page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 30, 1972 Page Six - THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 30, 1972 I £li r y 4 1.L .7 y LT~f1 Armstrong grinds for glory 1 I BILL SAM iM BILL & SAM FIGHT TO KEEP PRICES DOWN FOR THEIR CUSTOMERS STADIUM RESTAURANT AND PIZZERIA, By ROBIN WAGNER Twenty - two years ago, Otis Armstrong was born into the ug- liness and hopelessness of the Chicago ghetto. Today, thanks to an abundance of desire and a sport called football, Otis Arm- strong resides atop the career Big Ten rushing record, replac- ing an ancient mark held by Alan Ameche. "The odds against my getting anywhere in this world were s t a g g e r i n g," Armstrong describes. "There was poverty, unemployment, dope and gang wars in my neighborhood, but I made it out through football." And did he ever make it out. In a 31-game, injury-free stop- over at Purdue, Armstrong twisted, turned, sidestepped and dived for 3,315 yards and a 4.9 average. Along with becoming the all-time conference rushing leader, the Chicagoan owns sixth place in the NCAA ground - gain- ing records, passing such col- legiate superstars as Mike Gar- rett and 0. J. Simpson of South- ern Cal and San Francisco's 01- lie Matson. Armstrong's affinity for break- ing records (and picking up the .ieces) is unending. Every rush- ing mark at Purdue, including single season and career carries and rushing yards belong to the senior. Hold on, the best is yet to come. Not since 1945 had the Big Ten total offense leader not thrown a pass. But then, that's right, along came 1972, good ol' Otis, 1176 total offensive yards (no passing, of course) and an- other spanking new record. Armstrong's greatest "moment of glory" occurred last weekend against Indiana, when he gal- loped for a new school mark of 276 yards, and touchdowns of two, 71 and 53 yards. Super Breakfast Menu only 99 CENTS for eggs; ham, bacon or sausage or any omelette on our menu with toast & coffee or tea 99 c Mon.-Fr. 9 7-11 a.m. 99 GREEK MENU every Tues. & Thurs. 50 CENTS OFF on Medium and Large Pizzas 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. Big Ten Standings ,;. 3 e yi,;" , a 'p tos s, room MICHIGAN Ohio State Purdue Michigan State Minnesota Indiana Wisconsin Illinois Iowa Northwestern FINAL STANDINGS Big Ten W L T PF PA 7 1 0 162 34 7 1 0 199 97 6 2 0 196 61 5 2 1 136 80 4 4 0 151 183 3 5 0 131 205 3 5 0 103 168 2 6 0 129 176 2 7 0 80 183 1 8 0 129 231 All Game W 10 9 6 5 4 5 5 2 2 2 L 1 1 5 S 7 6 6 9 8 9 T 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 PF 264 261 255 158 185 204 169 177 109 146 Is PA 57 129. 135 156 297 266 209 297 208, 390 . b i i 4 Send any B&W, color, polaroid, or magazine photo (original returned unharmed). Add 50c for postage & handling for each poster ordered N. Y. residents add sales tax. Blowups from slides or negatives add $1.00. Send check, cash or money order (no C.O.D.)s(quantity prices on request) Superspeed Service: Shipped in one day by 1st class mail add $2.00 per poster. PHOTO . lV- V Van Wyck Expressway, 11418 s ,l r. 8 e Featuring OBIOTIC SPECIA L :00 A.M. Various accolades have been bombarded upon Armstrong dur- ing his reign in Lafayette. Indi- ana mentor Johnny Pont briefly, but vividly articulated, "He's the best, period." Cal Stoll of Min- nesota stated, "He's tremendous- ly strong, with speed and fine moves. Armstrong can do it all." Boilermaker coach Bob De- Moss, the man fortunate enough to possess the fleet running back, counted every one of his lucky stars while saying, "Otis has the ability to turn every play into a touchdown. He is undoubtedly the most coachable player I've ever seen in 22 years at Purdue and in four All-Star games." A r m s t r o n g, oversha- dowed in the past by such backs as Johnny Rodgers, Greg Pruitt and others, is finally getting his just rewards. Earlier in the week, the senior was named to the All-Big Ten squad and yes- terday was picked by the Foot- b41 Writers of America Associa- tion to the UPI All-America team. Performing on gridirons be- Halfway Inn Beats the Munchies fore thousands of people is in- deed, a "far cry" from scaveng- ing for food in the deserted al- leyways of Chicago. Armstrong, while cherishing his personal jackpot, possesses a refreshing notion of his position in the world. He explains, "A lot of black kids everywhere don't have much, if anything, going for them. The least I can do as a college athlete is to give them incentive for school. It's my duty to do the best I can for kids." Not many people who gain media publicity desire it for the constructive purpose Armstrong does. Repeating the theme of his past, he continued, "I hope the publicity will help other black kids go the right way. I'd like to set an example so they will stay in school and have a future." To build up his already steel- like legs, Armstrong enjoys rid- ing a bicycle. When one reporter heard of this exercise, he quip- ped, "That's like hearing Sophia Loren lifts weights to develop her chest." From Chicago to Purdue and hopefully on to the pros, Otis Armstrong remains a reassuring symbol of thoughtfulness in a sport ruled by prima-donnas, cut- throat competition and greed. BRADLEY TO THE BAY Cards grab relief, infield help Today We' A YlA CR DINNER From 11 HONOLULU (IP)-The St. Louis Cardinals picked up relief pitcher Wayne Granger and a pair of young infielders yesterday in trades with Houston and Minnesota. The trade mart continued to hum at the baseball winter meetings with three deals, the other involv- ing the Chicago White Sox and, San Francisco Giants. The Cardinals acquired Granger, an experienced relief pitcher, from the Twins in exchange for out- fielder Larry Hisle and left-handed pitcher John Cumberland. Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY OTIS ARMSTRONG (24) eludes the grasp of tackle Dave Gallagher in the Boilermakers 9-6 loss to Michigan. Armstrong won the Big Ten rushing title, total offense title and was named as an All- American. COME TO A JAMAICAN DINNER AND TALK ON POLITICS IN JAMAICA TODAY M7W{IL )FoonS JSIRWVWT 315 S SATE SZ AGA1RDOPT61-79186 In another deal, St. Louis added the end of the season. Ramirez infielders Ray Busse and Bobby hit .231 at Little Rock of the Texas Fenwick while giving up catcher League. Skip Jutzke and infielder Milt Busse batted .207 with Oklahoma Ramirez to the Astros. City of the American Association The White Sox, seeking outfield and Fenwick hit .180 with the help, came up with outfielder Ken Astros last year. Henderson and pitcher Steve Stone None among the deals matched from the Giants in exchange for the magnitude of Tuesday's big righthand pitcher Tom Bradley. seven-player swap between Cali- A workhorse for the White Sox, fornia and Los Angeles that re- Bradley compiled a 15-14 record turned slugger Frank Robinson to and 2.98 earned run average in 40 the American League and moved starts last season. He came to highly-coveted Andy Messersmith Chicago in a winter meeting swap to the National League. with California two years ago and was one of the Sox' three regular GRANGER, 28, RETURNS to the starters along with Wilbur Wood National League where he starred and Stan Bahnsen. for the Cincinnati Reds from 1969 through 1971. He went to Minnesota HENDERSON, A five-year veter- last winter in a deal in which the an and outstanding defensive out- Reds got pitcher Tom Hall. fielder, batted .257 for the Giants, Granger had a 3.00 earned run two points over his lifetime aver- average with a 4-6 record last age, with 18 homers and 51 runs season. batted in. He had a disasterous Hisle, who previously played start but came on strong in the with Philadelphia, batted .325 for final two months to hike his aver- Albuquerque in the Los Angeles age to a respectable figure last Dodger organization last year. The season. Cards picked him up at the end Stone had a 6-8 log and 2.98 ERA, of the season. working as both starter and re- Cumberland, 25, was 1-5 with San liever for the Giants. Francisco and St. Louis in 1972. The Astros hope Jutzke, No. 2 He had been. on the Cards' Little hitter in the American Association Rock roster. The Twins, who pass- with a .324 average at Tulsa last ed him up in the recent minor year, can help solve their catching league draft, sent him to their problem. The rookie batted .239 in leageaft noh a brief trial with the Cardinals at Tacoma farm. IN NATIONAL HOCKEY League THURSDAY, NOV. 30-6:30 $1.00 donation 4 for reservations call:NIGHTS-665-746 Ecumencial Campus Center-921 Church r1 4 rI 11 On your stereo, do cymbals still sound like cymbals Just bring in your amplifier, preamplifier, or receiver -- regardless of age, make, or where you bought it. The Marantz Audio Analysis Program will find out for sure. And it won't cost you a cent. First, Marantz will thoroughly test your equipment (except the tuner section of your receiver) on $7,000 worth of precision laboratory testing equipment. You'll discover if you're getting all the sound performance you paid for. Then, the results will be plotted on a graph for your records. 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