toage 8-Saturday, Octobgr 22 1977-The Michigan Daily BIG TEN WEEKEND Wildcats purr into OSU By DIANE SILVER The Big Ten football race approaches the halfway mark with Michigan and Ohio State leading the league, both un- defeated in conference play. The "Big Two" look like clear shots for the Rose Bowl, but there still remain four teams, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, and Michigan State, with only one conference loss apiece and an outside chance at the roses. Ohio State travels to Northwestern to defend its tie for the Big Ten lead, Northwestern has lost°22 of its last 23 games and is winless this season, compared to OSU's 5-1 record this season, blemished only by a one point loss to Oklahoma. BUCKEYE FULLBACK Joel Payton saw action against Iowa last week and will be back again at full strength after suffering a series of ankle injuries. Payton leads the Big Ten in scoring while being tied for the national scoring lead. Although he never counts on an easy game, Woody Hayes admits, "We should defeat Northwestern. We'll outwork them. We have better football players and more of them, and for that reason we'll win." Illinois meets Indiana with the intention of keeping its four game winning streak against the Hoosiers alive. The Illini have last week's win against Purdue behind them, bur Illinois coach Gary Moeller is not overconfident. "We can't be fooled because we won a game. We know we have to make a lot of improvements." THE ILLINI will be up against Indiana's top ranked pass defense and one of the Big Ten's leading rushers, Ric Enis. The Hoosiers have been plagued by injuries, among them linebacker Joe Norman, named Big Ten defensive player of the week after the Michigan State game, and number two rusher in the Big Ten, Darrick Burnett. Purdue hopes to snap out of its losing streak when it plays Iowa on the Boilermaker's home ground. The Boilers haven't lost to the Hawkeyes in 17 years. All eyes will be on freshman quarterback Mark Her- mann, who will be trying for a new school passing record. With just an average game, Hermann could become Pur- due's second highest single season passing leader, having already accumulated 1,601 yards through the air. Iowa coach Bob Commings is concerned about his offen- sive line, which, due to injuries, will.require some lineup switches. Center Jim Hilgenberg is the only uninjured Hawkeye who will start on the line. WISCONSIN PLAYS host to Michigan State, each having only one conference loss, for their annual homecoming game. The last time the Badgers met the Spartans was for Wisconsin's homecoming in 1974, when MSU topped Wisconsin 28-21. That was Wisconsin's only homecoming defeat in the past six years. Both teams are trying to rebound from last week, when Michigan pasted Wisconsin 56-0 and Indiana tied Michigan State 13-13. Pairing up Michigan State's second-ranked passing offense against Wisconsin's number two-ranked pass defense will result in some interesting match-ups. MSU coach Darryl Rogers said of the Wisconsin game, "You can't take anything away from Wisconsin for losing to the number one team in the country in its own stadium. That score doesn't mean they're a poor team. They are still 5-1 on the season, they'll be back in their own plant, with a sellout crowd and homecoming., My concern is getting our team ready to play again. We have five games to go." -^P Photo "All righty whitey A ht Kansas City Royal's Manager Whitey Herzog is all smiles after signing a new one-year contract to continue coaching the Royals. General Manager Joe Burke provides backup for the skipper who commandered the Royals to two con- secutive AL West Division titles but lost both shots at the World Series to the New York Yankees. TROPHIES PRESERVE TRADITION And to vthe t By BRIAN MARTIN BIG TEN Commissioner Wayne Duke cannot permit insubordination of this nature any longer. - Duke slapped a probation on Bo Schembechler for calling some Big Ten officials at the Duke game "a bunch of goons." which is under- standable. But to allow Minnesota Coach Cal Stoll to call the battle for the Little Brown Jug "really insignificant" borders on blasphemy in the hearts of' football romantics everywhere. The history behind the Jug is famous. A Wolverine trainer left a water