Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ihursday, October 18, 1913 PageEigh THEMICHGAN AIL NOT FOR WOMEN ONLY, Most everyone knows about contraceptive lectures at Health Serv- ice. They provide basic information about various methods of contraception. The meetings are kept informal and questions are encouraged. But we've discovered this does not always meet stu- dents' needs. So to try to improve and expand the services, we now have gyn contraceptive counselors available during most gynecology clinic hours. They will see students by appointments or on a walk-in basis. The counselor will be able to talk with you individually and confidentially to help provide: " information about specific contraceptive methods; " information regarding sexual responses and techniques; * the chance to discuss your personal feelings about rela- tionships and the use of contraception; " resource and referral information. / S,(and for females, it will be a chance to help you be more comfortable and at ease when visiting the gynecology clinic. To make an appointment or check the counselors' schedules CALL 763-4370 (Gynecology Clinic) Grid stats pa Bced By BILL CRANE BIG TEN STANDINGS MICHIGAN Ohio State Illinois Northwestern Purdue Minnesota Indiana Wisconsin Michigan State Iowa W 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Conference L T PF PA W 0 0 62 7 5 0 0 80 7 4 0 0 43 27 3 0 0 45 25 2 1 0 27 28 2 \1 0 31 59 2 2 0 17 52 2 2 0 13 38 1 2 0 10 45 1 2 0 15 46 0 SATURDAY'S GAMES All L 0 0 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 Games T PF 0 147 0 144 0 80 0 71 0 80 0 98 0 72 0 91 0 55 0 68 PA 17 13 75 104 79 155 95 114 101 157 The Michigan Wolverines, cur- rently prepping for this Satur- day's game with Wisconsin, find themselves atop the Big Ten in several defensive categories. Arithmetic shows Michigan yielding the fewest ground yards by a defensive team. The Blue defenders have allowed only 158 yards in 71 tries by the opposi- tion and no touchdowns. Ohio State stands second at 267 yards allowed in 79 plays and one six- pointer. Wolverine defenders also lead the conference with their, total defense yield. Gary Moeller's b y ) men have allowed but 375 total yards in 99 plays, while Ohio State is second with 401 yards in 112 plays; (despite their better per play average). Both the Wolverines and the Buckeyes share the lead in al- lowing the fewest points by the opposition - 3.5 points per game. However, in passing defense Michigan and Ohio State leave the scene, leaving Illinois' Fight- ing Illini atop the statistical heap. Michigan State trails in second place. The Wolves, at the same time,' are last in the league in passing defense. The opposing teams have completed 16 of 28 passes against the Maize and Blue secondary for a substantial 217 yards. Nev- ertheless, none of that yardage fue has hit paydirt verines. efe se against the Wol- Ohio State at Indiana Weekdays 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. sue Shelia 7634384 UAC Football Ticket Exchange Union Ticket Desk Friday, Oct. 19 Work in Washington, D.C. this summer Sponsored by U-M Washington Summer Intern Program Positions available in Congress, Offices, Lobbying Groups, Executive Agencies, Research Orgns. MASS MEETING THURSDAY UNDERGRADUATES ONLY 7:30, October 25 Multipurpose Room-3rd Floor UGLI Illinois at Michigan State Minnesota at Iowa Northwestern at Purdue Wisconsin at MICHIGAN MICHIGAN'S offensive produc- tion looks good in relation to the rest of the league. Although Ohio State leads in rushing (140 at- tempts-806 yards-8 TD's), total offense (154 plays-918 yards-9 TD's), and scoring (40 points per game), Bo's boys have produced enough cross country yardage to be the runner up in all three categories. (Michigan has netted 669 yards in 135 tries-6 TD's, to- tal offense figures give Michi- gan 725 yards in 150 tries-7 TD's, and the Blue Wave has scored 31 points per game.) Passing statistics see loop pow- erhouses Michigan and Ohio State again disappear from the leaders. Wisconsin leads the league with 258 aerial yards in- cluding 20 completions in 44 at- tempts and one touchdown. MICHIGAN is located in next to last place with a miserable 56 yards gained through the sky on five connections in 15 throws for one