Sunday, October 13, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, October 13, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0I Grounded Irish roll to victory By The Associated Press lsChuck Burkhart to fullback Tom early in the fourth quarter after SOUTH BEND - With their!Badgeiseagain Cherry in the third quarter and Simpson had tied the score late air - attack stifled by inspired MADISON - Utah State scored rolled over the Bruins 21-6 yes- in the third period on a four-yard Northwestern; the fifth-ranked three quick first period touch- terday. run. Notre Dame Irish ground out three touchdown drives with Bob Gla- dieux scoring twice to down the! Wildcats 27-7 yesterday. The defensive web sparked mainly by secondary backs Dan White, Dick Dean and Hal Dan.- iels, shut off Terry Hanratty's aerials. He had only three com- pletlons in 13 attempts for 26 yards in the first half, and two of his shots were stolen. The great split end, Jim Sey- mour, was held to one catch in each half for a total of 23 yards as winless Nortwestern, a 28-point underdog, clamped the best de- fense on him of the season. Notre Dame took the opening kickoff 78 yards in nine running plays to score on Hanratty's 7- yard bootleg run. Late in the third quarter, with Hanratty on the sidelines, sopho- more quarterback Joe Theismann led the Irish 48 yards on the ground, with Gladieux bursting across from the 7. Gladieux scored from the 2. early in the fourth as Hanratty kept-the Irish on the ground for 69 yards in 11 plays. downs, all on the passing arm of A crowd of 35,778 in Memorial7 John Pappas, and defeated Wis- Coliseum, plus a regional television consin 20-0 yesterday. audience on both coasts, watched The victory was Utah State's the Nittany Lions preserve their fourth in five games. Wisconsin unbeaten record in four games suffered its fourth defeat of the with a bruising attack that buried season and ran its winless streak UCLA in the last half. to 14. Leading 7-6 after the half, Pappas connected on a six-yard pass to Mike O'Shea, a two-yard- er to Altie Taylor, and a 25-yard aerial to Ken Demartini. Utah State rushed for only nine yards in the first half, but Pappas kook up the slack by hitting on 4. of 24 passes for 191 yards. In the first half quarterback' Bob Schaffner failed to move the Badgers. He attempted only two passes, completing one for minus rne yard. Six Badger runners gained a total of two yards rush- ing. John Ryan took over the signal calling chores for Wisconsin, but he also was unable to move con- sistently against the tight Utah State defense. Penn St. routs UCLA LOS ANGELES - Penn State, the nation's No. 3-ranked football team, drove away from UCLA on a spectacular 76-yard pass from Penn State's quarterback Burk- hart stepped back, looked to his left and then found the 220-pound Cherry all alone on the right side- line. Cherry took the ball on the Bruins' 35 and was untouched until a Bruin hit him at the goal line. Halfback Charlie Pittman added the final Lion touchdown early in the fourth quartet when he slam- med through the Bruin right side, broke two tackles and stormed on for a 28-yard run to the end zone. USC rambles on$ STANFORD - O. J. Simpson scored three touchdowns as sec- ond-ranked University of South- ern California came from behind three times to beat an upset-mind- ed Stanford football team 27-24 yesterday before 81,000 fans. Final margin of victory was a 34-yard field goal by Ron Ayala Simpson carried the ball 47 times, a career high, gained 220 yards and scored touchdowns of 3 and 46 yards in addition to his four yarder. With less than five minutes left in the third quarter and Stan- ford leading 24-17, USC quarter- back Steve Sogge hit halfback Jim Lawrence on a 40-yard pass play that put the Trojans on the Stan- ford four. O. J. then scored his 12th touchdown of the season. Then came Ayala's winning field goal. He and Steve Horowitz of Stanford each kicked three extra points. * *, * LINCOLN - Quarterback Bob- by Douglass calmly rallied sixth- ranked Kansas to a pair of touch- downs in the final five minutes yesterday for a come-from-behind 23-13 conquest of Nebraska before 67,199, largest football crowd in Big Eight Conference history. Nebraska had moved in front 13-9 in the fourth quarter of a wild, penalty fought contest. But Douglass capped a 73-yard march with a one-yard touchdown plunge with 4:09 remaining, and clinched the victory with a 10- yard scoring scamper with 1:11 remaining. It was the fourth straight vic- tory for Kansas and the first loss in four starts for ninth-ranked Nebraska. MISTER $ FAMILY RESTAURANT " HAMBURGERS ?RAsUR m= - CHICKEN * CONEY ISLANDS al.Z.L " JUMBOYS SMILING SPEEDY SERVICE CARRY-OUT SPECIALISTS NO WAITING - PLENTY of PARKING INSIDE SEATING OR EAT IN YOUR CAR OPEN '11 AM DAILY 662-0022 3325 WASHTENAW RD. ANN ARBOR 2 8LKS. W. of ARBORLAND i Ruggers deal State double loss It just wasn't Michigan State's weekend. Following the foobtall extra- vaganza in Michigan Stadium, the scene moved to Wines Field, where the ruggers proceeded tq demolish two State teams, 15-6 and 14-3, completing the weekend sweep. In the first game, Michigan y drove for three scores and all its points in the first half. Mike Johnson kicked the conversions on tries by Joel Pensyar, Max Gail, and Jerry Swift, to give the Blue a 15-0 lead at the break.- Both MSU scores came on penalty kicks by Tom Wallace. However, the second game was a 0-0 battle for most of the first half." Center John' Bowers pushed over a try, but State knotted the score again at 3-3 when John Withers tallied just before the end of the half. Scrum half, Ross Vickers broke 0 the deadlock for good, taking the ball across from two yards out. He set up the play after grab- bing the ball -during a pileup at midfield and finding temporary running room. Tom Motimer, who had missed the two conversions booted a drop * kick. for another three kpoints. He then converted Howers' second try to finish out the scoring. The victories enable Michigan to :etain the Webster A. Steeby/I trophy. The trophy, which is given1 annually to the winner of the Michigan-Michigan State game, 0 has never left Michigan hands in its six-year existence, except for the short time it was stolen a few years back. The Soccer Club, meanwhile, traveled to Toledo and tallied six times to bring home a 6-0 victory. FLIGHT 2 May 8-Aug.17 NEW YORK-LONDON BRUSSELS-NEW YORK -Daly-Thomas R. Copi THE MICHIGAN RUGBY CLUB celebrates their double drubbing of MSU at the traditional party-after. Their 15-6 and 14-3 vic- tories yesterday insured their monopoly on the Webster A. Steeby tropy pictured above. I foo" 1.MOFrar k ilki fson MAW Chairman of Committee on, the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-Americon Activities will speak on The House Committee on Un-American Activities Investigation of the -UNDERSTANDING COMES FASTER WITH CLIFF'S NOTES! OVER 175 TITLES $1 EACHY AT YOUR BOOKSELLER LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68501 FLGHT 3 June 29-Aug.14D NEW YORK--LONDON PARIS-NEW YORK 707 JETS ON TOP CLASS AIRLINES 1 ALL FLIGHTS $220* -rn- rr Sabena Pan Am - rrrrrrr rrlrr rrrrrr i. MASS MEETING I -I 1 CHICAGO PROTESTS Monday, October 14 8:00 P.M. Third Floor Conference Room, Union I 1Oct. 23, 7:30 P.M. I UNION BALLROOM Eligibility-Students, Faculty, University Employees and Family Only University-backed European Flights 0Rebate if Plane Fills /: I I i i FOLLETT'S Michigan Book Store STATE STREET at NO, U ,.. Enjoy Yourself - Join the Daily Staff Today! I. r UNIVERSITY CHARTER & CALEDONIAN AIRWAYS EUROPEFLIGHTS 1969 SIGN-UP ON BOEING 707 JET AIRCRAFT FLIGHT 1-May 7-June 24 7 wks. $199 FLIGHT 6*-Dec. 21-Jan. 8 Christmas Holidays $175 FRIDAY, OCT. 18 3 P.M. Rm. 1 FLIGHT 2-May 15-Aug. 20s 14 wks.$204 TUESDAY, OCT. 22 6 P.M. Rm. 150 FLIGHT 3-June 27-Aug25 wks. $229SDAY, OCT. 2 6 P.M. 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