Sunday, November 17, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Southern Cal wins Rose Bowl berth * f * * * Georgia. rambles to SEC crown; Razorbcsslash past Mustangs By The Associated Press pair of talented sophomores, and The eighth ranked Steers blend- AUBURN, Ala. - G e o r g i a a reckless Arkansas defense ruined ing their brute force ground game captured the Southeastern Con- Southern Methodist 35-29 yester- with a fierce defense, moved with- ference football crown yesterday, day, setting up the 10th-ranked in a game of at least a share of whipping Auburn 17-3 in a title } Razorback's showdown with Texas the SWC tittle. showdown behind the deadly pass- Tech. Only a Thanksgiving Day show- ing of Mike Cavan and an unre- Montgomery passed for two down with arch rival Texas A&M lenting defense. touchdowns and Burnett scored on blocks the way to a possible Cot- The victory in the fifth-ranked runs of one, two and five yards. ton Bowl berth. Bulldogs' final league game gives SMU quarterback Chuck Hix- Quarterback James Street served Georgia a 5-0-1 mark while Au- son, who entered the game as the as a catalyst for Texas' big swift ' burn's conference record dropped nation's leading passer threw four running backs, who tore into the to 4-1. touchdown passes in the final record book in turning, TCU's The Tigers spoiled their chain- quarter as the Mustangs battled homecoming into an autumn pionship drive with .a rash of er- back from a 35-0 deficit. nightnare.! By The Associated Press what appeared to be the winning LOS ANGELES - Clutch quar- margin. terback Steve Sogge and the fa- The excitement was hardly bulous O. J. Simpson led unbeaten over, however, for with less than Southern California from behind two minutes left, Simpson swept with 17 points in the final quarter to the left for 40 yards and a to defeat Oregon State yesterday, touchdown and USC had a 17-7 17-13. and USC headed on to its lead. third straight trip to the Rose. The battling Beavers were still: Bowl. not subdued. Preece arched a tow- Simpson rushed for 238 yards. ering pass to Billy Main for 74 The victory sewed up the Paci- yards, a touchdown, and with 1:06 fic-8 conference championship for remaining, the Troy margin was the No. 1-rated Trojans and only 17-13. wrecked an aggressive attempt by the belligerent Beavers from Cor- valis to register the upset they al- Bears roar most achieved.I Thees weredeBERKELEY - California's de- The teams were deadlocked for fense demoralized Oregon and its 21/2 quarters of scoreless football offense ran up a 23-0 halftime before 59,236 in Memorial Coli- lead yesterday as the Bears dump- seum and a regional television au- ed the Ducks 36-8 in a Pacific-8 dience before Oregon State hit football contest. the scoreboard. otaIcnet Quarterback Steve Preece led Oregon lost 24 yards in the first the Beavers t59 yards in eight half trying to run against Califor- plays and Bill Enyart, the full nia, and the Bears picked off back they call "Earthqua k,Ifour Duck passes for the game, back the ca Eathqake, Itwo by Ken Weidemann. smashed for the final yard mid- way through the third period. Defensive tackle Larry Reis set Southern California, enroute up the Bears' first score when he to its eighth triumph of the sea- recove'red Claxton Welch's fumble son, suddenly began to click and on the Oregon 30. Garry Fowler, traveled 64 yards in eight plays who was named back of the game, with Sogge throwing a scoring went over from four yards. bullet pass of 22 yards to a little- Oregon held the Bears the next used junior end, Terry DeKraai. time California got the ball but Ron Oyala tied it with a conver- Ron Miller booted his second 50- sion kick after 2:13 of the fourth yard field goal of the season. He quarter. missed three others including one Southern Cal went ahead after try from 51 yards.' 10:40 of the quarter as Sogge and A block by Wayne Stewart Simpson paraded from deep in sprang wingback Paul Williams Trojan country to th'e enemy 11, . loose on a 56-yard touchdown where Ayala stepped back and I jaunt and Cal had a 17-0 first, rors, losing the ball twice on Hixson's final touchdown shotl fumbles and twice on pass inter- a 20-yarder to Pinky Clements ceptions. ' came with less than a minute left.: Cavan, a cool sophomore who * i wasn't bothered by the muddy Texas rambles field, tossed a 22-yard touchdown pass to Kent Lawrence and scored FORTH WORTH-Texas, snif- once himself on a one-yard plunge fing a Southwest Conference x set up by his passes of 23, 9 and championship, rolled roughshedx 14 yards. over crippled Texas Christian Uni-t * * *versity 47-2 yesterday en route to f LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Bill its seventh straight football vic- Montgomery and Bill Burnett, a tory. Oklahoma upsets Missouri; Kansas grinds Kansas State * * * NORMAN, Okla. - Oklahomai hurled its human battering ram,' tailback Steve Owens, at the Mis- souri defensive wall 46 times yes- terday and the result was a 28-14] Sooner victory over the sixth-I % ranked .'igers. Owens scored three touchdowns and gained 177 yards rushing. He also tossed a nine yard touchdownr pass to Eddie Hinton as defending, Big Eight champion Oklahoma: put itself squarely in the 1968 title; picture. A near-sellout crowd of " 60,590 was on hand. Missouri and Kansas each standj 5-1 in league play and meet each other next Saturday in Columbia, Mo.'Oklahoma is 4-1-having de- feated Kansas a week ago-and still must play .Nebraska and Ok- lahoma State.- But this Saturday the Sooners' minds were -on nothing but Mis-: souri, which had won seven straight since its season-opening loss to Kentucky. . The battle plan was to run right at a Tiger defense that had al- lowed an average of only 98.6 yards rushing and 9.6 points per game. The strategy worked per- fectly, thanks to Owens' Her- culean efforts. * * * BOULDER, Colo - Nebraska socked Colorado with two first quarter touchdowns including Guy Ingles' -62-yard punt return, and kept piling it on ' for 22-6 Big Eight football victory yesterday. The Nebraskans, powered by hard-running Joe Orduna and Dick Davis run up a 22-0 lead Something To Swap? Try Daily Classifieds midway in the third quarter be- fore Colorado scored on an 80- yard march in 16 plays. The second time it got the ball Nebraska drove 55 yards in 10 plays for a touchdown. Davis' 20-1 yard dash up the middle to Colo- rado's 30, and quarterback Ernie Sigler's nine-yard pass to, Englis on the Buffalo nine generated most of the momentum. Orduna churned around left and eight. yards on a pitchout for the touch- down. Colorado bombed LAWRENCE, Kan. - John Rig- gins exploded 83 yards: late in the{ third quarter, igniting a Kansas scoring.flurry whichabrought a 38-29 victory over arch enemy Kansas State and enhanced the seventh-ranked Jayhawks bowl} chances yesterday. ' Rigins' run, highlighting an out-3 standing performance by the sophomore fullback, set up Kan- sas' first touchdown. That score, which came on Bobby Douglass' five-yard end sweep on the first play of the fourth quarter, gave the Jayhawks a 31-21 lead which the Wildcats could not overcome. Irish roll SOUTH BEND, Ind - Halfback Bob Gladieux smashed to his 12th and 13th touchdowns to match a 50-year Notre Dame single season record as the Fighting Irish hum- bled scrappy Georgia Tech 34-6 in their rain-soaked home football finale yesterday. Fullback Ron Dushney also scored twice on short plunges as ninth-ranked Notre Dame posted its seventh victory in nine starts with only top-ranked Southern California left to play. Gladieux, on touchdown darts of three and one' yards, tied the Irish season touchdown record previously shared by Creighton Miller and Bob Kelly. The Irish, No. 1 nationally in total offense, ground out three touchdown drives of 82. 76 and 74 yards and held a 27-0 lead before Georgia Tech broke the ice in the fourth period. * * Maryland swamped COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Third- ranked Penn State converted four; Maryland mistakes and a long punt return into touchdowns to methodically demolish the Terps 57-13 yesterday while post-season bowl representatives watched. The Nittany Lions, whose only first period score came on a 40- yard interception return, by tackle Steve Smear, rolled up a 34-0 halftime lead against outclassed Maryland. With observers from the Orange, # Cotton and, Sugar bowls in attend- ance, Penn State led 42-0 before Coach Joe Paterne sent in the reserves. Halfbacks Charlie Pittma and Gary Deuel each scored twice for Penn State which won its eighth in a row and hasn't been beaten in its last 16 games. kicked a 27-yard field goal -a -Associated Press- BILL "EARTHQUAKE" ENYART pounds for a five yard gain in a losing cause as Oregon State dropped a 17-13 decision to number one ranked Southern California in Los Angeles. The victory virtually sewed up a third straight Rose Bowl berth for the Trojans as they only have to face mediocre UCLA in their conference finale. for quarter lead. - "When I was in graduate school, I wanted to make sure I'd get to use what I was learn- ing, That's why I went into marketing atIBM," says John Houlihan.' John earned his MBA in 1966. He now sells IBM computers to mutual funds, banks and other financial institutions. "It's a management consulting job," he says. "The reason is, computers affect nearly, every area of a business. I get involved with a customer's accounting, finance, and' marketing. Which means I have to know something about each of these areas. So I'm constantly using the broad scope of knowl- edge I picked up in graduate school." Working at the top Another management consulting aspect of John's job is the level of people he deals with. "Most of the time," he says, "I work with vice-' presidents and the data processing manager., But I also have to deal with the president because he's often the only one who can give final approval. "And when you're working with people on that level, you need the management tools you get in graduate school. If a customer starts talking about a regression analysis, U\ can stay with him. Or, I might get involved in a linear programming study to determine the optimum stock mix for a portfolio. Believe me, getting an MBA was worth the extra effort." Career areas for MBA's Marketing is only one of several areas for MBA's at IBM. Others include finance and engineering. MBA's in finance can work in Financial Planning and Control, Financial Analysis, Accounting, and Information Systems. In engineering, MBA's work mainly in industrial engineering and manufacturing. Whatever area you choose, we think you'll agree with John: "Getting my MBA was worth the extra effort." Check with your placement office If you're interested in the opportunitises for MBA's at IBM, ask your placement office for more information. Or send a resume or letter to Irv Pfeiffer, IBM Corp., Dept. C, 100 So. Wacker Dr., Chicago Ill. 60606. We'd like to hear from you even if you're headed for military service. An Equal Opportunity Employer IBM@, The Organizational Committee of the STUDENT NEW DEMOCRATIC COALITION will meet Sun., Nov. 17 2:30 Room 3R Union Those willing to work, please come Join ouar protest miovemient. Our upstart congregation is too young and-too small to identify with the status quo. Founded in 1849, we have only 6,000 ,members world-wide. Perhaps that is why, responding to the needs of the changing times, we find it easy to move out to where the action is. Among our favorite assignments are the inner city and missions in Latin America, where there's no shortage of injustice to confront. We believe that Christianity, in the tradition of the early m artyrs, must be somewhat anti-Establishment in every