SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1866 t THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGESEVEN- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1968 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVE1'1 - Wolverines Face Young, Hungry Gophers By RICK STERN For what it's worth, there's a sign in a pansophic Ann Arbor chophouse known as "REd's Rite- spot," predicting that Michigan will beat Minnesota 28-10 this afternoon. And Grayle Howlett, a Michi- gan Daily night editor and prob- ably the only living biped to have correctly forecasted each of Mich- igan's first five games this sea- son, also picks the Wolverines to- day. Even Paul Josephson, an obscure dishwasher in the Alpha Phi Ep- silon Phi sorority house, says that Michigan will take the Brown Jug when the two squads clash at 1:30 this afternoon in Michi- gan Stadium. And Josephson has never seen a college football game and probably couldn't discern left tackle from shortstop. In other words, though Michi- gan has lost three football games in a row and was almost booed off' the field the last time, everybody seems to be picking the Wolver- ines. What could be the reason be- hind this fanatical belief in Wol- verine destiny? Minnesota Coach Murray Warmath, who hopefully isn't picking Michigan, provided some possible solutions to the di- lemma, when we talked to him on the telephone last night. "Michigan is a veteran team with probably the best backfield in the country. They've had bad breaks so far but all told they have the experience and talent to be a top team." Warmath downgraded his own stock of talent. "I wouldn't say we're even above average in any facet of the game, except per- haps kicking. We're a young team -20 of the 42 men we brought along are sophomores-and we're still not recovered from a wave of early season injuries. I'd say we have more problems than we do assets." The veteran Minnesota coach touched briefly on what must be a major factor in today's game- the fact that Michigan played probably their best game of the season last week against Purdue yet still lost. "We're very con- cerned about Michigan's getting beat because it should make them want to win against us even more, since . they clearly played well enough to win last week." "Our team is ready, too, men- tally. We've had good practices! all week and all of the boys are enthusiastic.," Bodily Essence Warmath emphasized the im- portance of mental preparation in college football. "It's everything," he said. "The team that's not up just isn't gonna win. The adren- alin simply has to be flowing." 1 Mjinnesota is undfeated ,0riin +.to ClruiA TbrVIT~t 1T YTTTITUC Big Ten games this year, havingI1 11tLJVl tied mediocre Indiana 7-7 and OFFENSE beaten Iowa 17-0. But in presea- MINNESOTA MICHIGAN son action they lost two of three, Last (211) LE Sipp (216) to Missouri 24-0, and Kansas 16- Jones (234) Lr Phillips (228) 14 with a 35-21 win over Stan- Laako (213) LG Hanna (220) ford sandwiched in between. Killin (225) C Dayton (220) Michigan is uncomfortably close Walsh (211) RG Bailey (214) to the bottom of the standings, Klick (218) RT Hribal (220) I with losses in their first two Anderson (242) RE Clancy (192) games, to Michigan State 20-7 and Purdue 22-21. If the Wolver- Wilson (190) QB Vidmer (185) ines want to salvage a respectable Wintermute (190) LH Detwiler (215) t position by the end of 1966 they Whitlow (165) RH Ward (178) will have to start today. Cornell (211) F8 Fisher (210) 'Feel' the Stadium Warmath and the Gophers did MINNESOTA DEFENSEMICHIGAN not work out in Michigan Sta- dium yesterday afternoon, prefer- Sanders (221) LE Rosema (214) ring to take a short hike around Hermann (229) LT Hardy (233) the grounds instead. Warmath ex- Duren (242) MG Mielke (223) plained the rationale behind this, Kamzelski (234) RT Porter (237) then let a little of his own adren- Williams (234) RE Stincic (217) alin flow. "Half of our team is Wheeler (203) LB Morgan (230) sophomores and have never seen Reierson (191) LB Nunley (218) Michigan Stadium. I don't believe Newsome (206) DR Rowser (183) in working out before a game but NSomel(26) DR Bossr(183) I did think the players should get Sakal (191) DB Bass (180) the feel of the stadium. Hatfield (187) S Sygar (185) "They also should get the feel Condo (193) S Volk (192) of the dressing room," he volun- teered, "which is probably the'son who is still recovering from replaced by Bill Hardy in the line- worst visitors' dressing quarters an injury, Peterson should see ac- up. Williamson missed several in the country. When they were tion though, according to War- days of practice this week due to math. hudrijr building the stadium, which is a shoulder injury probably the best in the country, Deutscher Summing up Michigan's state of they should have put in decent The other halfback is sopho- preparedness for the game, El- dressing rooms." more John Wintermute, a speedy liott said that "the team has come Urged back to the topic of foot- elusive back with "fine poten- up well in the past week and ball, Warmath denied that soph- tial." should be ready." He referred to omore quarterback Ray Stephens, Minnesota's best known player Minnesota as "a young team, who has been third string up un- is split end Ken Last, who is prob- tough defensively, which has made til this week, would start this aft- ably comparable to Wolverine a lot of progress thus far in the JacoLat, season." enn.standout JckClancy. Lswho You Be the Quarterback has already become the first The Wolverines held only a light I woulddoubtit very much,"Gworkout yesterday afternoon, with- Iwuddui