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November 10, 1963 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-11-10

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EIGHT

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1963

EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1963

Have a question on the Vatican Council?
Interested in modernism and.
liberal religious thought?
COME TO THE PLANNING SESSION
UNITARIAN STUDENT GROUP'
REFRESHMENTS-
1917 Washtenaw 7:30 P.M., Nov. 10
Bus leaves Union, 7:10-Markley, 7:20

NATIONAL COLLEGE:
Navy Rolls Again;
Arkansas Dumped

m.

1
i

Under the auspices of
THE HILLEL GRAD GROUP
DR, ABRAHAM KAPLAN,
Professor of Philosophy
conducts a discussion on
"JUDAISM and JEWISHNESS'
Wednesday, Nov. 13, at 8 p.m.
Everyone interested is welcome
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street

(Continued from Page 6)
cepted a Notre Dame pass and on
the next play Mazurek hit Mar-
tha with a 40-yard pass to the
Irish 10. Mazurek then ran over
for the touchdown and the senior
quarterback faked an extra point
kick and ran over for two more
points.
Maryland Crushed
ANNAPOLIS - Roger Staubach
and Skip Paskewich provided the
offensive fireworks and Navy's de-
fense the rest yesterday as the
fourth-ranked Middies crushed
Maryland 42-7.
Staubach scored two touch-
downs and passed for one in turn-
ing in another spectacular job of
quarterbacking before leaving the
game early in the third quarter.
His seven pass completions in
12 attempts tied a Naval Academy
season record at 94 completions,
with two games left. His 104
yards passing and 20 rushing
boosted his total offense for the
season to 1,544 yards.
Paskewich, a sprinter on the
track team, turned in the most
spectacular run of the day by rac-
ing 76 yards for a touchdown
after intercepting a Dick Shiner
pass. It was one of four pass in-
terceptions by the Middies, who
harried Shiner throughout the
day. The Navy defense also re-
covered three fumbles.
Richey Saves Day
COLLEGE STATION, Tex. -
John Richey kicked a 17-yard
field goal with 43 seconds left yes-
terday to pull Southern Methodist
from behind and give the Ponies
a 9-7 victory over Texas A&M.
The Mustangs hhd trailed from
the opening minutes and gambled
on a two-point conversion that
failed after a second quarter
touchdown.

.

F FREE PUBLIC LECTURE
AUTOMATION-JOB KILLER
How will it affect college graduates
Tuesday, November 12, 1963
8:00 P.M.
Angell Half Auditorium
Speaker: Ralph W. Muncy
sponsored by section Washtenaw County
Socialist Labor Party

A

UNIVERSITY PLAYERS/Dept. of Speech

presents

THIS WEEK
Wed. thru Sat
8:00 P.M.
Lydia Mendelssohn T
BOX OFFICE OPENS M
12:30-5
(until 8:00 performance
$1.50, 1.00
(25c additional on Fri.4

