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October 04, 1972 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


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COWBOYS SURPRISE

314 EAST LIBERTY-761-2231
LATE ~
Featurin. -g: SPECIA
LIVE E

NEW HOURS:
12-2 p.m.-5 p.m.-midnight
daily
Hot Town's First Gourmet
VEGETARIAN
RESTAU RANT
For You Natural Folk

Upset
By ROBIN WAGNER
Someone forgot to tell Okla-
homa State's football team last
Saturday that they were playing
the country's third ranked squad.
The Cowboys would probably
have more trouble riding horses
than they did in disposing of
Colorado, 31-6.
The overwhelming pre-season
choice to occupy the Big Eight
cellar this year, OSU was in un-
believable command of their
opponents throughout the contest.
This game was the conference
opener for both schools.
Following the rout, Coach Ed-
die Crowder of the losing team
dejectedly stated, "Never have
Never have I seen ai

stuns Colorado

splendid performance .directing
the home team's devastating
wishbone offense.
Especially outstanding in the
opening half, Blackman engi-
neered two 80 yeard scoring
drives and climaxed a third
drive by throwing a 16 yard
touchdown. pass.

NIGHT~TEA HOUSE
kL STUDENT PRICES
NTERTAINMENT

' OPEN AS OF WED., SEPT. 20

E m p 1 o y i n g a conservative
game plan closely resembling
one Michigan might use, Okla-
homa State refrained from pass-
ing the game's final thirty min-
utes. Content with a successful
team more obsessed with
n Oklahoma State was

wit

nning a gpme than

In reviewing the game, Smithxr
said, "We beat them with 'A-B-C r'
football.' There was no trickery.
or skullduggery involved."
Joey Duenas, quarterback fornW
Colorado, had his own theory
concerning the one-sided out-t,
come. He explained, "We were
spoiled in our first three games.
We forget what Big Eight foot-"-
ball was 'like. The Big Eight is
the only way to go."
Through three games of the
young season, Oklahoma State
has acted unlike the cellar- E
dwellers they were predicted to
be. After opening with a 21-3 ..
humbling of Texas at Arlington,
the Cowboys dropped a heart-
breaker at Arkansas,-24-23. Bit-"
ter memories of that loss van-
ished however, when the Bif- l
faloes came to town.
An old football-directed adage .
states, "One game doesn't make
a season". This fall' OSU might
realize the truth of that saying.
With such games as Missouri,
Oklahoma and Nebraska looming. ..s
ahead on the schedule, the Colo- .
rado win, if it "doesn't make the
whole season", might make a AP.Photo
large part of it.
As one OSU athletic official COLORADO QUARTERBACK Ken Johnson (7) rambled for good
said, before attacking the re- yardage against Minnesota two weeks ago in an easy Buffalo
mainder of the season, Coach victory. Last Saturday, however, Johnson and his Colorado team-
Smith will sit back and relish mates were soundly thrashed by Oklahoma State 31-6, dropping the
this victory, like "an old dog
having his day in the sun." Buffaloes out of the AP's top ten.
HUSKERS'_GLOVER BEST
Nation abounds i t0 pi men

today.

-Eddie Crowder

.......... ..........

I seen a team more obsessed
with winning a game than Okla-
homa State was today."
Capitalizing on four Colorado
turnovers, OSU built up a 21-0
halftime margin to put the game
out of reach. Alton Gerard, a
junior college transfer from Sa-
linas, California, was one of
many standouts for the winners.
He scored three touchdowns on
runs of one, one and nine yards.
Last fall, Gerard was the na-
tion's leading scorer in junior col-
lege football.
OSU quarterback Brent Black-
man, only 5'11" and 162 pounds,
was "worth his weight in gold"
to the fans in Stillwater on this
particular Saturday. He gave a

ground game, the winners ac-
cumulated 361 rushing yards for
their day's efforts.
Colorado's highly touted of-
fense, highlighted by All-Ameri-
can candidate Charlie Davis,
never did get untracked. The
lone tally for the losers came on
their eleventh possession, late in
the third period. Not since a
1969 encounter with Penn State
have the Buffaloes failed to
score at least seven points in a
game.
Middle linebacker Cleveland
Vann and tackle Barry Price an-
chored the enthused Cowboy de-
fense. "A real scorpion" is OSU
coach Dave Smith's vivid de-
scription of Vann.