tvr uc,'Gpe in history to gain over out uniforms and the atmospher~e said Warmath who ought to know. 1000 yards in his career, was de- out uniforseand detmosphern "He worked out with the first scribed by Warmath as being "tall, was one of reserved determination. unit for a while last Monday and a lot rangier but not as fast as Ho Ho, Hee the reporters seemed to attach Clancy. I've seen pictures of Clan- An added incentive for both great significance to this. Most of cy and I think that though his squads this afternoon is, of course, therm write their own fiction, hands are not as good as Lasts', the oft, heralded Little Brown Jug, though, instead of the facts," he he is a better runner once he gets symbolizing the long tradition be- added.pthe ball. Last is slower than Clan- tween the two schools. This will If Stephens, whose brother San- cy ,and Clancy of course, has back- be the 57th game meeting of Mich- dy was a former Minnesota All- field experience. Last is our best igan and Minnesota, with the America, doesn't start, then the man, though." Wolverines holding a 33-20-3 edge nod will go to either of two Jun- in previous encounters. But the iors-Larry Carlsoneor Curt Wi- .Michigan coach Bump Elliott e son.Bot hae sen onsderbleindicated yesterday that no major Gophers have won five of the last son. Both have seen considerable ncadystryth nmjr six, including three shutouts and action previously. Wilson is noted strategy changes had been planned shx i4-dn three suyouts n for a running game, actually lead- for the Gophers. He did indicate e 14-13 thriller last year in ing the Gophers with 241 yards that junior defensive end Rocky Minneapolis. gained this season.Carlson Ispri- Rosema was sufficiently recovered The Wolverine-Gopher battle is marily a hurler and boasts an ex- from his bout with mononucleosis regularly a low scoring affair with cellent pass completion percent- and would start today. the losing team averaging barely age of over 67. Haurdy Boy Joining the mystery signal call- Elliott also revealed that left SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: er in the backfield will be two tackle Dick Williamson would be GRAYLE HOWLETT MURRAY WARMATH CURT WILSON t i over five points a game or less composite Wolverine record for than one touchdown. Twenty-five those years standing at 43-0-1. In of the fifty-six matches have end- those four years incidentally, the ed in shutouts and the eight times Wolverines, under coach Fielding that the Gophers have blanked the Yost, rolled up 2314 points and Wolverines is more whitewashes gave up just 40 for an average than any team in the country score of 53-1! boasts against Michigan. But the past lies dormant this You Can't Win'em All afternoon. 80,000 will watch the As a matter of fact, way back struggling 1966 Wolverines and the in 1903 when Michigan averaged inexperienced Gophers duel it out 47.1 points per game in winning for probably nothing more than 11 of 12 games, Minnesota held third or fourth place in the big them to 'a 6-6 tie. This was the ten. And nobody will win 53-1 only game between 1901 and 1905 either, no matter what "RED's" that Michigan failed to win, the says. LINEBACKERS DENNIS MORGAN (34) AND FRANK NUNLEY (59) are anxious to slam 448 pounds against the Gopher offense this afternoon. Michigan will enter the '68 Homecoming game as one- touchdown favorites, although Minnesota is undefeated in conference play. LOSH CROWNED: Pep Rally Ignites the New l l 4 f [J I t r U CINEMAGUILD announces the selection of 2 New Board Members Andrew Lugg Elliot Barden 6 Try Daily Classifieds By HOWARD KOHN Some of Michigan's traditions got busted up last night . . . or maybe they were just reincarnated. It was actually pretty hard to tell. You know the kind of night- autumn with the leaves coming . down, a pep rally with Fourth of July fireworks, a thousand or so people who are still at least half- alive yelling like high school kids, and the kind of feeling you get when that know-it-all cynic gets shut down. Homecoming Pep Rally Michigan's Homecoming crowd piled into the baseball stadium at Ferry Field in an irrepressible wave and then stamped its feet and even refused to go home when the master of ceremonies was through spieling and the band was through playing. Doc Losh and Wally Weber were poet laureates and main speakers, of course, and Prof. Kolars filled in the gaps with MC jargon. Bump Elliott was there, prom- ising in no uncertain terms that Michigan would win today, and the players were there to back him up. They were all talking to the mob. Rah, Rah! Michigan! And the mob, with the go-go spirit of hope, played "follow the leader" and cheered without re- straint. 4 tIt was hard to conceive of the mob throwing cat-calls and boos like confetti at the same team. Maybe it wasn't the same mob. "Let's hear it for everybody who had the guts to come out and tell this team we're behind them," said Oh yeah . . . the Beta House crowned Doc the first Homecom- ing Queen ever at Michigan-, scooping the Central Committee and its choice. Girl cheerleaders, a phenome- nom in itself at Michigan, turned out with their rendition of Inter- national Showtime. And everyone cheered . , . just like that . . . all night . . Go Blue! Go Blue! Go Blue! The game starts at 1:30. sophomores and a senior. The full- back is a sophomore-Dennis Cor- nell, a 200-pounder whom War- math described as "just an aver- age fullback at this point." Cor- nell, a steel mill worker from Clin- ton, Pa., is tall for football, stand- ing over 6' tall and weighing 212 pounds. Lining up in the flanker slot is a senior, Ray Whitlow. Whit- low, the smallest regular in the Western Conference, at 160 pounds has replaced junior Dick Peter- rrr -- i WORSHIP 76'ers Dump Hapless Hawks NEW QUEEN PHILADELPHIA ('P)-The Phila- delphia 76ers overcame a 13-point first half deficit and led by Bill Cunningham's second half scoring spree defeated the St. Louis Hawks 119-110 last night in a National Basketball Association game. 'Trailing 38-25 early in the sec- ond quarter, Philadelphia, with Hal Greer dumping in 17 points, outscored the Hawks 37-19 to take a 62-57 lead at intermission. In winning their second game in as many starts, the 76ers gained a 76-65 lead early in the second half. The Hawks, however, closed the gap to 79-77 with 3:15 remain- ing in the third period. Cunningham came into the game and sparked a Philadelphia spurt that led to an 87-81 third quarter edge. He continued in the early fourth period to help the 76ers take a 15-point lead and break the game open. Weber. "Let's be 'Michigan men' and face up to the score," said the Doc. r Twisting Their Arms Everyone seemed well-pleased with the compliments-confident in their enthusiasm that they did deserve them. It was hard to tell who they were cheering . . . the team or themselves. What about the traditions? Boston Philadelph New York Cineinnat Baltimore NBA Eastern Division W L 20d hia 2 0 2 1 i 1 1 0 3 Cunningham scored 18 points in the second half and finished with 22. Greer led the winners with 31, while Wilt Chamberlain had 22 and took down 26 rebounds. Coach Richie Guerin topped the St. Louis scoring with 28 points. Pct. 1.000 1.000 .667 .500 .000 GB 34 1 214 1142 134 132 Western Division x-Chicago 3 1 .750 x-Detroit 1 2 .333 x-Los Angeles 1 2 .333 x-San Francisco 1 2 .333 St. Louis 1 2 .333 x-Late games not included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 111, Baltimore 91 Philadelphia 119, St. Louis 110 Chicago at Los Angeles (inc) Detroit at San Francisco (ine) ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. 9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 11:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer. NORTH SIDE EPISCOPAL CHAPEL (North Campus) 1679 Broadway 9:00 a.m-Morning Prayer and Holy Com- munion. ST. CLARE'S EPISCOPAL CHAPEL 2309 Packard 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. 9:15 a.m.-Morning Prayer. 11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. 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-Dr. George Men- denhall. 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 7:00 p.m. - Speaker: Dr. James Pollock- "How Can a Christian and the Church Serve the State?" WEDNESDAY, 10:00 p.m.-Vespers. 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 p.m.-Trining Hour-Classes for all ages. 7:00 p.m.-Gospel Services. Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:30 p.m. If it's Bible you want, come to Grace Bible cundamental, Pre-Millenial, Biblical. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Rev. V. Palmer, Minister II SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School. S1 :00 a.m.-Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.--Bible Study. Transportation furnished for ail NO 2-2756. services-Call i.h3 i /iCouncil Extends its Continued Good Wishes to the New Members of the CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Services at.9:15 and 11:00 a.m.-"Pulling To- gether," Rev. Terry N. Smith. Church School at 9:15 and 11:00 a.m. Student Group, 7:00 p.m., Mayflower Room. Giuld House, 802 Monroe, telephone 2-51 89. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Erwin A. Gaede, Minister Phyllis St. Louis, Minister of Education Church School and Services at 9:20 and 11:00 a,m. Sermon: "Lessons in Nature." 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. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Southern Baptist Convention 1 131 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. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Ave. (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 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. "Here I Stand," Bishop Reuben Mueller, Henry Martin Loud lecturer. 6:00 p.m. Fellowship Supper, Pine Room. Cost 35c. 7:00 p.m.-Program, Wesley Lounge. Bishop Mueller, "Impressions on Viet Nam." TUESDAY 12:00-1:00 p.m.-Discussion Class, Pine Room. "What Can Christians Believe?", Dr. Ran- som. Lunch 25c. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads, Pine Room. Din- ner and program. NEXT SUNDAY 6 :00 p.m.-Supper, Pine Room, followed by Hayride and Party. Reservations needed. Cost 85c. CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Donald Postema, Minister 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "On Learning to Accept One Another." 7:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. Sermon: "Life That Can't Take Anything." Dr. Seymour Van Dyken, guest minister at both services. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Phone 662-4466 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S: Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 noon. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. DARLINGTON LUTHERAN CHURCH Wisconsin Synod 3545 Packard Rd. Services at 10:30 a.m. For transportation cal Rev. Robert Baer, 761-1418 or Tim Krier- wall, 665-5952. PR 11 IKAIP IPA AlLIPIHA COILONY Timz Pirkie FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron James H. Middleton, Minister Cleo Boyd, Associate Minister Ronald Tipton, Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:45 a.m.-Church School Hour. 11:00 a.m.-Church Worship. Dave Cha pin Mac Joubran 11 L I 11 I