--I """ . 1 a 3.. _. J ri J P't Y1 fx TL._. A*-L.:..n-- M-*I.. A 09 LOCAL/STATE Wednesday November 16 1999 - The Michigan Daly - Ti al ,ian ers am r tra utionun dae ays -13 AILGATERS ontinud tom Page 1 live -- for the other eight, I'm in hibernation' Fisher isn't just faithful to Michigan's games - rain or shine. he follows the earn across the country each week. lthough the signature Michigan motor ioae is Fisher's principle means of trans- ortation, he admits "it's dangerous to take his thing to places like Ohio. East Lansing nd Madison, Wisconsin!" On its sides, the motor home reads "Go Blue, Hail to the Victors," "Michigan Warriors" and National Champs 1997." Maize and Blue tripes blaze horizontally from the front to the rof the vehicle. took some doing," Fisher said. "My son is n insurance sales. He has a lot of connections ad he referred me to a man who owns a shop in eWitt. I told him what I wanted: big block tripes of maize and blue._ I wanted it to say GoBlue.' How they put it on a computer and urned it into this, I don't know." "When I went to pick it up at the shop for the irst-time, I was like 'Whoa!"' Fisher hires a ecurity guard to keep a watehful eye on the ele during each game. While Fisher waits for his guests - between 0 to 100 were invited - self-proclaimed "die- ard, down-home tailgaters" Tom Yonkovit and iends are busy grilling sausages and drinking eer and hot cocoa at their designated spot in the ioneer parking lot. "You can come as early as 3 on Friday," says onkovit, of Brighton. "We usually do. But last ight was a tough one at work, so we didn't get ere 'til about 9." Despite the cold wind blowing around the ium, Yonkovit's party is equipped for all Cons. Hazel Grinnell, a member of the tailgate, xplained the group's all-weather capabilities - a roduct of their 20 years of tailgating experience. Their motor home is outfitted with a canopy o block out the rain. Heavy "plastic walls" line he canopy to create a more comfortable shelter or when the weather gets rough. "One time it was raining and we put straw own on the ground because there was so r h mud," Yonkovit said. His wife Mary o kovit added, "You could tell where we'd een for months, until the wind blew the trhw away." Inside this make-shift home-away-from- ome, there are two barn heaters, a grill and ables fully loaded with pre-game hors d'oeu- LIan limits media access to prisoners y LANSING (AP) - Representatives of hundreds of Michigan newspapers and television news -departments told state officials yesterday that a proposal to lint prisoner interviews would violate th public interest and allow abuses to go unchecked. The Michigan Department of Cdrrections held its only hearing yes- terlay on proposed rule changes that ld ban news cameras and reporters' rding devices from state prisons. Nws reporters would have access to inmhates only during telephone inter- views and normal visitation times. Corrections officials say the planned :hanges are meant to increase security. They say that bringing reporters, pho- :ographers and film crews into prisons :hreatens security and can create noto- -ety for the inmates featured. The media really should not be ranteed more access than the pub- ic," Corrections spokesperson Matt Davis said outside tie hearing. 'Obviously, we can't have the public coming in whenever they want." The department took testimony from officials representing The Associated Press, the Michigan Press Association, the Metro Detroit chapter of the Society of Professional ournalists, the Detroit Free Press, the P sing State Journal, Booth ewspapers, ABC News and Detroit elevision stations WJBK and WKBD. vres. Hazel Grinnel spends most of her time inside the vehicle's toasty interior preparing the rest of the food -- the rest of the tailgate party is counting on its traditional steak dinner after the game. "We have all the creature comforts of home," said John Snyir, "we lack and need nothing" One Saturday, the group was entertained by special tailgate chef and tailgate party cookbook author' "Tailgate Joe " "Companies sponsor hir to cook for their parties:" Mary Yonkovit -ys 'He has special recipes and would cook a bunch of food for everyone." By 9:30 a.m. Fisher's ac-quaintance, Bill Serpico is busy securing a satellite dish on the top of his motor home so that Fisher can watch the Purdue-Wisc onsin game following the Michigan game, during his "traditional victory party." Serpico heard of Fisher's infamous motor home and tailgate parties through friends. He said he traveled from Ohio just to photograph the entourage. "The only way to go in sIvle is like this," Serpico said, "Im here to take pictures - doing the whole nine yards:' This weekend, Fisher plans to spend nearly $1,000 on food and other luxuries for tailgate activities before the Ohio State game. "This is my life," Fisher says. Just a few spaces down from Fisher, music from the Michigan Marching Band resonates from the site of a joint tailgate party of devout Michigan fans. Years ago, Warren and Cherie Major of Virgina coincidently parked their vehicle next to Barbara Jandasek and her husband several times in a row. The couples decided it was fate, and have stuck together for the past 10 years for every game. Five years ago, the Majors, both Michigan alums, made a pact to follow the Wolverines to every game in each season and thev've been attending home games for 30 years now. "It gives us something to look forward to at the end of the week," Warren Major said. Because they travel more than 500 miles from Virgina, the Majors have a regular plan of action when they visit Ann Arbor. After traveling to Baltimore, they fly to Cleveland where they rent a car and drive the remainder of the trip to Michigan. The Majors also fly to each away game, although their route is usually more direct. "When we go to away games," Warren said. "We make it a tourist event." But the pair said they always make it clear to locals that they are visiting to support Michigan football. In Skaneateles, a suburb of Syracuse, N.Y., Warren says that he set up his dancing Michigan gorilla doll in a bar. "All the Michigan fans went nuts." The night before they leave, the Warrens make all their preparations, including a trip to the grocery store to procure items for the tradi- tional menu including soup, stews, shrimp, chicken and an abundance of beer. Across the way from the Majors' tailgate is a tailgater "restaurant" sponsored by Larry and Marci Swinckey of Riverview, Mich. - where Lloyd Carr attended high school. In the free-of-charge restaurant for family members, the Swinckeys have a stove top and food bar set up behind a counter under their tent. Hanging next to the counter is the game day menu, reading: Pre-game - Larry's 'M' Omelette, friendship bread, Lulu's brownies. Post game --Beef 'M' noodle-mushroom soup, reuben loaf, ham loaf, tea and pop. "Everything is non-commercial," Marci Swinckey says, "We don't by anything pre-made - we make everything ourselves." Since 1993, the Swinckey crowd has main- tained this restaurant-like set-up. But their guests can contribute the diversity of the menu by bringing addition family favorites. Each game Larry Swinckey fries and serves up his all-encompassing omelette, which contain tomatoes, onions, peppers and cheese. "The 'M' omelette:' Larry Swinckey said, "has everything on it." Prior to the Michigan vs. Rice game. the Swinckeys' prepared to watch the Wolverines devour Rice, by concocting several rice dishes. The Swinckeys, like the Majors and Fishers, make it to all Michigan games, tak- ing with them their Michigan Barbie doll and Marci's favorite blanket. Their tailgating tra- ditions and Michigan pride were influenced by their grandma, an avid Michigan fan who's been tailgating for decades. "The neatest part (of tailgating) is bringing my 78 year old grandma," Larry says, "She sits through anything - rain or shine." It's just before 10 a.m and the Yonkovit- Grinnel crowd has increased nearly tenfold. Friends from Ohio and San Diego have just arrived. Chris McWaters, from Ohio, paints his face before he will walk the short distance to the gates of Michigan Stadium. McWaters makes it a tradition to get his Maize and Blue-painted face on TV prior to kickoff. "The best was two weeks ago, when we played Illinois," McWaters said, "There were these girls dressed in wedding dresses promot- ing a blockbuster film. We got right up there with them on TV!" The Wolverine Road Club is parked a few motor homes down from the Yonkovits and Grinnels and at 10:30 a.m. members are enjoying gourmet sandwiches prepared by their highly- regarded gourmet chef, Abner Taylor. "We follow through with every game," said Taylor, a professional chef who, in the 18 years he has been cooking for the Road Club, has only missed one game. Taylor says that he always wraps up The Wolverine Road Club's season each year with an elaborate feast of wild game following the last regular season game. "This year, for Ohio State, we will have