Page Si- THE MICHIGAN DAILl 5ntijrcinv Nnvomkoe 14 1 QAJQ Page Si> THE MICHIGAN DAILY autuluuy., i.Nuv :T oer Io, i,7Fo 5 Michigan frosh dominate ToledoMaior Dowers try to Cure bowl fever J < 11 C k -t 1 t 1 c 1 i , as defense keeps Rockets on pad By JOE MARKER why many of the shivering gather- quick personal foul penalties (ac- The Michigan freshman football ing were not electrified by the counting for 30 of the 107 penalty team squeezed out a 12-7 verdict early play. Michigan rushed 22 yards stepped off against Michi- over Toledo. last night' at Ann times for 54 yards, a 2.4 average, gan) moved the Rockets to the Arbor's Holloway Field in a game while Toledo/lost one yard in 17 Michigan 24. Then, in what may unexpectedly dominated by the attempts. have been the key play of the two defensive units. The most exciting play other game, Tom Darden intercepted than the touchdown came on a for the Wolverines and Toledo had The Michigandefense so con- 49-yard field goal attempt by the made its last threat till its 1 a s t trolled the game that Toledo, Wolverines' Dana Coin, which was minute score. which had averaged 42 points a long enough but barely wide to the The huge Michigan defensive board until the final 16 seconds of right. This made it all the more front four, John Cilluffo (205), boar uie fincredible that he missed the point Fred Grambau (250), Tom Beck- the game, after the first touchdown. man (245), and Alden Carpenter The first half was a tense, near- Toledo, however, came out of (203), took command of the game ly scoreless struggle, with neither the dressing room unwilling to from that point and late in the team able to generate any sem- play dead for the Wolverines in third quarter pushed Toledo back blance of a sustained drive. The the third stanza. The Rockets had to its 16 yard line. only score came on a lightning- been plagued by bad field posi- Here an aborted Rocket punt like touchdown strike from Mich- tion all evening; frequently taking provided comic relief for the igan quarterback Dennis Connell possession of the ball within their crowd. Lee Goodman, backed up to Glen Doughty that covered 42 twenty yard line. into his own end zone, decided to By HANK LOWENTHAL Watch out, it's spreading! Bowl fever, dormant early in the sea- son, is quickly rising to its annual height as the top teams close out their schedule. It has struck all over the country, from Texas to Alabama, and Southern Califor- nia to Oregon State. The cure for the delirium brought on by this fall disease never fails: a piece of cotton, a bit of orange, a pinch of sugar, and lots of roses. In Los Angeles this week, the smell of roses is stirring on the co- leaders in the Pacific Eight, top- rated Southern Cal and Oregon! State. Last week the Trojans faced a tough and highly praised Califor- nia defense. The game was touted1 as a confrontation between this defense and all-everything, O. J. Simpson. It was no match. O. J. gained one-hundred and sixty- four yards against a line that had yielded an average of only ninety point one yards per game. In- cluded in Simpson's yardage were touchdown jaunts of seven and thirty-nine yards. An important cog in the power- ful USC offense but overshadowed by the exploits of Simpson, has been quarterback Steve Sogge. Against California last week, he completed 10 passes, including three for touchdowns as the Tro- jans won easily 35-17. The key to an OSU victory on Saturday will depend on their own All-American candidate, Bill yards with only u minutes ilt- I Connell spotted him when he was about five yards behind the last Toledo defender. and -led him with a perfectly thrown aerial that marked the only scoring of the half and gave the Wolverines a 6-0 advantage.. Toledo's best first-half chance came on its initial turn with the ball. The R ckets had recovered a Michigan fumble on their own 47 and moved to the 25 on Chuck Ealey passes before being thwart -ed.\ Simple statistics will illustrate, i y - - W%..Or I-ow Ann- 4 mw %-Of Isollm JIL %-/ They returned the second-half kickoff to the thirty-five and put together their first sustained drive. They quickly moved through the Michigan line tosthe Wolverines' 42 and then received a big break on a pass interference call at the 15. They couldn't capitalize, though, as on second down Doughty stepped in front of the the intended receiver to steal an Ealey aerial.. Toledo then stopped Michigan cold and four plays later put the ball in play on their own 45, again in excellent field position. Two pass rather than punt, but chang- ed his mind at the last moment, and kicked a line drive which smacked one'of his linemen in the head for a minus four yard kick. Michigan took advantage of the break by throwing an interception on the first play. Getting down to business early in the final stanza,dthe Wolverine frosh rolled 58 yards in ten plays to effectively put the game out of reach. Bruce Elliott used the roll- out to move to the one yard line, where Dave Zuccarelli crashed over for the clincher. The final twelve minutes werer Basketball ticket information Season Basketball tickets for Michigan Students will go on sale Tuesday, November'19 at 8:30 A.M. These are priced at six dollars for a Season Reserved Seat. There are twelve home games. The Student tickets will be distributed