Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 17, 1968 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 17, 1968 U Coeds: "Let us style a, FLATTERING HAI R CUT to your individual needs." No Appointment Needed The Dasco)a Barbers Near Michigan Theatre PAID ADVERTISEMENT Game s By THOMAS R. COPI Down in Bloomington, the In- diana football coaches are intently studying movies of last Saturday's Michigan-Michigan State game. They're trying to figure out which end will be the easiest to go around, or which defensive halfback gives the man he's cov- ering the most running room, or whether there's any way to stop Ron Johnson, Michigan's All- America candidate halfback. The films they're studying are theirs through the courtesy of the University of Michigan. The Big Ten Rules specify that each school must provide its next opponent with films of its game from the previous week. Where do these films come from? At Mich- igan, baseball coach Moby Bene-; dict and his cinematographical as- sistant Dick Honing and George Pomey are responsible for getting1 Saturday's gridiron action down on film. FREE WIG CATALOG j Genuine Michael Andrew Line Finest quality in the field. 100% I Human Hair --full, luxurious, su perbly made for long life and na- tural beauty. Have fun choosing the type hairpiece you want. Full as- sortment of stretch wigs, regular wigs, miniwigs, fais, wiglets, Gre- cian.curls-preset for unstyled-any length, any type. Match your own hair color exactly or try exciting change. Never before offered by mail. These wigs are sold nation- wide in beauty salons for twice your price. Send no money. Write today. MICHAEL ANDREW, Inc., Dept. 8 540 Commerce Dr., Yeadon, Pa. 19050 films After each game, the films are taken immediately to Lansing, where they are processed while- you-wait and returned to Ann Arbor Saturday night. prepare gridders for combat, Early Sunday morning, while participants in post-victory cele- brations are sleeping off the ef- fects, sistant football coach Stan Kemp goes through the films and breaks them down into three cate- gories: offense, defense, and kick- ing. By 9 a.m., the films are ready >r for viewing by the rest of the Michigan coaching staff. Head football coach Chalmers "~up in the films that he can't pos- "Bump" Elliott says that the films sibl seeo he idelines. are ,used to grade not only thesThe othe idenes h plays, but the .individual playersTof gamerfilmsvisthagetthe allow as well. Each play is examined inors theetheyeallow detail, Elliott explains, and players check their own play. This could are given either a "plus" or aIhecti owxmplayrs erl "minus" in such areas as "lineup help if, for example, a player were assinmet,""pusui," eacion"telegraphing"~ or inadvertently fro ad o-givingawytth opposition the both to plays away from and to- direction a play is going by the ward the individual opponent, andd "big play" action. Elliott defines a payehea ide up. It al s assign- "big play" as an interception, ment fits in with those of his fumble, or scoring play, teammates in the execution of any According to Elliott, the infor- given play. mation gained from scanning the Although, Big Ten rules provide game films plays a very large part that the previous week's films in determining lineup changes, must be sent to- next week's op- Also, detailed study of plays may ponent, Elliott says that usually result in changes of blocking as- the previous three games are sent. signments or other variables, And a special arrangement with which can turn a mediocre play an individual school may result in into a scoring threat. even more films changing hands, Elliott maintains that there are he adds. two major purposes involvedih the The films are also given to the use of game films. The first is that Alumni Association for distribu- the overall view captured behind tion to U of M clubs throughout the cameras allows all the coaches the country. The Ann Arbor club, to be aware of what every player for example, shows the game film is doing during the game. Elliott to its members every Monday at reports that a lot of things show a special luncheon. -Daily-Thomas R. copi 'TREMENDOUS Sunday night at the movies COMPETITOR': _ r : George Hoey: Matches the chiches_ By JOEL BLOCK as a fourth string offensive tail- 1<- There are certain stock phrases back. that sports people use to describe Last year he lead the Big Ten great athletes when they know Conference in punt returns and little about them personality-wise. placed on the second All Big Ten defensive squad. These people - coaches, sports writers, publicity men -- repeat - This season he. is continuing over andpover again how their where he left off, returning op- athlete "is a tremendous competi- ponent's punts for 117 yards in the tor, puts out 100 percent all the first four games of the season. His time, and is a great guy to work career total is. already 416 yards, with." placing him fourth on the all- time Michigan list. Tennis Ace Arthur Ashe To Play Here < Arthur Ashe, a:one of the world's premier tennis player~s following his victories in the two biggest tournaments this country of- fers, w i11 dis- play his talents at tlhe Univer- sity of Michi- gan Events Building, this Sunday, Oct. 20. Ashe, U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open champion in 1968, will play Clark Graebner, a U.S. Davis Cup team member, in. the highlight of an attractive afternoon