PAGE TEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14. ll ?AGE TEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY ATJ kF1MJL, VW RV=11Rl' ti J%,1007---t.-w~~aafs i Curtis' Steals Kindle Defensive Lein By HUD ENGLEHART Champaign, Illinois has never been a town known for great de- fenses. Ever since the days of Red Grange, offensive power has dom- inated the University of 'Illnois football scene. The best way to win was to score points . . . and points ... and more points. For a while last Saturday it looked as if the Illini were going to do just that. With 2:45 left in BIG TEN STANDINGS Purdue Indiana Minnesota Ohio State MICHIGAN Michigan State Northwestern Illinois Iowa Wisconsin W 5 5 4 3 2 2 2 1 0 0 L 0 0 1 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Pct. 1.000 1.000 .800 .600 .400 .400 .400 .200 .100 .100 the first quarter, fullback Rich Johnson cracked over right tackle and went fifteen yards for a touchdown Then after an Illinois interception of a Denny Brown pass at the Michigan 35, John- son again bolted into the Wol- verine line for seven yards and the second score of the game. Halftime rolled around and Michigan was behind with what seemed to be a comfortable Illi- nois lead of 14-0. Someone must have put the ghost of Red Grange in the Mich- igan locker room at half time be- cause the Wolverines defense took the field determined not to let the Illini offense score any more points and even more determined to wipe out any hope for the presence of the Galloping Ghost. Defense Awakens In the second half of the game, the Michigan secondary showed the people of Champaign just how football games are won by de- ABA Indiana 119, Dallas 118 New Orleans 106, Anaheim 98 THIS WEEK'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Wisconsin Iowa at Ohio State Michigan State at Purdue Indiana at Minnesota Illinois at Northwestern fense instead of offense. With second down and ten on. their own 13-yard line, the Ulini1 fumbled a handoff and defense- man Jerry Hartman recovered for Michigan from his cornerback position. Michigan proceeded to lose the ball on downs, but the fumble recovery helped to keep Illinois deep in their own territory. The defense held them there and forced a punt. Michigan then drove its first touchdown. After the kickoff, the defense held again. The Illini punted into the waiting arms of George Hoey who did a cute little disappearing act galloping 60 yards to score Michigan's second touchdown of the day. Just for the record, Hoey is a defensive back. Chalk up number two for the defense. Actually the defense hadn't even warmed up yet. Curtis Begins The fourth quarter began and the Illini began to move. The Wolverine defense wasn't about have any of that, so Tom Curtis decided to take things into his own hands and cover the entire secondary by himself. Illinois quarterback Dean Volk- man completed four passes in four attempts in the quarter - two to Illini receivers and two to Curtis. The Illini advanced the ball 24 yards in three plays and had a second down with nine yards to go for a first down. Volkman de- cided that it was about time to Phillips Sentenced KALAMAZOO, Mich P) '-Jesse Phillips, a, Michigan State Uni- versity football star, Monday was sentenced to 15 months to 14 years in State Prison at Jack- son on forged check charges. Phillips, a 20-year-old senior from Beaumont, Tex., pleaded guilty Aug. 21 to the charge that he passed a forged cheek for $369.10 at a store in Kalamazoo. Phillips suffered a torn knee ligament in the first game this season and was lost to the team for the rest of the season. try the deep pass play that was good for 20 yards just two plays earlier. Volkman took the snap from center, dropped beak and fired - right into the hands of Curtis. The interception gave the Wol- verine offense the momentum it needed to drive the 44 yards for the winning score. The touchdown came with only 5:12 gone in the fourth period, giving Illinois ample time to mount its offensive in an effort to tie the score. The only ghosts in Champaign this week were the nightmarish kind that looked like Wolverine defenders. On the third play fol- lowing Michigan's final scoring effort of the afternoon, Tom Stincic blasted into the Illini backfield from his defensive end position and glued a tackle on Volkman that unglued the ball. While Stincic was busy prying himself loose from Volkman, Michigan linebacker Dennis Mor- gan got into the ball-stealing act long enough to recover the fumble on the Illini 35. Offense Controls The offense came back into the game and held on to the ball for eight plays before Drehman's punt rolled out of bounds on the Illini nine yard line. There was still 5:10 remaining in the game and Illinois wasn't about to quit. Until ... Until that nightmare popped up again. Illinois had just reeled off two consecutive first downs. With first and ten and the clock run- ning out, Volkman decided to throw a relatively deep pass in Curtis' direction again. Volkman took the snap from center, dropped back and fired - right to Curtis arms. Final score: Michigan defense 21, Illinois offense 14. Victory 200 The victory was number 200 for the Wolverines in conference play. The Wolverine secondary ac- counted for five of the six un- expected turnovers committed by the Illini. Hartman recovered a fumble and intercepted a pass. Curtis found himself on the re- ceiving end of three Volknian aerials before the day was over. a .CLARK NORTON Sixteen years. Down the drain. Or should I say down the septic tank. It all started, innocently enough, in kindergarten. The teacher would draw four objects in a row and ask everyone to pick out the one that was different from the rest. For instance, she would picture three rabbits and one squirrel. Or maybe three squirrels and one rabbit. That was a little tougher,. By the time I got to grade school the teacher was drawing graphs on the board .. . bar graphs, line graphs, circular graphs. I was still looking for the rabbit. In junior high the teacher would shove a book under our noses and tell us to read. That was all right until he asked me what I'd read. But at least I was beginning to understand what education was all about. I never had figured out what rabbits or bar graphs had to do with the Korean War, rising taxes, or the Brdoklyn Dodgers, all of which seemed more important. High school was notably uneventf-ul. But then I came to college and discovered the mysteries of life, became attuned to the ageless questions which have plagued man, and began for the first time to appreciate the beauties of the written word, the complexities of modern existence, the profundities of the world's greatest thinkers . . . and in zoology lab I finally found out how to distinguish a rabbit from a squirrel. Education was beginning to make sense. Until last Saturday. Saturday they gave the Law School Ad- mission Test, better known as law boards, at Rackham Auditorium. It wasn't so much the degree of difficulty-as the type of ques- tion asked-that was so disillusioning. I went in thinking I was an educated man.I came out muttering something about septic tanks. The first section was concerned with reading comprehension. Shades of junior high, I thought. We read something about bats The next section presented a number of graphs for our consump- tion. Shades of grade school, I thought. There was one graph depicting the rising and setting of Venus with various dots and dashes that resembled a Kandinsky original. "Never saw a dash-dot graph before," I muttered, marking the answer sheet at random (with a "number two" pencil.) 4 -Associated Press MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK Denny Brown steamrolls through a hole in the Illinois line for a five-yard gain in the second quarter of Saturday's 21-14 Wolverine victory. Doug Whitman (80) of Illinois prepares to lunge at the diminuative field general. PURDUE .FLIES: Indiana Ros Along A t:~.1 4 VOICE-SDS endorses QUINN SHERMAN LOWEN WESTERDALE for SGC' By ELLIOTT BERRY In two weeks, the unbelieveable Hoosiers of Indiana may find themselves battling an overwhel- mingly powerful Purdue team for the Big Ten championship. The incredible Indiana Hoosiers, whose last period victories are1 becoming old hat,. came within two minutes and 50 seconds ofI losing Saturday's contest with Michigan State when whiz kid John Isenbarger breezed five yards for the score to give Indi- ana a 14-13 victory. fense, as Purdue buried the Go- phers. 41-12. Fabulous Leroy Keyes, with his three touchdowns, set Big Ten records for most touchdowns in a season, 14, and most points, 84. Keyes' running was equaled by the brilliant passing of young quarterback Mike Phipps who completed 17 of 31 passes for 235 yards and a touchdown. The Gophers scored first on a 31-yard field goal by Bob Stein. B u t then, the Bolermakers marched down field on the first of their six touchdown drives. r i i 3 Isenbarger, who was injured in A Chance the first half, came off the bench The Gopher defense, which had and along with quarterback Harry only given up 44 points all season Gonso engineered the climatic 69 prior to Saturday's debacle, never yard drive. had a chance against the beau- The Indiana defense, anchored tifully balanced Purdue attack. by linebacker Ken Kaczmerek Northwestern scored four touch- turned in a fine job and had little downs in less than seven minutes difficulty with the mystifying in the second quarter of last inept Spartan offense. Quarter- Saturday's contest, to wreck back Jimmy Raye completed only Iowa, 39-24. three of 15 passes for 29 yards. The wild offensive show was A Kaczmerek interception of a highlighted by two successful Raye pass thwarted the Spartans Northwestern on-side kicks and last chance after Isenbarger had a fake punt which was good for scored the lead touchdown. 33 yards. Quarterback Bill Melzer The third section, naturally, featured rows of objects. Shades of kindergarten, I thought. We were supposed to tell which ob- ject in the third column contained a certain characteristic which all the objects in the first column had that none of the objects in the second column had. I still couldn't pick out the rabbits. After struggling through hypothetical laws and hypothetical cases, ("Assuming that you can sue a man if he's trying to destroy com- petition, can B sue A if A threatens B with, a gun that has a faulty firing pin and B is a gun expert?") the morning session ended, and, after lunch, we were tested on writing ability and general knowledge. Apparently the test of a good writer is if he can properly organize a paragraph about cows. At least I think that's what it was about. But the general knowledge test was the back-breaker. Sure, there were questions about Aristotle, the moon, Jonathan Swift, Rembrandt. But never more than one of each. Septic tanks, of course, are a different story. They rated at least three questions. "Do septic tanks lower the water hole in the United' States?" "What substance is used in septic tanks?" Is grass green? How should I know. Sixteen years-and I can't remember one day spent on septic tanks. Can I help it if I didn't go to a progressive school? Where did I go wrong. Hadn't I said I liked raw carrots better than cooked carrots during orientation. Hadn't I eaten dinner once a week with the housemother when I lived in the Quad. Hadn't° I pretended to listen to my counselor for four years. And all I got was a sore neck from leaning over all day. At least everybody hissed at the end of the test. But there was one other encouraging sight. A guy at the end of my row brought a transistor radio and listened to the football game all afternoon. He must have aced Sewage 101. 4 1. I ii Let the Non-Students Decide?. S Why should non-students be voting members of student organizations? " Can't student organizations benefit from non-student participation without voting power? 9 Are non-students qualified to communicate student ideas to the public? o Don't student organizations reflect on the character of the University? 0 SGC Resolution allows up to 50% non-student membership in student organizations with as few as 2 of the officers being students. STUDENTS FOR STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS! ISSUE No. 1-Student-Community Organizations This was their eighth victory in as many starts, a first for any Indiana football team. The Boilermakers kept their share of first place last Saturday with an awesome display of of- fense, which totally snowed under' a highly touted Minnesota de- paced the rout as he passed for 130 yards. Ohio State's victory bell, which was silent for over a year, was finally heard after the Buckeyes 'eked out a 17-15 victory over win- less Wisconsin. It was the first home win of the season for the Buckeyes. 4 T fac's b AR OTE HA Olds 4-4-2. Three bucket-seat models: Holiday Coupe, Sports Coupe, Convertible. Cons titutional Convyen tion 0 SGC presently provides no small constituency for a delegate to represent. a Virtually no communication exists between the students and their representatives. e No power of recall is available to students dissatisfied with their representatives. a A constitutional convention may provide a more workable system. " Delaying a constitutional convention means extended misrepresentation. ISSUE No. 2-Constitutional Convention ENGINE Type.........................Rocket V-8 Bore x stroke, inches.........3.87 x 4.25 Displacement, cubic inches..........400 Compression ratio.........10.5-to-1 Bhp....................350* at 4800 rpm Torque, Ib.-ft............440 at 3200 rpm Carburetion........................4-bbl. Built-in Combustion Control System provides constant carb air temperature. Optional: Force-Air Induction System. Requires close-ratio 4-on-the-floor trans- mission or Turbo Hydra-Matic. 4.33-to-1 axle, 360 bhp at 5400 rpm. Optional: Cruising package: Includes 400-CID V-8 with 2-bbl. carb, 290 bhp, 9-to-1 compression, Turbo Hydra-Matic, 2.56-to-1 axle. 325-hp Rocket 400 V-8 with 4-bbl. carb and 10.5-to-1 compres- sion ratio teams with Turbo Hydra-Matic. *Bhp 325 with Turbo Hydra-Matic. DRIVE TRAIN Transmission.....Fully synchronized, heavy-duty 3-on-the-floor with Hurst Shifter Optional: 4-on-the-floor (close- or wide- ratio with Hurst Shifter) or Turbo Hydra- Matic floor shift. Prop shaft....................Heavy-duty Axle ratios (to 1)..2.56, 2.78, 3.08, 3.23, 3.42, 3.91, 4.33, 4.66 OTHER OPTIONS Power front disc brakes. UHV Transistor. ized Ignition. Anti-Spin Differential. Rally Stripe. Rally Pac (clock, tach, engine gauges). Sports console. Custom Sport Steering Wheel. Radial-Ply Whitewalls. Simulated-wire and Super Stock Wheels. Special wheel discs. Others. GENERAL A Optional: Heavy-duty axles (H.D.shafts, Wheelbase............112" bearings, differential gears), 3 ratios. Overall length....................201.6" Overall width............6.2" CHASSIS and BODY Overall height.......52.8" Suspension.........Heavy-duty. Includes Curb wt. (lb.) Holiday Coupe........3628 heavy-duty springs and shocks, front and Fuel capacity (gal...................20 rear stabilizers. Dual exhausts. Headroom (Holiday Coupe)...front 37.6" Steering ratio....... .......24-to-1 rear 36.3" Wheels........,....Heavy-duty 14-inch Legroom (Holiday Coupe).....front 42.7" with extra-wide rims rear 32.7" Tires................F70x14", Nylon-Cord Hiproom (Holiday Coupe).....front 59.5" Wide-Oval Red-Lines rear 53.0" Tread.............front 59.0", rear 59.0" 4 '4 VOTE YES a U of M Engineering Council ;. . I