Football Program Covers W Ill Invite Your Attention to Campus Scenes in Four Colors

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Football Program Covers W Ill Invite Your Attention to Campus Scenes in Four Colors r ' 50¢ Great New Name in '•• ANNIVERSARY RN METHODIST - OHIO STATE SOUTHE- S , , Edit. or a11c1 -ldvcrti,inq· • Jfa 11. ager \V1LBvll £. :o PP, · Circulation Manager John F. HummeL.--..:··:··~ g Re presentative THE MAKING 100 million • 1 Adverllsu1 f th mighty dinosaurs, when FROM POWER IN SpencerNallona Adv erh. s.m g Co ., 271 Madiy son Ave., years, from the age o eth omes Sinclair DINO · g·1ntheear ,c t New York 16, N. · oi l was form in ·um gasoline tha d anced prem1 SUPREME, th e a v ou r engine running -------------------- ------------------ ---- .. 32 cleans as 1·t powers - keeps y The U"; ve" ;1y p ,e,; de"" _______ ,.___ -------- .::.::::::___________ --------------------------- 4 smoother, longer. Southern Method;,t Offic,ol, ---------- -- -- ---------------------------------------- 5 M thodist University Story ________________ ----------------- ---- SMART DRIVER Southern e h d ' t Campus -------------------- 6 REWARDS THE h paid for in his high- ho wants all the power e Scenes on the Southern Met o is __ --------------- -------------------- 7 wpowered car. Try a tankful today. Facts About Mustang Starsb 11 ------------------St ff ---------- ----------- ------------------- 8 Southern M et hod ist f FootOh' a Statea Football------------ ------------------ ------- --------------- 9 ON GUARANTEED YOUR SATISFACTI back. stop at the si~n 75th Anniversary o io . ------------------------------------- -------- by S1nc• 1ai • r -or your. money Ohio State Football Coaching Staff ----------- ______ 10, 18, 22, 32, 36, 42, 44, 46 of the Sinclair Dinosaur. F tboll Player Pages ------------------ ----- 12, 20, 30 Ohio State oo ----------------------- 1 4 , Southern Method;,t Playe, Uage, --------- ------------------------------· ------- -------- 16 .... , ,,. f Oh'o State Un1vers1ty -------------- ---- Story o I • • Athletic Staff ----------------------- ------ ------------- -17 Ohio State . Unilv1 erAs,ltl:Time Big Ten Standing ---- ------------ ------------ __ 19 Buckeye, F' " " ------------------------------------------- 2 4 It ' and Signals ·----------- ------------------- Pena ,es . ·1 Football Roster ------------ 29 DRIVE WITH CARE Qh;o Stole Uo,ve"' y . Football Roste, ---- ---------------- --- 34 Southern Method isl Un1vers'.ty ------------------------- . I nd Physical Fitness --- 38 Stan Mus1a a . S ad ---------------- ·------------ -- 41 AND euv S1ncla1r 1964 Ohio State Un ivers1ty q ~ -----d-- -------------------------------- Half-Time Music by The Marching Ban ------------------------- --- 48 Starting Backfield of the Buckeyes SINCLAIR REFINING COMPANY • 155 N. WACKER DRIVE • CHICAG O 6, ILL. The Universi·ty Presidents Southern Methodist Representatives HAYDEN FRY Head Coach & Athletic Director DR . NOVICE G. FAWCETT President, The Ohio State University LESTER JORDAN Asst. Director of Athletics DR. WILLIS M. TATE DR. EDWIN D. MOUZON, JR. President, Southern Methodist University Faculty Representative 2 3 SOUTHERN METHODIST Southern Methodist University CAMPUS SCENES OUTHER I j\1(ethodist Uni ersit -located Today, these relatively few years later, th e S in suburban niversitv Park, an incorpo­ Uni ersity inventories 80 buildings in its physi­ rated r siden tial district s{u-rounded by Dallas ral plant ( 60 of th s constructed since the Texas-has, in its short lifetime, a record of close of World War II ), a faculty of more than growth and 300 employed on a full-time basis, total assets achievement to of $60,000,000 ( including endowment of 16,- match that of the 000,000 ), an enrollment that has averaged ap­ d, namic region in proximately 6,000 the past few years, and a which it was 150-acre campus whi h occupies some of the p 1a c e d only 50 most valuable land in Texas. years ago. institu­ With a popula­ Since S 1 is not a state-supported to residents of tion of approxi­ tion, enrollment is not limited e for out-of­ matelv 800 000- Texas, nor is any distinction mad ements and ;ituated in a stat students regarding entrance requir 1 rly all the students in c o u n t v of more or tuition and fees. ea County, but than 1,100,000 and M 's first class came from Dallas acceptance of a metropolitan