''- Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 21, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 21, 1969 I Spartans squeeze by Huskies; do inion Irish over Man will never really conquer the atom until he conquers his fear of the atom - his fear of annihilaiion. He needs a spirit( ual understanding of himself, of the universe, and of God. You are invited to hear a one-hour public lecture on this subject by Jules Cern of The Christian Sci- ence Board of Lectureship. The title is "Christian Science: Do- minion Over the Atom." chrstia Sciernce Lecture First Church of Christ Scientist 1833 WASHTENAW AVE. Tuesday evening, Sept. 23--8 p.m. Child Care Provided AdJmision FREE Everyone welcome By The Associated Press EAST LANSING, Mich. Law, a 225-pound lineback formed like a scatback, 70 yards to score on a pas ception and assure Michiga of a 27-11 foobtall win over ington. Law grabbed a pass try b quarterback Gene Willis fourth quarter to save MS losing because of earlierr Washington led 9-7 at the It looked all the way as bles and interceptions wo cide the game. The Spartans scored e second, S , the first quarter after a - Don recovery, with quarterbac wr, per- Triplett going in the las dashing yards for the TD. ;s inter- Clyde Werner. the 228 in State Washington middle linebac r Wash- up two Husky tallies in the quarter on pass interceptio y husky pass grab by Werner let in the Sligh sweep in for 20 yar 3U from a score. A second intercept miscues. up a 33 yard field goal 1 half. Volbrecht. if fum- MSU took command in tY uld de- quarter, driving from its for a score. Speedy left h early in Eric Allen escaped for most half buries Cats fumble yardage in the impressive drive. the Boilermakers hold off the k Bill The push started in the third per- Horned Frogs behind the classy t three iod but the score came on the quarterbacking of Mike Phipps, first play in the final quarter, while TCU sophomore signal caller t-pound with Triplett sneaking in from the Steve Judy fired four touchdown cker set one. passes. second MSU added to the score on a Phipps had four TD passes and ins. One 29-yard pass from left halfback ran for one score. Luther Tommy Love to Frank Foreman Purdue drove 86 yards to a ds and with less than 30 seconds remain- touchdown after TCU kicked off tion set lng.t by Ron he third own 11 alf back t of the ZBT Irisi roll SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Bill Barz, surprise fullback starter, and scrambling quarterback Joe Theis- mann combined for three touch- downs to rally Notre Dame from a 10-0 deficit, leading the Irish to a 35-10 route of Northwestern's Wildcats in the football season opener for both teams. After leading only 14-10 through the first three quarters, the heav- ily favored Irish exploded for 21 points in the fourth period. With 50 seconds left in the wild' 24-point first quarter, the Irish finally moved ahead 14-10 on halfback Ed Ziegler's 18-yard scoring run which capped a 981 yard march by the awakenedJ Notre Dame powerhouse. Two of the three Notre Dame touchdowns in the closing quarter were scored by Barz, who last sea- son played only three minutes and was a last minute replacement for injured Jeff Zimmerman. Purdue sizzle s FORTH WORTH: Tex. - Pur- due's p u n i s h in g Boilermakers fought off 87-degree heat, 12 pen- alties and a second-half charge to outgun Texas Christian, 42-35. A crowd of some 25,000 watched a nice place to eat to open the game. T1he Boner- makers used nearly 5 minutes of the first quarter in the drive, capped by a Phipps' bootleg run of 5 yards. Fullback John Bullock of Pur- due took a Phipps screen pass later in the quarter and stomped 80 yards to the TCU 3. It was the Slongest pass play in the history of the stadium, wiping out a 78- yard play Baylor made in 1938. TCU's flood of points came in the second half. First Ju'dy fought off a vicious blitz and slipped a 35-yard TD toss to Steve Rabb. Minutes later he hit Linzy Cole for 3 yards and another touch- down. In the fourth period, Judy hit John Beilue for another TD. Then, with 4:48 remaining in the game, Cole romped 70 yards with a Pur- due punt for the last score of the game. Hai keyes bombed IOWA CITY, Iowa - Quar- terback Steve Endicott threwI three touchdown passes and Billy' Main and Larry Watson scored two touchdowns each in leading Oregon State to a 42-14 upset over mistake-prone Iowa. Endicott, a 5-11,. 