PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, UCTOBER:16,',:1965.:I PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1985' -.. .. ,.. ..-s .....a .. ... . . .. yr avaiv F. IN NBA OPENER: Hawks Best Royals, 111-100 Arkansas Duels To -Ranked Texas By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Zelmo Beaty and Cliff Hagan put St. Louis ahead last night with a six-point outburst right after halftime, and the Hawks went on to beat the Cincinnati Royals, 111-100 in the National Basketball Association season opening game for both clubs. The Royals dominated the first half, hitting with 57 per cent of their shots from the field and led, 61-55 at halftime. They could not keep up the pace in the second half and the Cincinnati offensive fell completely apart in the final period. The game had remained close until after the third quarter. Dennie Wilkens carried the St. Louis attack in the first half and wound up leading the Hawks with 28 points. Beaty scored 24 points -all but four of them after the intermission. Big 'O' Oscar Robertson paced the Royals with 36 points, and Adrian Smith contributed 20. Jerry Lucas added 19 points and pulled down 23 rebounds, the same as Bill Bridges. Los Angeles, who won the West- ern Division title last year, also opened their season last night in a late game at San Francisco. The Lakers, who traded Dick Barnett to the New York Knicks Thursday night for Bob Boozer, compiled the best won-lost record of any team, 9-4, in the exhibition season. Los Angeles appears vast- ly improved over last season. The Lakers won the Western Division crown then, but lost to Boston, four games to one, in the cham- pionship playoff. West-Baylor.. The Lakers have back veterans Jerry West and Elgin Baylor to go with second year man Walt Hazzard and rookies Gail Good- rich and John Fairchild. In con- trast, injuries have hampered Bos- ton and for the first time in years the Celtics' seven-year champion- ship reign is in jeopardy. Rick Barry, the All-America from Miami, Fla., has shown well in exhibitions for San Francisco and is expected to star for the Warriors tonight against the Lak- ers. He is one of the rookies whose play Walter Kennedy, president of the league, expects to make the season "one of the best competi- tive seasons the NBA has ever had." Big Bill Some of the other rookies are Bill Buntin of Detroit, Dave Stall- worth and Dick Van Arsdale of New York. The big salaries play- ers, like Wilt Chamberlain of Philadelphia, Bill Russell of Bos- ton and Oscar Robertson of Cin- cinnati, are back along with many other familiar names. It all adds up to what Kennedy believes will be the best season in the 2-year history of the NBA. He looks for a record attendance of close to 3 million "in view of our best advance sale of season tickets and the tremendous crowds that have turned out for our pre-sea- son exhibition games." TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Boston Detroit at New York Philadelphia at Baltimore Los Angeles at St. Louis TOMORROW'S GAMES Baltimore at Cincinnati SCORESj COLLEGE FOOTBALL Cincinnati 13, George Washington 3 Southern Conneticut State 18,. Montclair State 13 EXHIBITION PRO HOCKEY New York 6, Detroit 4 Chicago 4, Montreal 2 By The Associated Press FAYETTEVILLE - Top-ranked Texas, a powerhouse noted for taking advantage of opportuni- ties, and third-ranked Arkansas, with its exceptional speed, collide today in what may be college foot- ball's game of the year. The Razorbacks, who own the Today's Games EAST Rutgers at Army Dartmouth at Brown Yale at Columbia Harvard at Cornell Boston University'at Holy Cross Pittsburgh vs. Navy at Washington Colgate at Princeton Penn State at Syracuse SOUTH Tennessee vs. Alabama at Birming- ham, Ala. Clemson at Duke Georgia at Florida State (n) North Carolina State at Florida. Auburn at Georgia Tech Kentucky at Louisiana State (n) East Carolina at Louisville (n) Mississippi State at Memphis St. (n) Houston at Miami (Fla) (n) Tulane vs. Mississippi at Jackson, Miss (n) Maryland at North Carolina Wake Forest at South Carolina (n) Virginia Military at So. Mississippi (n) Virginia Tech at Vanderbilt (n) W. Virginia vs. Virginia at Richmond MIDWEST Iowa State at Colorado Illinois at Indiana Nebraska at Kansas State Ohio State at Michigan State UCLA at Missouri Wisconsin at Northwestern Kansas at Oklahoma Minnesota at Iowa SOUTHWEST Texas at Arkansas Southern Methodist at Rice (n) Texas A & M at Texas Christian Oklahoma State at Texas Tech (n) Colorado St. Univ. at W. Texas St. (n) FAR WEST Washington at Colorado Oregon State vs. Idaho Utah at New Mexico (n) Air Force vs. Oregon at Portland Arizona State at San Jose St. (n) Montana at Utah State Stanford at Southern California Arizona vs. Wash. St. at Spokane L F ' . d . 