on the same Priority basis as in Football as follows: - Priority No. 4 - Tuesday 8:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. Priority No. 3 - Tuesday 12:30 P.M. to 5 P.M. Priority No. 2 - Wednesday 8:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. Priority No. 1 - Wednesday 12:30 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. Your I.D. Card indicates the first year of registration and the priority is as follows: Priority No. 4 will have a 5 or less Priority No. 3 will have a 6 Priority No. 2 will have three registration letters imprinted. Priority No. 1 will have one registration letter imprinted. These numbers are at the right of your Student number. A Student may pick up four tickets with four I.D.'s with the proper Priority number. Students with various priorities, who wish to sit together, should pick up tickets at time shown for-lowest priority of group. Please have your check made out to the Michigan Ticket Department for the proper amount and your address thereon. Student Distribution will be at the main entrance to the Athletic Administration Building. The front doors will be marked to indicate the proper group. f Enyart. A large, rambling full- back, Enyart is currently fourth in the nation in rushing, having already surpassed the one thous- l and yard mark. With wingback Billy Main shar- ing the rushing chores, the Bea- vers overwhelmed an ever-danger- ous UCLA eleven last Saturday, 45-21. So today's game shapes up as the championship for the Pacific Eight conference. Unless OSU is somehow able to stop Simpson (maybe by breaking his leg in the first quarter), they will probably be the Trojans eighth straight vic- tim in their run for the roses and a second straight national cham- pionship. In Birmingham, Alabama, an- other possible conference cham- pion could be decided when Au- burn hosts fifth ranked Georgia. Both teams, undefeated in the SEC, had impressive wins last week. Led by sophomore quarterback Mike Cavan, the Bulldogs routed Florida, 51-0. Auburn pulled the upset of the year in downing pre- viously unbeaten Tennessee, 28-14. A victory here for either would solidify a Bowl bid. Look out for an Auburn upset, though. The top game in the Southwest conference pits two of the four teams tied for first, Arkansas and SMU. This game should be typi- cal of many college games this year, a showcase for the offensive units. Two of the top sophomore quar- terbacks in the country will be featured in this contest. SMU's Chuck Hixon, throwing aerial bombs to All-American Jerry Le-I vias, has led the ,country in bothI passing and total offensive yard-{ age from the outset of the season. Arkansas' soph sensation Bill Montgomery has alreadyibroken their single season total offensive yardage record of sixteen-hundred and twenty-two yards. There will be many points1 YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM MEETING SUNDAY, NOV. 17 3:00 P.M. Room 3B-Union Future plans, psychological questionaires Second newspaper mere formality. M FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. RUSHES NET YARDS- Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES ATTEMPTED Cozy pleted Intercepted by Yds. interceptions re TOTAL PLAYS (Rushes and Passes) PUNTS, No. Average Distance KICKOFFS, returned by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kickoffs FUMBLES, Number Ball lost by PENALTIES, Number Yards penalized ichigan Opponent 16 19 11 16 4 11 1, 2 51 39 169 70 125 185 20 41 8 16 2 1 '.24 0 71 70 7 8 40.9 28.7 2 3 t O. J. SIMPSON, Southern Cal's All-American halfback and Heis- man Trophy candidate, is down a4d out on this play, but it is not a position in which the 'rojan star is often found. Simpson is\ currently number two in he country in both rushing and scoring, and is the man that Oregon State must stop today in the big battle on the west coast. A victory for either team should send the winner to Pasadena on New Year's day to face the Big Ten, champion. racked up in this battle, but Ar- Kwalick, a powerful backfield of kansas should account for most halfbacks Charlie Pittman and of them. Bob Campbell, and a hustling de- The Missouri-Oklahoma strug-? fense, they impressed Miami coach gle will be a battle between two of Charlie Tate so much that he the top defensive units in the was prompted to comment, "This country. Missouri, currently rank- is the best team we've faced, bet- ed sixth in the nation,, will have ter than USC." its hands full against the always In a traditional clash at Yale potent Oklahoma offense. This Bowl in New Haven today, Yale will be a close game, and could meets Princeton. The Bulldogs, go either way, ktied with Harvard for first in the Of the major independents, Ivy League, are led by quarterback Penn St. and Notre Dame should Briah Dowling, fullback Calvin coast to easy victories today. Hill, and one of the top defenses Many observers feel that the in the country. Princeton is having Nittany Lions might possibly have one of it's poorer seasons and the best team in the country. Led should not be able to handle this by All-American tight end Ted top Yale eleven. 