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September 25, 1995 - Image 15

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The Michigan Daily, 1995-09-25

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I

The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 25, 1995 - 73
FOO-TBA LL/SCOREBOARD

NATIONAL COLLEGE FOOTBALL STANDINGS

Atlantic Coast Conference

Pacific-10 Conference

Florida State
Virginia
Maryland
Clemson
Georgia Tech
North Carolina
Wake Forest
Duke
N.C. State

Conference
3-0-0
3-0-0
2-0-0
1-2-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0
0-2-0

Overall
4-0-0
4-1-0
4-0-0
2-2-0
1-2-0
1-2-0
1-3-0
2-2-0
1-3-0

Washington State
Washington
Southern Cal
Stanford
Arizona State
Oregon
California
Arizona
Oregon State
UCLA

Conference
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0

Overall
2-1-0
2-1-0
3-0-0
3-0-1
2-2-0
3-1-0
1-2-0
2-2-0
1-3-0
2-2-0

Saturday's games:
Hawaii 42, Texas-El Paso 21
Northwestern 30. Air Force 6
Utah 25. Fresno State 21
Wyoming 45. Oklahoma State 25
New Mexico 36, New Mexico State 24
Next week's games:
Nevada at San Diego State (Thurs.)
Air Force at New Mexico
Brigham Young at Colorado State
Fresno State at UCLA
Hawaii at UNLV
Utah at Texas El-Paso
Division I-A Independents
Notre Dame 3-1-0

Saturday's games:
No. 1 Florida State 46, Central Florida 14
No. i1 Virginia 22, Clemson 3
No. 24 Maryland 41, Duke 28
Baylor 14, North Carolina State 0
Wake Forest 30, Navy 7
Thursday's games:
North Carolina 17, Louisville 10
Next week's games:
Maryland at Georgia Tech (Thurs.)
Wake Forest at Virginia
Clemson at N.C State
Navy at Duke
Ohio at North Carolina
Big West Conference
Conference Overall

Saturday's games:
No. 5 Southern Cal. 31, No. 25 Arizona 10
Stanford 28, No. 12 Oregon 21
Washington State 24, No. 16 UCLA 15
No. 22 Washington 21, Army 13
Arizona State 20, Oregon State I I
California 40, San Jose State 7
Next week's games:
California at Arizona
Arizona State at Southern Cal.
Washington State at Nebraska
Washington at Oregon State
Fresno State at UCLA
Southeastern Conference

J4- 4 .

Tulane
East Carolina
Louisville
Southern Mississippi
Tulsa
Army
Navy
Northeast Louisiana
Cincinnati
Memphis
North Texas

2-1-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
1-2-0
1-2-0
1-2-0
1-3-0
1-3-0
1-3-0

ANTOINE PITTS/Daily

The College Football Hall of Fame Is located In South Bend, Ind.

Conference Overall

Review:
Hall of Fame provides pomp
and Pnt of college football

Nevada
Northern Illinois
UNLV
Arkansas State
Louisiana Tech
Pacific
New Mexico State
Utah State
SW Louisiana
San Jose State

2-0-0
2-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0
0-2-0

2-0-0
2-2-0
1-3-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
1-3-0
0-3-0
1-3-0
0-4-0

EAST
Florida
Tennessee
Kentucky
Georgia
Vanderbilt
South Carolina
WUST
Arkansas
Louisiana State
Alabama
Auburn
Mississippi
Mississippi State

2-0-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-2-0
0-1-0
0-3-0
2-0-0
2-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0

3-0-0
3-1-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
0-3-0
1-3-0
3-1-0
3-1-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
2-2-0

Saturday's games:
No. 10 Oklahoma 51, North Texas 10
No. 21 Notre Dame 55, No. 13 Texas 27,
No. 22 Washington 21. Army 13
Arkansas 27, Memphis 20
Miami (Ohio) 23, Cincinnati 16
Indiana 27, Southern Mississippi 26
Illinois 7, East Carolina 0
Wake Forest 30,.Navy 7
Missouri 31, Northeast Louisiana 22
Tulsa 45, East Tennessee State 20
Next week's games:
Notre Dame at Ohio State
Rice at Army
Toledo at Cincinnati
West Virginia at East Carolina
Louisville at Memphis
Navy at Duke
Northeast Louisiana at Mississippi State
Tulane at Southern Mississippi
Tulsa at Louisiana State

'VA

By AntoIne Pitts
Daily Sports Editor
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - The Michi-
gan football team doesn't play at Notre
DUme this year, but there is still a good
reason to travel down to Northern Indi-
ana.
In August, the new College Football
Hall of Fame opened and ha§ since seen
a myriad of visitors. Nearly 20,000
people have gone through the turnstiles
since it opened on Aug. 25.
The hall has been inundated by tour-
ing groups, many of which are football
teams. On Friday, Texas - in town to
play the Fighting
Irish - and de-
fending Division
III champions
Albion, Mich.
viewed the hall of
fame. High school
teams also frequent
the $14.7 million
building.
"It's been really
well-received,"
said Mary
Peterson,oneofthe
hall's 81 full-time
volunteers. "The teams are really

r
MA MM
*AWN

exhibits located below ground. The
street level encompasses a gift shop and
a restaurant run by one of its biggest
sponsors, Burger King.
As visitors approach, they traverse
the 19,000-square foot Gridiron Plaza
- an actual field complete with
yardlines and a goal post.
After entering the front door, you go
down a 100-yard ramp - the length of
a football field -to get to the exhibits.
In the center of the ramp is a 43-foot
sculpture called "Pursuit of a Dream."
It depicts several events in a boy's life
as he pursues his dream of becoming a
football player.
The first thing
you encounter at the
bottom is the Sta-
dium Theater. The
360-degree, 11-
screen theater puts
you right in the
middle ofthe action
on a football Satur-
day. You see game
highlights, the
bands, the cheer-
leaders and all the
other sights of a
college football game while the sur-
round sound system pumps out audio
highlights.
All around the theater is the Hall of
Champions. It contains plaques and
computer biographies of players and
coaches dating back to the 1800's. Each
Hall of Famer has a biography, photos,
playing (or coaching) statistics and a
30-second video highlight.
With this year's inductees there are
now 729 people in the hall. Notre Dame
has the most with 53.
Visitors can go into the lockerroom
and listen to the great coaches give pep
talks to their players. Among the coaches
in this exhibit are Florida State's Bobby
Bowden and Southern Cal's John
Robinson.

The Scholar Athlete Exhibit contains
over 10,000 names in its database. This
award, the heart of the National Foot-
ball Foundation, is given to athletes
displaying greatness on and offthe field.
The training center is an interactive
area that allows visitors to become a
part of the game itself.
In the fitness room you can record
your height/weight, identify your body
type, test your leaping ability, agility,
balance and flexibility to see how you
measure up to actual players
On the practice field you can pass, run,
and kick a football and the strategy clinic
allows you to go against some of the all-
time great coaches in game situations.
The Pigskin Pageantry is a room de-
voted to all the spirit revolving around
a game. Tailgating, cheerleaders,
marching bands and mascots are all
celebrated here. An exhibit plays many
of the fight songs at the touch of a
button. You can tell where everyone's
loyalties lie by the song that they select.
There is an exhibit devoted to the
journalists who have covered the game
over the years. Here, for a small fee,
you can broadcast a great play in the
history of the game. You have your pick
of the Stanford-Cal band game, the
Doug Flutie "Hail Mary" pass, and a
few others.
There are other exhibits that present
great rivalries, the bowl games, na-
tional champions, the evolution of
equipment, and winners of the annual
Pantheon Award.
The hall is 58,000 square feet in total
and has plenty of room for future exhib-
its. It is designed so that it can be
expanded for inductees through the year
2010.
No trip to the College Football Hall
of Fame would be complete without a
trip to the Notre Dame campus, just
three miles to the north.
It should be a good attraction for
many years to come.