4 VJ}y,+ G pVb pq Jt j SrUQ & Wrti POSTERS nation's longest major college win- ning streak, 16 games, are a slight choice to knock Texas from a pos- sible national title for the second straight year. The Razorbacks have won only once in 10 previous Fayetteville battles between the two giants of' the Southwest Conference. That' was a 16-14 decision in 1951. The Longhorns hold a 35-11 edge in the series which started in 1894. All-America linebacker Tommy Nobis, one of six Texas starters Coach Darrell Royal says are on the doubtful list because of in- juries, says he is ready to play. Nobis injured a knee in practice this week, missed Wednesday's workout but was back on the field Thursday. Nobis says even if he can't play, he doesn't think it will hurt the Longhorns' chances of snapping the Arkansas string and extend-! ing a Texas streak to 11 straight. "Texas never has been built around one boy and I don't think it ever will. There are too many good football players here for one man to be indispensable," Nobis said. Arkansas upset Texas 14-13 at Austin last year and knocked the Longhorns from the No. 1 spot in the nation. Nebraska Favored MANHATTAN, Kan.-Unbeaten Nebraska is an overwhelming f a- vorite to keep rolling in quest of a third straight Big Eight football title against improved but out- manned Kansas State today be- fore a capacity crowd of 22,500. K-State Coach Doug Weaver came out with an I formation against Missouri last week and the Wildcats moved the ball 262 yards. Little Henry Howard ran for 37 and caught passes for 103 more. It wasn't enough as Missouri's power prevailed 28-6. But K-State could make things interesting should Nebraska make mistakes. The Wildcat defense was tough as usual in the first half at Missouri. The ringleader is end Bill Matan. Nebraska's defensive ends have been hit by injuries but K-State could be hurt worse by the loss of the placekicker, Jerry Cook. * * * USC-Stanford LOS ANGELES - Southern California's explosive Trojans re- centers on halfback Mike Garrett, a 185-pound senior who may well be the finest runner in the school's history. The Stanford attack features a -triple-threat quarterback,- Dave Lewis, who started the Indians' uphill march midway in the 1964 season and is a prime factor in their success this autumn. The Stanford offense has not NCAA Grid Statistics TOTAL OFFENSE Games Billy Stevens, Texas Western ..........3 Bob Griese, Purdue. .....3 Vic Purvis, So. Mississippi.. .3 Bill Anderson, Tulsa.................3 Allen McCune, West Virginia ..........3 Plays 125 89 96 145 59 snowing *elrre um, ,' vm, Swim, Monkey, Surf, Wyatt Earp, Esther Williams, Harry James, Popeye, Hitchhiker, Mouse. These go-go posters are Pop, > Op and Art Nouveau-the fab look to dress up your walls! Hang these bright, arty posters in playroom, den, bedroom-and even the walls will dance! In glowing colors on double-thick pa- per, 21"x28"-a great size. Order,, today. Money-back guarantee. $2.95 each or only $5, the pair ppd. Sorry no C.O.D.'s. THE ARNO CO. Dept. C12 44Court St., Bklyn., N.Y. 11201 main solid favorites to defeat been as spectacular as the Trojans, Stanford today in a football game and three times the Indians have heavily tinged with Rose Bowl been forced to come from behind possibilities. to win. The Pacific Athletic Conference But Coach John Ralston's Tribe foes, both unbeaten but once tied has the best defensive record in in four engagements, are to per- the conference and Garrett, the form before 70,000 or more in loop's leading ground gainer, may Memorial Coliseum. get his sternest test of the cam- For Southern Cal, the spotlight paign. * * * Gators Favored GAINESVILLE, Fla. - The Florida Gators take their No. 10 football ranking and hopes of more glory against defense-minded' North Carolina State this after- noon. A homecoming crowd of 45,0001 RUSHING Games Rushes, Vic Purvis, So. Mississippi ............ 3 58 Mike Garrett, So. California. ....3 88 Garrett Ford, West Virginia ... .......3 38 Harry Jones, Arkansas ...............3 29 Jim Grabowski, Illinois.............. 