Page 16-Friday, October 26,1979-The Michigan Daily. ARE TITLE HOPES FOR REAL? Youthful Hoosiers ripe for upset ,. 4 By MARTHA CRALL Mighty Michigan becomes even mightier, it seems, on Homecoming Day. The Wolverines have won their last eleven homecoming games. Ironically, the last Michigan homecoming defeat came at the hands of the Indiana Hoosiers in 1967. However, the irony as well as the tradition. of Wolverine homecoming. wins will probably be near the bottom of the list of things on the Hoosiers' minds come Saturday. Michigan has that familiar Blue momentum rolling now, having won its last five games in a row. They have their next victims, Indiana, in their sights this week and with a win, would virtually eliminate the fading Hoosiers from the Rose Bowl race. All they have to do is beat the Hoosiers, which would give Indiana two Big Ten losses. It doesn't figure to be quite that easy, though. INDIANA IS 5-2 on the season, and 3-1 in Big Ten play. The Hoosiers' first loss came on Septerber 29, a 17-16 hear- tbreaker to Colorado. Their only Big Ten defeat was a crucial one. Ohio State, with whom Indiana was tied going into the contest, blew them away, 47-6. Where graduate education in management began The Amos Tuck School of Business Ad- ministration is the oldest graduate school of business in the United States. It was founded at Dartmouth College in 1900 and continues to be a leader in the busi- ness of educating managers. From its inception, the Masters Degree has been the only degree offered by the Tuck School. This exclusive focus, combined with its small size, offers a personalized approach to professional management education which is distinctive among the leading business schools. The residential nature of the program and close student- faculty interaction furthercenhance the quality of the learning experience. Prospective applicants to MBA programs will consider many aspects of the various schools in choosing those to which they will apply. Among them are likely to be some of the qualities mentioned above as well as location, teaching methods and philosophy, the student body, reputation, and placement. These issues as they re- late to Tuck will be presented in a short series appearing in future editions of this paper. Look for them. And, for further information about the Tuck program, clip the form below. Next edition:A Top Graduate School of Business in Hanover, New Hampshire!' Please send a bulletin and application materials for Tuck School to: Name (please print) Address City State tip College Degree Date Director of Admissions Amos Tuck School of Business Administration Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755 A representative of Tuck School will be on campus Tuesday, October 30, 1979. Schedule an interview with the Career Panning and Placement, 3200 Student A tivities Building - 764-7457. Indiana bounced back last week, however, with a 30-0 trouncing of Nor- thwestern. It is on that wave that they will ride into Michigan Stadium on Saturday. The shutout of Northwestern, coupled with their 3-0 shutout of Wisconsin on October 6, marks the first time Indiana has accomplished two shutouts in one season since 1959. The Hoosier defense has been led this season by sophomore cornerback Tim Wilbur. With his interception against Northwestern his career total advan- ces to nine, just two shy of the Indiana record. Marc Longshore, a sophomore defensive back, is a questionable star- ter. He suffered a bruised shoulder last week against Northwestern. HEALTHY, INDEED, is junior tailback Mike Harkrader, who rushed for a season high 146 yards against Nor- thwestern. Junior quarterback Tim Clifford must be contained, as well. Clifford is a 60 per cent passer who is movjng up in the Indiana record books. He's currently seventh on the all-time list and has 1076 passing yards so far in 1979. As far as tradition goes, Indiana doesn't have much here in Ann Arbor. Over the last 50 years, the Hoosiers have managed only seven wins in 29 at- tempts. The last time Indiana visited the Wolverines in 1975, they were sent home with a 55-7 spanking. Co'rso, in appraising the Michigan Machine said, "They have fine person- nel. We'll have to play good,-solid foot- ball. That's the only way to beat a team like Michigan." GRANTED, THAT particular statement is a favorite from the college I 1 STAR BAR 109 N. Main St.-769-0109 APPEARING TONIGHT: STEVE NEWHOUSE BAND "Ann Arbor's Original Honky Tank Dance Bar" Golden dreams ex-Blue harrier i By JOHN FITZPATRICK Who is Greg Meyer? If you asked anyone familiar with track this question, you'd get replies like, "He's the 3:59 indoor miler, right?" or, "He set an American road record for the 25-kilometer run this year," or "He beat Bill, Rodgers in a road race in Boston," or, "Didn't he win the 1978 AAU cross-country champion- ship?" Greg Meyer, a 1977 graduate of Michigan, has done all of these, and more. Yet, if a straw poll was taken on campus, few, if any students, would admit to knowing this famous ex- Wolverine. Greg Meyer is a distance runner, and it is football which is king at U of M, not running. Meyer, currently readying to defend his AAU cross-country title and to gain a berth on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team, works in Bill Rodgers' running store in Boston and trains with the members of the Greater Boston