PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER. 6, 1966 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6,1966 Long-winded Illini Backs Outdistance Wolverines (Continued from Page 1) called time out, and when the Blue lined up again, it was in 'I' formation. Vidmer took the snap and )itch- ed back to Jim Detwiler, who was playing the deep part of the I'- and with a block from Ward-who b} A professor of classical Greek Kept searching for objects unique. They caused him to snicker Except Colt Malt Liquor- So he sat down and drank his critique! ' 1AT.ON" A A completely unique experience! *SPECIAL PRODUCTS DIVISION THE NATIONAL BREWING CO., BALT., MD. lined up directly in front of him, Detwiler carried the ball just across the goal line. Rick Sygar converted to tie the score which remained 7-7 at halftime. Opted for Option Early in the second half Illinois took over on its own 10-yard line, and Huston broke loose on a 66- yard sprint to the Michigan 24. One play later, the shifty Naponic rolled right on the option and sprinted through a wide hole un- touched for the second Illinois score. Vidmer, after the following kickoff, led a 58-yard drive with Ward and Clancy again gaining most of the yardage. In the drive Vidmer hit Clancy with passes of 10, eight, 14, and, 16 yards-the last play going for the touchdown. Sygar's conversion tied the score at 14-14. Sygar Scores Again With about two minutes left in the third period, Illinois was forced to punt from its 34. Sygar received the punt and with a good blocking setup in front of him, he cut to the right sideline and pranced 64 yards for a touchdown. His conversion put the Wolverines in front 21-14, but Illinois' two long runbacks just minutes later sort of took the glory away. Michigan got possession of the football three times after Sulli- van's interception return, but twice lost it on interceptions and once on a punt. There was one last instance of hope for the Wolver- ines when-with just less than two minutes remaining in the game - Naponic fumbled and Roger Rosema recovered for Mich- igan on the Blue 49. Rosema had three Wolverine blockers in front of him, and only Naponic had a chance for him from be- hind. Naponic to the Rescue The sophomore signal caller came through again, though, and dropped Rosema along with Mich- igan's signal hopes. "I just held on for dear life," Naponic said after the game. Illinois' locker room was jubi-1 lantly noisy. Pete Elliott s'ood amidst a semi-circle of reporcers answering the post-game ques- tiions, happy but still a little nerv- ous, lighting up one Camel after another. "Michigan played a good game," he conceded, "But I think we played better. We played our best." As usual, one reporter was morel interested in the "Battle of the Brothers" than the game. Elliott Going the Wrong Way ... On a One-Way Street.. . stifled him. "We don't relish play- in each other," he said. What Rivalry?!? "But it's nice to win once in a while, isn't it?" He persisted. "I'm just glad for our team that we won," Elliott finalized, em- phasizing "team." No one complained about the weather conditions. And despite the snow and cold, individual per- forformances were sharp. Up and Away Clancy added 11 receptions to his nation-leading figure, good for 179 yards. Ward, breaking away with speed, power, and determina- tion all afternoon, netted 131 yards in 20 carries. And defen- sively, linebacker Frank Nunley made some bruising tackles on Il- linois' ball carriers. But nothing can be taken away from Naponic. He mixed his plays well, his fakes were effective, and his passing was accurate. The fact that Illinois' ground game more than doubled Michigan's must be credited mainly to this sophomore quarterback. "I was really proud of the way my boys came back after losing to Purdue last week," Coach Pete summed up. "It was a hard thing to do." 0 First Downs Rushing Passing Penalty Total No. of Rushes Net Yards-- Rushing Passing Forward Passes Att. Completed Intercepted by Yards interceptions returned Total Plays (Rushes and Passes) Punts, Number Average distance Kickoffs, returned by Yards Kicks Returned Punts Kickoffs Fumbles, Number Ball lost by Penalties,Number Yards penalized MICHIGAN 0 7 ILLINOIS 0 7 MICH. ILL. 14 13 5 11 8 2 1 0 38 53 114 246 183 41 27 9 13 5 0 3 0 103 65 62 7 7 37 32 5 4 106 140 74 57 32 83 2 .3 1 2 3 4 15 39 14 0 - 21 7 14 - 28 Michigan - Clancy (16 pass), Sygar (kick). Michigan - Sygar (65 punt return), Sygar (kick) Illinois - Naponic (20 run), Stotz (kick) Illinois-Sullivan (98 pass int), Hus-' ton (pass from Naponic). SCORING Illinois-Naponic (1 run), J. Stotz (kick) Michigan - Detwiler (6 run), Sygar (kick) Illinois-M. Smith (40 punt return), PAT (no good) Player Vidmer Ward Detwiler Fisher Totals Player Huston Johnson Harford Naponic Brooks Bess Totals Vidmer Naponic Ward Clancy Humphri Totals Johnson Wright Huston Totals Kemp F. Smith Miller Totals RUSHING Michigan Tries LossN 7 49 - 20 51 9 0 3 3 37 571 Illinois Tries Loss N 16 0 1 11 0 4 0 17 14 4 4 1 0 53 182 PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Y 27 131 Illinois Att. Comp. Y 9 5 PASS RECEIVING Michigan No. Y 1 < 11 17 es 1 1 13 1 Illinois No. Yd 1 3 2 1 1 5 4 Net -40 131 26 -3 114 Net 105 60 11 50 16 4 246 Ave. -5.8 6.5 2.9 -1.0 3.0 Ave. 6.7 5.5 2.7 2.9 4.0 4.0 4.6 -Daily--Lanny Austin BRUCE SULLIVAN coughs up the ball midway in the second quarter on a kickoff return as Gerry Miklos brings him down. Rick Sygar moves toward the fumble which John Rowser eventually re- covered on the Illinois 46. 14 NATIONAL FOOTBALL: Yds. Pct. 183 .482 Yds. Pct. 41 .555 Washington Upends UCLA, 16-3 Ave WE NUMBER ONE .. . BUT WE STILL TRY HARDER Come to the third organizational meeting Student Council for Exceptional Children Tuesday, November 8 ds. 4 .79 0 83 ds. 4 23 14 41 .rs. 56 'rs. 69 225 Ave. 4.0 16.3 0.0 14.1 Ave. 4.0 7.7 14.0 8.2 Ave. 37 Ave. 28 34 32 By The Associated Press SEATTLE-Washington, spark-' ed by Frank Smith's touchdown interception and Jim Sartoris' 80- yard kick-off return, upset third- ranked UCLA 16-3 yesterday be- fore 56,300 howling fans in dark, rainswept Husky Stadium. Washington went ahead on Don Martin's 42-yard field goal only four minutes into the game. Kurt Zimmerman tied it up for the Bruins with a 36-yard field goal six minutes later. Sartoris then did his heroics, taking Zimmerman's kickoff on his own seven-yard line, starting up the middle where he found daylight to the right at midfield University Elementary School Dr. Bates will speak PUNTING Michigan No. 7 Illinois No. 2 7 YI 2 Yr 1 22 Lunchroom and was on his way until Mark Gustafson caught him at the 13. Six plays later, fullback Jeff Jordan banged over left guard for the touchdown and Martin's kick made it 10-3. Washington scored again mid- way through the third period when Smith picked off Gary Beban's pass at the UCLA 29-yard line and romped in for the touchdown. Irish Maul Pitt SOUTH BEND-Nick Eddy's 85- yard kickoff return and Tom Schoen's 63-yard return for third quarter touchodowns enabled top- ranked Notre Dame to subdue Pittsburgh 40-0 yesterday. The win was the seven straight for the Irish. Pitt's upset-inspired Panthers held Notre Dame scoreless for the first 25 minutes of the game. But as the first half neared a close, quarterback Terry Hanratty whip- ped into the end zone on a three- yard sweep to cap an 80-yard drive and send Notre Dame ahead. Then, in the third period, the tide really turned against Pitt- which has beaten only West Vir- ginia in seven previous starts. 'Bama Routs LSU BIRMINGHAM - Bobby Johns cracked a defensive duel by scor- ing on a 33-yard sprint with an intercepted pass yesterday, carry- ing Alabama to a 21-0 conquest of Louisiana State which kept the Crimson T i d e 's national and Southeastern Conference t i t1 e hopes alive. Alabama had forged an 8-0 margin in the first half on a safety and two field goals by Steve Davis, but the Tide was not able to score a touchdown until Johns picked off Fred Haynes' pass and swept into the end zone with two minutes left in the third period. A pass interception by Stan Moss with four minutes left in the+ game nailed down the triumph for the Tide. * * * Bulldogs Growl JACKSONVILLE-Georgia's de- fensive unit harrassed Steve Spur-+ rier all afternoon yesterday as the Bulldogs handed the seventh- ranked Florida Gators their first loss of the season 27-10. Trailing 10-3 at the half, Geor- gia scored four times after the intermission to blow the game : Attendance-59,322 ]Fight textbook squint. Get aTensor@ high-intensity lamp. open before a Gator Bowl crowd of 62,820. Lynn Hughes, 39-yard touch- down interception early in the fourth quarter put Georgia ahead. Hughes' touchdown came after Ronnie Jenkins plunged over from four yards out to tie the score at 10-all in the third quarter. Florida seldom had the ball in the last period. Arkansas Rolls LITTLE ROCK - Linebacker David Cooper's 37-yard run with an intercepted pass gave eighth- ranked Arkansas the cussion it needed to slip past Rice 31-20 yesterday in a Southwest Confer- ence football game. Cooper's score came with 7:31 remaining shortly after quarter- back Jon Brittenum had engineer- ed the Razorbacks 69 yards to erase a 20-17 Rice advantage, The Razorbacks' go-ahead touchdown came on sophomore tailback David Dickey's two-yard plunge off tack- le, his second score of the game. The victory was Arkansas' fifth in five conference games and set up next Saturday's showdown w i t h league-leading Southern Methodist. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JCHN SUTKUS WELCOME!! MON. thru SAT. 8:30 to 5:30 P.M. DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre IW w YOUR FAVORITE BOOKSTORE IS ALWAYS THE BEST PLACE TO BUY FOR SERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY. Ulrich's Books Inc. Wahr's University Book Store where YOU be in as good a spot an original contribu- as you are today? tion to your area of Well.informed? Rt.J w interest. In an Up on things? environment like Intimately this, there's no acquainted with the telling how far Want a clean, white, bright light? Want to see words etched on the page sharp and clear? Want to come away from those heavy assignments without squinting and eyestrain? Want a lamp that gets in close without getting in your way? Want to burn the midnight oil without burning up your roommate? Want a concentrated light that lets you concentrate? Then what you need is a Tensor high-intensity lamp. What do you mean you can't afford our $12.95 or $14.95 or $17.50 or $19.95 prices? Didn't you know you can get aTensor for $9.95? So stop squinting. Get a Tensor high-intensity lamp. And who knows,,your grades might even get a little better this term. "tstensor Sx._tiIt helps you see better's state of the art in your field of study?; It 52 weeks for only $4.50 Or will you (through no fault of your own) be dangerously close to the brink of obsolescence? Could happen. Often does. Which is one good reason to consider a career at MITRE. MITRE is pioneering in the design and engineering of complex information, sensor, command, control and com- munications systems for the United States Government. Our assignments include such prominent electronic systems as the NORAD Combat Operations Center, the Back- up Interceptor Command System for SAGE, and the National Military Command System (NMCS). These projects represent the most important systems challenges of our time, and require the most advanced thinking on a broad range of scientific problems and the technologies needed to solve them. As a member of the MITRE team, you'll be working in an atmosphere of scientific inquiry, alongside colleagues of outstanding reputation, with the opportunity to make you can go. But this much is certain. You'll not be over- looked, and you can't be overtaken. Salary? Benefits? They're competitive, of course. More- over, we have an excellent Educational Assistance and Staff Scholar Program. (Many MITRE employees presently attend nearby educational institutions includ- ing Harvard, Boston University, Boston College, Brandeis, Northeastern, MIT, and Tufts.) Depending on your interests, qualifications and current openingsyou may start in one of the following, or other, departments: System Planning and Engineering Air and Missile Defense Systems System Design Systems Analysis Air Traffic Systems Tactical Systems Strategic Systems Range Instrumentation Information Sciences Computer & Display Technology Communications Electronic Warfare Radar Design and Technology Information Processing Surveillance and Warning Systems Applied Mathematics DID YOU MISS THESE NEWSWEEK STORIES??? BRITAIN'S WITH-IT SOCIETY. Are they "switched-on" or just "a coffin of tarted-up people"? THE DRAFT, 1966. Who's going, what they face, how they feel about it. LSD AND THE MIND DRUGS. A trip with the acid heads and an ap- praisal of the perils. POP... IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING. "The great- est pop-art object in the world is the planet Earth." WHAT ROLE FOR THE EDUCATED WOMAN? "Sex I prejudice is the only prejudice now considered socially accept- able." THE LITTLE MAGAZINES OF THE NEW LEFT. Youth, militancy, energy and naivete provide the bounce. BLACK POWER. How deep the split in the civil rights move- ment? AUTO RACING. The Year of the Ford. VIETNAM. The polls and the war. SCIENCE. Shattering the antimatter mirror. On and on it goes, week after week-page after page of reward- ing reading like this. Start enjoy- ing it now. * 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. " 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? The Paulist Fathers have developed an aptitude test for the modern man interested in devoting his life to God. This can be a vital instrument tn hln nyo make the most impor- 4 4 * Special Offer for Students Only: Newsweek, 6SA21 117 East Third Street,* f6 5 a Dayton,Ohio45402 * 152 weeks for ony y$4.50 I want Newsweek to keep * r me in the know for the next 52 weeks for $4.50 with the tind rktndia tat n, Technical representa- T H rE-r >:<: