Page 10-,Wednesday, October 8, 1980-The Michigan Daily The Polls Lilja in line to land many honors AP Top Twenty 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Alabama (60).........4-0 So. California (1).......4-0 Texas...............4-0 Pittsburgh (1).........4-0 UCLA (1).............4-0 Georgta..........4-0 Notre Dame..........3-0 North Carolina........4-0 Ohio State ............3-1 Nebraska............3-1 Florida State ............ 4-1 Oklahoma............ 2-1 Miami, Fla..........4-0 Penn State .............. 3-1 Arkansas ............... 3-1 Stanford...........4-1 South Carolina .......... 4-1 Baylor .................. 4-0 Missouri ................ 3-1 So. Methodist ........... 4-0 1,252 1,127 1,088, 1,087 991 896 882 731 705. 635 609 563 519 424 353 351 323 252 205 66 UPI Top Twenty 1. Alabama (39)...........4-0 2. So. California ........... 4-0 3. Pittsburgh (2) .......... 4-0 4. Texas ................. 4-0 5. UCLA (1) ............... 4-0 6. Georgia ................ 4-0. 7. Notre Dame ............ 3-0 8. North Carolina ......... 4-0 9. Nebraska...........3-1 10. Florida State.........4-1 11. Ohio State........... 3-1 12. Oklahoma............2-1 14. Miami, Fla.........'. 4-0 14. Penn State .............4- 15. Baylor. .............. 4-0 16. Stanford ............4-1 17. South Carolina ..........4-1 18. Arkansas ............... 3-1 19. Missouri................43-1 20. Iowa State ..............4-0 622 533 490 468 453 390 389 250 246 235 226 205 114 101 70 67 58 51 45 10 When George Lilja was in high school, the one position he didn't want to play was center. But when the coach suggested he switch front tight end tb the snapper's spot, he grudgingly ac- cepted the change. Since'then, Lilja has had few regrets. By GARY LEVY The 6-4, 250-lb. fifth-year senior from Palos Park, Ill. is the anchor of Michigan's offensive line and his per- formance last season earned him pre- season All-American honors before the 1980 season began. "Center was the last place I wanted to go," said Lilja, the Wolverines' of- - fensive captain. "But things have worked out, I can't complain.'' LILJA EXPLAINED that his lack of speedfor a tight end and his lineman- like size were the reasons for the move by his coach at Carl Sandberg High School, Cliff Eade. And he said he thinks the decision enhanced his-chan- ces of playing college football. "I was lucky because a lot of scouts looked at me at center who wouldn't have if I had stayed a tight end," said Lilja. Lilja's choice for a school was narrowed down to Purdue and Michigan because he wanted to play in the Midwest and particularly at a Big Ten school because his brother had played at Northwestern. And Michigan had the edge because of a little sign that hangs above coach Bo Schembechler's office door. "WHEN I VISITED Michigan, I saw the sign above his door. It says, 'Those who stay will be champions.' I wanted to be a champion, so I came here," said Lilja. Lilja said he is well aware of the fact that center is not one of the glamor positions in football, and realizes that with hard work, the accolades come in due time. "It's a long drawn out process. It's not an immediate process, like for run- ning backs. If you play good week in and week out, the rewards will come your way from the coaches and players," said Lilja, who was named of- NOW OPEN 18 E. WASHINGTON (NEXT TO BIMBO'S) Featuring Fish N' Chips $2.95 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT-NO COVER Wednesday-Saturday Cocktails, English Ale 663-9757. fensive champion of the game twice last season. LILJA ALSO EARNED the Meyer Morton Award for 1980, given to the football player who shows greatest development and promise as a result of the annual spring practice. , However, Lilja said he has room to improve before he'll ever be satisfied with his performance. "When I can master it all; when I can block on any play, that's when I'll know I'm doing my job," said Lilja. "I haven't mastered it yet, but I'm closer." Playboy must think he's close as Lilja was selected to the magazine's pre-season All-American squad. "I WAS SURPRISED because I knew I had a good year last year, but I didn't know if I was All-American material," said Lilja. "But I can't let it get to my head." Lilja's role as co-captain, along with linebacker Andy Cannavino, has become significant this season as far as team moral is concerned with Michigan suffering consecutive non-conference losses to Notre Dame and South Carolina. "I TRY TO TELL the team that the championship is still there no matter what," said Lilja. "We've got no time to sit around and think about the losses. They are behind