Page Six;
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Tuesday, October 21, 1969
THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 21, 1969
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VIols,
By LEE KIRK
Paul Bear' Bryant. as the Gen-
tle Ben of the SEC? ! It sounds
even less likely than the M et s
winning the Series.
This has been a year for totally
implausible. however, and for the
first, time since anyone can re-
member. Alabama and Bryant
have lost two straight! It used to
be a rare occurrence wvh en the
Crimson Tide would lose two
g ames in a season, but two in a
row --ridiculous.
The unbeaten Tennessee Volum-
tee'rs methodically took the Tide
apart Saturday, 41-14, in the
'ruins gain
in regional
races
worst shellacking ever absor'bed by
a Bryant. coached "KBama team...
THlE ONCE gigantic 'Tide de-
fense has suffered embarrassing
indignities. Mississippi's brilliant
Archie Manning ran and passed
for a phenomenal 540 yards, only
to lose, but he more than pointed
to the precursors of doom on the
wall.
Vanderbilt (remember mediocre
Vanderbilt) crunched out 450
yards a wveek later en route to a
shocking 14-10 upset of the Tide,
but the ease with which Tennes-
see cut the blushing, ebbing Tide
to shreds c a u g h t everyone off
guard.
The rest of the SEC continued
like madhouse.
Louisiana State and Florida al-
so kept their unblemished records
intact with lopsided wins o v e r
meager op~position. while Georgia
and Auburn, who have only lost
once. remained hot on the leaders'
tailIs.
'THIE VALUE of the football
championship in the SEC has been
considerably diminished in t h i s
decade. Georgia Tech and Tulane
have both dropped out of the con-
ference, leaving the conference
with tenr teams, some of whom
play as few as f i v e conference
games.
Tennessee, Louisiana State and
Florida could all finish the sea-
son with untarnished conference
records for they do not play eachj
other. The odds against this are,
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This Week in Sports
1 1. S ATrU RDAY
Xfl'MAKUP V~ARSITIY FOOTBALL - Minnesota at :Minneapolis
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL --- Michigan State at Michigan Sta-
dium, 10:30 a.m.'
SOCCER - Toledo at Toledo
es'4 & Mel ns RUGGBY - Kent State, Denison at Ohio
ES4"R SUPLYSNA
line Rood FOOT1BALIL - Daily Libels vs. football managers at :Michigan
Ph. 663-0111 Saim
TUSKEGEE-MICHIGAN
however, limited by the fact that
each of these teams still has two
or three games remaining tgainst
the other conference powerhouses
Penin State took another giant
step backwards in this week's poll
after pulling a monumental luck-
out against Syracuse w i t h two
fourth quarter touchdowns. The
Nittany Lions haven't lost in 24
games, but they have shown very
little in their narrow wins against
Kansas State and Syracuse, the
only two remotely potent teams
on their schedule to date.
FOR OVER-RANKING, one will
have to go a long way to beat
the year in. year out consistency
of Notre Dame. The Irish some-
times make it appear as if the Col-
lege of Cardinals has replaced the
writers and coaches in voting for
the top twenty.
UCLA has emerged as the class
of the far west after their con-
vincing 32-0 triumph over Cali-
fornia. The Golden Bears were
supposed to provide a stiff test for
Will iams-,gets
pilot's award
NEW YORK (iP Tel Wil-
liams, baseball's first million dol-
lar manager who lad the Wash-
ington Senators to their f i r s t
winning season in 1'7 years, has
been selected The Associated
Press' American League Manager
of the Year.
He narrowly outp~olled another
first year man, Billy Martin, who
was fired after directing Minna-
sota to the Western Division title.
Soccer Results
ichvligan 7, Notre Dame I
Sunday's Results
Milwaukee 130, Seattle 106
Yesterday's Gamnes
No gamnes scheduled,
Today's Games
L~os Angeles at Baltimore
Phoenix at New York
Boston at D~etroit
" 13 A
Eastern Division
W L
New Yoirk 4 0
Baltimore ? 0
Philadelphia 2 0
Milwaukee ? 0
Cincininati 1 2
D~etroit 0 1
Boston 0o 9
Western lDivision
Atlanta 2 0
Phoenix 1II
San Diego I I
Chicago 1 2
San Francisco il 1
Los Angeles 0 2
Seattle 0 4
Pct.
1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
.333
.000
.000
1.000
.500
.500
.333
.000
.000
.000
the Bruins. but the battle for sur'-
vival of the species never material-
ized. Everybody got into the UCLA
act, with reserve halfback Bill
Bolden picking up 105 yards and
two touchdowns in two carries.
Pro Standings
1
2
3
CONTACT POINT SETS TO FIT IMPORTED CARS
GENERATOR
Huston i
',Ioltreat
D~etroit
New York
Toronito
CiIcago
St. Louis
Minesot a
Oakland
Pittsburgh
Los Angelss,
Philadelphia
SIlI1L
E~ast Division
WV L T Pt. GF
3l 0 1 7 15
2 0 2 6 15
3 1 0 6 13
? 4 9
1 2 1 3 8
0 5 0 0 6
'West lDivision
3 1 0 6 11
3~ 2 0 6 17
1 5 9
.0 1 3 3 8
1 :3 0 2 9
0 1 2 2 4
Etl
AND STARTER
'SWITCHES
'a
l
ROTORS &DISTRIBUTOR
S
TUDENT EXCHANGE
Sunday's Results
Mlontreali.,Philadelphia 1, tie
New York 1, Toronto 0
Detroit 4, St. Louis 2
Minnesota 4, Chicago I
Boston 4. Pittsburgh 0
Yesterday's Gamnes
do games scheduled.
Today's Gaines
Pittsburgh at Oakland
FLASHERS
CA1PS
REGULATORS
,,
WINTER 1970
Apply now for the Tuskegee Student Exchange
The exchange will take place during 2nd semester at Tuskegee
Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama, and will run from ,Jan. 30, 1970
thru May 31, 1970.
Application deadline is Nov. 15, 1969
1014 Angell Hall
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SUMMER JOBS
ABROADa
IAESTE" offers jobs worldwide forI
students in the sciences, architecture,
and engineering.
MASS MEETING
7:30 P.M.-THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1969
ASSEMBLY HALL, MICHIGAN UNION
International Association for the Exchanqe of Stu-1
dents for Technical Experience
U
U
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20 1 F. Iloover, Attn Arbor
662-5619 or 662-7272-Open 8 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.-Sat. 8 to 4I
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ov. 14-
ov. 15
To
help
create
the largest
expression
for
peace
in history-
March Aanteath -NovI1
Delegations from every state, representing Amnerican~war dead, walking in a single
file solemn procession from Arlington Cemetery past the White House to the
Capi tot
The Michigan delegation marches sometime between 4 and 8 P.M. on Friday, Nov. 14
To participate in the MA RCH AGA..iAINST DEATH
you muvt 11regist, er ith:
ANN ARBOR MARCH AGAINST DEATH COMMITTEE
ANNE FRIEDRICHS-665-0486
INTERFAITH COUNCIL FOR PEACE--663-1870
MRS. FRED LEE-662-1324
TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION-
FRED GREEN-769-7038
Or register when you buy a
BUS TICKET-$23.OO (round trip)
Michigan Union-9-4, Monday-Friday, thru Oct. 31
BUS LEAVES ANN ARBOR-Nov. 13--8-10 P.M.
BUS LEAVES WASHINGTON-Nov. 15-8-10 P.M.
so that marchers con also participate in Mass March
M a s MrhMarch begins from the Capitol area at 1 1:00 A.M.
Lead by Rev. William Sloane Coffin Jr.
Mrs. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dr. Benjamin Spock
Proceeds past the White House to the Ellipse
RALLY& FOLK ROCK CONCERT-1--5 P.M.
For information call:
NEW MOB ILIZAT ION-769-2570'
AL VELLUCC I-761 -0200J
PETER KOEPKE-665-3264
BUS TICKET--$23.00 (round trip)
Michigan Union-9-3 Monday-Friday thru Oct. 31
BUSES LEAVE FRIDAY, NOV. 14--4 to 7 P.M.
BUSES LEAVE WASHINGTON, NOV. 15--10:00 P.M.
11