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The original documents are located in Box 90, folder 70 - Sports (2)" of the Charles H. McCall Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. Michigan Beats Ohio State, 22-0, And Gains a Rose Bowl Berth Wolverines Get Lift From Option Plays After 0-0 Half 70 By NEIL AMDUR 11-21-76 Special to The New York Times COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 20-The frustration finally ended for Michigan today with a convincing 22-0 victory over Ohio State. Five years after their last triumph over the Buckeyes had sent them to the Rose Bowl, the once-beaten Wolv- erines again qualified for the New Year's Day game with a second-half The New York Times Babe Ruth Lou Gehrig Joe DiMaggio Red Smith 70 NYT 10-19-76 Some Ghosts of World Series Past The World Series, which used to be a standard feature the new champions of the American League are compara- of autumn in New York, returns to the Bronx tonight after tive strangers imported from other teams. Except for Babe 12 years that changed almost everything but the name of Ruth, who was bought from the Boston Red Sox, most the game. The Yankees, now two games down to the heroes of the past, such as Lou Gehrig, came to the majors Cincinnati Reds and that's halfway to extinction, are play- as Yankees. Another of these demigods, Yogi Berra, man- ing for the North American baseball championship for the aged the last pennant winner and was dismissed after the 30th time, though not remarkably well. When they last rep- defeat by St. Louis. resented the American League there were nine men on a The owners who fired him, Del Webb and Dan Topping, team, 10 teams in a league and seven afternoon games in did not often own up to mistakes, but two hours before the tournament, and when they lost to the Webb's death he had a colloquy with his doctor, a friend Sports St. Louis Cardinals each Yankee received of Berra's. "Do you see Yogi?" Del asked. of $5,309.29. Now 10-man teams from 12-team "As often as I can." The Times leagues compete at night, with the win- "Next time you see him," Webb said, "tell him we fouled ners getting approximately $25,000 a man. him." Since 1964 the Yankees have changed Beginning in 1923, when their third straight pennant win- owners, managers and playing personnel, and New York's ner brought off the club's first World Series success, a taxpayers have spent $100 million converting old Yankee legend of Yankee invincibility flourished for 40 years. It Stadium into a new park. became more than a legend during its last 16 years, when Even the team's public following has changed, if one may the club swept five straight pennants and five World Series, judge by the crowd at the last game of the pennant playoff finished second once and won the next four pennants, with Kansas City. Yankee fans in the past were accustomed dropped back to third and then ran off another skein of to success and cool about it, if not downright smug. At last five. week's playoff, spectators threw bottles and chanted ob- Last time New York and Cincinnati hooked up was near scenities while tearing up the premises. Like the present owners, who are mostly from Cleveland, Continued on Page 47, Column 2 13 MAY 1976 WSA Fielding Gem 70 Chicago Cubs center fielder Rick tries to answer it all. Monday has made hundreds of field- That's a refreshing turnabout in ing plays during his baseball ca- public attitudes from the time not reer, but the most memorable oc- long ago when the flag was less a curred in a April 25 game against national ensign than a bone of con- En NEW YORK TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER so Lake Placid Set Aglow By 1980 Olympic Fever Continued From Page 47 0 Miles 50 CANADA fairy tale, this is how it Ottawa would come out," he said. River Montreal Mr. Hill describes being the parent of a dedicated figure skater as "absolutely the cra- Lawrence Lake Placid ziest thing you imagine " 70 Lakers Get West As Coach NYSAM 8-20-76 GOLDAPER Jerry West, the Los An- geles Lakers' "Mr. Clutch," who came out of Cheylan, W. Va. (pop. 500) to become a pro basketball legend, was named yesterday as coach of his former team. West replaces Bill Shar- man, who had coached the Lakers for five seasons. When Los Angeles failed to make the playoffs the last two seasons, Sharman was not rehired, but he remains with the organization as an aide to Pete Newell, the general manager. The news conference to announce West's hiring was held in the room at the Los Angeles Forum where West announced his retirement on Oct. 13, 1974, after 14 sea- sons with the Lakers. West's departure set off a feud with Jack Kent Cooke, the owner. The 38-year-old West had filed a breach - of - contract against the Laker owner, his close friend at one time. An- gered by West's sudden re- tirement and blaming him for the demise of the Lakers, Cooke countersued. "My differences with Mr. Cooke have been settled," said West yesterday. "I'm very happy with my contract. We have no differences now." Cooke, who has been ill and was not present at the announcement, said in a prepared statement: "It was inevitable that a man with Jerry's leadership, drive and intelligence would coach. I'm pleased to have him back in the Lakers' family. I know he will bring the Lakers back to their rightful place on top of the National Basketball Association." Since his retirement, West has missed the game. Unlike many players, West enjoyed the plane rides, the bus trips and the waits in airports when flights were delayed. He loved basketball. While spending most of Browne Draws With Kavalek, wash. star. Leads in 4/21/74 Chess OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) - Defending champion Wal- ter Browne finished a 13- hour marathon chess game me meen. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONIT 70 Woody is understood-by Mrs. Hayes! By Ross Atkin flavor. Segmented practice sessions Hayes insists that his players make Sports writer of are run on a rigid time schedule, academic strides. He is a keen stu- The Christian Science Monitor Buckeye leaves are plastered on dent of history and when the Buck- 12/3/74 helmets as combat awards, and the eyes go on the road he often leads the To his many critics, Coach Woody patented offense crunches up and team into a lecture hall of the rival Hayes of Ohio State is the Archie down the field like a tank corp. university. Bunker of college football. He has a Over the years Hayes has devised If obsessed with winning, at least reputation for being staunchly conser- some unique ways of expressing his Woodv can't be accused of chasing 70 Balloon trip with a space-age flair Forbes 2001 odyssey: an Atlantic crossing By David F. Salisbury Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 1/6/75 It is more than a balloon trip. It is a space-age, 2001-type odyssey. And Malcolm Forbes - - millionaire, publisher, consummate collector, and promoter extraordinary - is playing the part of a gray-haired, bespec- tacled Buck Rogers. He is attempting to do what no one else has ever done: cross the Atlantic Ocean in a balloon. His creation, Windborne, is no ordi- nary lighter-than-air craft. It is a 625- foot-tall buoyant tower: 13 balloons tethered in clusters and supporting a 7ft.