Page Eight
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
a hursday, October 11, 19/3
OOC T. 12-27
'FOLLOWING'
an exhibition of drawings and images by
DONALD DAVIDSON
1971 M.F.A. graduate from UM'
OPENING RECEPTION FRIDAY EVENING
OCT. 12-7-10 P.M.
, UNION GALLERY
1ST FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION
GALLERY HOURS: Tues.-Sat., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m._
O >o ?C) t) C,°~ t>C'"f ~ t)© X== 0<==---- > C) -
Michigan-MSU
rivalry:
Not
just another game
By BRIAN DEMING
Marking the beginning of the
seventy-sixth year of the Mich-
igan-Michigan State football riv-
alry, more than 76,000 fans will
fill Spartan Stadium, Saturday,
to be a part of. the aura built
around the defense of gridiron
pride and prestige. Despite the
seeming mismatch in this year's
battle, the traditions, emotions,
and pride involved make this in-
tra-state contest not "just ano-
ther game."
For anyone doubting the im-
portance of this game and i t s
tendency to ignore both odds and
statistics, recall last season's
meeting before a full house in
Michigan Stadium. Michigan, the
Ned's Bookstore & Student Book Service
formerly of Ann Arbor)
ANNOUNCE
GIGANTIC WAREHOUSE SALE
overwhelming favorite, had to
dig out a 10-0 victory over the
stubborn Spartans.
Probably no one remembers
the occasion better than Spar-
tan running back David E. Brown
(not to be confused with Michi-
gan defensive back David Brown)
who had the ignominious distinc-
tion of being the man w h o
fymbled' away Michigan State's
best threat of the day.
The Spartan back, returning as
a junior this year, looks ahead
to Saturday's rematch. "I'll be
up for this game better than
for any-game," Brown comment-
ed, ignoring his past mistake,
"It makes the season if we beat
Michigan."
The 193-pound back feels that
the friendly East Lansing crowd
could make a difference. "It was
something," Brown recalls, "go-
ing in there (Michigan Stadium)
for the first time as a sopho-
more. We had problems hearing
signals. It seemed like the crowd
was five feet away from the foot-
ball."
Denny -Stolz, though in h i s
rookie season at the helm of
the Spartan gridiron regiments,
OCT. 1-OCT.
19
is well acquainted with t h e
Michigan - MSU rivalry. Stolz
came to Michigan State in 1971
from Alma College and directed
the defense to second and third
place Big Ten rankings in total
defense in '71 and '72, respec-
tively.
The Spartan mentor acknowled-
ges the importance of the annual
cross-state battle. "It deserves
every bit of press coverage it
gets," Stolz comments, refering
to the immense attention the
game receives.
. He noted that "there is an
added natural incentive for the
game because of the national
prestige, the state rivalry, and
standing in the Big Ten."
The tradition that Brown and
Stolz will contribute to, Saturday,
had its origin October 12, 1898,
when Michigan's "Varsity" fac-
ed Michigan Agricultural College
at Regents Field and defeated
them 39-0 .. . "in a game," ac-
cording to the Daily, "that did
not afford them (Michigan) half
the practice that they would
have had in a line-up against the
in 1953 by Governor G. Men-
nen Williams, the coveted statue
of the legendary hero of the
north woods has spent most of
its time in East Lansing, t h e
Spartans winning eleven of those
20 contests.
MSU has not beaten Michigan
since 1969 but its relative suc-
cess against the Maize and Blue
in, the '50s and '60s can be at-
tributed largely to the coaching
of Hugh Duffy Daugherty.
75,000 TITLES
All Books 50% OFF .(or more)
THOUSANDS OF TITLES 25c-$1.00
(Would you believe 15c/lb.?)
Text-on all sub.: for. lang, quality paperbacks, B-M & Sci.
Amer. Reprints
3800 PACKARD-971-7820
(NEAR CARPENTER)
M-F 10-5 SAT. 10-3
Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI
David E. Brown (26), Spartan runningback, carries the pigskin against Michigan's* Tony Smith (74)
and Tom Kee (37) in last year's fierce contest. Before 103,735 fans, the Wolverines shut-out Michigan
State' 10-0. Brown contributed a mortal blow to the Spartan hopes by fumbling the ball at the conclus-
ion of a near-successful MSU drive.
licensed qualified
physicians
1.
FINAL CLEARANCE SALE!
ENDS OCTOBER 13
TAKE ADVANTAGE of the SAVINGS... UP TO 50/o .
ll Billboard
All underclassmen interested
in trying out for the J. V. Bas-
ketball Team, there will be a
meeting at Crisler.Arena on Oc-
tober 1S at 6:30 pm.
third scrub eleven."
In the next meeting between
the two schools in 1902, Michigan
won by the astronomical score
of 117-0.
It wasn't until 1913, in t h e
eighth game of the series, that
the Aggies squeeked out a tri-
umph, 12-7.
The traditions of this quest for
statewide gridiron prestige have
grown considerably since t h e
days of Fielding Yost and Ly-
man Frimodig (class of 1917,
State's only ten-letter winner).
Now there is even a circulating
trophy to go to the winner of the
annual event.
The nobly conceived but little
known prize is known as the
"Paul Bunyan-Governor of Mich-
igan Trophy". Put in circulation
Gridde Pickings
The Washington Scandals announced a severe blow to their gridiron
fortunes today, as fullback Teddy "Two-face" Agnew was injured fum-
bling a kickback. Agnew joins a growing list of sidelined Scandals in-
cluding "Flat Top" Haldeman, "Masher" Mitchell, "Eat 'em up" Ehr-
lichman and "Boy Blunder" Dean.
Coach Tricky Dick Vixon, visibly upset, said he took the injury' of
Agnew " . . . with a sense of personal loss. He was especially good at
knocking out the opposition with golf balls."
With the loss of Agnew' the Scandals have become definite under-
dogs in the upcoming "Investigation Bowl" against the Capitol Hill
Muckrakers. Coach "Country Boy" Ervin says his team is at full
strehgth with "Charisma" Baker and "Wrecker" Weicker ready to go.
Proceeds from the bowl will go to the Senator Ted Kennedy fund.
Sponsors of the bowl, Mr. Pizza, have announced another contest spec-
tacular in the making; if you get your Gridde Pickings in to 420 May-
nard you may be eligible for a free Mr. Pizza pizza..
h -- 11__________________ _____________________ i
SK IS,
HEAD
240: $65.00
360: $79.00
72-0: $65.00
DYNASTAR
S 1430: $110.00
S-230: $99.00
KNEISSL
Red Star SL: $125.00
White Star: $99.00
OLIN
Mark JI: $110.00
Mark 11: $150.00
BOOTS
RAICHLE
Speed Freak: $120.00
Red Hot: $1 10.00
KOFLACH
Blue Star: $56.00
Swing Star: $56.00
POLES
Scott: $11.00
Kerma: $11.00
BINDINGS
Morker $29.00
Tyrol ia :$39.95
NOON LUNCHEON-only 40c
Friday, Oct. 12
SPEAKER
Prof. Dan FUSFELD
Dept. of Economics
"THE DEEPER MEANING
OF WATERGATE"
GUILD HOUSE
802 MONROE
there will be no international dinner this week
FREE CIDER & DOUGHNUTS
SATURDAY THE FINAL DAY!!!
I
2455 S. STATE
1 mile S. of Campus
H RS.: M; Th., Fri.-1 0-8:30
Tues., Wed., Sat.--10-5:30
662-7307
BankAmericord " Master Charge
0 American Express
[!I
1I'
---
ai
APPEARING IN A FUND RAISING CONCERT FOR
OZONE HOUSE " DRUG HELP
COMMUNITY CTR. PROJECT
i~ <
-' ' RAITT
AND
photo D. Fulton'
J. WELI UDYGY
T.T
!. v.4~
r/,."
photo D. Fulton,
JR. WVYELLS &BUDDY GUY
SATUR iiAY. OCT..f 13
_-"-_--1. MICHIGAN at Michigan State
(pick score)
2. Ohio State at Wisconsin
m~u r ~3. Purdue at Illinois
V W- u 4 Indiana at Minnesota
V W OW.rL.1J S Iowa at Northwestern
6. Nebraska at Missouri
FALL TUNE-UP 7. Air Force at Colorado
ONY 99w agon:8. Oklahoma at Texas
ONLY 9.959. Louisiana State at Auburn
COUPON w10. Georgia Tech at Tennessee
Includes plugs and points . CAlabama at Florida
Waraned wrk I12. UCLA at Stanford
Sme day service 1237 Rosewood 13. Maryland at N.C. State
(Coupon Good Forever) Phone 662-2576 14. Boston Col. at Miami, Fla.
15. Pittsburgh at West Virginia
16. Connecticut at Delaware
__17. Columbia at Harvard
18. Massachusetts at Boston U.
19. Bowling Green at Kent State
20. DAILY LIBELS at Michigan
State News
DEC. 23-29 CLASSICS
MASS MEETING CLASSIAL,
Thurs.,Oct.r11LIBRARY 0
Th rs1Scholarly English transla-
/Jtions opposite definitive
Greek and Latin texts,
7:30--Assem bly Hall The flloing are some of the
authos wehave in stock:
fl Cicero
Basement Michigan Union Vlato
..jAristotle0
Isocrates N
Stein Erickson Ski Movie Pervigilium Venes
SEuripides (
LIMITED SPACE ! . Petronius &Seneca I
V Propertius
to be assured a seat, Sopoces Q
by Oct. 20 Greek Bucolic Poets
Suetonus
____TRAVEL Gorevidal
Horace
11__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ vidaesar
Apuleus
Xenophon
Tomorrow FRIDAY Ieis
____ ____ ___ ____ ____ ___ ____ N-Plautus
Greek Anthology V
Longus
INUBoethius
Juvenal &;Persius
UN Martial
LIVELOBSER U
0Homer 1N-
Thucydides
Lyaieraec
+vSallust-
Herodotus
D Callimachus p
aEpictetus{t~iV
with bread, butter, Greek salad,0 Samervn
a Lyra Graeca c
baked potato & sour creamIAecyu
by reservation-please specify P anas
a iPsana 1J
lobster when making reservation 0 Lysias
I Bede
art&H CINEMA