4 I I 92 60 32 4 1 8 107 67 6 61 3 2 4 20 PRO BASKETBALL: Leaders win on clutch buckets By The Associated Press The Celtics has seven players in phia before fouling out late in the BOSTON-Boston's Bill Russell double figures, topped by Bailey fourth period. broke a tie with a three-point play Howell with 27 points. Lou Hudson led Atlanta with 26 * * * points. Walt Hazzard had 21. in the closing seconds of the third IF F*1 * I a I MBA 's Dear MBA Students: In the November, 1968 edition of MBA magazine, you will find a RE-CON-MBA Candidate Ques- tionnaire for you ,to fill out, as well as its counterpart for Employers, the RE-CON Job Specification (Input) form. Whether or not you are looking for permanent employment, we would like you-to be a RE-CON representative-and receive compensation for your time and efforts. Simply make the Job Specifications form available to any company considering employment of an MBA next spring. Just make sure you identify yourself as the RE-CON representative by inserting your name and address in the appropriate space on the back page of the Job Specification Form. period and the Celtics exploded for 10 straight points at the out- set of the fourth quarter l a s t night rolling to a 116-105 National Basketball Association victory over the Cincinnati Royals. With reserve Don Nelson scoring 13 of his 21 points in the final 12 minutes, the Celtics built a 20- point lead and breezed to their ninth victory in 12 starts. Ft ~ Hawks clipped ATLANTA - Billy Cunningham tossed in two free throws with two seconds left to give the Philadel- phia 76ers a 116-115 National Bas- ketball Association victory over the Atlanta Hawks last night. Cunningham was the game's leading scorer with 27 points, Luc- ius Jackson had 23 for Philadel- ii Speed Your Way TO Better Pay Educational Institutions Large Research Establishments, Government Agencies, and Many Small Businesses are in constant need of: Bullets explode BALTIMORE -'the Baltimore Bullets went on a scoring ram- page at the end of the third quar- ter, and start of the fourth and broke open a tight game for a 129 102 route over Milwaukee in a National Basketball Association game last night. Gus Johnson led the Bullets with 28 points and the league's leading scorer, Earl Monroe, 25. Pipers fly MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL- Connie Hawkins stuffed in 35 points and grabbed 20 rebounds to spark the Minnesota Pipers'to a 105-95 American Basketball As- sociation victory over the Indiana Pacers, playing their first game under, new Coach Bob Leonard. Hawkins scored the baskets at the start of the fourth period that snapped a76-76 tie and sent the Pipers ahead for good. He also blocked five shots in winning his first battle against Indiana's big man, Mel Daniels who had 14 re- bounds but only 12 points. THE EXAM SECRET * MSUCCESSFUL I TECHNIQUES .< FOR PASSING EXAMS- 1~ For additional CORP., or call Daily-Peter Dreyfuss Happiness is rugby Michigan rugger. Pete Mildner grabs the ball earlier this season. Champs in the Southwest Ontario Unioh with a 6-2 re- cord, Michigan is still undefeated in Big Ten competition. To- day's meeting with Wisconsin ('B' game at 11:30 p.m.; 'A' game at 3:30 p.m.) is the last real stumbling block to that goal, despite next week's game with Ohio State. A third game will also be play- ed at 5 this afternoon against the- Borderers from Windsor. information, write to RE-CON collect 212-687-2090. 9 Executive Secretaries '0 Stenographers 00f~~Jf Respectfully, RE-CON CORP. 342 Madison Avenue Suite' 1607 New York, New York 10017 * Office Machine Operators * Receptionists " Clerk-Typists * IBM-Key Punch Operators Hamilton Business College can quickly prepare you for these high-paying positions. Exclusive Speedwrit- ing shorthand will allow you to master the shkrthand skill in just a few weeks. Call today 769-4507. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE STATE and WILLIAM -, ANN ARBOR The Organizational Committee of the ,;, 1 NOW-You can shine in Exami- nations and Life! Don't fail exams through ignorance of technique! "The ExamkSecret" gives' you ex- perience, knowledge needed to make good. It includes: magical lessons; essay is the key; year's master-plan, etc. Complete. 1 28 pages. Only $1 ppd. Money-back guarantee. EVERSOLE CO., BOX 10231 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 STUDENT NEW DEMOCRATIC COALITION tvill meet Sun., Nov. 17 2:30 Room 3R Union Those willing to work, please come SR EL 0 " 1 II 11 , J I IF, * Volunteer Service " Israel Universities * Language Study * Kibbutz Summer AN INFORMATIVE CONFERENCE ON ALL OPPORTUNITIES TO TOUR, STUDY, WORK AND LOVE ISRAEL. DR. DAVID GUTMANN, U. of M. DEPT. OF PSYCHOLOGY, WILL SPEAK ON: ,"ISRAEL: PRECONCEPTIONS AND REALITY" Resource people and materials will be made available individually and in workshops. T ER | S7l S M UNION-LEAGUE THERE IS STILL UNION-LEAGUE EUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHTS FLIGHT 1 May 4 DETROIT-LONDON Sabena June 1 BRUSSELS-DETROIT FLIGHT 2 May 8 NEW YORK-LONDON Sabena Aug. 17 BRUSSELS-NEWYORK FLIGHT 3 - June 29 NEWYORK-LONDON Pan Am IIAuI 14 PARIS-NJW YORK ENGINEERS A representative from the Jervis B. Webb Company will be on Campus No- vember 18, 1968. Graduating Students - Opportunities are excellent for those who desire a career in i I i the Material Handling Industry and are interested in diversification of training in all product areas-from designing to wherever If i 11 Ii 3 I