PAGE EIG'H'T THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 I I CAMPUS DISCOUNT STORES 213 S. STATE ST. 665-0725 CAMPUS COUPON CIGARETTES 4 PACKS 99c except 100's LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON HAIR ROLLERS Req. $1.00 59c LIMIT ONE Toledo To Test Frosh '11' Behind Closed Doors ..~~ 4 ''... ..... . COLLEGE TEACHING COOPERATIVE COLLEGE REGISTRY Recruiting college teachers for over 200 four year accredited liberal arts colleges throughout the United States. Service is free to all registrants. Administrative and faculty positions in all areas of the curriculum. Master's Degree is minimum requirement, Ph.D. De- gree or near preferred. Salaries $6500-$22,000. Make appointments for interviews through the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 Student Activities Bldg., Monday, November 13 through Friday, November 17, 1967. College Relations Director c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 i Pleaise send m a Sheraton Student I.D.soIcan saveaxup to201%oon Sheraton rooms. Name I I Reservations with the special low rate are confirmed in advancet (based on availability) for Fri., Sat., Sun. nights, plus Thanks- giving (Nov. 22-26), Christmas (Dec. 15-Jan. 1) and July 1 i through Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns offer I student rates during other periods subject to availability at time U of check-in and may be requested. Sheraton Hotels &Motor InnsS 1 55 Sheraton Hotels & Motor inns in Major Cities mi =M - =-M- M=--M-= M-- = M M J By DIANA ROMANCHUK Michigan's undefeated football team will defend its record agains Toledo tonight. In its second and final game of the season, the Wolverine freshmen take on the Rockets in Gassbowl Stadium at 7:30 p.m. After last week's 6-5 squeaker over Bowling Green in a drizzle that almost turned the game into a repetition of the Homecoming I Mudbowl, freshman coach Billt Dodd is conservative in assessing the team's chances in this next encounter. "In practice we've been point- ing toward the offense. It wasn't, as good as we think it can be despite the weather which natur- ally hurts the offense more than, the defense. "We weren't able to pass as much as we would have liked and SECTIONS GRID SEI This week's- guest selector .was to have been Ann Arbor's answer to Mr. Clean, Lt. Eugene Staudenmair. When informed of this honor, bestowed upon him yesterday after a hard day in court, Staudenmaier exuded thinly disquised reluctance. "I can't do that, being a policeman," he said. "You understand." Even after gently explaining to the kind detective that his participation would not involve illicit transactions, marijuana, dirty movies, or this week's Newsweek he remained adamant. CAMPUS COUPON MAYBELLINE Reg. $100 59c LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON A search of The Daily's Good Guy files revealed the accom- panying photo of Staudenmaier in action at a Wolverine football game. His job involves spotting students partaking of the various available psychedelia. It is rumored that at last week's Northwestern game Staudenmaier arrested a student radical for asking some girl what she was doing in a joint like this. The gutsy police officer had a wistful comment to add at the conclusion of yesteday's interview. "You know," he said, "it's too bad because I like to get involved in these things on campus." Thank you, sir, but we already know that. THIS WEEK'S GAMES (Consensus in All Caps) PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE Reg. $1.39 79c LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON 1 Pt. Rubbing ALCOHOL 14c LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON MASKIN TAPE, Reg. 98c 49c LIMIT ONE Candidates for degrees in ... Eng., Math Meet the Man from Monsanto Nov. 15, 16 & 17 Sign up for an interview at your placement office. This year Monsanto will have many openings for graduates at all degree levels. Fine positions are open all over the country with America's 3rd largest chemical company. And we're still growing. Sales have quadrupled in the last 10 years . . . in everything from plasticizers to farm chemicals; from nuclear sources and chemical fibers to electronic instruments. Meet the Man from Monsanto-he has the facts about a fine future. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. the films don't really give us a good look at the boys offensive y." Jerry Perkins and Bill Brutti shared quarterbacking honors-a job to be divided between lv~a Betts of Cleveland and Don Moorehead of South Haven, Mich., this week against Toledo. Dodd praised the defensive unit for a job well done: "We'd fumbled a couple times giving Bowling Green the ball deep in our territory but the defense did a good job 'closing the door,'" The only change in game plan that Dodd is making is to try more passing, but he is going to a two platoon system with more substituting so that "we can see as many boys in action as pos- sible." The injury menace has stayed away, no serious injuries being sustained last week, and the frosh enter this game with "everybody well.'' Not Like the Varsity Unlike the varsity with a highly developed system of sc.uting, Dodd and