Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 11, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN11 DAILY Tuesday, November 11, 11 '19-9 WOW! A three-piece Treasure Chest chicken dinner, plus french tries, for only 79! Larger take-home orders also. Try a box soon!! LMIUNG®SPEEOY ERVICE West of Arborland Prospective bowl bids narrow as season approaches climax WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER: I By DALE ARBOUR 110 yards in 23 carries to Owens for the conference title and a bowl wl er to b o Ip a C Sl to bE th at or 10 After the action of this past 105 yards in 27 carries. berth. eekend, the Big Eight confer- nce race has been narrowed down ALTHOUGH OWENS was held IN o two teams, Missouri and Ne- to a lone touchdown, he did man- mouth raska. age to tie the national career rec- tied fo Missouri knocked Oklahoma out ord of 51 touchdowns set by Ar- with a f contention by exploding for 44 my's Glenn Davis in 1944-1946. mouth oints in the final three quarters, Also in the Big Eight, Oklahoma first i fter giving t h e Sooners a 10- State played the role of spoiler as time w oint lead in the f i r s t quarter. they upset Kansas State, 28-19, Mea parkling performances by quar- and knocked the Wildcats from a proble erback Terry McMillan and tail- share of the conference lead. Ne- 20. H ack Joe Moore were the key to braska got by Iowa State 17-3 to will be he Tigers' success. remain tied with Missouri for the Prince McMillan passed for 312 yards Big Eight lead. nd three touchdownswhileMoore In the Southeastern Conference, season ut-duelled 'Oklahoma's S t e v e Tennessee remains in first place Soul wens on the ground. Moore had after a non-conference victory ov- step c er South Carolina, 29-14. Louis- Confe iana State picked up a half-game Rose B on the Vols as they beat Alabama, ton Si 20-15. This was Alabama's third remain loss of the season, and is the first jans it time since 1958 that an Alabama UCLA. team has lost three games. Southe Florida and Georgia struggled and th to a 13-13 tie which left b o t h decide teams virtually out of the running USC m THE IVY LEAGUE, Dart- and Princeton remained or the conference lead, each an impressive victory. Dart- , whose defense is ranked n the nation, had an easy with winless Columbia, 37-7. nwhile, Princeton h a d no %m in routing Harvard, 51- owever, the Ivy League title: e decided in two weeks when ton faces Dartmouth in the finale. thern California moved one closer to the Pacific Eight rence title and a bid to the Bowl by defeating Washing- tate, 28-7. One barrier does n which might stop the Tro- n their bid for the roses - . The Uclans are tied with ern Cal in the conference he Rose Bowl winner will be d on November 22. w h e n meets UCLA at Los Angeles. 'Jouster i By JIM KEVRA A couple of years ago, there was a man named John Pont who was the king of a university called In- diana. His Knights, although most of them were only in the first year of their three year apprenticeship, proved to be so skilled in the arts of knighthood that they defeated many other squads of knights that year. In fact, they were so able that they were chosen to travel west to joust with the best of the knights from the Pacific Coast in the 'War for the Roses., This year, a large number of the nation's wisest men felt that King Pont could lead his troops to many victories again. Being in the last year of their apprentice- ship, most of his men had al- ready been tested in battle. Be- sides, the Hoosiers had the ad- vantage of not having to face the strong 'Buckeye Barbarians.' King Pont and his men seemed destin- ed to again represent the Big Ten; (squads of knights)' in the Rose Bowl. s' grind Harry Gonso of Indiana was in- tercepted twice late in the game as he attempted to rally his team- mates. The big gun in the Hoosier attack was halfback John Isen- barger