Saturday, September 11, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Football, medicine: All in a day's There is a program here at Michigan r ailed Inteflex - an intensive, six-year cur- riulum which combines undergraduate and medical school studies and allows students to trim two years off the normal time it takes to becnme a doctor. Inteftex students are noted for their fiendish devotion to their schoolwork and an equally fervent aversion to outside activi- ties. Then there is Kirk Lewis, an offensive guard for Michigan with a powerful build and a mind to match. For the past four years, Lewis has somehow found time for both football and Inteflex. He's excelled at both, starting as a sophomore for Bo Schem- bechler in 1973 and compiling a 3.44 grade point average through four years of school. Such a combination of brains and brawn is rare indeed. Lewis missed all of last season with a broken arm, hut stilt served as team cap- fain. He's back this year to sise sip his last year of eligibility, taking time off from Inte- flex a wchile. Daily S rts Editor Bill Stieg asked Lewis about his remarkable career at Michigan, his thoughts about football and his plans for the future. DAILY: It's not unreasonable to say that varsity football and Inteflex are the two most time-consuming activities on campus. How do you do it? LEWIS: That's what everybody asks me. During the season, you've just got to set priorities for what you want to do with your time. For me, academics and football come ahead of the social life, although I don't like to neglect that because I think that's an important part of the university experience. If I have studying to do after football practice, that gets done before anything else. I've been fortunate that I haven't had to study much, so as a result I've been able to play. But to me, football is also a relaxing thing, in that it's doing something other than school. Some of my classmates, all they do all day long is study and study and study. It would be hard for me to do that. It's easier for me to play foot- ball and study. DAILY: How much time did you spend with the team last year when you were injured? LEWIS: I spent the regular amount of time with the players. I was down at practice when they were, and I went work for Kirk Lewis to the meetings and everything else, so I was just like part of the team. So I spent just as much time down there (as when playing). But the time I saved was when I got back from practice. Usually you're so tired that you have to catch an hour of sleep, or sometimes you can't do anything - you just lay there and watch TV. It's hard to func- tion. DAILY: When you were playing, what was a typical day like, during the season? LEWIS: Well, classes were usually from eight to twelve, and then one to three, and after that I was down at football practice. We usually have meet- ings prior to every practice to discuss our plans for the day and put in any adjustments for the opponent that week. I WAS UNABLE to be at a lot of those meetings, so I'd come in over lunch hour and eat lunch with the coach- es and go over the plan for that day. Then we'd practice from 3:30 until six, run up to the training table and grab a bite to eat, and maybe by 7:30 I was done with football. So that's about five hours a day. After that I had to go back and study. Usually I couldn't take too much time to study because I'd have to go to bed early - I was too tired from practice. I could get a couple hours of studying in if I wanted to, but I didn't always take the time. DAILY: You said you've been fortu- nate that you haven't had to study much, and you say you don't always take the time, yet you have a 3.44 grade point. How did that happen? LEWIS: I don't know ... I've been able to get B's and A's - I've gotten a C or two here and there - it's mostly stuff that has come easy to me. DAILY: What's the curriculum for Inteflex? LEWIS: We start out with just basic natural sciences - zoology, chemistry, organic chemistry and stuff, and then we "I get uset if people label me a dumb jock * It is kind of funny, though. When t h e y come wheeling in the emergency room and look up and see the guy they just called a dumb jock, they might get a little flustered." Kirk Lewis progress on after two years to a total wouldn't appreciate my being beeped medical school curriculum, which is bio right in the middle of practice. chemistry, microbiology, anatomy, phys- So I've just decided to take the whole iology, pathology, pharmacology, things year off, take a few humanities courses like that. You go ten months a year for that I hadn't been able to take. And then, the first four years, and the last two hopefully, I'll do an externship or pre- years you're on clinic, with vacation ceptorship type thing with a rural doctor time dispersed throughout the year. in the second half of the year. DAILY: Are you on schedule? DAILY: Do you get a kick out of being a total refutation of the "dumb LEWIS: I'm on schedule up to now, jock" stereotype? Some of your class- but the rest of my classmates are on mates must hold some sort of prejudice clinic. I've decided to take the next year against athletes in general. off in order to play my fifth year of football. It's impossible in the fifth year LEWIS: Yeah, I do kind of get a at Inteflex - which is equivalent to the kick out of it. I know there's a stereo- third year of medical school - to do type of the basic dumb jock. Depending anything else besides medicine, unless on who I meet, I can tell them I'm a it's something you can do at your leis- football player and I've got that going ure, and football is not one of those for me, or I can tell someone else I'm things - football is a discipline. a medical student and I've got that repu- SO I'VE BEEN forced to take a leave tation, which is always good. of absence. I could have taken the leave I like both worlds, and I consider during the school year and just been myself a jock, but I don't consider my- a half year behind, or maybe take some self a dumb jock. There are a lot of clinics that wouldn't require my being other kids who aren't necessarily foot- there all night and all day. Something ball players or varsity athletes who I like internal medicine or obstetrics, consider jocks. Those are the people you're on call every third or fourth I like - those who don't study all the night, and there's no way I could be time. There are people in medical school on call and be down playing football. who come to school in their cutoffs and I could bring my beeper along, but Bo after class go shoot a few hoops instead of hitting the medical library- Those are the types I associate with. I THINK THE "dumb jock" thing is gone, because in order to play big-time collegiate football the way it is now - it's a very complex game - you've got to study the game like you study school, especially at Michigan. You have to maintain the academic requirements to be eligible. You can't be dumb and play. I know there are still guys like that (dumb jocks) and I think you'll always have them. Maybe at some of the small- er institutions that aren't as stringent academically, you'll find a few more. But at Michigan I don't think you can say "dumb jock" anymore. I get upset if neople label me a dumb jock. For one thing, I don't think they know what they're talking about. Then again, sometimes I just have to look the other way. Tt is kind of funny, though. When they come wheeling in the emerg- ency room and look up and see the guy they just called a dumb jock, they might get a little flustered. DAILY: Bi-time football and medi- cine offer striking contrasts. One breaks bones, the other mends them. How do you reconcile that in your mind? LEWIS: I've never had much of a DottymPhoto by SCOTT b R R conflict with that, When I play foot- for e ssed last season with a broken ball, I play clean and don't do any- for the '76 season, anid says MchEganE See LEWIS, Page 19 KIRK LEWIS LEADS THE WOLVERINES onto the field for a game last year.3 arm, but still served as team captain. The med student-offensive guard is back I a "super, super team."