Gridde Pickinigs
As for Marvel - she went back to her desk to redraw the game
plans.
If you have any suggestions for Marvel truck them down to 420
Maynard along with your Gridde Pickings by midnight Friday. Marvel
will thank you, and so will your stomach if you win the free Mr. Pizza
pizza.

By CHUCK BLOOMt
With the sport of football sat-
isfying the violence of most Amer-
icans, those who epitomize the vio-,
lent nature are worshiped. Titlest
such as superstars and All-Amer-t
icans are heaped upon them. I
The defensive lineman engagest
in war each time a play is called
and physically they must be ready+
for it. The best linemen are big,
powerful brutes, ready to crash
heads at any given moment.
The best of them all is Nebras-
ka's Rich Glover. Barring a poor3
Cornhusker season or some injury,
Glover is virtually assured of be-
ing named the outstanding lineman
in theacountry.tGlover, (6-1, 234),
was named to the AP All-America
squad last year as a junior.,

tainly in the running for post-sea- been Pt Michigan." Butz tried to
son honors. live up to such praise by dumping
_ racnc13 tim lac t an

i

Ohio State's George Hasenrohl
(6-1, 258) continues in the tradi-
tion of fine Buckeye defensemen.
Coach Woody Hayes called Hasen-
rohl, "one of the finest defensive
tackles in college football." Has-
enrohl, who is strong as a bull, is
equally effective against the rush
as he is as a pass rusher.
Northwestern's pride and joy is
viking Jim Anderson (6-6, 255). In
1971 action, Anderson made 25 solo
tackles and had 66 assists. Even
though he plays for a fairly weak
team, Anderson is high on many
pro scouts' lists as a fine pro pros-
pect. Anderson is always up for
the big game. In last year's upset
of Ohio State, Wildcat defensive

COLOR. IN T HIS "MINI-,
PRESIDENTIAL
1. Buy a bunch of Flair pens. You need
-black,' brown, orange, yellow, purple,
,and green. (You need them anyway for
school.)'
2. Colorinthe picture according to these
color guide numbers. (1), Black (5). Brown;
(6). Orange (?). Yellow (9). Purple (12).
Gren. Do not color unnumbered areas.

I"

POSTER" OF ONE OF THE
CANDIDATES!
3. Congratulations! You have created a
genuine full color portrait of someone
you know and love, Maybe. If he is not
yourfavorite presidential candidate, have
patience.-You'll see your favorite next in
the Flair Election Collection!
(Don't forget to ask about Flair's running
mate, the Flair Hot Liner.)

1. Navy at MICHIGAN (pick
score)
2. Indiana at Syracuse
3. Penn St at Illinois
4. Notre Dame at Michigan State
5. Kansas at Minnesota
6. Northwestern at Wisconsin
7. Ohio State at California
8. Purdue at Iowa
9. Lehigh at Army
10. Colgate at Yale

11. Rhode Island at Maine
12. Kent St. at West Michigan
13. Missouri at Oklahoma St.
14. Alabama at Georgia
15. Auburn at Mississippi
16. Duke at North Carolina St.
17. Florida ait Florida St.
18. USC at Stanford
19. New Mexico St. at SMU
20. Northern Arizona at Montana
St.

passers 1t mesiasi seasuon.
Bingham is a hard nosed mid-
dla giard whose fierce pass rush
has many quarterbacks listening
for footsteps behind them. Against
the Wolverines last year, Bingham
made 17 tackles in a great indi-
vidal effort.
By no means, however, does the
Midwest monopolize all the out-
standing linemen. In the East, Sy-
racuse casts Joe Erhmann as the
best in Orangemen history.
Ken Lambert of Tennessee was
a prep hurdles champion and uses
that ability when playing his de-
fensive end position. Joe LeHeup
leads the South Carolina Gamecock
defense which is perenially tough.
In summary, All-Americans are
eventually determined by the pro
leagues themselves. They draft
according to ability, not accolade.
But this year there is a lot of tal-
ent up front.
Billboard
There will be an organizational
meeting for all freshmen inter-
ested in trying out for the fresh-
man basketball team Friday,
October 13, at 5 p.m. in Crisler
Arena.

Il]

WILD'S

J

I

A

a _
T. .. .. .

Against Oklahoma on Thanks- line coach Ron Marciniak said An-
giving Day last year, Glover per- derson "was the finest defensive
sonally destroyed the Sooners with player I've ever seen."
his keen pursuit and great play. In Tab Bennett, (6-2, 240), switch-
1971, he came up with 46 solo tack- ed from defensive tackle to end,
les and 92 tackles, overall.' aftdy e si gr a ckes t . en -
Nebraska is also blessed with n last year with great results. Ben-
another All - American, defensive nett, of Illinois, utilized his great
end Willie Harper. Although he is speed to make 53 solo stops and
only 6-3, 210, Harper is a fierce sacked enemy quarterbacks 11
times. Bennett lead the Illini de-
pass rusher and a near shoo-in forfnstoheecdbstiteBg
repeat All-America honors. He was fense to the second best the Big
named the outstanding lineman in;Ten behind only the Wolveries.
the 1971 Orange Bowl win over Purdue has a pair of All-Amer-
Alabama. ica prospects in Dave Butz and
The Big Ten, as a conference, Greg Bingham. Butz is a big boy
perhaps has the best group of de- at 6-7, 279 and Michigan coach Bo
fensive linemen in the nation. Schembechler called him "the
Michigan's Fred Grambeau is cer- best tackle I've seen since I've

Gillette CompanyPaperMatt Division 0197.

;

-

Reading with" the hand
is 4.7 limes taster

ITl'U
a'
r.'. ,c,. .z
t .4'
4.
t/2

(I-

i

In the first grade, when you were taught.
to read "Run Spot Run,"you had to read it
out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second'
grade;.you were asked to read silently. But
you couldn't do it..
You stopped reading out loud, but you
continued to say every word to yourself.
Chances are, you're doing it right now.
This means that you read only as fast
as 'you talk. About 250 to 300 words per
minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records'
lists John F. Kennedy as-delivering the fast-
est speech on record: 327 words per
minute.)
The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you
to read without mentally saying each word
to yourself. Instead of reading one word at
a time, you'll learn to read groups of words.-
To see how natural this is, look at the
dot over the line in bold type.
grass is green
You immediately see all three words.
Now look at the dot between the next two
lines of'type.
and it grows .
when it rains
With training, you'll learn to use your
innate ability to see groups of words.
As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be
able to read between 1,000 and 3,000
words per minute . . . depending on the
difficulty of the material.
At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's
American Political Tradition and finish
each chapter in 11 minutes.
At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be
.able to read a magazine like Time or News-

week and finish each page in 31 seconds.
At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read the 447 page novel The God-
father in 1 hour and 4 minutes.
These are documented statistics based
on the results of the 450,000 people who
have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course
since its inception in 1959.
The course isn't complicated. There
are no machines. There are no notes 'to
take. And you don't have to memorize any-
thing.
95% of our graduates have improved
their reading ability by an average of 4:7
times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read-
ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times.
In these instances, the tuition is completely
refunded.
Take a free
Mini-Lesson
on Evelyn Wood.
Do -you want to see how the course
works?
Then take a free Mini-Lesson.T- The
Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what
the Evelyn Wood course offers.
We'll show you how it's possible to
accelerate your speed without skipping a
single word. You'll have a chance to try your
hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually
increase your reading speed. (You'll only
increase it a little, but it's a start.)
We'll show you how we can extend your
memory. And we'll show you how we make
chapter outlining obsolete.
Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a
wild hour, And it's free.

L.SAL1{

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Double Knit Flares
Moderate flare, flap back pockets, wide belt
loops.=RACERS*-5 colors in a basketweave
double knit of 100% Dacron* polyester. $19.00.
100% DACRON", DOUBLE KNIT!
Du Pont's registered T.M.
.. f'd .- .. ar

U of M STUDf.NT UNION
530 S. State St.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4
6:30 p.m. or 8:30 p.m.

THURSDAY, OCT. 5
6:30 p.m. or 8:30 p.m.

I

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