THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 28, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 28, - 9-9 Summer Flights to EUROPE '70U MASS'ik MEETING Tuesday, September 30 7:30 P.M. Michigan Union Ballroom May 3-June 1-Air Canada Jet Windsor-London$ Brussels-Windsor May 1-June 26-TWA Jet Detroit-London 1 Paris -Detroit May 6-August 16-Air Canada Jet Windsor-London -1 Brussels-Windsor June 28-August 15-Sabena Jet New York-London$ Brussels-New York All students, faculty members, and employees of University are eligible UNION-LEAGUE Bucks screw Horned Frogs, Tigers e C j - Spartans luck out, 23-15 By The Associated Press Purdue wins EAST LANSING, Mich. - Michigan State's grind-it-out run- LAFAYETTE, ning attack stole the glory from Phipps' passes a Bears se ers I n d . - Mike nd thundering the great passing by Southern Methodist quarterback C h u c k Hixson for a 23-15 come from be- hind football win by the Spartans yesterday. MSU was trailing 15-10 late ini the final quarter before the sput- tering Spartans finally made their ground game jell. They surged 641 yards in 10 plays with Don Smith carrying the last five yards for the score and a 16-15 edge. Michigan State added a cincher' score with slightly more than three minutes remaining. Quar- terback Bill Triplett, who had been off target most of the after- noon, hit a five-yard TD pass to Bruce Kulesza. Earlier, it looked as if Hixson, the leading passer in the nationi last fall, was going to make his bullet arm pay off. Southern Methodist scored twice within 15 } seconds in the third quarter. The first carry came on a 48-yard field goal by Bicky Lesser. Hixon then threw a 41-yard scoring pass to reserve halfback Gordon Gild- ed for a 15-7 Mustang lead. Gary Boyce boomed in a 36- yard field goal to put the Spar- tans within striking distance. It was the third straight defeat for Southern Methodist, edged by Air Force 26-22 and Georgia Tech 24-21. MSU which plays Notre Dame next week, won its opener from Washington 27-11. Even in defeat, the great Hix- son broke by 137 yards the SMU record for total offense of 3,- 592 yards, formerly held by ex- Detroit Lions star Doak Walker who was watching from the stands. On passing alone, Hixson made 244 yards with 17 completions in 30 pass attempts. defensive line play gave Purdue a surprisingly easy 28-14 vic- tory over ninth-ranked N o t r e Dame yesterday. Phipps passed 37 yards to half- back Randy Cooper for the game's first score and set up the other Boilermaker touchdowns w i t h passes to his new set of receivers. The victory gave Phipps a per- fect 3-year record in quarterback- ing Purdue against the Irish. Defensive end Bill McKoy, who put pressure on Notre D a m e quarterback Joe T h e i s m a n n throughout the game, set up Purdue's decisive touchdown drive late in the third quarter when he spilled Theismann on the Purdue 49-yard line. The play was on a fourth and six situation from the Purdue 31, with the Boilermakers ahead 14-7. Phipps quickly passed the Boilermakes deep into N o t r e Dame territory, hitting end Greg Fenner on a 13-yard completion, fullback John Bullock for 19 yards and flanker Stan Brown for 16. Brown's catch put the ball on the 3-yard line and Phipps took it into the end zone on two car- ries. Theismann passed for both Notre Dame touchdowns but one came in the dying minutes. Notre Dame's first touchdown was on a drive covering 79 yards late in the second period. Two penalties against Purdue, one for roughing the passer and the other for pass interference,, helped in the drive. On a fourth down pass which end Tom Gate- wood dropped on the Boilermaker, 10-yard line, the interference call was made. Two plays later Theismann threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to halfback Ed Ziegler. Phipps completed 12 of 20 passes for 213 yards in the game played before a record crowd of 68,179 in newly enlarged Ross- Ade Stadium. Mnneso t I atelidEMI MINNEAPOLIS - Ohio Uni- versity's touchdown twins C I e v e Bryant and Todd Snyder combin- ed three times for touchdowns yesterday and pulled the Bobcats into a 35-35 football tie with the Minnesota Gophers. Bryant's 14-yard touchdown pass to Snyder with 9:47 to play in the game tied it. Earlier, Bry- ant had hit Snyder with TD tosses of five and seven yards. Minnesota missed a chance for victory five seconds before the By Tie Associated Pres COLUMBUS. Ohio --Crafty Rex Kern directed Ohio State's de- vastating