Tuesday, October 1, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paae Nine i 0 i;Tesdaty, Octber 1 1968THE MCHIGA DA.L %ri. y -- \ 1 1 fi , WEEKEND LEFTOVERS Big Ten menu lists 'boiled' Irish' Purdue maintains top spot; Notre Dame slips to fifth Ii __ I I By JOE MARKER Purdue, figured by many ex- perts the best college football team in the nation this year, con- firmed that judgment Saturday afternoon with a 37-22 bombard- ment of arch-rival Notre Dame.. The Fighting Irish - came into the game as the nation's second- ranked team, right behind Pur- due, but left their home field licking the wounds inflicted by a well-balanced Boilermaker at- tack and a clutch defense. The game was decided in the second quarter when Purdue blit- zed the Irish for three touchdowns within four minutes. Notre Dame was leading 7-3 with less than six minutes left in tthe half, when Mr. Everything, Leroy Keyes, went to work. He threaded his way 16 yards through the right side of the Notre Dame defense to score the go-ahead touchdown. Following the interception of an errant Terry Hanratty pass, Keyes, while rolling out' to his . left on an option play, passed 17, yards to Bob Dillngham for ano- ther score. Tp coi plete the first- half blitz, Dillingham took, a 16- yard touchdown aerial from quar- terback Mike Phipps following a ALd BRENNER recovered Notre Dame fumble, and for all practical purposes the ball game was over. The importance of Keyes in the victory was, as usual, vital. All he did was rushrfor 99 yards and two touchdowns, pass" for one .tbueh- dlown, and defense Jim Seymour when Notre Dame threatened to score. Southern California, ranked number three, crushed its second, straight Big Ten opponent with O. J. Simpson turning in another spectacular performance. This time the victim was Northwestern by a score of 24-7. USC, unlike its come-from-be- hind victory over Minnesota last week, decided this affair in the first half, piling up a 17-0 lead. The score might have been worse except for the fact that Simpson sat out much of the second quarter. O. J. rushed for 189 yards and three touchdowns and has now scored seven times in two games, the entire Southern Cal, output. Minnesota dropped its second straight heartbreaker to a na- tionally-ranked team, losing 11- 14 to ninth-ranked Nebraska on a field goal by Paul Rogers with only 11/2 minutes left. The Goph- ers entered the last quarter lead- ing 14-7, but Nebraska parlayed two intercepted Ray Stephens' passesinto a touchdown and the decisive field goal. Duff y Daugherty's eager Michi- gan State Spartans turned in their second straight impressive performance, crushing Baylor in the second half en route to a 28- 10 triumph. State held a slim,7-3 halftime lead, thanks to an 83- yard pass from Bill Feraco to Al Brenner, but erupted for t h ,r e e touchdowns in the second half to ice the victory. A relatively slim crowd of 73,- 855 at Columbus watched O h i o State overcome a Southern Meth- odist aerial circus and score a 35- 14 triumph. SMU put the ball in the air 76 times, completing 40 for 437 yards, but were repeated- ly stymied in Buckeye territory by interceptions and fumbles (five and three respectively). Woody Hayes' charges ground out 227 yards of their own, but two of their scores came on passes from sophomore quarterback Rex Kern. Washington raced to a 21-0 lead and then had to stave off a Wis- consin second-half rally to escape with a 21-17 victory. The loss was Wisconsin's seventh in a row, ty- ing the school record. After two quick touchdowns by Washington's Harvey Blanks in the, third quarter, Wisconsin stormed back with an 80-yard, drive of their own to score. The Badgers then took advantage of two Washington fumbles for ten more points. However, Al Worley intercepted his second pass of the game at the Washington' 34 to end the Badgers' upset hopes, With the exception of Michi- gan, the other Big Ten teams all mnet unfortunate, ends. - Kansas piled up 388 yards rush- ing to overpower Indiana, 38-20. Don Shanklin was the 'hero for Kansas, scoring three touchdowns! on runs of 54 and 65 and a punt return of 59 yards. Illinois wasybombed for the second time by a Big Eight foe ,as Missouri exploded for five touch- downs in the second half and a 44-0 'victory. Coach Dan Devine's team now has amassed a 7-1-1 re- cord against Big Ten competition since 1958. Iowa dropped a 28-17 decision to Texas Christian after leading at halftime 14-7, ending its modest one-game win streak. The Hawk- eyes have the privilege of meeting an enraged Notre Dame eleven this Saturday. The Purdue Boilermakers in- creased their lead in The Associa- ted Press' college