7W Page 24-Thursday, December 9, 1982-The Michigan Daily 'M'-UCLA Rose Bowl trivia 0 9 -f 1. When was the last time Michigan played UCLA in the Rose Bowl? 2. When was the last time UCLA played in the Rose Bowl? 3. Whom did the Bruins play on New Year's Day that year. 4. What was the final score? 5. Who was the UCLA coach that season? 6. When was the last time Michigan played in the Rose Bowl? 7. Whom did the Wolverines face? 8. What was the score of that game? 9. In 1972, Michigan played Stanford in the Rose Bowl and lost, 13-12. What was the Wolverines' record going into that game? 10. What was Stanf ord's record going into that game? 11. With 22 seconds left in the 1972 game, Stanford's kicker booted a field goal to give Stanford a 13-12 lead. What is the name of that Stanford kicker? 12. In 1970, Michigan lost to USC in the Rose Bowl. What was the final score? 13. Who scored the winning touch- down for USC? 14. Besides the loss, what else went wrong for Michigan on that New Year's Day? 15. UCLA played in the 1966 Rose Bowl? Who did they play? 16. What was the score of that game? 17. Who was the Bruins' head coach in that game? 18. In 1965, Michigan was victorious in the Rose Bowl, 34-7. What team did the Wolverines beat? 19. The 1965 game marked the fourth time Michigan had played in the Rose Bowl. What was the Wolverines' four- game Rose Bowl record? 20. Who was the Michigan coach for that game? 21. In 1962, UCLA played Minnesota in the Rose Bowl. What was the score? 22. Minnesota originally was not to have been the Bruins' Rose Bowl op- ponent. Who was originally slated to play UCLA and why didn't they? 23. UCLA faced the same team in the 1954 and 1956 Rose Bowl games. What was that team? 24. The same team won both of those games. Which team was that? 25. Although UCLA and Ohio State split honors for the national title in 1955, the two squads did not face each other in the Rose Bowl. Why not? 26. From 1949 through 1951, Califor- nia sent an undefeated team to the Rose Bowl every year. The Golden Bears lost the 1949 and 1950 Rose Bowls and played Michigan in 1951. What was the final score of the 1951 game? 27. Who was Michigan's head coach for that game? 28. In 1948, Michigan routed USC in the Rose Bowl. What was the final score? 29. Who was the Michigan head coach for that game? 30. Michigan won another Rose Bowl by the same score as it did in the 1948 game. When did this happen and whom was it against? 31. UCLA lost in the 1947 Rose Bowl, 45-14. What team beat the Bruins? 32. UCLA lost again in the 1943 Rose Bowl, 9-0. What team beat them? 33. What was the nickname of the Michigan team that played in the first Rose Bowl game ever played (1902)? Answers on page 23. WHAT WAKES YOU UP IN THE MORNING, RELAXES YOU AT NIGHT, PARTIES WITH YOU ON THE WEEKEND, FITS IN THIS BOX, AND COSTS JUST $63900? YOU NO LONGER HANG OUT HERE GUT YOU CAN STILL READ ABOUT IT HERE. Straight from the source's mouth By RON POL LA CK Recalling hijinks of the past and a bad jinx of the present T HAS BEEN called the Rose Bowl and it has been called The Grand- daddy of Them All. And over the years, it most certainly has been a grand 'ole game. Dating back to its inception in 1902, it has been a magnificent event from which many a tale has oft been repeated. There was the first contest, in which Michigan's famous "point-a-minute" team shellacked a hapless Stanford squad, 49-0. In 1929, California's Roy Riegels returned an interception the wrong way, forever enshrining his name in infamy. In 1939, Duke went into the annual classic without having been scored upon all season. With 40 seconds to go in the game against USC, the Blue Devils led, 3-0. But in a storybook finish, the Trojans' fourth-string quarterback Doyle Nave completed a 19-yard touchdown pass to Al Krueger, giving USC a 7-3 victory. And the list of classics goes on and on ... All of which makes this year's run for the roses in both the Big Ten and Pac Ten so confoundingly befuddling. Most seasons, squads from the two conferences battle tooth and nail in order to achieve a spot in this New Year's Day extravaganza chock full of tradition and personality. But this year has been shockingly different. This year, the Rose Bowl has been "The Game Nobody Wanted To Play In." This game of renowned fame has been something of an enigma in the year 1982. The mere thought of a holiday