').inc iric~c~ f~ij Fn~i SAIIDA -Setebeil.200 UUr 9 -She Michigan Dailv - FOCOALL SATURDAY - SeptembeOD, 2000 a w w w L IIG IVI IIIII QII t1Qliy - ! V\J t1LL vnt vnvni VVhllVlilN\,.i i <....i t. FOOTBALL SATURDAY PRIt0DUtJTION C REMT 02OW 'MeMichigm David Den Herder Chris Duprey Mark Francescutti Stephanie Offen.........Football writers Mike Spahn. .. .............. Editor in Chief David Den Herder........Managing Editor Mark J. Thomford. ....Business Manager Jeanine Mouilleseaux ..Special Sections Mgr. Sarah Estella ......Display Sales Manager Brent Traidman. Assoc. Display Manager Matt Andrews. Ayalla Barkai. Bradley Davies. Jacob Fenton, Jennifer Fratarcangeli. Jared Halajian.-Jen Houtzer, Simon Hui, Kellie Kinney. Jennifer Lamping. Julie Lepsetz, Vinh Nguyen. Pranisa Pothpan, Glenn Powlas, Jennifer Roosa. Jaimie Rose, Nicole Siegel. Julie St. Clair. George Vavaroutsos....................................Display Staff Dana Linnane....Advertising Production Mgr. Vinh Nguyen..........................Head Designer Joy Szilagy .................Production Assistant Proof reader. ................... Nisha Sachd Lauren Aposhian. Anne Fix, Tyler Nordstrom, Melinda Trombley............... ...Display Staff Cover photo: NORMAN NG/Daily Cover cutout: JOE KOSHOLLEK/ Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel GAME 1P1EVI7W The Micnigan Daly ISSN 0745967) is published Monday through Friday during the fal and winter terms by students at the University of Mchigan. Subscriptions for tall term. staring in Seetmbrb. va U.S. ma are $100. Winter term January through Aprl is $i05. yeaiong iSeptember through Aprl) is $180. On-campus suscrp ons for fa term are $35. Subsriptons must be orepaid. T Ie Micigan Dalyi s a member of Tne Associated Press and TheO Assocated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: Thre Michigan Dally. 420 Maynard St Ann Arbor. Michigan 481091327.PHONE NUMBERS Ail are a code 7344: New~s 76-DARNY: Arts 763-0379: Sports 647- 333: Opinion 7640552: Circuiation 764-0558: Classfied adc't 5t- -F 30557: Display advertising 764-0554: 8.ling 764-0550.E- nma' letters to the editor to cafIy.Ietterst-rmich edu. World Wide Web: wwwmichigan5aiy.com. FOOTBALL SATURDAY Football Saturday, to those who know the Michigan athletic tradition, is an institution unparalleled in excitement and spirit. From the action on the field to the flying marshmallows in the stands, the Brg House becomes the center of life in Ann Arbor each Fall. every time the Wolverines take the field. So read the introduction to the first edition of Football Saturday. published in 1997. Merely freshmen during that memorable season. your newest cast of Daily football writers represents the last tie to those student-journalists who had the courage to innovate. Still the best part of Football Saturday? Easy. The writers, photograhers and producers are students - just like the players on the pages ahead. Enjoy. - The Football Writers Team (votes) (record) 1. Nebraska (39) (3-0) 2. Florida State (30) (3-0) 3. Florida (1) (4-0) 4. Virginia Tech (3-0) 5. Kansas State (1) (4-0) 6. Washington (3-0) 7. Clemson (4-0) 8. Southern Cal (3-0) 9. Michigan (3-1) 10. Miami Fla. (2-1) 11. Tennessee (2-1) 12. Ohio State (4-0) 13. Texas (2-1) 14. Oklahoma (3-0) 15. UCLA (3-1) 16. Texas Christian (3-0) 17. Wisconsin (3-1) 18. Michigan State (3-0) 19. Auburn (4-0) 20. Oregon (3-1) 21. Southern Miss. (2-1) 22. Purdue (3-1) 23. South Carolina (4-0) 24. Illinois (3-1) 25. Georgia (2-0) Pts. 1,743 1.732 1,603 1,491 1,484 1.426 1,223 1,181 1,160 1.079 1.043 995 747 740 727 640 594 583 545 457 418 414 291 268 199 Pvs. 1 2 3 5 4 8 11 9 10 12 13 14 15 17 6 18 7 23 20 NR 22 21 NR 19 24 ARTS ILN~ uri-rel 3dtm Dafg # LIRa SEPTEMBER 30, 2000 Comedians Chappelle, Breuer light u By Rob Brode Daly Arts Writer Hash Bash came a bit early this year. Dave Chapelle and Jim Breuer "rolled" Even with Jamar Fletcher in the mix -- the Wolverines passed far 257 yards last season against the Badgers. Will they be able to repeat the feat? Reinstated Bnagers ha§ive big shoes to fl Completely Baked Hill Auditorium September 22. 2000 into Hill Auditorium last Thursday night for an intoxicating pe r fo r m a n c e. Breuer is best known for his work on Saturdav Night Live as "Goat Boy" and Chappelle for his roles in "200 Cigarrettes" and "Robin Hood: Men and Tights." DAVID KATZ/Daly Jim Breuer has turned his appearance of being perpetually high into comedic gold. crowd, Breuer was pure c Chappelle began his se ing his recent exploration and the experience of a t dance. Chappelle touched jects from racismto the C weed and even gave a lo on testing methods to ch ness of sexual seafood. U appeared as if Chappell written material, weaving of particular themes tl night, leaving the audil munchies for more. Although the perfor "joint" effort, Chappe "Northern Lights" while oregano your neighbor tt buying. These days, a even get you a dime b down ten bucks on a Br ticket was money well sp Dropped Out: No. Mississippi State 16 Notre Dame. No. 25 By Stephanie Offen Daily Sports Editor Look out Wolverines. Jamar Fletcher is back. The Wisconsin defense may have allowed 47 points - 13 points in two overtimes - in the upset loss to Northwestern last weekend, but Michigan Stadium will see a con- pletely different defense on Saturday. Its star has returned. Fletcher, who was forced to sit out three of the Badgers' four games, has only seen game time in Wisconsin's 27-23 victory over Oregon But