PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. OCTORER, 14- 19fl7 THE MICHIGAN DAIlY 5~ATTTflflAV fl1~Tfln1~i? IA IOL!'? >'Jl'1 .R. i.l ilrAJC1A} 11V 1V 1' ZTu . 9 1 0( Re ven ge Sets Pace in Nation's Top Contest Irish Host Trojans, Orange Juice Kid By BILL LEVIS The key word today is revenge. While Michigan tries to turn back Michigan State in the Sta- dium after suffering two straight losses at the hands of the Spar- tans, undefeated Southern Cali- fornia travels to South Bend to seek revenge against the Figthin' Irish who buried the Rose-bound Trojans 51-0 last year. This year things appear to have changed. Southern California has piled up four straight victories and is presently rated on top of the Associated Press football poll. The main difference in the Tro- jans' attack is the addition of jun- for transfer 0. J. Simpson who has team I have ever seen." And after carried the ball for 602 yards and the Trojans defeated his Spartans a 5.4 yard average. Simpson runs 21-17, Michigan State coach Duffy the 100 yard dash in a blazing 9.4 Daugherty concurred, saying, "this and was a member of USC's world is the biggest, fastest and best record-breaking 440-yard relay I Southern Cal team ever." team last spring. The Irish, who slaughtered Iowa Sogge's Not Soggy Guiding the Trojan attack will be quarterback Steve Sogge who pin point passes to a quartet of has riddled USC's opponents with receivers including speddy Earl McCullouch who has accumulared 339 yards on 18 receptions. According to Notre Dame coach Ara Parseghian, "Southern Cal is undoubtedly the fastest college 56-6 last Saturday after being upset by Purdue 28-21 the week before, will rely on the passing arm of Terry Hanratty to outdo the Trojans. Hanratty completed nine out of 10 passes against the Hawkeyes and has already passed for 655 yards and four touchdowns this year. He is now threatening to break all of Notre Dame's passing rec- I Over 100 Area Artists J. T. Abernathy Barry Avedon James Black F'rank. Cassara Jessie Forsythe Fiame/ta Hsieh Gerome Kamrowski Milton Keinnit;- Lois Kojola Chet LaMore William Lewis Guy Palazzola D)ati Sharp Jean Paid Slusser John Stephenson John VanHeran Albert Weber Emil Weddige Richard Wilt ords. His prime receivers should be Rocky Bleier and Jim Seymour who dislocated a finger a week ago and caught only one pass against Iowa. Irish Kryptonite While the Trojans have been playing like supermen all season, they are expected to come back down to earth when they invade Notre Dame Stadium. The Fightin' Irish seldom lose in the "pit" and the Trojans will probably come out of there looking like they have been fed to the lions. In other top rated games, sec- ond-ranked Purdue travels to Co- lumbus to tackle Ohio State while third-seeded Georgia faces Mis- sissippi under the lights in Jack- son. On the West coast, the game of the week features fourth-ranked UCLA against a surprising Cali- fornia team which has compiled an impressive 3-1 record. One of the Golden Bears' wins was a narrow 10-9 decision over Michigan two weeks ago. California's only loss was against Notre Dame, 41-8. While the Bruins barely defeated Penn State 17-15 last weekend, they should be up for the Golden Bears. The Uclans will play Cali- fornia in the friendly confines of the Los Angeles Coliseum where they have never lost under coach Tommy Prothro. Led by quarter- back Gary Beban, the Bruins are expected to encounter little trou- ble, from the upstart Bears. 2 Big Ones in Big 8 In the plain state area, fan in- terest will be focused on two Big Eight Conference games. Unde- feated Colorado hosts Missouri while eighth - ranked Nebraska travels to Kansas. Against Kansas State last week, SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JOEL BLOCK Associated Press was the reocgnize its comeback by four Big Ten teams with1 tion's leaders. 'Golden' Keyes Leading the Midwest1 supremacy is undefeated -Daily-Andy Sacks Sports Staffer Wedded Sports Night Editor Howard Kohn yesterday claimed Kathy Weir as his bride in an afternoon ceremony at the First Methodist Church in Ann Arbor. Kathy is the sister of Sports Night Editor Dave Weir. Others in the picture are Grayle Howlett, Clark Norton, Rick Stern, and Bob MacFarland. Ohio State Challenges Undefeated Boilerinakers By JIM CHEKERYLLA powerhouse Notre Dame, 56-6 in They said the giant was dead. later games. They had finally defeated him and Facing a tough Minnesota squad, now they are rejocing all across Illinois will have all it can handle the country. Too bad-he's not in its 57th annual Homecoming dead, and they may be in for big contest. "Minnesota is a big, strong trouble, team with an excellent defensive The "giant" is the Big Ten, re- unit and a good offensive punch. cently recovered from a string of They seemed to jell in their 23-3 defeats, and now sporting hope- win over Southern Methodist last fully at least one contender for Saturday," reported Illini Scout the national championship. The Jim Brown. 0 the Cornhuskers came back from a 14-0 deficit to defeat the Wild- cats 16-15. Nebraska's come from behind drive was led by split end Denis Richnafsky who set a Corn- husker record with 13 catches for 145 yards and 6-7 quarterback Frank Patrick who completed 191 of 33 tosses for 193 yards. The big game for Big Eight par- tisans will be next Saturday when Nebraska and Colorado square off; against each other in Lincoln. In other top games today, Ala- bama journeys to Vanderbilt, North Carolina State travels to Maryland and Syracuse plays Navy at Annapolis. Tennessee, which lost to UCLA 20-16, a month ago, takes on undefeated Georgia Tech first to ranking the na- towards Purdue, BIG TEN 1. What veteran Big Ten Sports Information Director was a mem- ber of the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Team? 2. Who was the Big Ten's Most Valuable Player in 1966? ANSWERS: 1. Eric Wilson, now in his 45th and final sea- son as Iowa's publicitor, made the 1924 Olympic team. He reached the quarter-finals in the 400-meter dash in the Paris Games. 2. Bob Griese, Purdue's All-American quarterback. scond in the country only to Southern California. Leroy, "the Golden," Keyes will head the Boil- ermaker's drive for their fourth straight victory in this afternoon's contest against Ohio State. Keyes, a right halfback, has ac- -cumllated six touchdowns and a 9.6 yard average through his rush- ing, passing, pass receiving, inter- ceptions, punt returns, and kickoff returns. The Buckeyes should be in great shape after demolishing Ore- gon last week 30-0. Ranked as one of the top teams in the nation by the Associated Press, Indiana's 3-0 won-lost rec- ord is equalled only by that of Purdue's. They will be searching for their forth win today as they face Iowa, a team which earned its only victory last season by slip- ping past the Hoosiers, 20-19. A Game to Remember "I don't think we will be lacking for incentive with that game to remember, as well as for what we have at stake," remarked Coach John Pont of the Hoosiers. The Hawks enter the game with a 1-2 record, downing Texas Chris- tian, 24-9, in the opener but falling to tough Oregon State, 38-18, and Yom Takes Its Toll Illinois stands with a 1-2 record, trouncing Pittsburgh, 34-6, but losing Florida, 14-0, and Indiana last week, 20-7. Nationally ranked in the top 20, Minnesota hosts a fine 2-1 record, narrowly defeat- ing Utah, 13-12, and walking over a highly rated SMU team, 23-3, but being blanked by Nebraska, 7-0. The Gophers will be without their top defensive performer-end Bob Stein, who will miss the contest because it falls on Yom Kippur, a Jewish holiday. With both teams seeking their initial triumphs of the year, Wis- consin will play host to Pittsburgh for the first time since 1938. The Badgers have lost prior non-con- ference tests to Washington, 17-0, and to Arizona State, 42-16, two weeks ago, while dropping their opening Big Ten tilt to Michigan State last Saturday, 35-7. Pitts- burgh has lost to UCLA, 40-8, to Illlinois, 34-6, and ta West Vir- ginia, 15-0. It's Rice-Time Northwestern will -meet Rice for the first time tonight, hoping to improve its unimpressive record of 1-2. In their opening game; the Wildcats ruined Miami's national title hopes with a 12-7 upset, but failed to pick up another victory while losing to a rough Missouri squad, 13-6, and second-ranked Purdue, 25-16 in the final quarter. U' w e i i i + I in Knoxville. ON EXHIBIT AT THE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH CORNER OF STATE & WILLIAM featuring DONATIONS FROM AREA ARTISTS Sponsored by the ANN ARBOR COMMITTEE FOR RESPONSIBILITY Benefit for war-injured Vietnamese children r . 4- UNION-LEAGUE I ©Z VOLKSWAGEN CF AMERICA, '-C. TICKET RAMSEY LEI SALES WS TRIO & BUFFY STE.-ARIE CONCERTS 1% .1 It's been replaced. INDIVIDUAL SALES Hill Aud. Box Office, starting Oct. 76 9-4 daily BLOCK SALES ' Diag, Oct. 75,.72 noon THE DOORS 4 For the 19th consecutive year, we've replaced the bug. With another bug. To those of you who expected some- thing fancier, sorry. (The '68 looks just like the '67 crossed out above.) To those of you who now own a VW, congratulations. (Once again your model has not gone out of style.) To those of you who've been thinking nbout buvino a new one, nice thinkina. (They have built-in headrests.) The windshield wipers are much more efficient. (They're larger.) Even the shifting is easier. (We put a decal on the window to show you how.) All in all, we feel that the 36 nice little changes on this year's Volkswagen make it the best ever. Of course, every year we build the "perfect" Volkswagen. And then we do a masterful iob of i i .