4 Pa 4 M' quests for new. QB Schembechler surveys sophomore signal wlers carry. A key to Schembechler's running attack is tailback Gerald White, who severely lacerated his right arm in a dormitory ac- cident last week. White required 20 stitches. "He's got five puncture wounds in his arm," said Schembechler. "The arm has a full range of motion, but the question is whether it can take a hit." According to the coach, Rick Rogers, who picked up 64 yards on 14 carries against MSU; is still not 100 percent. 4 By DOUGLAS B. LEVY Is there life after Jim Harbaugh? Who is Michigan's new quarterback? Is it Russell Rein or is it Chris Zurbrugg? All the answers were supplied yesterday by . the man who calls all the shots - Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler. "No, it doesn't scare me, we'll be all right," promised Schembechler at his weekly press luncheon, when queried about having a new man at the helm. BUT SCHEMBECHLER conceded that Harbaugh's season-ending arm injury poses a tremendous problem for Michigan's already struggling offense. "We've been training Jimmy Harbaugh for three years to do what he's doing. Now we've got to start over and it'll be tough," said Schembechler. Right now, Schembechler's toughest decision is who will be Michigan's starting quarterback this Saturday against North- western. The Wolverines have two scholar- ship quarterbacks available, Rein and Zur- brugg,. BOTH ARE SOPHOMORES, both were redshirted last season and both have taken exactly 25 percent of the snaps in practice (Harbaugh took the other 50 percent): And according to Schembechler, Rein and Zur- brugg are almost even in ability. "They're both very close. Maybe we'll play both of them. I'm just not sure yet. They're, very similar types of quarterbacks," assessed Schembechler. Schembechler does have one other scholar- ship quarterback at his disposal in freshman Bob Cernak. But Cernak, a highly touted recruit from Lockport, Ill. is just recovering from a broken throwing hand. Cernak has not taken a snap in six weeks and Schembechler has ruled out any chance of, the freshman coming on. AS FOR REIN. and Zurbrugg, Schem- bechler is confident that the two can get the job done. "They're both pretty mature kids. They have the ability to handle this situation well." Which sophomore will start, however, is still a question mark. "I may decide tonight. I would think that both of them will see time," said Schembechler. Schembechler isn't the only Big Ten coach with a quarterback problem. Northwestern will start 18-year-old freshman Mike Green- field when the Wildcats open up on offense in Michigan Stadium. NORTHWESTERN'S three-year starter, junior Sandy Schwab stretched ligaments in his throwing arm last Saturday in the Wild- cats' 31-3 loss to Iowa. "The way it looks right now, Sandy has got to be ruled out," confir- med Wildcat head coach Dennis Green from Evanston. "This is going to be interesting. I don't know anything about Greenfield," said a sur- prised Schembechler upon hearing the news. Against Iowa, Greenfield failed to complete any of his five pass attempts. Against Michigan State, Rein went two for seven with one interception while Zurbrugg was one for four with two interceptions. LOOKING FORWARD TO this Saturday's battle against Northwestern, Schembechler noted that the Wildcat offense has been weak while an experienced NU defensive unit has played tough. Without Schwab, the 1-5 Wildcats, 1-3 in the conference, will be heavy underdogs. Schem- bechler noted that he wants his Wolverine of- fense to have a good outing because Michigan's next three games are away at Iowa, at home against Illinois and away again against upstart Big Ten leader Purdue. Schembechler is looking to open up his ground game which, through five games this season is averaging only 3.4 yards per rush. In 1983 the Wolverines averaged 4.8 yards per 4 4 Zurbrugg ... fighting for QB reins BLUE BANTER: Defensive players Kevin Brooks, Mike Hammerstein and Andy Moeller suffered slight knee injuries against the Spartans, but should all play against Nor- thwestern . . . When