Si..&DAY, NOVEMBER 6,1966- THE MICHIGAN DAILY , PAGE SEVEN r S~TA,;NVME ,96Tl IHIA AL ~l!~~V 9 ii a rz"au L7ai v a:i - urdu By The Associated Press MADISON-Rose Bowl hopeful Purdue, with Bob Griese sneaking for two touchdowns and kicking a 29-yard field goal, destroyed Wisconsin's upset dreams yester-. day and ground out a 23-0 Big Ten football victory., The win was the first for the Boilermakers over Wisconsin at Madison since 1945. The Purdue defense, led by end George Olion, frustrated the Bad- gers at every turn, choking off touchdown bids that reached the Purdue four and seven and inter- cepted a pass that helped produce the first Boilermaker touchdown. Bob Baltzell scored initially for Purdue from the two to cap an 18-yard drive that began with Pat Conley's steal of a John Boyajian pass at the Purdue 47 Griese, who passed only four times in the first half, drove over from the one for the second Pur- due score to climax an 82-yard march. His field goal gave Purdue a 17-0 halftime lead. Slow Day The second Griese touchdown came early in the fourth period, ending a 53-yard drive that began with Dick Marvel's recovery of a Badger fumble. Griese finished the day with 7 for 9 for 95 yards passing. He also kicked two extra points. Wiscon- sin, an improved team despite a 2-51 record, was able to do every- thing offensively but score. Trailing 14-0, the Badgers, be- hind Wayne Todd, who gained 119 yards during the game, drove70 yards to the Purdue 4 but Olion spilled Boyajian, who was attemp- ting to pass, and the Wisconsin quarterback fumbled. LeRoy Keyes recovered for Purdue. Gophers Sniff Roses EVANSTON-Curt Wilson rifled Ken Last two touchdown passes and scored himself on a 17 yard run yesterday to lead Rose Bowl- hopeful Minnesota to a 28-13 Big Ten football triumph over North- western. Two of the Gophers' tallies stemmed from theft of Bill Melz- er's tosses and a third from a fumble recovery as alert Minne- sota boosted its conference record to 3-1-1 in keeping the Pasadena trip in mind. Minnesota and Pur- due, also aiming for the Rose Bowl, tangle next week for what should be the ticket. Tim Wheeler's interception in SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY FOREIGN STUDY PROGRAMS *"* 4 DED N SUMMER SCHOOL in Florence, Italy Courses in Italian language and literature, general drawing, art his- tory, Italian theater and drama. Graduate and Undergraduate. Pre-registration by April 15 For information: FOREIGN STUDY PROGRAMS SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY 335 Comstock Avenue Syracuse, New York 13210 I -, Passes into Bowl Showdown the first quarter touched off a 39, yard Gopher scoring drive in 12 plays, with workhorse John Win- termute carrying seven times. An- other soph, Dennis Cornell, ram- med over from the two and Jim Barle added the first of his four extra points. Sakal Intercepts Minnesota soomed ahead 14-0 early in the second period after Tom Sakal's pass banditry, moving 74 yards in 10 plays. Hubie Bryant's 34 yard gallop off a double reverse was the big play, and Wilson pitched the final six to Last. Northwestern before halftime made it 14-7 when Mike Baker re- covered Ray Whitlow's punt fum- ble on the Gopher 28. On the tenth play Melzer hit Larry Gates with a six yard touchdown toss. Chico Kurzawski's bobble after taking the kickoff in the third period was captured on the North- western 28 by Jerry Hermann. Wilson eventually rifled a 20 yard scoring pass to Last. Open Filching Season Later Al Koranda filched a Wil- son aerial and the Wildcats thrust 52 yards with Woody Campbell scoring on a one yard smash. A 28 yard pass interference ruling set up the score. Minnesota put victory out of Wisconsin's reach early in the fourth quarter on an 80 yard march in five plays, featuring a 34 yard ramble by Wilson after picking up Wintermute's fumble. Wilson eventually rolled in for a 17 yard touchdown. Wilson carried 19 times for 106 yards and Wintermute 28 for 86. HIGH PAY We will enrich you for letting us teach you what the world will be like in 1979. (It's an experiment on computer- aided decision-mak- ing) Requirements and Salary 1. Male, upper classmen or graduate students. 2. Must be available from 7- 9:30 p.m. on Nov. 8, 10, 15, and 17. Pay-15 3. Be willing to work 4 hours a week for the next two weeks and from 1 to 2 hours a week during the winter semester. Pay-$2/hr. Call Meg Throll, 764-9442 12-5 p.m. Monday BIG TEN STANDINGS Conference All Games *Michigan State Purdue Minnesota Illinois MICHIGAN Ohio State Indiana Northwestern Wisconsin Iowa *Clinched tie W 6 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 L 0 1 1 2 3 3 3 3 3 5 T Pet. 0 1.000 0 .800 1 .700 0 .600 0 .400 0 .400 1 .300 1 .300 1 .300 0 .166 PF 176 125 62 93 126 53, 69 54 40 42 PA 52 83 76 91 87 51 86 94 78 151 W 8 6 4 3 4 3 1 2 2 2 L 0 2 3 5 4 4 6 5 5 6 T 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 PF 246 216 106 114 175 81 78 82 66 76 PA 70 125 137 138 105 96 141 178 157 186 Spartans Clip Hawks career total to 15-smashing the EASTLANSNG -MichganMSU record held by Bob Carey. EAST LANSING - Michigan Jones put on scoring runs of 70 w dr svwit bte o en in kick- and 79 yards and a two-yard: doaredwithcthe opening icdscoring dive as he set a MSU and off, roared back for a lopsidedBgTn ngegmrshnre- 56-7 victory yesterday as Gene Big Ten single game rushing rec- Washington and Clint Jones re- The pile-driving Jones collected wrote the Spartan record book. 268 yards in 21 carries. The Big The tiumphthe mst btophea Ten record was 239 yards by Jim MSU victory since it blanked in- Grabowski of Illinois last year. diana 54-0 in 1957, assured Mvich- Jones also broke MSU's single igan State at least a tie for a sec- and successive Big Ten title. game rushing record of 207 yards setdbyuRccRubickinB1962 Washington grabbed a pair of set by Ron Rubick in 1962. touchdown passes to bring his Bucks Bust Hoosiers CITY OF DETROIT -- OPPORTUNITIES IN Engineering design and construction of streets, sewers, bridges, water treatment plants, pumping stations, pipe- lines and municipal buildings; Budgeting audtiting, sys- tems analysis and public utility accounting; Real and personal property appraising; Purchasing; Personnel; Public housing; Social work; Recreation and physical education; Municipal forestry; Analytical and control chemistry; Landscape Architecture; Urban planning; Hospital and public health nursing; Medical technology; Occupational and physical therapy; Nutrition and dietetics. Campus Interviews NOVEMBER 14, 15, 16, 17, See your Placement Office for an 18 / 1966 appointment COLUMBUS-Bill Long directed Ohio State's sputtering offense to a third quarter touchdown and the Buckeyes continued their long standing mastery over Indiana with a 7-0 victory yesterday. The frustrated Hoosiers, who haven't beaten the Bucks since 1951. had four good scoring chan- ces but couldn't cross the goal line, Ohio State, unable to move the ball in the first half during a steady downpour, took the second half kickoff and marched 59 yards in 12 plays to pay dirt. The Buckeyes actually assumed a 3-0 lead when Gary Cairns boot- ed a 38-yard field goal into the wind on a fourth-and-five situ- ation. But Indiana was detected holding and the Buckeyes elected to take the penalty. That moved the ball to the Hoosier 11. Fullback Paul Hudson then smashed to the two on the next play, and Long hit halfback Rudy Hubbard who shook from a would- be tackler and scooted into the end zone for the game's only score Daily Classified Are Great! A PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT reelect your STATE SENATOR REPUBLICAN retain experienced leadership From a Detroit Free Press Editorial, October 27: "Bursley, a legislative leader in economic development, inter- national trade and higher education, deserves to be returned." To Jim Bierne... From Bob Griese BONNE CUISINE DIVERTIMENTO MOLTO AMILI CO-OPS Welcome Everybody Men and Women-Grad. and Undergrad. VACANCIES FOR THE WI NTER TERM When Experience Counts VOTE for Room and Board $17.50 per week Board Only $12.00 per week JOHN W. CONLIN plus a few hours work, since we own and run our own houses. For information, contact the INTER-COOPERATIVE COUNCIL 2546 Student Activities Building 668-6872 WA SHTENAW COUNTY PROBATE JUDGE 10 YEARS 1 nn1 Had a unique expenence? I so, real or imaginary, tell us about it in a limerick and we'llsend you a completely unique token of our appreciation. Here's an example: "A chemistrymajor named Bleaker, Drank his Colt 45 from a beaker, He said, 'It's more fun! It holds two cans, not one, As an experience, it's even uniquer."' Get the idea? Get- it down on a post card and send to: Limerick Contest, Box 45, Colt, Arkansas. n the meantime, try this for inspiration? Allstate is Interviewing for Insurance Trainees in Claims, Supervision, Underwriting, Sales and Data Processing. Interviews will be held by appointment at your Placement Office on Nov. 8, 1966 * 10 Years Experience as your Probate Judge * 30 Years of Experience as a Trial Lawyer * 10 Years 9f Service and Experi- ence as your Juvenile Judge * Former Chairman, Family Law Committee of Michigan State Bar Association *k President, Children's Charter of the Juvenile Court of Michigan * Secretary Treasurer of Michigan Probate and Judges Association *r Member of American Bar Association * Member of Michigan Bar Association * Member of Washtenaw County Bar Association * Graduate, University of Mich- igan Law School Voters of Washtenaw County preferred John W. Conlin by more than 2 to I in the August Pri- mary Election for Circuit Judge because of his experience, record and integrity. John' W. Conlin, probate judge for 10 years, received more votes than the combined total of the other two candi- dates. Vote for John W. Conlin in the General Election, Tuesday, November 8th, and you vote for experience for Washtenaw's third circuit judgeship. Complete the job by voting for John Conlin. PUT ABILITY AND EXPERIENCE ON WASHTENAW COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT BENCH ELECT JOHN W. CONLIN CIRCUIT JUDGE (Non-Partisan Ballot) I I y If you'd like to know something about Allstate, we can tell you this much right now: Since 1950, sales have grown from $50 million to over $700 million. Allstate is the innovator of the insurance indus- try-the pioneer that revolutionized insurance by making it easy to afford and easy to buy. Allstate offers salaries that are liberal and competitive. Now we'd like to know something about you- regardless of your academic training and back- ground.