Wednesday, October 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesday, October 23, 1968 THE MICH'GAN DAILY F 3 Michigan, Minnesota to vie for Jug Meyer heads U.S. swim sweep; Petrove hits gold in skeet shoot By THOMAS R. COPI Last week Michigan defeated Big Ten co-champion Indiana in a real heart-stopper at Blooming- ton. This week, the Wolverines have a chance to-wipe out another of the d e f e n d i n g co-champions, namely, Minnesota. The Golden Gophers, whose rec- ord of 3-2 this year is a good capsule description of the type of club they are, haven't' visited An I Arbor since 1966, when they suf- fered a 49-0 shellacking at the hands of an inspired Michigan eleven. Into this year's battle for the Little Brown Jug (better known as' the "Clash for the Crock"), Min- nesota will bring ambition, high hopes, and a 2-0 record in Big Ten play. Since both Minnesota and Mich- igan are undefeated in league ac- tion, Saturday's game is what is known as a "must" for both~ squads, in that the team that wins will have a much better shot at the Western Conference title than the team that loses. The crystal-ball types from the Associated Press have given the surprising Wolveripes a surpris- ing two-touchdown edge.in Mich- igan's homecoming tilt. Minnesota comes to the Athens of the Midwest fresh fi'om a 14-13 win over Hugh "Duffy" Daugher- ty's luckless Spartans last week at East. Lansing. Capitalizing on six State fumbles, the Gophers man- aged to eke out their second con- ference win by the sm'allest of margins. In that game Minnesota, which has been plagued by a stuttering offense all year, managed to maintain only two drives, one of which resulted in the Gophers' second touchdown, the other of which was thwarted by a heart-{ MEXICO CITY A'P - Evgemy Petrove of the Soviet Union won the gold medal in the Olympic skeet shooting contest yesterday after a shoot-off with Romano Garagnani of Italy and Konrad Wirnhier of West Germany. Garganani won the silver and Wirnhier was third for the bronze. In other action, resilient Debbie Meyer, so ill Monday night she -Daily-Thomas R. Copi HERE'S HOW IT WAS DONE two years ago as the Mighty Michigan Wolverines simultaneously white-washed and shellacked the uphappy Minnesota Gophers, 49-0. Bone-crushing tackles such as the one pictured above kept the Gopher backs on the ground for most of the game, as the Won-' derful Wolverines scampered up and down the field at will, scoring touchdown after touchdown. Ago inst TeWl 4i Revv ltioary, sports: 1 L berate the Stadium By KIM JOHNSON It was sunry and warm a week ago Saturday for the football game. Like all the rest of the conventional students, I had shelled out 14 dollars to that coldly capitalistic institution, the college athletic empire. I scorned myself for my moment.of weakness, and forgbowing to the pressure of social acceptance (That must go). "I'll make the best of it," I vowed, "and use it as a chance to observe this as a phenomenon, as another thing to be changed." Thus deciding, I chose to make myself inconspicuous in typical, conservative clothes, although even this revolted my anti-estab- lishment tastes and standards. My friend (who I tolerate, being tolerant, even though he is boringly middle-class) and I left from my apartment (which I hate, since It is a sterile cubicle and not 'a dark, dank basement. where I could assert my individuality; and because it is a symbol of the feudalistic Ann Arbor landlord domination). "Boy, look at the people! And all the ears!" exclaimed my friend as we proceeded towards that sshrine of dg Ten football addicts,E Michigan tadium (It will be lberatedsomedy). "Lemings," I sneered. "Can't think for themselves, so they1 just 'accept and follow. And, they support an organization simply) inconsistent, with the true concept of a fi'ee university, too." And the cars, the expensive, shiny symbol of our materialistic culture, caused me to again repudiate the standards forced upon me against my will by my status-conscious parents and associates, (They'll] be 'gone). The pigs were there, of course, in our streets, with their helnets and guns and sticks. And as they pointed and ordered the ,y cars and 'pedestrians about with expressionless, fixed faces, I) expvrienced a sinking feeling in my stomach. (They will have to go).. Defiantly ignoring a gate ,marked "students" (I'll be damned if I'll b pushed and channeled like the other sheep), I thrust out my ticket' (someday we'll make them learn 'our names, and we can burn our I.D. cards and tickets) to the impersonal guard. Then I was inside th concentration camp wire that surrounds the stadium from the people (That will be torn down). Jammed like cattle into lnes, forced to sit where the little num- bers on our tickets said, we had to submit to the authoritarian guards who invade our privacy by ekamining our ticket again. Of course, we were repressed from the freedom to express our- selves by sitting where we will (on the field-yes! In the press box- why not? Do you, or Joe Falls, have more right?) "Fascist pigs," my . mind shouted at the guards, "let us freel" And as I saw the uniformed Boy Scouts, they appeared to me as the Hitler Youth, and suddenly I felt empty, and wondered if anyone else was aware enough to perceive the terrible meaning of it all. (They will be freed). The band pranced and played, easily entertaining my shallow friend and the ignorant, burgeois crowd. It appalled me that 100,000 y people were blind enough to accept this Roman-orgy indictment of the decadence of our society. (That will be changed). The game, and the ecstatic, roaring approval of inhuman' naked violence; the exhileration over crass physical talent; the establishment sanctioning such bureaucratic capitalism in the name of sport-all this emphasized how diseased and degenerate our modern culture has become.' The fraud, the hoax being perpetrated before the unaware, apathetic mass made me recoil in disgust and contempt. (Sports Will not go; paying audiences will). And the noble black man, being exploited for his skill, his body-to hell with his education. The racism and bigotry cried out for acknowledgement. The crdwd, soothing its conscience with the idea that sports makes all men equal, repressed any conception of this. And remained safely innocent. (They will be awakened). The end, and the crowd, mind-blown and drunk in victory, con- veniently re-ordering their values of importance, celebrated. As did my friend. Or did he? Watching the people, he turned to me with a terrible question in his eyes. A look of comprehension? Perhaps a loss of innocence? New awareness? Had the fertile seeds of liberating radical- ization been planted? (He will get another chance). The Revolution. The movement. The future. It has begun. We want the world and we want it now. (And when we get it, hoo boy.) breaking interception on the one allowed an average of 39 points yard line. per game this year, putting' them The Minnesotans' other score in the "hapless" category. came on a spectacular 58-yard The Gophers' only other winthis punt retdrn by Doug Roalstad. year was over the same Wake For- To say that Minnesota's defen- est team that came so close to sive unit effectively bottled up the beating Purdue last week. They Spartan attack to insure the win also came close to beating Minne- would be wrong, as the men in sota. The final' score was a close green-and-white amassed a total 24-19. of 406 yards offensively. Minne- This is not to say that Minne-1 sota's win over the Spartans was sota poses no threat to Michigan's instead a direct result of State's four-game win streak. Lest we for- fumble-itis. Even one of the get, the Gophers threw a scare in Gophers' assistant coaches said O. J. Simpson's USC squad in the after the game "We didn't deserve season's opener by jumping out that one.' . ' to a 10-0 lead before falling to the Minnesota's other conference Trojans 29-20. And they took a win came at the expense of the 14-0 lead into the locker room at Fighting Illini, of Illinois, 17-10. halftime in their game against In purveying this score, it should Nebraska, only to lose that one be remembered that Illinois, has 17-14, as they ere unable to keep - - the Cornhuskers out of their end- I The closest thing the Gophe s have to an. individual offensive threat is their leading ground- gainer, halfback George Kemp, who is averaging just over 40 yards per game this year. His best game so far this year was against MSU, in which he gained over 60 , N w daily sporlts NIGHT EDITOR: FRED LaBOUR BULLETIN MEXICO CITY ()-Debbie Meyer, the 16-year-old Sacra- mento, Calif., speedster, over- came illness last night and led a United States sweep in the women's 200-rueter freestyle with an Olympic Games record of 2:10.5. Jan Henne of Oakland, Calif., was second and Jane Barkman of Wayne, Pa., third. was feared lost to the U.S. swim- ming team, bounced back with a brilliant performance yesterday that sent the Americans splashing toward another medal spree at the 1968 Games. The powerhouse U.S. pool con.' tingent, set back early in the day when ailing breaststroke queen Catie Ball was forced to drop out of the 200-meter race, rallied be- hind Miss Meyer, 16-year-old freestyle marvel from Sacramento, Calif., to qualify 14 men and women for semifinals and finals in five swimming events. Debbie, plagued by a sore throat and intestinal trouble, showed no effects of illnesses in scampering to a 25-meter triumph in the women's 800-meter freestyle trials. Before she became ill, she was regarded as a cinch to add the 800 and 200 freestyle titles to her 100-meter gold conquest earlier in the Games. The 200 freestyle finals were set for last night, along with the finals in the men's 100-meter back- stroke and 200-meter breaststroke. The United States, which went into the 10th day of over-all com- petition with a Games-leading total of a whopping 66 medals, including 28 golds, faced its most severe basketball test late last night-a 'semifinal confrontation with Brazil that was televised na- tionally. Meanwhile, defending champion Hungary and Bulgaria advanced to the finals of the Olympic soc- cer tournament yesterday. Hungary whipped Japan 5-0 be- fore Bulgaria edged host Mexico 3-2. Japan and Mexico will play for the bronze medal tomorrow. Hungary will be trying for its third consecutive title, having won in Rome in ' 1960 and in Tokio four years ago. West Germany, Hungary and ri Eid I C team hokay"l "We play 'em one at a time," commented Libel Captain Loath-. some Landsman after yesterday'sC grueling practice session at thes Hill. Loathsome led the Libel 'B' teamN to a crushing defeat at the handsa of the 'C' team before the exciteda gaze of hundreds.a The 'C' team looked more pow-o erful than ever yesterday, recov- ering beautifully from the loss r through inertia of ex-coach Nap-i py-Ass Tnerko. "I'll pick a coach," commentedx Loathsome, but he was hootedr down by, Frenchie LaBour, t h e second-year scatback who led the league in passing last season. Developing rapidly into a pin- naole of powerful performance, the 'C' secondary, headed up by Soft- ball -Ace' Gromper Gray and straight shooter Flash Sacks, roll- ed up yard after yard without eas- ing up once. And although Coach "Biggie" Copi was unable to a'ttend, acting Big Cheese Shoo Shoo Shister II noted, "If them UAC guys show up for the game they should've stayed home." zone in the second hall. As for Minnesota's personnel, Gopher coach Murray Warmath bemoans the loss of last year's "superstars," especially on offense. "When you lose players like Char- ley Sanders, John Williams and Curt Wilson, you have lost super performers," moaned Warmath in a preseason interview. Phil Hagen, who hails from Eau Claire, Wis., has stepped into the shoes of Curt Wilson at quarter- back, and found them over-sized.; With excellent protection, he was able to complete only 13 of 26 aerials against State last week, and had a pair of passes picked off, to boot. He has completed a total of four passes to the opposition thus far in 1'968. For the season, Hagen has com- pleted 63 of 120. He's not exactly rewriting Minnesota's record book. yards. - All in all, it can be said without regret that the Golden Gophers have a balanced, if uninspired of- fense. Their y a r d a g e gained, against MSU last week was almost equally divided between rushing and passing: 119 yards for the 'former, 114 for the latter. Always highly-regarded defen- sively, the Gophers this year have allowed their opponents over 300 yards per game. A pair of MSU backs, Triplett and Love by name, chewed up the vaunted Minnesota defensive line for over 200 yards between them. It'might be noted at this Junc- ture that MSU ran an option play with great successkagainst the Gophers-the same kind of option play that Michigan backs Dennis Brown ands Ron Johnson have been known to use more than a few times per game. SUMMER, { IN Opportunities in Teaching or Social Work- ./Work and Travel Thurs., Oct. 24 7:30 P.M. Room 212-SAB Winont Volunteers Kenneth Prideaux-Brune British Representative Will be on Campus Please come or call 769-3468 for information IL Roo I- R. H. Philipp, Owner 1031 E. Ann, near the hospitals DELICIOUS SANDWICHES, SALADS, SOUPS 95c DAILY SPECIAL Open 1 1 :00 o.m. 'til 8:00 p.m. Daily CLOSED SUNDAYS IF YOU HAVE NEVER BEEN- INSIDE A SALT BOX NOW'S THE TIME TO SPICE UP YOUR LIFE! Antique ~~tii SEarrings, P insni and 330 Maynard Broaches Across from Arcade MOADON Informal presentation and discussion of i Toward Victory Always a Cuban film of Che Guevara wJnfW F AY OCT-1 3 The ISRAELI ARAB TONIGHT M I V T i 11