Sunday, November 10, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine t Former Suckers shut out (Continued from page 1 I penetrations into Michigan terri- quarter; pick up steam in the sec- tory 'during the first half, gave ond period with two more scores; them only half a dozen plays be- a n d maintain the momentum fore forcing a punt. The offense throughout the second h a 1 f -- then took over on the Michigan 21.: much like t he proverbial steam Only five plays later came engine. Brown's bomb to Harris, as the The first score came on a four- fleet end got behind his defender_ yard Johnson plunge following a and outran him to the goal line. 64-yard Wolverine drive. Only Brown got the PAT this time, on' eight plays were needed, including I a seven-yard run (following a' a key interference call which gave Michigan a first down on the Il- linois 22. Killian's conversion at- tempt was wide left, and the Wol- Big Ten Standings five-yard penalty), and the Wol- verines had 20. The second half started off with an exchange of punts-hardly an offensive showing. Yet the Wol- verines were able to capitalize on them, especially since the second - a Mark Werner boomer - bounced right off the Illini re- ceiver's chest right into Dan Dier- dorf's waiting arms at the 21 of Illinois. Three passes later the score m ain. The first was inecmplete. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR' FRED LaBOUR i A .1 1 verines had a 6-0 lead. Johnson also gained the second Michigan TD, capping a 74-yard drive with a two-yard run. In ad- dition, the tailback figured here in probably the most exciting play of the game, grabbing a swing pass from Brown behind the line and twisting and powering his way for 31 yards, with the whole team downfield throwing blocks. Brown fumbled the PAT attempt follow- ing the touchdown, but Michigan had a 12-0 lead. Four minutes later the score- board operator was busy again. The Wolverine defense, which al- lowed the Illini only two minor MICHIGAN Ohio State Indiana Iowa Minnesota Purdue Michigan State Northwestern Illinois Wisconsin W 5 5 4 3 3 3 1 1 0 0 L 0 0 1 2 2 2 4 4 5 5 Pct. 1.000 1.000 .800 .600 .600 .600 .200 .200 .000 .000 g4 41. 11 Z it 11~ljliC the second was made good via in-' The very next play after the teference - admd the third was kickoff was a Bob Naponic-to- Brown's strike to Staroba. The Doug Redmann pass, one of the PAT pass was intercepted, but Illini quarterback's few comple- now it was 26-0: tions of the day. But the receiver promptly fumbled the ball, George Hoey fell on it at the 27, and the offense was back out. Four plays netted good yardage, but Killian came in on a fourth down to boot his field goal. The score: 29-0. That was the last time the first team scored, yet Elliott elected to leave them in till midway through the last period. Aterwards he explained his reasoning. I} . . r -Daily-Andy Sacks DENNIS BROWN (22) scoots along the sideline -Daily-Andy Sacks SUPERLATIVE RON JOHNSON (40) evades Illinois' John Mauzey Sports Beat Sports Beat Sports Beat By David We ir 4Hedcefumbles, and the seventh straight The first time he carried the ball in the fourth quarter, he did it. Ron "Flipper" Johnson, Michigan's All-American calibre half- back, took a pitchout around right end for three yards. With that, he went over the 2000 yards-gained plateau to become the second plgyer in Wolverine history to do so. Johnson has now lugged the ball a record 435 times for 2002 yards - only 132 short of Tom Harmon's all-time mark of 2134. Breaking into the select "2000-gained" circle didn't alter the game statistics, however, as Johnson suffered through his worst game of the season - 19 carries for 51 yards - against a deter- mined front-wall defensive unit from Illinois. On his initial carry from scrimmage in the first quarter, Johnson was hit hard and fumbled. "I was hit in the head," the Michigan captain explained after the game., "I never really recovered for the rest of the game - it continued to bother me. "Everyone seemed to be moving in slow motion, like a dream," he said. Johnson's fumble was the first lost by Michigan this season, The Wolverines had played 421'minutes and 10 seconds of game-time without losing the ball on a bobble. Yesterday they lost it that way) four times. "We were dropping the ball a lot because of the wetness," quarterback Dennis Brown said -in the post-game locker room. "Our receivers had trouble holding onto some of the passes, and we lost the ball once on a hike." "On the first two-point conversion attempt in the second quarter, I never even saw the ball-it never got to me. The rest of the fum- bles came when the ball carrier was hit." Brown hit on 13 of 27 passes in the game to close in on Dick Vidmer's all-time aerial records for Michigan. Hie now has a career total of 174 completions in 351 attempts . . only 13 and 31 respec- tively from Vidmer's marks. Safety Tom Curtis pre-empted the other 'Wolverine pace-setters