I f r , I BILLIARDS BOWLING FOOSBA LL TABLE TENNIS rI Michigan Union OPEN 11 a.m. thru 12 mid. Mon. thru Thurs. 11 a.m. thru 1 a.m. Fri. and Sat. 1 p.m. thru 12 midnite Sun. BRUINS 'WISH-ING': Co Ilegisate * ders Ce . 5J2 e Union Gallery First Floor MICHIGAN UNION 530 South State Telephone 761-2924 FIRST JURY The Gallery is accepting art work for the first jury from September 11 through Sep- tember 20. Artists may submit their work at the gallery from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday. AP Photo Fray Romps Ray Seales (right) became the first American boxer to advance to the finals and earn a chance for a gold medal after a unanimous decision over Yugoslavia's Zvonimir Vujin yesterday. By The Associated Press "Eventually," says UCLA Coach Pepper Rodgers, "we'll beat a lot of people." By eventually, Rodgers apparent- ly means he doesn't expect h i s young, inexperienced Bruins, ex- perimenting with the wishbone forI the first time, to manhandle top- rated Nebraska as the Corn-husk- ers open their drive for a t h i r d straight national title. The Nebraska-UCLA game is one of several key contests that high- light today's rather heavy sched- ule that gets the college football campaign underway with a flourish. The Colorado Buffaloes, 10-2 last season and ranked No. 2 behind Nebraska in The Associated Press pre-season poll, plays California, 6-5 last season, on home grounds at Boulder to head up the bill. Other top games include the re- newal of an ancient rivalry be- tween No. 15 Tennessee and Geor- gia Tech at Atlanta, and Florida State's visit to Pittsburgh where the Panthers also have installed the Wishbone and returned 30 letter- men from last year. The Seminoles were ranked 19th in the top 20 poll. Sharing the night spotlight with Nebraska-UCLA are games involv- ing No. 8 Southern California and No. 4 Arkansas at Little Rock and nuke testing No. 7 Alabama at Birmingham. Also of considerable interest: Houston, which lost 15 starters from its 9-3 team from last year, embarks on a less demanding sch- edule at Rice; and Toledo, com- ing off an unbeaten 12-0 1971 sea- son, puts its 35-game winning streak on the line at Tampa where the Spartans have not only a potent offense but a solid defense. Other key games today find Temple at Syracuse, Villanova at West Virginia, The Citadel at Clem- son, Auburn at Mississippi State, Richmond at North Carolina, Mary- land at North Carolina State, Vir- ginia at South Carolina, Washing- ton State at Kansas, Tulsa at Kan- sas State, Oregon at Missouri, Tax- as A&M at Wichita State, Houston. at Rice, Colorado State at Arizona and Utah State at New Mexico. Rodgers, whose Bruins won two games, lost .seven and tied one last year, installed the Wishbone in an effort to get better balance in running and passing. To operate the Wishbone, - he switched defensive specialist Rob Scribner to quarterback and look- ed for Mark Harmon, son of the ska. all-time Michigan great Tom Har- For his final year, Devaney wel- mon, to back him up. comed back 28 lettermen, ic'ld- The Cornhuskers, hoping to be- ing standouts Johnny Rodgers at come the only team to win thi ee wide receiver, Rich Glover at mid- straight national championships, dle guard and Willie Harper at de- have added incentive - if they in- fensive end. Soph David 1imlm deed needed any - to go all the succeeded Jerry Tagge at quorter- way again. Coach Bob Devaney has back, and this position, plus a lick said he will step down at the end of depth in the offensive line, ap- of the 1972 campaign. Ironically, pear to be the only weaknesses. he has never won a Coach of the Even so, the Huskers should have Year title despite a brilliant 92- a strong running game and poi.en- 18-1 record in 10 years at Nebra- tially devastating defense. U.S. cagers face strong Soviets 4 NEW Etn SEAFARER JEANS . . $7.25 USED l . Army-Navy Surplus 514 E. William (ABOVE CAMPUS BIKE & TOY) 10:30-5:30 761-6207 R uggers host rival Purdue The Michigan ruggers open their regular fall season -with a twinbill against the Purdue Boilermakers at Palmer Field today. Michigan will be trying to avenge two losses at the hands of Purdue last spring which cost them the Big Ten title. Both squads have lost heavily to graduation and will be experiment- ing with relatively inexperienced ruggers. Michigan will be depending on3 the aggressiveness of its scrum; while Purdue has traditionally had' an outstanding backfield. The kickoff time has been set for 2:30 for the Blue game, with the Gold following. -A-- -- By The Associated Press MUNICH - Russia, with its Americanized brand of basket- ball, will attempt tonight to beat the United States at its own game and halt a 36-year Olympic dyn- asty. The Americans, with a 63-0 record since the sport was in- troduced at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, meet the Russians for the gold medal. "Sure, the Russians look a lot like us," said Hank Iba, coach of the American team. "After all, we invented the game of basketball. I feel honored that teams throughout the world copy us." Both Russia and the United States are 8-0 in the Munich Games. "Russia is awfully strong," said Iba, the retired basketball coach from Oklahoma State University. "Rebounding against them will be difficult, but I have confidence in our team . . . they have grown from boys into men in Germany." Ergei Belov, a handsome back- court whiz, is the scoring ace for the Russians. He's somewhat of an Iron Curtain Jerry West with silky moves and a dead eye. Up front are 6-foot-9 Alshan Sharmukhamedov and 6-foot-7 Aleksander Belov. Had they been born in America, these fellows would have -likely been signing lucrative pro basketball con- tracts. Iba admitted he fights over- Join The Daily confidence among the Americans by meeting with players individ- ually. "We're frank to tell them their mistakes and don't often tell them how great they are." The United States has a well- balanced bunch without a single sensation to match the 1968 Olympic heroics of Spencer Hay- wood. Iba has shuffled his troops in previous games, most of which were won by lopsided scores, so statistics are almost meaningless. Tom Henderson, a junior col- lege who will enroll at the Uni- versity of Hawaii, is the Ameri- can pLaymaker. The most con- sistent big men have been 6-8 Dwight Jones of Houston, 6-9 Jim Brewer- of Minnesota and 6-8 Jim F )rbes of the University of Texas at El Paso. Probtably the team's most im- pressi-1 e triumph to date was their 63-38 semifinal conquest of Italy. C Al'r Io, whi ,finished third in th 1972 national rankings, appears to have the muscle to throw the title fight into the post-season bowl -iCt'ira To d so, he must find replace- peats far tight end J.V. Cain and hot-shot soph lineman Bubba Brid- ges, boti i of whom lost their eli- gibility, plus a fleet of swift re- :eivers ivho graduated. Back, how- ever, is junior Charlie Davis, who 3et all ki:ids of school records with 1,386 yards last fall. I Melville beats Chris Evert By The Associated Pv ess CHICAGO - Ohio State is heavily favored to dethrone Michigan in the 1972 Big Ten football race, accordi ng to the 19th annual, poll of the Big Ten Skywriters after their to ur of conference camps. Among 40 writers and sportscasters who completed the tour Wed- nesday, 26 gave first-place votes to Ohio State and two predicted a title tie between Ohio State and Purdue. On a graduated scoring scale, Ohio State received the all-time largest point total and victory margin with 403, compared with 339 for Michigan which received six first-place -votes. The Skywriters, correctly picking thr-, conference champion the past three seasons, ranked Purdue third with 307 points and three clearcut first-place votes, and Michigan Slate fourth with 247 points. Illinois was rated fifth with 226 pointis; Northwestern, last year's runnerup behind champion Michigan, seventh with 143; Wisconsin 103; Minnesota 85, and Iowa 50. Purdue's Otis Armstrong was forecast Conference Back of The Year, barely shading Michigan State's standout defensive back, Brad Van Pelt. Third pick was Wisconsin's Rufus "Roadrunner" Ferguson. *0FOREST HILLS, N.Y. - Australiar L Kerry Melville upset Amer- ican teenager Chris Evert 6-4, 6-2 yesterday and joined defending champion Billie Jean King in the women's finals of the U.S. Open tennischampionships. The bouncy Mrs. King, the No. 1 seed and Wimbledon titleholder from Long Beach, Calif., destroyed the comeback dream of lanky Australian veteran Margaret Court 6-4,, 6-4 in the other women's semifinals at the West Side Tennis Club. The 28-year-old Mrs. King and Miss Melville, a 24-year-old Aus- tralian pro, will meet at center court Saturday for the title Mrs. King won for the second time last year. * * * 0 COLUMBUS, Ga. - Dewitt Weavei, scrambled to a three-under par 67 yesterday to take a three-shot lead at the midway mark of the $100,000 Southern Open Golf Tourn ament over charging Frank Beard, who had a sizzling 63. Weaver, still plagued by headaches f3 2om a clogged left ear, had a 36-hole total of 132, eight under par at the 6,776-yard, par-70 Green Island Country Club course. * OAKLAND - The Oakland Raidrs announced Friday the re- tirement of onetime great pass receiver Warren Wells, who is on pro- bation after a year in prison. "Warren just isn't ready to play prof assional football at this time,' said Coach John Madden. "We notified 'his advisors and they decided this is the best thing for him to do. 131e'll continue to work out in Southern California and iron out his probl ems." Wells spent a year in. prison followir g revocation of his probation last September on a 1969 attempted rape conviction. s el PROJECT OUTREACH PSYCH 201 Approximately 20 different projects A If interested you MUST attend mass meeting MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 7:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM the $10 lab fee 2 credit hours 1 I I I The Raiders had placed Wells on waivers last week but another National Football League put in a clabn for him and Oakland with- drew his name. The club did not have, to waive him to put him on the retired list. PARTICIPATE! Student Vacancies Exist on these University Committees: " Academic Affairs " Academic Services " Budget & Planning " Civil Liberties " Committee on Communications " OSS Policy Board " Proper Role in State Education " Teacher Awards " Health Service Planning * University Relations " Grocery Co-op Board (and Vice-President) APPLY NOW WED.-SAT SEPT6-9 SUN. SEPT 10 MON.-TUES., SEPT11-12 AL154'hYI1HAFI AUPOSE JOHN A JOflfl1 WidiLllt P-lI