e 10-Tuesday, September 26, 1978-The Michigan Daily lue rises higher as ooners cop Top Spot By AP and UPI Oklahoma, =combining a 66-7 drubbing of Rice with Alabama's upset loss to uthern California, took over the nation's number one ranking from the Crimson de yesterday in both the AP and UPI ratings. Michigan, which scored a solidvictory over Notre Dame, was pushed to num- r three in the UPI poll and number four in the AP poll. The Wolverine win also ocked the Irish out of both polls. The top five teams were closely bunched this week. Oklahoma's victory again- an overmatched Rice team made the Sooners' strength difficult- to judge and y were less than an overwhelming choice. Southern Cal, 2-0, made the most significant jump, climbing from seventh in St week's poll to second and third in the polls with a surprisingly one-sided 24-14 umph of Alabama, which fell to number seven. Penn State, which came from nine points behind in the third period to edge uthern Methodist 26-21, slipped to fifth place, while Arkansas, 19-7 victor over lahoma State, moved to second and fourth in the polls. To the Freshmen: It wouldn 't be the DEKE HOUSE If there weren't some rumors about it. UPI Top Twenty AP Top Twenty 1. Oklahoma (25) 3-0 558 1. Oklahoma (27) 3-0-0 1,235 2. So. Calif. (7) 3-0 516 2. Arkansas (17) 2-0-0 1,208 3. MICHIGAN (3) 2-0 499 3. Southern Cal (14) 3-0-0 1,189 tie Daily Libels (3) 2-0 499 4. MICHIGAN (6) 2-0-0 1,144 5. Penn St. (1) 4-0 450 tie Daily Libels (6) 2-0-0 1,144 6. Texas 2-0 372 5. Penn State (2) 4-0-0 1,087 7. Alabama 2-1 286 6. Texas 2-0-0 950 8. Texas A&M 2-0 260 7. Alabama 2-1-0 871 9. Florida St. 3-0 194 8. Texas A&M 2-0-0 819 10. Pittsburgh 2-0 184 9. Pittsburgh 2-0-0 678 11. LSU 2-0 156 10. Florida State 3-0-0 662 12. Nebraska 2-1 116 11. Louisiana State 2-0-0 576 13. Maryland 3-0 101 12. Nebraska 2-1-0 508 14. Oklahoma 3-0 98 13. Ohio State 1-1-0 449 15. Ohio St. 1-1 * 86 14. Missouri 2-1-0 446 16. Iowa St. 3-0 84 15. Maryland 3-0-0 376 17. Missouri 2-1 54 16 Colorado 3-0-0 356 18. Kentucky 1-0-1 42 17. Iowa State 3-0-0 312 19. Stanford 2-1 20 18. UCLA 2-1-0 229 20. Purdue 2-0 19 19. Georgia 2-0-0 117 20. Stanford 2-1-0 85 II This Week in Sports Just for the record, Here are some of the things we're not: TEKES QUARANTINED MORTGAGED STARVING Entirely GROSSE POINTE ARISTOCRATS In the bar 24 hours a day, and so forth. Come down and see us during Fraternity Rush Week rnysterious century old DEKE Chapel, 611! E. William next to White's Market. GRIDIJE "And in my hand, I hold the last en- velope, O Great Karnac, mystic of the East," said the jolly announcer. "Thank you, buffalo breath," said Karnac. "And the answer is, Tim McGraw who went 19-1 to win small, two-item Pizza Bob pizza." S".anh?" said the beer bellied an- nouncer. "What' the hang was the question?" "The question, O flea infested fish face, was-Who won last week's Michigan Daily Griddes contest," Kar- nac explained. "Anyone who enters before midnight Friday at the Daily (420 Maynard) can win, 0 inebriated at our Street, DELTA KAPPA EPSILON, a Michigan tradition since 1854, is back on campus. one." Go look that one up in your Funk and Wagnells. 1. Duke at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Illinois at Syracuse 3. Nebraska at Indiana 4. Iowa at Arizona 5. Michigan State at USC 6. Minnesota at UCLA 7. Northwestern at Colorado 8. Baylor at Ohio State 9. Purdue at Notre Dame 10. Oregon at Wisconsin 11. Houston at Florida State 12. Kentucky at Maryland 13. Missouri at Oklahoma 14. North Carolina at Pittsburgh 15. Texas at Texas Tech 16. Tennessee at Auburn 17. Central Michigan at Ball State 18. Dartmouth at Holy Cross 19. Miami (Fla.) at Kansas 20. DAILY LIBELS at Wayne Duke State M.H. ****** ******* (at Lowell,j SALEM WITCHCRAFT Wednesday: All ladies and college Thursday: Drink & Drown-Rc Well, it's been another ho-hum week in sports. Michigan won, the Lions and Notre Dame lost, the Tigers survived and the Yankees and Boston con- tinued their race (walk?) for the Eastern Division pennant. Which must mean it is Tuesday and time for another PREVIEW-THE WEEK IN SPORTS. BASEBALL Thanks in main part to the Cleveland Indians, the American League East still has a pennant race entering the final week. Both first-place New York and second-place Boston finish their seasons at hone this week, the Yankees hosting Toronto and Cleveland, while the Red Sox entertain Detroit and Toronto. Both teams have only six games left, and if there should be a tie at the end of the regular season, Boston and New York would settle the issue in a one-game playoff in Boston. Kansas City and Philadelphia have almost clinched their shares of half- pennants and Los Angeles won the National League West Sunday. The Division Playdffs will begin a week from today and the Daily will have looks into both the American and National title tilts beginning tomorrow. COLLEGE FOOTBALL The third week of Big Ten football finds the conference engaging in its first full slate of non-conference opponents. Duke invades Ann Arbor this weekend while Purdue follows Michigan into South Bend attempting to drop Notre Dame to 0-3. Illinois takes on Syracuse, Indiana hosts Nebraska, Iowa travels to Arizona (Michigan's opponent next week), Michigan State travels to Los Angeles for Daryl Rogers' homecoming-too bad the Spartans are playing USC, not San Jose State-, Minnesota is at UCLA, Ohio State enter- tains Baylor, and Wisconsin hosts Oregon. Other interesting games: Alabama at Vanderbilt Army at Washington State Central Michigan at Ball State Fresno State at Cal-Poly Obispo Oh, Yes ... DAILY LIBELS at Wayne Duke State, PRO FOOTBALL Since there's no interest here we'll move on to: WOMEN'S SPORTS The field hockey team is busy this week with two games at home against Central Michigan and toledo on September 26 and 29 and a road contest at Kalamazoo College on the 30th. The Volleyball team travels to Western Michigan today and participates in the Spartan Invitational Friday and Saturday in East Lansing. Finally, the golfers tee off at East Lansing in another Invitational Friday and Saturday. GUESS WHAT? Yep, that's right, both the National Hockey League and the National Basketball:League have begun their respective preseason schedules. Thus, for the next four weeks, you can look forward to batters, receivers, pucksters, dribblers ... ad infinitum, ad nauseum. Les McCann and AIR CONDO Tuesday & Wednesday, Oct. 3 & 4 at the SECOND CHINCE Advance Tickets $5.50 $6.50 at the door' ust east of the E.M.U. Campus) T TONIGHT. students with I.D. FREE ock Bottom Prices -JAMIE TURNER YI BILL BOA RD Students who haven't picked up their season football tickets may do so today, starting at 8:38 a.m. at the ticket office at State and Hoover. The limited remaining tickets will also be on sale at student prices for individual games. Bring your ID card. i