oII r are .szl l~,.ILrtsaI S..Ai-Ir aae Eight I Ht MR-MIUAN UAIL.Y I-fiouyt JC ltJ rllwcr G71 F 7 1 L I,,., _ I I I Attention: THE SENIORS CLASS of '73 Gridde Pickings All the boys were seated for the opening ceremonies of the forty- second bi-nightly renewal of the Alpha-Rho "Screw-your-neighbor" pageant. "It gladdens my heart to see you Greek lads back for another shot at the 'grand screw.' The Findlay Kid and I were worried lest we should lose you to the octagonal oblong of 42nd St." In the initial maneuver of the night, Gunner slipped The Demon a couple of Jack brothers to complete the little fellars' "mini-screw."' In the diagonal direction from The Demon sat Trips, recent recipient of a pair of queenly ladies and thus a proud possessor of an incredible inky-dinky-doo screw. Trips,, in an aside to The Yonkers Youngster, was heard to mutter "get our Gridde picks into 420 Maynard before the screwing hour and win us a free Mr. Pizza pizza." 1. Tulane at MICHIGAN 11. Boston College at Navy 2. North Carolina at Ohio State 12. Tennessee at Auburn 3 Mich. State at Southern Cal. 13. Bowling Green at West. Mich. 4. Purdue at Notre Dame 14. Virginia at Duke 5. Wisconsin at LSU 15. Toledo at Ohio U. 6. Minnesota at Nebraska 16. California at Missouri 7. Indiana at Kentucky 17. N. Illinois at Marshall 8. Illinois at Washington 18. Holy Cross at Temple 9. Iowa at Penn State 19. Fresno St. at San Jose St. 10. Northwestern at Pitt 20. DAILY LIBELS at East. Echos Ur- Hard-hitting Kee heads stout Michigan defense. By GEORGE HASTINGS The 1972 season is fast becom- ing the big year for Tom Kee. He's a logical pick for All-Big Ten, the signal caller for one of the top defenses in America, and his coach just named him as "champion of the week" for one of the finest Michigan perfor- mances ever, the 26=9 thrashing of UCLA last Saturday. But surprisingly, Tom himself says that he is playing that much better" he did last year. Kee "not than * . IS THE SYMBOL FOR TAUREANS but this is no bull. Sign up NOW for your YEARBOOK PORTRAITS make your appointment now! on DIAG or FISHBOWL (incase of rain) Subscribe to The Michigan Daily, - ~ l 1 '4 ^/}, / i _ We Have the Silliest Things Penny candy and mix nuts, jigsaw puz- zles, Origami paper kits, match box cars, Model boat kits, Dope-Balsa-Paints. -Adult Games -_ FOOTBALL GAMES, LARGE CHESS SET SELECTION, GOLF GAMES, BRAIN TEASER GAMES - Famous Makes of Bicycles -- SCHWINN, RALEIGH, MERCIER, LA PIREER, MOTOBACAN E - Parts -- LOCKS, ARM BAND LITES, TUBES, TIRES, TOOL KITS, AND TOOL BAGS THE FRIENDLY STUDENT STORE campus E & TOY 514 E. WILLIAM Kee sees the acclamation which has come to him this season snot as a result of any great Improve- ment in his own play, but as result of the fact that he has come out from under the shadow of former fellow Michigan line- backer Mike Taylor. "Last year," he says, "I was playing in Taylor'ssshadow. He was a great player and an All- American, so I didn't get too much attention." Actually, the statistics from 1971 show that Kee didn't have too bad of a season. Although Taylor led the team with 92 tackles, Kee finished a close second with 80 solo stops, as well as leading the Wolverine de- fense-the toughest in the na- tion to score upon last year- with 44 assists. But despite what he would have you believe, it would seem that Kee is playing even better so far this year. Michigan coach Bo Schembechler feels that Kee is quite an improved player as he is now leading the club in tackles, and even Kee himself is willing to admit that he is play- ing "maybe a little better." Of courseathe 5-11, 210-pound senior has a high set of stan- dards against which to measure his own gridiron performance- he comes from a family that has played a lot of football. His older brother Dick, a de- fensive back, played with Dick Butkus, Jim Grabowski and that group on the Illinois Big Ten championship team of 1963 under Pete Elliot. Tom got his own football start at Central High School in his native Wheaton, Illinois, where he was an outstanding fullback as well as a linebacker. In fact, the basis of Michigan's recrut- ment was his talent as a full- back. On the freshman team, Kee was the starting fullback and h successful ground gainer. But in the spring of his freshman year, he was switched to the position of wide-side linebacker in the Wolverines' two-linebacker de- fense, and there he has been ever since, much to the chagrin of Mchigan's opponents. Although the position of full- back is traditionally more glor- ious than that of linebacker, Kee is glad he was switched. "I'd rather hit than get hit," he says with relish, "In football you either dish out punishment or take it and at linebacker I can dish it out." Kee sees this year's defense as potentially as good as last year's, which was first nationally against the rush and the score, and sec- ond in total defense. "Eventually, we should be as good or better," he says. "We're not at that point yet, but we will be. We're getting there." In actuality, so far the Wol- verine defenders have done all right, posting a shutout against Northwestern, and then effective- ly shutting down the vaunted UCLA wishbone attack last week- end. .nAnd, if the pun can be par- doned, Kee was the key in that second effort. He was credited with 13 solo tackles, and assisted on several others. And although the press voted teammate Randy Logan as the defensive player of the game, Schembechler sig- nificantly gave Kee his designa- tion as the Wolverines defensive "champion of the week." But Kee's biggest goal in foot- ball is to return to the west coast and win this year in the Rose Bowl, which, he says, has been the scene of both his big- gest thrill and his biggest dis- appointment on the gridiron. "Ever since my brother went to, the Rose Bowl with Illinois, that had been an ambition of mine, and just being there last year was a thrill," he says. However,. the 13-12 loss the Wolverines suf- fered at the hands of Stanford made Kee determined to return again. "I would really like to go back again," he says. "We've lost only two games in my varsity career at Michigan-but both in the last game of the season. It would be nice to go my senior year without losing any." Does he think that the Wol- verines can do it? "I think that it's possible, with a little luck," he smiles, "I can't count on it, but it'd be nice." I .I _ _ _ Are you still reading the way your parents read? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. s grass is green Daily Photo by DENNY GAINER TOM KEE (37) takes off after intercepting a pass against North- western two weeks ago. Craig Mutch (34) prepares to cut down a would-be Wildcat tackler. THE ADIDAS SHOES ARE IN ^i6e SbrtShf al week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read the 447 page novel The God- lather in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.-r The Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. 711 North University 668-6915 I ON-CAMPUS JOB INTERVIEWS You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. and it grows when it rains With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material.% At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be .able to read a magazine like Time or News- U of M STUDENT UNION 530 S. State St. 6:3 HOLIDAY INN BAXTER LABORATORIES, 10 4/72 HEALTH & INSTITUTIONAL CONSULTANTS, 1 0/4/72 DEERE & COMPANY, 10/5/72 INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, 10/5/72 WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY, 10/6 '72 GENERAL FOODS CORPORATION, 10/6/72 JOHNSON & JOHNSON, 10/6/72 Liberal Arts Accounting Biology Chemistry Comp. & Comm. Sci. Economics English History Marketing Mathematics Microbiology Physics Political Sci. Sociology Statistics Biostatistics Hospital Admin. I FRI., SEPT. 29 0 or 8:30 p.m. SAT SEPT. 30 10 a.m. or 1 p.m. GRAD SCHOOL INTERVIEW SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY, 10/4/72 V5A5 Vi : I