PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1966 PAGE EIGHT THE MICNIbAN EIlEEN FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1966 ATTENTION STUDENTS All changes of address or telephone numbers (this includes numbers not recorded on registration forms) must be reported at 2226 Student Activities Bldg. by September 13, if it is to appear in the '66-67 STUDENT DIRECTORY. Bruhn Due for SecondNightmare THE JUNIOR CIRCUIT By JOEL BLOCK Fritz; but only Fritz has nailed a little color blind and tossed one H S., Neenah, Wis to a staff (e- down a starting job. out of ten passes into the eager pleted by promotions and the Jankowski led the almost non- hands of a defensive back. It death of 'assistant Clark Van Gal- . . C/ lt T17! --- -- ,..L---. A1_det fassatCakVnG l i*j SC U G jaexistent Badger rushing attack THE BIG TEN last year with 271 net yards from scrimmage. (Michigan's Ward had more than twice as much.) With If you were a Wisconsin football such unimpressive statistics it's football coach and had your best no wonder that Head Coach Milt seems please now h coach Bruhn wasnt too d with this performance and der. e has junior John Boya.iian tontcti-ing Interests Somebody's Hoping runner, passer, and scorer of 1965 returning to play this fall you'd feel confident and content and all those good things Big Ten coaches rarely feel, RIGHT? WRONG! Because your best run- ner, passer, and scorer are rem- nants of the worst Wisconsin team of the decade. The Triumphant Trio is com- Biuhn has switched to 6-2, 227- pound sophomore Wayne Todd in the fall scrimmages. Aerial Exchange If you talk to Burt, he'll tell you that he had the tenth best passing percentage in the nation last year. Very impressive. And so was the number of aerials the other guys caught. trying his luck with the first Then there's that catastrophic"rm eLrs ue r UI ingf e string backfield. schedule Wisconsin has to furrow The only really solid player of through this year. First there's By GRAYLE HOWLETT this returning threesome is tight the Iowa State Cyclones with top end Fritz His scoring total of 24 Big Eight quarterback Tim Van Pete Rozelle, wearing the perennial smile that makes even Hubert points was tops for Wisconsin Galder and nine other offensive Humphrey jealous, looked conspicuous without a ten-gallon hat as he scorers last year and is the most starters returning to improve their huddled between Tex Schramm, general manager of the NFL Dallas number of points ever scored by 5-4-1 record of last year. Then Cowboys, and Lamar Hunt, money man behind the AFL Kansas City a Wisconsin sophomore. they face John McKay's Trojans Chiefs. Star-Searching of Sotuhern California who should be formidable opposition even The pro football orator of never a discouraging word was about It doesn't seem like Bruhn is going to find any hope in his seven though All-American Mike Gar- to annouce that he would be the Commissioner of the newly merged returning linemen of last year's ret is gone. To climax their non- AFL-NFL, a match which only could have been made in heaven trampled squad. As early as the conference gaunhtlet. Bruhn's boys (Texas, to be sure). spring drills Milt switched Tony will host the Nebraska Cornhusk- The "ooh" and "ah" story of the summer was greeted with the Loukas, who played center every e onal championship by Alabama general recation that 'the NFL and AFL feud is dead, long live the game last year, to right tackle to he Oramnge By ANFL-AFL." Now both leagues could concentrate on the finer points shore up one of the bulging holes mn OrangeB l.of the game such as passing, blocking, and tackling and do away ... t~n ?nrln~e.+li 117e1 , 14-;i.ti ..ryouve got- a^ f_- la 1 'I, ,k } N t' "Y a DON'T CRAM!! prised of senior fullback Tom Five out of every ten times he Jankowski, junior quarterback threw the ball, Chuck hit a red Chuck Burt, and senior end Bill and white jersey; but when he got Start the Year Out Right!! in the Badger ine. Have enough problems yet, Coach? How about four rookie coaches to guide the rookies on the field? Bruhn has added coach- es Mike McGee (Duke), Roger French (Memphis State), Les Ritcherson (Moore H.S., Waco, Texas), and Harland Carl (Neenah problems to cope with. But there are a few people in Madison who are optimistic. They just built a new upper deck into Camp Ran- dall Stadium. providing seats for 1,310 more enthusiastic fans. Or 1.310 coaches. more Sunday morning STEAK AND SHAKE 1313 South University CHAR-BROILED SIRLOIN STEAK Potato Salad, Bread & Butter ...........$1.50 SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE Salad, Bread & Butter.............$1.30 s TI OPEN: Mon., Wed. and Thurs., 4 P.M. to 2 A.M. OPEN: Fri., Sat., Sun., Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tuesday) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE. 314 DETROIT ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. CARRY.OUT ORDERS ONLY-PHONE 665-2266 FREE DELIVERY BARBECUE CHICKEN AND RIBS FRIED CHICKEN SHRIMP AND FISH DINE OUT STUDENTS WELCOME BACK!! Now's your chance to get the THE "GREATEST PIZZA" at South U. Restaurant For your convenience-open 24 hours daily . Carry-out All Week . 