yesterday, however, as he broke the all-time Big Ten record for in- terceptions in one ,season. Curtis snagged one of Illini quarterback Bob Naponic's fourtli- quarter passes for his eighth pickoff in five, conference games this year. The interception stopped the only teal scoring threat Illinois had all afternoon. Brown threw two touchdown passes to increase his season total to 12; and Johnson, the Big Ten scoring leader going into the game, added two more TDs for a 50-point total in the five games (he's scored 74 overall). Only Tom Harmon has racked up more touchdowns in one season. When asked to compare this year's team to his 1964 Rose Bowl squad, Head Coach Bump Elliott said that "the '64 team was much more dominating, while this year's club comes up with the 'Big Play' a lot of times. "Defensively, we're up to the '64 standard - we've improved rap- idly this season. Offensively, we've been able to strike fast and con- sistently in the last seven games," he noted. The Wolverines have scored 229 points to 96 for their opponents so far. They need only eight more points 4n the last two games to be- come the highest-scoring Michigan team in twenty years. Yesterday's victory' was remarkably similar to last week's over Northwestern. Michigan started out slowly, but took advantage of a few breaks for the 'Big Play' to build up an insurmountable lead at halftime, 20-0. The Illini were out of the contest before they knew what had happened. Spirit ran high, as usual, in the Wolverine locker room. And as g happy as anybody was Johnson. "We're gonna win three more games," he yelled. "Two now and one later." Yesterday's Results MICHIGAN 36, Illinois 0 Ohio State 43, Wisconsin 8 Indiana 24, Michigan State 22 Iowa 68, Northwestern 34 Minnesota 27, Purdue 13 I_ SCORES The Run for the Roses MI FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. OF RUSHES NET YARDS - Rushing 1 Passing2 FORWARD PASSESl ATTEMPTED Completed' Intercepted by Yards interceptions returned TOTAL PLAYS (Rushes and Passes) PUNTS, Number Average distance 1 KICKOFFS, returned by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kickoffs FUMBLES, Number Ball lost by PENALTIES, Number Yards penalized MICHIGAN 6 14 ILLINOIS 0 0 ICH. ILL. 23 15 12 14 9 1 2 0 47 62 154 225 242 35 31 16 15 5 2 0 Moorhead Total Mandich Harris Johnson Staroba Imsland Hankwitz Betts Is 4 2 0 16 31 15 0 242 Pass Receiving No. Yards 7 84 1 69 2 40 2 25 1 8 1 6 1 10 Totals 15 242 Ave. 12.0 69.0 20.0 12.5 8.0 6.0 10.0 22 78 6 35.7 34 15 33 78 5 Werner .6 Punting Number Yards Average 6 143 35.7 7 137 4I 4' 6 Rich 4 5 Naponi 7 5 Kmiec 75 62 Bess Raddal 9 7-36 Vargo 0 0 0- 0 Burns Johnsoi Li t~z ILLINOIS Rushing Tries n 27 17 4 4 5 4 Totals 62 Passing Att. Comp. 16, 5 Pass Receiving No. "Illinois has a history, of being awfully tough in the second half," the Wolverine mentor declared. "We wanted to keep our number one offense in till we felt it was all right, in order to rule out the possibility of them picking up momentum like they did against Ohio State." (Against the Buck- eyes, Illinois had rallied from a 24-0 deficit to tie the Big Ten co-leaders at one point in the second half.) This second half threat never materialzed. The only really sus- tained Illini drive came at the end of the third quarter and continued through the first part of the last period, ask Illinois took over at their own 15 and Naponic and Rich Johnson went to work. Twelve plays later the ball rest- ed on the Michigan 15, and a score seemed imminent. But Tom Curtis came up with his eighth Big Ten interception-a record-and that was that. SALE! CHEAP! ! Junior sizes 7 and 9 Dresses $10, Skirts $5, Slacks $5, Sweaters $5. HARDLY WORN!I Sun., Nov. 10, 12-6 P.M., 721 South Forest, No 309 NO CHECKS! GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 36, Illinois 0 Indiana 24, Miiigan State 22 Minnesota 27, Prdue 13, Iowa 68, Northwestern 34 Ohio State 43, Wisconsin 8 Army 58, Boston College 25 Penn State 22, Miami (Fla.) 7 Alabama 16, LSU 7 NC State 17, Duke 15 Georgia 51, Florida 0 SMU 36, Texas A&M 23 Stanford 35, Washington 20 USC 35, California 17 Oregon State 45, UCLA 21 South Carolina 34, Wake Forest 21 Oklahoma 27, Kansas 23 Navy 35, Georgia Tech 15 Harvard 9, Princeton 7 Cincinnati 37, Louisville 7 Austin Peay 56, Murray State 0 THE EXAM SECRET MICHIGAN Net Ave. 121 4.5 32 1.9 94 6.0 is 4.51 1i 3.6 15 3.7 -3 -3.0 225 Int. Yards 2 35 Yards Ave. 15 15.0 14 7.0 4 4.0 2 2.0I 35 Missouri 42, Iowa State 7 Notre Dame 56, Pittsburgh 7 Ohio U. 28, Bowling Green 27 Oklahoma State 34, Colorado 17 Arkansas 46, Rice 21 Texas Tech 31, Texas Christian 14 Oregon 27, Washington State 13 Oregon State 45, UCLA 21 VMI 21, Davidson 17 Arizona 14, Air Force 10 Utah State 34, Brigham Young 7 Dartmouth 31, Columbia 19 Kansas State 12, Nebraska 0 Texas 47, Baylor 26 Muskinggum 31, Heidelberg 0 Montana State 41, North Dakota 7 Bemidji 37, St. Thomas 0 Ricks 19, Snow 14 Fort Lewis 20, Westminster 19 Pacific Lutheran 39, Whitman 17 Lane 20, Fisk 7 SUCCESSFUL TECHNIQUES FOR PASSING EXAMS I I I I V Johnson Brown Craw Moorhead Scheffier sipp Beruttl Rushing Tries 19 13 3 6 2 Totals 47 JUMBOY Net Ave. Naponic 51 2.6 45 3.5J 2 0.7 24 8.0 Raddatz 24 4.3 Redmann 6 3.0 Kmiec 0 0.0 Johnson 154 Int. Yards 0 226 Bareither D. BROWN, passer LET US STYLE YOUR HAIR TO FIT YOUR PERSONALITY Y 1 2 1 Totals 5 " 8 BARBERS * No Waiting The Dascola Near Michigan NOW-You can shine in Exami- nations and Life! Don't fail exams through ignorance of tehnique! "The Exam Secret" gives you ex- perience, knowledge needed to make good. It includes: magical lessons; essay is the key; year's master-plan, etc. Complete. 