I THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 8, 1968 Tus~y cobr8.16 Retrospect: BIG TEN PUDDING Some win and others lose from the seat BJI pevkn of my rants4 By JOE MARKER The opening of the conference season highlighted the third week of action for Big Ten teams. Each of the three conference games played Saturday pitted a confer- ence favorite against an also-ran, and none produced any suprises. At Evanston, Purdue, the nearly unanimous choice as the top- ranked team in the nation, scored the firt time it received the foot- ball and romped to a 43-6 demoli- tion of Northwestern. Although the Boilermaker of- fensive; unit rolled up more than 300 yards in total offense, the game was dominated by a pressing defensive unit which did not per- mit a Wildcat score until the re- serves entered the game in the final quarter. Vero Paraskevas, Chuck Kle, Bob Yunaska, and Co., held Northwestern to 60 yards in the first half and 33 in the third quarter before leaving the game. Leroy Keyes again led the of- fensive show for Purdue with three touchdown gallops of six yards and picked up another 100 yards rushing before leaving the game in the thtird quarter. However, Keyes removal did not benefit the Wildcats as untried sophomore John Bullock, who hails from the same Newport News, Virginia, high school as Keyes, grqund out 80 yards in 13 carries as a\ replace- ment. Other than these Southern re- cruits, the offense left little to cheer about as they sputtered to a 14-14 deadlock and escaped with' an O.egon punt on the nine yard a 28-14 victory, line and ran it into the endzone. Quarterback Harry G o n s o The Web oots got on the score- sparked the Hoosiers' late game board late in the first half, but surge with a scoring pass to Jade then the Ohio defense took over Butcher and a touchdown run of hn t Ohio defenst ove his own of six yards after Illinois and did not allow a first down the had spent most of a scoreless third r. Cl0ire RICH JOHNSON PHIL HAGEN 13-0 halftime lead, one score com- ing with only seconds left in.the half. Michigan State did nothing spe.ctacular in a 39-0 rout of win- less Wisconsin - they simply ground out touchdown after touchdown against an overmatch- ed opposition. The Spartans made little use;of the passing game as they rushed on 67 occassions, 20 by quarter-, back Bill Feraco, for 260 yards. punt situation only twice, as com-; pared t 10 times for the Badgers' David Billy. All the State touch-! downs came on runs of one or two, yards, with Feraco plunging over the goal line three times from the! one. The Spartans demonstrated1 field goal strength which couldf be helpful this Saturday against, arch-rival Michigan as Gary Boycet kicked two through the uprights1 from 38 and 40 yards.E Indiana ran into unexpectedlyt quarter inside Indiana territory. The Illini faced a 14-0 deficit. in the first quarter, but fought back to even the game at half-, time on short runs by Rich John- son and Bob Naponic after In- diana fumbles, and dominated play until the late rally, In non-conference action. Iowa faced the fury of Notre Dame and came out on the short end of a! 51-28 shellacking. The fifth- ranked Irish, stinging from its'loss to Purdue last week, broke a 14- 14 first quarter tie and raced to, a 31-14 halftime lead on the strength of an awesome offensive display. Wake forest nearly surprised supposedly strong Minnesota be- fore succumbing to the Gophers 24-19 on two touchdowns in the last ten minutes of the game. Minnesota scored on marches of 80 and 75 yards, the final score coming on a 28-yard Phil Hagen to Chip Litten pass to overcome, both a 19-10 deficit and the rain and wind which hampered both teams. Sixth-ranked Ohio State pre- pared for Purdue's invasion, this week by using its stingy defense to overcome Oregon 21-6. The Buck-! eyes scored early in the game when safety Mike Polaski blocked In the second half, the Buck- eyes broke the game open on a 35-yard touchdown gallop by Jim Otis and a 55-yard scoring pass from resei ve quarterback Ron Marciejowski'to Bruce Jankowski. The settling of the dust, or mud, as the case may be. reveal's a fam- iliar alignment in the conference standings: Purdue and Indiana at the top and Illinois, Northwestern, and Wisconsin at the bottom. By next week, all the teams will have played conference games, with the Purdue-Ohio State clash the first showdown., B oIllboarda ..'.4'.lO,,% . . . The Fraternity 'A' Touch Football playoffs start tonight on Wines Field. Games are ;sAceduled for 5:50, 6:35, 7:20, and 8:05 p.m. The/ Joint Judiciary Council will hear complaints against the marching band for making too much noise during practice on Wines Field tomorrow night at 7 p.m. on the third floor of the S.A.B. Homecoming '68 DIONNE WARW-ICK CONCERT Oct. 24, 8:30 P.M. Univ. Events Bldg. The monotonous pattern mani- strong opposition from an Illinois! fested itself early in the contest, team which had been previously i.e. Wisconsin punt, State touch- crushed by two Big Eight foes, as down, kickoff, Wisconsin punt, touchdown, etc. the Hoosiers had to score twice in In fact, MSU was forced into a the final six minutes to break a. valute life? Joel Cordish is a teaching fellow in English 123 but he doesn't know why he is teaching the course or even why he is still in school. He has been going to college for over six years and it doesn't make any sense to him. People need help all over the world and here we are, all of us, grubbing for grades. This semester, in particular, has been one of reflection for Joel. Because of this, his heart has not been in his books, and he has yet to do any studying. Instead, Joel has spent his time organizing a McCarthy for Presi- dent write-in campaign in Michigan. Disillusioned, as many of us, with this year's political scene and the massive problems facing this country, he has buried himself in this effort. Since Robert Kennedy was assassinated in California last June and Senator McCarthy and his supporters were ignored in Chicago in August, Joel has not known where to turn. School, and all its sense- less work were not the answers. He has been running to them for six years and all they have been giving him is agony. So this year, he has submersed himself in the McCarthy cam- paign. Whil he knows the Senator has no chance of winning, Joel has to expr ss his disenchantment with the present system of select- indpresidential nominees and voting for McCarthy is his way of do- ing it. Still, he was not even totally committed. to this write-in effort. Lately, Joel has been wondering if all his work is doing any good. He recently wrote a letter to the Daily articulating why he is still sup- porting McCarthy but even then he didn't believe what he was saying. It all seemed so useless to him. Joel began to talk about leaving this. country, but only after fin- ishing school. After spending so much time in college, he had to get something out of it. After graduation, he wants to quit the system. It doesn't seem worthwhile to him to stay. Dissent doesn't appear to do any good and Joel is not the type to turn to violence. If going to school, teaching a few classes and working on the Mc- Carthy campaign wasn't enough, he has been spending much of his time working out with the Lacrosse club. He probably joined just' to let himself go. In this modern, supercomplica'ted world there never seems to be a chance to enjoy yourself. You always have to- be so ser- ious. Lacrosse was Joel's way of forgetting "about his cares and enjoy- ing himself. It's just a game. Sure, there are winners and losers, but the losers always have the chance to play and try to win again. Life doesn't appear' to grant Joel that opportunity. All life gives him is headaches and more headaches. Joel won't get a chance to play Lacrosse again this year or any year. It's not that he doesn't want to. He can't. Joel Cordish was shot in thes back by an unknown assailant at 4 'a.m. Saturday morning on the Diag. He most likely will be paralyzed for life from the neck down. There are no leads as to who did the shooti ig and no reason to believe that anyone wanted to shoot Joel He was just there wlen someone, with a gun, got mad and had to pull the trigger. The police are quick to put down dissent with clubs and tear gas but they sure aren't quick when it comes to life and death. Joel Cord- ish was shot Saturday morning, three days ago. The police department did not put a detective on the case until:yesterday. In those two days, the assailant could have hopped a plane to Zanzibar. . We are quick to punish dissenters for protesting the system but we are slow to track down would-be murderers when they find a vic- tim. We are quick to silence dissent but try to get an effective gun control bill through Congress. It seems we have our priorities upside down. Joel is alive, alert and off the critical list at University Hospital. He is now in intensive care and may be able to leave the hospital in about a week. But Joel will probably never walk again. The feelings in his right side were completely cut off by the bullet. He may re- cover some mobility of his left side but Joel deserves more. He had begun to plan his whole life but iiow those plans have gone down the drain. He has to start all over again. All because some- one got mad and had to shoot him in the back. 'S of Maybe some day we'll learn to protect and preserve life instead destroying it. It seems too much to ask of mankind now. 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