who ran for 140 yards and one touchdown. In Columbus, t h e toughest group of warriors in the entire country, the Ohio State Buckeyes, had an easy time in overcoming the outclassed Badgers of Wiscon- sin, 62-7. Woody Hayes, who is the k i n g of the Buckeyes (al- though he has been called many other things besides 'king'), de- cided not to let his ace warrior Rex Kern partake in the battle. Kern was injured a week ago, although his injury was not ser- ious, Hayes thought it best to save him for the last two contests of the season. Instead, a great Pol- ish knight, Ron Maciejowski, was called upon to lead the attack. Maciejowski r'esponded admir- ably and guided the squad to a 34-0 lead at the half before he was removed. Jim Otis, the full- toward tourney WELCOME STUDENTS ! Let us style your hair to your personality . . fit I COMPUTA-DATE "Finds People for People" Spare them the headache of being responsible for $275,000 of your money that will be placed in their hands. Save these precious few. Vote NO November 10 and 11 on the bookstore referendum. If you don't vote NO on the bookstore referendum, never will so many owe so much to so few... $275,000 of your money to be precise! Vote NO on the bookstore referendum. 0 8 BARBERS, no waiting 0 OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers' Arborland-Campus Maple Villoe It was not to be, however, as back of t h e Buckeyes, crashed last Saturday an unpredictable through the defenders three times garrison of men from nearby Iowa for one-yard touchdowns to run handed the Hoosiers their second his season total to thirteen and loss of their conference season and lead the league. all but eliminated them from any post-season contests. Wisconsin's only score came in The Hawkeyes, 1e d by Larry the waning minutes on a short Lawrence, outpointed the Big Red, pass from Gary Losse to Mel Red- 28-17. Lawrence accounted for dick. two of the scores, once by running Trying to use any available for 40 yards through the helpless means to stop their string of bat- defenders and also on a 19-yard tle losses, the Michigan Spartans aerial to flanker back Kerry Rear- used a new attack plan against the don. Dennis Green added two Boilermakers of Purdue. The old touchdowns on short runs. leader of the attack, Bill Triplett, was sent out onto the flank to do Top Twenty battle. In his place,aerial artist Steve Piro was asked to lead. CALL 662-4401 I -Associated Press MICHIGAN STATE'S split end Frank Foreman momentarily bobbles a Don Werner pass as junior linebacker Jim Teal of Pur- due tightly snares him. Foreman held on for the first down, but FXWrIJAY YOUR NEEDTA r IF' --wr W.. -W v 775r w w , 'I, w lw w - v v - - -7- 1. Ohio State (25) 7-0 2. Texas (4) 7-0 3. Tennessee (2) 7-0 4. Arkansas 7--0 5. Penn State (1) 7-0 6. Southern California 7-0--1 7. UCLA 70-1 8. Missouri 7-1 9. Notre Dame 5-i-i 10. Purdue 7-1 11. Auburn 6-2 12. Louisiana State 7-1 13. Stanford 5-2-1 14. MICHIGAN-6-2 15. Florida 6-1-1 16. Georgia 5-2-1 17. Nebraska 6--2 18. Mississippi 5-3 Houston 6-2 20. Air Force 6-2 _^ 618 neither he nor the rest of the Spartans gained much from the 573 Unfortunately for the green and Boilermaker line. 589 white, Piro was injured in the first 3 quarter and the new quarterback, other TD. Stan Brown added two When the dust had cleared from 294 Dan Werner was unable to direct more touchdowns to his total of t h e battlefields Saturday after- 275 the team. The result was a 41-13 twelve. noon, only three teams remained 225 Spartan loss with both Spartan The only game that meant noth- in the running for the Big Ten 2616 TD's coming in the second half ing towards the Rose Bowl match- title. Ohio State still leads t h e 148 after the outcome of the battle ed Northwestern and Minnesota. conference with a 5-0 mark while 144 was obvious. Both teams were equally weighted the armies of Michigan and Pur- 76 Prince of the Big Ten quarter- as they each have inconsistent of- due rank close behind with 4-1 50 backs, Mike Phipps, mixed up his fenses and porous defenses. Ernie records. B o t h Purdue and our 28 ground and air attacks to hope- Cook's fourth period touchdown Wolverines still have to meet OSU 26 lessly confuse the hapless Spar- provided the margin of victory for in one of their remaining t w o 16 tans. Phipps scored once himself Minnesota, 28-21. games. 