185-pound sophomore who was given stellarI protection, pitched one of his scoring bullseyes to wingbackj Watson and one to fullback Main! during the early-season surprise before 51,800 fans. Main slammed a yard to a touch- down with the game only 2:24 old and tucked in a 31-yard pass, ---Associated Press WASHINGTON'S LUTHER SLIGH sweeps the right end en route to a twenty-yard touchdown gallop in the second quarter of yesterday's encounter withe Michigan State, while State's Gary Novak (82) and several unidentified Spartans give chase. The score helped lead which State overcame in the second half. 4 1I FIFTH DIME NSIONS C EONCERT at full speed crossing the goal line in the third quarter. A fumble recovery of the open- ing kickoff set up the first touch- down for Oregon State, which added a second score 10 minutes later on a concerted drive from its 24 and took a 21-0 lead to in- termission on Larry Rich's 65- yard punt return. OSU built its lead to 35 - 0 before quarterback Larry Law- rence passed 25 yards to wing- back Terry Reardon and sopho- more Levi Mitchell sped two yards around left end' for Iowa's touch- downs in the final period. Indiflna coaSIS' LEXINGTON, Ky. - Indiana jumped to a 24-0 lead and rolled over defenseless Kentucky 58-30 in a football game that included almost every type of scoring. The touchdown plays alone cov- ered 481 yards with running scores, touchdowns by passing. scoring kickoff and punt returns, fieldgoals and a safety. It was Indiana's senior quarter- back Harry Gonso and halfback' John Isenbarger who carried the brunt of the Hoosier attack both on the ground and in the air. Gonso, before retiring in the fi- nal minutes, connected on 23 of 28 passes. As the final touch, sophomore Mike Heizman replac- ed him and hit two for three. The Hoosiers scored t h r e e touchdowns in the first quarter, one on a 63-yard punt return by Steve Porter and another on a 60- yard pass from Gonso to John Andrews. Illini sclped CHAMPAIGN Sophomore the Huskies to a 9-7 halftime holding and Monahan's next try was good. Until then, Illinois sophomore quarterbacks Steve Livas and Gary Lange, and senior halfback Dave Jackson each scored on short blasts. After each touchdown, Il- linois failed to convert, on a place- ment that was low and twice on two-point running attempts. Livas spurted across from the 4 in the second period after Il- linois gained the ball on its own 17 when Hugh Klopfenstein's punt went only 10 yards and out of bounds. Jackson swept three yards to score late in the second, closing a 56 yard drive in nine plays. Wisconsin subdued MADISON, Hardworking Steve Owens, forced to share rushing honors with Wisconsin's Alan Thompson, led the sixth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners to a 48-21 vic- tory over the Badgers in the foot- ball opener for both schools. Owens rambled for 189 yards in 40 carries against Wisconsin, a record-breaking 10th consecutive game in which he has rushed for more than 100 yards. "A-Train" Thompson, making his collegiate debut, buldozed for 220 yards in 33 attempts, breaking Wisconsin's single game rushing mark of 200 y a r d s set by All- American rushing back Alan "The Horse" Ameche in 1951 against Minnesota. Oober 11 Events Buil BLOCK TICKETS On Sale Sunday, Sept. 28 12 Noon-Union (A block will consists of ten or more tickets in a given price range.) INDIVIDUAL TICKETS On Sale Monday, October 6 Tickets: $3, $4,$5 (Proceeds go to Martin Luther King Scholarship Fund) CO-SPONSORS: ALPHA PHI ALPHA UAC ding Daily Classifieds mean MONEY Frank Monahan's 22-yard field goal in the last 33 seconds of the game gave Washington State a 19-18 season-opening football vic- tory over Illinois Saturday. The Cougars in the final min- utes drove 47 yards behind Bob Ewen's line-blasting to the Illini 5. On fourth down, they were set back by a delaying penalty. Then Illini Bob Bucklin blocked Mona- han's field goal try from the 17. But Illinois was penalized for 7:15 CHAPEL p.m. LOUNGE Rev. Leonard Verduin will lead a discussion on South Africa. Rev. Verduin his lec- tured and preached in South Africa as an Exchangee in the United States-South Af- rica leadership exchange program. Everyone is wel- come! for you a - p -a-om USE THEM! Call 764-0557 9:30-12:30 TEMPLE BETH EMETH (Reform) 1917 Washtenaw at Berkshire RABBI BRUCE WARSHAL Yom Kippur Services KOL NIDRE Sunday, Sept. 21 ---8:15 p m. MORNING SERVICE Monday, Sept. 22-- 10:00 a.m. CHILDREN'S SERVICE -2:00 p.m. AFTERNOON SERVICE --4:00 p.m. --ALL ARE WELCOME - Ss v '2 FOREST AT WASHTENAW r Take a ride with us to a new era! - - - --- ---- COME TO THE em ichiganensian ass Meeting SUNDAY, SEPT. 11Ihru RVSTU~S.-YSP.2 TODAY AT 11*00 p 1 U. St-IJAY, SEPTEMBER 28-7 P.M. . .: s . I'Ea A bE Ar-s s aa & * m=