Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 22, 1969 14 BLACKPLAYE DRS()Dil OcHE eOEOAr2 Wyoming gridiron showdown - discipline or dissent By LEE KIRK Daily News Analysis Not since the days of President Warren Harding, Interior Secretary Albert Fall and the infamous Teapot Dome scandal has the placid state of Wyoming seen such an uproar, The political and civil rights of fourteen black football players h a v e been prostituted by Wyoming football coach Lloyd Eaton and the university ad- ministration and every remotely concerned group in the state is getting into the act. The fourteen were suspended after wear- ing black armbands as part of a Black Students Alliance protest against the rac- ial policies of the Mormon Church and Brigham Young University, the Cowboys' Saturday gridiron opponent. The players had talked to Wyoming mentor Lloyd Eaton about wearing the armbands in symbolic protest and were in- formed that if they did so they would be violating an alleged rule against partici- pation in any political demonstrations and would be subject to dismissal from the team. The players went ahead and wore the bands and Coach Eaton announced that they were off the team. WYOMING IS tlie least populous state in the country, and it is therefore some- what surprising that the school has recent- ly emerged as a national football power. The team's success can hardly be attri- buted to home grown talent, for most high schools in Wyoming are too small to sup- port football teams. Eaton and the Cow- boys success can be attributed directly to highly successful recruiting, and their pitch must be an awfully good one to lure competent gridiron talent to Laramie. No matter how nicey-nice one may want to be about it, football players for the Cow- boys came to Wyoming primarily to play football for Eaton. No matter how smart or dumb they may be. their primary mo- tive in choosing to go to school in Lara- mie had to be football. To some, this might seem like prostitution, but arguing this point is purposeless. THE REAL CONCERN raised in the suspension of the fourteen players is whe- ther they also have to sell their minds to play the game. The questioning of estab- lished authority has spread to all areas of collegiate life in this decade, and ath- letics are no exception. The image of the clean, crewcut athlete is being overthrown. Joe Namath and his Fu Manchu, L:>w Al- cindor and Ken Harrelson with their mod, hip styles, and sideburns on athletes in almost every sport. The rebellion extends far deeper than external appearances. The old notion that a student-athlete owed first responsibility to his team was apparently dying, but it has been resur- rected in the foothills of the Rockies. The assumption that a player could live his own life off the field if he fulfilled his obligations on it is still apparently a myth in too many places. Too many members of the coaching pro- fession still firmly believe that discipline is directly proportional to hair length and dedication to football is antithetical to any form of political expression, no matter how subtle or symbolic it may be. While several Michigan captains did sign a let- ter to The Daily in support of the Viet - nam moratorium, their action appears to be sadly atypical. The roll and extent of disciplinw is not viewed by athletes as it is by their coaches. The emergence of militancy by some black athletes, for example, has caught many coaches completely unprepared. Oregon State football coach Dee Andros stirred up a hornet's nest when he ordered a black piayer to shave off a moustache in the off-season. Washington coach Jim Owens admits lie doesn't know exactly what to do, and his job is in jeopardy because he no longer produces wvinning squads. TO VIEW the problem as racial is to understate the increasingly evident con- flict of values. The old idea that an athlete should view his coach as a marine pri- vate views his sergeant no longer is uni- versally accepted. A group of Maryland football players complained to the athletic director a few years back that the head coach was being overly strict. The coach was shortly there- after dismissed. Bill Wehrwein. an out- standing middle distance runner for Mich- igan State, was kicked off a team bus bound for the Drake relays this past winter because he had not gotten a hair- ct. The list of similar incidents goes on and on. And now invisible battle lines are be- ing drawn - athletes feeling their rights suppressed and coaches feeling their dis- cipline undermined. The events this past weekend at Laramie are by far the most unreal to date. It is hard to understand what Eaton hoped to accomplish by the dismissal of the players, for it is doubtful chat Wyoming as a university or Wyoming as a football factory gained anything at all by his acts. The university's role as a haven of free inquiry and expression has been badly smeared, and from a purely practical standpoint, Eaton has done ser- ious damage to all Cowboy teams, both present and future. Black athletes on other Wyoming squads are still working out, but they have ex- pressed disgust with the action and there is no guarantee that they will stay on their teams. THE ISSUE has already mushroomed into a political football, and Eaton is be- ginning to feel the squeeze. He readily ad- mits that he wouldn't be at all surprised if he is fired, adding that he is not con- sidering rescinding his action because he feels that this would be unfair to the other members of the team, now all white. The University Board of Trustees, in an emergency Friday night meeting with Wyoming Governor Stan Hathaway, voted to support Eaton, and alumni and coach- ing groups in the state have rallied to the cause, The faculty senate, however, voted to ask Eaton to make the suspensions temporary until an investigation can be made, and the student government has frozen all student fee money normally ear- marked for the athletic department. The snowballing effect has reached all the way to the University of New Mexico, where the local ACLU has asked that university to reconsider its membership in the West- ern Athletic Conference (BYU and Wyom- ing are also members), questioning whether the University's interests can be w e 11 served by association with an organization that includes racist institutions. One can only wonder what inner fear motivated Eaton to lash out as he did, totally oblivious to the consequences. If the players are kept off the team, which unfortunately looks more than likely right now, it will be a setback not only for the Wyoming 14. but for college athletes any- where desiring to express themselves on political questions. The tragedy, however, cuts far deeper, for there is no way that anyone or any group can profit by this mass martyrdom. All involved will suffer. 1i 'il OFFENSIVE COG: ATTENTION SENIORS A representative of the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company will be in Ann Arbor on TUESDAY, OCT. 28th to give a free comprehen- sive (2 hrs. sales aptitude examination to sen- ors interested in high paying careers in sales management. For appointment call: PLACEMENT SERVICES 763-1363 Otis keys OSU's attack By MARC LEVENTHAL But Otis was not one of those Mattel and Remco were not con- sophomores and amid the enthu- tent with their Pentagon approved, siasm exuberated for the game, hE miahf an ncinfp ffl T guaranteed-to-decimate, run of the mill war weapons and toys. They have now, through joint ef- fort. come up with the ultimate in destruction: The Annihilate Your Opponent Woody Hayes Football Machine. There's even a three year patent pending on it. It comes with full guarantee not to break down. The only constraint you will en- counter is in finding someone to play with you. After all, it is a rough game! As in every machine, there are vital cogs, some more vital than others. These cogs, of course, mustI be kept well oiled. Jim Otis de- cided he wanted to be the fullback cog of this "game." After all, what else is there toudo ifyou're from Celina, Ohio but hunt, fish, and play games. But take heart. For the purity of the plastic world we can trust in Jim's integrity. He has three sisters. mi gnt get ost in the snu ie. tI actuality, camouflaged under all the advertising done for junior quarterback sensation Rex Kern, Otis can be your secret weapon. How can you ignore 1968 totals of 985 yards in 219 carries (4.5 y'ards per carry). 17 touchdowns, and 102 points, all OSU records? You can even fool your friends who come to play with you. Otis caught 10 passes last season for 82 yards. Even after a season marked by such individual and team play, this is one toy that lasts longer than it takes you to get it home, or get over the shock. "The coach (Hayes) keeps the pressure on, heven if the other team's don't." So go the thoughts of this power- ful fullback. The little old toymaker from Columbus still has shirt sleeves into things. Thus, Otis continue to yards in 103' rushing attempts for an average of 4.4 yards and seven touchdowns, leading the Buckeye machine and Kern. who has scored six times so far this season. Otis has excellent quickness and hits holes a$ fast as any Buckeye fullback in many years. He is very strong through the should- ers. to which many an opposing tackle can attest. Being s t r o n g physically, he experienced no let- up or "bad" game last year, scor- ing at least one touchdown in nine of ten contests, missing only against Purdue. "With our early leads I'm not playing as much as last year," sighed Otis. It's more like playing less and enjoying it more. We must keep our battle scarred piec- es healthy. There's only so much you can do with plastic. As a pre-dental student he'll have to compromise two futures. somewhat, if he is drafted into faro football. "I'll just have to work that out," realizes Otis. Jim Otis is certainly a well oiled cog of the OSU machine, and its gears will continue to run smoothly as long as he does. Won't you come out and play? 1{. Electrical Engineers Daiy-Eric Per-uux MICHIGAN SAFETY' Tom Curtis blocks the path of Ohio State's all-American running back Jim Otis during last year's Wolverine- Buckeye debacle in Columbus. Otis scored a plethora of touch- downs in Ohio State's 50-14 victory. SUMMERN JOBS A BROAD IAESTE offers jobs worldwide for students in the sciences, architecture, and engineering. MASS MEETING 7:30 P.M.-THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1969 ASSEMBLY HALL, MICHIGAN UNION International Asscciation -for the Exchange of Stu dents for- T-chnical Exoerience wear down. Last season he logged more playing time than any other member of the Ohio State squad 283 minutes). But as crucial as Otis is to the machine, he could still get lost among all the other pieces. Coach Woody Hayes,the originatoiof the game has been known to note that ". . . last year we caught a few people by surprise with our outstanding sophomores, but every one will be ready for us this year." Eighteen regulars are returning to that national championship team, eight on offense and ten on defense. So you don't have to woriy about r'eplaceable parts. But Jim must be acquired as an prove his durability. After OSU's extra. He is a mighty big pack- first four "exercises" of the season age, you know. But as a six foot, "TCU, Washington, MSU. and 214 pound senior he also will not Minnesota). Otis has gained 452 (uridde Iitski ugs Ever notice the fools in yellow jackets running around at home football games? Sometimes known as the football managers they are in reality glorified waterboys whose chief function, aside from picking up the player's sweaty clothes after the game, is to chase loose foot- balls trying to save the athletic department $22. Known far and wide for their incompetence, the managers have shown their stupidity many times over. Don Canham applied for a Federal Poverty Loan to replace them, but was refused because poverty of intelligence was ruled insufficient grounds for a grant. Not content to be incompetent in only one field of endeavor the managers have decided to try playing football. In their infinite idiocy they have challenged the mighty Libels to a football game to be played before 10.1001 sleeping fans in the Michigan Stadium. As always the Libels are ready for the opposition. They considered adding a few new plays for the contest but since three of his players are in jail and the rest are sleeping off hangovers Coach Buster "Cowboy" Block decided to forget practice for the week. i I C Y. ,. 3f. MICHIGAN at Minnesota Michigan State at Iowa Illinois at Ohio State ti ,'1 V AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Northwestern at Purdue Indiana at Wisconsin Washington at Oregon Cornell at Yale Virginia at Navy Wake Forest at N. Carolina UCLA at Stanford Ohio U. at Penn State Texas Tech at SMU Texas A&M at Baylor Oklahoma State at Nebraska Oklahoma at Kansas State Missouri at Colorado ,Mississippi at Houston Kentucky at Georgia Tech Pennsylvania at Princeton DAILY LIBELS at Football Managers Your abilities and knowledge are impor- tant to Southern California Edison. Come work with us and enjoy the new life happening here in Southern California. There are sports of every type and enter- tainment ranging from Hollywood scenes to renowned museums: Dozens of colleges and universities are near at hand. We need nev. ideas, new techniques and sound planning for projects necessary to serve the enormous electrical po, er requirements of Central and Southern California. These projects will cost approximately S1 billion during the next three years. During this period we will build or participate with other utilities in the development and construction of approx- imately 3,300,000 kilowatts of generat- ing capacity. That's a lot of kilowatts - about one-third as much, in fact, as our total capacity today. at the Four Cor ners a n Plant in New Mexico. A new 500,000-volt A.C. transmission line from Four Corners to Southern Cali- fornia was completed early in 1969. Spanning 650 miles, it makes a mighty leap over the Colorado River. The Mohave Generating Station in Clark County, Nevada will have Pwo 790,000 kilowatt units. A 275-mile slurry pipeline will deliver coal fuel to the plant from Arizona. Edlson is alo) active in the advanced technologies of EHV transmission, both A.C. and D.C. We're looking even further ahead to such direct conversion meth- ods as fuel cells, thermionics thermo- electrics and magneichydrodynamics. It takes plenty of talent to make this kind of progress. We're prepared to pay "elI for it. And we're prenared to offer advancement, and to nick up the ta for work on advanced denrees, Think You Deserved an A Instead of that C-plus? Sick of the Army surplus food served at South Quad? Send your complaints on any subject to this column and the best will be printed each week. Write to: CRAIG WOLSON Retail Advertising Mgr. THE MICHIGAN DAILY A "In'tk A- -JC. ir yCouw'ere a waysnea a wnen yo needed asa .'ourd ne one in . 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