Hockey vs. Ferris State Friday and Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena SPORTS Volleyball vs. Ohio State Friday, 7:30 p.m. IM Building The Michigan Daily Tuesday, November 4, 1986 Page 7 Bo bashful about breaking Yost record I , t Injuries may hurt run for Roses By ADAM MARTIN Bo Schembechler says he is not a record-chaser. Proof came when the 18-year Michigan head coach captured his 200th career coaching victory earlier in the season. The feat accomplished, Schembechler claimed his 200 victories only indicated how long he'd been coaching. IF SCHEMBECHLER wins at Purdue this Saturday he will tie Fielding "Hurry Up" Yost's record for all-time career victories at Michigan. In 25 years at the University, Yost posted a remarkable 165-29-10 record. Schembechler is currently at 164- 38-4. But the current Wolverine field general refuses to draw, comparisons. "By the time they talk about me like they talk about Yost, football will be something else," Schembechler said yesterday at his weekly press luncheon. "Yost must have been a helluva guy. He was one of the pioneers of coaching." IN HUMBLING himself Schembechler also tried to dispel the myth that Yost was an offensive football genius. "Everybody thought he was a great offensive coach, but that's just not true," he said. "He was a defense-oriented coach. Even when he lost it was 3-0." Yost's famous "point-a- minute" teams played 56 games without a loss between 1901 and 1905 and scored 2,821 points to the opponents' 42. DURING HIS reign Yost worked for what seems a mere pittance in modern terms. "I have one of his contracts. He got $1,000 for one year-plus, and he was even permitted to eat at training table," joked Schembechler, who added that he has no ambition to win 300 games - an eye-popping plateau reached only by the late Paul "Bear".Bryant of Alabama. Blue Banter -It's painful to look at the Wolverines' injury list. Quick tackle Mike Husar, who damaged his knee at Indiana, will not play against Purdue. Strong tackle Jumbo Elliott played with a neck problem in the Illinois game but may not make the trip to Purdue. Because Elliott's backup Brian Reid is also sidelined, strong guard Mark Hammerstein may move to tackle to shore up that position. MEANWHILE, outside linebacker Steve Thibert (deep thigh bruise) and kicker Rick Sutkiewicz (leg) probably will miss the Purdue game.AddBilly Harris (knee), Dave Folkertsma (knee), Garland Rivers (shoulder), and linebacker Dieter Heren (ankle), all of whom are expected to play in West Lafayette, and Michigan's starting lineup may be unfamiliar come Saturday. -So Miami's Vinny Testaverde has a lock on the Heisman Trophy, huh? Well, after completing 11 of 13 passes for 224 yards against Illinois, quarterback Jim Harbaugh now sports a higher efficiency rating than Testaverde, who had occupied the top spot before last Saturday. Maybe, just maybe, the race isn't over yet. -Schembechler, like his basketball counterpart, Wolverines coach Bill Frieder, enjoys catching the press off guard. When reminded of Maryland coach Bobby Ross' mad dash across the field after an official, who Ross felt had unfairly awarded a timeout to North Carolina that allowed the Tarheels to kick a game-winning field goal, Schembechler quipped, "I was disappointed in his speed." All right, Bo. -His two receptions for 79 yards against the Illini made split end Paul Jokisch the tenth receiver in Michigan history to reach the 1000-yard reception mark. Vt Yost ...Bo's next milestone ,5 , " . i t The Center for Western European Studies announces a new SPRING LANGUAGE PROGRAM) IN ITALIAN, TO BEGIN IN 1987. The Program will be held at the Villa Corsi-Salviati, the Michigan Study Center on the outskirts of Florence. It will run from May 10 to June 21, and will offer intensive courses in beginning and inter- mediate Italian, and contemporary Italian. Culture. The Program will be directed by Ilene Olken, Professor of Italian in the Depart- ment of Romagce Languages and Literatures. Students interested in participating in this program are invited to contact the Center for Western European Studies. Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON An injured John Kolesar is escorted off the field after breaking his collar- bone during Saturday's game. Kolesar likely will miss the rest of the regular season. Top-three order same in AP CENTER FOR WESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES 5208 ANGELL HALL 764-4311 (AP)-Miami, Penn State, and Michigan, the only three unbeaten and untied teams in major-college football, held on to the top three spots yesterday in this week's Associated Press poll. All three teams are 8-0 after weekend victories. MIAMI and Penn State are both independents and could meet each other in the Fiesta Bowl for the national championship. Michigan, if it wins the Big Ten, is committed to a trip to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl. Oklahoma remained fourth but Auburn and Washington fell several positions while Arizona State jumped from seventh to fifth. MIAMI, which defeated No. 20 Florida State 41-23 and knocked the Seminoles out of the Top Twenty, received 53 of 58 possible first- place votes and 1,153 of a possible GRIDDE PICKS Sixty-nine - what a pleasant number. Bet Mike White doesn't think too much of it these days. Then again, he may never have thought too much of it. Turn in your picks by midnight Friday and win a free pizza from Pizza Bob's and an FTD bouquet. 1. MICHIGAN at Purdue (Pick total points) 2. Northwestern at Ohio State 3. Indiana at Michigan State 4. Iowa at Illinois 5. Minnesota at Wisconsin 6. Maryland at Penn State 7. Miami, Fla at Pitt 8. Florida State at South Carolina 9. Georgia vs. Florida at Jacksonville 10. LSU vs. Alabama at Birmingham 11. North Carolina at Clemson * 12. Nebraska at Iowa State ;160 points from a nationwide poll of sports writers and sportscasters. The Hurricanes occupy the top spot for the sixth consecutive week. Penn State, which moved into the runner-up spot a week ago, received four first-place votes and 1,076 points following a 19-0 triumph over West Virginia. The other first-place ballot went to Michigan, which swamped Illinois 69-13 and received 1,053 points. OKLAHOMA, 7-1, totaled 953 points after thrashing Kansas 64-3 and Arizona State's 34-21 victory over Washington lifted the Sun Devils, 7-0-1, into fifth place with 921 points while the Huskies fell to 13th. The Sun Devil victory put Arizona in the drivers' seat in the Pac Ten. Alabama rbouided from last week's 23-3 loss to Penn State and trounced Mississippi State 38-3. The Crimson Tide received 861 points in climbing from eighth to sixth while the Bulldogs dropped out of the rankings after a four- week stay. NEBRASKA moved up from ninth to seventh with 793 points with a 38-0 rout of Kansas State and Texas A&M vaulted from 10th to eighth with 740 points after edging Southern Methodist 39-35. Auburn suffered its first loss of the season, bowing to Florida 18- 17 and dropping from fifth to ninth with 660 points. Arkansas, No. 13 last week, rounded out the Top Ten with 639 points after trimming Rice 45-14. The Second Ten consists of OhiohState, UCLA, Washington, Southern California, North Carolina State, Iowa, Arizona,: LSU, Georgia, and Clemson. AP Top Twenty 1. Miami(53) 8-0-0 1,153 2. Penn St.(4) 8-0-0 1,076 3. MICHIGAN(1) 8-0-0 1,053 4. Oklahoma 7-1-0 953 5. Arizona St. 7-0-1 921 6. Alabama 8-1-0 861 7. Nebraska 7-1-0 793 8. Texas A&M 7-1-0 740 9. Auburn 7-1-0 660 10. Arkansas 7-1-0 639 11. Ohio State 7-2-0 535 12. UCLA 6-2-0 500 13. Washington 6-2-0 477 14. USC 6-2-0' 434 15. N. C. State 6-1-1 343 16. Iowa 6-2-0 260 17. Arizona 6-2-0 178 18. LSU 5-2-0 154 19. Georgia 6-2-0 103 20. Clemson 6-2-0 56 I SMMM. .9 4C) o " LS&A faculty with a disciplinary interest - in Italy and with an interest in participating in the MICHIGAN-WISCONSIN ACADEMIC YEAR PROGRAM IN FLORENCE are invited to contact The Center for Western European Studies. Faculty who would like to be considered for the Fall or Winter Semester of the 1987-1988 session should send a copy of their curriculum vitae and a brief description of two courses that they might teach in Florence to Graham Smith at CEWS before November 15. Faculty who would like to be considered for some more distant semester are also warmly encouraged to make themselves known at this time. 0. I W> CENTER FOR czWESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES 5208 ANGELL HALL 764-4311 , \ WITH Dinners include baked COUPON potato and salad buffet with fresh fruit,-hot vegetables andmtwo hotsu. "' UW M OM "T"A11.You-Can-Eat Chopped SteakT T-gSteakBonesDanne aTAssueRa Y Vaue MealsSwlad Bffet 2i'r~!1 ~ for$8~ 9 2 fo ilhincludes Salad Bullet with Hot Spkotrcas ~n~a l andaked potato , With any sand U..p3 '~ ~