15 and passed to Ashley Bell for an- . . . . . . .................r::.;.. .. Professional Standings l t x r f t Folletts, Overbecks, Slaters, Ulrichs, Wahrs 213 S. STATE ST. U. of M. Payroll Checks cashed here OPEN 10-6 NO GA ME S NO GIMMICKS $1 00 SIZE-8 OZ. $1.49 VALUE FAMILY SIZE-6.75 OZ.NEW TAME SHOE .IC ON Reg. TOTE ULTRA- OSELF-STYLNG CREME CEEBAS B RITE RINSE REGULAR OR TOOTH PASTE EXTRA HOLD 13 OZ. 7c c76 $167 $1 85 SIZE-9 OZ. $1.60 SIZE-6 OZ BOX OF 48 $2.00 BOTTLE NEW CLAIROL ~DESIGNER ttloH ESERIES HYPER MODESS LOVING REGULAR CARE SUPER HAIR COLOR LOTION 42c $48$48 COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON $1.00 SIZES DERMA $1.50 SIZE-1 OZ. REGULAR $1.10 KODAK CAMERA FRESH TWEED CLAIROL Instamatic YOUR CHOICE COLOGNE LI ICKS 44 COMPLEXION LOTION C L G E LPTC S4 r Do we really need our own cigarette? Why aren't abortions always available? Are we really naturally passive? Why don't women make it through graduate school? Why are women used as objects in advertising? BEGIN TO TALK WITH A GROUP OF WOMEN ABOUT THESE AND OTHER ISSUES AT: WOMEN'S LIERAIO NFL Western Division Western Conference Minnesota Green Bay Detroit Chicago w 1 L 1 3 3 7 T 0 0 0 0 Pct. .875 .625 .625 .125 Coastal Division PF 258 159 158 107 229 185 120 132 PA. 82 135 131 156 129 170 174 191 Los Angeles Baltimore Atlanta San Francisco 8 0 0 1.000 5 3 0 .625 2 6 0 .250 1 6 1 .143 Eastern Conference Century Division Cleveland 5 2 1 .714 210 201 St. Louis 3 4 1 .429 182 204 New York 3 5 0 .375 216 188 Pittsburgh 1 7 0 .125 143 223 Capitol Division Dallas 7 1 0 .875 224 120 Washington 4 2 2 .667 178 171 Philadelphia 3 4 1 .429 166 223 New Orleans 1 7 0 .125 159 228 Sunday's Results Detroit 27, Atlanta 21 Minnesota 51, Cleveland 3 Baltimore 14, Green Bay 6 Dallas 33, New Orleans 17 St. Louis 42, New York 17 Philadelphia 28, Washington 28 Chicago 38, Pittsburgh 7 Los Angeles 41, San Francisco 30 Sunday's Schedule St. Louis at Detroit Baltimore at San Francisco Chicago at Atlanta Cleveland at Pittsburgh Dallas at Washington Log Angeles at Philadelphia Minnesota vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee New Orleans at New York A F L I Mass Organizational Meeting Tuesday, Nov. 11 at 8 UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM ALL WELCOME-JOIN US Kawasaki Sidewinder 250 cc SCRAMBLER NICHOLSON Motorcycle Sales 224 South First 662-3221 . t 4 f i t . INew York Houston Miami Buffalo Boston Easter Wester .. n Division W L T Pct. 7 2 0 .778 4 4 1 .500 2 6 1 .250 2 7 0 .222 1 8 0 .111 rn Division 8 1 0 .889 7 1 1 .875 4 4 1 .500 4 5 0 .444 4 5 0 .444 PF 222 156 164 140 127 242 255 213 133 185 PA 166 174 183 241 203 88 165 222 190 205 Kansas City Oakland Cincinnati San Diego Denver Sunday's Results Miami 17, Boston 16 New York 16, Buffalo 6 Cincinnati 31, Houston 31, tie Oakland 41, Denver 10 Kansas City 27, San Diego 3 Sunday's Games Boston at Cincinnati Houston at Denver Kansas City at New York Miami at Buffalo San Diego at Oakland ART AUCTION! THURS. EVE., NOV. 13 at 8:30 P.M. Presented by the MERIDIAN GALLERY of Cleveland Featurinq original works of graphic art etchings, lithO- graphs, woodcuts -by lead- ing 20th century artists I Do you think you should be treated like this? We don't. If you think the University Salvador Dali Pablo Picasso Johnny Friedlaender Bernard Buffet Victor Vasarely Alexander Calder Leonard Baskin and many others at theI