662-4170 Breakfasts-Lunches-Dinners WELCOME! TO FIRESIDE LOUNGE 77HONDA Chinese and American Restaurant' I DOWNTOWN HONDA 310 E. Washington Returning Students Note! WE MOVED IN MAY I 3140 Packard NO 8-7488 311 South Main 662-4240 OPEN DAILY-]II A.M. to 1:30 A.M. OPEN SUNDAY-11 A.M. to 10 P.M. Closed Mondays, get the BEST food in town " PEA PODS . HONG SHU " CHINESE BEAN CAKES 0 CURRY POWDER Order for banquets, parties or any other combinations ~° Sour CusovtI &sEigne& oaod o'i u Oi%.groupsof 20 to 22 0 19REE ALL CRPTEDA ND UO.UTIFWLLt DE(OROTEV 00q$.,* Friday Nite Seafood Smorgasbord FOOD and LIQUOR SERVED OPEN 0 Mon.-Thurs.-1 1 :30-8 P.M. s Fri. & Sat.-1 1 :30-9 P.M. 0 Closed Sunday I with the current practice of rookies wearing their money belts as hip pads. But the war is far from over, only the battleground has shifted. Enter baseball (Yes, Commissioner Eckert, there is a sport called baseball), and professional football has a non-conference opponent. j Up to now, professional football and major league baseball have enjoyed a relatively harmonious relationship save for a few malcon- tents who insist that one of the two has to be the "national past- time." Those rallying behind "Win one for the Gipper" point out the upsurge in attendance, the fact that every kid is playing football, and that the annual title game draws a television audience second, only to the national conventions. While the drum-beaters shout "Slide, Kelley, slide," reverting to the irrevocable facts of increased attend- ance, that more kids than ever are swinging bats, and that the World Series draws a television audience second only to the national con- ventions. The argument is merely academic, and both sides are actually right. It used to be that at the first bee sting of spring everyone naturally thought of peanuts and popcorn,_and Sandy Koufax's hummer. And when you switched from sipping lemonade to apple cider, "rah, rahs" immediately filled the air along with Frank Gif- ford's description of a flag cut. But in this day and age when "the approach of the football season" is a misnomer because it never really ends (the Pro Bowl, the Coaches All-American game, the All-Star game, et al), the average fan is being asked more and more to make a choice and it is primarily for this reason that baseball and football are negotiating on a collision course. The NFL and AFL by the year 1970 will have expanded to 28 teams and will play an interlocking schedule. Obviously the present schedule of 14 games will have to be lengthened and the preliminary indication is a 16-game slate, conceivably more. Also consider that with the merger of the two leagues, certain rivalries will be intensi- fied. The past mythical game between the New York Jets and the New York Giants is now a reality. Those staticticians who argued in the past that the Oakland Raiders were better than their cohorts across the Bay, the San Francisco 49'ers, can now point to the score. To schedule all these rivalries would over strain the before mentioned 16-game season, so look for more exhibition games instead of the proposed cut. The question now becomes when can all these games be fitted into an already tight season. The answer is simple: they can't. Still this poses no problem because the football leagues can plan on opening camp a few weeks earlier, say in the middle of June as opposed to the usual mid-July target date. If you still don't smell the fire, let me point out that in Cleve- land there is an old adage probably uttered by Bill Veeck himself, that, "if the Indians are not a pennant contender by the time the Browns open camp, you can forget your million attendance." In Baltimore it's a lot easier: "You can forget your attendance as soon as Johnny Unitas uncorks his first spiral." If that's not a clear enough trail, consider that the start of the pro football season will have to be moved up to the beginning of September when the baseball season still has a good month to run. Add it all together and you have competition where you didn't have it before-off the field. Both sports will be fighting for newspaper space, television coverage, and the fan's buck. Still, you're probably saying that somehow some important ingredient is missing that would make a football-baseball war complete. You're right: it's money, that stuff which the AFL in- vented and produced in large quantities But money's there when you consider that most of the stadiums where the pro football teams play are also the baseball parks and baseball gets priority. There isthe proverbial powder keg. It used to be that the pro football leagues would schedule them- selves around the baseball schedule partly out of fear of competition but mainly because the parks were unavailable. Two years ago Art Modell, the owner of the Browns, wanted to hold his annual scrim- mage in the vast caverns of Cleveland Municipal Stadium instead of the more modest and confining Hiram College field, where the Browns train. Gabe Paul, president and general manager of the Indians, quickly put a halt to Modell's plans and that was that. Score one for baseball. But when you consider that an expanded schedule plus a 28- team league will mean more games seeking a place to play, then pro football might try to live without baseball instead of with it. With these two heavyweight opponents ready to go and a guaranteed record gate assured, you have a fight that no promoter would turn down. Unfortunately, only the fan loses. ALL CAMPUS BOWLING LEAGUE Forming Now OPENINGS for Individuals and Teams 3 a q' I iV L ., i BAR-open 'til 2 nightly I Our Most Popular British Import . _-___ , .4 *VELCOME TO Delicatessen Restaurant Between University Hospital and St. Joseph Hospital-I 030 E. 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