3 62 Yards 977 691 683 669 660 Yards 476 472 418 327 327 will expect Steve Spurrier, Flor- ida's Back of the Week, and Char- les Casey to show their skill as a passing combination. Spurrier is seventh in the nation in passing with 645 yards after four games. Casey ranks 17th in receiving with 19 catches for 244 yards. The Gators are three touch- down favorites. They have won three games out of four over top level opponents and will start an all-letterman line-up on offense and defense, except possibly at flanker back. Jack Harper, who has been the starting flanker, may miss the game because of injuries. If he doesn't start, Richard Trapp is likely to get the spot. The Wolfpack ranks eighth in the nation for pass defense-pos- ing a direct threat to Florida's strength. The last three Wolfpack games have been decided to field goals. Harold Deeters kicked two in the lone victory, 13-11, over Wake Forest. Missou'-UCLA' COLUMBIA - Potent, once- beaten Missouri, which is taking dead aim at Nebraska's Big Eight football title and national rank- ing, faces ambitious UCLA, the surprise team of the Pacific Coast, is a top intersection game today. UCLA, voted seventh in the eight-team Pacific Coast League in a pre-season poll, clipped fa- vored Penn State 24-22 and Syra- cuse 24-14 after an opening 13-3 defeat to unbeaten Michigan State. The Bruins are coached by Tommy Prothro, already a success in his first year in Los Angeles after 10 successful years at Ore- gon State. His key man is rookie quarterback Gary Beban, an out- standing run-pass threat. Missouri Coach Dan Devine, with the third best winning per- centage among the nation's active coaches, admits he may have his best team since the 1960 team which beat Navy and Joe Bellino in the Orange Bowl. The Tigers were a fumbling giant in an opening 7-0 loss to Kentucky, but have come strong since then. They beat Oklahoma State 13-0, Minnesota 17-6 with a crushing 324-yard ground game and Kansas State 28-6. I w T FORWARD PASSING Gami Bill Anderson, Tulsa....... 3 Bill Stevens, Tex. West. .. 3 Chuck Burt, Wisconsin .... 3 Bob Griese, Purdue........3 Tom Wilson, Texas Tech . 3 nes Att. 116 111 96 60 75 Comp. 66 55 49 46 43 Pct. .569 .495 .510 .767 .573 Yds. 668 1106 477 622 559 . _ PASS RECEIVING Games Caught Howard Twilley, Tulsa......3 30 John Love, No. Texas State ... 3 24 Chuck Hughes, Texas Western 3 22 Bob Hadrick, Purdue .......... 3 22 Harlan Lane, Baylor ..........3 21 Yds. 362 340 668 288 238 Yd. 3 10 2 7 5 Tds. 2 3 6 1 0 Pts. 54 42 42 36 36 36 WORSHIP 4 SCORING Td. Bill Jackson, Marshall .......... Mike Garrett, So. California ... . Chuck Hughes, Texas Western . Garrett Ford, West Virginia .... Roy Shivers, Utah State....... Bob Wallace, Texas Western .... 9 7 7 6 6 6 Gpt. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fg. 0 0 0 0 0 0 ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 N. Division-Phone 665-0606 SUNDAY 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon (Folk Moss) (Breakfast at Canterbury House after 9:00 services) 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon (Folk Mass) 7:00 p.m. Evening Prayer (Chapel) WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion FRIDAY 12:10 Holy Communion LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill Street at South Forest Ave; Pastor: Henry O. Yoder SUNDAY 9:30 & 10:00 a.m. Worship Services 7:00 p.m. Filn-"Raisin in the Sun" WEDNESDAY 9:00 p.m. Bible Study 10:00 p.m. Vespers ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL m331 Thomp=.on. NO 3,0557 Msgr. Bradley, Rev. Litka, Rev. Ennen SUNDAY-Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9.:15, 10:45, 12:00, 12:30. MONDAY-SATURDAY-Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9.00, 11:30 a.m. and 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. Confessions following masses. WEDNESDAY-7:30 p.m. - Evening Mass. Confessions following SATURDAY--Confessions: 3:30-5:00; 7.30- 9:00 p.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Theodore L. Scheidt, Assistant SATURDAY 4:15 to 5:15 p.m.-Open House after the Game. SUNDAY 9:45 and 11:15 a.m.-Services, Sermon by Pastor, "Travesty or Truth?" 11:15 a.m.-Bible Study of II Corinthians. 2:30 p.m.-Meet at Chapel for meeting with MSU Gamma Deltans at E. Lansing. No Sunday evening meeting in Ann Arbor. WEDNESDAY 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Devotion. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron at Fletcher Pastors: Malefyt and Van Haven 9:10 a.m. Collegiate Coffee 9:30 a.m. Collegiate Discussion Group 10:30 a.m.Dialogue Sermon, "What is Wor- ship" with Professor Kenneth Pike and Rev. Malefyt. 5:45 p.m. An open discussion: "Guide Lines for Living; Liberty, Law, and your Life." 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship and Discussion with Rev. Malefyt. Topic: "Solving Our Emotional Prorblems." 8:30 p.m. Roast n'Fest. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S. Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 & 12:00 Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Corner State and William Services 9:30 and 11:15 a.m.-"How Can I Be Sure?," Rev. Terry N. Smith Church School: 9:30 a.m., crib-9th grade 11:15 a.m., crib-6th grade Guild House, 802 Monroe, telephone 2-5189 PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 11 31 Church Street Phone 761-0441 Rev. Jesse Northweather Sunday School at 9:45 a.m. Sunday Morning Service at 11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Service at 7:30 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCI ENTIST 1 833 Wastenaw Ave. For transoortation call 662-401 8 9.30 a m.-S-snday School for pupils from 2 to 20 years of age 11 :00 a m.-Sjrday morning church service Infant care curing service. 11:00 a.m.-Sunday School for pupils from 2 to 6 years of age. A free reading room is maintained at 306 E. Liberty, open daily except Sundays and holidays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Monday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH & WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone NO 2-4536 Hoover Rupert; Minister Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a m.-Worship Services, Dr. Rupert: "You Ahe Taking Life Too Easy." 7:00 p.m. Worship and Program, Wesley Lounge. "Worship and Liturgical Dance." TUESDAY 12:00-1:00 p.m. Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "Communist Faith-Christian Faith." Lunch 25c. 8:30 p.m.-Open House, Charles Bearden's Wesley Foundation apartment. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads, Pine Room. Dinner and Program. Dr. Victor D'Souza, Head of Sociology Department, University of the Punjab, "India Through the Eyes of the Sociologist." THURSDAY 12:00-1:00 p.m.--Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "Basic Themes in the Bible." Lunch 25c. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Erwin A. Goede, Minister SUNDAY 9:00 Church School & Service 10:15 Church School & Lecture Discussion 1 1:30 Church School & Service Sure we have desk jobs. Desk jobs at Cape Kennedy, helping check out the Apollo moon rocket. Desk jobs at an air base, testing the world's most powerful jet engines. Desk jo bs in Samoa, setting up aTV network to help teach schoolchildren. The. most interesting desk jobs in the' world are at General Electric. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JIM TINDALL 4 Sermon Topic: "Albert Schweitzer-His and Thought" Discussion Speakers: Mrs. Toby Hendon Mrs. Suzanne Whitney. Life and V 4 SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH meeting temporarily at 1 1 31 Church St. Pastor T. J. Rasmussen Sabbath School 9:30 (Saturday) Worship Service 11:00 (Saturday) BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER & FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 & 512 E. Huron 663-9376 9:45 a.m.-Campus Discussion Class. "The Secular City." 11:00 o.m.-Worship-First Baptist Church. 7:00 p.m.-Movie: "The Raisin in the Sun." WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Mid*eek worship and study class- es. Paul Light, Baptist Campus Minister. James H. Middleton, Baptist Church Min- ister. DARLINGTON LUTHERAN CHURCH (Wisconsin Synod) 3545 Packard-Phone 662-9247 Rev. R. A. Baer-761-1486 Sunday Worship Service-10:30 a.m. For tronsoorain iReRv. Baer. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Roy V. Palmer, Minister SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School 1 1 :00 a.m.-Regular Worship 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Rev. E. R. Klaudt, Rev. A. C. Bizer, & Rev. A. G Habermehl, Pastors 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Worship Service 9:3A nnA 1 l5a' ,. m- -.CrhSch :onl (Have a sea. Transportation furnished for all NO 2-2756. services-Call I I I I