One hundred seven years of edmonarzjfredom . , : F:,t .P News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 Friday October 24, 1997 xcitement builds as big game nears decade kter, this ame is stilspecial n years and 14 days. That was the last time anybody in East Lansing has been this excited about playing Michigan. Ten years and 14 days ago, more than 77,000 people crammed into Spartan Stadium, a com- plex that somehow looks even more gigantic than Michigan Stadium, to watch what was the greatest Spartan team in two decades. I was IIyears old that day. I remember that it was very cold. I remember my brother and I JOHN stuffing our- LEROI selves into sweat Out of pants and turtle- Bounds necks that just had to be green. I remember D etrius Brown throwing seven interceptions that day and I asked my dad, "If Bo is such a good coach, why didn't he yank that guy after the first five?" For more than 18 years, I lived just around the corner from Michigan State's campus. When your father works there and your mother takes classes, it's hard not to bleed Green. I remember everything about the I* season, when Bobby McAlister, Lorenzo White and Michigan State's famed, but forgotten, fourth-quarter defense took the Spartans to the Rose Bowl. They beat Southern Cal and fin- ished with a No. 8 ranking, the first time they cracked the top 10 all year. They haven't been back since. A loss to Northwestern last week ruined the Spartans' chances of making a return apearance. re, Michigan State has beaten Michigan since that day; in 1990 when the Wolverines were the top-ranked team in the country, and again two sea- sons ago with a 28-25 victory in East Lansing. But not since Oct. 10, 1987 has there been so much anticipation and such an outpouring of support. This game means everything to fans who who have lived in East Lansing. Forget Ohio State. This isn't just about war cooler bragging rights and silly bf between colleagues. It's about I I- year-old kids who grew up loving one team and hating the other, even though See LEROI, Page 7 A Regardless of records, MSU rivalry bitter By Danielle Rumore Daily Sports Editor The talk this week has been about the tradition, the rivalry and the bitterness. Michigan and Michigan State mix together about as well as oil and water, and the animosity between the two teams and their fans has been the week- long focus leading up to tomorrow's game at Spartan Stadium at 12:30 p.m. There's also been talk about the hope that this would be a game between two undefeated teams, both ranked in the top 25, both looking to grab a lead in the Rose Bowl race, both looking to secure state bragging rights. That hope died last week when No. 15 Michigan State (2-1 Big Ten, 5-1 over- all) fell to Northwestern, 19-17. But after the initial disappointment subsided, the talk returned to the intrastate rivalry - how a Michigan win would destroy the Spartans' Rose Bowl chances and how a Spartan win would keep things interesting in the conference. The players have been saying many of the same things. Michigan quarterback Brian Griese: "We've been waiting awhile to play this game. It doesn't matter (if Michigan State isn't undefeated) for this game; you throw the records out the window. This is the first really big rivalry in the season. A lot of people call us rivals, but this one is bitter." Michigan tailback Clarence Williams: "This game is annually marked off on our schedule." Michigan linebacker Sam Sword: "Look for an all-out war. This is the game we've been looking forward to since the summer." Putting such talk aside, the focus is shifting to the game at hand, to the strategies and especially to the defenses that could single-handedly dictate which way the game sways. Amidst all the talk remains the fact that the fifth-ranked Wolverines (3-0, 6-0) and the Spartans are almost defen- sive equals, and that should be what the game comes down to tomorrow. Michigan State has the best rushing defense in the Big Ten, giving up just 64 yards, and Michigan is a close sec- ond (68.2). Michigan is tops in the conference in scoring defense (5.2 points); Michigan State is second (10.8). See SPARTANS, Page 7 PAUL TALANIAN/Daily Chris Miller (left), an Engineering junior, changes the game day countdown while LSA junior Andy Yosowitz (center) and Engineering junior Bill Reeves (right) watch. Many students view the intrastate rivalry as serious business. Coverage has evolved over 50 years By Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud Daily Staff Reporter Fifty years have passed since the first televised broadcast of the Michigan- Michigan State game, and the excite- ment surrounding the rivalry has not abated. When WWJ-TV first broadcast the intrastate game, only 2,500 homes in the Detroit area saw Michigan trounce Michigan State 55-0. Saturday's contest will probably be viewed by more than 1.6 million households, a far cry from the game's humble beginnings. "It's a wonderful matchup," said Dean Diltz, senior publicist for ESPN, which will be televising the game. "Any time you have a state rivalry, that heightens the excitement level." For the first televising of the match-up, WWJ-TV only had five workers and two cameras inside the stadium. When ESPN crews come to East Lansing on Saturday, they will carry quite a larger load. They expect to bring at least 12 cameras and upwards of 85 people for the entire production. ESPN's broadcast of the event will include a pre-game show, and is expected to be one of their higher rated games of the college football season. Fifty years ago, in order to beam the broadcast from Michigan Stadium all the way to WWJ-TV's 5,000-watt sta- tion in Detroit, relay dishes were mounted on top of a windmill at the crest of Tuomy Ridge. Two extra crew members were assigned the task of operating the dishes in the basement of a nearby farmhouse. "I think that first televised game was part of the ongoing saga of the infor- mation age," said Bruce Madej, assis- tant athletic director for media rela- See TELEVISION, Page 7 Who: No. 5 Michigan (3-0 Big Ten, 6-0 overall) vs. No. 15 Michigan State (2-1, 5-1) Where: Spartan Stadium (cap, 72,027) When: Tomorrow, 12:30 p.m. Line:_ Michigan by 2 1/2 Weather: Chance of rain, high around 55. Television: ESPN Series history: The last time both teams were ranked this high, Michigan prevailed, 17-10, in 1964. Michigan leads the all-time series, 58-26-5, but lost on its last trip to East Lansing. The uiatit choice U Alumni celebrate RC's 30th birthday By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter When RC graduate Danny Thompson entered East Quad yesterday for the first time in nearly 10 years, it seemed to him that little had changed. "The place smells the same," Thompson s as he hugged former classmates. "It's s.e strange combination of carpet and cafeteria." Dozens of alumni returned to Ann Arbor yesterday to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Residential College - the University's first living-learning community, which is a part of LSA and housed in the East Quad res- idence hall. Prof. Janet Hegman Shier, the anniver- sary's coordinator for special events, said the end-long festivities will be more than a coration. "We're hoping that some initiatives may grow out of it," Shier said, adding that she has spent the year uniting current students with RC alumni to plan the weekend. RC philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen, one of the college's founding fathers, said the idea for the college crew from a feeling among a growth of the University was threatening the camaraderie between students and faculty. "(Other professors) and I were concerned that we were going to lose some of the close- ness we prized," Cohen said, adding that a small living-learning college would help pre- serve notions of decency and humanity in the University. "By and large, I think it's fair to say that we've succeeded" Economics Prof. and RC Director Thomas Weisskopf said that while a number of uni- versities started similar living-learning pro- grams during the 1960s, the RC is one of few that have survived. "A lot of schools are very much interested in, and somewhat jealous of, what we have here at Michigan," Weisskopf said. Cohen attributes the college's success to the close relationship the RC has maintained with LSA. "We did this with the financial and intel- lectual support of LSA," Cohen said, adding that other programs cut themselves off from the universities that supported them. Expanding from 100 students in 1967 to nearly 1,000 students today, the RC has undergone numerous changes but retained its Students ready for Million Woman March By Katie Plona Daily Staff Reporter The voices of many black Unrversity women will join oth- ers when they gather tomorrow in Philadelphia to participate in the Million Woman March. Two buses filled with students are departing this evening from the Michigan Union. They will meet with two other busloads of women from the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti area and make the 400-mile tek to Philadelphia. "This is one day to bring all of the issues not just to the attention of the women there, but bring it to the conscience of the nation who might not be aware," said LSA and Music senior Dee Dee White. Local participants registered at Originations Gallery in Arborland Mall, the area's designated MWM registration and information site. White said that besides the planned presentations, the event will be a means of discourse for not only black women, but for all women of color to discuss issues relevant to them. "Issues tend to be 'dealt with in a different way," White said. "We have to understand how the experiences started and try to resolve it from the same direction." White said she and a few other women are videotaping the event, and have already started recording women as they pre- LOUIS BROWN/Daily RC sophomore Jessica Bodzin (left) and RC junior Colin Zyskowski (right) discuss Madame Bovary in their class on Arts and ideas of the 19th century. Since it was a new program, the RC first attracted liberal students who were interested in an exciting and different experience, Weisskopf said. "They tended to be quite outspoken, quite political," he said. With much of the RC student body opposed to former President Richard Nixon's re-elec- tion in 1972, RC students held a mock inau- "It was all very sardonic and terribly bit- ter," Cohen said. RC students sent a letter to the former president inviting him to the festivities, but Nixon sent the students a telegram declining the invitation. Students read the telegram and poked fun at Nixon during the ceremony, Cohen said. Cohen said the biggest change in the RC I