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April 05, 1968 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1968-04-05

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Friday, April 5, 1968

Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY

A HAPPENING

Maloney,
in this year's football press guie
book.
One - Frank Maloney, young,
short, and just bar'ely red-head
coach.
The other-Bob Shaw-is older
and headed toward baldness. His
responsibility is the defensive ends
and linebackers.
Together they make up the new
two-sevenths of the* Michigan'
football staff.,
There was no hesitation on the

Shaw

Bolster Grid Staf

'ii high school you really teach a boy
how to play football. In college you only
refine his skills; it's a polishing process."
On the other side of the fence. Mahoney is convinced that more
Shaw observes, "The easiest part "'coaching" is done on the high
is on-the-field coaching with the school level. "There you really
boys. They have a lot of hustle teach a boy how to play football,"
and respect you. You're a Michi- he explains. "In college you only
gan coach and what you say refine his skills: it's a polishing
goes." process."
Both were highly successful The Pennsylvanian noted other
high school coaches. differences, mainly the fact that

F R IDAY, A PR IL

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9-12 P.M.

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WOARLD BAND

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Thei NtionaCollegiate ad
this 'morning at 10:00 a.m. The
tournament will be held at the
I.M. building. Included in the
tournament is Michigan, Mich-
igan State, Eastern, Michigan.,
Western Michigan, and San
part of either man about ac-
cepting the job.. In fact, as Shaw
put it, "I was here almost as
soon as I hung up (after talking
to head coach "Bump" Elliot) ."
The two quickly found their place
among the veteran staff members.
Constant Kidding
Maloney joins fellow bachelor
George Mans, the offensive end
coach who was his teammate here
in 1960, 61, and 62, in bearing
all the good-natured ribbing about
their '"eligible" status. .
Shaw, whose wife and four
It has been brought to the
attention of the U of M
Speech Clinic Vietnam Pe-
tition that the name Tom
Stringer should not have
appeared. We offer public
apologies for this error.

FRANK MALONEY

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FREE

children are still in Louisburgh,
Pennsylvania, i njyn thehs-
backfield coach), his old friend
from their seven years as assis-
tant and head coach respectively
at Niles McKinley in Ohio.
Some adjustments have been
hard, though.
Pegging terminology as the big-
gest change he's had to face. Ma-
loney notes, "sometimes you are
using the same play in an iden-
tical situation, but it's got a dif-
ferent name."
His fellow rookie coach picked
"coming in the middle of spring
football and recruiting," as the
toughest adjustment. Michigan's
system of trimesters makes it
doubly hard on the coaches who
must split -their time between
pactice and telephone recruiting
One Mistake
He agreed with Maloney's one
regret of "not coming up here
two months -sooner." Both ac-
knowledged how hectic it is get-
ting used to the system and per-
sonnel at the same time.
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Shaw; a '53 graduate of his
hometown college, Clarion State
in Pennsylvania (the same year
as his more famous teammate,
Detroit Lion head coach Joe
Schmidt), followed in Mason's
hi secodf d two season s head
coach, the team went undefeated.
tLast year he movedhis famil
coach at Bucknell University, in
the Mid-America conference.
Story from the East
His favorite anecdote concernis
another conference member. Dela-
ware, and its athletic director
Davey Nelson. A Michigan alum-
nus, Nelson insists that the foot-
ball team wear Michigan uniforms
and helmets.
Maloney. on the other hand,
originally started out to be a law-
yer, spending one year at North-
western. Then an opening for head
coaching job at his old high school
forced him to make a decision
between law and football.
Football won and he took over
as head coach at Mt. Carmel, the
smallest school enrollment-wise In
the All-Catholic league.
In a five-year span, his teams
won 31 of 43 games, including the
city championship last year, "37-0
in front of 60,000 screaming fans
at Soldiers' Field,'' as he jokingly
remembers.
Poetry reading by
DE NISE L EVE RTOYV
(wose husband, Mitcell
Godman,* wa ndicted
Rev. Coffin)
Sponsored by SPU-RESIST
Tues., ApriI9, 8:30 P.M.
CANTERBURY HOUSE
330 Maynard

college is more specialized. "And,"
he added through his character-
istic chuckle, "a difference of
about 100,000 in the stands."
The younger coach, who played
before those 100.000 in the Michi-
gan Stadium, remeihbers the days
wheen even college wasn't special-
"When I was here," Maloney re-
calls, "there was only one platoon.
same coach. taught offense and
defense."

Today there is more organiza- fly Tile Associated Press
tion, plays are more detailed, S.PTRBUG -Rc
and orecoahes re ecesarMonday, breaking a string of 20
to implement them. hitless trips with two singles and
Thouh acoac's ob i toad-a double, led a 14-hit attack as
vise, at times he finds it best to teOkadAheisbre h
say nothing. St. Louis Cardinals 12-2 In an
Shaw's oldest boy, Rob, made exhibition baseball game.
thisverycler tohimdurig a The Athletics drew nine walks
little league baseball game. Fur-an bneidfrm ouerr.
ther advised son to play his right- The Cards were held to four hits
fied psiiondeper So rjecedfor six innings by Jim Hunter,
the advice with, "Dad, you're not Okadrgthne.Oeo h
my coach." bows was a 400-foot homer by
-._ Dick Simpson.

cars Brie

BOB SHAW

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W.A.A. Namles
The new officers of the Wo-
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physical education, will tak over
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In addition, certificates were
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Seeley House, Oxford for basket-
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Yanks Clout Nats
FORT LAUDERDALE - The
New York Yankees combined six
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Frank Howard clouted a honie
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inning The blow was measured at
480 feet, longest drive ever hit at
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