PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1966 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHiGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1966 This is Russ Kennedy of Balboa Island, California, on an in-port field trip as a student aboard Chapman College's floating campus. The note he paused to make as fellow students went ahead to inspect Hatshepsut's Tomb in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, he used to complete an assignment for his Comparative World Cultures professor. Russ transferred the 12 units earned during the study-travel semester at sea to his record at the University of California at Irvine where he continues studies toward a teaching career in life sciences. As you read this, 450 other students have begun the fall semester voyage of discovery with Chapman aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-America Line acts as General Passenger Agents. In February still another 450 will embark from Los Angeles for the spring 1967 semester, this time bound for the Panama Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, Spain, Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark, Great Britain and New York. For a catalog describing how you can include a semester at sea in your educational plans, fill in the information below and mail. MSU Machine Mashes Pur due By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - Michigan State parlayed the driving smash- es of Bob Apisa and the strong right arm of quarterback Jimmy Raye into a 41-20 rout of Purdue yesterday in a Homecoming clash before 70,014 fans. matched Purdue's highly-touted !ed on Purdue's 16. MSU's Raye passer Bob Griese. feinted niftily on a rollout on the Michigan State, which dropped next play and went in for the into the No. 2 spot behind Notre score. Dame in the national rankings last week, struck hard and often Bucks Bump Badgers in a bid to regain the top spot. Michigan State, making its own COLUMBUS-Ohio State broke Big Ten Standings Conference All Games Apisa carried for t downs on smashes of 10 yards at MSU's ground attack backed liant aerial show in ' Why Are Y Ignored WI You Talk? A noted publisheri reports a simple tec everyday conversati canJ taJ you real di hree touch- breaks and taking advantage of loose for two touchdowns in the six, two and Purdue miscues, surged into a 28- final quarter to snap a three- devastating 0 lead before Purdue finally got game losing streak with a 24-13 up a bril- onto the scoreboard late in the Big Ten football victory over Wis- which Raye third period. consin yesterday. MSU, posting its sixth consecu- T . n.a tive victory and its fourth straigth touch visi foriBadgers anage r in Big Ten competition, got its a tuhonfrtefrttm Ott first touchdown the hard way. I since their opening game, but The Spartans drove 80 yards in could not contain the Buckeyes nine plays with halfback Dwight blend of passes by Bill Long and Lenee comyn ofthe bch t driving runs by Bo Rein and Paul Lee coming off the bench to Hudson. smash through the middle for H s final three yards. The key play was a fumble The Spartans got two breaks in which halted Wisconsin at the the second quarter and cashed in Buckeye 19, the Badgers deepest i Chicago on them quickly. A Griese punt penetration except for the scoring ion hich hich traveled only 11 yards march. ividends in against a 25-mile wind was down- Wisconsin led 13-10 when Dick i i Michigan State Purdue Illinois Minnesota Wisconsin Northwestern Indiana MICHIGAN Ohio State Iowa W L 1 0 2 1 2 1 1 1 S1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 0 4 T Pet. 0 1.000 0 .667 0 .667 1 .500 1 .500 1 .500 1 .500 0 .333 0 .333 0 .000 PF 98 77 44 17 23 41 50 77 41 15 PA 45 62 -45 56 27 44 59 42 34 76 w 6 4 2 2 2 2 1 3 2 1 L 0 2 4 3 3 3 4 3 3 5 T 0 0 0 1 1 1 I 0 0 0 PF 168 168 65 66 49 69 59 126 77 49 PA 63 114 92 117 106 128 114 70 79 111 Himes grabbed John Wood's bob-t yards out. Gary Cairns added ble. three extra points and E 40-yard The Buckeyes drove 81 yards to field goal. Wisconsin's first touch- go ahead 17-13, Reiii and Long down in 313 minutes of play came getting most of the yardage. They when John Boyajian, who went sealed the victory with a 50-yard all the way at quarterback, hit scoring march after a pass inter- Tom Jankowski with a six-yard ception. aerial. Hudson scored all three Ohio The Badgers have never won in touchdowns, from 2, 6, and 8 Ohio Stadium. haven't won in Columbus since 1918. and haven't beaten the Buckeyes since 1951. 'Cats Rip Hawkeyes 10 0 cul Fy uia iiciot social and business advance- ment and works like magic to give you poise, self confidence and greater popularity. According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by what they say and how they say it. Whether in business, at social functions, or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances there are ways to make a good im- pression every time you talk. To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to- follow rules for developing skill in everyday conversation, the publishers have printed full de- tails of their interesting self- training method in a new book, "Adventures in Conversation," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No ob- ligation. Send your name, ad- dress and zip code to: Conver- sation, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. C157, Chicago, Ill. 60614. A postcard will do. What you do on October 26-27 may affect the rest of your life! N1 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Big Wheels in the MSU Machine Does IOWA CITY - Northwestern survived aroused Iowa's last half rally yesterday for its first Big Ten victory 24-15, and put the Hawkeyes just one game short of a league record for futility. The Wildcats slammed in 17 points in the opening half while holding Iowa completely at bay in the Hawkeyes' Homecoming con- test. But the Hawkeyes broke a four game. touchdown drought early in the final period when quarterback Ed Podolak fired a seven-yard pass to end Al Bream. Just, a few minutes later, Podolak got loose deep in Iowa territory and scam- pered 87 yards to score, cutting the deficit to 17-15. However, the Wildcats then choked off Iowa's hopes of break- ing a 16-game conference losing streak, driving swiftly down field and enabling halfback Bob Olson to blast over from the five-yard line with about three minutes left. Northwestern didn't have much trouble scoring in the opening half. Dick Emmerich kicked a 44- yard field goal the first time the Wildcats got the ball. And Cas Banaszek and Chico Kurzawski each simply eluded a hoard of de- fenders in streaking for touch- downs in the second quarter. Stanford Nips Illinois CHAMPAIGN - Stanford's In- dians, taking advantage of a fumbled punt, scored on a six- ,yard touchdown run by Gene Washington and handed Illinois a 6-3 football defeat yesterday. Early in the third quarter, with Illinois holding a meager 3-0 lead, Dave Lewis punted and Illinois' Rich Erickson called for a fair catch. Erickson then jumped away, but the ball hit him and Phil Messer recovered for Stan- ford on the Illini 14. Work-horse fullback Jack Root pounded to the one-yard line in five plays, but the Indians were hit with a five-yard penalty to the six. Washington threw an incom- plete pass, but on the next play he kept the ball and went around left end for the game's only touchdown. It was a listless game, before an Illini Homecoming crowd of 56,561, except for the two scoring plays. Four times in the first half, Il- linois failed to get first downs on fourth-down situations, but finally got on the scoreboard with 15 seconds left in the first half on a 26-yard field goal by Jim Stotz. The field goal drive started on the Illini 22 and was kept alive mainly on the passing of Bob Naponic to end John Wright. 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It could be the start of something big-your future with IBM. I ii TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25 8:00 P.M. i - - - --------- Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study, :i V-