Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 19, 1969 PageTenTHEMICHGANDAIY Suday Ocober19,196 * SWAX* II OFAUĀ£g1CA,*1. Volkswagen doesnt do it again. Beautiful. It's not any longer. It's not any lower. And it's not any wider. The ]970 Volks-' wagen. Ugly as ever. Beauti- ful. Just beautiful. HOWARD COOPER VOLKSWAGEN INC. 2575 So. State St., Ann Arbor Phone 761-3200 Open Mon. & Thurs. till 9 P.M. AUTHORIZI Overseas Delivery AvailableD Buckeyes sock It to Gophers, 34- By The Associated Press I MINNEAPOLIS - No. 1 ranked Ohio State, feasting on every op-' portunity, beat back its stiffesta challenge and trimmed Minneso-. ta 34-7 yesterday for its 18th con-l secutive victory. The Buckeyes, recovering five; fumbles and intercepting one pass,j stopped the inspired Gohpers fivec times inside the Ohio State 20- yard line to stretch their 1969 re-' cord to 4-0. Minnesota is 0-4-1. Fullback Jim Otis gave thel Bucks the only points they need- ed in the first period on runs of eight and two yards, each cap-j ping short drives set up by wobbly Minnesota punts deep in Gopherl territory.' The Gophers, behind Jim Car- ter's running and Phil Hagen'sf passing, drove to the Ohio Statet one in the second period. But Ha- I gen threw wildly on a pitchout and the Buckeyes' Dave Whitfield recovered on the Ohio 13.t Woody Hayes' charges quicklyj marched 87 yards in 13 p 1 a y s, with reserve quarterback Kevin Rusnak passing 25 yards to Bruce! Jankowski for the touchdown that' gave Ohio State a 20-0 halftime, lead.- Minnesota linebacker R i c h f Crawford scooped up a Rusnak1 fumble in the third period andI raced 51 yards to the Ohio Statel 21, setting up Carter's six-yard touchdown run, the only Minne- sota score of the afternoon. The Buckeyes, stopping the Go- phers on t h e 13 after Hagen's third fumble, iced the game with Leo Hayden's seven-yard touch- down run in the final period. First' string quarterback Rex Kern, shaken up in the second period,, returned to quarterback the Bucks on the march w i t h his nimble ballhandling. Ray Gillian completed the BucK- eye scoring with a one-yard plunge. Purdue squeaks by JaAFAYETTE - Purdue scored late on an 83-yard drive and sur- vived with a 35-31 victory when anI Iowa drive stopped inches of a first down on the Boilermakers' three-yard line with 24 seconds to play in a wild offensive show. Quarterback Mike Phipps, held without a touchdown pass the first time this season, directed the late drive that put the Boilermakers back ahead after they had blown a 28-14 lead with the help of four lost fumbles in the third period. A key play in the winning march: was a pass interference call which gave Purdue a 19-yard gain and a first down on the Iowa 20-yardj line. Three plays later, halfback Randy Cooper swept around left end for the touchdown. Iowa took the ensuing kickoff with only 1:42 to play and drove 72 yards in seven plays. On ai fourth-and-15 play, quarterback Larry Lawrence passed to fullbackE Tom Smith on the three, where his knee touched the ground be- fore he continued into the end zone. The official spotted the ball just short of the first down: marker. Lawrence and halfback Levi Mitchell, a Gary, Ind., product, were the stars of the Hawkeye offense that outgained Purdue, 534 yards to 329. Mitchell scored three touchdowns, one on a 21- yard pass from Lawrence that put Iowa ahead, 31 to 28, with 11:28 to play in the game. Phipps had two touchdown runs, as did Purdue halfback Stan Brown. One of Brown's touch- downs was on an 88-yard kickoff return in the first half. The victory left Purdue at 1-1 in the Big Ten and 4-1 overall Iowa is 0-2 in the conference. yards in 24 carries to supplement Isenbarger's 127 yards. Illinois jumped to a 6-0 lead in the first quarter on a 1-y a r d plunge by David Jackson, which was set up by a 40-yard pass in- terference penalty. Pogue scored for Indiana on a 1-yard plunge, the first play of the second quarter, after Illinois fumbled a punt, and a pass from Harry Gonso to Jade Butcher was