PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY OCTOBER 16, 1966 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY OCTOBER 16, 1966 Why Can't You Control Your M~emory? A noted publishersin Cheiago reports there is a simple tech- nique for acquiring a powerful memory which can pay you real dividends in both business and social advancement and works like magic to give you added poise, necessary self-confidence and greater popularity. According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by remembering accurately everything they see, hear, or read. Whether in busi- ness, at social functions or even in casual conversations with tiew acquaintances, there are ways in which you can domi- nate eachisituation by your ability to remember. To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to-fol- low rules for developing skill in remembering anything you choose to remember, the pub- lishers have printed full details of their self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Memory," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Send y ou r name, address and zip code to: Memory Studies, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. C157, Chicago. 1. 60614. A postcard will do. Raye By The Associated Press COLUMBUS-Mighty Michigan State, stymied by rain, wind, and an inspired band of Buckeyes, rambled 83 yards on a fourth quarter touchdown drive yesterday and eked out an 11-8 Big Ten foot- ball victory over Ohio State. Passes Spartans Over Bucks, 11-8 quarterback who out-shone his heralded running backs, engineer- ed the winning touchdown march that came with 7:09 left to play. Raye completed four passes in the scoring drive, picking up gains of 27, 14, 16, and 10 yards on the connections. and barely negotiated the final eight inches. The Buckeyes, unimpressed by Michigan State's two-touchdown favorite's role, clung to a 2-0 half- time lead after picking up a safety at 8:09 of the first period. * *' * Illini Tops Hoosiers BLOOMINGTON - Illinois off- Illinois' all-sophomore backfield, Go >hers Shoot Hawks gave up a safety on the third pay M of the game, but he completed 10f MINNEAPOLIS - Massive de- of 22 passes for 131 yards. fens d pass kt uren plucked Two of Naponic's tosses went to rumbled and tumbled 95 yards junior end John Wright for touch- with four and half minutes re- downs. Wright took a short pass maining to insure Minnesota a and f dn A nP hffa l 2nn dVI ,rr c Emmerich had a chance to give wet ball oozed away from Wis- Northwestern the victory late in cousin's Kim Wood in th second the final period but his field goal period as the Badgers mounted one try from 27 yards out sliced off to of their rare drives inrt North- Wne left of the goal post. western territory. There were 21 punts in the Pc- Dennis White recovered for the tion-scarce contest and 12 fumbles. Wildcats on the 38. Chico Kur- Wisconsin was guilty of nine of zawski swept wide for four yards tne fumbles but lost the ball only tut a 15-yard penalty for piling twice. on pushed the ball all the way to The first loss was critical. The the Wisconsin 42 A 4 The No. 1-ranked Spartans had Ohio State staged a valiant to fight off a late Buckeye drive goal-line stand in a bid to thwart before posting their fifth straight the score, holding the slick Spar- conquest of the seaspn while Ohio tans to only two yards in three was losing its third straight for rushes at the line. But bulldozing( the first time since 1943. Bob Apisa smacked into a big pile- Jim Raye, a clever 171-pound up at the goal line on fourth downc .mmm ini mi---- -m-m -.-i --- m-- -- -- ----nx I Ii I , Son , II A LARGE 1-ITEM PIZZA I II I GOOD ONLY MON., Oct. 17-THURS., Oct. 20 - I I I I I I U I I ...-- Thompson's Restaurant i (for delivery only-i coupon per pizza) I I I I LmI m ininminmin mminmm a mi i mmmmu anu suaggereu on oaance ziyarns for the first Illinois touchdown in the second quarter. He got the clincher in the fourth period, tak- set sophomore inexperience with ing a short toss over the middle' control football and some breaks and out-running the Indiana sec- and scrambled to a 24-10 victory ondary for 22 yards. over Indiana yesterday. Phil Knell intercepted two pass- Bob Naponic, quarterbacking es by Indiana's Frank Stavroff. He went 62 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter and intercept- ed in the end zone in the third quarter to wipe out an Indiana CN bid to tie the score. Illinois controlled the b a 11' through the first half, holding the Hoosiers to three first downs. i I I f Ir Big Ten Standings Michigan State Purdue Minnesota Wisconsin Illinois Indiana Northwestern MICHIGAN Ohio State Iowa 3 2 1 1 2 L 0 0 0 0 1 T 0 0 1 1 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 10-0 victory over Iowa yesterday.! Iowa was moving toward a touchdown on its only scoring threat of the game when Gopher tackle Ezell Jones rushed Hawkeye passer Ed Podolak and batted his pass. Duren, a 242-pounder, grabbed the ball and started chugging up- field. He picked up an escort of half a dozen Gopher blockers who cheered the big tackle goalward. Two minutes later, Minnesota recovered an Iowa fumble at the Hawks' 11-yard line, but couldn't capitalize as Curt Wilson fumbled and the ball went back to Iowa two plays later. Until the late ball exchanges, the Gophers and Hawkeyes match- ed each other's uninspired of- fenses- Iowa remained scoreless in three Big Ten games. Minnesota posted its first Big Ten victory after an opening tie with Indiana. 'Cats Tie Badgers MADISON-Tom Schinke kick- ed a 19-yard field goal in the final period to give punchless Wisconsin a 3-3 tie with sluggish Northwestern yesterday in a Big Ten fiasco. The kick matched a 33-yard sec- ond period field goal by the Wild- cats' Dick Emmerich in a region- ally-televised game pitting two slow-moving offenses, slowed still further by a muddy field and a steady mist-like rain 1 1 1 .500 -4 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 3 1 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily '-- a The Paulist Father is a modern man in every sense of the word. He is a man of this age, cognizant of the needs of modern men. He is free from stifling formalism, is a pioneer in using contemporary ways to work with, for and among 100 million non-Catholic Amer- icans. He is a missionary to his own people-the American people. He utilizes modern techniques to ful- fill his mission, is encouraged to call upon his own innate talents to help further his dedicated goal. I If the vital spark of serving God through man has been ignited in you, why not pursue an investiga- tion of your life as a priest? 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MICH -10-1C -Associated Press MICHIGAN STATE FULLBACK BOB APISA bulls his way across the goal line for a fourth period touchdown and the margin of victory in the Spartans 11-8 squeaker over Ohio State yesterday. Buckeye linebacker John McCoy (12) tries vainly to stop Apisa. 4 NATIONAL FOOTBALL: 'Bama Rally Nips Tennessee This is J. F. Powers. He wrote "Morte d'Urban." It's in THE MODERN LIBRARY By The Associated Press ?KNOXVILLE - Kenny Stabler led an Alabama uprising in the fourth quarter yesterday that wiped out a 10-point deficit and Steve Davis capped the comeback with a 17-yard field goal to topple Tennessee 11-10. The victory for the third-ranked Crimson Tide boosted its record to 4-0 and gave it a share of the Southestern Conference lead with a 2-0 record. The triumph wasn't nailed down until the final 16 seconds, when Tennessee's Gary Wright was wide on v 20-yard field goal try after kicking a 40-yarder earlier in the game. Stabler, a junior lefty who miss- e. on all six passes he tried in the first half against the sturdy Ten-I nessee defense, scored on a one- yard plunge to start the last quar- ter, passed fora two-point con- version and then guided the Tide to the winning field goal. * * * Arkansas Trips Texas AUSTIN - Gary Adams made two key interceptions, one lying on the ground in the end zone, to thwart Texas drives and hand Arkansas a 12-7 victory yesterday. The regionally telecast game was bruising and marked by fumbles and pass interceptions. Texas fumbled eight times, losing three. Arkansas fumbled five times, los- ing three. Irish Kick Tar Heels SOUTH BEND - Notre Dame shelved its sensational sophomore passing combination except for one 56-yard bomb yesterday and still thundered past North Carolina 32-0._ The passing battery of Terry Hanratty-to-Jim Seymour, which has been instrumental in lifting the Irish to their No. 2 national ranking, clicked for only one com- pletion. That came on a 56-yard touchdown play in the second per- iod after a fumble recovery to spin Notre Dame to a safe 20-0 half- time lead. The switch from passing to the running of Larry Conjar and Nick 11 zacn eamndtopse dy worme o 2yr This is Albert Camus. He wrote "Notebooks 1935-1942." it's in THE MODERN LIBRARY This is Joseph Heller. He wrote "Catch-2 2" it's in THE MODERN LIBRARY This is William Styron. He wrote ."Lie Down in Darkness." it's in THE MODERN LIBRARY HOMECOMING '66-TICKET SALES MONDAY, OCT. 17... 9:00 Saturday Night Concert, The Beach Boys $3.50-$3.00-$2.50 HILL AUDITORIUM Friday Night Dance, The McCoys $1.00 Saturday Night Dance On Sale at the Diag, Union Arkansas' victory, the third in three years over Texas, pushed its Southwest Conference record to 2-1. Tex~as fell to 1-i. The Razorbacks' winning touch- down came suddenly in the third quarter. Trailing 7-6, Martin Ber- cher sped 49 yards on a punt re- turn to the Texas 22-yard line. On the next play quarterback Jon Brittenum tossed to Tommy Bur- nett, who pulled away from two! Texas players for the touchdown. touchdown run in the third quar- ter, was caused more by the 22- mph winds than by design. Any hopes of a possible North Carolina upset were dimmed in tie first quarter when Tar Heel quar'- terback star Danny Talbott had to leave theugame because of an ankle injury. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD KOHN .4 Sunday, October 16 7:30 P.M. "INDONESIA-AN EMERGING ASIAN POWER" DR. FRANK COOLEY Professor at Satya Watjana Christian University in Indonesia Dr. Cooley also spent 16 years in China until he was deported by the communists in 1952 at the PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1425 Washtenaw Everyone welcome to attend 4 This is Jean Genet. He wrote "Our Lady of the Flowers." It's in THE MODERN LIBRARY This is Jean-Paul Sartre. He wrote "The Age of Reason." It's in THE MODERN LIBRARY This is John Updike. He wrote "The Poorhouse Fair" and "Rabbit Run." 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