program. Opening the program at 1:30 will be two Wolverine varsity players, Jon Hamline and Brian Marcus. Following the Ashe-Graebner con- test (best two of three sets), these two will tangle with the Dell brothers, Donald who is the Davis Cup team captain, and Richard, o a Michigan varsity player. Proceeds go to the U.S. Davis Cup squad fund, Tickets are $2 for the public and $1 for University students, staff and faculty. All tickets for chil- dren are $1. You can purchase tickets at Moe's Sports Shop, 711 N. University, at Stein & Goetz Sporting Center, 315 S. Main and at the University of' Michigan athletic ticket office, 1600 S. State. -Remember, this Sunday, Oct. 20, is the date for a rare tennis treat. Make your plans now! 4i 3 KENSINTON MARKET They assembled in Toronto, the five best rock-men in Canada ...recorded in Manhattan, in a prestigious series of sessions.., proving the creanrof Canada to be a very heady brew. LIVE Bluegrass Music by the COUNTY LINE BOYS TONIGHT and EVERY THURSDAY at the . i i 3 I i i And most often that well-en- dowed superstar doesn't care about competition, or he hardly puts out close to what he could, or is miser- able to work with. So when you meet a superlative athlete like George Hoey, it sur- krises you to find that he is some- thing of a Will Rodgers. He never met a man he didn't like, and more importantly, George Hoey will probably never meet a man that didn't like him. Hoey's athletic credentials are exceptional. He is in his second year as starting defensive back for the Michigan varsity, after sitting on the bench his sophomore year Hoey, who had his best game this year against Navy when he sat up three Wolverine toucldowns on punt returns of 63 and 36. yards, and an interception return of 31 yards. In last week's 28-14 win over MSU, Hoey's heroics were limited to a fumble recovery deep in Michigan territory and seven tack- les of Spartan runners. MSU punter Dick Berlinski must have studied the Navy game films well, as he kept all four of his punts well away from Hoey's reach. Two of his punts soared over Hoey's head into the Michigan end zone. A third was a squibbler which went for 29 yards and was downed by a Spartan lineman. The fourth was like an Apollo launch- ing which Hoey caught on a fair catch amid a sea of green jer- seys. But Hoey, who weighs only 170 pounds, refuses to take any credit for his magic touch with pu n t returns. "It's the defensive line that sets up the punt returns. If they go, I go; I can't go any- where if they don't give me the blocks." On both kickoffs and punts, Hoey's mission is to get any ball he can reach. Defensive backs Tom Curtis and Brian Healy, who join Hoey in the Wolverine punt re- turn formation, have given him the first two key blocks on sev- eral of his long runs. But football isn't Hoey's only sport and it might not even be his best. Last year he was Michigan's top sprinter and made it to the NCAA Indoor Track Champion- 0/4 RESTAU RANT 221 N. Moin St. Ann Arbor -Daily-Eric Pergeaux WOLVERINE RIGHT CORNERBACK George Hoey (12) plows into end Al Brenner (86) during last Saturday's encounter with Michigan State after the latter pulled in a short pass from quar- terback Bill Feraco. Left linebacker Tom Stincic (90) moves in to provide insurance, although Hoey had no trouble flattening Brenner without-help. ship semifinals before losing out in Burnley's comment. As a reg- to the likes of O. J. Simpson, Jim ular in the defensive backfield, Green, and Lennox Miller (who he misses much of the'track.work-'M just won a silver medal in the outs in the fall and spring. Olympic 100 yard dash). "Hoey never has had the time Despite Hoey's accomplishments, to concentrate on his techniques assistant Track Coach Ken Burn- in track like most regular sprint- ers do," said Burnley. "This Is Michigan head coach Bump true of most football players who Elliott reported at practice yes- double in track." terday that flanker John "What's more, he has never been~ .i ca in top shape for track because the Gabler is recovering from a rib hr y-f bewn sass injury suffered in fast Satur- short lay-off between seasons day's 28-14 victory over Michi- doesn't let him recuperate from gan State, and is expected to be the aches of football. His successes rady forathndis eeek'sgabehave come from his natural abil- y fr Bthis week's game ity and a great competitive de- against Big Ten leader In- sire." diana at Bloomington' Burnley uses words like "person- able" and "likeable" when talking ley once told, him, "if you ever about Hoey. He also refers to worked out, you'd be a hell of a Hoey's mental concentration, runner." "Hoey isn't the type to get psyched In light of Hoey's other. j o b. out before a race. All he's thinking football, it's easy to see the truth about is winning." KENSINGTON MARKET WS 1754T Enjoy Yourself - Join WARNER BROS. - SEVEN ARTS RECORDS INC. t the Da-y Staff Today.- GEORGE HOEY INSTANT EMPHASIZER New standOUT pocket-model reference marker by Eberhard Faber makes words, titles, numbers, and main points stand out. In textbooks, reports, maps-on any kind of paper. Pocket-size standOUT goes with you, marks the important stuff in either bright transparent yellow or pink for easy reference. At Won't show through paper, either. At your college bookstore. standOUT 49 TM Rg.U S. Pat Off and Other Countries EBERHARD FABER MMOMAMMOsssWILKES-BARRE, PA. - NEW YORK CANADA' GERMANY. -VENEZUELA -COLOMBIA