rab- bit, venison, moose, beaver and maybe bear meat,"Taylor said. Secretary and Chair of The Wolverine Road Club Ed O'Reilly said the club's weekly cele- bration has carried on many traditions in the 27 years since its founding. "We have a little dancing after the game," says O'Reilly. "We also have palm reading. And we always encourage the visiting team to come and sing the Michigan fight song." The group stresses the importance of guests. They encourage passers-by, including fans head- ing back to their cars after the game, to stop by for food and socializing. They have collected nearly 12,000 pictures of individual guests across a 17-year period. "The biggest thing about this is its constan- cy," Taylor said. "Anyone who comes by is welcome. We make sure we have plenty of food for people who come by to party with us. We really enjoy it." With less than 30 minutes until kickoff, the The Wolverine Road Club packs up some of its belongings. Anticipation in both lots has built over the last four hours and it's now time to brave the massive crowd of maize and blue fans in their hike to the Big House. But the tailgater saga doesn't end here. Hours after the last play, the last cheer of the crowd and the last young fan has stepped off the field, the Pioneer parking lot rema ins littered with about two dozen motor homes. Blue-tinted lights glow in some of the motor homes, others are completely dark and outside a few devout Michigan fans remain soaking up the pride that still seeps from the stadium following a 37-3 win over Northwestern. The fans drink, play football and converse with city employees who empty garbage cans from the lot. "We usually go to the bars at night," says Morgan Mudge, a sophomore at the University's Flint campus. In the hours following the game, the group of about eight will play football to pass the time. They listen to music and relax with friends. "A lot of people get the same spot every time. A lot of it is relaxing. We take it easy. It's a break from school for a couple of nights," Mudge said. The group is already preparing for the last home game of the season this weekend. "We'll bring a chef with us-he's planning the menu," said Michael Wolf from Newberry, Mich., in the eastern U.P The chef, a friend of the group's with a degree in culinary arts, will create the game day spread using a full-size grill, brought along the near seven-hour drive down from the U.P. Mudge and his friends are rookie tail- gaters. The game against Northwestern marked the three year anniversary of the tail- gate's initiation. "This is where we started out - we've never been to any other lot," Mudge says. Across the dimly-light lot, a group of Northwestern students relax in their motor home drinking beer and watching reruns of the Purdue game. The Evanston, Ill., visitors are saddened by their team's loss, but said they took comfort in the break in Purdue's undefeated season - nobody's perfect. But a loss to Michigan hasn't stopped these football fans from mixing with the home team's crowd. "We're forming relationships with our fel- low tailgaters. We're getting to know the Michigan crowd," said Chicago resident Scott Cleve. The group plans to hit Ann Arbor's bars later in the night. "Our first stop is the Touchdown Cafe," says Jeff Bierdrzyk of Chicago, "Then, whatever happens after that until we pass out." Bierdrzyk and his friends embarked on the five-hour tourney to Ann Arbor from their native Chicago not only to experience the excitement of a live game, but to join the other tailgaters and Michigan fans in their quest to become a part of what Bierdrzyk terms "the Michigan myth." By 10 a.m. Sunday morning, the Pioneer lot will be empty and only a few scraps of newspa- per and dropped hot dog buns will remain. And whether they battle their way through Sunday morning traffic back home to Chicago, San Diego or Newberry, Michigan fans are already anticipating their return to Ann Arbor for the game against Ohio State and -just maybe, a lit- tle tailgating. K READ THE DAILY. LOVE THE DAILY. EXPERIENCE THE DAILY MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. We will help you get the interviews 0a ......... ..... phi RI CH E I SEN Days at Michigan, Life at SportsCenter Los Angeles...$269 The University of Michigan welcomes Rich Eisen, SportsCenter anchor at ESPN. Eisen, an alumnus of the University and Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, will speak about his days as a Wolverine and the roard to hica rrear with PN ml