Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridov -ROntfmhPr 4 1 97rw Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY riI I uu . J LMu A -,i 7* r"I BOWLING 40c 9 A.M.-Noon Mon.-Sat. League Forming Sign Up Now! Steak and Eggs' for $1.20 AT CAMPUS GRILL RESTAURANT om bard 's death ends pro grid era UNION LANES 8Q8 S. State St. I What Is Circie K? By TOM SEPPY Associated Press Sportswriter WASHINGTON (P) - An era of professional football ended yes- terday with the death from can- cer of Vince Lombardi, the Wash- ington Redskins' coach who reach- ed legendary heights in the 1960s with the teams he led at Green Bay. Lombardi, 57, believed deeply in the old-fashioned virtues which were stamped over all his teams- hard work, dedication and never give-up. "A n y man's finest hour," he once said, "is when he has work- ed his heart out, exhausted on the field of battle, victorious." f$ He believed that football was ::' basically a game of blocking and tackling, with no fancy frills in- truding. Lombardi, an awesome task- master with his players, lived by the motto: "Winning isn't the big thing. It's the only thing." He arrived at Green Bay, Wis., population 70,000 in 1959 . one year after the Packers had posted a miserable 1-10-1 record, their -Associated Press worst ever. ' VINCE LOMIBARDI is cf~rried He said he was "no miracle off the field by Jerry Kramer man," yet forged a 7-5 record (64) after his Green Bay Pack- during his first season, won the ers defeated the Oakland Raid- divisional championship the fol- ers in the second Super Bowl on lowing year, and then proceeded ers ianuary14 second to capture National Football Lea- gue titles in 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, Wand 1967. His Packers also won Join The Daily Staff t'e first two Super Bowls against American Football League teams. -UG UNION BILLIARDS-$1 /HR. TABLE TENNIS-50c' His nine-year coaching record at Green Bay was 89-29-4. After becoming the first mar in the NFL playoff history ever to win three straight champion- ships, he retired as a coach tc serve as general manager of the Packers. He later was to describe the one-year off-the-field as the worst 12 months of his life. Lombardi joined the Washing- ton Redskins, a team that hadn't had a winning season in 14 years and hadn't won a divisional cham- pionship in 27, in February' of 1969. "I hope to be a winner the first year," he told his first news con- ference in the nation's capital. The record during h is initial Redskins season - 7 victories, 5 losses and 2 ties; was almost iden- tical to the mark he made during his first Green Bay season. It also kept intact Lombardi's record, of never having a losing season in 10 years of pro footbal. A native of New York, where he was born June 11, 1913, the 5- foot-7, 170-pound barrelled-chest- ed Lombardi played his collegiate football at Fordham University. He. played guard and was one of the famed Seven Blocks of Gran- ite in the middle 1930s. After coaching and teaching at St. Cecelia High School in Engle- wood, N.J., 'he became line coach at Fordham. In, 1948, Lombardi was named assistant to Earl "Red" Blaik at West Point. He left the U.S. mili- tary Academy ^in 1954, to join *the New York Giants under Jim Lee Howell as offensive line coach. In four years with the Giants, they won two divisional titles and one world championship.' When he was named head coach of the Packers in 1959, Lombardi said: "A good football team is my No. 1 job and I am keeping that in mind at all times. "I cannot make any predictions, on what kind of team I'll have. But I know this much: You will be proud of the team bec use I will be proud of the team." Lombardi was sumiing up his own philosophy. Along with pride, he stressed love and dedication. For his play- ers, this totaled up to hard work, sacrificing and success. He was a man of grand emo- tions that a trifle could trigger. He was also a man with steely self-control who often, was at his most gracious after a particularly bitter defeat. Lombardi could take grown men and whip them into a fury that forced tears of rage from their eyes or so intimidate an injured player that he would jog up and down the' grandstand steps of Lambeau Field despite a ripped cartilege that in a few days would require surgery. A well-known Packer halfback once stood up in a restaurant and repeatedly slapped an imaginery face in savage mimicry of the day he would assert himself, against his coach, Lombardi. That day never came. Bluff as some might, mostey Packer players bowed before Lom- bardi. Love him or hate him and some did- both simultaneously, they re- spected him with a deference given few mortals. Linebacker Ray Nitschke once sat transfized during a footbal* banquet. At the dais, Lombardi was speaking. He spoke of disci- pline and obedience and order- themes that Nitschke had heard the coach elaborate on countless times before. "Listen to him," said Nitschke marveling. Most marveled at Lombardi from aydistance. Close social con- tact was reserved only for a few. If honors had come to Lombar- di, he gave "something b a c k" without a fuss. He may have been the only of-4 ficial in sports at his level whose background showed that when he was coach and general manager in Green Bay' he found time to serve on, the Council of Human Relations, was president of the State Mental Health Association, chairman of the S t a t e Cancer Fund, director of Pop- Warner~ Football; co-chairman of the State Council on Physical Fitness and special events coordinator of the City of Hope{. in Washington, with added du- ties, he was on the Advisory Board of National Capital Area Councilo of Boy Scouts' of America, a mem- ber of the Board of Trustees of D.C.. Division, American Cancer Society, 'on the Commitee f o r Children's Hospital of the District of Columbia, honorary chairman of Washington, D.C. Kidney Foun- dation drive for 1970, on the boar of directors of the National Foot- ball Foundation and Hall of Fame, and a member .of Citizens Committee for Peace with Secur- ity. I III 9 A.M.-NOON MON.-SAT. i P.M.-6 P.M. SUNDAY I 11 Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Hairstyling To Please 75 BENEFIT 75c , 0 I e , TUDENT FILMS FROM CHICAGO ART INSTITUTE Canterbury House-Friday, Sept. 4 L ~Bi I I1 board Any freshmen and sopho- mores interested in becoming a football manager should con- tact Neil Hiller at 971-6501. * * * At 4:30 Tuesday-Friday inthe old wrestling room of the IM Building, there will be try-outs for male cheerleaders for foot- ball games. These are the words which Chief Assistant Prosecutor Casper H. Kast used to describe' our books and magazines when he filed suit against us. SEE FOR YOURSELF 9. Open daily and Saturday 10 A.M.-11 P.M., Sunday 2 P.M.- 11 P.M. (Look for our huge red-and-yellow blacklite paint- ed sign . . . don't be attracted to cheap imitators.) We are Ann Arbor's largest erotic bookstore, featuring an unspeakably complete line of paperback books, magazines, newspapers, records, cards, still photos of local models, and, 8mm color and black-and-white movies, plus a marvelous selection of "novelties." Not to mention the individual movie viewing machines in the back. Note: the, long-haired freak who manages this most excellent bookstore has recently installed a stereo system, and will eagerly assault your ears with all manner of raunchy de- [ I- ! 1I 4 Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 CI RC ILEIBOQIKS Zen, Yoga, Taro- Alchemy, Astrology, Theosophy Tarot, Magic, Parapsychology Macrobiotics and Health Food Books 215 S. 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