The Michigan Daily 11C GERALD FORD I 1913-2006 BO SCHE Mi - 7 anuu u q- 4 F I Legendary coach Bo SchembethIer wit and went to 17 bowl games. He was per 1969 with an upset of a Buckeye team l Fable ByANDREW GROSSMAN and MATT SINGER Daily Staff Reporters Bo Schembechler, the football coach who grew to embody the ideal of the Michigan man, died yesterday. He was 77. Before retiring in 1989, he became the all-time winningest coach in Michigan football history. In 21 years as head coach, Schem- bechler won 13 Big Ten titles, went to 10 Rose Bowls and compiled a 194-48-5 record. He collapsed yesterday morn- ing in the studio of WXYZ-TV in Southfield while taping a show. He was pronounced dead from heart failure at Providence Hospital at 11:42a.m. In the 10 years before he became head coach in 1969, Michigan's football team had won barely half of its games. From the beginning, Schem- bechler brought a new fire to the team. The night before the Rose Bowlattheend ofhisfirstseason, Schembechler suffered his first heart attack. He received peri- odic updates in his hospital bed about the game, which Michigan lostto Southern California. Schembechler stood on the sidelines in silence during prac- tice the next spring. His doctors wouldn't lethim coach. One afternoon, Jim Betts, a second-string quarterback, threw a pass to halfback Tommy Darden. Darden's eyes locked onto MBECHLER 1 1929-2006 chigan FAan COURTESY OF STEVE KAGAN h his 1976 Michigan squad. In his 21 years as head coach, he won 194 games haps most famous for his annual battles with Ohio State, which he kicked off in ed by his former mentor, Woody Hayes. 'd coach dead at 77 University's most famous alum never forgot his roots By ANDREW GROSSMAN Daily StaffReporter University alum and former President Gerald Ford, who sought to restore trust in the presidency in the aftermath of one of the most scandal-ridden administrations in American his- tory, died at his home in Rancho Mirage, Calif. on Dec. 26. He was 93. When asked in 1995 what his greatest accomplishment was as president, Ford said it was "heal- ing America." AndhealAmericahe did. Ford's honest Midwestern demeanor calmed a nation beset by a deep unease after the traumas of Viet- nam and Watergate. Ford was never elected to the presidency or vice presidency. In 1973, then-President Richard Nixon appointed then-Congress- man Ford to take the place of Vice President Spiro Agnew after bribery charges forced Agnew to resign. His presidency will be remem- bered most for a single act - the decision to grant Nixon an uncon- ditional pardon for all crimes he committed while president. The pardon sparked a national outcry and sent Ford's approval ratings plummeting. It likely cost him the 1976 election to Jimmy Carter. Now, the pardon has come to be viewed as necessary to pre- vent the nation from having to see a former president in court for years. Ford graduated from the Uni- versity in1935 with a double major in economics and political sci- ence. He played center on a foot- ball team that won two national championships. Ford was named the team's most valuable player in 1934. The University retired his jersey, number 48, in 1994. He came to Ann Arbor in the middle of the Great Depression from his boyhood home in Grand Rapids with a $100 scholarship to cover tuition and $100 he had earned working in a paint factory. His football coach, Harry Kipke, helped him find jobs washing dishes and waiting tables at the University hospital. In his autobiography "A Time to Heal" he wrote that a "wonder- ful" aunt and uncle sent him $2 each week. He also donated blood every two or three months, earn- ing $25 each time. One of the places where Ford washed dishes was his frater- nity, Delta Kappa Epsilon, where he worked to pay his room and board. In the spring of his sophomore year, Ford was slated to have surgery to repair a knee he had injured playing football. But the night before the operation, Ford and a friend went to the now- defunct Spanish Club and "spent hours drinking tequila and smok- ing long cigars," he wrote. "I woke up the next morning with probably the worst hangover I ever had." He wrote that when he showed up at the hospital, the doctors and nurses looked at him and decided to postpone the operation. It was Ford's first experience with alcohol. Ford was also a member of Michigamua, the elite senior society. He would continue to participate in the society as an alum, even during and after his presidency. Ford turned down offers to play for the Green Bay Packers and the Detroit Lions after grad- uation. Instead, he headed east to Yale University, where he was an assistant football coach and stu- dent at the law school. After serving in the Navy dur- ing World War II, Ford returned to Grand Rapids and opened a law firm. He was elected to Congress from Michigan's 5th District in 1948, a seat he held until assum- ing the vice presidency. Ford remained close to the University throughout his life. He spoke at the University's commencement ceremony in May 1974 and kicked off his re- election campaign in September 1976 in front of a crowd of more than 15,000 at Crisler Arena. He returned to Ann Arbor to speak at forums and conferences through- out his retirement. Since 1977, Ford has held the title of adjunct political science professor. Ford's presidential library is located on North Cam- pus, and the University's Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy is named for him. "The Ford School community has been enriched by our con- nections with President Ford," said Rebecca Blank, the school's dean. "His visits here helped our students learn about the com- plexities of policymaking and understand the role of politics in our society. President Ford's com- mitment to public service was a hallmark of his entire career." University President Mary Sue Coleman lauded Ford's contribu- tions to the campus community. "I am deeply saddened by his death but grateful for his many years of inspiration to his Uni- versity," Coleman said in a writ- ten statement. "I have had the great privilege of knowing both President Ford and Mrs. Ford. An ardent Michigan football fan, President Ford was equally pas- sionate about interacting with students on issues of public policy and world affairs." Coleman named her two cats Betty and Jerry after Ford and his wife. Coleman also noted Ford's sup- port for the University's use of affirmative action in its admis- sions decisions. Ford published an op-ed piece in The New York Times in 1999 condemning two lawsuits filed against the University that chal- lenged its use of affirmative action. "At its core, affirmative action should try to offset past injustices by fashioning a campus popula- tion more truly reflective of mod- ern America and our hopes for the future," Ford wrote. Ford's stance on affirmative action was indicative of his mod- erate Republican leanings. Both he and his wife, Betty Ford, were supporters of abortion rights. In 1976, Ford faced a primary chal- lenge from the more conservative RonaldReagan,whomhe defeated. Ford did not attend a single social event at the White House during Reagan's eight years in office. He survived two assassination attempts in September 1975. It was Ford who presided over the removal of the last American troops from Vietnam in April 1975. After the fall of Saigon, Ford called on Americans to put the nation's first real military defeat behind them. "I ask that we stop refighting the battles and the recrimina- tions of the past," he said in a speech at Tulane University. "I ask that we look now at what is right with America, at our possi- bilities and our potentialities for change and growth and achieve- ment and sharing. I ask that we accept the responsibilities of leadership as a good neighbor to all peoples and the enemy of none." Ford echoed Abraham Lin- coln's second inaugural address, saying "the time has come to look forward to an agenda for the future, to unify, to bind up the nation's wounds, and to restore its health and its optimistic self- confidence." Ford is survived by his wife Betty, his daughter Susan and his sons Michael, John and Steven. Plans for a memorial .at the University have not yet been announced. This article originally ran on Jan. 4, 2007. the ball, and he ran to catch it. But Schembechler stood in his way. Darden crashed into the weakened coach and knocked him uncon- scious on the field. A trainer ran to revive him with ammonia capsules. When Schembechler came to, he stood up, looked at the crowd that had gathered and repeated one of his favorite phrases. "Hotdamn,"hesaid."Thatwould have killed an ordinary man." Schembechler was no ordinary man. Those who knewhim consistently described himwith one word:gruff. Below that prickly exterior, they said, was one of the most compas- sionate men they had ever met. "Forbeingsogruff, theguyloved people and he always saw their potential," said author John Bacon, a professor ofAmerican culture and history who has been collaborating with Schembechler on a book. Glenn E. Schembechler was born on April 1, 1929 in Barberton, Ohio. He got the name Bo from his sister, who couldn't pronounce the word "brother." It was his mother who instilled a love of sports in him, Bacon said. As a seventh and eighth grader, he suited up for his town's high school football team because his grade school didn't have a squad. 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