first conference victory. The Ag-
gies have tied one conference
Ibattle.
Rice Takes Squeaker
HOUSTON-Rice's Owls struck
quickly on the passing of Walter
McReynolds and running of Rus-
sell Wayt for a 58-yard scoring
drive early in the final period yes-
terday to defeat Arkansas 7-0,
their first victory over the Razor-
backs since 1958.
Rice, a team that had averaged
150 yards through the air in six
previous games, had not completed
a pass until the Owls cut loose
with the victory surge that Mc-
Reynolds ended by ramming over
from the one.
* * . *
North Carolina Edged
CHAPEL HILL - Clemson bat-
tled from behind to edge North
Carolina 11-7 yesterday and threw
the Atlantic Coast Conference
football race into a three-way tie.
A crowd of 36,000 watched the
Tigers struggle 88 yards for a
fourth period touchdown after
North Carolina had taken a 7-3
lead in the third period. UNC's
extra point marked the 15th in a
row kicked this season by Dave
Braine.
North Carolina, D u k e and
North Carolina State have 5-1
conference records now. The title
probably will be decided when
UNC and Duke meet at Durham
Nov. 23.
* * *
Rally Saves Trojans
LOS ANGELES-Southern Cali-
fornia's Trojans rallied with 17
points in the finalrquarter yester-
day to defeat Stanford in a game
that was won-and lost-by fum-
bles, 25-11.
The heavily favored Trojans
trailed the underrated Stanford
Indians 11-0 at the half but came
back to score an eight-point
touchdown in the third and forged
ahead with an automatic safety
and two touchdowns in the last
period.
Washington State Hit
PULLMAN, Wash.-Quarterback
Bob Berry, moving well on an in-
jured knee, threw two touchdown
passes in directing Oregon to a
21-7 football victory over Wash-
ington State yesterday.
Berry, a doubtful starter, hit;
end Rich Schwab on scoring
throws of 17 and 30 yards.
Fumble recoveries gave the fav-
ored Ducks their scoring oppor-
tunities and key interceptions pro-
tected their lead. Versatile half-
back Mel Renfro, also recovering
from injuries, contributed two 30-
yard runs to the Oregon offense.
Dick Imwalle intercepted a
Dave Mathieson pass in the end
zone to stop one Washington State
surge early in the second half and
pulled down another in the fourth
quarter. Lu Bain grabbed off an-
other Mathieson throw in the
closing minutes to end a final
threat.
** *
Labruzzo Leads LSU
BATON ROUGE - Fleet half-
back Joe Labruzzo raced for three
touchdowns to lead Louisiana
State to a 28-14 decision over
Texas Christian in a wild, erratic
football game last night.
The Bayou Bengals were alter-
nately hot and cold as they
bounced back from their humili-
ating 37-3 loss last week to Mis-
sissippi. The Tigers had to come
from behind to whip the Horned
Frogs.
Both teams put on razzle dazzle
offensive shows, but the Tigers
settled down in the second half
and it was their defense, Laruz-
zo's speed and the power running
of fullback Don Schwab which
determined the outcome.
Texas Christian passed for two

first half touchdowns and a 14-6
intermission advantage.
The LSU defense stiffened in
the second half and Labruzzo put
the Tigers in front with two third
quarter touchdowns.
BERMUDA
COLLEGE WEEK
MARCH 22-"APRIL 11
Everyday packed with action
...new friends...fun!
SUN.-Get acquainted dance.
(Wear Bermudas!) MON.-
College Day at the beach. Tal-
bot Brothers Calypso, College
Queen Contest, barbecue lunch.
TUES.-Jazz session, Limbo
contest, buffet lunch. WED.
-Cruise to St. George, Steel

bon Friday night to initiate the
fair, hundreds of visitors took the
international tour through the
second and third floors of the
Union.
* * *
Each country had a display ex-
hibiting native food, jewelry,
clothing and handicraft. Slide-
shows and movies added to the
cosmopolitan atmosphere. An in-
ternational variety show-"Hoote-

nanny by Telstar"-featured folk
dancing and folk music.
Policemen, dressed in native un-
iforms, patrolled the floor and
sold tickets. Hostesses piloted
guests to the various displays.
* * *
Yesterday's highlight was Youth
Day. The afternoon do-it-yourself
variety show was put on by the
visitors themselves.
In addition to the displays, the
student nationality groups sold
souvenirs and wrote names of
guests in foreign languages.
The World's Fair was presented
jointly by the Union International
Affairs Committee and the Inter-
national Student Association.

r
~1

T

Folk singing by students from Estonia was the first stop of "Hootenanny by Telstar."
'Kaleidoscope of Nations'

by
RICHARD
COOPER

1

C

FILIPINO STUDENT
... moro costume

heatre
4ONDAY

JOHN RICHEY
... winning boot

nights)
& Sat.)

Sophomore quarterback Mac
White set up the field goal by
steering the Mustangs from their
own 46 in five plays. He passed
once to Larry Jernigan for 23
yards, again for six yards and
then to John Roderick for 20
yards that put the ball on the
Aggie 5.
Three runs by White put the
ball less than a foot from the goal
but the last sneak injured White.
So Richey came into the game
and put his toe to work.
The win gave the Aggies undis-
puted possession of the Southwest
Conference cellar. It was SMU's

ITALIAN POLICE UNIFORM
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Order Your Subscription Today-
Phone NO 2-3241

~'l
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IKEBANA - This Japanese flower arrangement, known as an
Ikebana, was on display at the fair. Japanese students arranged
chrysanthemums and pine spriggs for their exhibit.

WOODCRAFT-Indian woodcraft made of rosewood and sandal-
wood represent many of the animals native to India, including
elephants and buffalo.

A

Designed for you, forever

Nyquist Jewelry Marquette

4

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