his assistant coaches have seen Toledo, 2-2-1 for the season, play only once-in their game against Bowling Green. ,Comparing the two teams, Dodd says. "They're basically the same type ball club, though not as big. They have two fine quarterbacks, both 6-3 and 193 pounds and also an exceptional split end." The two quarterbacks are Bob Ransom from Holland, Mich., who does the running and Tony Harris of Cleveland who handles the passing attack. His major target is Terry Kenneally, a 6-foot, 175 pounder from Cleveland, who has caught seven touchdown passes in five freshman games. Pete Carpenter (5-11, 196) spearheads the ground game, run- ning,"from the deep back in the I formation and at fullback in the T., No Prediction Refusing to make a prediction, Dodd explained the situation this way: Bowling Green beat Toledo by a couple touchdowns, then lost to Kent State 7-6 who in turn were dumped by Toledo 21-6. Referring to last week's game, Dodd was pleased about the per- formance of converted center Tim Killian whose two field goals, one 43 yards, accounted for all the scoring. "We knew he could kick them that far but we hadn't worked on field goals in practice. Tim had to center for the punter, for the other field goal kicker, and then get to kick a few himself. And with the conditions the way they were, that kick was even more difficult." However, if it were up to Dodd, Michigan will not have to depend solely on Killian for the scoring tonight. elts, Tyler i Grid Premier The first annual Inter-House Council - Interfraternity Council Football Championship will be playedthis Sunday on Wines Field at 3:30 p.m. The game will pit the champion of the "A" social fraternity league, Delta Tau Del- ta, against the residence hal win- ner in the "A" division. The resi- dence hall champion is Tyler House, Residential College. Presenting trophies to the teams Sunday will be Opal Bailey, Mich- igan homecoming queen, and Dennis Brown, starting Wolverine quarterback. The "B" championship between the two divisions will be played next Wednesday on South Ferry Field at 4:00 p.m. The Winchell Wipers from West Quad will carry residence hall hopes against a yet to be chosen fraternity seven. BOB McFARLAND The Injury Problem: Loving Life More Michigan at ILLINOIS Wisconsin at OHIO STATE INDIANA at Michigan State IOWA at Northwestern Minnesota at PURDUE Mississippi St. at AUBURN Baylor at TEXAS Maryland at CLEMSON KANSAS at COLORADO Duke at NAVY 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. GEORGIA at Florida OKLAHOMA at Iowa State OKLAHOMA ST. at NEBR. WYOMING at New Mexico N. CAROLINA ST. at Penn St. NOTRE DAME at Pittsburgh SOUTHERN CAL at Oregon St Washington at UCLA TEXAS TECH at TCU BOWDOIN at Tufts "Do me one favor, will you? Just don't emphasize the injury aspect. That's all I've read about this fall. I swear you sports- writers have got a hang-up on injuries. For once, I'd like to see a football story on something positive." The speaker? A high school football coach some four years ago. I complied with his request and didn't mentioned the word "injury" once in the article. But the point of view is typical of one line of thinking that can be found among football coaches, be they high school, college, or professional. I call it "creeping paranoia," this physical revulsion against the word and the phenomena that has turned winners into losers, losers into winners, and stars into has- beens. "Why can't the shadow of death escape me for one season," the coach asks himself in Montpellier, Vermont, Glendale, Arizona, and Sioux Falls, South Dakota. "We got on that plane the best team in the country, and got off it 48 hours later just another mediocre ballclub," says the disgruntled coach from Football Power, America. I'd worry too, of course, if my team had two super-stars who could go the cast-and-crutches route on any given play, with a couple of replacements sitting on the bench who'd be second string on the intramural football squad. I'd feel about as secure as the President of the U.S. finding enemy missiles streaking toward Washington, and getting a wrong number when he used the hot line. Security for the football coach is having your o. J. Simpson or Ron Johnson surrounded by a corps of MP's whenever he goes on the playing field. Oklahoma's new head coach, Chuck Fairbanks, felt a little queasy about doing much more with his first-string than letting photographers take pictures of them this season. Not that they weren't big, strong, and powerful. Rather, he was only too aware of that fact... and one other characteristic of his Sooner squad. With the exception of the first unit, his squad had less depth than a dried-up creek. So he took a revolutionary step. The squad hasn't scrimmaged since the tenth day of practice. And they've only dressed out in full pads about three times since then. Their standard dress on the practice field has been the sweatsuit, and more than one observer has confused 4 them with the Sooner track team. To think that Bud Wilkinson used to be known for his light contact work in Norman. Why, the Oklahoma trainer has ever gone on a sabbatical. Pure idiocy, you say. I implore