I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, Oftober 20, 1968 Top 20 teams have success, shock, surprise By The Associated Press es covering 14 and 23 yards. The; LOS ANGELES-0. J. Simpson first was a gamble from the eight. ear, stonlp dashed nine yards for a touch- * * * BERKELEY - California's de- down capping a 90-yard Southern fense set up four scoring oppor- California fourth quarter drive to Gators levolre(I tunities in the third period and bring the No. 1-ranked Trojans a the Bears made good on all of 14-7 victory yesterday over, a de- stunned Florida 22-t in a rain- them, crushing UCLA 39-15 yes- termined band of Washington st ge ytrda, tn in terday. swept game. yesterday, turning in Huskies. a shocking upset of the nation's The victory, California's first Checked much of the afternoon, seventh-ranked football team, over the 'Bruins in five years, gave Simpon aind 5 yaids n sven On the way to the victory, North the Bears a 4-1 record and a 1-0 carries on the winning drive., He Carolina's Don Hartig kicked three Pacific-8 conference mark. UCLA, cut outside left tackle for the win- fiednas, yng asco r 2-3 over-all, is 1-1 in conference ning score, his second score on the and setting a schol mark with a play. sunny afternoon. 47-yarder. The old mark was 46 Behind 15-13 after the first Simpson smashed one yard for l'yards set by Harry Dunkle in 1939. half, Cal forced UCLA to punt a first quarter touchdown but ' other field goals went deep in its own territory and the Washington rallied to score in the for 44 and 42 yards. ball went out of bounds at the third period on an eight-yard run forid4 as 4yad, Bruins' 39. by Buddy Kennaner. loida was plag e b fhes,. Quarterback Randy Humphries losing eight of 11, while the Tar; The Huskies threatened 'a up- Heels lost only one of three. Flor- immediately put Cal ahead with a set midway in the final period ida quarterbacks Jack Eckdahl 39-yard scoring toss to Paul Wil- after Simpson fumbled at his own and Larry Rentz combined for a liams deep .in the end zone. 20 and Les Brack recovered for loss of 42 yards although the Ga* * Washington. The Huskies drove tors outrushed the Tar Heels 215 1Crinson Tide bleeds to afourth down at the one, where yards to 155. quarterback Tom Manke was stop- In the air, Florida picked up 85 KNOXVILLE - Karl Kramer ped short of the USC goal. yards to North Carolina's 72. But kicked a 54-yard field goal-a Then the Trojans mounted their the winners repeatedly -came up Southeastern Conference record- drive from. there With Simpson with the big play when needed and gave Tennessee a, 10-9 foot- carying the lead, helped by a pair and capitalized on Florida mis- ball victory over Alabama yester- of Steve Segge-to-Bob Klein pass- takes, day.I " DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN L14 ........*.........*...*.............,.. . . . . . . . The spine-tingling game, played against Oklahoma State last year on the passing of Good, their sen- before an overflow throng of 63,- when he gained 253 yards. ior quarterback. 392 and millions more on regional x Good threw to Joel Stevenson television, wasn't decided until the last play when Mike Dean's field goal attempt with five seconds left was blocked by Tennessee's Jim Weatherford. The victory was eighth-ranked Tennessee's fourth in a row after a tie in the season opener with Georgia. > t for a 4-yard score and to Gene Razorbacks Slashed Spiotta for a 27-yard touchdown' for the other Tech tallies and. AUSTIN, Tex. - Texas' awe- Duncan's three conversions made some running attack crushed Ar- the difference. kansas 39-29, last night in South- Meanwhile, in Athens, Georgia's west Conference play, knocking unbeaten Bulldogs put down a the ninth ranked Razorbacks froi first period uprising by Vander- the unbeaten list. bilt yesterday and rolled to a 32-6I The Longhorns dominated the Southeastern Conference victory gameso ompltel tha itwasover the outm~anned Commodores. game so completely that it was Shocked by a 29-yard touch- 39-15 when Texas coach Darrell down run on John Burns' inter- Royal pulled his first string back- ception of a Mike Cavan pass, the field early in the fourth quarter. tenth-ranked Bulldogs rallied for Bill Burnett scored Arkansas' last 16 points in the second quarter two touchdowns on short runs to and blanked Vandy the rest of the make the score a little closer, way. Arknasas ab.hhend n 3- l nn MISTER( FAMILY RESTAURANT " HAMBURGERS TRE=Rt C= " CHICKEN I?~1l? . 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Tennessee licked Alabama 24-13 last year in Birmingham. * * * - Jayhawks soar riaa giue a4-u ea Oin LAWRENCE, Kan. - Fourth- a field goal after Texas fumbled ranked Kansas struck swiftly for a on its second offensive play and r l pair of touchdowns at the outset still led 15-10 in the second quar- Hoosiers, 6-0 of each half and crushed upset- ter.. * conscious Oklahoma State 49-14 But then Texas erupted behind The Michigan Rugby yesterday, the running of Chris Gilbert, and chalked up its seventh vict It was- Kansas' fifth straight a long touchdown pass from quar- the season yesterday against victory, second in the Big Eight. terback James Street to Charles defeats by downing Indiana' Bobby Douglass, enjoying the Speyrer. gers, 6-0. third best day of his career, di- The Wolverines gained the rected Kansas on scoring drives ofTd 67 and 71 yards, two of the first Tech, Georgia will on a 'drop kick by Colin W: three times the Jayhawksthad theg and a kick by Mike Johnson ball. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. and ATH- scores came in the first ha] Then Douglass took Kansas on ENS, Ga.-Larry Good's running were enough to provide v touchdown marches of 63 and 20 and passing on key third downs The B team did not mee yards the first two times the carried Georgia Tech on a 65-yard as much success but at lea Hawks got possession in the second scoring drive and a 21-20 victory not go down to defeat as half to put the game out of reach over favored Auburn yesterday. tied the Hoosiers B team, THE DIVINE RELATIVITY- A SOCIAL CONCEPTION OF GOD An introduction to process philosophy as a framework for theological reflection. Informal seminor sessions a re open to all interested persons team ory of three s rug- eir win rarbick . Both If and' ictory. ,t with st did they 0-0. NEXT SESSION: Monday, October 21, 7:30 P.M. Guild House, 802 Monroe St. Sponsored by The-Office of Religious Affairs (Continued from Page 6) mediately preceeding semester and are eligible to enroll the immediately subse- quent one: And at least two-thirds of the total membership of any such or- ganization must be students, 9s defined above, or alumni of the University, or people who while not currently enrolled have either been enrolled at the Uni- versity within one calendar syear prev- ious to the start of the current semes- ter; And every such organization must have two student officers entitled to attend every meeting of the organiza- tion or any part thereor, including all meetings and caucuses restricted to of- ficers or any other sub group' of the total membership. These two officers shall be those whose signatures must be submitted to SGC under the Pro- cedures for Recognition and Registra- tion of these Regulations. Groups having only students as vot- ing members and officers shall be re- cognized as "student organizations." All other groups meeting the require- metns of those Bases shall be recog- nized as "student community organiza- tions" subject to all the rights and ob- ligations of student organizations un- der these regulations. Passed in Referenda, Fall 1967 thle U of M on October 21, Monday Calif., and Puerto Rico - all day. Men .rin 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. and from and women. BA/BS and MA/MS Arch., 8:0i0 to 9:00 p.m. the same evening. Econ., Gen Lib. Arts, Georg., Journ., These meetings will take place in Law, Libr, Si., Math., Lands. Arch., Room 3532, third floor of the S.A.B., Poli. Sci., Soc.. and Urban Planning for follow the poster signs. Public Admin., Transportation and Ur- Placement Interviews: The following ban Planning. organizations will interview at Place- floffman - La Roche, Inc., Nutley. nent Services, the representatives ex- N.J. - Man and woman. All day. BA ' pect to see at least a vita sheet on in- BS MA MS Biochem., Anal, Gen, terviewees, therefore, if you are n o t Organ. Phys, Chemistry, Math, Micro- already registered with the General biol., and Pharmacy for Biol., Comput- Division, please stop in and let us pro- ing, Lit. Sci., Mktg. Res., Biochem. vide you with the proper materials. Pharmacology, Diagnostics. Please call 763-1363 to make appoint- ments by phone, or stop in and make THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1968 appt. in person. Make appts. as soon Chicago Payment Center of Social as possible, none accepted after 4 p.m.> Security Administration, Chicago, Ill.: day preceding visit. All day. Men and women. BA/BS Econ., Educ., Engl., Fine Arts, For. Lang., Gen. .IONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1968 Lib. Arts, Hist., Journ., Libr., Sci., Harvard Graduate Business School: Math, Philo, Poll. Sci., Psych., Speech, Boston, Mass. All day. Men and women. Soc. Wk. and LLB Law. for Claims Ex- Any undergraduate discipline for Mas- amining. ters in Business Administration pro- Johnson and Johnson, N.J., Ill., and grams. Texas - All Day. Men and women., BA John Hancock Mutual 'Life Insurance BS Chem., Econ., Eng., Math, Psych., for Company, Boston, Mass.: All day. Men Data Processing, Mgmt. Trng., and Pro- and women. Bach. level degrees in duction. Gln ral TLibril Arty for insurance no- i at 28-0. Kenny Bounds carried the final ' . .. e......... Before retiring to the sidelines four yards for the tying score and e after two plays of the fourth quar- Johnny Duncan then kicked the Something To Swap? ter, Douglass rolled up 93 yards deciding point for the Engineers, rushing and 141 passing for 234 who cane from a 14-0 deficit in i Try Do iI y ClaSfi Ieds total offense. His best day came the first quarter almost altogether *.::x..: