PAGE STS THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1966 PAGE SIXTHE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1. 1966 71 Petitioning Now Open for HONORS STEERING COMMITTEE Pick up petitions now in 1210 Angell Hall Honors Office DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 11 Ann Arbor High: Boos vs. Football _='- .. ... HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL INTERVIEWS Mr. Richard L. Nohl, a member of the Admissions Board at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration, will be at the University of Michigan on Monday, November 7, to talk to men and women interested in graduate study in business as a career of excitement and creative opportunity. Requirements for admission for the two-year course, leading to a degree of Master in Business Adminis- tration (M.B.A.), include a college degree in any field of concentration, a standing, in at least the top third of the class, and a record of achievement in campus activities, business, the military, or elsewhere. Sen- iors, or others, wishing to talk to Mr. Nohi should contact Miss Mildred D. Webber in the Bureau of Appointments. By GRAYLE HOWLETT Ann Arbor High School has to be a farm team of the University 'of Michigan. The academic air is so thick you could cut it with a slide rule. Ann Arbor High is a place where study halls are used for studying and students wear letter sweaters with their SAT scores on their backs. If you walk the halls with- out a copy of Plato's "Republic" you're considered an enemy. And if caught you must recite your name, grade, and serial number- all in digital computing code. The cheerleaders there must maintain a C-plus average and have had a minimum of two courses in crowd psychology. I can remember back in my high school days when cheerleaders had to have other qualifications. Even on football Friday nights you get the feeling that the stu- dent body is on a massive study break and if Ann Arbor loses- The New Ravens are now at.the Schwabin on Wednesdays and Sat- urdays. For info. contact: NO 8-8769 well, what the hell. There's al- ways the books and that Quantum Theory test on Monday. Status Game But as fate would have it (and she usually does almost every year), the biggest football game in the state was dropped right in Ann Arbors intellectual laps last Friday night. The Bearcats from Battle Creek Central, fresh from their 17th straight victory and rated No. 1 in the state, were stacking their braun against the the No. 2 ranked Ann Arbor Pio- neers. The big question remained whether or not the Ann Arbor High campus could take it. Ann Arbor's head coach Jay Stielstra, a thin, serious looking man who looks like your old math teacher (he is, in fact, a social science teacher) leaned back in his chair on the afternoon of the game and contemplated on the effect the big game has had: "We're a real sophisticated school. Let's face it-we're no Massilon. The general student population is not caught up by sports. There's a cosmopolitan atmosphere here. The University is very influential and this hurts the sports program to a certain extent. But let me emphasize that it's a nice climate. "True we're really excited over how many Merit Scholarship Win- ners we get, but a big game will bring them up. When they get the big one, they really go wild." Ricky-Ticky-Low "Wild" seems to have different connotations to the Ann Arbor students, however, as evident in their pre-game hoopla. Friday aft- ernoon's pep rally brought out the usual sign carriers but with the excellent material Battle Creek provided (home of Kellogg's cereals), you'd think there would be a little more hate conveyed. Instead, the most witty one turn- ed out to be "Dam the Creek," or "A-square is greater than BC," in perfect mathematical symbols, probably just to let their teachers know they hadn't forgotten. Still it was the big game and Stielstra talked unemotionally about it. "We have no rivalry, as such, with Battle Creek. We play- ed them under similar conditions in 1962 and 1964, but we don't especially point to this game. We play them one at a time." Mayor Harry Wilklow Jr. of Battle Creek and Mayor Wendell E. Hulcher of Ann Arbor refused to believe there was no rivalry and played it big time all the way. If Ann Arbor won, Mayor Wilklow promised the Pioneers two cases of cereal, a case of pet foods, and a case of cookies, all Battle Creek products. If Ann Arbor lost, Mayor Hul- cher owed the Bearcats an auto- graphed game football, a key to, the City, and the book "Michigan Memories," nothing edible but purely Ann Arbor products. "It's really our offense against their defense," Stielstra continued getting back to football. "We can score a lot of point. They've been scored on only once. They're much bigger than us. We're actually too small for a class A team. They'll try to run and crush us inside." Anyone for Philo Stielstra next turned to his phi- losophy of tcoaching: "Psychology is beyond me. I'm not the Woody Hayes or Knute Rockne-type coach. And the boys know this. They don't go for any kind of phoniness. Why, I couldn't hang any type of signs in the locker room or paste clippings in their lockers. They wouldn't go for it. They'd know it wasn't me. I just stick to fundamentals and the things we can control." Mark Carrow, the curly-haired quarterback for the Pioneers, seems to be the perfect exponent for the Stielstra philosophy. He's the type of guy that eats pizza with a fork and says "thank you" after an interview. His uniform seems to always stay white and looks like he could just slip on a tweed coat over his pads and be ready to go to the homecoming dance. He also just happens to be prob- ably the best roll-out passer in the state and is certain for All-State honors. Stielstra describes him as being "poised and an excellent play caller. He's a fantastic ath- lete and probably his least favo- rite sport is football. He likes The Pioneers lacked the muscle baseball first and then hockey." and were pushed around by the' It was on the cool and collec- likes of Chuck Brown (240). Tom tive head of Carrow that Ann Beard (238), Orville Sherrod Arbor's fortunes rode and it look- (265), to mention a few, and it ed like he'd do it. was the poundage up front which Poised Effort broke halfbacks Andrew Johnson After Battle Creek had forged and Eugene Brown on long jaunts, out to a 17-7 lead, Carrow started as well as opening up holes for his team from their own 35 and fullback Paul English, and a total drove them to score with 1:20 left rushing game of 451 yards. in the half. He completed four of Coach Jack Finn of Battle Creek six, the last one to Tom Wood for concurred, "We were physically the score after he had scrambled tougher. Even though we lost in the backfield a la Fran Tark- Beard and Ball (Tim) in the sec- engton to find the open receiver. ond half, we still held them score- Battle Creek added a field goal less. We thought those reverses before the half, but Ann Arbor with Johnson would work on a took the second half kick-off and team like Ann Arbor (two TD runs drove for the tying score. With of 84 yards and 76 yards) ." work horse Bruce Sharemet and Stielstra, who thinks winning is "I" back Fred Smith carrying harera, yo thanksing ws most of the burden the drive sput- harder on you than losing, was tered on the Battle Creek 12. Car- feeling the pain of a six-game row went to the air. First one wFinningstreak snapped plus a conference championship 10o s t: went incomplete. Second pass in- "Sure they were big physically but tercepted and that was the end they didn't wear us down. They for academic cause, and Battle just broke those long runs on us Creek added another TD fortheir and we missed the tackles." LA ,i arn......anwemsethtcks" 41 26-13 margin. pnryca Tltn4 RaFrarhac Carrow admitted that this was rpuse That netresnes the turning point along with In the boisterous Bearcat dress- Stielstra. ing room, while basking in the The turning point, however, 26-13 win and their preserved rat- was best stated by one of the Ann ing of No. 1, Coach Finn received Arbor cheerleaders at the Friday the biggest cheer when he a*- afternoon skit. nounced that Cokes would be free The cheerleaders, wearing cer- for all the football players this tain equipment of the football week. players, were explaining their It kind of makes you wonder function to a cha-cha beat. The what Coach Stielstra would have one with the shoulder pads chant- promised his team if the Pioneers ed: "This is what our boys wear would have won. Free Cokes are to build up something that isn't a little too phony for Ann Arbor there." High. * ..1 '1 P I I .1 FACULTY LUNCHEON COLLEGE TEACHING Cooperative College Registry A free service of 13 denominations to some 200 church-related liberal arts colleges throughout the United States. Administra- tive and faculty positions in all areas of curriculum. Ph.D.'s pre- ferred. Master's required. Salaries-$6,500 to $20,000 plus fringe benefits. Make appointment for interviews through the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 Student Activities Building, Mon- day through Friday, November 14 through 18. Cards Scamper Past Bears All faculty members are invited to a light (50c), informal luncheon WEDNESDAY, NOV. 2 12:00 Noon Speaker: MRS. ELISE BOULDING Place: Baptist Campus Center, 502 E. Huron Please call to make reservations: NO 3-9376 11 G --- ~ DOWNTOWN HONDA Sltet St. Big or Small -'''' We Have Them All - a itn St. .5 5th Ave. 34th Art. Main St. t WENK Sales & Service, Inc. 310 East Washington 665-8637 Sales, Service, Parts Accessories Service entrance on 5th Ave. ST. LOUIS A')-St. Louis used the running of rookie John Ro- land and two key interceptions by Larry Wilson to whip the Chicago Bears 24-17 last night and move back into first place in the Na- tional Football League's Eastern Conference. The victory gave St. Louis a 6- 1-1 record in the Eastern Confer- ence, a half-game better thaB sec- ond place Dallas' 5-1-1 record. Chicago, a member of the Western Conference, is 3-4. Roland sparked two first-quar- GRAYLE HOWLETT SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: I ter drives that gave the Cardinals a quick 14-0 lead in the first half. Wilson returned an intercepted pass 29 yards for a fourth-quarter St. Louis score, then intercepted a Rudy Bukich pass on the Cardi- nals' 13 late in the game to kill a Bears' threat. The Bears scored on a Bukich sneak in the second quarter, then again on an 80-yard pass play from Bukich to Gale Sayers in the fourth quarter. Jim Bakken and Roger Leclerc matched field goals to round out the scoring. Professional Chicago Montreal Detroit Toronto New York Boston NHL W L 4 0 3 1 2 4 1 1 1 2 1 3 T Pts. GF 0 8 22 0 6 12 0 4 22 2 4 10 1 3 11 1 3 13 GA 1! 8 24 10 18 19 r SATURDAY'S RESULTS Montreal 3, New York 0 Boston 3, Toronto 3 (tie) SUNDAY'S RESULT Detroit 8, Boston 1 MONDAY'S GAMES No games scheduled Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference W L T Pet. Pts. OP St. Louis 6 1 1 .856 192 130 Dallas 5 1 1 .833 266 106 Cleveland 5 2 0 .714 234 124 Washington 5 3 0 .625 174 164 Philadelphia 4 4 0 .500 163 184 Pittsburgh 1 5 1 .167 133 218 New York 1 5 1 .167 100 214 Atlanta 0 8 0 .000 95 299 Western Conference Green Bay 7 1 0 .875 216 81 Baltimore 5 2 0 .714 176 122 Los Angeles 4 4 0 .500 131 134 San Francisco 3 3 1 .500 132 169 Chicago 3 4 0 .429 94 123 Minnesota 2 4 1 .333 150 129 Detroit 2 6 0 .250 111 170 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Green Bay 31, Detroit 7 Washington 27, Philadelphia 13 Cleveland 49, Atlanta 17 Baltimore 17, Los Angeles 7 Dallas 52, littsburgh 21 Minnesota 28, San Francisco 3 YESTERDAY'S RESULT St. Louis 24', Chicago 17 AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division HOW TO GO BAROQUE WITHOUT GOING BROKE a5 discount records, inc. 1235 5. UNIVERSITY-300 S. STATE TODAY'S GAME Boston at Chicago NBA Eastern Division W L Philadelphia a 0 1 Boston 4 1. Pct. .000 .800 New York Cincinnati Baltimore Weste Detroit San Francisco Chicago St. Louis Los Angeles BUY . .:vi't 4::i. i;"k-.i:i hviiii: trn Di 4 3 .571 2 4 .333 1 7 .125 ivision 5 3 .625 4 3 .571 4 4 .500 3 3 .500 26 .250 GB 1^ 2 4 5f. 1/ 1 3 V 98" MONO or Boston Buffalo New York Houston Miami W L TI 4 z 1 4231 I I AT ONLY SATURDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 127, Cincinnati 115 Philadelphia 138, Boston 96 Detroit 103, Baltimore 97 St. Louis 110, Los Angeles 109 SUNDAY'S RESULT Detroit 124, Los Angeles 121 4 3 ?. 3 5 Pct. Pts. OP .667 151 149 .571 201 187 .571 172 155- .375 207 194 .286 116 185 2 0 0 4. Western Kansas City 6 San Diego 5 Oakland 4 Denver 1 Division 2 0 .750 285 160 2 1 .714 198 123 4 0 .500 153 174 7 0 .125 108 264 * per SEE recordSTRE MONDAY'S GAMES SUNDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled Buffalo 33, New York 23 Kansas City 48, Houston 23 TODAY'S GAME Boston 24, Oakland 21 San Francisco at Chicago San Diego 24, Denver 17 for instance- this superlative Bach-Brandenburg Concerti by THE SAAR ORCHESTRA Cond. by Karl Ristenpart complete in a two-record set A Fantastic Bargain -or perhaps A GREAT RECORDING OF Vivaldi-Four Seasons by REINHOLD BARCHET and SOUTHWEST CHAMBER ORCH. Cond. by Friedrich Tilegant .... HOW LONG SINCE A MAN SENT YOU' ROSES? call MSIS 662-4867 The most exciting idea in dating CHOOSE FROM OVER A HUNDRED RECORDINGS I INCLUDING BACH-MAGNIFICAT with Teresa Stich-Randall STOELZEL & TELEMANN music for trumpets & Orch. 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