you to look at Oklahoma's record. Ranked eighth in the nation with five victories and one loss, the Sooners are sitting on top of the Big Eighth tussle, a spot that everyone had conceded to Colorado in August. Their only M defeat was to arch-rival Texas by a 9-7 score. All right, Oklahoma has an impressive record. How about their injury record, tough? It seems that a team with that kind of practice schedule would be about as tough as thumbtacks. Again, a surprise. Oklahoma has suffered only one injury this season, and that to a second-stringer. Other teams should be so lucky. The idea is an old one. The pros have been practicing this wa! for years, emphasizing conditioning rather than contact. The novelty of the Fairbanks experiment is shifting the principle to the college game, where the players supposedly needed the contact work during the week to be proficient on Saturday. It's too early to draw conclu- sions, but the idea does merit study by other colleges. So too, does the whole injury problem. Fairbanks is getting at the injury problem by reducing the number of injury-producing situations which a player must face. Dr. Richard Schneider, a neuro-surgeon at Michigan, has been concerned with grid injuries for several years, but he is attempting to solve the problem by eliminating the causes, not the contact. Schneider had studied football fatalities and serious injuries over a long span of time in an attempt to find what situations and techniques are likely to produce a mishap. He has compiled film clippings of plays in which fatal injuries were incurred into a movie which draws several conclusions, many of them startling, about the injury problem. To sit through the film is a sobering experience, as a simple, routine play suddenly turns into a horrifying accident that costs a young man his life, or permanently disables him. I was never very much affected by the grid fatality stories prevelant every fall, being more interested in who scored how many touchdowns. Schneider's movie and slide presentations brought about a rapid change in my thinking, however. The visual media transforms sterile newsprint into potent reality. What Schneider's meticulous research shows is that coaching techniques are one cause of serious injuries. Methods like clothes- lining (making a neck tackle with an outstretched arm), spearing (trying to dislodge the ball with the helmet), head blocking, and head tackling, can put tremendous pressure on a life link about the diameter of your little finger, the spinal cord. Yet, a small group of coaches still teaches players to employ these practices, even though their use may result in death or serious injury for the players or their opponents. Connected to this cause is equipment. The latest helmet design looms up formidably on the screen, no longer used solely for protec- tion but, also for a weapon. The face mask, in addition to providing a tempting lever for a tackler, also obstructs lateral vision, resulting in more blind-side tackles and new injuries. Hopefully, Schneider's work will ameliorate the injury situa- tion in football. Hopefully, His excellent research will stimulate 0 more fact-finding. But until that time, men like Chuck Fairbanks will continue to avoid contact situations in practice. And sports- writers will continue to write about the perennial problem. Not because we love football less, but-because we love life more. i 4' Bob McFarland (Executive Sports Editor, 97-43, .693) Illinois, Ohio State, Indiana, Iowa, Purdue, Auburn, Texas, Clemson, Colorado, Navy, Georgia, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St., Wyoming, North Carolina St., Notre Dame, USC, UCLA. Texas Tech, Bowdoin. Clark Norton (Sports Editor, 85-55, .607) Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana, Northwestern, Purdue, Auburn, Texas, Clemson, Kansas, Navy, Florida, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Wyoming, No. Carolina St., Notre Dame, USC, UCLA, Texas Tech, Bowdoin. Grayle Howlett (Associate Spts. Editor, 84-56, .600) Illinois, Ohio St., Indiana, Iowa, Purdue, Auburn, Texas, Clemson, Colorado, Navy, Georgia, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Wyoming, North Carolina St., Notre Dame, USC, UCLA, Texas Tech, Bowdoin. Rick Stern (Associate Sports Editor, 80-60, .571) Illinois, Ohio State, Michigan State, Iowa, Purdue, Mississippi St., Texas, Clemson, Kansas, Navy, Georgia, Iowa St., Oklahoma St., New Mexico, N. Carolina St., Notre Dame, USC, Washington, Texas Tech, Tufts. U -UI An Equal Opportunity Employer I t GIRLS-" EASILY EARN $200 BY CHRISTMAS THROUGH SPARE-TIME SEWING AT HOME EVEN WITHOUT A SEWING MACHINE Easy-to-sew products (both with and without a sewing machine) can earn you extra money just in time for Christmas (and in the following months, too!). You can accomplish this in a few hours a week, even while you're baby-sitting. There is no personal selling needed. Our booklet gives you all the easy steps to follow so that you can have fun sewing those items which you already know, plus new ideas which you can learn, while every stitch earns you more money. 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