i When I first heard that Johnny Robinson was going to work in the steel mills of Chicago, I was stunned. It was one of the saddest things I'd ever read. I remember Johnny Rob as that "fifth" player on some of Michilgan's best basketball teams who soon would be forgotten in favor of players like Rickey Green, Phil Hubbard, Steve Grote, and Wayman Britt.x Rob never did get a lot of attention, or a whole lot of points and rebounds. He played "Michigan" basketball-unselfish, with a lot of running. He was always there to pick up those "garbage" points and rebounds. He ran on less publicity per mile than the Volkswagen Rabbit. You wonder if they make them like Rob anymore. John Robinson was also a good example of how athletics could help a student who normally would have never made it through school. Without basketball, Johnny Robinson would have ended up working in the .. well, the mills. 4 So what happened? Why didn't he graduate from the University of Michigan and get a good job? You start to wonder even more when you-hear that along with Robinson, Britt, Green, and Grote also failed to graduate. Are coaches to blame? It is so easy to point out the fingers of blame to the coaches for the basket- ball players not graduating. Johnny Orr ... behind that warm, friendly, per- sonality ... was there any responsibility for his players? Bill Frieder. .. sup- posedly more efficiently than the IBM 360 computer. . . wasn't he program- med to monitor the players academically? Yes, the answer must lie with the coaches. The answer is as simple as talking to them. "We suggest to the players to take 15-16 credit hours in the fall, and 12 in the winter;.. anything more would be just too much," Frieder said. "If you follow this through for eight semesters, you will come up short of credit hours.That's why we tell the players when they first come to be ready to go a spring or sum- mer term if they want to graduate in four years. After that, it's up to them." Indeed, more than 12 hours during the winter semester would be too much. The Daily's basketball beft uses a tag team to try to keep up with the cagers, and our grades still suffer. agers and classes,.. ... it's up to them The coaches do fulfill the responsibility of telling the players what they need to graduate. . . but that is all they can do. Players are still students like you and me ... and no one pampers us or tells us what to do. You are not going to see Orr or Frieder put diapers on any of their players and they are not going to force on anyone a summer term who would rather go back to their families or make some money. Furthermore, if the players do go a fifth year, according to Frieder, the basketball program continues their scholarship. If necessary, they provide their players with paid tutors to help get them through. If the players do not graduate after their four years of basketball, it is their own decision. Robinson, Grote, Green and Britt did not graduate as they decided to put their efforts towards basketball. Robinson had hoped to play with the NBA this season, but was released by the Lakers and not picked up by a European team before the deadline to sign Americans. Robinson thought about working in the steel mills until he got the chance to play in Europe again. However, Robinson has shown up this semester to finish off his degree. And Grote? As he told Frieder before he was cut by Cleveland, "I'll always have the chance to go back and pick up my degree, but this is the only chance I'll ever have to make it in basketball and I'm going to give it my best shot." Grote is expected to return next semester. Media mistreats Orr If the players felt they were being cheated by the coaches they would be the first to say so. But from what I understand, they are ready to set the story straight. It's too bad the media is not always ready to do the same. Time after time, we seem to blow it with the Michigan basketball team. Orr is one of the few coaches to keep his door open to reporters. In fact, he pleads with reporters to come talk with him when they want to get the full story. All he asks for is a chance to give his side. He is a reporter's dream. Year after year, though, Orr is shamed in print by some reporters who elec- ted not to talk first, but to write. They don't criticize Bo, who tends to shy away from the press. During Ohio State week, Schembechler tries to put a wall around the football team. Orr never has built walls around his program. His coaching has never been perfect, and he would be the first to agree. Yet, year after year, while the media ignores its responsibilities, the coaches fulfill theirs.. . Special to The Daily DETROIT- - The Detroit Pistons parlayed 56 per cent field goal shooting to pound the Houston Rockets 127-107 last night in Cobo Arena: M. L. Carr paced eight Pistons in double figures with 25 points. All-star center Bob Lanier was missing from the Detroit lineup due to a knee injury as was the spark-plug for the Houston Rockets, guard Calvin Murphy. After falling behind 37-32 early in the second quarter, the Pistons outscored the punchless Rockets 32-13 to take a commanding 64-50 halftime lead. However, the Rockets surged early in the second half to within seven points until substitute Willie Norwood and starting center Leon Douglas steamed the tide. The Pistons received superior guard play from Eric Money with 19 tallies and Ralph Simpson, who notched 18 points and 10 assists. For the Rockets, Moses Malone counted 22 markers and Rudy Tomjanovich chipped in with 20. Former Central Michigan standout Ben Poquette surpassed his NBA high with 14 points on six for eight shooting from the field and ex-Michigan captain Waymann Britt hit more than a point a minute with four in less than three minutes playing time. -BILLY NEFF Regressive hockey DETROIT-Aggressive hockey? It was regressive hockey for the Detroit Red Wings last night as they managed only a 1-1 tie against the last place Washington Capitals. After a strong first period, in which Detroit took the lead on a power play goal by defenseman Greg Joly, his first of the year, the Wings left their crisp passing attack in the locker room and struggled the rest of the way. The Capitals tied it up in the second stanza on a close-in shot by Gerry Meehan, this time with Red Wing Andre St. Laurent in the penalty box. After Joly's goal, the loudest cheers from the crowd were reserved for St. Laurent's near decapitation of Bryan watson, former Detroit hatchet man. -JEFF BLAKE ISCOR-ESI NBA San Antonio 129, Boston 114 Buffalo 124, New York 113 Philadelphia 130, New Jersey 107 NHL New York Rangers 8, Buffalo 4 Pittsburgh 5, Cleveland 3 Detroit 1, Washington I The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 10, 1977-Page 9, Pistons top Houston; Wings knot Capitals OSU "AME TO DECIDE 'M'BID: Thursday and Friday, Nov. 10, 11 4:00 p.m. Angell Aud. B MEXICO: THE FROZEN REVOLUTION This film examines modern-day Mexico, dominated by a single political party, the institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), heir of the 1910 Revolution. Yet widespread poverty exists today-tenant farmers, Indian communities, aging veterans of Zapata's legions. Set against interviews with hacienda owner, union official, and Party Leader. DIRECTOR of this film is Roymundo Gleyzer, held prisoner, incommuni- cado by the Dictatorship of Videla in Argentina. I4 "THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE FOR TODAY" (Monday, Nov. 14 7:30 P.M. Pendleton Room Union) James D. Cockroft, Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University, is one of the foremost radical scholars on Latin America in the United States. He is a participating editor of Latin American Perspectives and a coordi- nator of the Rutgers-Livingston Transnational Corporation Research Group., ADMISSION FREE Bowl By BILLY SAHN You're sitting in your east New Year's Day about to first bowl game of the picture tunes in and boor watching Meet the Pre: gives? This year, because. falls on a Sunday, the Ne ay bowl games will be f Monday, January 2. o, when you finally w duled bowl games, you prised at some of the m The number of possible pa almost endless and the r games for the nation's top t crucial to the final match-ul THE NUMBER of pc college football games growing each year. Thi addition is the Hall of Fam be played in Birmingham, The Gator, Liberty, Fie Peach, Blubonnet, Tange Independence Bowls are some of the others. However, the big four bo to be played on January 2 w the bulk of the nation's attei Sugar Bowl and Cotton Boi played in the afternoon Orange Bowl being played And as tradition goes, the g JGIIJIE PIC! Someone sabotaged this we des, slipping a twenty-first the paper. We join Gridd Miller Bobber for an explana still haven't found the culprit distraught Bobber. "But th needn't worry - if they've p Central Michigan-Toledo gan attempt to earn a small tw from Pizza Bob's, we won't Just make sure to tell them t picks into the Daily by mid day." 1. MICHIGAN at Purdue 2. Minnesota at Illinois 3. Indiana at Ohio State 4. Iowa at Wisconsin 5 Northwestern at Michig 6. Harvard at Yale 1. Southern Cal at Was 8. Notre Dame at Clemson 9. Grambling at Norfolk Sta 10. Auburn at Georgia 11. Arkansas at Texas A&M 12. Mississippi St. at LSU 13. Oklahoma State at Misso 14. Georgia Tech at Navy 15. New Mexico at Arizona 16. Colorado at Oklahoma 17. Kansas at Nebraska 18. Kentucky at Florida 19. South Carolina at Wake 20. DAILY LIBELS at St. Ign match-ups y chair on dy of them all - the Rose Bowl - will watch the be sandwiched between them in the day. The late afternoon.. M, you're The question still remains, who