asked if he had seen anything at all this season that he liked about 'his offense, Schembechler responded, "No, not yet.".. . And when asked to give his true feelings about the loss to MSU, the General said; "No, I can't for publication give my true thoughts." . . . Schembechler certainly doesn't feel that the conference crown is beyond Michigan's reach: "There ain't nobody in the conference whose going to win this thing without a loss. And the winner may have two." . . . Last Saturday's 19-7 loss to MSU occurred on the Jewish High Holiday of Yom Kippur. Since 1963 Michigan has played;: eight games on Yom Kippur compiling a 2-6' record. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Quarterback Russell Rein was pressed into duty Saturday when regular Jim Harbaugh suffered a season-ending broken arm. Rein will battle fellow sophomore Chris Zurbrugg for the starting role. AN INTERNSHIP IN EUROPE COULD HELP YOUR CAREER PROSPECTS Semester, Quarter and Summer programs in LONDON, EDINBURGH, PARIS, MADRID & BONN If you'have a positive attitude, right GPA, good command of the language concerned you could intern in the House of Commons, French National Assembly, Spanish Cortes, German Bundestag. Other place available in Law, Social Science, Research Labs., Business Museums, Town Planning, The Arts and European Politics. 1985 Semester costs from $2,975, Quarter & Summer costs from $1,690. Full academic credit available PA' ~FULLDETAILS FROM EPA, MARYMOUNT COLLEGE, TARRYTOWN, N.Y.10591 Phone (914)631-M TEAM .,, Total First Downs. 98 Rushing ......... 53 Passing ......... 41 Other ............ 4 Total Net Yards ... 1653 Total Plays ...... 385 Avg. Per Play ... 4.3 Avg. Per Game.. 330 Net Rushing Yards 902 Tota! Attempts .. 263 Avg. Per Play ... 3.4 Avg. Per Game... 180.4 Net Passing Yards. 751 Att/Comp/Int ... 122/63/8 Avg. Per Att ..... 6.1 Avg. Per Comp.. 11.9 Avg. Per Game.. 150.2 Punt/Avg/Blk ..... P/43.1/1 Opp 85 41 38 6 1590 314 5.1 318 726 183 3.9 145.2 864 131/74/11 6.5 11.6 172.8 26/42.6/0 Michigan Punt Rt/Yds/Avg.. 16/133/8.3 KO Rt/Yds/Avg ... 9/118/13.1 1 Int/Yards .......... 11/54 Fumbles/Lost ..... 8/5 Penalties/Yards... 25/221 SCORING Total Pts/Avg ..... 74/14.8 Touchdowns ....... 9 Rushing ......... 6 Passing ........ 3 Other ..............0 PATS/At t 6/7 2 Pt. Conv/Att 1/2 Field Goals/Att ... 4/6 3rd Down Conv/Att 36/84 Success Pct......... 42.8 SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 MICHIGAN .....................16 17 Opponents ...................10 13 Football Statistics 8/161/20.1 Receiring 1/152/13.8 8/47 No Yds Avg 14/8 Nelson............. 16 212 13.3 25/201 Bean ....... 14 209 14.9 73/14.6 '9 8 3 7/9 0/0 4/6 28/72 38.8 .~11 . .. . .. . . . Morris........... White.......... Jokisch .......... Rogers.......... Garrett ........... Kattus........... S. Johnson ........ Markray........ Logue ............. Harbaugh ........ 91 5 4 4 3 3 2 1 1 1 90 26 63 35 30 26 32 15 9 4 10.0 5.2 i5.8 8.8 10.0 8.7 16.0 15.0 9.0 4.0 TD 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 DEFENSE Tackles Assists M. Mallory...........41 22 Brooks...............33 9 Anderson.............17 15 Rivers ..............28 4 Cochran..............23 6 Lyless................15 9 Moellery.............11 12 Mike Hammerstein 16 8 Scarcelli............. 11 7 Campbell............. 10 2 Gantd................ 11 1 Herens...............9 1 Gray................ 4 5 DeFelice............. 6 2 Rodgers..............3 5 D. Mallory........... 6 1 Bishop...............5 2 Hicks.. 4 2 Sincich...............4 2 Harris ........ ....... 2 2 Meredith............. 2 2 Randall.............. 2 1 LeivandoWski......... 0 1 Robbins.............. - - ,Interceptions No Yds Cochran.............. 3 4 3 20 27 4 Tot. 21 74 23 73 I 14,789 to choose from - all subjects! Rush $2 for the current, 306-page cata- log. Custom research , thesis assis tance also available. Research, 11322 Idaho Ave., #206 WA, Los Angeles, CA 90025(213)477-8226. INDIVIDUAL Rushing Att Yds Morris............. 71 317 White ............. 61 229 Perryman......... 40 142 Garrett............ 