now-reflecting the widespread in recent years-more area of 1,250,000 its scholastic programs ersity's student -Dallas is the na- than 40 per cent of the niv Mustan9 mascot, of Texas, and the ratio Peruna, w ith managers tion's fourteenth body come from outside e to Te as students is increasing larges t city and is on of the fastest growing of out-of-stat cities in the nited tates ( in the number of annuall . office buildings constructed since the end of A Master Plan for the academic future, World War II, for example, Dallas rank · second adopted by the Board of Trust es on May 10, on l: to New York City.) Within the Dall as 1963, rededicates Southern J\l thodist Uni er­ boundaries lie th e ninth largest concentration sity to its b lief and aim as a national private of million-dollar businesses in the U.S., a bm­ institution of higher learning, pursuing academic aeoning industrial complex, and a sophistica­ quality and the full development of each in­ tion of cultural endeavor trul., cosmopolitan. dividual student. It insists upon a program Dall as is a clean, beautiful, vigorous city of well balanced in th e humanities, the social accomplishment sensiti e to the intellectual sciences, and the natural sciences, and well currents of th e time. balanced in undergraduate, profes ional, and In this climate of great potential SMU was graduate education. founded in 1911. First classe were held Sep­ Dallas by The tember 22, 1915. SM was established in .\1ethodist Church, and management of the t its op 0 ni:ng session, th e ni ersit had niversity is vested by SMU's Board of Gov­ two building , 706 students ( characteristically ernors in an Executive Committee of civic, at that time th e large t first- year enrollment of business, and religious leaders. anv uni ersitv in this cotmtry's history), a 35- mri n facult , 'an endowment fund of $279,178 President of SMU is Willis M. Tate, a 1932 and a 133-acre campu . graduate of the University·· 4 5 FACTS ABOUT MUSTANG STARS Southern Methodist Football Coaching Staff 1 0. 0 D \'ID RDER, 206. 6-6. Junior. ago . only game experience lacking for thi s trong two-way player as a reser\'e la ·t sea on .. big. smiling red head to I e a good ne. caught three pas - for 32 yard .. returned in ­ X 60 LY?-."l\" TH H.:'\HILL. 19 . o-1, terception against 1 ·a,·y for 15 yards . order ·ophon1ore. I ettermen and squaclmen retur11in" is X o. l tight end to guard \\' ill relegate fine rusher an cl solid I vnn to a re .. erve role bl cker. tl1is fir ·t ,·ear. but the K 0. , 1 FR i_;: D potential is· there for him TlER, 18 1, 6-0 Jun­ to become a truh· fine ior. Tick ted primarily footba ll I layer. - for defen i\'e lu ty .. XO. 6..J. R 13 El{ T ha chance to I reak in YLl;:R. - 0-+. 6-0. Sen­ at on of the corner ior. Held do\\'n the r g­ back po ition . ular tight tackle po ·t last KO. 5 E RGI~ ason as a 200-pouncl \\'IL\J T, 21 I , 6-2, junior ... great trength , ophom re. P r o ,. e cl and quickne:,,;, separate that he's a tough de­ this man from a hoY fender last fall n th e . lllO\' cl to g uarcl freshm:111 team and in during spring training. JOHN KNEE var ity competition last DANNY TH OMAS :\'O. (>2 ID[ SIT­ No. 76-Tackle spring ... h lps acid to No. 22- Quarterback T X. 198. 5~ 10, Junior. the tag that th e ends Xicknamed "Hittin' . it­ \\'ill be much larger than in previous years. lon" and he did just that .. honored for his play ::\0. 86 B BBY JO DR.I H. 189, 6-5 . Sopho­ in th e XaYy. A&M. and T lJ game . graded more. Tabbed as a pl it end on offense an I corner out a b ·t offensi\'e lineman in th :\lichigan and hack on clefen ·e . ·ure tackler and fine pas · de­ Baylor games ... I d the team in tackle in the fense man ... good hands and height make him a :\fichigan game and a"ain st Xayy \\'ith 19, a team prime taraet. high for on game ... hand! th linebacking as- Left to ri ght; - Dave Smith , Glenn Gossett, Herman Morgan, Pug Gabrel, Charlie Driver, Dudley K 88 .\IIKE TAB R. 21 . 6-1. Junior. ignment on cl fense with th e be ·t. Pa rker. Kneeling, head coach Hayden Fry. :\[oyed from fullback to tio-ht nd for hi blocking l\"O. 52 DOCG JAKU RY, 208. 6-2, Junior. abil ity ... had good ·pring on clefens ... fine C ·ecl primarily at defen i"e encl la ·t year ... target fo r the hook pa ·· . hard to I ri1w clo\\'n ha red h nors \\'ith all -conference John Hughes OHIO STADIUM INFORMATION in the open field . grabbed four I as es for 27 by grading hi<1he t for defen i\'e lineman after the Yards last year. Xan• Yictory. TICKET SALES SERVICE TO PATRONS - K . 89 -BILL HA RLA ~. 187, 6-2. , enior. H as x· . 56 I:IARIJY .\fc1\ USTEH. -00. 6-..J., _·en­ AV AIL ABLE TICKETS ore for sole ct gate l (closed end). Emergency medical treatment is available in special fi rst to be on of the toughest little men in the confer­ The Ticket Office is located in the southeas t corner of the aid quarters back of Sections 11 ord 12 in "B" deck. A ior. An offensi ,·e pecialist \\'hen ·uhstitmin" would St. John Arena, just l 00 yards north of the closed end of th e mobile station also is available on the ground level at the ence ..
Recommended publications
  • Mallory Men Bullet Points
    Mallory Men Bullet Points To: Loyal Mallory Men From: Andy Curtin RE: Letters of Recommendation for Bill Mallory’s Candidacy for College Football Hall of Fame My name is Andy Curtin. I created and ran the Legends Poll for 10 years from 2005 through 2014. We had 23 retired coaches participate over those years. Of this group 21 are in the HOF. Bill Mallory was a charter member and served all 10 years as a voter in the Legends Poll. The roster of Legends Poll coaches is stunning in its composition. Bobby Bowden, Tom Osborne, Frank Broyles, John Cooper, Fisher DeBerry, Bo Schembechler, Terry Donahue, Vince Dooley, Pat Dye, LaVell Edwards, Don James, Hayden Fry, John Ralston, Dick MacPherson, Don Nehlen, John Robinson, Bill Snyder, R.C. Slocum, Gene Stallings, George Welsh, Frank Kush, Bobby Ross…and Bill Mallory. Bobby Ross and Bill are the two non-HOF coaches. Everyone of our Legends Poll coaches believe Bill Mallory belongs in the HOF. However, since 2010 no coach has been granted a waiver for eligibility from the 60% winning percentage minimum rule, despite the fact that there are 31 non-60% coaches in the HOF with over 200 coaches enshrined there. I have been lobbying for Bill for over 4 years now to have the National Football Foundation reinstate the waiver procedure. I believe we have our best chance now because I have created an Index called the Curtin Coach Index (CCI) which I have provided to you herewith. It awards points to coaches for playing Top 25, Top 10 and Top 5 teams and is then averaged by years of service.
    [Show full text]
  • NCAA Division I Football Records (Coaching Records)
    Coaching Records All-Divisions Coaching Records ............. 2 Football Bowl Subdivision Coaching Records .................................... 5 Football Championship Subdivision Coaching Records .......... 15 Coaching Honors ......................................... 21 2 ALL-DIVISIONS COachING RECOrds All-Divisions Coaching Records Coach (Alma Mater) Winningest Coaches All-Time (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 35. Pete Schmidt (Alma 1970) ......................................... 14 104 27 4 .785 (Albion 1983-96) BY PERCENTAGE 36. Jim Sochor (San Fran. St. 1960)................................ 19 156 41 5 .785 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four-year colleges (regardless (UC Davis 1970-88) of division or association). Bowl and playoff games included. 37. *Chris Creighton (Kenyon 1991) ............................. 13 109 30 0 .784 Coach (Alma Mater) (Ottawa 1997-00, Wabash 2001-07, Drake 08-09) (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 38. *John Gagliardi (Colorado Col. 1949).................... 61 471 126 11 .784 1. *Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) ........................ 24 289 22 3 .925 (Carroll [MT] 1949-52, (Mount Union 1986-09) St. John’s [MN] 1953-09) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) ......................... 13 105 12 5 .881 39. Bill Edwards (Wittenberg 1931) ............................... 25 176 46 8 .783 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Case Tech 1934-40, Vanderbilt 1949-52, 3. Frank Leahy (Notre Dame 1931) ............................. 13 107 13 9 .864 Wittenberg 1955-68) (Boston College 1939-40, 40. Gil Dobie (Minnesota 1902) ...................................... 33 180 45 15 .781 Notre Dame 41-43, 46-53) (North Dakota St. 1906-07, Washington 4. Bob Reade (Cornell College 1954) ......................... 16 146 23 1 .862 1908-16, Navy 1917-19, Cornell 1920-35, (Augustana [IL] 1979-94) Boston College 1936-38) 5.
    [Show full text]
  • The Football Coaching Bible (The Coaching Bible) by American Football Coaches Association
    The Football Coaching Bible (The Coaching Bible) by American Football Coaches Association Ebook The Football Coaching Bible (The Coaching Bible) currently available for review only, if you need complete ebook The Football Coaching Bible (The Coaching Bible) please fill out registration form to access in our databases Download here >> Series:::: The Coaching Bible+++Paperback:::: 376 pages+++Publisher:::: Human Kinetics, Inc.; First edition (August 15, 2002)+++Language:::: English+++ISBN-10:::: 0736044116+++ISBN-13:::: 978-0736044110+++Product Dimensions::::7 x 0.9 x 10 inches++++++ ISBN10 0736044116 ISBN13 978-0736044 Download here >> Description: The Football Coaching Bible features many of the games most successful coaches. Each shares the special insight, advice, and strategies theyve used to field championship-winning teams season after season.The 27 chapter contributing coaches span six decades of the sport and reach into every corner of the United States. The impressive list of contributors:-Joe Paterno-Hayden Fry-Phil Fulmer-Dick Foster-Grant Teaff-Gene Stallings-Jim Tressel-R.C. Slocum-LaVell Edwards-Bobby Bowden-Jim Young-Frosty Westering-Mack Brown-Larry Kehres-Bill Snyder-Lou Holtz-Ken Sparks-Tom Osborne-Sonny Lubick-Mike Bellotti-Barry Alvarez-Fisher DeBerry-George Curry-Bo Schembechler-Joe Tiller-Frank BeamerThey cover every aspect of the game: coaching principles, program building, player motivation, practice sessions, individual skills, team tactics, offensive and defensive play-calling, and performance evaluation.Developed by the American Football Coaches Association, this coaching guide establishes a new standard of excellence in the sport. This book doesnt have the greatest Xs and Os. It doesnt plan workouts or practice schedules.
    [Show full text]
  • 82Nd Annual Convention of the AFCA
    82nd annual convention of the AFCA. JANUARY 9-12, 2005 * LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY President's Message It was an ordinary Friday night high school football game in Helena, Arkansas, in 1959. After eating our pre-game staples of roast beef, green beans and dry toast, we journeyed to the stadium for pre- game. As rain began to fall, a coach instructed us to get in a ditch to get wet so we would forget about the elements. By kickoff, the wind had increased to 20 miles per hour while the temperature dropped over 30 degrees. Sheets of ice were forming on our faces. Our head coach took the team to the locker room and gave us instructions for the game as we stood in the hot showers until it was time to go on the field. Trailing 6-0 at halftime, the officials tried to get both teams to cancel the game. Our coach said, "Men, they want us to cancel. If we do, the score will stand 6-0 in favor of Jonesboro." There was a silence broken by his words, "I know you don't want to get beat 6-0." Well, we finished the game and the final score was 13-0 in favor of Jonesboro. Forty-five years later, it is still the coldest game I have ever been in. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] No one likes to lose, but for every victory, there is a loss. As coaches, we must use every situation to teach about life and how champions handle both the good and the bad. I am blessed to work with coaches who care about each and every player.
    [Show full text]
  • John Mackovic
    As John Mackovic leads his Arizona Wild- cats into year three of his rebuilding plan, he does John so firmly in place, with a new staff and a new Mackovic sense of purpose. Mackovic does so intently focused on the Head Coach task at hand – building a winner in Tucson – with a track record of success to match. Mackovic YEARS COACHING: 34 YEARS AT ARIZONA: 3 has more wins than any other head coach in the Pacific-10 Conference and is just six victories 2 0 0 3 away from collegiate win No. 100. It’s a focus seen on the field with a highly- productive spring practice after introducing five new assistants and an improved defensive phi- losophy. “We have to play better defense in order to have a good team,” said Mackovic. “Our focus was that way all throughout the spring. From where we started to where we finished, we are comfortable, but I know that we are not satisfied.” That’s not to say that his record-setting of- fensive style will take a back seat. Not an offense that set nearly 50 individual and team offensive records a year ago. It’s a focus seen in the classroom as 22 play- ers earned University of Arizona Mary J. Roby academic honors (3.0 GPA or better) in 2002-03, including two first-team Pac-10 All-Academic se- lections (six in the last two seasons) and Jason Johnson, the Woody Hayes National Scholar-Ath- lete award winner. It’s a focus seen off the field as a head coach builds a tight-knit bond with his charges.
    [Show full text]
  • BSB Reprints: Earle Bruce Leads Ohio State to Victory Over Michigan in Final Game After Firing
    BSB Reprints: Earle Bruce Leads Ohio State To Victory Over Michigan In Final Game After Firing [image_with_animation image_url=”29647″ animation=”None” hover_animation=”none” alignment=”” img_link_target=”_blank” border_radius=”none” box_shadow=”none” image_loading=”default” max_width=”100%” max_width_mobile=”default” img_link=”https://www.buckeyesports.com/reports/BSBReprints_1987_Michigan.pdf”] For the 40th anniversary of Buckeye Sports Bulletin, we will select a standout Ohio State football game that was played in the corresponding week in our first 39 years of publishing and running stories from the original BSB coverage. This week’s installment of BSB Reprints features our coverage of the overwhelming outpouring of support for Ohio State head coach Earle Bruce, who was fired ahead of the Buckeyes’ rivalry matchup with Michigan in 1987. The Buckeyes rallied together to send their beloved coach out the right way, with a 23-20 win over the Wolverines, whom Bruce despised. Members of the 1987 Buckeyes were outspoken in their support of Bruce, including standout linebacker Chris Spielman, William White and Everett Ross, but they were not alone. Big Ten coaching competitors like Michigan’s Bo Schembechler, Iowa’s Hayden Fry and Don Morton of Wisconsin all spoke up to defend Bruce, as well as OSU athletic director Rick Bay, who resigned because he did not agree with the administration’s decision. This installment of BSB Reprints includes our in-depth coverage of Ohio State’s victory over rival Michigan, with an abundance of coverage regarding
    [Show full text]
  • Download Brochure (PDF)
    25TH ANNUAL TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28th, 2020 Honoring Top Assistant Coaches Since 1996 OUR MISSION RECOGNIZING EXCELLENCE The Broyles Award was created in 1996 to honor my grandfather, Coach Frank Broyles. I am so proud of the award and what it has accomplished over the past twenty-five years. This award has touched the lives of so many coaches and their families, and has created a vast network of friends and colleagues through my grandfather’s legacy. Though he passed away in 2017, my grandfather’s mission carries on not just through this award, but also through the Broyles Foundation. This organization provides game plans for another kind of ‘assistant coach:’ Alzheimer’s caregivers in crisis. My grandfather built his career and his family around the pillars of teamwork, preparation, and selflessness. As caretakers of his legacy, my mother and I strive every day to uphold these values and expand upon his mission. My granfather’s values influence everything we do: just like he would have done, we are eagerly preparing for the next twenty-five years of recognizing excellence. Sincerely, Molly Arnold Broyles Award Director Coach Broyles’ Granddaughter COACH BROYLES ARKANSAS V. TULSA, 1964 THE BROYLES LEGACY Frank Broyles’ legacy of selecting and developing great assistants is unparalleled during his almost two decades as head coach at Arkansas. Broyles assistants went on as head coaches to win: • 15% of all Super Bowls • 8 Super Bowls in a span of 14 years • 5 college national championships • More than 40 conference titles • More than 2000 games Two of the three head coaches in football history to win both a National Title and a Super Bowl were his assistants, Jimmy Johnson and Barry Switzer.
    [Show full text]
  • Digital Collections
    . ,, ,~ ;,~ ·; ,,,---· ARKANSAS --~ UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS TRAVELER Vol. 61 UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS - FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1966 No. 39 Enthusiasm High For Weekend By WALTER SLAUGHTER in preparation for tomorow's students will hold a torch-light Excelled only by the pageantry game, UA students have lost little march to the intramural field itself, Homecoming 1966 will be a in the way of tradition with prep- where they will set ablaze the spectacle. arations for Homecoming. • · traditional bonfire. There will be places to go, Mammoth lawn displays, elab­ An Alumni Board Meeting is people to see and things to do, but orate floats, and countless smaller also scheduled for tonight at 6:30 the focal point will be a returning decorations will bathe the campus in the Union Dining Room. Razorback team which left Fay­ with thousands upon thousands of Festivities will resume again etteville over one month ago to yards of crepe paper, ominous "Big early tomorrow morning at 8 with avenge an unfortunate loss to Bay­ Red's," and "horses gone lame." the line-up for the Homecoming lor on Oct. 8. All house decorations must be Parade which is expected to com­ Texas, Wichita State, Texas completed by 2 this afternoon. A mence about 9. A&M and most recently Rice, have committee of UA faculty members Senator J. W. Fulbright, D. P all fallen in between. Tomorrow along with a representative group Raney of the Board of Trustees, the Razorbacks come home to a of Fayetteville citizens will judge Guy Lackey, president-elect of the game with SMU which well might all decorations from 3-5 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Texas Sports Hall of Fame
    Texas Sports Hall of Fame The Texas Sports Hall of Fame was organized in 1951 by the Texas Sports Writers Association. Each year the honorees are inducted into the Hall of Fame at a gala dinner. (The second such fete in 1952 was headlined by, “That filmland athlete, Ronald Reagan, and his actress wife, Nancy Davis,” The Dallas Morning News, June 9, 1952.) The hall was originally in Grand Prairie in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The Hall of Fame was closed in 1986 for financial reasons, but in 1991 it was reopened in Waco. In addition to memorabilia, the new location also houses archives. Under the current selection process, dues-paying members of the Texas Sports Hall of Fame can nominate any number of individuals. (Anyone can become a member.) The selection committee, chaired by Dave Campbell, founder of Texas Football Magazine, reviews all nominees and creates the “Official Voting Membership” ballot. Ballots are then mailed to the voting membership, former Texas Sports Hall of Fame inductees and the media selection committee. The results of the balloting are announced in the fall with the induction banquet following in the winter. The hall of fame website is at www.tshof.org. Year Inductee Sport Texas connection, career From the Texas Sports Hall of Fame, The Handbook of Texas, The Dallas Morning News and other sources. 2006 DeLoss Dodds Athletics UT athletic director, 1981- Mia Hamm Soccer Wichita Falls, college/national/Olympics 1989-2004 Rafer Johnson Olympics Olympic decathlon 1956, 1960, Hillsboro native Jerry Jones Football Dallas Cowboys owner, 1989- Roosevelt Leaks Football UT running back 1972-74, Brenham Warren Moon Football Houston Oilers quarterback, 1984-93 Don Perkins Football Dallas Cowboys running back, 1961-68 Rafer Johnson, 2006.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading the Pink Locker Room: on Football Culture and Title IX
    William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice Volume 14 (2007-2008) Issue 1 William & Mary Journal of Women and Article 2 the Law October 2007 Reading the Pink Locker Room: On Football Culture and Title IX Erin E. Buzuvis Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl Part of the Education Law Commons Repository Citation Erin E. Buzuvis, Reading the Pink Locker Room: On Football Culture and Title IX, 14 Wm. & Mary J. Women & L. 1 (2007), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl/vol14/iss1/2 Copyright c 2007 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl READING THE PINK LOCKER ROOM: ON FOOTBALL CULTURE AND TITLE IX ERIN E. BuzuvIs* ABSTRACT This article examines the public controversy that erupted after local media reported on a comment I made about the University of Iowa's decision to renovate the football stadium's visiting team locker room entirely in pink. I submitted my statement in response to the University Steering Committee on NCAA Certification's request for feedback on a draft report and suggested that the "joke" behind the pink d6cor traded in sexist and homophobic values. As such, I con- cluded that it belonged in the comprehensive analysis of gender equity that the committee was preparing. I immediately received hundreds of hateful e-mails and was the subject of thousands of invidious online postings. The content of these messages intrigued the national media, whose reporting fueled the controversy for several months.
    [Show full text]
  • Hawkeyesports.Com Iowa at Penn State - - Beaver Stadium Date of Release: Oct
    Date of Release: Oct. 3, 2011 Iowa at Penn State - - Beaver Stadium Iowa Athletic Communications: 319-335-9411 IOWA OFFENSE PENN STATE OFFENSE WR ....... 7 McNu , 83 Staggs WR ....... 6 Moye, 85 Moseby-Felder LT .........77 Reiff , 78 Donnal LT ..........67 Barham, 76 Don. Smith LG ........60 Tobin, 68 Scherff LG .........74 Troutman, 73 Arcidiacono C .........53 Ferentz, 59 Boff eli C ...........54 Stankewitch, 60 Howle RG ........73 Ge s, 72 Orne RG ........50 Pannell, 64 Urschel RT ........56 Zusevics, 70 Van Sloten RT .........52 Okoli, 78 Farrell, 58 Gress TE .........39 Herman, 86 Fiedorowicz/ 85 Z. Derby TE .........80 Szczerba, 10 Haplea, 82 Irvin QB ........16 Vandenberg, 14 Wienke QB ........ 1 Bolden/ 11 McGloin, 2 McGregor WR ....... 6 Davis, 11 Mar n-Manley RB .........25 Redd, 3 Beachum, 26 Dukes RB ........34 Coker, 3 White WR .......19 Brown, 20 Dev. Smith, 5 Belton FB .........35 Meyers, 92 Gimm WR .......81 Kersey, 7 Drake, 16 Scherer IOWA DEFENSE PENN STATE DEFENSE DE ........79 Alvis, 58 Daniel LE .........90 Stanley, 56 La more, 84 Baublitz DT ........87 Nardo, 71 C. Davis LT ..........47 Hill, 93 Terry, 92 Alosi DT ........93 Daniels, 99 Gaglione RT .........71 S ll, 91 Jones, 97 Graham DE ........91 Binns, 96 Forgy RE .........81 Crawford, 86 Olaniyan OLB ......45 T. Nielsen, 13 Donatell OLB ...... 6 Hodges, 43 Hull MLB .....44 Morris, 52 Alston MLB ......40 Carson, 11 For , 33 Yancich WLB .....20 Kirksey, 31 Hitchens OLB ......34 Stupar, 54 VanFleet LC .........28 Prater, 4 Berns ne LC ......... 8 Lynn, 2 Powell, 14 Wallace SS ......... 4 Berns ne, 10 Sleeper FS ........
    [Show full text]
  • NCAA Division II-III Football Records (Coaching Records)
    ALL-DIVISIONS COACHING RECORDS 189 Coach (Alma Mater) Coach (Alma Mater) (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 14. *Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) ........................ 22 260 21 3 .921 47. Don Nehlen (Bowling Green 1958) ........................ 30 202 128 8 .609 (Mount Union 1986-07) (Bowling Green 1968-76, 15. Frank Girardi (West Chester 1961).......................... 36 257 97 5 .723 West Virginia 1980-00) (Lycoming 1972-07) 48. Vince Dooley (Auburn 1954) .................................... 25 201 77 10 .715 LaVell Edwards (Utah St. 1952) ................................ 29 257 101 3 .716 (Georgia 1964-88) (BYU 1972-00) Eddie Anderson (Notre Dame 1922) ..................... 39 201 128 15 .606 17. Tom Osborne (Hastings 1959) ................................. 25 255 49 3 .836 (Loras 1922-24, DePaul 1925-31, (Nebraska 1973-97) Holy Cross 1933-38, Iowa 1939-42, 46-49, Jim Malosky (Minnesota 1951) ................................ 40 255 125 13 .665 Holy Cross 1950-64) (Minn. Duluth 1958-97) Keith W. Piper (Baldwin-Wallace 1948) ................. 39 201 141 18 .583 19. Lou Holtz (Kent St. 1959) ............................................ 33 249 132 7 .651 (Denison 1954-92) (William & Mary 1969-71, *Active coach. †Ties computed as half won and half lost. #Tennessee State’s participation in North Carolina St. 1972-75, Arkansas 1977-83, 1981 and 1982 FCS championships (1-2 record) vacated by action of the NCAA Committee on Minnesota 1984-85, Notre Dame 1986-96, Infractions. @Texas A&M-Kingsville’s participation in the 1996, 1997 and 1998 Division II champi- South Carolina 1999-04) onships (2-3 record) vacated by action of the NCAA Committee on Infractions.
    [Show full text]