Saturday's games:
No. 2 Nebraska 49, Pacific 7
Iowa State 57, UNLV 30
California 40, San Jose State 7
New Mexico 36, New Mexico State 24
Northern Illinois 25, SW Louisiana 24
Next week's games:
Nevada at San Diego State (Thurs.)
Arkansas State at Minnesota
Tulsa at Louisiana Tech
Hawaii at UNLV
New Mexico State at Iowa
Northern Illinois at Kansas State
Utah State at San Jose State
Ivy League

Saturday's games:
No. 15 Tennessee 52, Mississippi State 14
No. 18 Louisiana State 52, Rice 7
Ole Mississippi 18, No. 20 Georgia 10
Kentucky 35, South Carolina 30
Arkansas 27, Memphis 20
Texas Christian 16, Vanderbilt 3
Next week's games:
Alabama at Georgia
Arkansas at Vanderbilt
Auburn at Kentucky
Mississippi at Florida
Louisiana State at South Carolina
NE Lousiana at Mississippi State
Oklahoma State at Tennessee
Southwest Conference

Boston College
West Virginia
Virginia Tech
Pittsburgh
Rutgers
Syracuse
Miami Fla.
Temple

1-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

1-2-0
2-2-0
1-2-0
2-2-0
1-2-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
0-3-0.

Yale
Princeton
Pennsylvania
Columbia
Brown
Cornell
Dartmouth
Harvard

Conference
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

Overall
1- 1-0
2-0-0
2-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0

Texas
Texas A&M
Baylor
Rice
Texas Christian
Texas Tech
Southern Methodist
Houston

Conference
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0

Overall
2-1-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-3-0
0-4-0

Saturday's games:
No. 6 Penn State 59, Rutgers 34
No. 8 Ohio State 54. Pittsburgh 14
Virginia Tech 17, No. 17 Miami Fla. 7
Syracuse 27, Minnesota 17
West Virginia 45, Kent 6
Next week's games:
Boston College at Michigan State
Virginia Tech at Pittsburgh
Syracuse at Rutgers
Bowling Green at Temple
West Virginia at East Carolina

..
,;,
i"

Big East Conference
Conference Overall

Saturday's games:
Lehigh 21, Yale 10
Princeton 20, Bucknell 3
Pennsylvania 28, Lafayette 8
St. Marys Cal 34, Columbia 14
Brown 31, Rhode Island 28
Cornell 28, Holy Cross 19
Dartmouth 34, Fordham 14
Harvard 28, Colgate 8
Next week's games:
Brown at Holy Cross
Fordham at Harvard
Columbia at Lafayette
Cornell at Dartmouth
Connecticut at Yale
Bucknell at Pennsylvania
Princeton at Colgate
Mid-American Conference

Saturday's games:
No. 7 Colorado 29, No. 3 Texas A&M 21
No. 21 Notre Dame 55, No. 13 Texas 27
No. 18 Louisiana State 52, Rice 7
Texas Christian 16. Vanderbilt 3.
Baylor 14, North Carolina State 0
Wisconsin 42, Southern Methodist 0
Kansas 20, Houston 13
Next week's games:
Texas Tech at Baylor
Rice at Army
Texas at SMU

Big Eight Conference

Nebraska
Colorado
Kansas
Kansas State
Oklahoma
lowa State
Missouri
Oklahoma State

Conference
1-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-0-0
0-1-0

Overall"
4-0-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
3-0-0
3-0-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
1-3-0

44.

psyched when they come through. They
love it."
The original College Football Hall of
Fame opened in Kings Mill, Ohio in
1978. It was shut down in Jan. 1992
following alack ofvisitors. Kings Mill,
located in suburban Cincinnati, is also
home to the Kings Island amusement
park.
South Bend beat out a field of 50
cities to be selected as the new site in
July of 1992. The deciding factors were
its closeness to the football tradition of
Notre Dame and its central location -
,Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit,
ji ianapolis and St. Louis are within a
,rasonable driving distance.
The hall has two levels with all of the