-8in. pressurized metal gondola. The balloons, 33 feet in diameter, are made of super-strength plastic and filled with helium. Crammed into the spherical gon- dola are computers almost as sophis- ticated as those carried on board an AP photo 5 Apollo capsule. These, via satellite, 6 Please turn to Page 4 Balloonist Forbes (right) seeks new records Monday, January 6, 1975 70 1/6/75 Sun Trans-Atlantic balloon trip delayed By a Sun Staff Correspondent height at the edge of the stra- Santa Ana, Calif.-Capricious tosphere. upper winds caused the third At 40,000 feet, the travelers hope to pick up 150 mile-an- postponement yesterday of a hour winds for a flight that nonstop, 7,000-mile balloon could last anvwhere from four Anti-Devine Feeling Led to Irish Bowl Veto By David Israel were playing for a bowl bid. Some- bid, and Cotton Bowl officials invited This is Devine's first year as Notre tating defeat, that talk was revived. Washington Star Staff Writer thing was wrong." Georgia instead. Dame's head football coach. All sea- around South Bend. Notre Dame's football team voted The Irish lost to Pittsburgh Satur- Notre Dame would have received son there have been reports out of the If the Irish win Saturday night, to decline an invitation to play in the day 34-20 when Tony Dorsett gained about $850,000 for playing in the Cot- South Bend campus that players they will finish the season 8-3. That is Cotton Bowl because it did not want 303 yards. The loss dropped Notre were disenchanted with Devine, and an acceptable record almost any- to play any more games this year Dame's record to 7-3 this season. More Football: F-3 South Bend sources said the decision where but Notre Dame. Parseghian, under Coach Dan Devine, sources in Michigan State and Southern Califor- not to play in the Cotton Bowl was a who accumulated a 95-17-4 record in South Bend told The Washington Star nia also beat Notre Dame. ton Bowl, but now its season will con- reflection of that. his 11 years at Notre Dame, never yesterday. NOTRE DAME Athletic Director clude with Saturday night's game at lost more than two games during the Edward (Moose) Krause acknowl- Miami of Florida. EARLIER IN the season, there regular season. His 1972 team finish- "They're just fed up with Devine," edged yesterday that if the Irish had Notre Dame appeared in bowl were reports, which proved to be un- ed 8-3, but the third loss was to Ne- one source said. "They don't have won they would have played in the games the last three years, and five true, that Devine was to be fired, al- braska in the 1973 Orange Bowl. any respect for him as a coach. They Cotton Bowl in Dallas on New Year's of the last six seasons that Ara though he signed a five-year con- just don't want to play football for Day against the Southwest Confer- Parseghian coached the team. In tract last December when he was the Sources in South Bend said yester- him any more this year. Against Pitt, ence champion. But after the loss the 1969 and 1970, the Irish split Cotton first and only choice to succeed day that Devine definitely would DAN DEVINE they were just flat even though they players voted Sunday not to accept a Bowl decisions with Texas. Parseghian. After Saturday's devas- See IRISH, F-4 Problems 70 N.Y. Y, DAILY N 12/6/74 Golf Tour 1M Under In Sub-Par Economy Washington, Dec. 5 (UPI)-The depressed state of the nation's economy has caught up with the pro golf tour, and in 1975 the pros will be playing for nearly $1 million less in purses than they did this year. The PGA's Tournament Play- ers division disclosed its 1975 | The richest will be the Jackie schedule today and it included Gleason Inverraryl Classic at 20 C RUNNING IS DEBATED AS BENEFIT TO HEART MO Anyone Able to Go Marathon Route Will 'Never Die' of Coronary Attack, Barbizon-Plaza Meeting Told NYT 10-28-76 By BAYARD WEBSTER The nature of the benefits that can ac- crue. from a regular program of jogging, running six miles or more or running the marathon distance of 26 miles, 385 yards was debated at a scientific conference here yesterday in the wake of New York City's first marathon race last Sunday. The conference, sponsored by the New York Academy of Sciences, attracted about 400 doctors, researchers and expo- ments of running-most of them trim and clim-who are attending the academy's fapr-day meeting on the health aspects of strenuous exercise and marathon run- zing. The most extreme view of benefits of marathon running was presented by Dr. Thomas J. Bassler, a California patholo- gist who runs the marathon distance and frequently accompanies heart patients when they run that route. Dr. Bassler noted that at least five heart attack patients, one who had under- gone double coronary artery bypass sur- gery just four months ago, had run in the New York marathon finishing in about The New York Times Dorsett 70 Heisman Winner 11-1-16 By GORDON S. WHITE Jr. Tony Dorsett, the University of Pittsburgh tailback who set more collegiate rushing records than any other player in the 108-year history of football, was named winner of the 1976 Heisman Trophy yesterday as the outstanding college player in the nation. The 22-year-old native of Aliquip- pa, Pa., who led the Panthers through an undefeated and untied regular season and to the No. 1 national rank- ing, easily defeated his primary rival for the award-Ricky Bell of South- ern California. Dorsett had 2,357 points to 1,346 for Bell, who is also a tailback. Bell, however, was ham- pered by midseason injuries and missed all or part of four games. Rob Lytle, the speedy running back for Michigan, finished a distant third with 413 points, followed by Terry Miller, the Oklahoma State running THE back. Then came three quarterbacks -Tom Kramer of Rice, Gifford Niel- sen of Brigham Young and Ray Goff of Georgia. Mike Voight, North Caro- lina's tailback, was eighth, with two West Coast quarterbacks ninth and 10th-Joe Roth of California and Jeff Dankworth of the University of Cal- ifornia, Los Angeles. 863 Ballots Mailed In The New York Times/Carl T. Gossett Dorsett, the only player to rush Tony Dorsett with the Heisman Trophy he won yesterday for more than 6,000 yards in a var- sity career, received 701 votes for Trophy. O. J. Simpson of Southern first place, 112 for second and 30 for ner, made in his four campaigns as third. The Downtown Athletic Club, California, who won the trophy in a Cadet. Dorsett tied 18 National which conducts the Heisman Trophy 1968, had the biggest Heisman vic- Collegiate records as he did more election each year, sent 1,014 ballots tory spread of 1,750 points over Le- to revive his team's fortunes than to sportswriters and broadcasters Roy Keyes of Purdue. any other Heisman Trophy winner across the nation but received only Career Total of 6,082 Yards had done. Most of the 40 previous 863 completed ballot. This means that Dorsett was first on 81.2 percent of Dorsett burst on the college scene winners entered colleges with suc- with 101 yards rushing against Geor- cessful teams. the ballots but, surprisingly, he was not even mentioned on 20 ballots. gia in Pitt's opening game of 1973, Dorsett finished fourth in the 1975 his freshman year. The game ended voting behind Archie Griffin of Ohio Each ballot calls for a first, second and third choice and scoring is based in a 7-7 tie. He never missed a reg- State, who became the only man to in 3 points for first, 2 for second ular-season game, playing in 44. win the trophy twice; Chuck Muncie nd 1 for third. Bell received 73 first- With the help of 33 games in which who set a season rushing record of lace votes, seconds and 157 he rushed for more than 100 yards, 1,948 yards this fall, surpassed Grif- hirds. Lytle had 35 first-place votes Dorsett reached a total of 6,082 yards fin's career rushing record of 5,177 nd Miller 18. last Friday night when Pitt beat Penn yards before that mark was a year old. Dorsett and Bell ran one, two in State, 24-7, in his final regular-sea- Il five voting districts-East, South, son game. Dorsett was recruited by Coach lidwest, Southwest and Far West. Johnny Majors, who was hired in Dorsett finished in grand style ytle was third in four areas, with 1973 to upgrade a bad football scene against Penn State with two touch- filler, the only junior in the top downs and 224 yards rushing. This at Pitt. Dorsett and Majors brought our, taking third spot in the South- Pitt its first winning season in 10 enabled him to break a 30-year-old vest. years. They took Pitt into the Fiesta scoring record set by Glenn Davis of Bowl in 1973 and the Sun Bowl in Dorsett's margin of 1,011 points Army. Dorsett scored 356 points in over Bell was one of the largest in four seasons, 2 more points than 1975 and will be in the Sugar Bowl he 42-year history of the Heisman Davis, the 1946 Heisman Trophy win- Continued on Page B12, Column 2 no Dan Devine's Problems Run Deep at Notre Dame 11-19-75 NSTAR Coaching football at Notre Dame is was offered the job five days before pressure a coach comes to know at the Top 20 rankings released by vine's problems run much deeper in front.' It wasn't too good a first im- the best job of its kind in the country. Parseghian's resignation was made Notre Dame. He wasn't prepared for Associated Press and United Press than his disappointing record. pression." It is also the most difficult. public on Dec. 15. the difficulties the head football International. Devine started alienating his team, To be considered a successful When Devine was hired, the Notre coach encounters at Notre Dame, There have been reports that he players said, at the first team meet- ACCORDING TO players, Notre coach there, you have to be a Dame people said he was the right which is our only national university. would be fired, although he is in the ing he held last spring. The scene of Dame team morale proceeded to go Rockne, a Leahy, or a Parseghian. man for the job. He had been a suc- Now he knows. Saturday night De- first year of a five-year contract. the meeting was an auditorium downhill from that point. You have to win 10 games for every cessful college head coach at Arizona Yesterday, The Star reported that adjacent to the football offices in "Before the first game against Bos- one you lose. You have to mass pro- State and Missouri, where his teams David Israel Notre Dame players voted not to play Notre Dame's Athletic and Convoca- ton College," a player said, "about duce players like Gipp, Lujack, Latt- were 120-40-6 in 16 years. And he had in the Cotton Bowl because of their tion Center. five minutes before we went onto the ner, Bertelli, Hornung and Hart. gotten proféssional experience in vine will take his 7-3 Fighting Irîsh in disaffection with Devine. field, he called the offensive team Into this environment last Decem- four years with the Green Bay Pack- to play at Miami of Florida, and end "The place was almost filled," a around him. He said that on our first ber came Dan Devine. He was hired ers, where his record was 25-27-4. his first season. It has been a tumul- DEVINE AND some players player said. "There were just a few to succeed Ara Parseghian, who ran tuous one. A 7-3 record is good any- empty seats down in the front of the play from scrimmage we would run denied these reports. But sources in '37.' Immediately, the whole offense up a 95-17-4 record in 11 years at BUT IN all those 145 victories and where but at Notre Dame. South Bend, including players who room. The very first words Devine raised its hands. They were wonder- South Bend. Devine was the only the 67 losses and the 10 ties, Dan De- And this week, for the first time wish that their names not be reveal- said to us as a team were, 'You guys candidate considered for the job. He vine never experienced the kind of since 1963, Notre Dame dropped out of ed, have supplied evidence that De- in the back get your asses down here See ISRAEL, D-5 Auperdome Dedicated Amid Superlatives NYT 8/4/75 70 THE NEW YORK TIME By ROY REED to the first rank of American bond market, labor strikes New Orleans banking scene Special to The New York Times cities. and construction bungles. in 1969 as president of the NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 3- Dome envy spread as other They have also faced con- First National Bank of Com- The Louisiana Superdome, cities perceived the Astro- stant criticism from the proj- merce. The dome project was dome as a symbol of Hous- ect's opponents, who in- under way but its financing newest and grandest of the ton's rise to greatness. Seat- clude some of the best- was stymied. According to nation's sports palaces, was tle will soon open the third known names in New Or- American Banker Magazine a opened to the public today of the oversized domes and leans. chief obstacle had been a de- 10 years after it first gleamed several other cities are build- Large Jump in Cost cision by Chase Manhattan in a New Orleans promoter's ing, planning or eagerly dis- Bank of New York not to cussing them. There is widespread ex- help underwrite the bonds. eve. that the dome will SONNY'S DEBUT AS TV FOOTBALL ANALYST In the Booth 70 7/18/75 wsta On the Tube By Frank Blackman Three professions require no for- Special to the Washington Star mal training: Prostitution, member BERKELEY, Calif. - An hour be- of Congress and sportscasting. Sonny fore air time and Sonny Jurgensen is Jurgensen's national sportscasting doing a hell of a job trying to con- debut yesterday was proof once vince people that he isn't nervous. again that a lack of experience isn't a "No, not at all, " says Jurgensen, drawback, at least in that field. who, after 18 years on the football Jurgensen, who has signed on with field as a pro quarterback, now is CBS for a bundle, went coast-to-coast perched high above it, patiently wait- as the expert analyst color an- ing to make his national debut as the nouncer is an obsolete term - for the expert or color commentator on CBS' Pittsburgh-Oakland National Foot- telecast of the Oakland Raiders- ball League exhibition game (WTOP- Pittsburgh Steelers National Football 9). League exhibition game here yester- Okay, since one doer begets 1,000 day. (The Raiders won 24-21. Report critics, and since this was, after all, on Page D-4.) the former Redskin quarterback's "That's why, that's my security debut, Jurgensen has the right to call blanket sitting right next to me an audible and ignore any criticism. here," says Sonny, gesturing toward veteran play-by-play man Lindsey Beano Cook/TV Sports Nelson. Nelson is the only one giving Jur- Besides, with the money he's making, gensen a warm, protected feeling. Jurgensen can laugh as he goes to For the people from CBS, the big the bank in a limo. game is in the broadcast booth, not I liked Jurgensen's straight deliv- on the field. ery. He did get overly technical at times, on several occasions referring WHEN SONNY wanders down a to a "double zone" as if several mil- corrider looking for the men's room, lion viewers knew the term precisely. people from CBS smile reflexively. In fact, everybody smiles at Sonny. JURGENSEN'S strength lies in Arms are draped over his broad telling stories about his 18 years in shoulders. Cooing words are whisper- pro football, especially as his experi- ed in his ear. Love is everywhere. ences relate to what is happening down on the field. "I just want him to enjoy himself Once, when the center asked the today," says producer Hal Uplinger. ref for another football, Jurgensen "I want to keep him as relaxed and quickly took the mike and observed, as happy as I can today." "Backs put Stickum on their hands, Asked if the reporter can stay in and this makes the ball sticky for the the booth to watch Sonny work under center and quarterback." Excellent game pressure, Uplinger sets up a comment. More stuff like that, and protective pocket that would make some humor thrown in, and Jurgen- the Redskins swoon with envy. sen will have no trouble in his new job. "Gee, this is all so new to him. After Pittsburgh quarterback He's just a novice," says Uplinger, a Terry Bradshaw raced 56 yards for a nervous smile flitting across his face. touchdown, Jurgensen showed the "This is his first time out, the first ability to laugh at himself, a trait time he's worn headsets and had viewers admire in a public personal- someone talking into his ear the same ity. time he's trying to talk. I'd hate to -Associated Press "I don't think I ran 56 yards in my see him get a bad rap his first shot." Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw scores on a 56-yard run, prompting entire career," Jurgensen cracked. See BOOTH, D-5 a quip from Sonny Jurgensen, making his debut as a TV football analyst. See TUBE, D-5 st Mile of All New Zealander Lowers World Record to 3.49.4 hAT 8/13/75 From Reuters GOTEBORG, Sweden-John Walker of New Zealand shattered the world mile record Tuesday night with a time of 3 minutes 49.4 seconds-after con- vincing the organizers of a track meet here to substitute the event for the 1,- 500 meters. In becoming the first man ever to run under 3:50, Walker cut 1.6 sec- onds from the record set by Filbert Bayi of Tanzania in Kingston, Jamai- ca, May 18. In the Jamaica race Bayi broke Jim Ryun's record that had lasted for eight years but broke it by only one- tenth of a second. Sports Walker, who told journalists Mon- day he thought the best mile possible in the 20th century was 3:50, led through the race with quarter times BUSINESS & FINANCE of 56.3, 59.2, 58.0 and 55.9. Nobody was within 50 yards of Walker at the CC PART III finish. Australians Ken Hall and Graham Crouch were second and third in 3:55.2 and 3:56.4. Gunnar Ekman of Sweden was fourth in 4:01.5. Walker, 23, later told Reuters that he felt good throughout the race and at no stage was in danger of "tying up." "A week ago I asked the woman in charge of the meet if the 1,500 me- ters could be changed to a mile, and to make her do it I had to tell her I would be going for the world rec- ord," he said. "In training a couple of days ago I ran a couple of 200s in 22.9. I can't usually break 23 seconds for that dis- tance. SO I felt I was as ready as I'd ever be. "Today I woke up and it was windy as hell. I was watching the wind all day and although it didn't go down for the race, while I was running it didn't worry me at all." The temperature was 77 degrees at race time-7:50 p.m. local time-in Slottskogsvallen Stadium. Walker said he was worried about pushing himself too hard but the lap times had come up exactly as he wanted. He reached the halfway point in 1:55.5 and three-quarters in 2:53.5. "I ran the last 120 yards in 15.1 and I still felt good," Walker said. His 1,500-meter time was 3:34.3. The 6-11/2 185-pounder. possibly the heaviest man ever to hold the world mile record, is scheduled to run in Stockholm next Tuesday, but he said he will not be attempting any more fast miles this season. "I think I've done enough for a while," he said. (His best previous mile time was 3:52.2.) Referring to a possible meeting with Bayi at the Olympics in Mon- treal next year, Walker said he is sure the Tanzanian will go fast through the 1,200-meter mark "and I've now realized I must be able to sit with him and kick at the finish." Walker ran second to Bayi in the 1,500 meters at the 1974 Common- Please Turn to Page 8, Col. 5 Chicago Tribune Thursday, September 11, 1975 Sports Section 4 Miami bowl is interested 70 Big Ten runnerup may smell oranges By Roy Damer day for a meeting with Sugar Bowl offi- As a matter of fact, the plight of the we will explore a matchup between the living alumni, the largest stadiums, has quire a participating team to arrive in cials in New Orleans, then will confer Wolverines was one of the factors which Big Eight and Big Ten," said Jim Arm- led the nation in attendance for 18 Miami at least five days prior to the IF THE Big Ten runnerup has any- next week with Cotton Bowl officials in led to the Big Ten's change in policy. strong, president of the Orange Bowl straight years, has almost 25 per cent of game to build up interest. where near the credentials that Michi- Dallas. Michigan tied Ohio State for the Committee. "Figures indicate that of all the nation's TV sets in its area, and has Officials were unhappy last year that gan did the last three seasons, it will Members of the three bowls will visit league title the last three years but the major conferences, the Big Ten has enjoyed lofty positions in the polls since Alabama kept its squad in Tuscalloosa play in the Orange Bowl next Jan. 1. the conference office near the Woodfield didn't go to a bowl game even tho it had the largest population and TV exposure their inception in 1936. until two days before the game and No- "Under certain circumstances, the Or- shopping center next Thursday, then the best record in the nation over that of the states represented." "Not only the Orange Bowl," Duke tre Dame headquartered at Marco Is- ange Bowl would love to have the Big travel to Columbus for the Ohio State- period - 30 victories, 1 tie, and only 2 The Big Eight has a contract to send added, "but I believe any of those three land, across the state from Miami. Ten," said Wayne Duke, the confer- Penn State game. losses. its champion to the Orange Bowl the ence's commissioner. "There has been bowls