Track Club. "My training right now consists of a lot of distance, but I'll also do one day of in- tervals, one hill workout, one hard distance run, and one long run a week," said Meyer. "Bob Sevene, a coach at Boston U., helps me out with my training, but I still talk to, Ron Warhurst once a week. Sevene is able to gauge my day-te-dayd condition, but Ron knows me better _ he's coached me for so long, he's better acquainted with my characteristics." In a typically self-effacing way, Meyer credits Warliurst, Michigan men's cross-country coach, with muc of his success: "Ron Warhurst has had a big effect on me. Warhurst made me the runner I am today. Dan Heikkinen ('79 NCAA steeplechase finalist) 'is a good example of Warhurst's coaching ability; when Dan came to Michigan as a freshman he wasn't very good, yet Warhurst stuck by him and developed him into the runner he is now. Ron Warhurst is every bit as good as any of the best track coaches in the country; Michigan isn't a big track school, so he doesn't get much recognition." Meyer: Olyi pw goal Meyer's achievements since his graduation from Michigan are many: the 3:59 mile, an American record of 1:14:29 in the Old Kent Bank River Run of 25 km., (breaking Bill Rodgers' cour- se record by three minutes), a victory over Olympic bronze medalist Brendan Foster of Great Britain in a cross- country. ,racelast year, and the 1978 national cross-country title, which Meyer won at Seattle, using a blistering kick to nip NCAA champion Al Salazar 29:35.9-29:36.5 for the hilly 10,000-meter course. Meyer sees this year's AAU meet as a tough race: "It'll be a dogfight from the gun. I don't think it'll develop into the coaches' quote-bag, but Corso is pretty close to the truth this time. Indian a must rally their offense to the same-, heights as they did last week when they..,; logged 465 yards. Of course, the Michigan defense isn't as vulnerable as, - Northwestern's, so the Hoosiers cer, tainly have their work cut out for them.,. The Indiana defense must keep the, Wolverines inside, as well. Ohio State', outside game shredded the Hoosier defense, and so will Michigan's if in-. diana doesn't keep it well contained. Corso admits that the Hoosiers will do something to protect against the out- side game, but at the same time, he., realizes that other areas may open. . - Indiana has everything to gain this, week, so undoubtedly they'll be going for broke. All their remaining games - are with Big Ten rivals, and they can.t* afford any more conference defeats. keep running wait and kick sort of thing that it did last year. Al Salazar will be there, and a lot of other good guys like Herb Lin- dsay." In the U.S. Olympic Trials at Eugene,. Oregon this spring, Meyer will eith.r' run the steeplechase of 10,000 meter. "The steeple is my first love, so then- coaches will, have to do a lot of talking' to persuade me to concentrate on theK 10,000. My main competition in the steeple should come from Henry Marsh of Athletics West and Bill McCullough of the Santa Monica Track Club, and there are quite a few others-who are good competitors. I've beaten a lot of'. them, though, so I stand a good chan- ce. Despite finishing third in this year's' AAU steeplechase, Meyer considers that to be his best event. "I wasn't ready for the AAU's. I hadn't done nearly enough speed or steeple wo-k',-, just a lot of distance; I think there's a lot of room for improvement in the steeple." When asked about how he would sum up his running career to date, Meyer,. perhaps better at understatement than} he is at running, responds, "It's been, fun." After a pause, he adds, "I think that by running, and doing well at it,,If proved to myself that I could do something decent; it gave me a lot of confidence, not just as an athlete, but as,, a person. Greg Meyer is an internationally,. known track figure, a national chan- pion, and an amateur athlete. Whereas,. he would be handsomely paid and pam- pered if he was a professional sports figure, as an amateur he must make do with quietly working in Rodgers' store in between his twice-daily training- sessions, as he runs toward the ultimate goal of a track athlete: to compete if the Olympic Games. MIT,- a a t 1 I 0) the,(;ourg 5 DAYS - H To impkin latch GRIDDEj PICKS 1. Indiana at MICHIGAN (Pick score) 2. Michigan St. at Ohio St. 3. Northwestern at Purdue 4. Illinois at Minnesota 5. Iowa at Wisconsin 6. South Carolinoat Notre Dame 7. Princeton at Harvard 8. Navy at Pittsburgh 9. Maryland at Duke 10. N. Carolina St. at Clemson 11. Auburn at Wake Forest 12. Florida St. at LSU 13. Toledo at Miami (.) 14. Central Michigan at Kent St. 15. Oklahoma St. at Kansas 16. Texas at SMU 17. Washington at UCLA 18. Houston at Arkansas 19. San Jose State at Long Beach St. 20. G.K.'s Vermont Saps at DAILY LIBELS d ' 4 .} I ,8,t I a" The University of Michigan Committee on Southern Africa TEACH-IN ON SOUTH AFRICA: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE October 26 & 27, 1979 OCTOBER 26 School of Education (corner South & East university) Whitney Auditorium 1:30 Panel-"CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN SOUTH AFRICA" Professors Vilakazi, Seidman, Samoff, Wilfred Grenville- Grey Lecture-"WHITHER APARTHEID? SOUTH AFRICA IN BLACK SOUTHERN AFRICA" Professor Bernard Magubane, University of Connecticut Schorling Auditorium 4:00 I Al 11