Friday, September 10, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pnnte±' Plav,-m Friday1 September 10, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY age cievi I Rain y BILL STIEG Yesterday's rainstorm soaked the practice field but did noth-1 ing to dampen Bo Schembech-+ ler's spirits as he continued preparing his Wolverines for to- morrow's season opener with Wisconsin. "We had to do a wet-ball drill, anyway," joked the Mich- igan coach as his team trudg- ed in from practice. The Wol- verines will have a one-hour workout today in the stadium as a final tune-up. Schembechler showed no signs of pre-game jitters and even expressed some optimism can't drown Bue spirit about his highly-ranked squad. leby moving into the tailback "This team has good morale," spot. Lytle and Iuckleby are he said. "I think they will come track sprinters. out smoking for the first game." Lewis hurt his back on Aug.-t Not all the Wolverines will 26, the first day of practice, come out smoking, however. and hasn't done any hittingI Fullback Russell Davis is not since. Junior Gerry Szara will fully recovered from a foot take his place. sprain, and guard Kirk Lewis "It's one of those injuries that is still out with a slipped disc. they want to treat conservative- Both were originally expected ly," said Lewis, a medical stu- to start. dent. "You have to come back' Davis will not start Saturday slowly. I hope to be back prac- but will "definitely be avail- ticing next week, but it's all able," Schembechler said. The up to the doctors." injury, incurred in last Satur- Compared to past years, this day's scrimmage, means tail- fall has been fairly injury-free. back Rob Lytle will take over Still, there are several top subs at fullback, with Harlan Huck- who will see little or no action tomorrow. ard will start at wolfman, throw a lot more," said Lytle. Don Dufek's old spot. "The backs are going out on So the lineup is as follows: flares and such. The coaches Offense: QB, Rick Leach; are saying that if the main re- TB, Huckleby; FB, Lytle; WB, ceiver is covered, then dump Jim Smith;, WR, Curt Stephen- it off to one of the backs." son; TE, Gene Johnson; OG, Bo says that sophomore Szara and. Mark Donahue; OT, quarterback Leach is now Bill Dufek and Mike Kenn; C, "p o 1 i s h e d, experiene- Walt Downing. ed, good." But so he doesn't Defense: S, Dwight Hicks; commit himself too much, he CB, Jim Bolden and Jim Pick- adds, "Don't expect to come ens; Wolf, Howard; LB, Cal- out and see footballs flying vin O'Neal and Jerry Meter; all over the place." DE, John Anderson and Tom The possibility of a good Seazron; DT, Greg Morton and throwing game to go with Michi- John Hennessy; MG, Lang. gan's assuredly strong running R e c e n t 1 y, Schem- attack prompted both the As- bechler claimed his team will sociated Press and United PressI open up its offense and throw International to call Michigan more. His teams have never the second best team in the na- lived up to these promises, tion. but this year there seems to Sports Illustrated picked be more truth to his words. Michigan Number one. Lytle For one thing, pass plays have won't go along with that-yet. been added that utilize the "It's really a nice honor, but tight ends and running backs we have to prove it's true," he more. With the fleet Lytle and said. "We havethe potential to Huckleby in the backfield, the be the best, but we have to passing threat could be quite work very hard. You can't call dangerous. yourselves number one until "Our offense is going to the end of the season." 