I Wednesday, November 1, 1972 I I iE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Wednesday, November 1, 1972 ii IE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine I WHY DO Missouri kills another giant By DANIEL BORUS amazing Missouri Tigers became tha fndt Uif the f b llinrlU ldn THE LIEA ADA, DSG CRD AND SUPPORT STEMPIEN CONGRESS? When Al Onofrio opened the foot- ball practice of the University of Missouri, reporters across the state began filing his obituary. After all,, didn't the Tigers roar to an im- pressive 1-10 season the year be- fore? The outlook for this season wasn't much brighter as Onofrio whistled together the men of the "show me" State this fall. Putting on pads for Mizzou were the kids from the Jewish suburbs of St. Louis, farm boys from the hick midland, jun- ior college transfers, and the re- mnant of that disasterous squad of last year. Onofrio, who bears a striking resemblance to Administration swifty Henry Kissinger, but lacks" a German accent, had the un- enviable task of facing besides the usual Big Eight roughnecks, that perennial pover Notre Dame. But today, Onofrio's phone con- tinues to ring and ring as the "DID YOU KNOW that the Coun- ty Board of Commissioners deals with medical care, law enforce- ment, divorce and child support, administration of Welfare, em- ployment and job trainina, child care, family planning, and other services?" KATHY TO the roast or te eoot a twort as they registered their second straight shocking -pset, clubbing the sky-high Colorado Buffaloes, 20-17 last Saturday. For that feat the Tigers have been awarded a 16th ranking, the only team among the prestigious twenty to have suffered a shellacking of the magnitude of 62-0, ahdisgrace they suffered at the hands of mighty Nebraska. In explaining Missouri's success over the last two weeks, Onofrio said, "Emotion wins, the plays, the formations, they're all the same, but these guys (the Tig- ers) love each other and it shows." "These victories have been the greatest of my career", the well known fixture at Missouri pro- claimed. Onofrio assumed t h s head coaching job in 1971 after mentor Dan Devine took to min- ing gold in Wisconsin with t h e Packers. The Golden Buffaloes of Color- ado came into Columbia a bit down after their upset of Oklahoma the week before. Coach Eddie Crow- der and staff didn't. have the added incentive of a Missouri spy. Mis- souri, the thinking went, couldn't pull two big upsets in a row. Missouri, it turned out, didn't need any spies. Just a good quar- terback and a brassy halfback. John Cherry, who some thought should not be quarterbacking the Tigers, completed 7 of 12 passes and gaided the Tigers to a first half 10-0 lead. T)mmy Reamon, the brash trans- fer from a Kansas junior college, put the Tigers ahead 10-0 when he scored from the two. The Tigers drew first blood with a Greg Hill field goal and moved into scor- ing position when linebacker Scott Pickens fell upon a bad pitchout from quarterback and star of the Oklahoma game, Ken Johnson. Cherry, reading the Colorado defense perfectly, threw a bril- liant screen pass to Reamon, who rambled from the 24 to the five. From there he busted in two plays later. Coming out of the locker room for the second half, the Golden Buffaloes found themselves in the same position that Notre Dame had found itself in the week before. But Crowder was determined to pull out all the stops. Injured running star Charlie Davis was pressed into duty and for a while it appeared that the strategy would be success- ful. Davis helped the Buffs drive the length of the field and dove the last three yards to put the Buffs in con- tention, 10-7. Freddie Lima, the barefoot kick- er from Chile, booted a third quar- ter field goal to knot the score at 10 apiece. I But Cherry, Reamon and Com- pany were not to be denied this weekend. The Tigers stormed 58 yards with Reamon marching most of the turf. Cherry found John Sharp in the end zone and com- pleted the pass to give Mizzou the 17-10 lead. Colorado drove back, fighting desperately for yardage. Johnson's passing, while not overwhelming began to power past Missouri and fullback Bo Mathews helped t i e the score when he plunged into paydirt from the three. Cherry went to the air a n d completed one pass to Sharp and when no one was open, Jumpin' John pulled down the ball and romped 12 yards to out the Tig- ers in, field goal range. This time Hill split the uprights with six seconds left and Missouri had accomplished an unprecedented feat of pulling two upsets in con- secutive weeks. Which all in all isn't bad for a nice guy who was expected to find a new job at the end of the year. P hilly deals for hurlers By The :associated Press PHILADELPHIA -The Phila- delphia Phillies traded third base- man Don Money, pitcher Bill Champion and infielder John Vuko- vich to the Milwaukee Brewers yesterday for starting pitchers Jim Lonborg, Ken Brett and relievers Ken Sanders and Earl Stephenson. The seven-player trade was an- nounced by Phillies' General Man- ager Paul Owens, who said "this really puts our pitching staff in good shape for next season." Owens said Lonborg and Brett would join Phillies' ace Steve Carl- ton as the top three starters in 1973. He said Wayne Twitchell, Dave Downs, Barry Lersch and Ken Reynolds would compete for the fourth starting job. Sanders will be used as a right- hand reliever and Stephenson as a lefthander out of the bullpen. The 29-year-old Lonborg won 14 and lost 12 for Milwaukee in 1972. He completed 11 games, pitched 223 - innings, struck out 143 and posted an earned run average of 2.83. READ VAGINAL POLITICS Dem. Commissioner Pd. Pol. Adv. TODAY-Wednesday, November 1 the Office of Religious Alfairs Fnd the Program for Studies in Religion PRESENT roessor Robert ela Prof. of Sociology at Berkeley 4 P.M.-- "The New Religious Ccnsciansness On the Secular University" AND Professor fheodore Gil Prof. of Humanities at C.U.N.Y. 8 P.M.- IReligion as an Aesthetic Discipline" Auditorium 3, Modern Language Building E. WASHINGTON and S. THAYER STS. _... _ _ _ ___.__. ..._ ___ r! 14ffI 0 The record with no tancy dressing. ON PEOPLES NEEDS: Bob Griffin is fighting sickle cell. He co-sponsored the new law to spend $70 million to find the causes and cure of sickle cell anemia. He uses muscle for Michigan. Senator Griffin caused the Agriculture De- partment to re-instate the supplemental food program for under-nourished infants and pregnant mothers in Detroit. He works for the aged. Senator Griffin fought successfully in Congress for the new cost-of-living increase in Social Security payments. ON TIC;E ENVIRONMENT: He's fighting the heavy polluters of Lake Superior. Senator Griffin was the prime mover in getting court action against the Reserve Mining Corporation of Silver Bay, Minnesota. Reserve Mining was (lumping up to 67,000 tons of taco- nite waste daily. i BECAUSE HE DEMOCRAT STEMPIEN STEMPIEN supports immediate American withdrawal from Vi- etnam, and rejects the interventionist mentality that leads to involvement in the internal affairs of oher naions. STEMPIEN, nominated as "Conservationist of the Year" in 19- 71, has earned the endorsement of the Detroit Area Coalition for the Environment (DACE). STEMPIEN supports substantial defense budget cuts including a deletion of funds for the ABM, the B-lI Bomber and military aid to dictatorships, plus troop reductions in Europe and the "Third World". STEMPIEN supports a reallocation of military funds to pressing domestic needs such as urban education, National Health In- surance, pollution control and job creating programs. STEMPIEN opposes Nixon policies which believe that the way to fight inflation is with high unemployment and special favors for big corporations. STEMPIEN has supported Equal Rights throughout his legisla- tive career, was chief sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment in Michigan and saved the Women's Commission Budqet with a floor amendment when funds hod been deleted. STEMPIEN has earned the endorsement of the Black Caucus of the Michi- AN DO MORE! REPUBLICAN ESCH MYTH: Marvin Esch is a liberal reformist Republican like Pete McCloskey and Don Riegle. FACT: Esch has voted numerous times for conservative Nixon policies. Esch voted for House Resolution 613, supporting Nixon's stand on Vietnam in full. December 2, 1969. Esch voted against Mink amendment which would have requir- ed a cut-off of funds for military activities in and over Indo- china after December 31, 1971. Esch voted to table the resolution requiring Nixon to furnish the House a copy of the Pentagon Papers. 1971. Esch voted against the Pike amendment deleting funds for the B-1 Bomber. (HR 8687) 1971. Esch voted for the McDonald amendment to the Water Pollu- tion Control Acts of 1972 which would have exempted indus- try from paying their fair share for watse treatment. April 1, ,1972. Eschvoted to extend the power of the Subversive Activities Conrtol Board. (HR 9669) June 10, 1972. Esch voted against Common Cause, organized labor, civil rights and women's groups-backed proposals for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to stop illegal job dis- rrmnnin(Elnor mnm~ntl) Setemer 6,1971.- He's co-sponsoring legislation to protect Michigan's wilderness. Griffin bills will preserve forever the wilderness along the Au Sable Rivers, and on Isle Royale. These n e w and 1MIanistee- ON EQUAL fiHtITS: Senator Grif fin voted for every important civil rights law enacted since Re- construction. They have all been plasse in the 16 years since Bob Griffin first went to Congress. And he supported every one. lHe fought for a five-year extension of the Joting Right's Act. This meant five years more assistance for blacks who are being (leprive(l of their vote in the South. And the extension did pass Congress. He was a co-sponsor of the 18-year-old Voting Rights Amendment. Senator Griffin also co-slionsored the Equal Rights Amendment that e im ina s job dis- crimnation because of sex, and a new bill allowing 18-year olds to serve Oil jUries.