would like to have the Big Ten Armstrong said the Orange Bowl will no agreement nothing specific THE BIG TEN champion will play in In four of the last five Orange Bowls, next four years. runnerup." make its own team ratings and an- one team entered with two defeats. Had Duke has put together a paper entitled but that's not a far-out state- the Rose Bowl, as usual, but the confer- WITH OFFICIALS of three major nounce them weekly to "keep both the ment." the Big Ten had an open bowl policy in "Meet the Big Ten," and is in the proc- ence recently approved a measure that bowls in attendance, the Ohio State- colleges and public informed." He said effect then, the Orange would have had ess of showing it to officials of the Or- Duke and a committee from the Big permits the next three finishers to go to Ten met with Orange Bowl officials in a much more attractive alternative. ange, Sugar, and Cotton Bowls. Penn State game on Sept. 20 becomes a the bowl's selection committee is "delib- other bowls. The Orange Bowl long has In it, the commissioner points out that "bowl qualifier," SO to speak. erately departing from the highest- Miami last weekend. They left Wednes- coveted Michigan. "TO THE FULLEST extent possible, the Big Ten has the largest number of Orange Bowl contracts now will re- Continued on page 2, col. 1 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Thursday, September 18, 1975 21 sports A new man steps onto Notre Dame's gridiron 70By Larry Eldridge Sports editor of The Christian Science Monitor Foxboro, Massachusetts Dan Devine knows he has some tough acts to follow as Notre Dame's new football coach. The mystique, the winning tradition, the legendary players and coaches of the past - all of this goes with the territory, SO to speak. to instant for more than a half before finally coming "I really enjoy being back," Browner said. "dump Devine" movement gained impetus years if he was bothered by pressure.' DAILY@NEWS SPECIAL SECTION NEWSPAPER Friday, September 19, 1975 70 PRO Another football season arrives, bringing, in addition to the annual players' strike, new faces and a fresh start for the Jets and Giants. Here is a preview of 1975: Larry Fox analyzes the Jets and AFC, then looks at the college prospects who might make it big a year from now. FOOTBALL Norm Miller studies the chances of the Giants and the rest of the NFC. Joe O'Day introduces the rookies. And Bill Verigan gives an insight to the struggling WFL. '75 The Golden Dome: L. Only 70 Demigods Need Apply Dan Devine is merely mortal; at Notre Dame some don't consider that to be good enough "The three toughest jobs in the world are: Pres- Dan Devine was now a first-time loser as Notre ident of the United States, mayor of New York and Dame's new head coach. head football coach at Notre Dame." "I feel as bad about losing this game as any in Beano Cook Mutual Broadcasting Co. my life," he told reporters. "Frankly, I don't know what to say." BY JEFF PRUGH Within an hour, Devine retreated to his secluded Times Staff Writer 10-acre estate beyond the city's outskirts and SOUTH BEND, Ind.-These are restless autumn joined his wife and three teenage daughters. "My days for Dan Devine of Notre Dame, who is sud- whole world had changed," Devine recalled the denly the most castigated 5-1 coach in America. other day. "I was in a deep, deep depression." His team has struggled to win two games it sup- And what did he do for post-defeat therapy? posedly should have won handily. Irish eyes aren't He and his family stayed up long past midnight exactly smiling. The Subway Alumni are incensed. watching a TV horror movie, "Tarantula." Recurring rumors-hotly denied by all parties- have Devine on the way out and his predeces- Barely a decade ago, he was college football's sor, Ara Parseghian, back in. "talk softly" coach-an earnest, professorial man "I know where it originated and I know why it with coal-black hair and an altar-boy face. originated," Devine said Monday. "I don't want to Today, at 50, Daniel John Devine still speaks in say anything other than that. To go into it further the clipped-sentence rhetoric of his glory years— detracts from my preparation for the Southern Cal the 1960s-at the University of Missouri. game this week." But now his graying hair and chiseled forehead For Devine, it all smacks of his troubled waters -the scars of four turbulent years with the profes- at Green Bay, where the ghost of Vince Lombardi sional Green Bay Packers-give him the look of a sacked him. high priest. Which, ironically, is something he once Now he's being blitzed by the giant shadows of considered as his life's calling. Rockne and Leahy and Parseghian. And his boss, "If I hadn't gotten married so young," said De- athletic director Ed (Moose) Krause, is running in- vine, father of seven, "I might have studied for the terference for Devine. "I don't understand how this kind of flak can priesthood." come out when we have a 5-1 season and had two As Devine relaxed in his small, wood-paneled of- big comebacks in our last two games," Kraus said. fice, inhaling slowly on a nail-thin cigarillo, a visi- "If we were 0-6, I could understand it." tor asked if he regards himself as strongly religious. Devine laughed nervously. "Well, I won't say 'Yes,'' he replied, "because when people say they October 4, 1975, a day when somebody up there are religious, it often means they really aren't." He didn't like Notre Dame. paused reflectively, then added, "I guess you could The Fighting Irish had lost to Michigan State, 10- say I strive, at least, to be better " 3, and all but caused a protest burning of Subway On this October afternoon, Devine was uncharac- Alumni cards. They blew five touchdown chances. teristically effusive for someone who had just lost They lost six players with injuries. They threw two for the first time as Notre Dame coach. interceptions and committed six fumbles. Please Turn to Page 5, Col. 1 10/24/75 70 L.A.T. Notre Dame: Where Football Is Close to a Religion The Campus Is Devoted to a Game "Father in Heaven, we pray that the suspension for violating dormitory and sent an angry letter to network adversity we suffered last weekend visiting regulations that were not bosses. will turn to joy and happiness in the clearly defined publicly. The incident Nor will university officials be in- weeks to come." involved an 18-year-old girl who was terviewed. One spokesman said, "It is THE REV. EDMUND P. JOYCE, not identified but reportedly was not the school's policy not to comment on Notre Dame, at the South Bend Quarterback Club a student. While six players were dis- disciplinary actions." Another, after the defeat by Michigan State ciplined (one reportedlY planned to however, insisted that published ac- BY JEFF PRUGH enroll elsewhere), no criminal counts alleging rape were false. "It Times Staff Writer charges were filed. was not rape," he said. SOUTH BEND, Ind.