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October 05, 1969 - Image 7

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Sunday, October S, 1969

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Sunday, October 5, 1 969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven

wri ters, poets,
art'ists,
phoatographers
generation
accepting material
for information, call 769-7353 or 665-4636
420 Maynard

Penn
By The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. - Second-
ranked Penn State withstood furi-
ous Kansas State offensive flur-
ries early and late and hung on
for a 17-14 victory over the fired-
up Wildcats yesterday.
Kansas State, fighting back
from a 17-0 deficit, scored its
second touchdown with 15 seconds
to go and completed a conversion
pass to trim the final margin to
three points.
Sophomore Lydell Mitchell, fill-
ing in for injured Charley Pitt-
man, provided the fuel for the Nit-
tany Lions' offense. He ran for 123
yards on 19 carries and cracked
the scoreless battle by uncorking
a 58-yard touchdown run midway
through the second period.
Trojans darn Beavers

State staves

off

Kansas

State

ed Southern California overcame
early Oregon State stubbornness
yesterday and powered to a third
straight victory of the season,
31-7.
It was the first Pacific-8 Con-
ference game of the season for
Southern California and put the
Trojans on the road to a possible
unprecented fourth straight Rose
Bowl appearance.

time this season the seventh rank-
ed Bulldogs had been scored upon.
Arkansas throttles TCU
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Quar-
terback Bill Montgomery and split
end Chuck Dicus, Arkansas' pass-
catching combination from t h e
suburbs of Dallas, colaborated on
two touchdown passes to spark
the third-ranked Razorbacks to a

Oregon State took advantage of 24-6 victory over aroused Texas
a first quarter fumble by Southern Christian University here yester-
Christian University hereyestnr

Califounia to take a 7-0 lead.U
USC struggled to a 10-7 lead by
halftime and then smothered the
Beavers in the last half, driving to
three touchdowns with a mixture
of running by halfback Clarence
Davis and passing by quarterbackI
Jim Jones.
., 4, 4

day.

l

CORVALLIS, Ore.-Fifth-rank- 11lldogs mid n

Open
T uesday8:E

Hearing

ATHENS, Ga.-A two-yard scor-
nig dive by workhorse fullback
Bruce Kemp turned a tight ball
game into a parade of touchdowns
in the fourth quarter yesterday
afternoon as the undefeated Geor-
gia Bulldogs rolled to a 41-16 in-
tersectional football victory over
South Carolina.
Kemp's touchdown in the first

It was the Southwest Confer-
ence opener for both teams and
Arkansas' 11th straight victory
over TCU, which fought doggedly
after last weeks 62-0 humiliation
at the hands of Ohio State.
Montgomery's passes to Dicus
covered 73 yards in the second
quarter and 23 yards to the fleet
junior in the third period.
Cal squashes Rice
BERKELEY, Calif. - California
scored twice in the last 53 sec-
onds, once of a 19-yard touch-
down pass and again on a 29-
yard interception return, to stun
underdog Rice 31-21 in an inter-
sectional football game yesterday.

)o P.M.

October 7

18 seconds of the final period--
The Golden Bears trailed 17-7
broke open a 14-10 contest and late in the third quarter b u t
the Bulldogs quickly followed it fought back to trail only 21-17.
with three other scores. Reserve quarterback Steve Curtis
It was the third straight victory then tossed to end Jim Calkins in
for Georgia and marked the first the end zone.
--- ---- Surrounded by defenders, Calk-

Auditorium

A,

Angell Hall

TOPIC: R.O.T.C. Final Report
by the
Academic Affairs Committee

,man= r ammm COUPON a= a m= mm
i THOMPSON'S
PIZZA
3 I
I £
761..0001
:off FjsO LI5cQoff:
Lorge one item (or more) *
pizza. One coupon per oizzor
E ,
Mon., Tues., Wed., a
Thurs. Only
OCT. 6-9 ;
s r
........... ... -m m mm ... m.

ins leaped high, made a specta-
cular catch and fell in scoring ter-
ritory for the go-ahead points.
Seconds later, Rice wvent to the
air and Cal's Paul Martyr inter-
cepted and ran it back all the way
for the clincher.

DON ABBEY, fullback for
second-ranked P enn St ate,
ploughs through the Kansas
State line in yesterday's 17-14
Nittany Lion triumph. The win
was Penn State's fourteenth
straight over the past two sea-
sons.

-Associated Press
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

}

CIVIL ENGINEERS
Interested in
OPPORTUNITIES IN CONSULTING ENGINEERING
We would like to meet with you during our next
visit to your campus. Please schedule an interview
through your Placement Office.
BURGESS & NIPLE
LIMITED
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
Waterworks and Sewerage - Highway Engineering
Water Resources Development
Industrial Wastes - Utility Valuation
2015 West Fifth Ave. Columbus, Ohio 43212

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5
Day Calendar
Electronic Music Recital: School of
Music Recital Hall, 7:00 p.m.
Degree Recital: David McVey, organ:
Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p n.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 6
Choral Union Series: Misha Dich-
ter, pianist: Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.
General Notices
Senate Asembly Special Meeting: On
Monday, October 6, 1969, 2:15 p.m.,
Rackham Amphitheater. Al--, open
hearing, to dicuss the Final Report of
the Academic Affairs Committee on
ROTC: Tuesday, October 7, 8:00 p.m,
Auditorium A, Angell Hall.

The University of Michigan Chapter

of the American Association of tUniver-
sity ProIesors announces: A A U P
Chapter Meeting: 8 p.m., Monday, Oc-
tober 6 in E. Conference Room, Rack-a
haon Bldg. Vice-President Barbara Ne-
well, Profe=sor Stephen J. Tonsor, Miss
SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Gretchen Groth and Mr. MartinMc-
Laughlin will form a panel on "The f

Role of the Student in University De-
cision-mnaking." Open to the public.
Any Student desiring a secondary
directed teaching assignment for Win-
ter Term, 1970 must came to the Di-
rected Te:ching Office, 292 University
School, no later than Monday, October
6, to obtain preliminary materials for
Winter directed teaching. If any stu-
dent should have decided to postpone
his directed teachinig or drop it alto-
gether, he should inform this office of
his decision by this same date, Oc-
tober 6.
Should any Winter candidate fail to
come to the Directed Teaching Office
by October 6 to obtain preliminary
materials, his application may be for-
feited. Requests for Winter assign-
""nnts will be based upon the applica-
tions which have been confirmed by
October 10.
Placement Service
3200 S.A.B.
GENERAL DIVISION
Placement Interviews at General Di-
vision, call 763-1363 for appointments:
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16
Detroit Edison, Bach and Mast Econ,
Masters in Educ and Soc with interest
In Personnel, Bach in manth with Inter-
ast in computers for corporate finance,
data proces, mktg res, personnel, inside
and territ sales.
International Business Machines,
(IBM): Bach and Masters in Phys Sci,
Math, Engrg, Humanities, for market-
ing representatives and systems en-
gi neers.
IBM World Trade Corporation, all
degree levels in Engrg, Math, Phys-
ical Chem, BXs. Ad and Econ. Citizens
of the following countries only: Aus-
tralia, Bahamas, Belgium, oCsta Rica,
Denmark, El Salvadore, France, G e r -
many, Iran, Jamaica, Japan, Kuwait,
Libya, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway,
Portugal, Saudia Arabia, Taiwan, Trin-
idad, Turkey, United Kingdom.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17
Honeywell: Bach in any area with in-
terest in computers, for progamnming
and data process.
International Business Machines, see
Thurs. listing above.
IBM World Trade Corporation, see
Thurs. listing above.
Interviews in Other Placement offices
for LS&A graduates:
Firestone Tire and Rubber at Chem
for PhD Math, microbiol, physics &
chem. Oct. 13.
Firestone Tire and Rubber at Bus
Ad, for Econ and math Oct. 14.
Deere & Co, at Engrg and bus ad
for math, tech journ, Oct. 14.
Naval Ship R&D Center, at Engrg
Naval Arch, Math, Physics, October 14.
Walker Manuf. Co., at Engrg, Math
and Econ. Oct. 14.
U.S Gypsum Co, at Chem, and Engrg,
Arch and Physics, and Chem Oct. 16.
- - - - - -

rr rr

Go

Go

Christmas

time to bury your idealism?

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into reality. Time to make a living and
forget about changing the world.
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One reason we feel this way is our in-
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CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Friday, October 17
(Business Administration & Sales)
Friday, October 31
(Engineering & Science)
See your Placement Director for a
copy of our brochure and to arrange
an interview with our representative.
Or, write to Mr. Roger VanderPloeg,
Vhto my'rrann o P nv 1

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