Western Athletic
Conference

Conference
Ball State 2-0-0
Eastern Michigan 2-0-0
Toledo 1-0-0
Central Michigan 1-0-0
Miami (Ohio) 2-1-0
Bowling Green 1-1-0
Ohio 0-1-1
Kent 0-1-1
Western Michigan 0-2-0
Akron 0-2-0

Overall
3-1-0
3-1-0
2-0-0
2-1-0
3-1-0
2-2-0
1-2-1
1-2-1
1-3-0
0-3-0

Utah
Colorado State
Air Force
Wyoming
Brigham Young
Hawaii
Fresno State
Texas-El Paso
New Mexico
San Diego State

Conference
2-0-0
1-0-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
1 1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

Overall
2-2-0
2-1-0
2-2-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
1-2-0
3-1-0
1-3-0
2-1-0
1-2-0

Saturday's games:
No. 2 Nebraska 49, Pacific 7
No. 7 Colorado 29, No. 3 Texas A&M 21
No. 10 Oklahoma 51, North Texas 10
No. 19 Kansas State 67, Akron 0
Wyoming 45, Oklahoma State 25
Kansas 20, Houston 13
Missouri 31, Northeast Louisiana 22
Iowa State 57, UNLV 30
Next week's games:
Colorado at Oklahoma
Northern Illinois at Kansas State
Washington State at Nebraska
Oklahoma State at Tennessee

Michigan tradition is on display
Hall of Fame exhibits are rich in Maize and Blue memories

Saturday's games:
No. 19 Kansas State 67, Akron 0
Eastern Michigan 31, Ohio U. 20
Miami (Ohio) 23, Cincinnati 16
Central Michigan 22, Bowling Green 16
Ball State 10, Western Michigan 0
West Virginia 45, Kent 6
Toledo 49, Nevada 35
Next week's games:
Miami (Ohio) at Michigan
Central Michigan at Akron
Ball State at Purdue
Bowling Green at Temple
Western Michigan at Kent
Ohio U. at North Carolina
Toledo at Cincinnati

I..
t1\j .

'4

Take the Syracuse Advantage!

By Antoine Pitts
Daily Sports Editor
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - The new
College Football Hall ofFame certainly
has a Michigan flavor to it. As the all-
timewinningestprogram in college foot-
ball, one could see why.
There are several exhibits featuring
the Wolverines but the biggest tribute
comes in the Stadium Theater. As visi-
tors enter the theater, they are treated to
a 360-degree view of Michigan Sta-
dium.
As the minutes count down before
the next video is shown, still shots of
Wolverine fans arriving are presented
in the II-screen theater. You see the
stadium get fuller and fuller until the
band takes the field and then you see
Michigan coming out from under the
"Go Blue - M Club Supports You"
banner.
In the video itself, there are several
triages of the Wolverines. Tyrone
Wheatley is shown scoring a touch-
down last season against Penn State,
mere are shots of the band and cheer-
ltders and many others of the Michi-

still in operation today.
In the Pigskin Pageantry display,
Michigan is also well-represnted.
John Phillip Sousa called "The Vic-
tors" the greatest fight song ever and
justly so it is included in the fight song
exhibit. You can select from over 20
school songs to listen to in this room.
The display also contains photos of the
Michigan Marching Band.
Elsewhere in the hall, there are plenty
of pictures of former coach and athletic
director Bo Schembechler. Former ath-
letic director Don Canham and Presi-
dent Gerald Ford, who had his number
retired by Michigan last year, are also
honored in the hall.
Desmond Howard, who won the
Heisman Trophy as a Michigan wide

receiver in 1991, is honored as a former
winner of the Pantheon Award.
There surely is plenty of Maize and
Blue in South Bend.

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