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November 21, 1972 - Image 7

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-11-21

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Tuesday, November 21, 1912

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page, Seven

Tuesday, November 21, 1972 THE MiCHIGAN DAILY gage Seven

Here
By FRANK LONGO
Well, here it is, folks. This is
the one you've all been waiting for.
For the fourth time in the last
five years, the final week of the
Big ,Ten grid season will be called
upon to determine the conference
winner, the Rose Bowl representa-
tive, and the Big Ten hope for a
national champion.
Yes, this is Michigan vs. Ohio
State Week.
This Saturday's nationally tele-
vised Game of the Year, Decade,
Century (choose one) takes place
in Columbus, where Michigan
has failed to win in either of the
last two Big Ten Playoff Bowls.
The Wolverines took a 50-14
beating in 1968, and two years ago
the Buckeyes pounded out a 20-9
victory.

come
But with this year's showdown
only four days away, it is time to
clear the air of a few items of
interest.
" The Wolverines are, of course,
the only undefeated team in the
Big Ten, sporting a 10-0 mark, 7-0!
in the conference standings.
0 The Buckeyes of Ohio State,
as ABC commentator Bill Fleming
likes to refer to that team down
south, are 6-1 in the Big Ten and
8-1 overall, with the lone loss cor-
ing at the hands of Michigan State.
Woody Hayes had corned beef
and cabbage for lunch yesterday.
That last fact may not have too
much significance, until it is real-
ized that that menu has popped up
just once before at Hayes' Mon-
,day afternoon press conferences:
the week before OSU lost to the

the

Bucks!

v-.,iXad tf i f'epCt4

----

Woody's Fantasi

.'

"Champ" has also broken the
d i school record for touchdowns in a
single season with 19. The former
record of 17, was held jointly by
Otis and Brockington.j
s p o r t eThe other backfield starter is
expected to be co-captain Rick
Galbos, who has missed the last
NIGHT EDITOR: three games with a leg inijry.
BOB HEUER Hayes reports that Galbos should
be ready in time for the Michigan
game. If not, freshman Brian;
Spartans. Baschnagel, 6-1, 185 from Pitts-
Materiallikevthat becomes par- burgh, will start in that spot for
ticularly relevant when dealing the Bucks.
with Superstitious Woody, who is Anchoring the offensive line are
now in his 22nd season at Ohio left tackle Merv Teague, left guard
State. Jim Kregel, center Steve Myrs,
One of Woody's favorites is his right guard Chuck Bonica, and
deliberate failure to mention right tackle John Hicks.
Michigan or the Wolverines at Big names and big players high-
any time. He refers to the Blue light the defense, led by All-
only as "that school up north." America co-captain George Hasen-
Anyway, the real material to ohensivetackle.,Hasen-
talk about when discussing Woody's ohrl, who measures 6-1, 258 is fin-
Wonders are his players, and a ishing his third season as a regular
fine crew he has. and is probably the strongest mnI
on the squad. Michigan's Tom
Quarterbacking an offensive unit Coyle is the lucky one to draw this
which has ground out an average blocking assignment.
of 368 yards per game will be The real strength for OSU lies
junior Greg Hare. in its linebackers, however. Rick
Hare, who played Don Lamka's Middleton, a -6-3, 214 junior who
back-up last season, has completed moved from tight end to the line-1
50 per cent of his passes this year backer spot, leads the team in
at 50 of 100 for 734 yards and three tackles with 87, including 32 solo
touchdowns. The 6-3, 198 p und jobs.
native of Cumberland, Md., is al:o
the Buckeyes' third leading rusher
with 308 yards on 79 attempts. His IN
play has been vital to Ohio State's
success this year.
Archie Griffin, OSU Wonder
Boy, will start at left halfback
for the Bucks. The 5-10, 185 pound ap
freshman, whose picture does nsE
appear in the Ohio State pressa By JIM ECKER1
guide, leads the team in yards- special To The Daily'
per-carry with 5.7. Griffin has DETROIT - The University of:
rushed 122 times for 697 net yards Michigan wrestling team staged its
and a pair of touchdowns. Al- annual intrasquad meet last night:
though he was not expected to before an intimate gathering at;
start (nor were any other OSU Detroit's Catholic Central Hight
freshmen) Griffin has stepped in School. Coach Bill Johanneson's
to do a remarkable job. "Red Wrestlers" defeated Coach

