r Page Six "'W !"7' I7}'") ยข'1'd'YWW '' I5;#:l ' ~r"','v*,x' " . - THE MICHIGAN DAILY wednp-gcinv Nnvp hor ' t 14 52 ,,, ,:<; 'cue . uu I jv ILmuer 4V,1 I.i.vo C. Ohio's Stincic 'up for Michigan By KAREN VAN SCHOICK Tom Stincic is from Ohio, not too far from the sight of this week's sport spectacular. And he's all psyched up for the big game down in hometown territory. "For those of us on the team from Ohio," Stincic declares, "the Ohio State game is like the Mich- igan State game for Michigan' guys., Stincic, the 6'3" anchor man for the defense, has prepared for this game for the past four years. "Bump Elliott) has said for weeks that we take each game as. it comes along. And he's right. All of us are ready for this one." "I guess we'll feel we have really man to man. "It helps to equalize time in quite awhile that the accomplished something after this things that way," he points out. Maize and Blue had been behind week," he says.1 A senior in the physical educa- tion department, Stincic will be playing his last regular season game this Saturday. He has play- ed fine defensive ball for the past two seasons, and has undoubtedly won his third letter this year. Stincic, a middle linebacker, is currently leading the team in tackles, but considers himself pri- marily a team man. He sees the defensive team as a unit and plays "not necessarily as the coaches see it, but as the players see it," Stincic had few doubts about in the scoring column. But Tom the success of the Wolverines 1968 had no fears. "Playing in the mud season. "We knew we had a good is miserable, and I just had to team and we didn't pay much at-' change those wet clothes. Afterall, tention to the pre-season polls," our defense was doing their job; he remarks. "Our 8-1 record says :the weather just made it difficult it pretty well for us." for our offense to score." Reaching for roses had little to' Losing the first game of the do with Stincic's choice of col- I year to California did not discour- leges. "I wanted to play high age Tom either. "I don't think we quality football and I narrowed were ready for that game," Tom my choices down to three: Pitts- treflects. "In any event, we really burgh, Ohio State, and Michigan," decided to fight after it was over." he says. Aftervgraduation in Anril Tnm 4 TOM STINCIC r -"---'- - 9i University Charter Flights CL0/V? Actually, Tom thought Michigan should have gone in place of Pur- due as a second place team to the 1966 Rose Bowl game. He felt that the following season (1967) was primarily a 'rebuilding one for the Wolverines, and this year is final- ly the one he has been looking forward to. "Our defense is good. The first lp l , M hopes to be playing pro football. He thinks he will be drafted, but really doesn't care by whom. "When you are in pro ball chances are pretty good you will be play7l' ing for a few years and you can build with the team, so it doesn't really matter where the team stands when you sign with them," he contends. string has only allowed nine What Stincic really feels he is points scored against us in the past preparing himself for at the Uni- four games. . . . and that touch- versity is a coaching career, fol- down last week by Wisconsin had lowing of course, 4 try at pro to be a fluke," he says. "They football. might say it was a case of being All of this comes after Satur- alert, but I call it luck. Their of- day's game. Right now that's the fense (Wisconsin's) just wasn't big thing on Tom's mind. And this Sthat potent." just may be the longest week of Halftime last week was the first his football career. -Daily-Larry Robbins TOM STINCIC (90) dives into Tommy Love's knees during this year's tilt with Michigan State. Stincic's solid linebacking has been a major contribution to the Wolverines' emergence as the second best team defensively in the Big Ten. t BIG PICTURE Michigan holds steady at $8 COMPLETE 4th in AP poll Includes: * Jet Detroit-Los Angeles Dec. 27, return Jan. 1 9:QO p.m. + 5 nights accommodations (double occupancy) " Ground transportation to and from airport and game OPTIONAL: "y The Associated Press 33-27 to match Southern Cal's 8-0 Michigan clung tenaciously to record, held the runner-up spot, its fourth place position in the picking up seven first place bal- Associated Press weekly football lots, but slipped farther behind poll by virtueof its 34-9 triumph t h e Trojans in points, 704-636. over Wisconsin. The leaders had a'44-point rear- - tr sgin over the Buckeyes last week. Southern California's c o m e- from-behind victory over Oregon Penn State, 8-0, and Georgia, State in last Saturday's Pacific 7-0-2, remained third and fifth, Coast showdown has bolstered the with the Nittany Lions receiving ,top-ranked Trojans' bid for the two firsts and the Bulldogs one 1 national college football champ- following impressive triumphs. ionship. Penn State trampled Maryland T h e unbeaten Trojans nailed 57-13 and Georgia stopped Au- the host spot in the Rose Bowl by burn 17-3. trimming Oregon State 17-13 with The top 20, with first-place votes, a second half come-back. records and total points. Points award- Ohio State, which downed Iowa ed for first 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-6 14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:1 * * * 7C 7[ . *! * * * Frosh promisIng Toledo win By .JIM FORRESTER tackles JimBrandstatter and Guy liott running the roll-out option What makes this day really im- Murdock, guards Reginald Mc- for 21 of those yards. portant is that it is the day the Kenzie and Don Shaw and center . I Ty e Charles Trick Defensively we can start where Rose Bowl Parade tickets seats) and box lunch (reserved bleacher previous r rlaay's frestiman foot * Game Tickets * New Year's Eve Pa rty I Disneyland Tour * Victory Celebration SIGN UP Thursday and Friday 9-12 a.m., 1-5 p.m. 3532 S.A.B. $10.00 deposit holds your seat I THE EXAM SECRET SUCCESSFUL TECHNIQUES . r* FOR PASSING EXAMS 1. Southern California 27 2. Ohio State 7 3. Penn State 2 4. Michigan 5. Georgia 1 6. Texas 7. Kansas 8. Tennessee 19. Arkansas 10. Notre Dam e 11. Houston 8-0 8-01 8-0 8-1 7-0-2 7-1-1 8-1 7-1--I 7-2 740 636 571 545 530 359 330, 256 236 205 * Not included in price For information call 665-8489 1-5 p.m. t NOW-You can shine in Exami- nations and Life! Don't fail exams through ignorance of technique! "The Exam Secret" gives you ex- perience, knowledge needed to make good. It includes: magical lessons; essay is the key; year's master-plan, etc. Complete. 128 pages, Only $1 ppd. Money-back guarantee. EVERSOLE CO., BOX 10231 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 12. Purdue 7-2 110 13. Missouri 7-2 1101 14. Oklahoma 6-3 92 15. Alabama 7-2 , 65 16. Oregon State 6-3 601 17. Ohio University 9-0 54 18. California 6-2-1 46 19. Auburn 6-3 361 20. Wyoming 7-2 161 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Arizona, Arizona State, Army, Harvard, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Texas State, SMU, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, Yale. a Y x i i f c f g t I is u t f' c e ii p ball clash is rehashed. Friday last, the ,mighty Wolver- ine football initiates met, fought and defeated their counterparts from the University of Toledo, 12- 6. The game was one of those hard-fought clashes one would read about for years if it were played for the Big Ten title. But it wasn't, so everybody will forget it. Unless of course, they are true football fans. Who could forget that magnifi- cent scoring strike launched from the arm of baby Wolverine quarterback Dennis Connell to the waiting hands of flanker Glenn Doughty, 42 yards away? And when will the memory fade of the strong, crushing rushes contrib- uted by fullback Dave Zuccarelli (including a one yard smash for Michigan's second touchdown) to further inspire the Wolverine cause. Other offensive players of note were tailback Bill Taylor and split end Mike Oldham. The offensive line, while not spectacular, dis- played plenty of promise with Another offensive player worth space in this most excellent of journals is Bruce Elliott, son to Pete and nephew to Bump. He looks amazingly like his father and uncle when they were All- Americans twenty years ago. Elliott spelled Connell at the signal calling slot and led the fledgling Maize and Blue to their second touchdown. The scoring drive, 58 yards long, featured El- we left off on the offense, with Elliott. He led a defensive back- field consisting of himself, Tomo Darden (who has that George Hoey look when running with punts and kickoffs), John Seyferth (who also punts) and Preston Hen- ry. This unit, with work and ex- perience, could replace the grad- - uating -seniors in 'the varsity de- fensive backfield. The defensive front four pound- ed and thundered the sputtering Rockets for a minus one yard in the first half of Friday's clash, and a meager 71 in the second as the seond team saw plenty of action. Defensive ends John Cilluffo and Alden Carpenter tip the scales at only a slight bit over 200 pounds but are fast and tough. The two tackles, though, are awesome. Fred Gambeau is a 6'4" 250 pound behemoth and Tom Beckman 'crashes 6'6" and 245 pounds into the opposition. To top all of this off 6'6", 270 pound Leon Hart (son of Heisman Trophy winning Hart of Notre Dame) had to sit out the game with an in- jury, Linebackers Mike Keller, Mike Taylor and Dana Coin show great promise with Coin a field goal kicking prospect. The word to the men who know football is that Michigan scooped just about everyone in recruiting this year. Last week's perform- ance is proof of this assertion. Maybe that idiotic Big Ten rule that says no team can go two years a row to the Rose Bowl should be abolished. you've, read it in generation now hear them read it! STUDENTFACULTY Reading UGLI Multipurpose Room ThUrs ov.20 E8:00 p.m. refreshments U I fORD8 DODD SWift lIiTRAXIYTER A ANGLED DOUBLE CHEVRON CLEATS prevent side skids, give you extra tire mileage and a quiet ride. DEEP-CUT CENTER SLOTS have hundreds of sharp gripping edges, dig in for extra traction. 4 FULL PLY body gives you extra strength and safety. PINNED FOR STUDS by precision factory molding. Studded tires give you 155% more grip on Icy roads and packed snow than conventional tires. DAVE ZUCCARELLI (r - - -------- _ . - UNION-LEAGUE Want to see the latest in art? 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