in Pasadena has sent team after team tumbling to defeat. Early in November, the "Rose Bowl Jinx" seized its first unsuspecting victim of the year. Illinois proudly flaunted a 5-2 record in conference play and was still doing some California dreamin' when 6-0 Michigan rolled into town. Michigan left town 7-0, and the Fighting Illini's New Year's Day hopes had seemingly been thrown away. Er, make that run away. With 27 seconds remaining in the closely contested ball game, the Illini had the ball on fourth down at the Michigan two-yard line, trailing 16-10. Illinois' offense came up to the line of scrimmage and lined up in a running for- mation. Surely the Illini were trying to fool Michigan into thinking they'd run the ball, when in fact they planned to pass. After all, Illinois had one of the most dynamic passing games in the nation. Furthermore, the Wolverine defense's strength was against the run; its Achilles' heel being the pass. But no, Illinois tailback Dwight Beverly took a handoff from quarterback Tony Eason and was promptly buried by a bevy of defenders. The Illini had lost one for the Rose Bowl. In the Pac Ten, the contenders were faring no better, quickly turning into pretenders. Two weeks after the Michigan-Illinois heart-stopper, Washington travelled to the lair of arch-rival Washington State needing a victory to clin- ch a berth in the Rose Bowl. Going into the game, the fifth-ranked Huskies were 18-point favorites. If ever there was a mismatch of monumental proportions, this was it. The Huskies had talent and incentive on their side. But alas, Washington was unprepared for but one opponent-the 1982 Rose Bowl jinx. And so, the Huskies fell flat on their face, among other things, losing 24-20. Washington had lost one for the Rose Bowl. Next to burn its fingers on Rose Bowl hopes, in the Pac Ten, was Arizona State. The Sun Devils needed a conquest over Arizona if they were to sun- bathe in Pasadena. ASU wasn't a prohibitive favorite, as Washington had been, but it was believed to be the better squad. And under routine circumstances, the Sun Devils probably would have shown this very fact. But these were not normal times. The Rose Bowl jinx was running roughshod over everything in its path, and that's exactly where Arizona State found itself. Arizona and the jinx rolled over a Sun Devil squad that never knew what hit it, 28-18. Arizona State had lost one for the Rose Bowl. By this time, Rose Bowl officials were becoming a bit perplexed. A quick check of the schedule, however, gave rise to a deep sigh of relief. UCLA, which was now atop the Pac-Ten standings, had already completed its season. There was no way it could screw up as others had so pathetically done. For the time being, the Bruins were immune from the jinx. It was only fair, of course. UCLA had already suffered enough from a bout with the jinx. On November 6, the Bruins played against Washington in a game that looked as though it would have great bearing on the run for the roses. The Huskies triumphed, 10-7. UCLA had lost one for the Rose Bowl, but thanks to Arizona State and Washington, a holiday in Pasadena was its anyway. All three teams were struck by the jinx. The difference was, UCLA sur- vived it while Washington and Arizona State proved to be fatalities. The Rose Bowl's other combatant, Michigan, did not go unscathed by the jinx, either. Head coach Bo Schembechler was too stubborn to let the jinx get in his team's way against Purdue and the Wolverines clinched a Rose Bowl bid by beating the Boilermakers, 52-21. But the following week, Michigan was almost apologetic for having cheated the jinx, and handed Ohio State six turnovers and the game, 24-14. It was a year to remember. It was the year nobody wanted to go to the Rose Bowl. Tight defense Michigan defensive back Jerry Burgei reaches over receiver Cormac Carney to deflect a Tom Ramsey p, 31-27 win earlier this season. Carney's face in the shows his disgust at the turn of events the play took. YOU'RE IN TOUCH WITH THE BIG LUE U WHEN YOU READ -ga he + + + n at- -1 I SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $12 Sept. thru April (2 Semesters) $13 By Mail outside AnnArbor $6.50 Per Semester $7.00 By mail outside Ann Arbor SEND TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Phone: 764-0558° The Candidate. 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