Friday, September 1.9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Friday, September 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Stan ford rei By GARY COHEN The Stanford Daily Frankie Albert, John Brode, Jim Plunkett and Mike Boryla are all fa- mous Stanford alumni. Noteworthy is the fact that they are all quarterbacks. The Cardinals have never been reluc- tant to toss the ball, and in the past they have done enough catching to be a more than representative member of the Pacific-8 conference. In the seven- ties only Southern Cal has won more Rose Bowls, and Stanford's two New Year's Day victories this decade dou- bles the total of the whole Big Ten. YET, THE 1975 edition of the Cardi- nals does not appear to be of Rose Bowl caliber. The Cards can still throw the ball, but this year the ground at- tack may be too weak. Three quarterbacks can run the of- fense, but Mike Cordova is the prob- able starter. Last week he was 17-38-3 against Penn State in a wind that made the Cards, think that they were playing just a few miles north of their own campus in Candlestick Park. Six of his completions were to Tony Hill, a speedster with some all-Ameri- can, potential. Bill Singler and tight end Ted Pappas are also familiar reci- pients of Cordova's bullet-like throws. Should Cordova falter, Guy Benja- min will be waiting in the wings. Ben- jamin cannot throw like Cordova, but can still move the offense. THE OFFENSE had problems, though, at Penn State. Six turnovers and the lack of an adequate rushing game combined to hold the potential- ly explosive Cards to 14 points. Stanford manaaged only 84 yards rushing against a Penn State defense that had resembled Swiss cheese the week before. Ron Inge, a 6-0, 200 junior running back is Stanford's hope for diversify- ing the attack. Last week the offen- sive line acted as though Cordova was a fellow Hatfield, while Inge and the other runners were the McCoys. The defense has a similar lack of balance. The pass defense was tested only six times in its first outing of the year. This was partly due to the respect that the Nittany Lions had for Stanford's secondary, but mainly due to Stanford's inability to halt the Penn State runners. PENN STATE amassed 330 yards on the ground and almost five yards a play. Stanford's tendency toward arm- tackling allowed Penn State freshman Tom Donovan to accumulate 110 yards on the ground. The defense will have ies on to do a better job against Gordie Bell to keep the Cards in the game. Maize and Blue fans undoubtedly re- call Bob Ufer's vivid account of last year's 27-16 Michigan come-from-be- hind victory in Palo Alto. They remember that the Stanford defense held the Wolverines to a sin- gle touchdown in the first half, and that Mike Langford's field goals of 42, 42, and 52 yards gave Stanford a 9-6 halftime edge. LANGFORD returns with what may be the best right foot in the country, but the defense that played so well in that half has forfeited three linemen and two linbackers to the pro draft and is still regrouping. One treat for the masses that attend the game Saturday afternoon, is that the Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band will perform. They are appearing directly from an engage- ment at the White House and those who have never seen the redcoated rowdies should be prepared. They will play after the game as well. Jerry Waldvogel, who started last year's Stanford - Michigan game at quarterback, will be watching this one from the sidelines. Waldvogel hasn't played since that game and is now the Card's third string quarterback. pass Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN Ohio State Indiana Illinois N'Western Michigan St. Purdue Minnesota Iowa Wisconsin W L 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 TOMORROW'S GAMES Stanford at MICHIGAN South Dakota at Wisconsin Penn State at Ohio State Miami (0) at MSU Northern Illinois at N'Western Indiana at Nebraska Missouri at Illinois Western Mich. at Minnesota Iowa at Syracuse Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS; MICHIGAN WINGBACK Jim Smith leaps over a Wisconsin defender to grab a Rick Leach pass. Smith may get a bit of a rest tomorrow, since the weak Stanford defense makes the pass un- necessary-running sufficed last week for Penn State, who rolled up 330 yards on the ground against the Cards. SEASON OPENS SUNDAY: ATTTY By The Associated Press The five striking National Football League teams agreed yesterday to return to work as the latest strife to hit the NFL was ended following a marathon 13-hour negotiating session and a five-hour meeting with the re- (calcitrant New England Pa- triots. Randy Vataha, player repre- sentative of the Patriots, emerged from a long session Thursday afternoon in Foxboro, Mass., to say that federal me- diator W. J. Usery Jr., had con- vinced the club which started the walkout to play this Sunday and await a contract offer from management on Monday. The New York Jets, New York Giants, Washington Red- skins and Detroit Lions re- sumed practice Thursday fol- lowing the tentative peace reached between the NFL Players Association and the league's Management Council in the exhaustive meeting which ended at 9 a.m. in New York. But the Patriots were tough to convince. A four-man delegation. from the New York meetings flew to Boston and it took them five hours to convince the New England team to play Houston on Sunday. Thus, the most serious threat ever posed to NFL regular sea- son games was ended, and a great deal of the credit for that seemed to belong to Usery, the nation's top federal mediator. "We are now willing to go back to play this weekend," A strik IGDIaol 7 Sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL STIEG e ave Vataha said as he emerged from the meeting. "However, we are still completely commit- ted to the principles that we started with." That strike started because there has been no contract be- tween the players' union and management for 19 months. A key to ending the six-day walkout was management's promise of a substantive con- tract offer by Monday. Vataha said the decision to end the strike was by a major- ity vote, but he wouldn't say what the vote was. It followed meetings attended by the play- ers and the delegation from the New York meetings - Usery, players union head Ed Garvey, Sargent Karch, executive direc- tor of the NFL Management Council, and Richard Neal, player rep of the New York Jets. "Mr. Usery has stuck his feelings out for us," Vataha said. "He feels that after dis- cussions with the Management Council in New York, some- thing meaningful will come on Monday.", Vataha said that when his club began the strike last Sat- urday, forcing cancellation of an exhibition game, "All we were saying is that nothing has hap- pened" in negotiations. Now, he said, it looked as if something would. Terms of the agreement ham- mered out in New York still had not been announced Thursday BILLBOARD; A Michigan women's golf team is being organized for competition in tournaments later in the fall at Central Michigan and Michigan State. Women interested in joining the team should call Betsy Richart at 764-7082 or Marcia Katz at 769-5177. Any water - minded woman interested in performing for the Synchronized women's swim team, call-outs will be held September 29 at 5 p.m. at Margaret Bell Pool. rted I afternoon. But two key elements were the Management Council's agreement to present a labor contract offer to the players by 218 N. DIVISION 665-0606 next Monday, and promises of, no reprisals against the strikers. POT-LUCK PICNICS FRIDAYS around 6:00 p.m. WANTED: Come on by to the big, blue house on the corner of Cath- erine & Division, two blocks north of Huron, and meet the Temporary Parents folks who live there and those who like to drop by. Bring some food or drink if you can, but if you can't, don't let HOMES FOR that stop you. There's always enough to go around. Have a TEENAGERS picnic with us before you go out for the evening. 1 DAY TO 2 WEEKS The House is open 9-6, Tuesdays through Sundavs, as a ANY ADULT (S) place to have coffee with a friend, read the paper, study, CONSIDERED or lust talk. CALL Feast of Thanksgiving on Sundays at Noon. OZONE HOUSE CHAPLAINS: THE REV. ANDREW FOSTER 769-6540 THE REV. BRUCE CAMPBELL Use Daily Classifieds I - __ ._ _ _ .. _._ .' _ ._ _ _.. .._ ._. , . ._ . .. « _.. _ . AP Photo Bob Gibson retires ' It was a sad night for Bob Gibson, the St. Louis Cardinals, and all baseball yesterday evening when the superstar pitcher hung up his jersey for the last time. Gibson, a Cardinal since 1959, was one of baseball's premier pitchers for several years. He had a phenomenal 1.12 ERA and set the World Series rec- ord for strikeouts (17) in 1968. TRAINING WORKSHOP on Counselinq and Group Leadership " Gestalt "Hot Seat" Work " Peer Counseling RICHARD KEMPTER 662-4826 MICHAEL ANDES 662-2801 DISCOVER A WEALTH OF POTENTIAL 1 1 Uy classics DIETZEL'S THE ONE Hoosiers hire athletic c BLOOMINGTON (P) - Paul Dietzel was named athletic di- rector at Indiana University yesterday, ending a year-long search for a successor to retir- ed J. W. "Bill" Orwig. The university board of trus- tees, in a telephone vote, unani- mously approved the appoint- ment, Indiana President John W. Ryan said. Dietzel, 51; former football coach at Louisiana State Uni- versity, Army and South Caro- lina, is commissioner of the Ohio Valley Conference. His contract with the OVC runs through June 30, 1976. Dietzel said ,he would hold both the Indiana and OVC jobs until a new OVC com- missioner was appointed but no later than next June 1, after the annual OVC meet- ing. Orwig, IU athletic director since 1961, retired June 30, but the search for a successor be- gan a year ago. His assistant, Bob Dro, was interim athletic director. Bob Skoronski, former In- diana All - American football player and now a businessman in Wisconsin, and Homer Rice, athletic director at North Caro- lina, were the first two choices, but both turned down the job. Leitzel also had withdrawn his name from consideration a week before assuming the OVC ' commissioner's post in April. The next choice, Bill Arm- strong, president of the Indi- ana University Foundation, withdrew after he was unable to get faculty approval. A native of Ohio, Dietzel's ca- reer in organized athletics spans 37 years including seven as a player, seven as an assist-. ant coach, 20 as coach and nine years in the dual role of coach and athletic director. Dietzel played football one year at Duke University before going into the military during World War II. After the war, he irector played at Miami of Ohio. His first head coaching job was at LSU in 1955. Three years later, the Tigers won the national championship with an unbeaten, untied season capped by a Sugar Bowl victory. Diet- zel moved to West Point in 1962 and then became athletic direc- tor and coach at South Carolina in 1966. He retired from coach- ing in 1974 after compiling a 109-75 record. reI WITHIN YOU ATTEND THE UTI LITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw on Sept. 22 and 23 8 P.M. COLUMBIA RECORDS PROUDLY PRESENT S AR IAS BY PUCCINI MASCAGNI,CILEA??: CATALANI LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA GIANANDREA GAVA ZZ ENI CONDUCTOR M 33435* Renata Scotto interprets, with great feel- ing and musicality, a selection of emo- tionally charged Italian arias. ONE RECORD WITH LIBRETTO First Complete Recording of Massenet's La Navarraise Popp!ItanzoIseneclialI~souzav London Scniphoiiv Orchestra 3,99.. 44+ This Week in Sports SATURDAY RUGBY-vs. Toledo RFC, 11 a.m., Wines Field FOOTBALL-vs. Stanford, 1 p.m., Michigan Stadium BASEBALL-Boston at Detroit, 2:15, Channel 4 NCAA FOOTBALL-Missouri at Illinois, 3:30 p.m., Channel 7 CROSS COUNTRY-EMU Open at Ypsilanti WATER POLO-vs. Indiana, 4:30 p.m., Matt Mann Pool Gridde Picks NOW IT CAN be told. Daily Sports has learned that the real reason Patty Hearst was arrested was that she blew her cover to hand in her Gridde Picks at 420 Maynard for a shot at that Pizza Bob Pizza. And you can do it yourself-without get- ting caught. Deadline: midnight tonight. M 33506* there was something like a riot both on the stage and off" said George Bernrrd Shaw at the ;London premiere of Mas- senet's exciting excursion into "verismo" opera. Here presented in an authentic, impassioned performance by a distin guished and thrilling cast. I special FOOTLIFTERS A CENTURY OFAMERICAN MARCHES IN AUTHENTIC VERSIONS GUNTHER SCHULLER THE INCREDIBLE COLUMBIA ALL-STAR BAND SOUSA: STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER, SEMPER FIDELIS. EL CAPITAN JOPLIN: COMBINATION IVES:MARCH INTERCOLLEGIATE AND-OTHERS XM 33513 2,99 also on Sale "RICHARD TUCKER IN MEMORIAM a 3record set for only 8.29 one week only n Columbia Records and Tape M-Thurs. 10-9; Fri. 10-mid. 1. Stanford at MICHIGAN 10. S. Dakota at Wisconsin I n Vwnat s nauppeing ii n he uIuwo riaweni the I II ommovolm- I