jug in Minneapolis after a 6-6 tie in 1903. When the oversight was discovered, in Ann Arbor, Michigan mentor Fielding Yost asked Minne- sota to return it. . HE WAS TOLD, in effect, to 'fcome and get it" himself. ' The poor Wolverines had to do without water for six years because the two teams didn't play each other. _again until 1909. Needless to say, the. thirsty Wolverines were fired up and rowned the Gophers, 15-6. A tradi- tion was born, not made. Perhaps Stoll was trying to down- play its significance because his players had earlier failed against Iowa for the secopd consecutive time to capture the coveted "Floyd of Rosedale." Yes, hog fans, it is the name of the national champion hog of 1935, from which the trophy derives its name. Floyd became the object of a wager between Governor Floyd B. Olsen of Minnesota and Iowa Governor Clyde Herring 42 years ago as to the outcome of the interstate football game. THE GOPHERS retained Floyd for the next four years before Iowa got him back, but poor Floyd retired to that great mudhole in the sky and his memory lingers on in a 15 inch bronze statue immortalizing the. prize porker. But the Gophers are far from holding a monopoly on prastigious trophies. Numerous grudge; matches live within the Big Ten sched'ule, sparking rivalries throughout the midwest. Illinois and Michigan State are tied for the league lead in trophy contests (the Big Ten Championship Trophy being excluded) with three apiece. However, the Spartans battle non- conference Notre Dame for the Receive 3 free lessons on our Cali 971.420 Peak indoor Ski Deck. Plus a free lift ticket a#t.tor stop byThe Peak Brighton and Sugarloaf. There's no obligation.3150 The free skiing Carpeniter is yours... onl us. Ann Arbor ctor goe Megaphone Trophy, thus giving the meet at ha lead to the Fighting Illini on a techni- to smoke cality. , memory, ILLINOIS' NEW coach Gary Moeller striking w inherited the difficult task of defend- POOR ing both the Cannon and the Toma- Spartans h hawk trophies against Purdue and three trop Northwestern and must try to pry the two and tie Illibuck from the unrelenting grasp Old Brass of Woodrow Hayes on November 5. Why bat The Cannon started in 1905 when a Students group of Purdue fans brought it along when bol to fire in celebration of a Boiler- (Indiana maker victory. Not only did they and thus i forget to fire it after Purdue's 29-0 ties. win, they forgot to take it home with Michiga them. the Paul 1 Illinois student Quincy Hall and his gan Trop. brothers of Delta Upsilon hid it. What year, and they did with it for the next 38 years bid for the is left for your vivid imaginations, gle with N but Hall donated it as a symbol of These t rivalry in 1943 (how do you hide a all the ric cannon?). but were THE TOMAHAWK represents governor more felonious actions. Originally intensify the trophy was the "Sweet Sioux" schools. wooden Indian presented in 1945, but some seedy character stole it from SOME P Northwestexn's showcase in 1946. A the Blue O Tomahawk trophy replaced the Purdue wooden Indian the next year and has a Civil W been used since. Mo 's "Sweet Sioux" was found in 1948, Bkorgan however it was thrown away because Bucket w it was too big. So much for nostalgia. rotting on Ohio State has won the Illibuck for shoolsal the past nine years, but the devout the buck Illini remember its glorious past. The gridiron c original Illibuck was a turtle back in The Bu 1925, but the wear and tear of al times s traveling between Champaign and wl iheach Columbus led to his tragic death two with ec wit~h dn years later. that the g Representatives from both schools pilfers it s . . lftime during the big game a peace pipe in Illibuck's which is captured in a ooden replica. MICHIGAN State. The have tried vainly to capture hies this year and have lost ed Indiana last week for, the Spittoon. .tle for'a spit bowl, you ask? think that it was around th schools were founded in 1820 and MSU in 1855) t carries some sentimental an retained possession of Bunyan-Governor of Michi- hy for the eighth straight the Spartans dropped their e Megaphone in their strug- otre Dame. wo trophies don't possess Lh history that the others do, simply instituted by a or some alumni groups to the rivalries between the PLAYERS do feel that Babe Jx got slighted. and Indiana lock heads for ar pail supposedly used by Raiders. The Old Oaken as found moss-covered and a farm in southern Indiana imni groups from both enthusiastically" endorsed et for the winner of the lash. cket has disappeared sever- ince its presentation in 1925, school chargingthe other apping. One theory has it host of Morgan's washlady" to finish scrubbing ,his tional flavor enters into the attles between the Boiler- and the Fighting Irish of me. Joe McLaughlin, a mer- aman from the land of the nated his very own shille- e winner of the battle. if you must, but that "win the Gipper" stuff only n the movies. £Sport4s qf the 4ai4y C'lub bers tie Albion It was almost-but not quite again yesterday as the Michigan field hockey team battled to a 0-0 stalemate in an away match with Albion College. "We had lots of opportunities," commented coach Phylis Ocker. "We just couldn't finish off our plays. As a result most of the game was played right in the middle of the field." While outshooting Albion 15-5, the Wolverines just couldn't find the net as one rush after another ended in a turnover at midfield. TheJunior Varsity broke the goose egg hex however as Kim Fruehauf, Julie Fink and Lisa Kaplan all tallied in its 3-0 shutout of Albion's reserve squad. The win raised the Junior Varsity's record to 4-1 while the varsity now sports a 4-6-2 season tally. The clubbers next contest will be on Monday when they meet Michigan State at East Lansing. ' * * * Hell on wheels NEW YORK-A ban was voluntarily lifted yesterday to allow a polio vic- tim to race in a wheelchair in this Sunday's New York City Marathon after a state Supreme Court justice who himself is running in the event negotiated a settlement. Under terms of the agreement worked out before Justice Arnold Fraiman in New York City, the New York Roadrunners Club will allow Robert Hall, "25, of Belmont, Mass., to enter the race. The club also decided to give-the polio victim a head start to reduce the risk of injury to himself, the runners or spectators. The hearing,.-which led to the agreement, resulted from a show-cause or- der obtained by the state Division of Human Rights. The polio victim's cause also was supported in court by Harold Unterberg, the governor's designee for the Office of the Advocate for the Handicapped. Bennett Gershman, lawyer for the marathon's sponsor, said the Roadrun-, ners Club was opposed to having runners compete side-by-side with han- dicapped or other persons using a wheeled device because of safety hazard. He said such a condition would also "violate the spirit" of the marathon. Gershman, who also is running in the race, finally agreed that the club will make an exception in Hall's case because of respect for his skill and ability. The return of W hitey KANSAS CITY-Whitey Herzog, who has led the Kansas City floyals to division championships in both of his full seasons as manager, signed a one- year contract today for the 1978 season. "Whitey has done an outstanding job as manager of the Royals," said General manager Joe Burke. "We are very happy with his work and he is happy with the organization, which gives us an excellent relationship." Burke said a one-year contract was the only thing he discussed with Her- zog "And we are both happy." "We are hopeful in the future to negotiate a string of 25 consecutive one- year contracts and break Walt Alston's string of 24 one-year contracts with the Dodgers," Burke said. Burke said contracts also have been sent to all of the Royals' coaches-Steve Boros, Galen Cisco, Chuck Hiller and Charley Lau. floors. Interna classic b4 makers a Notre Dar chant sea green, do lagh to thi Laugh one for happens i Leach go 'fers the record Michigan quarterback Rick Leach prepares to separate a Badger defen- sive end from his shoes. Leach's running ability along with his some- times maligned passing have brought him within 36 yards ol former great Don Moorehead's rec- ord career yardage total. In addition, Leach's next touchdown pass will tie him at 23 with 1940s halfback Bolb Chappuis as a Wolverine pacesettel America needs a band that worked its way to the top of England's rock scene through sheer hard work, guts and rock & roll. America needs The Motors. } s ,