128 pages. Only $1 ppd. Money-back guarantee. EVERSOLE CO., BOX 10231 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of ilb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup'. ALL THIS FOR'ONLY 49c L MNG PEEDY ERVICE West of Arborlond rassi i mp Att. Comp. 27 13 Punting Number Yards Average 5 168 33.6, Barbers Theatre Browne U- . """"... ADVE.RT i .} r{rShouldKn e r wrra. i ~ Is owv ERS rWhat ,'' ~ z~ 2 A RECORD SPECTACULAR!!, AT discountrecords, inc. 3oo S. State St. 10 MAJOR LABELS AT AMAZING SAVINGS -ONE DAY ONLY- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10th TUESDAY'S DEADLINE has been changed MONDAY 12 NOON Office hours Monday 9-12, 1-4 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. DON'T FORGET!r _ _ _ _ _ _ _--- ii _. _. .: FOCUS ON LATIN AMERICA CONSIDER A Monsignor IYAN ILLICH Speaking On the Seamy Side of Crarity: some statements about American Missionary work in Latin America. TUESDAY, NOV. 12 noon - International Center Luncheon "Social Change in Latin America Today" 8:00 p.m. - Rackham Auditorium "The Danger of the School System as a Belief System: The Need to Demythologize Education." Introduction by Prof. Mathew Trippe, Special Ed., School of Educa- tion. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13 noon - Canterbury House, 331 Maynard St. "Peasants in Latin American Church & Society." Dis- cussion with Prof. Eric Wolf, Anthropology. 8:00 p.m. - St. Andrew's Episc. Church, 306 N. Divis- ion. "Christianity & Communism: Coexistence or Con- flict." Discussion with Prof. Albert Meyer, Polit. Sci. Men and money sent with missionary motivation carry a foreign Chris- tian image, a foreign pastoral approach and a foreign political message. They also bear the mark of North American capitalism of the 1950's. Why not, for once, consider the shady side of charity; weigh the inevitable burdens foreign help imposes on the South American Church; taste the bitterness of the damage done by our sacrifices? Superficial emotional involvement obscures rational thinking about American international "assistance." Healthy guilt feelings are repressed by a strangely motivated desire to "help" in Vietnam. Finally, our generation begins to cut through the rhetoric of patriotic "loyalty." We stumblingly recognize the perversity of our power politics and the destructive direction of our warped efforts to impose unilaterally "our way of life" on all. We have not yet begun to face the seamy side of clerical manpower involvement and the Church's complicity in stifling universal awakening too revolutionary to lie quietly within the "Great Society." Groups of U.S. missioners cannot avoid projecting the image of "U.S. outposts." The U.S. missioner of necessity is an "undercover" agent-albeit unconscious-for U.S. Social and political consensus. But, consciously and purposely, he wishes to bring the values of his Church to South America; adaptation and selection seldom reach the level of questioning the values themselves. Latin America can no longer tolerate being a haven for U.S. liberals CIVILIAN AIR FORCE CAREER with the AIR FORCE LOGISTICS COMMAND at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio There are excellent opportunities in INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING (All engineering degrees considered) for those interested in the Air Force Logistics Command Staff Positions. The Industrial Engi- neer applies his skill in the areas of management systems, design, significant problem solving using his knowledge of the mathematical and physical sciences together with methods and principles of engineering analysis and design. He is a consultant to management in the application of proven management techniques to increase the effectiveness, efficiency, and economy of Air Force operations. He also administers and operates in methods improvement and processing engineering. He receives on-the-lob training in all the foregoing' areas and within a minimum of training time. The Industrial Engineer is given specific assignments relating to the above areas of activity pertaining to the particular organization to which he is assigned. Throughout his career, he continpes to be given increased responsibility commen- surate with his ability. I, I i