76-GUIDE is a number to remember -when you need to know where to go. --when University red tape trips you up. -when classes get you down. -when you're lonely or confused. -when your relationships aren't working out. -when you just want someone to talk to. -when you need a referral to a campus or community resource. WE'RE STUDENT COUNSELORS AND STUDENTS ARE OUR FIRST CONCERN REMEMBER 76-GUIDE WE'RE OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY TO HELP YOURSELF UCLA rolls over Arizona St.,"28-10 1 f 1 Rr Among others, Guard Greg Bartnick is out with a knee in-: jury; tight end Mark Schmerge is out with a bruised knee; quarterback Stacy Johnson has a hurt Achillies tendon; middle: guard Dale Keitz has a should- er bruise; and wolfman Jerry Zuver has a sprained back. Bob Lang, a converted of- fensive guard, has won the starting spot at middle guard on defense, and Derek How- TEMPE, Ariz. - Quarter- back Jeff Dankworth rushed for 155 yards and scored two touch- downs while halfback Theotis Brown scampered for 127 yards and two more scores to lead3 UCLA to a. 28-10 upset of Ari- zona State University in a na- tionally televised football game last night. The 17th - ranked UCLA Bruins, in their first meetingt ever with the third-ranked Sun Devils, stunned the crowd of 50,876 in the season opener for both schools. ASU entered the contest with the longest major col- lege winning streak, which was stopoed at 13. The Bruins demonstrated an awesome ground attack as they rushed for nearly 500 yards while holding what was billed as a higb-scoring ASU offense to juist 10 Doints. Dankworth, understudy for the past two seasons to the brilliant John Sciarra, Ivas sun- ning in his rushing, starting the Bruins on scoring drives of 80 yards, 80 yards and 79 yards. The Sun Devils got on the scoreboard first in the opening! quarter on a 29-yard field goal by Dan Kiish, which was set up by a fumble recovery. But the Devils, who re- turned nine offensive start- ers from last year's unde- feated Gonad,' were shuat out from then until lItes inthe fourth quarter, when junior quarterback Dennis Sproul hit split end John Jefferson on a IS-yard pass in the end zone. UCLA's first touchdown came with 40 seconds gone in the sec- ond period as Dankworth scam- pered 32 yards to score. UCLA scored again with sev- en seconds left in the half when Dankworth, keeping the ball on a broken play, slanted to his left and ran the one yard in for the TD. Brown's touchdowns both came in the third period on runs of two yards and 26 yards. 'Borg, Natase advance FOREST HILLS, N.Y.-Bjorn Borg survived a scare against defending champion Manual Orantes and Ilie Nastase rode a booming service to -victory! over Dick Stockton yesterday in bright sunshine to reach the semifinals of the U.S. Open ten- nis championships. Borg, the second-seeded 20-1 year-old Swedish sensation, elimi -. d Orantes, 4-6, 6-0, 6-2, 5-7, & a gruelling, pressure- filled rir, 10-minute match.: Nastasz., the volatile Romanian, stopped Stockton, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3. For events and movies: Community Switchboard 663-1111 SPONSORED BY: Counseling Services 304 Michigan Union For University phone numbers: 764-1817 For student phone numbers: 764-2330 ' mm P ll UPtRx DRUi of 3.: v'^ o: KODACOLOR 11 FILM c-110 ®rc.,' r C-126 WHEN YOU HAVE KODACOLOR FILM DEVELOPED & PRINTED AT SUPERx (COUPON WILL BE INSIDE ENVELOPE WHEN YOU PICK UP YOUR PRINTS.) 12 219 20 Exp. Exp. Roll Roll4 3 , -ctr u stores 1142. Broadway Ann Arbor Open 9-10 Daily 91 .Sunday, CANDY Ir F r BARS LIMIT 6 6%-a IAM CU ASII TAlLM LIMIT 1 COMET CLEANSER 14 OZ. LIMIT 1 3 ICE CREAM NALF GALLON - LIMIT 1 1. A LIMIT 1 I f ; I SCORES CANADIAN CUP Czechoslovakia 1, Canada 9 Finland 8, Sweden 6 Soviet Union 5, United States d BASEBALL American League Oakland 2, Chicago I Boston 5, Detroit 0 Cleveland!4, Baltimore S New York 4, Milwaukee 2 Minnesota 8, Texas 0 National League Philadelphia 4, Chicago 2 St. Louis 6, Montreal 1 Cincinnati 4, Houston 3 F i i i E s ( Borg and Nastase will meet in tomorrow's semifinals. The other semifinal pairs top-seed- ed Jimmy Connors and Argen- tina's Guillermo Vilas. The women's semis will be played today with top-seeded Chris Evert going against Yu- goslavia's Mima Jausovec and: Evonne Goolagong meeting Dianne Fromholtz in an all-! Australian match. The women's finals are Sat- { 'irday and the men's finals Sun- day. The winners of each will receive $30,000. 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