Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, ,October 23, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 23, 1969 SNew uty Idea from London! Scholl Exercise Sandals! The ex- clusive toe-grip-pro- vides natural exercise-for your feet. Tones your mus- cles. Actually makes every step a beauty treatment. Available in bone and red, flat or raised heel. $1095 Exercise Sandals MAST'S 2 STORES: 217 S. Main 619 E. Liberty By The Associated Press Multicolored armbands, ex- pressions of sympathy for the University of Wyoming's Negro athletes, will be part of the uniform Saturday for the San Jose State College football team. San Jose State affirmed yes- terday that it will play Wyom- ing at Laramie Saturday, end- ing speculation of a game boy- cott by San Jose. In a statement, San Jose. team spokesmen said the players would wear the armbands to dramatize the plight of 14 black athletes who were dismissed from the Wyoming squad just beforehthe Wyoming-Brigham Young Universty game. The 14 had worn black arm- bands as a protest of alleged racialhpolicies at the Morman church school. Spokesmen for the San Jose team included end Tony Jack- son and halfback Frank Slay- ton, both Oakland Negroes, and ends Glenn Massengale of Bar- stow, Calif.. and Mark Woods of Fullerton, Calif., both whites. ring -the Jackson read the prepared ed themselvest statement, which said in part: for the 14, said "we do recognize the difficult the 14 Negro pl situation facing black athletes lated when W on the Wyoming football squad. Lloyd Eaton p Our team has had the experi- from joining a pr ence of attempting to reconcile ing a game with: individual conscience and the San Jose Stat desire to play football. refused to show "The plight of the black ath- with BYU last se lete who is a member of a team similar to the W which scheduled Brigham Young versy. BYU has University is understandable, we all its football g believe. Jose. "As a visible symbolic ges- Meanwhile, in ture of our understanding of the Western Athletic feeling about BYU, all members nounced it wou of the team will wear multi- situation at a r colored armbands expressing our of the conferenc concern for all racial minori- 3-5 in Denver. ties, not just on the football Wiles Hallock, field, but within the greater missioner who or society." publicist at Wyo Earlier in the day, 85 Univer- cussions would sity of Wyoming students had whole problemt sent a letter to the San Jose ''Whenever campus newspaper urging San hember meets B Jose to "boycott the game and ard procedure t support our cause." andemrnedreto Signers of the letter, who call- of demonstration battle rages the Committee civil rights of ayers were via- yoming Coach revented them otest over play- Brigham Young. e black players up for a game . eason in actions 'yoming contro- since cancelled ames with San n Denver, the Conference an- uld discuss the egular meeting ce council Nov. the WAC com- nce was a sports oming, said dis- : refer "to the of membership conference." ra conference YU, it is stand-j have one kind n," Hallock said. ed, however, no talk of dis- from the WAC. the conference n all directions Ay honest with said there may ines conference gree to "whichI may help void some of the more drastic things which have hap- pened." In Laramie, the Committee for 14 said it planned to picket a Wyoming Alumni Association meeting Friday night and was to hold a meeting last night. At Tuesday night's meeting, a spokesman said the committee adopted resolutions which con- demned Eaton's actions, asked for reinstatement of the black players and to "remove uncon- stitutional and racist policies" at the University of Wyoming. PRO SPORTS: gilt's 43 topples Lakers By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Wilt Chamber- lain's 43 pointsa- six of Los An- gels' last 10 - and the ball-hawk- ing of Jerry West and John Egan paced the Lakers past Cincinnati 16-109 last night in a National Basketball Association contest. Chamberlain tallied 24 of his points in the first half, helping the Lakers to a 58-48 halftime lead, and then converted crucial shots in closing minutes after the Royals closed to within a point at 97-96. SAtlanta dow ns Hacks ATLANTA - Jeff Mullins' 20- foot jump shot with seven seconds to play provided San Francisco with a 94-93 National Basketball Association victory over Atlanta last night. Mulhins' clutch shot followed a 15-footer by Lou Hudson that had put Atlanta ahead 93-92 with 17 seconds left. Flyers squeeze Leafs TORONTO - Andre Lacroix scored his first three goals of the National Hockey League season to lead Philadelphia to a 4-3 victory --its first of the season-over the Toronto Maple Leafs Wednesday night. Lacroix scored early in the firstE and second periods in helping the4 Flyers to a 2-1 lead, then provided the clincher at 7:39 of the final period, minutes after teammate Lav Morison