football p o11 yesterday. The powerful Boilermakers, who trounced Notre Dame 37-22 in the Big Showdowin last Saturday were named first on all but thre of 45 ballots in amassing 894 points. Southern California edged up a notch into second place, while Notre Dame tumbled from second to fifth. Penn Stae is third and Florida fourth, both up one place from a week ago. And, the shakeup wasn't con- fined to the top teams. Georgia and Texas A & M moved back in- to the ratings after dropping out last week, while three others - California, Michigan State a n d Arkansas-ngade the Top 20 for the first tire. Southern California, 2-0 after a 24-7 breeze past Northwestern, received only two top votes, but the Trojans were named second on 37 ballots in rolling up 797 points. Penn State, which made Kansas State its second straight victim 25-9, had 568 points and Florida a 9-3 conqueror of arch-riva Florida State, had 441. Ohio State leaped all the way from 11th to sixth with a 34-14 1 victory over Southern Methodist in its opener, and Nebraska, 3-0, moved from ninth to seventh af- ter beating Minnesota 17-14, a -1 i PRESIDENT and MRS. FLEMING deleatn tat knocked the Gophers, I 17th last week, out of the rank- ings. cordially invite the faculty and students The top 20, with first-place votes re-I 4 cords and total points awarded for first of the Univrslty of Michigan 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9 0 a -7-6-5-4-2-2-1 0dO et hi 8-i-6--4-'2'2-1:to anOpe n House at their, horseIi 1. Purdue (42) 2-0 894 2. Southern California (2) 2--0, 79 3 Penn State (1) 2-0 568 4. Florida 2-6 441 I TODAY I;~ 5: Notre Dame 1-1 430 6. Ohio State 1-0l 3981 oa u ni a lc 7Nebraska 3-0 fl 395 1 I I fro orutlIi 'lc 8. Kansas 2-0 393 9. UCLA 2-0 342 10 Louisiana State 2-- 0 213 - 1 Alabama '2-0 196 , 815 South University Avenue t 12. Houston 1-4- 163 13. Miami, Fla. 2-0 152 14 Arizona State-2--0 104 15. Tennessee 1-f--1100f r 16. Georgia 1--0--1 64 -- 17. Texas A&M 1-1 4 r 18. California 2--0 43 19. Michigan State 2--0) 39----- i20. Arkansas 2-fl 37 tiyOthers receiving votes, listed ,alpha- ,Ji You! r .D N o w - Ibetically: {Air Force, Boston College, \,, ,}Y 7 Indiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Mis- souri, North Carolina State, North V Texas State Olio University, Okla- 1 case, Texas, Texas Teeh, Toledo, Vir- ginia Tech, West Virginia, Yale. ii'Joit JdicaryCouci I Jo of U CV 0 Pick up Petitions outside SGC office 1st floor SAB WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1968 V Professional Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division COME IN AND ENJOY YOURSELF! OPEN ALL WEEK 3 P.M.-2 A.M. SERVING DINNERS FROM 3 P.M.-1 A.M. Dallas New York Washingtol Philadelphi Eastern Conference Capitol Division W: L T Pct. PF 3 0 0 1.000 132 3 0 0 1.00116 ain 1 a2 0 .333 76 ia 0 3 00 .000 517. PA 33 66 113 10 9 New York Boston Houston Buffalo Miami w Oakland San Diego Kansas City Cincinnati Denver W 2 2 '1 1 0 'L 1 1 3 3- 3 T 0 0 0 0 Pct. .667 .667 .250 .250 .000 PF PA 102, 87, 67 71 74 90 73 133 34 119 Century Division New Orleans. 1; 2 0 .333 Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 St. Louis 1 2 ,0 .333 Pittsburgh 0 3 0; .000 Western Conference Coastal Division Los Angeles 3 0 0 j1.000 Baltimore, 3 0 0 1.000 San Francisco 2 1 0 .667 Atlanta 0 3 0 .000 Central Division Minnesota 2 1 0 .667 Detroit_ 2 1l 0 .667) Green Bay 1 2 0 .333 Chicago 1 2 0 .333 I 67 62 37 62 51 79 37 120 93 29 96 37 73 57 40 103 Western Division 3 0 0 1.000 3 0 0 1.000 3 1 0 .750 2 2 0 .500 0'3 0 .000 FINE FOOD ENTERTAIN- MENT, 119 90 127 81 29 42 37 46 93 78 314 S. Fourth Ave. 761-3548 Saturday's Results Kansas City 48, Miami 3 Sunday's Results Boston 20, Denver 17 Buffalo 37, New York 35 Sai Diego 31, Cincinnati 10 Oakland 24, Houston 15 Saturday's Games Kansas City at Buffalo San Diego at New York Sunday's Games Boston at Oakland Cincinnati at Denver Miami at Houston goY; r t or- 90 60 55 47 76 72 97 Bethlehem Stee Loop Course Interviews: Sunday's Results San Francisco 28, Atlanta 13 Baltinrore 41,, Pittsburgh 7 Chicago 27, Minnesota 17 Dallas 45, Philadelphia 13 Detroit 23, Green Bay 17 Los Angeles 24, Cleveland 6 St. Louis.21, New Orleans 20 New York 48, Washington 21 Saturday's Game Pittsburgh at Cleveland, night Sunday's Games Chicago at Baltimore ' Dallas at. St. Louis Green Bay at Atlanta Minnesota at Detroit New Orleans a New York Philadelphia at Washington San Francisco at Los Angeles II .1 1: Downtown Honda We Have Them All Big and Small tate St Sales si. WENK Sales Service, Inc. Accessories s Sth A. 310 East 6 5 "8i Partsccessories Washington rt4t6 *Service entrance on 5th Ave. ain St. 