Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 10, 1968 Sudy.Nvmer1,16 r LAST CHANCE!! To Save On- Cat's Cradle The Painted Bird, 7W-I-R Book Sale ENDS TOMORROW! 10-4 Fishbowl PARAGON RAPID COPY CENTER 311 E. LIBERTY COPIES WHILE YOU WAIT OFFSET COPIES AS LOW AS 6/10c Per Copy DROP IN OR CALL 662-3748 KALEIDOSCOPE Gophers stun Purdue 12 DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS i r: Grand Opening of our new location SPECIAL BERNAT RUG KITS 25 CANVAS !2 ~ Get Acquainted Table of _ YARNS & KITS f2OFF . fee * Imported Buttons Wrought Iron Sconces Sculntured Candles * Candide Yarns Natural oil yarn (brood range of colors) By The Associated Press opening touchdown early in the IOWA CITY, Iowa - Tailback MINNEAPOLIS - Burly full- period and then added two more Ed Podolak galloped to an amaz- back Jim Carter hammered in for scores on short yardage plunges ing 286 yards on 17 rushing at- three first period touchdowns as .ht tempts while pacing rambunctious SMinnesota knocked sixth-rankedthe Gophers to a 27-0 Iowa to a 68-34 Big Ten Confer- Purdue reeling 27-13 yesterday in halftime lead. ence romp over hapless Northwes- a stunning Big Ten football up- Purdue, a two-touchdown favor- tern yesterday. set. ite which had been averaging 33 The 6-1 193-pound senior, in Carter. who gained 100 yards points per game, never recovered eclipsing a 2-year-old Big T e n rushing, rambled 49 yards for the from the first half onslaught. rushing record set by Clinton Jones of Michigan State, amassed 208 of the yards as Iowa built a 42-14 lead in the first half. He shattered Jones' mark with a 42-yard dash to Northwestern's eight-yard line at the third quar- k ter's conclusion and retired from the game four minutes later with a bruised shoulder. * * * EAST LANSING, Mich - Indi- .ana scored a touchdown with 52 seconds left and edged Michigan State 24-22 yesterday. The victory kept Hoosier Big Ten title hopes alive. A Steve Brown pass to Eric Stol- berg, who made a spectacular catch on the one-yard line, set up Indiana's winning touchdown. The pass covered 33nyards. Michigan State fumbled six: times and lost the ball four times, while Indiana had seven fumbles and four ball losses. + Indiana is 4-1 in the conference * and cannot yet be counted out of the title run and the Rose Bowlj bid. Michigan State, 1-4 in confer-I ence play, now can only hope to play the role of a spoiler.t -Associated Press MICHIGAN STATE QUARTERBACK Bill Triplett (17, along MADISON, Wis. - Second- with a whole bunch of Indiana players, dives for a State fumble first half, used the passing and in yesterday's game in East Lansing. State fumbled four times running of Ron Maciejewski to in the first quarter of the game, losing the greasy pigskin twice. crush Wisconsin's winless Badgers _______________________________ w Exotic.., * Rya Rug Kits 9 Yarns-Sequins-Beads a Needle Point and Crewel * Exotic Thai Silks' -Associated Press PURDUE'S PERRY WILLIAMS (47) gives it all he's got by taking to the air at Minnesota yesterday. Williams netted only two yards on the play, however, indicating that form isn't everything in the world of football. Purdue was upset, 27-13. Pure Silks in several weights, Priced 40 irridescent solids, plaids, prints. to 950 yd. 1~riI Custom Knitting e Assembly e Blocking m~r~,Le ?Irn & an i~~ Next to the Fox Theatre Maple Village Shopping Center t Maple Rd. and Jackson R. ! 761-4131 OPEN Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. - Saturday 10-5 p.m. 43-8 yesterday in a Big Ten Con- ference football game. The Buckeyes from Ohio State had to settle for a 28-yard field goal by Jim Reuan the first time they got the ball. Their next ser- ies ended when Maciejewski fired -an eight-yard scoring pass to Larry Zelina. Wisconsin's defensive unit, on the field most of the day, stiff- ened and the visiters went into halftime leading 10-0. Any hopes for a major upset by the 40,972 watching the slaughter amid snow flurries vanished rep- idly at the start of the third per- iod NATIONAL ROUNDUP: The Non-Election L ifori tou ran cra thu forn Paci Rom T] jan fine 80,8 of tl USC and hop fere L und foot tof then cept end 27-2 T No. stra ruins goir had to w ent nex Trojans crop Cal By The Associated Press Tense against rushing yesterday OS ANGELES - Southern Cal- as unbeaten Penn State came nia's Steve Sogge threwthree from behind in the second half to chdown passes, O. J. Simpson beat Miami 22-7 for the Nittany for 'two, and aided by a rib- Lions' seventh straight football cking defense, the Trojans