:4 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1966 TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY PA'v N *NL FRIDY, OVEMER 1, 966 UE ICHGAN AIL PA'1~'~TrTU- r c'itrr, 1r 11 G mt 'Detonator Dick' a Bomb Thrower Off the By RICK STERN "Four years ago there was in South Quad, a series of wars carried on with explosive de- vices, during which was blown up a room betonging to one Richard E. Vidmer, otherwise. known throughout the quad- rangle as 'Detonator Dick.' "Further, this Richard E. Vid- mer had, a short time before the destruction of his own room, willfully demolished a huge hunk of the quad using a large car- bon-dioxide bomb which he had made himself. "Vidmer is possessed of a quick and articulate wit, yet at the same time rather strange in terms of. social adjustment. Mentally he is a wreck, a con- firmed hypochondriac with a disposed tendency toward ultra- conservative politics, as well as a firm belief in the ultimate necessity of nuclear (sic) wea- pons for the destruction of ene- mies of the American people. Funny Looking "Physically, he is the funniest looking thing which God has ever permitted to walk the face of the earth, with a twisted head and one eye closer to his football helmet than the other, and with the strength of a 6,000,000 year old Czenozoic shrew. "Vidmer's only real purpose in life is the achievement and fur- to praise him too-from football coach Bump Elliott ("He's been a fine passer for us, and he's worked hard to improve himself") to Vid- mer's own father ("he was a very persistent little fellow.") Yet, as is not surprising, to real- ly get to know Vidmer, you have to listen to him yourself. And even then you sort of get the feeling that underneath, there is some- thing, indescribeably personal, that nobody knows or ever will know about Vidmer. It's probably this something that turned a scrawny, nervous country boy into one of college football's most suc- tessful quarterbacks. "A Peculiar Place" The western Pennsylvania re- gion where Vidmer grew up is in his own words "a peculiar place, where you have a lot of small towns within 10-15 miles of each other, and football is simply the sport throughout the area." Vidmer's Dad was a guard at Villanova 30 years ago, and Dick began throwing the ball around at age nine. "We always had balls around, baseball, footballs, you name it," he noted. At age 13, he was a freshman at Hemphfield area high school, which is better known for its foot- ball teams than anything else. "I was lucky to play at Hempfield be- cause there were a lot of good foot- Law school was originally Vid- mer's goal, but that's changed now. "There's a lot of guys on the team-Clayt Willhite, Bailey, my- self, who originally were interested in law school, but are taking an- other look now. It just doesn't ex- cite me anymore. Mostly I'm in- terested in foreign policy and in- ternational relations. Digs Organski "I really enjoyed Poll. Sci. 160 with Prof. Organski. At first I wanted to beat on the guy because he oversimplified things so much. But after a while I got so excited that I ran to lectures every time he had 'em. He's the most dynamic person that I've met up here." Vidmer concedes that his grades improve during the winter semes- ter when football his over, but says that "the coaches realize that we're up here as students and not just football players. "When you think about it foot- ball and school are mutually in- compatible. That demands that football could put on a person are such that you wouldn't have any time to study at all and vice versa. In the south, at Alabama and places like that, you can really concentrate on football, and be better prepared because of it. Nothing but Work "Its a' hideous thing to have a game plan to work over, and plays to memorize and then have all those doggone mid-terms that hit you right in the middle of the season." What about the general overall emphasis placed on football at Michigan? Vidmer thinks, if any- thing, there's not enough, but he's ambivilant. "Playing ball at Michigan is a lot different than playing ball at another school like, say Arkansas. People don't live and die with football up there-its more of a Saturday excursion. Guys come up and ask me things 'Do you prac- tice on Thursday?' or 'Are you coming to the TG Friday night?' It's as if they think we just put on a jock and socks Saturday and go out an play. But it's a job and the fact that most people don't ap- preciate it bothers me a little bit. Football Minds "Down in the south, they just go out of their minds about foot- ball-they wear cowboy hats and make up songs about the players. It may seem anti-intellectual or asinine but I would like to try playing ball for people who are that interested. It would really be a pleasure. But I guess it's really better if football is just looked up- on as part of the general program of the University." Vidmer's overall view of the game itself is also perhaps a bit reactionary when weighed against tradition. "The Rose Bowl doesn't mean a damn thing to me. What's im- portant in determining whether you win the games or not is not dangling some big plum, like the Rose Bowl, in front of a group of guys. Rather it's the group pride and the individual pride that you have. Desire To Win "It's just the desire to win the game, for its own sake, not be- cause it's Michigan State or Ohio State. That stuff's myth. When I'm out in the ball game and it's down to the nitty gritty, the Rose Bowl, or Michigan tradition or anything like that, is 50,000 light years away. "That's why I just laugh when people say that they'll probably be ? down for Northwestern be- cause of one thing or another. For me, at least, I want to do well myself and I want the team to win, and it doesn't matter who we play." Vidmer, as quarterback, is in charge of Michigan's offense when the Wolverines are driving down the field. What everyone wonders, however, is how much of down on the five yard line and such an awesome burden on his course readily and perceptively on the leadership is actually his and say, Well I'll call F-96 reverse meek, meatless shoulders, feel, the philosophy of Michigan or how much comes from the coach- buck pass fumble,' yet on the knowing that he will shortly be collegiate football. He is far more ing staff, other hand, everyone's yelling out there in front of 80,000 reticent and unwilling when the "Vid calls most of the plays something at you, and you can't people? subject is himself. You ask him, himself,' says Elliott, "and he hear the coaches, and you won't Misery Is... "What has made you into a great does a good job." always call exactly the right play. "It's the most miserable time of football player where most kids Calls Alike Against Illinois, for Example your life. Sometimes I get real your size, no matter how coordi- Vidmer himself answers this "Like against Illinois last week sleepy. Sometimes I want to nated, just don't make college question a little differently. "It in the fourth quarter. You could crawl into a hole and hide. You football?" And he just shrugs his doesn't really matter who is ac- say that the interception was my pretend to be relaxed but you're shoulders and says "I don't know. tually calling the plays, because fault because I threw a bad ball, not. It's hard to say." by the time you get into the yet those things are reactions and "And it's bad to be too relaxed. Just Shrugs game, the coaches and the quar- there's just nothing you can do A sick athlete is always better You ask him if it's true that he's terback are thinking pretty much about it. than a happy one. Sick athletes a hypochondriac and he shrugs his alike, anyway. "You have to envy a team like set records. They get so much shoulders again and says, "I don't "We get a rough idea on Mon- Alabama though, that simply adrenalin built up inside them- really care what they call me. I day of what we're gonna do, and never loses a close game because selves that they really get lost in have asthma and you get a few then during the week, things get they'll never make a mistake. Mis- the game, totally." pills for that . . . plus I was on more and more specific. By Thurs- takes are a function of discipline, Plainly, Dick Vidmer will dis- a little kick about health food for day, we've narrowed the number and we've lost three or four games of plays that we'll run from each because of mistakes this year. We formation and the game plan is haven't eliminated these errors pretty well settled. but we haven't spent the time that . "It's fairly complex though and ,Alabama has either." you get confused sometimes. On What about before the game? the one hand you don't just get How does the quarterback, with Field a while and I think that tainted my reputation permanently with Chuck Vetzner. But if somebody says I eat a lot of pills, It doesn't really upset me." Tony Mason will tell you that Vidmer is a fabulously interesting persons with "a hundred differ- ent little quirks and traits that would make great sports copy." And Bailey will tell you how deep he is and about all the cool things he has done. But if you ask Vid- mer about it, he just gives a little laugh and says, "Yea, I guess that's what they say." SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LEVIS II i i formal wear MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK DICK VIDMER eyes a receiver downfield as Michigan State's George Webster bears down on him. Vidmer currently leads the Big Ten in passing and has as much to be proud of off the field where he carries a 3.1 overall average in economics. 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BROWN ONLY og CAN BOVEN SHOES 17 NICKELS ARCADE therance of his own popularity, illustrated by the fact that when in high school, with miles of open fields on which to practice, he happened to choose the Greensburg high school field, where he was conveniently visi- ble to the entire town. "His tremendous football abil- ity is best illus'trated by his blocking prowess, in which he lays himself flat on the field and allows the other players to walk all over him." -Donald Bailey, Guard-Bard If Don Bailey were Homer, Dick Vidmer would be better known than Odysseus and Achilles com- bined. The above is Just a sample of what Bailey has to say about Vid- mer, and some of the other stuff is more colorful (but less print- able) than this. If you haven't guessed, Bailey and Vidmer, who attended rival high schools back in Pennsylvania, have been best friends and friend- ly rivals for four years at Mich- igan. Understandably then, though Vidmer seems to inspire Bailey to perpetrate (probably) fallacious legends, he also inspires the 225 pound guard to praise him gen- uinely at times. W "Vid is a tremendously impres- sive individual, who has excercised an extreme effect on all members of the team. He combines, char- acter, intelligence and athletic ability to handle himself with smoothness and confidence on and off the football field." Inspires Praise Vidmer inspires a lot of people ball pleayers there when I was. thtre ... and everybody played all the time--all winter, all summer." Mr. President But Vidmer did other things in high school besides setting passing; records. He was president of the Student Council his senior year and his grades were good enough to get him into Harvard. "Yea, I was accepted at Harvard. My Dad was real fired up for Ivy League-you know prestige and Ivy covered walls ... I visited Harvard and Princeton and got, an idea about that, and then I; visited Purdue and MSU too and I kinda got the idea that I wanted a school that played good foot- ball, but also offered a good aca- demic program. Ivy League football leaves a lot to be desired-you know Bear Bryant calls it the 'tennis shoe' league-and MSU is a little short on academics. So I came here and haven't been sorry a minute." Even With an E Vidmer is an economics major with a 3.1 average, which includes an E in a Chemistry course. In terms of hours he is a Senior, but he has another year of football eligibility so he does not plan to graduate until next December. "I could graduate in April, but by juggling things and keeping my econ courses down I can still put in an extra one or two semesters and mabye get 138 hours or so too. There's so many things I want to pick up-especially in political sci- ence that I might hang around for another whole year." I I I I I I 111114/ -- S Sikorsky 1966-1967 Michigan Basketball Schedule Tuesday, November 22nd-MICHIGAN FROSH Home 8:00 p.m. Thursday, December 1st-Tennessee Away 8:00 p.m. Saturday, December 3rd-Duty Away 8:00 p.m. Monday, December 5th-HOUSTON Home 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, December 7th-Bowling Green Away 8:00 p.m. Saturday, December 10th-DAVIDSON Home 1:30 p.m. Monday, December 12th-BUTLER Home 8:00 p.m. Thursday, December 22nd-OHIO UNIVERSITY Home 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, December 27th-Friday, December 30th-Los Angeles Basketball Classic at Los Angeles, Calif. (Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Southern Californna, UCLA, Arizona, Georgia Tech and Arkansas) Saturd&y, January 7th-NORTHWESTERN Home 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, January 10th-Wisconsin Away 8:00 p.m. Saturday, January 14th-Illinois Away 1:30 p.m. Saturday. January 21st-MICHIGAN STATE Home 1:30 p.m. Ail ENGINEERING REPRE TO GIVE SENIORS ANDt ENGINEERIN WITH THE PIONEER ofN rcraft SENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS GRADUATES COMPLETE DETAILS ON NG OPPORTUNITIES AND LEADING MANUFACTURER VTOL AIRCRAFT 1