i
r
J
4

'Skins whip Falcons
to retain divsion lead
WASHINGTON () - Stung by Atlanta boosted its lead to 10-0
Atlanta's quick 10-0 lead, the just 12 seconds into the second
Washington Redskins, behind Larry period when Bill Bell split the up-
Brown's running and Bill Kilmer's rights on a 33-yard field goal.
passing, roared back to a 2413 Then the Redskins, who main-
National Football League victory taed their one-game lead over
over the Falcons last night. the Dallas Cowboys in the National
Brown scored Washington's firstConference's Eastern Division, fin-
two touchdowns and became only' ally settled down and moved
the third running back in NFL his- methodically to their ninth victory
l__in 10 games, their best record in
I B-ball toniught I30years.-

In place of the University ofj
Michigan annual freshman-var-
sity basketball game, there will
be an intrasquad contest to-
night today at Plymouth High
School, at 7:30 p.m.
tory to gain 4,000 yards rushing in
his first four seasons.
With a capacity crowd of 53,-
039, including Vice President
and Mrs. Spiro Agnew watching,
the upstart young Falcons took
advantage of Washington mis-
takes to build their early lead.
Three plays after cornerback
Ken Reaves picked off a Kilmer
aerial, quarterback Bob Berry
and tight end Jim Mitchell com-
bined on a 36-yard pass play to
open the scoring.

Linebacker Chris Hanburger's
fumble recovery led to Wash-
ington's first TD, a one-yard
dash around right end by Brown
The score was set up by. a 14-
yard reverse by wide receiver
Charley Taylor as the Skins were
down 10-7 at halftime.
Washington took the lead for
good midway through the third
quarter when Kilmer's 18-yard pass
to Brown climaxed an 89-yard,
nine-play drive.
A 12-yard pass from Kilmer to
tight end Jerry Smith, on the first
play after Brig Owens picked off
an Atlanta fumble, boosted Wash-
ington to a 21-10 advantage.
Fourth period field goals by At-
lanta's Bell and Washington's Curt
Knight ended the scoring.

. .

J

.. .beating Michigan

"i

john papanek.

AP Photo
ATLANTA'S RAY BROWN (34) and Tom Hayes (27)Astopped
Washington Redskin running back Larry Brown (43) on this play
in last night's game, but not until after he had picked up the
first down. Larry Brown passed the 1,000 yard mark in rushing
during the game, and his teammates provided the support in
Washington's 24-13 victory.

HERE IS THE secret lair of the Ohio State Buckeyes, buried
deep within the catacombs of the Woody Hayes Institute for
Rude and Indecent behavior.
Woody is feeding his players the secret drug that makes their
glands secrete urine and their nostrils pour smoke. He qlamps
their eyelids open and makes them watch movies.,
They see bizarre 'patterns of color-maize and blue-swirling
in gracefully placid images. Little pricks of electricity make them
jump and moan.
Then the screen fills with familiarity. It's a football game.
There are 103,000 screaming people in the stands. It's Michi-
gan and Ohio State. Michigan is winning 10-7, but OSU has
the ball and are driving for what will surely be the winning
touchdown.
A pass for Dick Wakefield deep in Michigan territory, and a
Wolverine helmeted Tom Darden leaps up and over the re-
ceiver and intercepts in front of him on the way down.
The players watch the fat man on the screen as he rants
and raves at the officials at the obvious pass interference that
robbed the game from the Buckeyes.
Foam dribbles from the wired players' mouths and grunts
and groans fill the room.
Meanwhile, arch-nemesis Bo Schembechler prepares his
players in Ann Arbor. He's cool. He's mean but he's cool. His
team is going to practice this week, harder and more intense
than any week in the season. The only turkey they'll see Thurs-
day is the student manager by that name who'll be shining their
shoes, and hanging their jocks.
And yesterday, Bo's only public day before the battle, the
General even stopped to talk about the Buckeyes, a mortal sin
all season until now.
In fact, he spent the morning chatting with Northwestern
coach Alex Agase, whose Purple Haze were victimized by Woody's
Weasels 27-14 last Saturday.
"I didn't get much from him," Bo said. "I've seen enough of
them in their films. We know what we'll have to do to win."
But that much he didn't have to say. The week of a Michigan-
dhio State game is something else altogether. The teams are so
that's higher-emotionally, mentally, or any other kind of high
even that the winner of the game will most likely be the team
that's applicable. One factor that always has people worried when
they venture to Columbus is the fanatical atmosphere that the
people down there generate for a football game.
"The only thing we usually worry about down there is the
field," Schembechler says, "but they have artificial turf now,
so that's no worry.
"But if you're talking about the noise, I guess the field
does have some advantage for the home team. But hell, our
players are used to having people scream at them. That
happens in any foreign stadium.
"The biggest difference in going there is that when they
come to us they get tickets. When we go down there, we don't
get any."
It's hard to imagine a group of human beings so immune
to abuse. I was there in 1970, when Columbus was literally torn
down by happily drunk celebrants. I can't imagine what will
happen if OSU loses. I'm putting Texas plates on my car just in
case.
Bo spent most of the remaining time yesterday talking about
his own team.
"This team has done more than any I've ever had," Bo said.
"They've done things that people just didn't expect them to do.
Nobody thought they'd be 10-0 at this point in the season.
It's a strong, cohesive unit. There's no bickering, no bitching,
everyone does their job. The kids hang together, they will not
crack. That's why I know we'll play a real good game Saturday.
"We have a limited number of seniors all playing great foot-
ball. We have a strong junior class. And we have real good
sophomores filling in. We needed a quarterback, we got one.
We needed a safety, we got one. It's a close knit group. They
like each other. There are no black-white problems, and that's
the first time I can honestly say that."
So the indication is that win or lose at Columbus, 1972 will
be an enormously satisfying year for Bo Schembechler.
- "Look," he says, "After spring practice we thought we
had a good team, but we knew there was an awful lot of work
to do. Everybody figured us, Purdue, Illinois, Michigan State
and Ohio State would be the contenders, with Ohio way out
in front.
"Our win over UCLA was what turned everything for us.
We needed the confidence from a win out on the coast. We had
to beat Michigan State and we did. And we played like hell
against Purdue. And anybody who thinks we can't make the
big play with (Dennis) Franklin, is wrong."
When Bo got through talking he got up to leave and Joe Falls,
everyone's favorite expert on dull football made an appeal.
"Bo," he said, "If you lose Saturday, please don't keep us
writers waiting outside the locker room too long." Bo made them
wait a very long time after losing in 1970.
"Don't say 'if you lose,' Joe," Bo said. And he walked out to
attend to the important stuff.

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TRASQUAD MATCH

Big Ten Standings

;;Cti

rs win and lose

ball fame and his brother, John,,
was a Big Ten wrestling champion
at Iowa a year ago.
Jim Brown (Red) opened the'
evening with a 10-9 decision over
sophomore Jay Hubner. Brown,!
second place finisher in last year's
Big Ten tournament at 118 pounds,
had trouble with the heavier Hub-
ner (126 lb.) throughout. A one
point riding advantage gave Brown
the win.

senior Jim Blanks. Lozon, a 134-
lb. freshman from' Detroit Red-
ford Union High School, got off to
a fast start and was never chal-
lenged thereafter.
In other matches, Dave Curby
(Green-190) defeated Steve Dis-
sell, 9-3; Bill Schuck (Red-142) took
Brad McCrory, 5-2; and Jeff Guy-
ton (Green-131) bested Rich Val-
ley (126).

MICHIGAN
Ohio State
Purdue
Michigan State
Minnesota
Indiana
Wisconsin
Illinois
Iowa
Northwestern

