C. 0 . The Michigan Marching Band spelled out Ufer's name in his honor at halftime on Oct. 17,1981 against Iowa, just 10 days before he passed. Ufer gave a speech and led the crowd in 'The Victors' over the PA. The Michigan football team will put Ron Kramer's No. 87 jersey back into circula- tion prior to the Michigan-Mas-. sachusetts matchup on Saturday, designating Kramer as a'Michigan Football Legend.' Kramer, a three-sport athlete from Girard, Kan., played offen- sive and defensive end, running back, quarterback, kicker and receiver at Michigan in the mid- 1950s before a 10-year NFL career at tight end with the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions. Kramer passed away on Sept. 11, 2010 at his home in Fenton, Mich. He was 75. His children, Kurt and Cassie, and their families will be on hand at Michigan Stadium on Saturday for the on-field pregame ceremony recognizing Kramer. One of Kramer's grandchildren, Kelsey, is an LSA senior at the University. On Thursday, Kelsey took a few minutes with the Daily to remember her late grandfather, a Michigan legend. The Michigan Daily: What are your emotions, what are your family's emotions as your grand- father's number is put back into circulation this weekend? Kelsey Kramer: My family is thrilled. It's kind of a cool thing for me, being a student here. I know a lot of kids my age don't necessar- ily know neat tha going to that and ing here TMD: unretiri ful, but putting with a 1 you seet to have associat in an ev' b life KK: I over tim a norma to be ab the fielt taken o somethi team an I thinki in a way it's not t about him, so for me it's that's the end of that. t it's back on the field. It's TMD: We know your grandfa- 'draw a lot of attention to ther was a player here, but how I the memory of him play- did you get here? Did your parents in a way. go here? Some have criticized that KK: Actually, my whole fam- ng numbers is disrespect- ily went to Michigan State except as you mentioned, you're for me and my grandpa. I've been them back on the field going to games since I was 3 years egend patch on them. Did old - we've kept the season tick- this as a good opportunity ets in my family since my great- your grandfather's name grandma was watching her son, ed with Michigan football my grandpa, play on the field. So eryday fashion? I've always had a strong connec- tion with Michigan in that way. My grandpa volunteered at the e wasthe school at the time. He was always He was t back, bringing apples around to S full of the president's office and all the est, fathletic offices. He remained real- and always ly involved, and I think because of our close relationship I couldn't have thought of another univer- sity I'd want to go to. TMD: What was your relation- ship with him like? KK: Every Football Saturday do. Part of me feels like before I was a student here, we re it's going to become just would go to the games together. d thing, but I think it's nice I'd sit up in the press box with tle to see that number on him. When I was a freshman d. Even though it's being and sophomore here, we'd go out ut of retirement, it's still to lunch once a month, and our ng that's special to the family always spent Christmas d to the player wearing it. at his house in Fenton. We were it's still respectful to him, extremely close, and I think that . He's still being honored; me going to Michigan brought us that his jersey is back and even closer. He was the best, so UFER From Page 5 Catholic? You bet I'd like it,"' Bob explained on the air. And he honked that horn into the microphone each time Mich- igan scored for the rest of his broadcasting career. Before I leave Tom's office - the same insur- ance business his father founded - he brings me into his study, where 'his walls and bookshelves are lined with autographed Michigan memorabilia. Photographs, plaques, game balls - he could probably sell half those things on eBay and buy an Audi. W He reaches into a cabinet and pulls out General Pat- ton's horn. He squeezes the bulbous end twice, likely jolt- ing nearby employees who have that 2:30 feeling on a Monday. He doesn't care. "Wanna try?" Tom asks. I take the horn from his hands, feel the rust and squeeze it a few times. I think about the families across Michigan who gath- ered in their living rooms each fall Saturday and muted the television to instead tune into Ufer's broadcast. I think of the 1979 Indiana game - Johnny Wangler to Antho- ny "The Human Torpedo" Carter as time expired - and imagine listening to the incessant blaring of the horn that followed. I hand it back to Tom, thank him and leave. I'm not sure why, but I can't stop smiling. More than 30 years after his death, Bob still has that effect on people. Last winter break, I was at a buddy's house in New Jersey for the Outback Bowl, where I watched the host mute Mike Tirico's play-by- play before kickoff and plug his iPod in the audio input. I suppose the Rational broadcasts are just too vanil- la for a fidgety generation of college football fans. Many have spurned television and radio commentary for Twit- ter updates, where the analy- sis from Sports Pickle is just a tad edgier than the journal- istic banter you hear during the game. Meanwhile, in Michigan, CDs of Ufer's best calls still fly off the shelves like a new Madonna album. On Saturdays, you can hear the classics playing throughspeakers as you walk down a corridor of tailgates in Ann Arbor. Every Michigan fan has a favorite Ufer call. Local WTKA radio per- sonality Sam Webb loves playing "Touchdown Billy There isn't a Michigan Man Taylor" on his broadcast, who wouldn't want to go out from the 1971 Ohio State and scalp those Buckeyes game. Taylor, Michigan's right now! They have the running back, took the pitch audacity, the unmitigated on the option 21 yards to the gall to tear down the coveted house to defeat the Buckeyes 'M'" 10-7 in Ann Arbor, and Ufer Webb's radio show co- went berserk. host, Ira Weintraub, calls in "It fit rig ht i n with what Bo was doing with the Michigan footbal team S'The Team, The Team, The Team.' Bob Ufer was a part of that, too." - Frank Beckmann Ufer he was a homer, he would arrogantly reply, "You bet Iam." Ufer wasn't just a Michi- gan fan - he was, in every sense, a Michigan Man. In 1940, as a freshman at the University, he played in the same backfield as eventual Heisman winner Tom Har- mon before leaving the team to run track. Ufer later broke a number of Michigan's track and field recordsbefore he finished his career. "The biggest thing you can do is go out and be you," Webb said. "That's what Bob Ufer was on the radio. You could tell that's him. I don't think it was an act, I don't think it was a character that he played on the radio. That was him. "You feel like that's you, or your friend, that's out there calling the game. I think there's an endearing aspect to that." In 1981, though, the voice of Michigan football's radio broadcast transitioned from a beloved son of Ann Arbor to a man that grew up in a Michi- gan State household. The play-by-play commentator who succeeded Ufer, Frank Beckmann, was raised on the Spartansby his father. But, like a fine scotch, Beckmann matured, and he grew an admiration for the Wolverines. As the 1981 sea- son opened at Wisconsin, he would lead the broadcast, and a sickly Ufer would take the back seat in the press box, relegated to the pregame show and halftime reports. "He was sick, he went on the trip and he told me to prepare as if I was doing the game," Beckmann said. "We got to Madison and I went to his hotel room, and he imme- diately says, 'You're doing the game tomorrow.' He sat there, very ill, and spent, I'd say, two hours going over the team, telling me about play- ers. "He wanted to make sure Michigan football was well represented on the radio. It fit right in with what Bo was doing with the Michigan football team - 'The Team, The Team, The Team.' Bob Ufer was a part of that, too." Of course, the transition wasn't seamless. After 36 years, Ufer's voice wasn't just a staple on the airwaves. It rang through the locker room to pump up the players, and it permeated the campus dur- ing pep rallies. Schembechler brought Ufer to speak to the players the day before the 1981 Rose Bowl to jack them up before the game. Heck, in 1976, President Gerald Ford called full of life and always partying. TMD: He played quite a long time ago, but do remember him getting recognized around games pretty often? KK: Definitely. A lot of people that worked around Michigan football definitely recognized who Ron Kramer was. President Mary Sue Coleman knew him very well; I met her a couple times with him. Kids my age might not unless they're friends with me. Two guys that lived next door to me in my dorm found out that he was a Michigan football player and looked him up on Wikipedia. He only is in the Hall of Fame for the Green Bay Packers and played for the Detroit Lions. They were so mad at me for not telling them. But my grandpa never talked about his fame. He was just my grandpa to me. TMD: Do you remember any memories he shared of his days as a three-sport athlete? KK: He would talk about Paul Honorng - he played against him at Notre Dame (and with him in Green Bay), one of his really good friends - and Tom Nowatski (a teammate in Detroit). He used to bring me out to lunch with him. Football was his big thing, and basketball he talked about occa- sionally. We went to one game together when they had an event at Crisler Arena. In track he was always told he would be a really good shot putter, and he obviously did well in it and enjoyed it, but he loved football so much more. TMD: Sept.11,2010 isa day a lot Michigan fans remember for the good things - Denard Robinson going for 502 yards against Notre Dame - but obviously it was a dif- ferent kind of day for you. KK: I remember sitting in my grandpa's house, and the coroners were there. He didn't have his cable hooked up for some reason, so I asked his sister and my mom if they would mind me turning on the radio to listen to the game. That was what he'd be doing any- way and it was what I would be doing. I wanted to get my mind off of it and listen to Michigan foot- ball. I definitely will not forget Denard Robinson running an 87-yard touchdown that day. That is the one thing that's always stuck in my mind about that day, think- ing, 'My grandpa's probably sit- ting up there laughing his ass off, so happy thatwe won. It just felt like he was there still, watching the game as usual. Webb also loves to imper- sonate Ufer's disgust when he saw the Buckeyes run out of Michigan Stadium's tunnel in 1973 and tear down the 'M' Club banner - the banner that the Wolverines jump up to slap as they run out onto the field before every game. "And they're tearing down Michigan's coveted 'M' Club banner! They will meet a dastardly fate here for that! from the room next door: "Don't forget about his poem about truck drivers," in refer- ence to the Ohio State sellout crowd that Ufer claimed con- sisted of 10,000 alumni and 74,000 truckers. Few people seemed to mind that Ufer was so bla- tantly partial. His listeners loved the in-your-face bias because it came from some place real. When critics told COURTE$Y OF KELSEY KRAMER Ron Kramer (top) elevates to catch a pass in Michigan's 42-7 season-opening victory over Missouri on Sept. 24, 1956. (bot- tom) Kramer stands with his grandchildren, Kurt, Kelsey and Heidi. 6 1 FootballSaturday - September 15, 2012 TheBlockM -- www.TheBlockM.com 1 3