score. I 12-51 I 1 ATTENTION ALL RECOGNIZED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS: There will be a public meeting to discuss the past, pres- ent, and future status of the University guidelines for recognized student organizations. All sudent organizations are urged to attend 6 P.M. THURSDAY in the SGC offices OMEGA 79 r )O FAST, FREE DELIVERY SUBS--CH ICKEN-SHRIMP-SALADS-BURGERS-FRI ES-COKE A medium or large A medium or large 5 Oc 1 itemor more C item or more Qff OMEGA PIZZA .OMEGA PIZZA COUPON HONORED ANYTIME COUPON HONORED ANYTIME Name __Name Address _ _Address FO DELIVERY ONLY FOR DELIVERY ONLY POSITIONS NOW OPEN FOR CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY. ALL-CAMPUS SUPREME COURT WHO CAN APPLY? Any student of the university. WHERE TO APPLY? Room 3-X Michigan Union WHEN TO APPLY? Before Monday, Oct. 22, 1 973, 3 p.m. HOW TO APPLY? Just fill out a csj prospective candidates form and sign up for an interview. WHAT IS NEEDED? Clear logical thought is the only requirement.j HOMECOMING RING DAY official U. of M. Ring LARGE SELECTION MICHIGAN UNION LOBBY Individual statistical standouts after two weeks of play include three Wolverines. Tailback Gil Chapman is third in rushing yard- age, averaging 93 yards a game. In front of Chapman (Michigan's second tailback) is the Big Ten's leading rusher, John King, Min- nesota's bruising fullback and OSU's Archie Griffin. Barry Dotzauer, tlW slender half of Michigan's golden kick- ng game, leads the league in punting with his 42.2 yards per kick clip, tying him with Wis- consin's Ken Simmons. Mike Lan- Archie Griffin try, the stockier half of the Wol- verines booting game, ranks sec- BIG TEN STATISTICS. RUSHING 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Archie Griffin, OSU John King, MINN GIL CHAPMAN, MICH Cornelius Greene, OSU Stan Key, NU Ken Starling, .IND CHUCK HEATER, MICH ED SHUTTLESWORTH, MICH Roy Kidd, PUR Ken Starch, WIS PASSING At At 44 49 35 23 44 38 25 34 11 32 Yds 298 230 186 165 161 158 147 137 136 134 1. Gregg Bohlig, WIS 2. Mitch Anderson, NU 3. Charlie Baggett, MSU 4. Jeff Hollenbach, ILL 5. Kyle Skogman, IOWA 6. Bo Bobrowski, PUR 7. Mike Glazier, IND 8. John Lawing, MINN 9. DENNIS FRANKLIN, MICH 10. Cornelius Greene, OSU, SCORING 1. Dan Beaver, ILL 2. MIKE LANTRY, MICH Blair Conway, OSU 4. Cornelius Greene, OSU GIL CHAPMAN, MICH Bo Bobrowski, PUR Stan Key, NU John King, MINN Bruce Elia, OSU Steve Greene, ILL Eddie Jenkins, ILL At Comp 44 20 36 19 25 13 33 15 35 13 17 8' 26 13 16 8 14 4 9 2 TD 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Pct .455 .528 .520 .455 .371 .471 .500 .500 .286 .222 XP 8 S11 Ave ' 6.8 4.7 5.3 7.2 3.7 4.2 5.9 4.0 12.4 4.2 Yds 258 209 219 186 184 128 104 35 47 22 FG 5 2 1 TD 1, 2 1 1 1 Pts 19 14 14 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 TD 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 Gregg Bohig ond in scoring with 14 points. One other league-leading per- former includes Gregg Bohlig, Wisconsin's quarterback. Bohlig comes into Saturday's game against Michigan as the leader in both forward passing and total offense. Some trends have partly re- vealed themselves as Michigan and Wisconsin get ready to square off. Wisconsin is third in total offense in the Big Ten, con- fronting Michigan with a team that can move the ball. Wisconsin leads the league in passing: Michigan is last in the leagueinpass defense. Neverthe- less, the Wolverines' defensive corps has not allowed a touch- down to be scored on them in the Big Ten, and although Wiscon- sin has moved the ball, the Bad- gers have had difficulty scoring. Wisconsin is ninth in both total defense and in rushing defense- a revelation the Wolverines are likely not to ignre. As Saturday nears, the statis- tics are likely to give way to fun- damentals - blocking, tackling, and good execution. If these are performed well and assignments are maintained by either side - past performances will move over for Saturday's desire. PUNTING No. Ave. 1. BARRY DOTZAUER, MICH 9 42.2 Ken Simmons, WIS 6 42.2 3. Mike Vierneisel, ILL 13 40.7 4. Frank Mosko, MINN 16 39.9 5. Mike Terrizzi, PUR 12 39.8 6. Jim Wenzel, IND 17 39.2 7. Wayne Frederickson; NU 4 38.3 8. Joe Heppner, IOWA 8 37.3 9. Bill Simpson, MSU 12 34.3 10. Tom Skadany, OSU 7 31.3 Blue Hens hold lock on college, poll The college division continues to be dominated by undefeated Dela- ware. The Blue Hens are 6-0 and headed toward an unheard of third- straight college division crown. "Dupont State" severely trounced Connecticut 35-7 last weekend. Western Kentucky made a strong showing against another Ohio Valley Conference team, crushing Tennessee Tech 41-0, and as a result leapt from 11th to 6th, marking the biggest jump up of the week. The latest poll resulted in an ex- citing shake-up after Nevada-Las Vegas and Elon upset previously ranked teams, gaining a ranking themselves. Grambling, South Dakota, and Wittenberg all i'mproved their standings as they prepare for this week's grid battles. Eastern Mich- igan's Hurons remain in the top fifteen with their twelfth-place standing in this week's poll. SmallCollege Poll W-L-T Pts. AIKIDO Wed.-Fri., Oct.1 7-19 Hours 11-5 First organizational meeting of Aikido of University of Michigan Association HOMECOMING RING DAY SPECIAL FREE SIGNATURE IN GOLD Josten's Representative will assist you $12.00 DEPOSIT ____________~~1r THURSDAY at 7:30 Michigan League Conference Rm. 5 Call HARVEY BARA for further info 663-1013 Aikido is a Japanese art of .self-defense that is based on non- resistance rather than strength. An attack is never stopped; it is met and guided in a way that causes the attacker to be thrown by the force of his own attack. In addition to throws, Aikido also employs a number of wrist techniques. Although these techniques are extremely painful and can drive an aggressor to the ground immediately, they are not designed to break bones or cause injury. For this reason, Aikido can be said to a 'kind' form of self-defense. The word aikido means "method, or, way (do) for the Coordina- tion, or Harmony (ai) of Mental Energy, or Spirit (ki)." Aikido is then harmony of the mind and of the body. We need not struggle against an opponent's strength. If we lead his mind, his body will follow. However, to lead an opponent's mind the Aikidoist must be calm and relaxed and in control of his own mind and body. One of the most valuable aspects of Aikido is that it trains its students to be relaxed and in harmony with them- selves and with others. These are things which can be carried into our daily lives and can help us to be better and more effective people. GA LLO PINK CHABUS OF CALIFORN IA MOre than a Rosi, our Pink Chablis is a captivating wine combining the delicate fragrance of a superior Rosi and the crisp character of a fine Chablis. This wine is one tour most delightful creations. Made and bottled at th Gao Vineyards in Modesto, Calif. Alcohol 12% byoL TIMEO Magazine reports: "Gallo's Pink Chablis recently triumphed over ten costlier competitors in a blind tasting among a panel of wine-industry executives in Los Angeles. Time Magazine November 27,1972 page 81. PA Make a friend today: Dowllor a Dull o wili a6loy 60hot Your favorite builder, buddy, anybody will wonder how he got along without the Royal Scot. It's a big quarter-pound of pure beef, grilled to perfection and topped with tomato and onion slices, lettuce, and Scotty's special sauce ;.. and A career i law- without law school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an under- graduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills- the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the six courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 500 graduates in law firms, banks, and corpora- tions in over 40 cities. If you are a student of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like to meet you. Contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Tennessee' St. (4) Cal Poly-SLO Hawaii Grambling Western Kentucky South Dakota Louisiana Tech Wittenberg North Dakota State Boise State Eastern Michigan Nevada-Las Vegas Elon 1 tie Carson-Newman 5-0-0 5-0-0 4-0-0 5-1-0 5-0-03 5-1-0 5-1-0 5-0-0 6-1-0 4-1-0 4-1-0 5-1-0 6-0-0 4-1-0 594 426 418 303 298 296 266 185 182 181 176 82 66 66 People! Music! Food! BACH CLUB PRESENTS Baroque, Classical & Contemporary Music by LECLAIR, REICHA, PERSICHETTI, & ARNOLD PERFORMED BY Vincent BRYSON-flute Scott KNIPE-oboe Ruth VANDERMOLEN- clarinet Vicki KING-bassoon Bob EVENDEN-horn There o flt 10 0 n m A, j 1i