I THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. OCTOBER '15.191 TH IHGA AL T 1fl~fRR.1 ~' Q %J V% AAjMA JL WAPAJAM A 0. A 0 U I I BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Purdue Smashes OSU, 41-6 By The Associated Press COLUMBUS - Mike Phipps, sophomore quarterback, riddled Ohio State with his passes and his runs yesterday as Purdue's No. 2 rated Boilermakers romped to an amazingly easy 41-6 victory over the Buckeyes. The unbeaten Boilermakers piled up a 35-0 lead by half-time and second and third stringers played most of the final two per- iods. Phipps sat out most of the last half. Ohio State never got beyond Purdue's 33-yard line until the waning minutes of the last quar- ter when they scored against Pur- due reserves. The touchdown came on a 10-yard pass from sub- stitute quarterback Kevin Rusnak to end Bill Anders. Phipps passed for two touch- downs and his runs on passing plays added up long yardage. AtC one point in the first half, he completed nine passes in a row for 142 yards and two touch- downs. Defense ClicksI Purdue broke the game open in a hurry without ever having the ball for an offensive play. Dennis Cirbes intercepted a Jerry Ehrsam pass on the Ohio State 30 shortly after the opening kickoff and walked a tightrope down the side- lines for a touchdown. The Boilermakers scored once more in that opening period on a one-yard smash by Williams. They scored three times in the second period. One came on a five-yard pass from Phipps to end Marion Griffin. Another was on a 25-yard pass from Phipps to Jim Bierne. And the final marker of the half was on a 25-yard sprint off left tackle by Leroy Keyes. S* * Gonso hit Butcher with a three- yard touchdown toss in the first quarter after Iowa's Bob Ander- son had kicked a 30-yard field goal. The tireless Gonso contri- buted a 47-yard run to the 73- yard Hoosier scoring drive. Bad Punt A short Iowa punt set up an- other Indiana touchdown drive in the second quarter. Mike Kri- Bob Longo, who caught seven passes for 82 yards. Bazylak hit on his first four throws, including a 22-yard pitch to Longo and an 18-yarder to Joe McCain to set up the first touch- down. George Pribish scored it with an 11-yard burst. The Panthers, who stopped Wis- consin twice inside the 10-yard line, got their second touchdown I A voshia went the last yard for the on an 80-yard march with Jeff score and Indiana carried a 14-3 Brown diving across from the one. halftime lead. Bazylak's passes accounted for Iowa came back with a 61-yard 63 yards on the drive with a 39- scoring drive in the first series yard toss to McCajn the key play. of the third quarter. Ed Podolak Big Ten Standings - I Michigan State Indiana Purdue Minnesota MICHIGAN Northwestern Ohio State Iowa Wisconsin Illinois W 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 a L 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 T 0' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. 1.000 1000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 _000 .00 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi The MSU defensive backfield closes in on Ron Johnson (40) as he bursts through the line. Although he didn't duplicate his heroics of last week, Johnson did pick up 107 yards on 24 carries as Michigan's leading ground-gainer. He also performed well on defense, as he was among the team leaders, in tackles. CLASS SHOWS: Mistakes, Spartans Defeat Michigan Yesterday's Results Michigan State 34, MICHIGAN Indiana 21, Iowa 17 Purdue 41, Ohio State 6 Minnesota 10, Illinois 7 Pittsburgh 13, Wisconsin 11 Saturday's Games Indiana at MICHIGAN Michigan State at Minnesota Ohio State at Northwestern Iowa at Wisconsin Notre Dame at Illinois Oregon State at Purdue Hoosiers Rally BLOOMINGTON - Indiana's 0 sophomore a e r i a 1 combination, Harry Gonso to Jade Butcher, produced two touchdowns, the last with only 53 seconds to play, as the Hoosiers beat Iowa 21-17 yesterday for their fourth straight victory. It marked the first time since 1910 that the Hoosiers had won their first four games and left them one of the two unbeaten Big Ten teams. passed the last 11 to Paul Usino- wicz,. The Hawkeyes then got the lead 17-14 in the final period on a Podolak one-yard plunge. John Isenbarger ran a kickoff back 33 yards to the Hoosier 40, to start the winning drive. In- diana then scored in nine plays with Gonso passing or running on seven of them. The clincher was a four-yard pass to Butcher. * * * Illini Edged CHAMPAIGN - Jeff Nygren's 23-yard field goal with less than five minutes to play capped the sparkling play of sophomores Jim Carter and Phil Hagen to give Minnesota a 10-7 Big