victory. ndered yesterday past Cali- Fourth-ranker State trailed the nia 35-17 in an important 'Hurricanes from Florida 7-0, in ific-8 Conference game with the first half on' a 78-yard touch- e Bowl bearing, down pass from quarterback Dave 'he unbeaten, top-ranked Tro- Olive to flanker Ray Bellamy. s, coming through with their * * * °st game of the season before PRINCETON, N.J. - Harvard 71, the largest football crowd held off a last quarter Princeton he year in Memorial Coliseum/ charge as the Crimson won their C increased its record to 7-0 seventh straight game yesterday, the Golden Bears' Rose Bowl 9-7 and remained tied at the top es were blunted with a con- of the Ivy League football race. once record now of 1-1-1. The Crimson defense, headed * * * by linebacker John Emeray, con- AWRENCE, Kan. - Oklahoma, tained Princeton for three quart- aunted by Kansas' perfect ers as Harvard built up a 9-0 lead. ball record crunched 81 yards * * * a fourth-quarter touchdown, LINCOLN, Neb. - Kansas State n got a game-saving pass inter- used the passing of Lynn Dickey, tion from Steve Barrett in the the kicking of Max Arreguin and a zone to upset the Jayhawks stubborn defense . yesterday to 23 yesterday. fashion their first Big Eight Con- I he defeat was the first for the ference football victory in f o u r 3 ranked Kansans after seven years a 12-0 conquest of favored ight victories and may have Nebraska. led, the Jayhawks' chances of* * * 1g to the'Orange Bowl. Kansas JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Soph- been considered a strong bet omore quarterback Mike Cavan vin a bid to Miami had it beat- drove ninth-ranked Georgia to an Oklahoma and 'Kansas State amazingly easy 51-0 victory over t vleek. the steadily deteriorating Florida * * * Gators through a heavy rain yes- NIVERSITT PARK, Pa. - terday and kept the Bulldogs a fbacks Charlie Pittman and leading contender for the South- Campbell ripped apart the eastern Conference championship on's second best college de- and a bowl game. t I o What are You Going to Do-Sulk There are better ways tq change America. Our radical politics forced one President to'abdicate. Now let's try to elect our own. Insurgents are organizing to do just that. Men like Don Peterson, Julian Bond, Paul Schrade (wQunded when Robert Kennedy was killed) Allard Lowenstein and the Rev. Channing Phillips. They are forming the New Democratic Coalition. A new party for students, blacks, McCarthy and Kennedy liberals, rebellious labor, the Spanish-speaking, the poor and other ele- ments in the ernerging coalition. U Hali Bob nati Attntion Fraternities FORMING BOWLING LEAGUE 5 man teams for Tuesday nights Sign up at Michigan Union Bowling Lanes, see George Radical politics for radical change. New politics, not no politics. Organize for Change NATIONAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE INCLUDES: EXEC. DIRECTOR EARL D. CRAIG (Minnesota) ADAM WALINSKY (speech writer for RFK) REV. CHANNING PHILLIPS (black caucus nominee ) DAVID HOEH (N.H. McCarthy chmn.) PAUL SCHRADE (Western Dir. UAW) ARNOLD KAUFMAN (The Radical Liberal") BERT CORONA (Mex -American leader, Cal.) CURTIS GANS (Dir., McCarthy camp gn.) JULIAN BOND (Ga. State legislator) SANFORD GOTTLIEB (Exec. Dir. SANE) MICHAEL HARRINGTON ("Toward a Democratic Left") DONALD PETERSON EARL CRAIG, national Executive Director of the New Democratic Coalition, will speak here Monday evening. Craig is 29. He is a black political leader of Minnesota insurgents. He and two'or three dozen others gathered.at the Sherman House in Chicago after Humphrey's nomination. From their meeting came a resolve-that the gains of the movementnot be squandered. And a commitment-that there be a majority party for justice, peace and liberty. A majority party of the democratic left. Students are a powerful 'element in that majority. Like labor in the New Deal. That's why we must organize now, Other campuses have already begun.- The times they are a-changin'. Meet with Craig Monday night. MR? a'candlelight dinner dance "Fading UFall" 'with the "JOHN .HIGGI NS QUINTET" 1 TICKETS $8.00 at the UAC Offices Michigan Union NOV.22 6-11 P.M. North Campus Commons i. II: IiII2 ftf Organize for change. endorsed by Bursley Council and IHA ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Monday, Nov. 11, 7:30 P.M. Paying for the Other Guy's Accidents? Save on your Auto Insurance For those who qulify- x $25=000 B.I. and P.D. $1,000 Medical Expenses and Uninsured Motorists Protection Single Male 1 AcqpmhIv Hall U nio'n I 0 I