will ss. What play in what bowl? January 1 "FOR 36 YEARS, the Southwest- w Year's ern Conference champion has played played on in the Cotton Bowl. Texas is the front- runner (rated No. 1 in the nation) and vatch the is a good prospect," said Wilbur might be Evans,-the executive vice president latch-ups. of the Cotton Bowl. 3 ir-ups are However, Texas still has one major emaining opponent to overcome - Texas A&M. eams are "If A&M does beat Texas, A&M Ps. will be our choice. But we'd like to ost-season see an undefeated tdam playing," has been said Evans. is year's "No matter who wins, we'd like to e Bowl, to see the best competition in there. We Alabama. are considering both Michigan and sta, Sun, OSU as well as Notre Dame, Penn rine and State and Pitt," remarked Evans. among ON NOVEMBER 19th, the major bowls will announce at least one wl games opponent if not both. The only ill receive exception is the Sugar Bowl, which ntion. The announced Alabama as a definite bid wl will be after they clinched the Southeastern with the Conference. at night. "The Cotton Bowl will announce granddad- the SWC's conference winner's op- ponent one hour after the Michigan- OhioState game. As far as Texas and A&M go, we'll wait until they play on Novermber 26," said the Cotton Bowl executive. Just as the Cotton Bowl executives ek's Grid- want the best possible match-up, so game into do the other bowls. e master "WE WANT the best team possible tion. "We to play in the Superdome," said ," sighs a Executive Director Carl James of the e faithful Sugar Bowl. icked that Also, just as the Texas officials are ne in their looking at the runner-up in the Big o-item pie Ten along with Notre Dame, Pitt, count it. Penn State and others, Sugar Bowl a get their officials are too. night Fri- "If Texas loses to Texas A&M, then it will be very probable that Alabama far from settled will be number one. If the Tide is the top team, then whoever will be playing in the Sugar Bowl will be playing for a top ranking," comment- ed James. THE SUGAR BOWL officials rec- ognize that they are competing with the Cotton Bowl, not only for teams, but also for air time. They'll both be playing at approximately the same time on Monday. "We've sold out the Superdome already. We've got a great building here in a great city (New Orleans) with the best collegiate TV contract (ABC-TV). Why, if you could cover that Michigan Stadium and haul it down here, we could easily sell 105,000 tickets," remarked James. "We're all playing on Monday. We have no control over it. It was much better when the Sugar Bowl was played on December 31 as it always has been, but we'll do our best," said Evans. THE ORANGE Bowl also is after the same group of teams as the Cotton and Sugar Bowls are. "We are still interested in Pitt, Penn State, Notre Dame, Clemson, Arkansas, Texas A&M (if Texas beats them), and the runner-up in the Big Ten," said Executive Director Don McNamara of the Orange Bowl. "We do have a Big Eightcontract. Right now, it looks as if Oklahoma will be our choice," remarked Mc- Namara. THE ONLY bowl that won't have trouble choosing its teams will be the Rose Bowl. They have no leeway. They will choose as tradition and contract goes the Big Ten conference winner and the Pac Eight conference winner. The Michigan-Ohio State game will determine the Big Ten representative. The Pac Eight this year, though, is tighter than in previous years. Washington, USC, and UCLA are all tied for the lead with Stanford and California right behind. If the above doesn't confuse you, then you probably knew long ago that the major bowl games will be played on January 2 instead of 1. This year's bowl games could have some excit- ing games', but you'll have to wait until the day after New Year's. Che 4ttCITi[tMtT wittivitt Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan - I I} *F E 1K3 ---mm-m-uWRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- s1 isr1n, 1 1 vk z. 3I3i.4.. 4 1078 93 080 15 el at I i 'iiAf e, n lsiies h icie al I- - -- - - CIPAND MAIL TODAY!----- ----.J Idi USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Id y IWORDS 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days addi.Q 0-10 1.15 2.30 3.05 3.80 4.55 5.30 .75 11-15 1.40 2.80 3.70 4.60 5.50 6.40 .90 Please indicate 16-20 1.65 3.30 4.35 5.40 6.45 7.50 1.05 where this ad 21-2 1.9 3.0 5.0 620 740 .60 .20is to run: 36-40 2.65 ,5.30 6.95 8.60 10.25 11.90 1.65 rpersonal I41-45 2.90 5.80 7.60 9.40 11.20 13.00 1.80 etc. 46-50 3.15 6.30 8.25 10.20 12.15 14.10 1.95 I Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word.9 Hyphenated words over 5 characters count. as two words--This includes telephone numbers.A I mn~Ii 1,i.h ark*ev Caessifieds, The MichiganDal an State shington ate uri e Forest nace STU DENTS! 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