-Walk among One might theorize that the scan- So now "The Incident" is little the red and gold sycamores beneath dal was an outgrowth of a fast- more than food for debate over the the Golden Dome and you step into changing campus. Notre Dame has severity-or lack of it-of the pun- two different worlds. been coeducational since 1972; it will ishment. Notre Dame boosters argue graduate its first women's class in that suspending six football players Notre Dame, alias the University of June. And while there are no coed from classes for a year was unusually Football, comes across to a stranger living quarters, male-female visita- harsh. But others contend that the as a mixture of the Seventies and the Fifties. tion is permitted until 2 a.m. on athletes got preferential treatment. There have been changes: women weekends. "If they hadn't been jocks," said now are enrolled and alcoholic drinks The athletic scandal has left a sig- one, "they would have been expelled are permitted in dormitory rooms. nificant scar on the nation's best- from school-not just suspended." But there are remnants from two known Catholic university. Campus Meanwhile, life goes on pretty decades ago such as the "traditional" fathers are sensitive to publicity. At- much as usual amid the woods and Panty Raid on the belles of neighbor- tempts by the news media to inter- lakes where in 1842 a young French ing St. Mary's College during the view the five reinstated players- priest, Father Edward F. Sorin, first week of the first football game. Ross Browner, Luther Bradley, Al opened classes with only $300 and Notre Dame is living uncomforta- Hunter, Dan Knott and Willie Fry- three rickety log buildings. bly with its new permissiveness. A have been rejected by all principals. Football still pays the bills, inspires year ago, the campus was rocked by When an ABC reporter tried to in- prayers at booster-club luncheons what the natives politely call "The terview the players before the na- and gives Notre Dame an interna- Incident." tionally televised Notre Dame-Boston tional following unlike any other col- Today, the aftershocks remain, College game, the school's sports lege in America. even though five football players publicist, Roger Valdiserri, inter- There's even an organized Subway have been reinstated after a year's vened in coach Dan Devine's behalf Please Turn to Page 8, Col. 4 The Golden Dome Notre Dame's Memorial Library commands attention. 10 FOOTBALL °75 The Washington Star SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1975 7-17- 37 The Washington Post FOOTBALL '75 Pros / Colleges / High Schools 70 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1975 B1 17% 66 87 88 - By Richard Darcey-The Washington Post Two generations of football: From left, Eric Sievers of Washington and Lee, Rob Anderson of Annandale, Robert Jagers of St. John's, Redskin Bill Kilmer, Jim Shaffer of High Point, Tyree Hill of Paint Branch. New Season: Missing Faces, Shaky Redskin Knees By Kenneth Denlinger football and two important law- will again combine to drive ticket by an underclass reserve who seem- screaming that their game is live- suits against the NFL, could cause prices well beyond the reach of ed larger and quicker. lier and more varied than the Washington Post Staff Writer as much stir as blocks and tackles. most Redskin fans-and both will The usual collection of Alabamas, stodgy NFL's. To a great extent The footballs are not all that That and who is not going to play continue to blame the players. Penn States, Michigans, Ohio States, that is an illusion. Ohio State, Ala- might take strange bounces this this season. new season. Without pushing the Quarterback Billy Kilmer un- Southern Californias and Notre bama and others appear to have For Washingtonians, the Red- doubtedly will establish the unoffi- Dames will follow, with the new more zest, but in fact they are play- mind into overdrive, one could skins-Cowboys games will lose cial record for most boos suffered NCAA rules limiting scholarships ing inferior teams. The all-dull hope, if not expect: much of their flair without Jurgen- before the regular season even be- conspiring to make them even more game annually is Ohio State vs. Bear Bryant to gain custody sen or Bob Lilly, who could well be gins, he being the most visible tar- powerful than the present also-rans. Michigan. of Walter Byers. inducted into the pro Hall of Fame get for customers frustrated at The annual Texas-Oklahoma bat- Sonny Jurgensen to dash from The cardinal rule of coaching, in the same year, which certainly Allen and Williams. tle could be even more intense than the television booth at halftime and, from high school through college would be appropriate. And the Leaguewide, seven of the 26 ever, if that is possible, what with in coat and tie, pass the Redskins through the pros, has been most Washington defense will not have teams will have new coaches: Jack Switzer and Darrell Royal talking eloquently stated by Maryland's to victory over the Cowboys. Calvin Hill to kick around, either. Pardee at Chicago, Bart Starr at nastier about each other as the Jerry Claiborne. First, he said, you The Oakland Raiders to win The Redskins' season literally Green Bay, Marion Campbell at At- months pass. keep from losing. Then you try to the Super Bowl, although nearly hinges on several joints, among lanta, Forrest Gregg at Cleveland, Lately, the colleges have been win. everyone agrees they would be 10- them the knees of Larry Brown, Bum Phillips at Houston, Paul Wig- point underdogs to Oklahoma. Diron Talbert and Terry Hermel- gin at Kansas City and Ted Marchi- Joe Kapp to become football ing. There are enough quality play- broda at Baltimore. commissioner after he wins his suit ers-and a squishy-soft schedule- against the NFL. for them to make the playoffs for As usual, most of the best play- Turn to the Colleges ers and teams seem to be in the Indeed, the off-the-field action, the fifth straight year. Coach George Allen and team American Conference, the National around such time-has-come ideas as By Paul Attner the Super Conference in college president Edward Bennett Williams Conference continuing to grow old- er but not necessarily better. The Washington Post Staff Writer team so many insist is SO dull, the Pro football is a bore. It's as spend their fall Saturday after- Redskins, passed for more yardage predictable as George Allen's next noons as coaches. The coach-com- Inside Football "75 than anyone in the NFL last season. quote and as exciting as one of mentators frequently sound better Ten teams won more games than Howard Cosell's profundities. It's than the ex-jocks used by the pros COLLEGE FOOTBALL they lost last season and eight made even more overrated as an Ameri- as analysts. Have you ever listened the playoffs. Teams with a realistic can attraction than Evel Knievel. carefully to what Al DeRogatis says A roundup of the nation's top teams Page E2 on Sundays? Life at Oklahoma now that probation has ended Page E2 chance to break 500-and perhaps Fourth and one from almost any A preview of the Maryland Terrapins Page E3 contend for a division title-include yard line brings a punt or a field- What makes the college version Navy football may really be back Page E3 the Bears, Broncos and Patriots. goal attempt. Long scoring passes SO much better is its unpredictable Who is