allowed on interference. The Hoosiers clustered three touchdowns in the third quarter, two of t h e m set up by Illinois fumbles recovered by Hoosier line- backer Karl Pankratz. Gonso sneaked from the Illinois one, Is- enbarger ran one from the 19, and Larry Highbaugh scored another on a 35-yard pass from M i k e Heizman. Illinois scored two touchdowns late in t h e wild third quarter. Tony Clements of the Illini pick- ed up an Indiana fumble on the Hoosiers' 34. Livas passed 34 yards to Kaiser and then carried the last yard. Livas starred again in the next Illinois drive, passing 35 yards to Mike Pickering and then keeping again for the last yard to the goal line. Isenbarger scored for Indiana in the fourth quarter, on a 1-yard plunge, and Pogue went 7 for the final TD. W * * --Associated Press OHIO STATE'S JIM OTIS (35) barrels over Gopher defender Garry Hohman (45) for the Buckeyes' EVANSTON - Mike Adamle, first touchdown. The first-half play came after Otis took a senior halfback from Kent, Ohio, and burst through the Gopher defense for the eight-yard barged over 30 yards and a school rushing record to lead Northwest- er to a 27-7 victory over defense- R UGGER INJURIES COSTLY: lesWisconsin yesterday. 'RUGGER___________________________________ an handoff from quarterback Rex Kern, d dash to paydirt. JUMBOY M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of 1 4b. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, movonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup .'. 4MIUWQ PEEOY &ERVCE West of Arborland Adamle's rampaging obliterated the Northwestern mark of 218 in 23 rushes by Chuck Hren against Navy in 1951. He also set a school rushing attempt mark and only once was thrown for a loss and that for only one yard. The Big Ten rushing record is 347 yards by Michigan's Ron Johnson against Wisconsin last year. In the first half Adamle gained' 187 yards and scored one touch-! down on a 20 yard run, whichI gave Northwestern a 17-0 first! quarter lead. Northwestern had scored earlier on a 32-yard Dave Shellbourne to Barry Pearson pass, while Bill: Planisek had put the Wildcats on, the scoreboard wtih a 42-yard field goal. Soccerman fall to Cleveland St; Buckeyes overwhelm stickmen The Michigan rugby team suf-' fered its' first regular season loss yesterday, as the spirited Mich- igan State ruggers capitalized on sloppy play and two Michigan in- juries to capture a 21-16 victory. Meanwhile the Michigan B team managed a revenge of sorts as they completely dominated the ac- tion against States B squad, 11-3. Michigan Blue team got off to a sloppy start, and were down 3-0 when matters worsened. In a messy play two Michigan Ruggers larfd State University in a match yesterday that ran into double overtime. A disputed call during play brought protests from the Michigan bench, who plan to carry their objections to the Intercol- legiate Soccer Federation. The disputed call took place at the end of the first period of over- time on a penalty shot against' Michigan coalie Rick Moore. CSU's frist shot missed, but Moore moved his foot, and Cleveland was awarded another shot on goal. deadlock for the entire first period of overtime, which ended with the disputed call. ** * Stickmen dumped COLUMBUS - A strong Ohio State attack carried the Buckeye stickmen to a solid 10-1 victory over Michigan yesterday. Most of Ohio's scoring occurred in the first quarter when they gained a 5-0 advantage. The Buckeyes' experienced of- Hoosiers romp BLOOMINGTON - John Isen- After his touchown run, Adamle were injured, one with a brain which they made. CSU capped the fensive players had it easy agaisnt barger and Hank Pogue, who has, broke loose on a 47-yard scamper concussion and the other a broken scoring with a goal in the final the Wolverine defensive unit, been used primarily as a blocker that gave Planisek his chance for nose. 25 seconds of the second overtime which is totally comprised of this season, scored t w o touch- a 25-yard field goal. Since no substitutions are allow- period. rookies. downs apiece to lead Indiana to, In the opening minutes of the ed the ruggers were forced to play The leading scorer for the a- 41-20 victory over Illinois yes- second quarter, Wisconsin moved two men down and any remaining The Michigan soccermen, in far Buckeyes was Skip Digiardina terday. 57 yards only to have Eric Hutch- spirit left quickly dissipated. |better form than their perform- who tallied four goals and three Pogue had carried the ball only inson steal. Neil Graff's 12-yard The ruggers made one attempt ance last year, initiated the duel assists. On the other hand, iMch- 14 times in Indiana's four prev- aerial on the one-yard line and to close the gap in the second half with a penalty kick in the second igan's lone score came on a shot ious games, but exploded for 171 return it 52 yards. with two quick goals but State quarter by Ghebrelesus Yimes- by Bob Gillon with 4:26 re- -__._-- poured in on to take a 21-6 lead ghen. In the third quarter CSU maining in the game. and seal the victory. retorded with two goals, one by After the game, Head Coach S*All-Midwestern forward Vito Co- , Henry "Skip" Flanagan said, "The Soccermen drubbed Ilonna. Michigan rebounded with majority of our ball players were ten minutes remaining in the relatively new to the game today. The Michigan Soccer Club re- game to tie the match on a boot The fact that Ohio State scored ceived its second drubbing of the by Jerry Vagelapos. heavily in the early stages of the season, 4-2, at the hands of Cleve- The game continued in a 2-2 game came as no surprise." We Don't Understand You-_ But We Do Understand Your Reading Problem And that problem is simply that there is just too darn much to read in order to keep up with your homework and what is happening today? What can you do about it? Just this. Learn to read faster with greater compre- hension and recall. Where can you learn this amazing skill. Right here, this summer at the world famous Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institution. Who has taken the course? More than 400,000 people from all walks of life, including the staff of the late President Kennedy, and his brother Senator Ed- ward Kennedy. Can you do it? Of course you can. In fact, we offer you a money back guar- arrtee if you do not at least triple your reading rate with equal or better com- prehension. ATTEND A FREE INTRODUCTORY SPEED READING LESSON *- You will learn what your reading speed is " You will discover various study methods " You will actually participate in techniques that will improve your reading speed and The Silent Issue ARE WE ESTABLISHING A RELIGION IN VIET-NAM! "Roman Catholicism in Viet-Nam is the heritage of the French occupation which ended in the 1950's with the defeat of Dien Bien Phu. The French pat- ronized the church and used it for education and welfare, and also as a bastion of political support. "EDUCATION, PARTICULARLY HIGHER EDUCA- TION, WAS VIRTUALLY A CHURCH MONOPLY. In practical effect, one HAD to be a Catholic to get such training in Viet-Nam. This assured that the educated class from which the leadership emerged would be Catholic. Catholic education and welfare were generously subsidized by the French and the large Catholic churches, like the Buddhist pagodas, were BUILT AND MAINTAINED WITH TAXES. "In 1954 the Roman Catholic Church achieved a stranglehold on South Viet-Nam through the ascend- ing to the premiership of the conservative Catholic, Ngo-Dinh-Diem.,. . "Without United States aid the Diem government could not have lasted a year. The late Cardinal Francis Spellman took care of that. He sold the Diem regime as an anti-Communist force, which it was. It was also some other things. ... "One of the lamentable results of Roman Catholic rule in South Viet-Nam-and one which might have been anticipated-is the STEADY ATTRITION OF THE NATION'S PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Starved for lack !_ 4 (li. fPsFFFFFF.. 1 : 7 _ {. ! 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