Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 18, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October '18, 1969 WHY WASTE TIME CLEANING 1 We Can Do It Quicker and Better QUALITY CLEANING AMPLE PARKING OPEN 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. EUREKA CLEANERS 308 N. Main St. FUN WORKING IN EUROPE Irish, By 'BOB ANDREWS Last year at the Los A Coliseum it took a mighty in the last minutes of play f Trojans of Southern Califort manage a tie against the born Irish of Notre Dame morrow the scene will swit South Ben, Ind., where ele ranked Notre Dame will t knock off the Trojans, wh ranked third in the nation. Notre Dame comes off an 45-0 trouncing of the Cad West Point at. Yankee Sto while the Trojans, as seems the case when they meet ford, won 26-24 as Ron booted a field goal on th play of the game. Quarterback Jimmy Jones passed for 180 yards a Stanford, and Clarence Davis has made the departure of Simpson hardly noticeable the Trojan offense while th Theismann to Tom Gati combination, which tore apa Army defensive backfield week, and the defensive wo lineman Mike McCoy also a the Cadets. will certainly be, thing Coach John McKay w concerned with. In a game which many tin the past has decided who BULLETIN Special To The Daily Charlie Kines, a former 11 igan offensive tackle and member of the 1965 RoseI team, received serious wounds in combat in Viet last week. Trojans top grid action number one in the East. the Nit- It looks like Syracuse should ence. Bob Anderson, the Colorado ngeles tany Lions of Penn State face the have its work cut out for them as quarterback, may give the Soon- drive Orange of Syracuse at Syracuse, they try to snap Penn State's 23 ers as much trouble in the back- or the N.Y. Each team comes off vic- game non-losing streak which is field as James Street from Texas nia to tories; Syracuse against Maryland, the longest of any major college had done a week ago in the Cot- stub- 20-9, and Penn State over na- since the University of Alabama ton Bowl. To- tionally ranked West , Virginia. went through 25 games without a If the Crimson Tide can come ch to 20-0. defeat from 1965 to 1967. out of shock after Vanderbilt up- venth Rich Panczyszyn, another of a The University of Oklahoma, set them 14-10, then they will try ry } long line of Syracuse players after last week's disheartening to avenge their 10-9 loss last year o are whose name is almost impossible loss at the hands of the Longhorns to the Volunteers of Tennessee. to spell or pronounce, will guide of Texas, 27-17, will clash with Alabama, who was undefeated the Orange against a defense that the University of Colorado at Nor- three pe o sas befeate easy allowed just 138 yards rushing man, Okla., in a game which in three previous starts before the ets of against the number one rushing mght vy wl decide te Bg tss Vanderbilt, dropped from adium team in the nation last week. Eight Conference champions. hn g al bynkcott te and to be C ing game, led by Scott Hunter and Stan- Charley Pittmanout two weeks Steve Owens, one of the best usually very effective, was as dead Ayala ago with a sprained ankle, picked tailbacks in the history of college as George Washington and to- elast up 84 yards while quarterback football, and quarterback Jack day's game will be a must if Ala- Chuck Burkhart ran the team with Mildren, who can run as well as bama is to have a chance at the who much precision and finesse, he can pass, will give the defen- Southeastern crown. gainst Aside from these offensive sive unit of Colorado plenty to Tennessee on the other hand , who standouts, Mike Smith and George worry about. seems to be rolling right along as o. J Landis, both linebackers, made in- The Buffaloes, off a victory they won their fourth straight, lead terceptons last week, giving the against Iowa State, 14-0, seem the latest victim being Georgia e Joe Nittany Lions defense a total of to be, along with Missouri and Tech (the score was 26-8). The ewood 11 in the four games played this Oklahoma, among the top con- Vols defense led by linebackers rt the year. tenders in the Big Eight Confer-- Summer and Year Round JOBS ABROAD: Get paid, meet peo- ple, learn a language, travel, enjoy! Nine job categories in more than fifteen countries. Foreign language not essential. Send $1.00 for membership and 34-page illustrated JOBS ABROAD maga- zine, complete with details and applications to International Society for Training and Culture, 866 United Nations Plaza, New York, N. Y., a non-profit student membership organization. %~at THE HOUSE this week 1429 HILL ST. FRIDAY, OCT. 17: Religious services with Beth Israel Congregation-8:30 P.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 18: 8:30 P.M. JEAN COCTEAU'S 1930 film classic--- "BLOOD OF A POET' HILLEL PLAYERS' first production- Murray Schisgal's "THE TIGER" admission charge--75c SUNDAY, OCT. 19: 2-4:00 P.M.-ISRAELI FOLK DANCING 4:00 P.M.-OPEN EXECUTIVE MEETING 5:30 P.M.-DELI HOUSE MONDAY, OCT. 20: Brown Bag Lunch 12:00-1 :00 P.M.-Room 1, mug. topic for discussion: "JUDAISM-RELEVANT OR NOT" TUESDAY, OCT. 21: Jewish Peace Fellowship open meeting-8:30 P M. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22-8 :00 P M- "WHY NOT JUDAISM WITHOUT GOD?" RABBI SHERWIN WINE; Humanist-agnostic rabbi of the Birmingham Temple. All are welcome THURSDAY, OCT. 23: Beginning of Yiddish Week. Yiddish film (to be announced) 7:30 P.M. EVERY TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY: Israeli- Arab Conflict News Analysis Brown Bog, 12:00-1 :00 P.M. in the library, Center for Research on Conflict Resolution, 4th floor, Winchell Hall, West Quad last rk of gainst some- 'ill be ies in was [ich- d a Bowl leg nam Professional Standings Jack Reynolds and Steve Kiner held the Yellow Jackets to a total of 23 yards offensively. Bobby Scott will be a major threat and the Alabama defensive unit will have to play at their very best to contain his explosive arm. IH Al E' S. I,. S; S+ NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Eastern Division W L Pct. GB % York :3 0 1.000 - altimiore 1 0 1.000 1 'hiladelphia 1 0 1.000 1 'ncinnati 1 1 .500 it etroit 0 0 .000 1 ilwatukee 0 0 .000 It o0st on 0 1 .000 2 Western Division tlanta 1 0 1.000 - 'ioeis 1 0 1.000 - an Francisco 0 0 .000 os Angeles 0 1 .000 1 an Diego 0 1 .000 1 hicago io ? .000 iI cattle i0 ? .000 1t Yesterday's Results Cincinnati 110, Boston 108 Philadelphia 131, Los Angeles 126 New York 116, Chicago 87 T1oday's Gaines Boston at Baitinmore Philadelphia at Cincinnati Seattle at Chicago L.os Angeles at New York Detroit at Milwaukee Phoenix at Atlanta San Diego at San Francisco NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE X : i ; Boston Detroit Mointreal New York 'T'oronto Chicago East Division IV L -e o w1 1 ? 1 1 0 I I 0 1 0 3 W~est lDivision ? 0 S 1 I I 0) 0 0 I 0 ? 1' Pt. GF GA 0 0 0 0 1 a 0 i 0 4 4 2 Z q 8 9 4 4 t 3 -Associated Press BILL BARZ (33) of Notre Dame pulls down a Joe Theismann pass for a touchdown in a game against Michigan State two weeks ago. The Irish play host to South"rn California today, and Thnismann will be trying to spoil the Trojans' unblemished record. 1EAVY SCHEDJLES 'Boozers, ruggers play today 5 St. Louis Minnesota Oakland SPittsb urgh Philadelphia Los Angeles 4 4 3 0 11 4 3 9 9 r? 9 i ;, !~ DESIRED Yesterday's Gaines Los Angeles at Oakland, inc. Today's Games New York at Montreal Chicago at Toronto Boston at Pittsburgh Minnesota at St. L"ouis Oakland at Los Angeles Sunday's Games Mlont real at Philadelphia Toronto at New York Pittsburgh at Boston St. Louis at Detroit Minnesota at Chicago The Michigan Soccer Club in- vades Ohio territory today to war with Cleveland State University in an important match for each team. For Michigan, it is the peak of the season, a pivotal point which, ac- cording to Co-captain Les Feld- man, "should set the tone for the rest of the year." THE DAILY Takes on the World of Fashion SUNDAY Ranked eighth in the Midwest, and second in Ohio with a 4-1-1 record, C.S.U. features a well- balanced squad favoring a four- two-four field position, and a win- ning combination of age and beauty. As an example of the former, Eraldo Mattel alternates as a freshman engineering student and a rough, hard-playing forward' halfback. Mattei is also 31 years old. As for the latter, C.S.U.'s beautiful players include All-Mid- westerns Vito Colonna and Jim McMillan, top scorers in the con- ference. Against Michigan last year. Clevelan delivered a 2-0 blow to the 'B' team. This year, their po- tent offense meets a well-solidified Michigan 'defense, and the teams will engage in the tough and spirited play that characterizes both. A little of C.S.U.'s offensive edge has been dulled through injuries, including one to star McMillan. but the subs and remaining team- mates should be able to maintain the temper. The Michigan soccermen, 2-1-1 for the season, wil probably try for a quick offensive drive early in the game, and then settle down to tight ball handling and defensive maneuvering for the remainder. The Michigan defense has proved itself a capable barrier, especially against highly esteemed Waterloo. and will bear the brunt of a large part of the action. Offensively, the footmen will turn to leading scorer Mike Sasich and the other forwards and half- backs to provide the necessary margin for victory. As an encore, the Michigan Soc- cer' Club will host the Irish (if Notre Dame on Wines Field Sun- day at 2:00. Rugby matches set The Michigan Rugby team spreads its' forces thinttoday as the Blue and the Gold team meet Michigan States' A and B squads at East Lansing following the football game, while the third team ventures forth to Ohio to tackle Miami. The Blue team, which is the of- ficial squad, has compiled an im- pressive 4-0 record in season con-n petition, and a 4-1 overall total including an exibition game. The Blue team, although lacking in defense, has displayed a power- ful offense, last week demolishing Windsor 30-11 in one of the high- est scores in years. Professor Robson, head coach of the team. noted that, "State is not nearly as strong as last year, and whe should have a very good chance of winning." He continued, the team has had very good practices, that is large turnouts, and very effective ma- neuvei's.", One new play that was develop- ed over the week is a linkage e- tween the backs and the forward, consisting of a long cross field kick that could be very effective. Two of the mainstays, however, will be missing, though they should be back next week. Prepare is out with a severely twisted ankle and Treblante is nursing a shoulder separation. U-M TUTORIALE presents PROJECT New York Mets' Gil Hodges named Manager of the Year By The Daily SPORTS STAFF P.S.: Reasonable facsimilies accepted "High School" If the public schools of the United States are as bad as "High School" suggests they are, this nation is chopping up its own youth in a gigantic garbage-disposal unit and going down its own drain. -Newsweek Tuesday, October 21st ED. SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 10:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. ADMISSION 75c a I I i l r Are you using too many tampons?. NEW YORK ie - Gil Hodges, the soft-spoken miracle worker who molded the New York Mets into baseball's greatest success story, has been selected The Na- tional League Manager of th° Year in the annual Associated P r e s s poll. The 45-year-old former Dodger great captured the honor yester- day by one of the greatest mar- MICHIGAN VS. MICHIGAN STATE Saturday 1:15 P.M. Play by Play with BOB UFER "The Voice of Michigan Football for 25 Years" WPAG 10WW) gins ever when he polled 267 votes to only 10 for second-place Luman Harris of the Atlanta Braves. Although the amazing M e t s completed their fairy tale r i s e from bungling bumpkins to base- ball's best Thursday by winning the World Series, Hodges carried th- day on the strength of their inning stretch run to the Na- tional League pennant. The bal- loting among sportswriters a n d broadcasters throughout the cotuntrv was taken before t h Series began. The only other managers to receive votes were Clyde King of San Francisco and Leo Durocher of the Chicago Cubs wth three each and Harry Walker of Hous- ton with one. When Hodges took over the M~ets, before the 1968 seasonthey were nothing but a bunch of ra'-mufirs who lost 101 games the year before and had finished last five t~noes and ninth t h e oth-'r tim° in their six years of Golf Tourney After 27 holes in the Ohio Fill invitational Golf Tournament she Michigan team is tenth out of 14 teams. Houston is leading, follow- ed by Oklahoma State, LSU, and Florida. Low man for the Wolver- ines was Keith Mohan with 122. Behind him were Randy Erskine and Bob Clark with 124. / 4ng I.Ititi'Cthi ~wdcrnoorc than od / 'MJr> 1(dr '.Witn tan oui'd Mi't EI 1it'nI p l S . Il cslorct 'll 1)pr6 . ktuote NLI, l D E', ilad lc rc UakTi)hat's xv lt . '1'h<;v' rC niad(' xvIth ti((of i bso,O n~t Ira\'C. .1First, thel's i t n Ic rayon tcher. i'Kban a vr ol' I-ayon fibers that almtrh q uicklv . hen ancohe Iaycr tl ine'rayon 5t01'dg(' ihcr's atahsorb,"tadi1y. .nl ini t'e-t'ntcr, a cuIshion~ed IONcr that hold,. andtII hlds eineluorc'. CLASSICAL POPULAR FOLK agreeable music at an agreeable price TUSKEGEE-MICHIGAN STUDENT EXCHANGE WINTER 1970 Apply now for the Tuskegee Student Exchange The exchange will take place during 2nd semester at Tuskegee A ..1.. ......-. . A L - -.11 -a ," , - n I i I