this fellow Wayne Woodrow Hayes? Page E3 College players will be working are so infrequent that television nature. Can you imagine George A preview of up-and-coming Virginia Page E4 as hard but getting less in return, commentators are usually at a loss Allen ealling a trick kickoff return Why Howard is talking about an unbeaten season Page E5 the NCAA having cut out the pal- to explain what went wrong with A look at Washington area small schools Page E5 play? Well, even Maryland's Jerry try $15 per month the schools were the defenses once touchdowns hap- Claiborne, who as is conservative PRO FOOTBALL allowed to give athletes who gener- pen. Running plays usually consist as college coaches come, has a A preview of the NFC: How can L.A. lose? Page E6 ate hundreds of thousands of dol- of off-tackle right, off-tackle left, whole bunch of sneaky returns in A look at the AFC: Can Oakland keep going? Page E6 lars each year. draw for no gain, punt. his bag of goodies. Is the thrill gone for Monday Night Football? Page E6 Oklahoma comes off probation That's fun? For pure enjoyment, The poor man's way to watch pros on TV Page E6 the odds-on favorite to win the na- Last year, college teams ran off give me college football, any time. For the Redskins, it may be do or fade Page E8 about 20 more plays a game than tional championship. Indeed, the For every stoic Bud Grant in pro What the WFL was like when your credit was bad Page E9 football, college\ football has a the pros. Those plays originated How the Redskins were put together over the years Page E9 Sooners are so good that the odds should be off. from the I, from the wishbone, Woody Hayes, who kicks yard HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL One recalls a visit with coach markers, hats and might add-if he from the veer, from the multiple Prospects for area squads Page E10 thought he could get away with it- set, from the wing T, and yes, from Barry Switzer at practice a year The new playoff structure in Virginia this year the single wing. Using two tight Page E10 ago, when the Sooners were win- officials. For every successful Don How it was to be a high school benchwarmer ends is considered an innovation in Page E11 ning against everyone but the UPI Shula, college football has a Joe the pros. SCHEDULES pollsters. Switzer would point to Paterno, who thinks winning may several areas of the field, to the Page E4 not be everything-and remains My guess is that many pro foot- Colleges Area Colleges Page E4 offensive line here, the defense employed. ball fans are drawn to the game in Pros Page E7 backfield over there by the side- College football has even surviv- the hope that maybe, this time, they High Schools Page E12 line, the defensive line and line- ed the banalities of Chris Schenkel, will see something new when the backers off in the distance. He list- now exiled to a New York televi- Rams play the Dolphins. Maybe, RADIO AND TELEVISION ed each starter. All were in their sion studio in favor of occasional this time, James Harris will become For the whole season Page E13 last seasons. All were backstopped guest commentators who normally See ATTNER, Page E3 70 RAPPING WITH BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE The aseball DAVE PARKER PAID 75° pages 12 & 13 Royal Oak; Mich. PERMIT NO. 442 Sulletin Baseball's Monthly Newspaper 39 NEWS VIEWS INTER VIEWS PHOTOS FEATURES NOSTALGIA VOLUME 1, ISSUE No. 12 PUBLISHED 12 TIMES A YEAR DECEMBER 1975 SEVENTY-F BASEBALL AT ITS BEST By HERB MICHELSON Washington, D.C. 20500 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. The White House Hon. Gerald R. Ford In terms of downright good fun, and aggressive, delicious baseball, the 1975 World Series had to be viewed as the most delightful in years. The matchup made it that way. A dull game of baseball is not inimical to Fenway Park. Cincy arrived by running and batting Pittsburgh to death. Boston simply outclassed the surprisingly bumbling A's. Dynasties die embarrassingly. Writer Wells Twombly, who is a very funny man, gave this Series the best label: a sort of kiddie horror story, he said, with a Green Monster, and Big Red Machine, and characters with fun- ny names like Sparky and Burly and El Tiante and Charlie Hustle and Yaz. Not to mention Pudge and Cesar and Just Plain Joe. In many ways it was a silly Series, haunted by umpirical boo- boos and key hits by pitchers. In other ways it was a grand Series, exhibiting the all-around brilliance of a young legend named Bench. The outside pitch was a key factor all the way. When the Reds went with the pitch, they were fine. But there was always the im- pression that Cincy was too haughty to go the other way. And in Fenway, you never quite know which way to go. Cincy has anointed itself as the best ballclub in the game, but Fenway is the best place to play this game, because it is much like life: jerrybuilt, confusing, noisy, cramped, unbalanced, lovable, damnable and, in the end, fatal. What more could one ask out of a Series? Boston wins game one: El Tiante was the whole story. His different speeds, different pitches, different angles simply con- founded the Reds, just as this infinite variety had buffaloed JOE MORGAN WINS PLAYER OF YEAR POLL page 8 Oakland in Playoff Game One a week earlier. Even his balk didn't seem to be a balk. The Reds never could generate anything THE IGNORING OF ROD CAREW page 4 because Loo-ee wouldn't let them. Gullett's bad throw on the force attempt with Tiant on first and nobody out in the seventh CASEY STENGEL page 5 was clearly damaging but not fatal; Boston was poised to hop on Gullett. What turned things, truly, was Clay Carroll's no-out, M.V.P.s and ALL-STAR ROOKIES FOR 1975 page 8 bases-loaded walk to Fisk that made the score 2-0. Clay had been ahead of Fisk, and a double play would not have been an EBBETS FIELD REVISITED page 9 improbable occurrence at that moment. Still, the way El Tiante was going, one run might have been plenty for him. The Reds were looking at too many outside pitches. JOHNNY MIZE: Cincy wins game two: Some will say Boston ran itself out of a WHY ISN'T HE IN THE HALL OF FAME? page 18 commanding early edge when Cecil Cooper's bit of first-inning hesitation led to his slaughter in a rundown. Not true. One way or WINTER INSTRUCTIONAL LEAGUES another, Cincy gets a double play in that instance and Boston comes out of the inning with just a run. Billingham threw better ARE WORTHWHILE page 22 Baseball at its best Continues on page 3. B JOHNNY BENCH PETE ROSE LUIS TIANT CARLTON FISK CARL YASTRZEMSKI Olympic 70 Flame Fails to Ignite Montreal Apathy, Late Building Dims Chances for Summer Games wp 1/19/75 By Eric Malling Special to The Washington Post OTTAWA, Jan. 18 - would be a tragedy if it Montreal's 1976 Summer did," Killanin says. Olympics are in trouble. Many Canadians, at least There is increasing fear here that the spectacle will half of whom did not want have to be moved or at least the games in the first place, dramatically scaled down. according to opinion polls, Construction is behind scoff at that appeal to na- schedule, costs have already tional pride. And the federal doubled and senior govern- government, which got ments have refused to bail stuck with much of the bill out Montreal's flamboyant for Drapeau's Expo 67 Mayor Jean Drapeau. World's Fair eight years Although Montreal has al- ago, vowed again this week ready invested several hun- that it won't cover the defi- dred million dollars in the cit. project, which is now priced Apart from rising costs, at $653 million and climbing there are problems of actu- toward $1 billion, there have ally getting the facilities been several offers to move built in the next 18 months. the games to a country where The spot where the 77,000- their success is assured. The seat stadium with its remov- Shah of Iran is reported try- able "umbrella" dome is to ing to get the Olympics be constructed is still a moved to Tehran where fa- snow-covered vacant lot. cilities are still in place Work on the $380 million from last year's Asian structure was to begin again Games. Similarly, Dussel- this week after a two-month dorf, West Germany, has of- illegal strike by the iron fered its stadium, built for workers, who reinforce con- the World Cup soccer tour- cete. The 1,200-member un- nament last year. ion walked off the job in However, Lord Killanin, November, demanding a 50 cent an hour cost-of-living president of the Interna- increase, and after Que- tional Olympic Committee, bec Provincial legislators is sticking with Montreal. "I voted themselves a Christ- can't see that the Canadian mas raise the union in- people would let it fail. It creased its demand to $1 an hour. The provincial govern- ment stepped in last week and, under threat of walk- outs in the whole construc- tion industry or even a gen- eral strike, got the men back to work with an im- posed 85-cents-an-hour in- crease, which brings their average wages to about $7.50 an hour. However, the stadium was 25 days behind schedule be- fore the strike began and now, even with costly dou- ble shifts and a seven-day week, it cannot be fin- ished until a few days be- fore the games are sched- uled to begin. Some of the Olympic or- ganizers are now proposing that an existing football sta- dium be enlarged, or even moved to the Olympic site. Others want to scrap the Olympic village, a 960-unit apartment complex, and put the 10,000 athletes under canvas for the two weeks. Costs of the village have gone up so fast it is doubt- See OLYMPICS, D3, Col. 3 70 U.S. Skaters Settle Controversy 2/9/16 From News Dispatches Heiden had been more than than one competitor in 10, INNSBRUCK, Feb. 8 - three seconds faster than doctors said. American speedskaters took a Gilmore in their latest A spokesman at the village team selection controversy off workouts at Davos, Swit- medical center said they had MONDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1976 DI 10 Nelson Wins Bronze for U.S. in Downhill Skiing By Leonard Shapiro The Russians got their sixth gold in the on the world circuit several years but a medal. This is a very pleasant sur- The main threat to Nelson's medal, the watching the race, Mittermaier said, "I Washington Post Staff Writer 3,000-meter women's speedskating and never before had won a major downhill prise." first of these Olympics for a U.S. Alpine was really frightened. I knew what AXAMER LIZUM, Austria, Feb. 8 their seventh in the 15-kilometer men's event. She came down the hill with the fastest skier. came from Andrea Nicola Spiess, Totschnig had done and I knew it would West Germany's Rosi Mittermaier is cross-country event. American Bill She was the ninth skier to make her intermediate time of the day and was a local favorite from the city of Inn- be difficult to beat her. known around the slopes of Europe as Koch, a surprise silver medalist Thur- "the grandmother but today the old sday at 30 kilometers, could do no better run, and by that time knew that clocked in 1:46.16, 52-hundredths of a sbruck Running 13th, she was 17- "I think I won in the S-bend halfway than sixth in the 15-kilometer race today Austrian's latest skiing heroin, Brigitte second faster than Totschnig hundredths of a second slower and down. I got an absolutely perfect line girl had enough young blood in her veins Totschnig, had whisked down the icy Nelson started 10th, while Mittermaier Nelson knew then she had the bronze. which meant that the mistake I made and enough sizzling speed in her skis to at Seefeld. "I was happy to finish in the course in 1 minute 46 68 seconds, almost was on the course, and was too busy Nelson and Mittermaier are good afterward when I got a bit jammed on my win the women's downhill event of the top 10," he said. a full two seconds faster than anyone trying to negotiate the treacherous trail friends in fact, almost everyone is edges did not matter. Winter Olympics. Mittermaier's victory was a popular The Americans continued doing well as else. to hear the cheering when the West Mittermaier's friend and the two Nelson said she, too, had problems on one with the 30,000 fans lining the steep, German had finished. embraced, gave each other a peck on the the S-bend, the last before the run to the Cindy Nelson of Lutsen, Minn., won the 2,515-meter run on a mountain 15 miles "I heard the spectators cheering, and I "When I first saw the time (1:47.50) I cheek and exchanged a few words before finish. In fact, she had been having bronze for third place in the downhill. It from downtown Innsbruck. told myself not to get nervous and to run didn't think it would stand up," Nelson the West German was swept away problems all week, and did not complete was the fifth medal won by the U.S. in Mittermaier, 25, from the Bavarian this race the same way always do," said said at the finish line "I'd rather have toward the television cameras. four days of competition. Alpine village of Reit Im Winkl, has been Mittermaier. "I did not think I would get the gold, but I didn't ski fast enough." 'When I saw how many people were See GAMES, D4, Col. I 20 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Thursday, September 4, 1975 21 sports 13-Notre Dame The curtain goes up on a new era. Dan Devine replaces Ara Parseghian as coach of the Irish, which is akin to following Sammy Davis Jr. on stage. But Devine knows the pressures of his profession from PREVIEW stops at Arizona State, Missouri, and a recent stint with the Green Bay Packers. The big questions are: Can he rebuild the depleted offense? And can he motivate the troops? THE TOP 14-UCLA All that glitters isn't the gold of the TWENTY UCLA helmets. Take the team's quarter- back, John Sciarra, perhaps the best in the By Ross Atkin country. Fully recovered from an ankle Sports writer of injury, he could light up scoreboards all The Christian Science Monitor along the Pacific Coast. The Bruins have more, namely an offensive line that aver- Picking the nation's top football teams ages 255 pounds per man. If UCLA can stop easy, up to a point. Teams like Ohio State, anyone, they should win often. Southern Cal, and Notre Dame are per- ennial powers. The secret is to get them 15-Boston College the right order. Then after the iron's been The Eagles own New England's version