Ten vic- tory over Illinois yesterday. A stubborn Illinois defense matched Minnesota's touted de- fense and limited the Gophers to a net of 52 yards in7 the first' half before finally yielding to the running of Carter and the pass- ing of Hagen. Minnesota took the lead in the third quarter on a 74-yard drive, climaxed by Carter's touchdown plunge only to have the Illini come right back with a 75-yard drive to tie the score.. Midway in the final quarter Mike Condo intercepted a Volk- man pass and returned 13 yards to the Illinois 44. Hagen then took to the air and completed four passes-the final one to Car- ter which took the ball down to the Illinois eight before Nygren booted the winning goal. Badgers Surprised MADISON-Reserve Bob Bazy- lak, who hadn't thrown a pass all season, came off the bench in the second half and passed pre- viously winless Pittsburgh to a 13-11 victory over still winless Wisconsin yesterday. Bazylak, who relieved Jeff Barr at quarterback with Pitts- burgh behind 3-0 at halftime, sparked the Panthers to two third period touchdowns. Bazylak, a senior, completed. 12 of 18 passes for 175 yards, with most of them going to receiver Wildcats Scalped HOUSTON - Rice quarterbacK Robert Hailey hit receivers with amazing accuracy last night as the Owls exploded for 31 points in the second quarter and went on to crush Northwestern 50-6 in an intersectional football game. Hailey threw three touchdown passes and scored one as he com- pleted 13 of 23 tosses for 202 yards before leaving at the be- ginning of the fourth quarter. When Bailey was not hitting his glue-fingered receivers, a fleet of running backs headed by L. V. Benningfield and Terry Shelton picked up huge chunks of yard- age through the heavy Northwes- tern line. Northwestern's only score came late in the final quarter when Bruce Hubbard caught a 21-yard scoring pass from Danny Wood- ring. Rice, the nation's fifth-ranking team in total offense with an av- erage of 430 yards a game, better- ed that mark with 456 yards. SCORES GRID PICKS Michigan State 34, Michigan 0 Indiana 21, Iowa 1'7 Minnesota 10, Illinois 7 Rice 50, Northwestern 6 Pittsburgh 13, Wisconsin 11 Purdue 41, Ohio State 6 Auburn 43, Clemson 21 'oledo 23, Bowling Green 0 Brigham Young 31, Oregon State 13 Colorado 23, Missouri 9 Massachusetts 35, Connecticut 14 Florida State 17, South Carolina 0 Tennessee 24, Georgia Tech 13 Iowa State 17, Kansas State 0 Navy 27, Syracuse 14 Southern Cal 24, Notre Dame7 Texas 9, Oklahoma 7 Duke 13. Virginia 6 Air Force 10, North Carolina 8 Shippensburg St. 28, Lock Haven 13 OTHER SCORES Penn State 50, Boston College 28 Cornell 47, Princeton 13 Harvard 49, Columbia 6 Kansas 10, Nebraska 0 Wyoming 28, Utah 0 Dartmouth 23, Pennsylvania 0 North Carolina St. 31, Maryland 10 Western Michigan 16, Kent State 7 California, Pa. 39, Slippery Rock 14 Miami, Ohio 48, Marshall 6 Washington 26, Oregon 0 NBA Boston 105, Chicago 90 NHL Montreal 6. 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"Orange Juice" Simpson was a three-touchdown tidal wave in the second half, sweeping top- ranked Southern California to a 24-7 humbling of favored Notre Dame in a wild football game yes- terday. The Trojans' fifth straight tri- umph impressively avenged a 51- 0 massacre by Notre Dame in last year's finale at Los Angeles. After being throttled in the first half, which produced a 7-0 Notre Dame lead, the lithe and swift Simpson, top national rusher, de- moralized the Irish with touch- down runs of 35, three and one yard. In the hard-played, but often wierd contest, in which there were a dozen turnovers on pass inter- ceptions and fumbles, Simpson battered Notre Dame for 163 yards on 39 carries to better his season average of 150 yards per game. Simpson was at his best in the 17-point Trojan third quarter, in which the erratic Irish collapsed badly. Simpson's one - yard scoring smash tied the score at 7-7 when the butter-fingered Irish fumb- led on the second half kickoff and the Trojan's Steve Swanson recovered on the Notre Dame 18. The real backbreaker for the Irish, whose heralded Terry Han- ratty had five passes intercepted, came on a 35-yard touchdown run by Simpson, his longest scrimmage jaunt of the season, with 4:34 left in the third quar- ter. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LEVIS I _________________ ii 4 ,-,'' I ...a i% :r"" I ! IPIIIERCiED iEARRINGS Our fine selection of pierced earrings I i 6: ? ";: s z- ,y ~A. is larger than ever 9 _ 11 . .\ i A special group of earrings available for monogramming engraved free _._ ---_-.-- if II All earrings in fourteen karat white or yellow gold III 1111 III I = 11 j