0 last night be- hind the four-hit pitching of Mike Cueller. A two-run double by Tommy Davis highlighted Baltimore's four- run first inning. Brooks Robinson, who singled to score Davis, also rapped a two-run triple in the second. Fred Scherman (6-2) normally a reliever who was making only the third start of his career, failed to retire a batter. Magic Number: 26 The victory, their third in a row and 11th in 13 games, lifted the Red Sox one-half game ahead of the Detroit Tigers, who lost to Baltimore. The Red Sox nicked Steve Kline (15-6) for an unearned run in the first inning and then started play-' ing long ball. Student Football Tickets Priority groups 3, 2 and 1 will be expected to have one stu- dent in line for each four tickets at all times. As in the past grouping of more than four tickets will be permitted with entrance at the Professional League Standings American League National League Boston Detroit Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee Oakland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City California Texas W L Pct. GB 70 59 .543- 71 61 .538 , Pittsburgh 70 62 .530 ly Chicago 70 63 .526 2 New York 61 71 .462 10 St. Louis 54 79 .406 18 hianehia West East W 83 72 66 63 61 49 west 82 74 71 61 58 49 L 47 61 63 69 69 83 50 58 60 72 75 82 Pet. .638 .541 .512 .477 .469 .371 .621 .561 .542 .459 .436 .374 GB 12 16 21 22 35 8 10 21% 24% 32% 77 74 66 63 61 50 54 57 63 66 70 82 .588 .565 .512 .488 .466 .379 - Cincinnati 3 Houston 10 Los Angeles 13 Atlanta 16 San Francisco 27% San Diego Group door. Entrance to th House will be fr State Street door distribution will1 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Distribution. dal follows: Group 3 Group 2 Group 1 he Yost Field om the South s and hours of be from 8:30 ates a r e as GUess the number* of Swingline Tot staples in the jar. The jar is approximately square -3" x 3" x 4%/". Look for the clue about "Tot" capacity. The "Tot 50@" is uncondition- ally guaranteed. It staples, tacks, mends and costs only 98# sug- gested retail price at Stationery, Variety and College Bookstores with 1,000 staples and vinyl pouch. Swingline Cub Desk and Hand Staplers for $1.98 each. Fill in coupon or send postcard. No purchase required. Entries must be postmarked by Nov. 30, 1972 and re- ceived by Dec. 8, 1972. Final dion by an irdependent judging organiation. In case of tie, a drawing determines a winner. Offer subject to all laws and void in Fla., Mo., Wash., Minn. & Idaho. IMPORT ANT: Write your guess outside the envelope, lower leithand corner. Vrey a oi n olg oosoe wih1,0Staples andthviny,) pocSwingline CubnDsk an P.S. rf$xec FlinewcorkonYrse10 pstard N purchaereqred.AE riNmte potmakdb o.3,17 n e ivef yDc ,17.Fnl'tglio bniroeedn ugn raiain (YPOuTcouldWfiteyuesousd th benweloen 200 and hn orer 000Tos wthth Stplsinte a { eYo kou 10016 ITHERE ARE......STAPLEStN THE JAR1 Sept. Sept. Sept. 11 12 13 Yesterday's Results Yesterday's Results Boston 10, New York 4 Houston 5, San Francisco 1, 13 innings Miwue ,,Cleveland 1 Philadelphia 2, St Louis 1 Kansas City 6, California 0 Montreal 4, New York 0 Minnesota 4, Texas 0 Chicag 4 Pisburgh 2 Chicago 6, Oakland 0 San Diego 2, Cincinnati 0, 1st oknght's GamesCincinnati at San Diego 2nd, inc. Tonight's Games Atlanta at Los Angeles, inc. New York (Peterson 14-13) at Boston !(Tiant 10-4) Tonight's Games Minnesota (Corbin 8-6 and Woodson 12- Chicago (Hands, 10-8) at Philadelphia 13) at Kansas City (Murphy 3-2 and (Downs, 1-0) IBusby 0-0),2 Pittsburgh (Moose, 10-8) and Johnson, Detroit (Fryman 4-2) at Baltimore 3-4 or Walker, 4-5) at Montreal (Mor- (Dobson 15-14) ton, 6-12 and McAnally, 3-15), 2 Milwaukee (Ryerson 3-8) at Cleveland St. Louis (Cleveland, 13-12 and Bibby, (Perry 19-15) 1-0) at New York (Matlack 11-9 and Oakland (Hunter 18-7) at Texas Webb 0-0), 2 (Paul 7-5) Atlanta (McQueen 0-2) at Los Angeles California (Ryan 16-12 and Wright 14- Singer 6-13) 9) at Chicago (Bahnsen 15-15 and Houston (Reuss 9-11) at San Francisco Lemonds 3-6), 2 (Barr 6-7) Billboard Tennis entries are due today, Friday, Sept. 8 by 5:30 p.m. SPECI~ SCHOILA 10 SHIP O)FFER. CLASS OF'75 ONLY Scholarship Includes: 2-year tuition...free! $100 monthly. Book allowance, lab fees, etc. Howto qualify: U Just send in the coupon, or talk to the Professor of i' I I Aerospace Studies on your campus. (If you're class of '76, next year is your year.) U.S. Air Force Recruiting Service Directorate of Advertising (RSAV) Randolph Air Force Base Texas 78148 Please send me more information on your 2-year scholarship program. I I t I 1 i I .. _ _ t