'Il I s1 t What is the Bethlehem Loop Course? It is our ma with bachelors' or advanced degrees. The course starts early in July with four weeks of Pa. Loopers attend lectures on every phase of the c t visits to a steel plant. OCTOBER g 14 , I 01 7f 91I' anagement development program for graduates f orientation at our home offices in Bethlehem, corporation's activities, and make almost daily Hours of Uninterrupted. Listening Enjoyment Angel nsv e a . r RacORDs Steel Plant Loopers, who comprise a majority of the average loop class of 150 to 200 graduates, proceed to various plants where they go through a brief orientation programh before beginning their on-the-job training assignments. Within a short time after joining the course, most loopers are ready for assignments aimed toward higher levels of management. How about other loopers? Our Sales Department loopers (30 or so) remixain at the home office for about a year of training Most are then assigned to district offices where they take over established accounts. Fabricated Steel Construction loopers are trained in a drafting room, on a field erection project, in a fabricating shop, and in an engineering office. A looper's first work assignment is based on interests and aptitudes disclosed during this program. Loopers in Accounting, Shipbuilding, Mining, Research, Traffic, Purchasing, Finance and Law, General Services, and Industrial and Public Relations go through training programs tailored to their types of work. Where would YOU fit in? Check your degree or the one most similar to it. i Pre-Recorded Tapes I at 7'/ IPS and 33/4 IPS 0 0 !I I! I MECHANICAL ENGINEERING-Engineering or me- chanical maintenance departments of steel plants, fabri- cating works, mining operations, and shipyards. Fuel and combustion departments. Supervision of production oper- ations. Marine engineering assignments in Shipbuilding Department. Also: Sales or Research. METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING - Metallurgical departments of steel plants and manufacturing operations. Engineering and service divisions. Technical and super- visory positions in steelmaking departments and rolling mills. Also: Research or Sales. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS-Technical and supervisory positions in coke works, including production of byprod-, uct chemicals. Fuel and combustion departments, includ- ing responsibility for operation and maintenance of air and water pollution control equipment. Engineering and metallurgical departments. Steelmaking operations. Also: Research or Sales. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING -Positions in steel plants, fabricating works, shipyards, and mines. Engi- neering and maintenance departments. Supervision of steelmaking, rolling, manufacturing, and fabricating operations. Also: Sales. CIVIL ENGINEERING: Fabricated Steel Construction assignments in engineering, field erection, or works man- agement. Steel plant, mine, or shipyard assignments in engineering, construction, and maintenance. Supervision of production operations. Sales Department assignments as line salesman or sales engineer (technical service to architects and engineers). ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING-Steel plant, fabricat- ing works, mining operations, and shipyard electrical engineering, construction, and maintenanlce departments. Technical and supervisory positions in large production operations involving sophisticated electrical and elec- tronic equipment. Also: Research or Sales. MINING ENGINEERING - Our Mining Department. operates coal and iron ore mining operations and limhe- stone quarries, many of which are among the most mod- ern and efficient in the industry. This IQ,000-man activity offers unlimited opportunities to mining engineers. Also: Research. NAVAL ARCHITECTS AND MARINE ENGINEERS: Graduates are urged to inquire about opportunities in our Shipbuilding Department, including the Cer -al Techni- cal Division, our design and engineering organization. Also: Traffic. OTHER TECHNICAL DEGREES-Every year we re- cruit loopers with technical degrees other than those listed above. Seniors enrolled in such curricula are encouraged to sign up for an interview. ACCOUNTANTS-Graduates in accounting or business administration (24 hours of accounting are preferred) are recruited for training for supervisory assignments in our 3,000-man Accounting Department. OTHER NON-TECHNICAL DEGREES - Graduates with degrees in liberal arts, business, and the humanities are invited to discuss opportunities in the Sales Depart- ment. 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