attack to a crushing 62- 0 victory over Texas Christian yesterday in an intersectional football game, handing the Horned Frogs their second worst defeat in history before a record Ohio Stadium crowd of 86,412. The No. 1 ranked - Buckeyes, staging an awesome show of pow- er in their 1969 opener, racked up their 15th straight conquest, the nation's longest winning streak. The huge partisan crowd, un- peturbed by a steady rain, roar- ed its approval as the Buckeyes exploded for three touchdowns in the first quarter, and kept up their assault. After a penalty wiped out a 36-yard pass play, Kern connected on the second play of scrimmage with Bruce Jankowski for a 58- yard bomb for the first score. Tailback John Brockington punched across for three touch- downs while Kern and battering fullback Jim Otis scored two each. The outclassed Frogs, beaten by Purdue last week 42-55, never got across midfield as the stingy Buckeye defense kept TCU bot- tled up. The Frogs lost to Texas, 72-0, in 1915 for their worst setback. Ohio scored in every period and got two touchdowns in the final quarter with reserves on the field. The final TD came on a 62-yard' pass from Kevin Rusnak to Rookie Tom Campana. It was the biggest score run up by the Bucks since they beat In- diana 56-0 in 1957. and was the most points scored since Ohio walloped Iowa 83-21 in 1950. Tigers trimphn j/li ST. LOUIS - Tailback J o e Moore blasted. burrowed and bedazzled Illinois for 150 yards rushing in the first half, includ- ing a 58-yard touchdown run, and started Missouri to a 37-6 football k A * I ictory ov r the Illini yesterday. Moore, a 198-pound junior, put thie Tiers on the scoreboard on Oh. ir first series with his long touchdown run. He followed Ron McBridwe up the middle, broke two ttckes at the line and raced down the middle fl the score. M'V1-oore scampered 26 yards in the scwnd period to set up a John Stag i'd touchdown run xwhich gav the 11th-ranked Tigers a 21-0 halftime lead. Iloosiers hizi BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - R- serve California quarterback Steve Curtis passed to sophomore Ken Adams for a 61-yard touch- down thatupset Indiana 17-14 yesterday in the firs t mieeting of the Pacific Eight and Big Ten teams. Indiana got otf. to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter and appear- ed headed for a runaway. The Hoosiers' star flanker Jade Butcher caught touchdown passes of 45 yards from John Isenbarg- er and six yards from Harry Gonso. Don Warner kicked both extra points and a record Indiana crowd of 52,904 sat back in a light rain to enjoy itself. Then Ken Weidemann of Cali- fornia picked off a deflected Gonso pass and ran 18 yards for a touchdown late in the f i r .s quarter, Randy Wersching made the ex- tra point for the Bears with a left-footed soccer kick, then boot- ed a 29-yard field goal on the first play of the fourth quarter to put -California in striking dis- ance. California rambled 64 yards in its winning drive. About 35 yards o1 the winning Curtis-Adams pass play was on the ground. Weidemnann's touchdown inter- ception was the fifteenth time in his cxe-r he had hauled down an enemy pass. He got another off Gonso in the second quarter. -Associated Press 4TSU's Bill Triplett carries the ball BUFFY SAINTE MARIE October 4! first half ended when Jeff Ny- gren's 36-yard field goal attempt bounced off the cross bar and sent the teams into the intermission tied 21-all. The Bobcats drove to the Min- nesota 31 in the final seconds but Jim Kensinger's long field goal attempt wobbled off to the left as time ran out. The Gophers got as tar as the Ohio 31 in their last threat af- ter Mike Curtis intercepted a Bry- ant pass on the Bobcat 37-yard line. But Jim Carter's six-yard run was the only gain as Ohio held on fourth down. Bryant carried 27 times for 78 yards rushing and completed 18 of 28 passes for 194 yards. Snyder took 12 of those tosses for 122 yards. r ini n wS~lSil iped( MADISON, Wis. - UCLA, tak- ing the first quarter to get its offense in gear, defeated upstart Wisconsin, 34-23, yesterday af- tUinoon in an intersectional col- lege football game . Greg Jones scored three touch- downs and Dennis Dummit two, to fuel the Uclan attack. Victory raised UCLA's record to 3-0, while Wisconsin dropped its second straight game of the season. It was the 17th consecu- tive loss for the Badgers and 22nd game in a row without a wvin. liwu triu~niplis IOWA CITY. Iowa - Sopho- more Levi Mitchell's opening kickoff return of 92 yards trigger- ed a record offensive avalanche catapaulting Iowa past Washing- ton State, 61-35. in an intersec- tional college football game here yesterday. The Hawkeyes, drubbed a week ago in their opener by Oregon State, amassed 696 yards run- ning and passing in handing Washington State its first 1 o s s against a Big Ten Conference team since 1964. 8 Oft AVM d% vmajor LeUivt I Delivered to Dorms and Campus Offices Home Delivery on Sunday Either CALL 769-4186 after 5 P.M. Or write to: KEN GORDON Box 241 Ann Arbor, Michigan AUTO INSURANCE FOR EVERYONE Eastern Division AV L 3lt i lfore t 18 50 Detroit 87 71 Boston 86 7M Washington 83s75 New York 77 81 Cleveland 6? 96 Western Division Minnesota 94 63 Oakland 85 7? California 7t 87 Chicago 67 91 Kansas City 65 93 Seattle 62 95 Pet. .684 .551 .544 .525 .487 .392 .599 .541 .4-16 .411 .395 G( i ? 32 NATIONAL LEAG E lastern Division XV 1, I'cd. New SoBik 98 61 .616 (1ic 1)ago 90 69 .566 Pittsbur A, 73 .541 St. l..rill 83 7-1 .529 1iiaT l hia 6 . .3 2 Montreal 52 106 .329 Western Division Atlantma 91 68 .572 88 69 .561 Cincinnati 87 7' .547 Los Ange82 8? 75 .522 nouston 80 78 .506 San Diego 50 108 .316 Yesterday's Results Pittt'sbIlrgh 4, (Chicago 1 Ni'x l Yor1, Phiadelphia 0 St. Louis , Montreal I Houiston 4, Cincinati 3 Atlanta 41, Satz Diego Los Angeles 2, San Francisco 1 Today's (;anmw St. Louis at Montreal New York at Philadelphia (chicago at Pittsbturghl san Diego al Atlanta Houston at Cincinnati San Francisco at Lo. Angelts GB 8 13F., 3512 46 ?r.. .4 7' 10. 401 ". APP Yesterday's Results New York 1, Baltimore 0 Washington 3, Cleveland Detroit 2, Boston 1 Oakland 6, California 0 Chicago 6, Kansas City 1 Minnesota at Seattle, inc. Today's Games California at Oakland Minnesota at Setitle Kansas City at Chicago Baltimore at New York Detroit at Boston AL vs. THE BOOKSTOREI Cancelled Rejected 0 Declined We also write motorcycle and motorscooter insurance. "EASY BUDGET TERMS" 482-9533 234 W. Michigan Ave. Ypsilanti ~lI/ 4 INSURANCE CENTER ARLAN'S DEPT. STORE 665-3789 2465 W. Stadium Blvd. Ann Arbor THIS CAN GET YOUR HEAD TOG~R This afternoon at 2 p.m. Al Capp will field any and all questions directed to him. Authority on nothing, Capp has opinions on everything, including ROTC and the student bookstore. Capp is (in) famous for his reactionary views and his obvious distaste for student Leftism. At S.I.U. Capp stated, "I wish I had the delousing rights to this group!" What will he say to you? Bring your questions and comments to Hill Auditorium. CONFRONTAT ON ROTC, the bookstore, and the proposed campus-wide strike tomorrow are all sure to be discussed. UVf KSki Ckd MASS MEETING UNION BALLROOM 7:00 P.M. SWITZERLAND TRIP SIGN-UPS INFORMATION-CANOE TRIP SKI MOVIES Bishop Thomas J. Gumbleton Detroit, Michigan Dear Tom: Your statement on parochiaid to the Governor's Commission on Educational Reform was a classic example of medieval cler- icalism wedded to present day politics. Your plea that a'church tax be levied upon the American people was hardly the "breath of fresh air" promised by the Second Vatican Council. Millisons of Catholics refuse to support your stand on the parochial school issue. Journalist Thomas J. Fleming writes: Nuns are frankly weary of the traditional role assigned to them - teaching in the American Catholic Church's 11,000 parochial schools. Lecturinq affluent younq Catholics on arithmetic and grammar no longer seems to have much to do with their religious vocation when the poor of our inner cities are desperately in need of help. A report by the Research Committee of the Conference of the Maior Su- periors of Women, in May, 1968, showed that nuns were leavinq their convents at the rate of 5,000 a year-double the rate for 1965. Those who so for have chosen to stay fought and won a number of spectacular bottles over the riqht to run their own lives without any direction from Rome or the local bishop. When archconservative James Cardinal McIntyre, of Los Anqeles, tried to prevent the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary from beginning on experiment in which they were Lead your own life. Enjoy it. Don't let life let you down because of a silly head- ache. Happiness is as far away as an Anacin* bottle. Anacin is twice as strong in the specific pain re- ..,,, ., 4 """" ,s. + r n y r l ONTROVERSY I' '69 AL CAPP GEORGE McGOVERN CHARLES EVERS WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY E