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September 24, 1966 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1966-09-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PA GE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAIUV

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24.1966

PAGE SIX THE MICHIC~AN DAII,'V SATTJRDAV gFPTI~M1U~'R 9&. 1~n~

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Michigan

Set

To

By JIM TINDALL . Last week's win over Washing-
Associate Sports Editor ton State means game experience
Special To The Daily and confidence to Coach Ray Will-
BERKELEY - The Michigan scy's team, but he explained in his
team was met at thriving Oakland office yesterday, "Michigan poses
airport yesterday, by a group of a great many more problems to
Cal sweethearts known as "The our defense than Washington
Oski Dolls", whose job it Is to State did. They have a great pass-
dispense oranges and good will to ing combination as well as inside
deplaning visiting teams. power and outside speed."
The most unsurfer-like "Dolls" Michigan came to town being
embarked on a filibuster of Cali- billed in the local paper as "The
fornia fight songs that stalled Big Ten Bulls . . . A typical Big
momentarily when Dick Vidmer, Ten team, the Wolves are big,
eager to stretch travel-tightened tough, and swift. Besides Vidmer
muscles, flashed his own orange, and Clancy they have brilliant!
on which he had carefully penned backs in swift Carl Ward, Jack
"FLORIDA," as he passed through Fisher (that's right, Jack), Ernest
the reception line. rd Sharpe (sometimes known as Er-
"Oski", resident unbearded bear nie), and Jim Detwilier (who
mascot, " watched over Cal from looks just like Jim Detwiler)."
the ;sky," as the song goes, and
brought home the first Golden As for Clancy-Vidmer, Willseyj
Bear conference victory, a full two commented, "We can't really ex-.
weeks before classes started; how- pect to stop a receiver completely,;
ever, little else besides football is but what we can do is to try tol
going full tilt in Berkeley, as evi- control the passing by dictating
denced by the fact that Cal's re- what the conditions will be. Somej
fusal to readmit Mario Savio in teams complete 15-20 passes ai
August went unprotested. game without winning."1

MICHIGAN
Clayt Wilhite
Ray Phillips
Henry Hanna
Joe Dayton
Don Bailey
Jim Hribal
Jack Clancy
Dick Vidmer
Ernie Sharpe
Carl Ward
Dave Fisher

March
The Lineups
OFFENSE
LE
LT
LG
C
m RG
RT
RE
QB
LH
RH
FB

Against

CALIFORNIA
John Beasley
Ed White
John Schmidt
John Frantz
John Johnston
Duane Mayfield
Jerry Bradley
Dan Berry
Rick Bennett
George Gearhart
Frank Lynch

California

man played one minute of college lugged the ball 14 times for 39
football until last Saturday. Cali- yards in last week's game. While
fornia gained 147 yards in total these figures aren't impressive,
offense a week ago, but Willsey ex- Bennett had to pick up all of that
plained that couldn't "open up" yardage by himself since the Cal
his attack because of the tight linemen simply could not open any
score. Saturday Willsey will rely holes. Bennett, a sophomore trans-
on "several things to keep Michi- fer from arch-rival Stanford,
gan off balance. Our people are could make the Indians squirm a
not big enough to maul Michigan. little this season if he gets a little
In fact, it might be the other way help from the front line. When
around." he gets loose, he is reputed to have
Golden Bear quarterback Dan "halfback - speed and fullback
Berry has yet to complete a pass, power.
but last year he gave Michigan Besides the "B boys", "Oski"
plenty to think about. Triple- and the Golden Bears appear to
threat Berry said yesterday, "We have very little power on the of-
will move against them and we will fense, and they go into the game
pass against them. Being able to as 11-point underdogs, the same
run against them last year makes as last year, when Michigan won,
me think that we can do it again 10-7.
Son Saturday," Michigan produce dealers will
Teepee Refugee be interested in reading on Sun-
The other half of what Cali- day whether Vidmer can prove
fornia advertises as the "B boys" that his "Florida" orange is better
is sophomore Rick Bennett, a than any bearded orange that
powerfully built 203-pounder, who they can grow in California.

While Willsey declined to com-
ment on the question of double
coverage for Clancy, Wayne (the
Blade) Stewart, 6-7, 195 pounds,
will get the man-to-man call after
the coin toss, but this is subjectI
to change if things get out of,
hand.
If Clancy and Vidmer aren't'
enough to keep him busy, Will-
sey is also tossing around the
idea that Michcigan passing willI
be primarily a threat while the

real Wolverine strategy involves
breaking Carl Ward loose. "If he
gets past our line, I seriously doubt
that we have anyone who could
catch him. Our plan is to try and
bottle him up somehow on the
line, said Willsey while gesturing
as if he had a string puzzle on
his hands.
Besides Michigan's offense, Will-
sey is doing some real worrying
about his own. From tackle tc
tackle on the front wall, not one

1 . .. _.- ..

I

ONLY AT BERKELEY:
Football and Feathers Fail To Mingle

By CHUC1K VETZNER #
Sports Editor
Special To The Daily
BERKELEY - Every landmark
has its own kind of marker. TheI
Berkeley campus needed no spe-
cial welcome greeting or slogan
to identify it. A small store with
an enormous rubric billboard made
the announcement suddenly. Read
the sign, "William B. Brown-Ball
Bond Service."
And suddenly there you are,
right in the middle of the un-
manned mountain among multi-
versities. The place where clean-
liness is next to Godliness .c. on
the list of taboos.
Fact says that one of the coun-
try's ten best dressed women is in
the student body. So is the reign-
ing Miss Universe. They must feel
comfy as Lady Bird at the Na-
tional Outdoor Advertising Con-
vention. The big fashion trend
seems to be away from the Beatle-
Dylan look. The 'in' crowd now
has an affection for Sitting Bull
styling, which includes a feathered
hat, western jacket, and mocasins
or bare feet.
Egyptian, Anyone?
Loin-cloths haven't caught on
yet, but they could be the next
really big fad. As everyone knows,
anything goes at Berkeley.
What doesn't go particularly
well is football. Opinions vary, but
it doesn't seem that enthusiasm
for a Saturday afternoon of pea-
nuts, punts, and percussion moves
people the way it does in the Big
Ten or the other West Coast
schools.
"There's just too much politicsj
'for anyone to get hepped up about
football," claimed a bearded-bare-
footer who used to attend Mich-
igan State (no, 'he wasn't Dick
Kenney). "I'm moderately inter-
ested, in sports," he continued. "I
have a friend who's trying to get
me tickets for the 49'er games."
Cal coach Ray Willsey claims
that interest is there, however.
"We sell general athletic tickets
for about ten or 15 dollars and
last year 13,000 out of 15,000 un-
dergrads bought tickets."
One for the Price of Two I
The admisison cards actually
sell for $26. Whether or not Coach
Willsey overestimated the ticket?
response by the same percentage

fie underestimated the cost, the in- don't do, but everybody

knows er can avoid being wowed by its

i
I
;
.t
, I
.+
t'
i
s,
t ,
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t'
i t

terest is not awe-inspiring. Last about it at Berkeley." cosmopolitan flavor. Just as in-
year, the campus' biggest Viet Nam The fellow was being modest. triguing was a Student Union no-
rally was held at the same time as Berkeley might not do it differ- tice announcing a seminar on per-
the big game against Stanford. ently but it goes on a grander suasion and manipulation at Big
The game sold out, but the rally scale. Cal is not a humble pace-' Sur. the leading fun spot on the
also drew a swarm. setter. It's the Waldorf setting coast.
What Berkeley does have is a policy for the chain of Holiday The campus itself jumps too.
special kind of spirit that must Inns. The university goes on the quarter
somehow be the result of being Geography helps. Across the Bay system this year and classes won't
Big Campus On Country. "What- is San Francisco, creator of the start for another week. But in-
ever we do makes the papers," one beatnik and keeper of Tony Ben- amous ou Hall as one
student said proudly. "We might nett's heart. It's a storybook town, again dotted with chairs, tables,
not do anything other schools, and only the most loyal New York- over completely), and garrulous
souls who will gab about any issue.

Make this your year to
Y MAHA
Swing into Spring on a Yamaha Newport 50. This lively one has-
all the conveniences. Step-thru frame, 3-speed gearbox, auto-
matic clutch and optional electric .;tarter. And how about that
price! The Newport 50 is the lowest priced way to Yamaha. It's
the easiest way to enter the Swinging World. And it's safe too
... if you can. ride a bicycle, you can ride a Yamaha. Come on.
Come in and let us show you why our Yamahas, with proven oil
injection, are the top-selling 2-strokes in the U.S.
since 1887
YAMAHA (
INTERNATIONAL C6RPORATION
Discover the Swinging World of Yamaha at
N ICHOLSON CYCLE SALES
224 S. First 662-7409
Daily Classified Are Great!

I

Major League Standings

I

AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB

NATIONAL LEAGUE

x-Baltimore 95
Detroit 85
Minnesota 84
Chicago 80
Cleveland 77
Californiay 76
Kansas City 71
Boston 70
Washington 68
New York 66
x-Clinched pennant.

59
69
70
74
78
78
84
86
86
88

;617 -
.552 10
.545 11
.519 6
.497 18
.494 19
.458 241~
.449 26
.442 27
.429 29

Los Angeles
Pittsburgh
San Francisco
Atlanta
Philadelphia
St.. Louis
Cincinnati
Houston
New York
Chicago

W L
91 62
89 65
86 67
82 72
82 72
79 74
73 .79
67 87
63 91
56 99

Pct. GB
.595 -
.578 2 lr
.562 5
.532 9
.532 9!.4
.516 12
.480 17 i
.435 241
.409 28?!.
.361 36

Sample conversation:
Beret : He committed -acrim
against humanity. He has to die.
Commoner: You mean you sup-
port Ronald Reagan (Berkeley's
biggest villain since Herbie Phil-
brick) and want capital punish-1
ment? Why don't you just put him
in jail?
Beret (screeching after a long,
woefull look): Put Batista in jail!
That's (shudder) liberal!!
No doubt about it, Berkeley has
class. Even the buttons are bet-
ter. One beauty available in four
seductive colors urges, "If it
I moves, fondle it." A bold purple
informs, "It melts in your mind,
not in your hand."
And where else can you find
a popular drinking establishment
known as the "Steppenwolf."

4

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Boston 2, New York 1
Minnesota 12, Detroit 4
Kansas City 2, Cleveland 0
Washington 5, Chicago 4'
California 2, Baltimore 0
TODAY'S GAMES
Baltimore at California (n)
Cleveland at Kansas City (n)
Detroit at Minnesota
Chicago at Washington
Boston at New York (n)

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Los Angeles 4-4, Chicago 0-2
Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 4 (12 inn)
Cincinnati 7, New York 0
Pittsburgh 3, Atlanta 0
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
Los Angeles atCl Y.ago
Pittsburgh at Atlanta..
St. Louis at Philadelphia (n)
New York at Cincinnati (n)
San Francisco at Houston

1/

W ORSHIP

SECURITY:
is knowing that Beaver bike shop
really CARES that you get to
your classes on time!!

THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. Stadium at Edgewood
Across from Ann Arbor High
Rev. V. Palmer, Minister .
SUNDAY
10:00 a m.-Bibl'e School.
1 1 :00 a.m.-Regular Worship.
6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m.-Bible Study.
Transportation furnished for alls
NO 2-2756.

-Come see our

wide variety of vehicles! !

services-Call

ur Special-a $41.95 Triumph
BIKE SHOP
605 Church St.

wb l

M
. .......r + M ..
T

"Ra

10:00 a.m. Sermon
"MINISTRY AT
THE UNIVERSITY"
7:00 p.m. Sermon
"EXODUS"
Rev. Donald Postema

Hold that crease?
You bet it will.
If the fabric is one of the great,
new permanent-press blends
of 2-ply polyester and cotton
masterminded by Galey & Lord.
For the new dimension
in collegiate slacks,
look tolof

ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Baptism.
11:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer.
7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer (Chapel).
NORTH SIDE EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
(North Campus)
1679 Broadway
9:00 am.--Morning Prayer and Holy Com-
munion.
ST. CLARE'S EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
2309 Packard
8:00 a'm.-Holy Communion.
9:15 a.m.-Holy Communion.
1 1:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Baptism.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
AND CHAPEL
National Lutheran Council
Hill St. at Forest Ave.
Dr. H. O. Yoder, Pastor
SUNDAY
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Services.
9:30 a.m.-Bible Study led by Dr. George
Mendenhall.
6:00 p.m.-Supper.
7:00 p.m.-"Psychology and the Christian
Faith"-Dr. Armin Grams, Detroit.
Monday-7 :00 pm.-Teachings of the De-
nominations of the Christian Church-Pas-
tor Yoder.
Wednesday-10:00 p.m.-Vespers.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
512 E. Huron
James H. Middleton, Minister
Cleo Bovd, Associate Minister
Ronald Tipton, Campus Minister
SUNDAY

FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Erwin A. Goede, Minister
Phyllis St. Louis, Minister of Education
Church School and Services at 9:20 and 11:00
a.m. Sermon: "Putting People First."
Student Religious Liberats-Sept. 25, 7 p.m.
Topic: "Is God Relevant?"
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
Southern Baptist Convention
1131 Church St.
761-0441
Rev. Tom Bloxam
9:45 a.m -Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.--Morning Worship.
6:30 p.m.-Training Union.
7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship.
GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
663-0589
Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor
Morning Services-8:30 and 11:00 a.m.
9:45 a.m.-Sunday School.
6:00 pm.-Training Hour-Classes for all
ages.
7:00 p.m.-Gospel Services.w
Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
If it's Bible you want, come to Grace Bible-
Fundamental, Pre-Millenial, Biblical.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 So. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6159
Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, Armin C. Bizer,
W. C. Wright
9:30 and 10:45 a m.-Worship Services.
9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Church School.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Phone 662-4466
1432 Washtenow Ave.
Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcclm G.
Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S. Horan
SUNDAY
Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 nocn.
Presbyterian Campus Center located at the
Church.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
1511 Washtenaw Ave.
{The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor

WESLEY FOUNDATION AND
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
Phone 662-4536
Hoover Rupert, Minister
Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister
Bartlett Beavin. Associate Campus Minister
SUNDAY
9:00 and 11:15 a.m. - Worship Services.
"The Greatest Treason," Dr. Rupert.
6:00 p.m. -- Fellowship Supper, Pine Room.
Cost 35c.
7:00 p.m.-Program, Wesley Lounge. Movie,
"Monsieur Vincent."
TUESDAY
12:00-1 :00 p.m. - Discussion 'Class, Pine
Room. "What Can Christians Believe?" Dr.
Ransom. Lunch 25c.
WEDNESDAY
5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel.
7:00 a.m.--Holy Communion, Chapel, fol-
lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in
time for 8:00 a.m. classes.
6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads, Pine Room. Sup-
per and Drogram on Liturgical Jazz; an
evaluation.
THURSDAY
12:00-1:00 p.m. - Discussion Class, Pine
Room. "The Prophets-Dissenters of the
Past," Mr. Beavin. Lunch 25c.
FRIDAY
5:30 p.m.-International Student Social Hour,
Green Room.
6:30 p.m.-International Student Banquet,
Social Hall.
8:00 p.m.-International Student Program,
sanctuary. "The Meeting of World Cultures
and World Religions," Prof. M. M. Thomas
of India.
UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH
1001 E Huron
Calvin S. Mclfyt
Reformed Church of America
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.-Church School.
Collegiate Class - Prof. Kenneth Pike,
"Viewing the Scripture Through Academic
Models."
10.30 a.m.-"Born To Reproduce," Dr. Mdlfyt.
7:00 p.m. - "Minds Open at Both Ends?"
Prof. Kenneth Pike.

I'

4
4

'9

HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA
Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf.
Rev, Charles Johnson
761-6749
SUNDAY SERVICES
9:45 c.m.-University Fellowship Bible Study.
11:00 a.m.-"Biblical Directives Toward Well-
Adjusted Living."

MOOI..,ebvw 4 ~' ,..dQeL

W1a~LV

I

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