in that one game, Fletcher had three intercep- tions - more than the entire Michigan defense has so far this season. "Everybody knows they've got the best secondary in the Big0 Ten, if not the country, with Fletcher back there," Michigan offensive lineman Steve Hutchinson said. The Badgers were given four weeks to fill suspensions handed down for receiving unfair benefits at a Madison- area shoe store. Those four weekends are over. Last Saturday against Northwestern, the Badgers served their final six suspensions. The team Michigan will face this Saturday is a Wisconsin team that no one has yet seen. Along with Fletcher returning, Wisconsin quarterback Brooks Bollinger gets his favorite con- nection back with star receiver Chris Chambers returning. Chambers makes his debut after serving suspensions and sitting out with a foot injury. The Wisconsin faithful are as eager to see the Bollinger-Chambers matchup as the Michigan fans are to finally see Drew Henson team up with David Terrell. Both include a virtually untested component but the Wolverines' con- nection has a defensive player-of-the- year candidate in its way, while the Michigan secondary gave up 352 yards passing last weekend. Last season, Terrell clearly won the battle between himself and Fletcher and Fletcher is back for revenge. In last year's 21-16 Michigan victory, Terrell caught seven passes for 88 yards, but was not always covered by the star cor- ner. Revenge will not only be a factor for Fletcher, but for the entire team in this game. On top of being the first game the Badgers will play with a full roster, not one of the seniors - who have won two straight Big Ten titles and Rose Bowls - has defeated the Wolverines. "Their seniors don't want to go out having never beaten Michigan," Michigan's Jeff Backus said. "That's going to be a big motivational factor for them." Another motivational factor will be the depletion of the Michigan defense. Both Eric Wilson and Jake Frvsinger will be missing again this weekend, giving Wisconsin running back Michael Bennett reason to believe that his 200-plus yards a game average should not be in jeopardy. "You don't lose guys like Frvsinger and Wilson and not have it impact you," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. Unlike the past three weeks, there will only be one face missing from the Badgers' lineup this Saturday. Senior right guard Dave Costa, who suffered a broken ankle in last weekend's loss, is out for this game and may be out for the season. Costa was not one of the Badgers who served suspensions, making this his first game out of the lineup. But with Ben Johnson and Bill Ferrario back on the offensive line after serving their suspensions, the line will be somewhat more complete than in the past three games. A loss to Northwestern, an near-loss to Cincinnati and close games against Oregon and Western Michigan may not be forgotten, but they have been put behind the Badgers. This Saturday starts a new season for Wisconsin - a season with a full roster. While this roster may be untest- ed, what better test than to throw at them than the only Big Ten team to beat them the past two years? Hutchinson said it best when he said that this weekend will mean every- thing to the Badgers. Carr "came into the lockerroom and told us that Wisconsin's going to come in here and play their best game because if they lose, they're out of the Big Ten race." Baked," a stoner movie for the'90s - a modern day "Up in Smoke." With a tour titled "Completely Baked," there was sure to be more ref- erences to marijuana than at Whitney Houston's sentencing. So when Jim Breuer came out and did his moronic, sedated, stoner chuckle and proceeded to talk about weed, the audience ate it up faster than a batch of magic brown- ies. Breuer's routine ranged from feined retardation to feigned drunkenness and of course feined highness. In between his bits on various types of intoxication he talked about baseball, child birth, hemorrhoids and goats. The set was punctuated with sound effects, impres- sions and vulgar hand puppets. In spite of being sophomoric and sometimes incoherent, amongst the college age Both highly-acclaimed comics starred in the 1997 soon-to-bc cult classic "Half ---- rn- n-- n-- - - - - --- Bootleg: Detroit; Morphine; Rykodisc Records By Gautam Baksi Daily Arts Writer Bootleg: Detroit is Morphine's first, and incidentally last, live release after six studio albums spanning eight years. Vocalist and saxophonist Mark Sandman, the leader of the Morphine trio, died of a heart attack in 1999. Bootleg is of little interest to the passing listener, but joyful to the devoted fan looking for a rarity. The album features a whopping 18 tracks. Although most of them are bare- ly three minutes long, the album is still satisfying and complete from beginning to end, as a full concert should be. Recorded by a fan on March 7, 1994 at St. Andrew's Hall near Detroit, the recording found its way into Sandman's hands, who eventually edited and mixed the work for a future release. The song selection from the show is surprising and mixed with banter between the band and audience. Popular hits from "Like Swimming" and "Cure for Pain" are missing, replaced by obscure tracks from B-Sides and Otherwise and other unreleased materi- al. Listeners with knowledge of Morphine's discography may appreciate the unusual set list, but the tracks don't merit individual release. 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