" Page 12-Friday, October 30, 1981-The Michigan Daily The weekly DAILY 'ine . -lum, Fans gather to bid final farewell to Ufer* (Continued from Page 1), of the late broadcaster. He outlined several reasons why Ufer was attracted to football. "Because he believed in Michigan . . . because he was a com- petitor . . . because of discipline .. . because of motivation ... and because of loyalty." "No man I knew demonstrated more courage in the last two years than Bob Ufer," Schembechler continued. "No Michigan player was ever criticized by Bob Ufer . . . I just want to thank the Lord that he was at Michigan while I was at Michigan." After the speakers finished, the house lights dimmed and a videotape of Ufer's stirring pep rally before the 1981 Rose Bowl began. The crowd was treated to vintage Ufer in one of his most famous spiels spurring on Michigan players and supporters last winter. THE TAPE also included highlights of the halftime tribute for the broad- caster on Oct. 17, the last game Ufer announced. The tape concluded and the Michigan Band immediately blasted in- to "The Victors," one of Ufer's requests for the memorial service. "The Yellow and Blue" followed, and then Smith delivered a benediction. "Notre. Dame has the 'Win one for the Gipper,'" Smith said. "Well, I think the Gipper has just met his match." And with that, the friends of Bob Ufer quietly filed out of Crisler Arena. GRIDDE PICKS Halloween is here, and one of the hot ter costume items seems to be a rubber mask bearing the mug of Howard Cosell, toule included. So what would you do if a little Howard rang your doorbell and said, "Trick or treat"? You would interrupt his candy-collec- ting and stand at the door and compare your Gridde picks, of course. Well, why waste your Gridde picks on a fake Howard Cosell? Submit your Gridde picks to the Daily (420 Maynard) before midnight tonight. And have a happy Halloween. 1. MICHIGAN at Minnesota (pick score) 2. Iowa at Illinois 3. Ohio State at Purdue 4. Indiana at Michigan State .5. Northwestern at Wisconsin 6. Penn State at Miami (Fla.) 7. Southern Cal at Washington State 8. Stanford at Washington 9. Mississippi State at Alabama 10. SMU at Texas A&M 11. Princeton at Pennsylvania 12. Western Michigan at Northern Illinois 13. North Carolina at Maryland 14. Navy at Notre Dame 15. Colorado State at Wyoming 16. Colorado at Oklahoma 17. Florida at Auburn 18. Lockhaven at Slippery Rock 19. Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Langston 20. DAILY LIBELS at The Little Brown Jug i Gophers go to air --- i Hohensee:o an aerial wizard performs JC magic in Big Ten Samoan" by his teammates, joins Tony Eason of Illinois and Indiana's Babep Laufenberg as starting Big Ten quar- terbacks who migrated from the junior college ranks. "I played in a very com- petitive junior college league, and that helped me," said Hohensee. THE BATTLE for the Little Brown 0 Jug tomorrow is a crucial one for both Minnesota and Michigan, both trying to stay alive°-in the Big Ten race. They currently share a 3-2 conference mark with three other conference squads. Hohensee has guided the Gophers to their best start since 1977, when they went 7-5 on the year, including a 16-0 Dean Michael Rappaport of UCLA Law School Will Discuss Going to Law School All Students Thinking About Applying to UCLA Are Invited to Attend DATE: Tuesday, November 3rd TIME: 11 AM- 2 Noon and 2 PM-3 PM PLACE: Sign up at 3200 Student Activities Bldg. MINORITY STUDENTS ARE ESPECIALLY WELCOME* By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE Special to the Daily MINNEAPOLIS- Last year at this time, Mike Hohensee was busy doing just what he is doing now-thrilling college football fans with hispassing skill. The only difference is that last year he was calling the signals for Mt. San Antonio.Junior College in Califor- nia and performing before crowds of a couple of thousand people. This season, however, Hohensee is the starting quarterback for the Min- nesota Gophers and plies his trade in front of gatherings of 65,000 or more. That is how many figure to be on hand tomorrow when Michigan visits Min- nesota in a game pitting two teams with identical 5-2 (3-2, in the Big Ten) recor- ds. "ONE OFithe biggest differences here is the size of the crowds," said Hohensee, a native of Rowland Heights, Cal. "Before this year,'I never played before more than 4,000 people It's fun-, ny, but I'm actually more relaxed playing in front of big crowds." It has quickly become evident that Hohensee's play is not adversely affec- ted by large crowds. The starter for all seven of Minnesota's outings this season, Hohensee has completed 85 of 174 tosses for 1,230 yards and 10 touch- downs. Against the Wolverines tomorrow, he will be testing a defensive secondary that has allowed 1,325 yards through the air thus far in 1981, in- cluding six touchdowns. "I've never played against Michigan before, but I have seen a lot of films of them," said Hohensee. "We do know quite a bitabout them." THE 6-1, 190-POUND junior joined the Gophers in time for last spring's workouts and eventually edged out Tim Salem, Minnesota coach Joe Salem's son and the Gophers' starter in '80 for the number one spot. "I thought I had a pretty good chance to start when I came here," said Hohensee. "But they didn't make me the starter until the week before the Ohio U. game (Min- nesota's season opener)." As the signal-caller for two years at Mt. San Antonio, Hohensee threw for an impressive 3,687 yards. But despite the fact that he earned All-State and All- American junior college honors, Hohensee said, "Minnesota is really the only school that recruited me. I knew they had a good, veteran offensive line, and that helped me decide to come here." Hohensee, dubbed "The Throwin' Hohensee ... New dimension for Minnesota '0 shocker over Michigan and a trip to the Hall of Fame Bowl. Despite the im pressive showing, Hohensee said, "I'm really not surprised we've done this well. There is quite a bit of talent on this team. With a few breaks, we could be 7- 0 right now." Included in Minnesota's five wins this season ,is last week'§ regionally televised 12-10 squeaker over Big Ten co-leader Iowa. "That was the most emotional game we've played all year," said Hohensee. "But we had the best practices we'd had all year the week before Iowa, and we've been practicing really well this week, too. "All of us have one goal in common, he added, speaking for his teammates. "We want to make it to a bowl game." For Minnesota, the next step toward earning a bowl is winning the jug. SCORES NHL Detroit 12, Calgary 4 N.Y. Islanders 6, Hartford 6 Montreal 5, Boston 5 IO4)FM GRAND RAPIDS ANN ARBOR 91M7 FMWRA WUOM/WVGR MARATHON 1981 0 THE OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS AND FORD IN COOPERATION WITH WRIF Present A Halloween party night of HARD DRIVIN' ROCK N' ROLL U U U.