us now, and we've got to look ahead. If we just keep pounding, pounding, and pounding, the breaks will come our way." His explanations for the Wolverines' offensive troubles this season are fum- bles, interceptions, and missed blocking assignments. "You can block 100 percent, but it won't do a bit of good if you don't get the ball over the goal line," said Lilja. "IT'S NOT THAT the line is bad. One little breakdown on the line and the play won't work. You need consistency, and that's what we had last week. The of- fense looked like the old Michigan," continued Lilja, in reference to the 497 total yards the Wolverine offense rolled up. If Lilja is sure of anything, it's that the offensive line will improve. 0 "This is our second season together. Things start to become habit," said Lilja. "As soon as the mistakes are ironed out, you'll see a more dominant line. A couple of blocks here and there could have made a difference. "There's always room for im- provement. If you're ever satisfied, that's when you'll start to lose. 'If we played as good as we should, we'd be 4- 0." D~aily Photo MICHIGAN CO-CAPTAIN George Lilja prepares to snap the ball to quarter- back John Wangler in last Saturday's 38-13 rout of California. The senior from Palos Park, Ill. was a pre-season Playboy magazine All-American. U 9 Software Engineer, BS in Management Science "I'm taking advantage of Harris' 100% edu- cational benefits for graduate programs- going for my Master's in Business Administration. I'm where I want to be- growing with q growing company." Electrical/Desi n Engineer, BSEV "As an engineer, I enjoy the challenge of working on different high technology projects, and having a choice in the type of work I do. As an outdoors person, I enjoy the warm climate and the beaches." t. THEIR EXPERIENCE AND GOALS SPAN THE SPECTRUM. BUT THEY'RE AT THE CENTER OF THE ACTION NOW The Harris Corporation. and equipment-such as a space A billion dollar leader in deployable antenna and a Kremlin- sophisticated communication and - to-White House hotline (DCL)-for information processing equipment a variety of industrial and govern- and systems. ment markets. Where these two professionals, Composition Systems Division and more than 23,000 others in over is a leading manufacturer of mini- three dozen facilities worldwide, computer and microprocessor-based are contributing their imaginative, systems to automate text editing, on-target ideas. Pooling their knowl- word processing and photo- edge to innovate and improve typesetting. technologies. Changing e face of If you're unable to schedule a the communications industry campus interview, send your resume If your back ound is in Electri- in confidence to: Harris Govern- cal, Mechanical, hemical or Indus- ment Sytems Grou Operations, il Engineering, Computer Science, P.O. Box 37, Melbourne, Florida Physics or Math-there's a place 32901, or to Composition Systems for your mind right here. Division, P.O. Box 2080, Melbourne, Harris Government Systems Florida 32901. Reggae rocks to red'riscover. its roots (Continued from Page 7) simpler, more direct approach: Everywhere you go it's the talk of the day Everywhere you go you hear people say That the Special Patrol they're murderers, murderers We can't let them go no furtherer, furtherer They kill Blair Peach the teacher They kill Blair Peach the dirty bleeders The wider vision of Johnson's earlier work has been replaced by social realism and musical economy. "Inglan is a Bitch" describes the plight of working class Blacks through their own words and experiences over an infec- tious dance rhythm sparked by John Kipapye's jazz-inflected guitar licks. Dennis Bovell's precision at the mixing boards is present here throughout, and throughout the album, retaining com- plexity and utilizing thosedynamic dub sound effects in a well-integrated, ac- cessible fashion. Johnson kills two birds with one stone on "Di Black Petty Booshwah" lam- pooning the obvious ("them climb up the ladder on the backs of the blacks") and, through a spaced-out horn riff and bouncy rhythm, directing a barb at Ska-revival-reactionaries. Johnson@ doesn't appropriate Jamaican music out of a gimmicky trendiness, but because he shares its political and rhythmic convictions. Bass Culture in its double-edged meaning asserts the ascending importance of reggae and other elements of third world culture both artistically and socially. The truths contained in the lyrics of Linton Kwesi Johnson and Big Youth extend Group designs, produces and markets high technology electronic systems INTERVIEW DATE: T HEMNFRIDAY, OCTOBER 17,1980 HTIEDM- Ilb I