scored his first mark- er of the year. Aga inst TeWa/ Phil Seymour's longest season By ERIC SIEGEL HE STOOD slightly off to the right of the action; his hands stuck deep inside his pockets; his Maize and Blue jacket with the cloth M embroidered on it strangely conspicuous amid the flurrry of white and gold jerseys that moved on the field be- side him. He looked at the sky, and then gingerly bent his knees against the cold autumn air. He was Phil Seymour, and these were familiar poses for him this season: standing to the right of the action, looking at the sky, gingerly bending his knees. But the standing, the looking and the bending were more than just poses. They were symbols, too - symbols of a foot- ball player waiting to hear when his injured knee would be well enough for him to play again. FOR SEYMOUR, the waiting had seemingly ended two weeks ago, when he pulled on his number 91 jersey and prac- ticed for the first time in five weeks. For Michigan football fans, the waiting had seemingly ended last Saturday in East Lansing, when Seymour, an All-Big Ten defensive end last year as a junior, played his first game of the season. And then Tuesday, the announcement came the Phil Seymour will be lost to the team for the remainder of the season and will undergo surgery for the removal of cartilage in his right knee sometime in the next two weeks. "I don't know any of the medical details," Seymour told me during Tuesday's practice. "You'll have to get those from (team physician) Dr. (Gerald) O'Conner. "I just felt the knee snap on a punt cover in Saturday's game," he continued simply. NOW* "It didn't feel too bad, though, so I didn't say anything and STUDENTS Find Out What Is Happening on YOUR Campus! TUNE IN THE NEW "CAMPUS NEWS" 8:30 A.M. Oil 650 Starting October 27 DON'T FORGET OUR 7 & 11 P.M. NEWS Hie emphasize there would bei affiliating BYUI Hallock said1 has to "look in and be perfect]; each other." He be some guideli members can ag LETTERS State coverage lambasted --READ AND USE DAILY CLASSI FI EDS- CENTRAL- STUDENT JUDICIARY Announces Open Petitioning Grads and Undergrads for SEVEN SEATS Sign up for interviews at SGC offices, 1 st floor, SAB Petitions due Monday, November 3, 5:00 P.M. To the Editor: YOU HAVE AN excellent col- lege newspaper with an excellent reputation. But after 'reading the accounts leading up to and the summary of t h e Michigan-MSU football game, one Is inclined to wonder why you let your sports department embarrass you as they' do. In general, I'm appalled t h a t your sports writers would allow their emotions to so apparently, interfere with their reasoning.! The pre-game stories a n d col- umns were loaded with half- truths and innuendos about MSU's agricultural programs, a vicious! slur that bordered on libel regard- ing Duffy Daugherty, and a wierd account of how a woman wasn't PAUL CAMELET MASTER TAILOR for MEN and WOMEN alternations and remodeler spe- cialties in shorteninq ladies coats, slacks, and skirts. No longer with Camelet Bros.. in business for himself. 1103 S. UNIVERSITY above the druq store 663-4381 going to be allowed in the Spartan Stadium pressbox because State's athletic history is obviously in- ferior to Michigan's. THEIR ACCOUNT of the game itself looked as if it were a take- home assignment in a high school journalism class. There were num- erous paragraphs loaded with complicated explanations of how the Wolverines handed the game to MSU through errors. This be- comes ludicrous when o n e con- siders that there was anotherI team on the field that was ob-E viously forcing those errors, and,1 incidentally, playing superior ball. I can see where the Daily would obviously be somewhat biased in its appraisal of MSU. But by what naturally overjoyed with the vic- tory over Michigan's Wolverines. Their poor performance might well have been due to "the inex- perience of the sophomores." yet are we to believe that the executive and associate sports editors are as immature as they would have us believe the Wolvertnes are? OBVIOUSLY happy with the prospect of a front page byline, your sports editors endeavored to make a lasting impression on thel readers. We don't know how the! U of M readers reacted, but weI here at East Lansing were dis- gusted. "Elements of immaturity" in the play of the Spartans these past two seasons has often been disheartening to say the least, yet kept playing. "Then I went to practice on Monday and I couldn't run on it. It felt like it did at the beginning of the season. The x doctors looked at it and said I needed an operation. That's about all." Judging from his perform- ance in the last half of t h e Michigan - Michigan S t a t e game, it would have been im- possible to tell Seymour w a s playing on a knee that would require surgery within t w o weeks. The tall, strapping de- fensive end made his f i r s t Phil Seymour perverted sense of fair play canj we cannot remember the school you condone this type of treat-: paper used to launch such a vici- ment of a major sports event? It ous attack on the team. does nothing but detract from y o u r journalistic reputation. ; While fans are apt to desert a What's worse, some of it must not~ losing team, it would 'seem that a even make sense to you. paper of The Daily's reputation should be able to present an ob- Uti dnnia ed re ort of the \1 ANN ARBOR can make Prague' look bad in comparison when it comes to reporting anything vag- uely associated with MSU sports. If it weren't for some of the "out- side" newspapers, your readers might never realize what actually' happened. What actually happened was that Duffy's boys beat yours - again. No amount of superfluous name calling is going to change! that fact. You do your readers a disservice by implying that if they yell "cow college" enough times it will all go away. -Thomas Garrett Oct. 21 Iiniaturity' To the Editor: "ELEMENTS OF immaturity", were not only evident on the Tar- tan-Turf here at East Lansing Saturday, but also in the Michigan Daily the following Sunday. As students at MSU, we were ,jecrive an u 1Use ptJ iti game, no matter what the out- come. IT IS HOPED, at least for Bo Schembechler's sake, that none of his boys read The Daily, for if they did, we fear he will have a hard time finding enough members of his third string willing to play for Michigan. We personally know of very capable people on The Daily's sport stall, and hope the authors of Sundays articles might remem- ber another song that Bob Dylan never wrote for U of M and its football team: Come writers and critics who prophesize With your pen, And keep your eyes wide The chance won't come again. -Elliot Frank -John Cohn -Zygi Goldenberg Oct. 18 tackle of the game and of the season midway through the third quarter, when he grabbed MSU's Frank Foreman from behind after Foreman had swept 14 yards on an end-around down to the Michigan 31. Later in the same quarter, with Michigan trailing 23-3 and State holding the ball second and six on their 33, Foreman tried the same play. This time he ran right into Seymour, who stopped him for a four yard gain. The Spartans ran their next play at the center of the line. The ball carrier was Don Highsmith. The tackler was Phil Seymour. The gain was only one yard, and the Spartans had to punt the football. IN ALL SEYMOUR had a hand in seven tackles. Four were solo tackles, the other three, assists. His total was the fourth best on the team, and his overall play earned him a place in Coach Bo Schembechler's Victor's Club. Said Schembechler, "Seymour probably didn't even realize he was hurt in the heat of the game. He was really keyed up." For Seymour, getting keyed up for a big game is nothing unusual. He was keyed up enou' h during last year's Michigan- Michigan State game to make 14 tackles and knock down a pass at the line of scrimmage in helping the Wolverines to a 28-14 victory. He was keyed up enough, too, to make 15 un- assisted tackles in the season opener against California last year. It was efforts like those that mada Seymour the team's lead- ing tackler last season and an All-Big Ten selection at defensive end. And it was efforts like those that made Coach Schem- bechler and the Wolverines wait hopefully for the return of Phil Seymour in the second half of the 1969 season. Now, with Seymour's return come a-nd gone in the space of three hours on a single afternoon ,everyone will have to wait until next year for the real return of Phil Seymour. Schem- bechler is confident the Big Ten will grant the senior end an extra year of eligibility, since he will have only played in one game all season, and since that game was in the first half of the year. "If I'm eligible to play," Seymour said the other day, "and I'm physically all right and think I can play well, then I'll play." Said Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler, "Phil Seymour would play a good game if he went out on the field on one leg. He's that type of competitor." i C t .,, P y \ .. ,,_ i WANTED . . . 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In areas. of enemy activity-an aircraft with track and search radar that can locate, identify and lock on to the target, even in zero visibility.. . the A6A Intruder, and advanced versions. In early warning emergencies-an aircraft that can extend the eyes and ears of a Navy task force at sea through radar and computers that alert interceptor aircraft to impending enemy attacks ... the E2A Hawkeye, and advanced versions. Far above the earth, a satellite that can discover more about the evolution of the universe ... the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory. 1969-1970 STUDENT D IRECTORY ON SALE IF YOU LEAD A QUIET LIFE Then the DA I LY DISPLAY ADVERTISING STAFF is the place for you! _ _ _ _ r __ __ _. _