25 80 Rogers ............ 20 77 Harbaugh..........42 54 Wilcher ........... 1 5 Logue. ........... 3 -2 Avg 4.5 3.8 3.6 3.2 3.9 1.3 5.0 -.7T TD 0 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 'M ' ................ 63 751 11.9 3 Opponent ......... 74 864 11.6 3' Scoring TDr TDp PAT FG TP Perryman........... .5 30. Bergeron .............6/7 4/5 18 Garrett............ 1 1 14 Bean ................ 1 6 Nelson ............... 1 6 Harbaugh ..........0 'M'.................6 3 6/7 4/5 74 Opponent............ 5 3 7/9 4/6 73 Punting No Yds Avg Long Robbins ........... 28 1280 45.7 78 Schlopy............ 1 13 ,13.0 13 Team ............. 1 - - - 'M....... 30 1293 43.1 78 Opponent .......... 26 1107 42.6 61' Field Goals 0-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Tot Bergeron.............2-2 0-1 2-2: 4-5 Schiopy ............. 0-1: 0-1 Total 63 42 32 32 29 24t 23 24 18 12, 12 " 10 9 8 8 7 7 6, 6 4 4 3 1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lyles............ Mike Hammerstein.. D. Mallory .......... M. Mallory ......... Rivers............ Moeller........... 3 1 I I 1 1 20 16 12 2 0 0 7~- } PP --ALLFREPA-rE & ALUINUMA S~IDNC CO-ILV 'M' ................ 263 902 3.4 6 Opponent..........183 726 3.9 5 Passing Att PC Int Pct. Yds Harbaugh............111 60 5 .541 718 Rein ................ 7 2 ' 1 .286 19 Zurbrugg ............ 4 1 2 .250 14 .M.................. 122 Opponent ............ 131 63 74 8 11 .516 751 .565 864 .M'.................. 2-2 Opponent ............ 1-1 0-0 0-1 2-3: 4-6 2-2 1-3 0-0: 4-6 TUESDAY LUNCH - FORUM October 9 - 12 Noon "CAN WE PREVENT A NUCLEAR WAR?" IS A NUCLEAR FREE ZONE WORKABLE? Speaker: PERRY BULLARD Member of the House of Representatives, Michigan Legislature M11 54 0 Opponents . 8 47 0 UPI top tienty 1. Texas (3-0).................579 2. Oklahoma (4-0)...............518 3. Washington (5-0) ................487 4. Boston College (3-0)...........459 5. Brigham Young (5-0) ............429 6. Nebraska (4-1) ..................360 7. Southern Methodist (3-0).......330 8. Florida State (4-0-1) ..........227 9. Ohio State (4-1)..... .........218 10. Louisiana State (3-0-1)...........208 11. Miami, Fla. (5-2) ...............185 12. Penn State (4-1) ................143 13. Oklahoma State (4-1).....1.... 99 14. South Carolina (4-0) ........... 88 15. Georgia (3-1) .................. 87 16. Auburn (3-2)................ 76 17. Purdue (4-1) .................53 18. Florida (3-1-1) ................. 39 19. Iowa (3-2)..................... 35 20. Kentucky (4-0) ................16 1 AT THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison St. For additional information, please call 662-5529 Sponsored by: THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER} THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER CHURCH WOMEN UNITED IN ANN ARBOR Lunch - $1.00 You can't believe everything you read. qq Including this ad. Or any other that attempts to sell you on a potential employer in 200 words or less. Because selecting an employer requires significantly more information than choosing a toothpaste. The type- of information that can only be gleaned from conversation with an insider - someone who can readily provide factual answers to hard questions. Undoubtedly you'll want to ask about training. For without ongoing career development, your degree isn't worth the But don't believe everything you read. Talk to the NL McCullough representative interviewing Mechanical, Petroleum and Electrical Engineers at University of Michigan on October 12. Or, if you are a candidate for a Technical Degree in December, you may send your resume to: Bob Chauvin NIMcCullough Human Resources Development P.O. Box 60060 Houston, Texas 77205 STUDENT PHONATHON CALLERS WANTED Part Time Employment Nights The School of Education will be interviewing students by phone to call alumni nationwide for an alumni fundraising phonathon. " Phonathon held Sunday through Thursday evenings October 28 through November 29 * Callers will be expected to work two of the five nights each week with some opportunity for additional hours. 1,4