Saturday, November 22, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Soturday, November 22, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Puge Seven HINT OF ROSES LEFT: Purdue lingers ona wf .. 4; , .. 5 1 : ..1 By BOB ANDRtEWS Bob Reynolds and Purdue coach. Jack Mollenkopf should get to- gether and discuss a small mat- ter; in particular, which team will make that certain trip to Pasadena. On Thursday night, Bob Reyn- olds, sports director of radio'sta- tion WJR in Detroit claimed it would take something just short of a, miracle for Michigan to be denied the Rose Bowl invitation. It is also true that the athletic directors of the various Big Ten schools have denied Reynolds' bold statement. MrOLLENKOPF, on the other hand has not given up hope by any means and he still believes that should his team "humiliate" Indiana and, at the same time, the Buckeye(s embarrass Michi- gani wxorse than they had done to the Boiler-makers, then the teame that would get the nod would be Purdue. After .last Saturday's game daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: PAT ATIINS -D: il1 indy Edmiond~s W1INNE-I1 TA hES ALL.a against Ohio State, the gloomy Mollenkopf said, "I hope Woody's mad at Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler." Woody would have to be in a furious rage for the situation to change, since even if a tie in the standings occurred between Purdue and Michigan, Michigan would still most likely go due to the fact that Purdue was defeated by Michigan earlier this season. With the Rose Bowl question put aside this game between Purdue and Indiana has added< significance. The game, the Old ' Oaken Bucket contest, is played annually between these two inw trastate rivals. In the series, Purdue has come out on top 11 times, while dropping two and playing to one tie. If Purdue thinks it can "humiliate" the Hoosiers they have anotherj thing coming. LAST YEAR the Hoosiers, in a wild battle against Purdue, lost 38 to 35. In that game Harry jGonso, Indiana's fine scrambling quarterback threw four touch- down passes. He and John Isen- 'barger, who currently leads the Big Ten in total yards rushing, should make Mollenkopf's goal of "humiliating" somewhat of a difficult task. These two remaining members of the 1967 Rose Bowl squad and the rest of the Hoosiers team will be trying to salvage a .500 season after being a tough contender for the Big Ten title until they lost to Iowa. They have compiled a 3-3 conference record and are 4-5 overall. Alter his poor showing last week against Ohio State, Mike Phipps has to make a super ef- fort if he is to have any chance to capture the Heismann Trophy which is also being sought by Clarence Davis of USC, Steve Owens of Oklahoma, Archie Manning olf isisppand others, At Champaign, Illinois, the erratic Hawkeyes wind up their season against the hapless I1- lini. If the heavily-favored Iowa team does defeat Illinois, the latter will suffer its worst sea- son in its history. In 1961 they were winless but played jut nine games. Iowa, who knocked off Miehi- by. jUStthree['l'to uru. victimized by ekrWsos' and Minnesta Te ae u Coming off apo hwn aged 123 yrd in _ asi;:g.n the Wolver ines, but shud x- pect no trouble fromIIIthe fi~ Illinois dfne Thi 'saon1! mni .Jnd1on pleaantnote forth Bdgr of WVI con"sinl, III. eet'a t1!he havenot e°,xct l1rrrt. they Big'Fen. IHouve .r, itithe should di, the Cophe rs of .i'i- USC- IBy DALE ARBO)UR Tlhe representative in the Ruse Bowl from the Pacific Eight Coni- ference will be decided today when Southern California faces UCLA at Memorial Coliseum. Both teams have ident ical sea- ,son records of 8-0-1; USC has a c'onference mark of .5-0 while UCLA is 5-0-1 in conference play, having tied Stanford, 20-20 earlier this season. Leading the Trojan at tack will be sophomore quarterback J innmy Jones and tailback Clarence Da vis. Davis, the successor to the Tro- jan's celebrated 0. J. Simpson, is thle nation's leading big collece rusher with 270 carries for 1.238 yar'ds, while Jones is an c!ftective passer, both long and short UCLA, ON the otlier hand. lias a veteran tea m led by quarterb1c'k Dennis Dummit, a transler from11 Long Beach City College. To dlate, he has led the Bruins to '317 points while the defense has al- lowed only 89 points to its nine, opplonents. Dununit , himself, hiis car'ried the ball for 95 yards and hit for 56 per cent of his tass:: for another 1,710 yards and 14 touchdowns. 61GBY-Oii S.tatatery1id1:0)a . UCLA ,!Iie Big; Eight Conference onice again1 offers an exciting agenda of gaines this weekend. Missouri and Nebraska are~ tied for the con- ference lead with 5-1 mnarks, but either or but h of them could 'A-e' today. Nebiaska fac'es the totlA-lest challenge as they go against pow- erful Oklahoma. strong but incon- sistent. The Sooners' strength lies in fullback Steve Owens who has rushed for 1,191 ya rds on1 282 carries so far' this seaison, Butt Nebr aska's only los ses have come at the hands of Southern (al tai ornia and Missouri, so they have experienced plenty of tough oppo- sitiorn this season to prepare hi mu1 for' Oklahoma, MIUSS-OURI, apper s at first to have 11 delhn I%,e defeneIsa a(;)' t ght''. . or a naltonL ?V ii[lf)i? l U l tf]'il1 U 1 I t -* stanI Id nt). ssu 1o.1 -rIIl i cred.''I e ietnam ,,-I wIs moll !'' -i _.the i r. Th" itduL lox altxto stpt- and c'ix it.Tn See M~lassenel'sMAO Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre NOW AVAILABLE, tis historic recording ofZO 1 . 2. 3' 4' 5' 6. 7, 8. 9' 10. ]I. Jet departure from Detroit Metro to LA. and return Open bar and champag.ne d inrner Six day and five nighticcommodati~is Free transportation to andl from airport andhte Reserved grandstand parade tickets Box lunch for parade and game Free transportation to and from parade and gorne Free guaranteed rent-a-car reservation Free Rose Bowl and Los Angeles tour book All taxes anti tips included, no hidden costs A complete range of travel services Manon OAN BUDGET SALF a. Round Trip Jet Flight and Transpor tai ion to and from Airport $144, b. Student Package $179 double occupancy accommodations on UCLA campus and all of above services except 5, 6, and 7 c. Deluxe Package $209 hotel accommodations and all of I I -