W
7
6
5
4
3.
3
3
2
1
1

Big
L T:
0 0
1 0
2 0
2 1
4 0
4 0
4 0
5 0
6 0
7 0

Ten
Pts.
151
18S
154
112
137
124
97
115
65
109

OP
20
86
54
64
177
163
154
161
169
207

W
10
8
S
4
3
5
S
2
2
2

All
L
0
1
S
5
8
5
S
9
7
8

Games
T Pts.
0 253
0 247
0 213
1 134
0 171,
0 197
0 163
0 163
1 94
0 132

OP
43
118
128
142
291
224
19S
282
194
366

Lining up at the fullback posi- Rick Day's "Green Grapplers",
tion will be Harold "Champ" Hen- 24-15.
son, a mere sophomore, but an- Catholic Central promoters bill-
other in the tradition of fine Buck ed the meet as a return to glory of
fullbacks. Following in the foot- two of their prouder products,
steps of Jim Otis and John Brxck- Mitch Mendrygal ('69) and John
ington, Henson, who stands tall at Ryan ('71). Ryan was Michigan's
6-4 but also weighs in at a burly state champion as a senior while
224, leads his team in rushing with Mendrygal took a second in the
759 net yards on 179 carries. state tournament his junior year.
The program's featured attrac-
- tions followed each other in quick
succession at the 158th and 177th
divisions respectively.

SATURDAY'S GAMES

Billy Davids (Red) moved up a
weight to 134 lb. and defeated the
incumbent Rick Neff, 6-3. Davids,
who has had trouble making
weights at 126, reversed and then
arm-rolled his opponent in eras-
ing an early three point deficit.
Fred Lozon (Green) looked im-
pressive in his 10-2 victory over

This was the first year in the MICHIGAN at
three year history of Michigan's Northwestern a
intrasquad meet that the event was
held outside Ann Arbor. The main Indiana at Purd
reason for the change was caused Minnesota at W
by the movement of the intrasquad' Illinois at Iowa
basketball meet from Crisler Are-
na to Plymouth High School. In
the past the wrestling match fol- HUNGA
lowed the basketball game. WO

Ohio State
t Michigan State
due
isconsin
RIAN DANCE
DRKSHOP

.ugh and Learn

I

fare well in
NCAA meet
Michigan's three representatives
to the NCAA Cross Country Cham-
pionships held yesterday in Hous-
ton did exceptionally well. Prelim-'
inary reports indicated that Keith.
Brown and Bill Bolster finished
45th and 46th in a field of 290
runners. Rick Schott, the other
Wolverine entry, finished around
100th. Both Bolster and Brown ran
lifetime bests.

Mendrygal, Michigan's captain
and defending 158 pound Big Ten
champion, rode sophomore Mike
Cross for a 4-2 success.
An injury put a stop to the Ryan-
Steve Schuster match. Ryan
dumped Schuster, a freshman
wrestling for the Green squad, hard
on his right leg, sending the
Grand Rapids native rising in
pain. Shuster was unable to con-
tinue and defaulted the match.
Heavyweight Gary Ernst took
advantage of 'an inexperienced
Schoolcraft Community College
wrestler named Rick Setzer and
pinned the freshman in the third
period.

Conference Standings f.

Big Eight Conference
ConT All Games
W LT W LT

Nebraska
Okiahoma
Oklahom
Colorado
Missouri
Iowa Sta'
Kansas
Kansas S
USC
UCLA
Washingt
Washingt
California
Oregon
Stanford
Oregon S

5 0 1 8 1 1
a 4 1 0 8 1 0
a St. 3 2 0 5 4 0
4 30 83 0
330 640
te 2 3 1 5 3 1
1 5 0 3 7 0
tate 1 6 0 3 8 0
Pacific-S Conference
Conf All Gaines
W L T W L T
7 0 0 10 0 0
5 20 83 0
on 4 3 0 8 3 0
on St. 4 3 0 7 4 0
a 3 4 0 3 8 0
2 5 0 #1 0
250 550
>tate 1 6 0 2 9 0

Penn
Yale
Harvard
Cornell
Princeton
Columbia
Brown
Mi
Kent
Bowlingt
w. Mich:
Miami, O
Toledo
Ohio
Texas
Texas Tei
Baylor
Rice
SMU
TCU
Arkansas
Texas A

4 2 0 6 20
4 20 682 0
3 2 1 4 3 1
3 3 0 5 3 0
2 3 1 3 4 1
1 4 1 2 5 1
1 50 1 70
id-American Conference
Conf All Games
W L T WLT
4 1 0 6 4 1
Green 3 1 1 6 3 1
igan 2 2 1 7 3 1
hio 2 3 0 7 3 0
2 3 0 6 5 0
1 40 38 0
Southwest Conference
Conf All Games
W LT WL T
6 0 0 8 1 0
ch 4 2 0 8 2 0
2 30 45 0
2 3 0 4 4 1
2 3 0 5 4 0
2 340 54 4 0
s 2 40 55 0
&M 2 4 0 3 7 0

CSABA PALFI
Professional d a n c e r with the
Hungarian State Folk Dance
Ensemble will teach donces:
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th
8:00-11 :00 P.M.
BARBOUR GYM
EVERYONE WELCOME
No Experience Necessary
Sponsored by
U. of M. Folkdancers

how to psych out
profs, exams,
textbooks, and the
other guy's notes.
STATEMENPie
Study Techniques
ava ilable at
U. Cellar, Ulrich's,
Follett's

Neal Cusack, an East Tennessee, Two time Big Ten Champion
State runner from Ireland, won the' Jerry Hubbard (Green) pounded
individual championship in a time I out an 8-1 win against sophomore
of 28:30. His teammate Ed Leddy John King in one of two 150-
who along with Bolster is from pound matches. In the second, Tom
Ireland, took third to put East Evashevski defeated freshman Cad
Tennessee in strong contention for DeLuca, 6-1.
the championship. The officials Evashevski comes from an inter-
must review a film of the finish to esting family. His father is For-
determine the final results. rest Evashevski of Big Ten foot-
This Week in Sports
TUESDAY
BASKETBALL-Intrasquad at Plymouth High School, 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
HOCKEY-Wisconsin at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m.
SATURDAY
FOOTBALL-Ohio State at Columbus
HOCKEY-Wisconsin at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m.

Southea
Alabama
Auburn
LSU
Georgia
Florida
Tennessee
Ken tucky
Mississippi
Mississippi St.
Vanderbilt
Atlantic4

stern Conference
Conf All Games
W LT W LT
7 0 0 10 0 0
5 1 0 8 1 0
4 1 0 8 1 0
4 30 64 0
33 0 4 4 0
2 20 72 0
2 4 0 370
1 5 0 4 5 0
1 5 0 4 6 0
0 50 36 0
Coast Conference
Conf All Games
WLT WLT
6 00 8 10
t. 4 1 1 7 3 1
3 2 1 5 4 1
33 0 560
2 4 0 3 7 0
1 50 47 0
1 50 2 80
ague Conference
Conf All Gaines
4WLT WLT
4 11 61 1

U OF M STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF & FAMiLIES
HERE COMES THE SUN!!
FREEPORT, BAHAMAS-$119.00*
DEC. 13-17, 17-21, 21-25, 29-2
JAN. 2-7-($129.00)
COSTA DEL SOL, SPAIN-$239.00*
DEC. 25-JAN. 2
WAIKIKI BEACH, HAWAII-$269.90
DEC. 20-28
*All trips include air transportation, hotel accommodations,
transfers (add $15.00 in Freeport and 10% in Spain and
Hawaii, for all travel and tips.)
FOR INFORMATION CALL: ADMINISTRATIVE &
OWEN-663-2044 TRAVEL SERVICES BY:
BOB & SUSAN-769-2728
DAVE-662-6726_ u n r
ELAINE-481- (3S30d5nou4
BILL-769-2543 (313) 886-0844

Major Independents
WV L T
Penn State 9 1 0
Notre Dame 8 1 0
Tampaa8e2 0.
west virginia 8 3 0
Utah State 7 3 0'
Georgia Tech 6 3 1
Northern Illinois 7 4 0
Florida State 7 4 0
Colgate 5 3 1
Tulane 6 4 0

I,

I

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I

drYearbook

U'

I

HAVE YOU TAKEN
the
MORNING AFTER PILL?
HEARD ABOUT ITS POSSIBLE SIDE-EFFECTS
AND PROBABLE CARCINOGENICITY?

1 ,
s Enclosed please find $8.00 (check or money order payable to MICH-
IGANENSIAN) for one 1973 MICHIGANENSIAN. We cannot bill u
you later. You will receive a receipt in the mail by early October.
Name
Ann Arbor Address ZipCode_
A
MALNINTUTOS adiinlcag f$.0"

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