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November 19, 1978 - Image 7

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1978-11-19

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The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 19, 1978-Page 7
OKLAHOMA-NEBRASKA REMATCH IN ORANGE BOWL
Michigantorn between two coasts
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By BOB MILLER
The Atlantic or the Pacific, that is
the question Michigan and Ohio State
will settle in the Big Ten title showdown
next Saturday in Columbus.
The winner of the game will
represent the conference in the Rose
Bowl in Pasadena while the other team
will head for Jacksonville, Florida and
a December 29 date in the Gator Bowl
versus Clemson.
CLEMSON WON the right to oppose
either the Buckeyes or Wolverines with
a 28-24 victory over Maryland to win the
Atlantic Coast Conference crown
outright.
A third Big Ten team, Purdue, will
play Christmas Day in the Peach Bowl.
The Boilermakers accepted the bid to
their first bowl since the 1967 Rose Bowl
and will meet an as yet unnamed team

in Atlanta.
The Gator Bowl selection committee
was heavily pursuing a Big Ten team,
preferably Michigan or OSU. Other
bowls were interested in the Wolverines
as well, but Michigan athletic director
Don Canham cited specific reasons for
accepting the Gator Bowl berth if the
Wolverines don't go to the Rose Bowl.
"WE HAD other opportunities from
two or three other bowls, but we'd be
trying to do it (play football) right in
the middle of examination time. Also I
don't think it would give the team
enough time to prepare," Canham said.
"The 29th is a pretty good date. The
kids can get home for New Year's and
we wanted to go to a warm weather
bowl," he added.
Still, all this is conjecture until the
outcome of next week's battle with the
Bucks is decided. "We assume we're

going to win it all," Canham said, "I
we don't, we'll be going to a pretty good
bowl. It should be a lot of fun for the
kids."
If the Wolverines do not get by Ohio
State, it would be their first appearance
in a so-called "minor bowl."
THE BOWL selection committee's
were busily making decisions in light of
yesterday's results around the country
to match up the best possible game.
Some bids hve been secured, others are
still up for grabs. So far the picture
looks like this:
* Rose Bowl-Pasadena: USC vs.
MICHIGAN or Ohio State
* Orange Bowl-Miami: Nebraska
vs. Oklahoma
eSugar Bowl-New ,Orleans: Penn
State vs. Alabama or Georgia
« Cotton Bowl-Dallas: Houston vs.
unnamed, possibly Georgia

" Gator Bowl-Jacksonville: Clem4
son vs. MICHIGAN or Ohio State
" Tangerine Bowl-Tampa, Florida:'
North Carolina State vs. Pittsburgh
" Sun Bowl-El Paso, Texas: Texas
vs. Maryland
" Liberty Bowl-Memphis, Ten-
nessee: Missourivs. Louisiana State
" Hall of Fame Bowl-Birmingham,
Alabama: Iowa State vs. Texas A&M
* Fiesta Bowl-Tempe, Arizona:
Arkansas vs. UCLA
* Peach Bowl-Atlanta, Georgia:
Purdue vs. unnamed opponent
eHoliday Bowl-San Diego: Navy vs.
Brigham Young
Two other bowls have as of yet not
announced either participant. They are
the Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston and the
Garden State Bowl in the Meadowlan-
ds, New Jersey.
Ann Arbor's Premier Discoteque
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SPAR TANS MAIM WILDCA TS:

Buckeyes edge Hoosiers
By The Associated Press Minnesota 24 Illinois 6 thousand fans rans the length of the
F hJ i , n ln to ri n the

Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN
ICHIGAN QUARTERBACK Rick Leach (7) searches upfield for another blocker
is guard John Powers (67) stalls Purdue linebacker Kevin Motts (58) in yester-
lay's 24-6 Wolverine win over the Boilermakes. Middle guard Ken Loushin (72)
ooks on for Purdue.
Michigan cage squad
'takes eighth in ratings-

The return of a healthy Phil Hubbard
will vault Mihigan into national
prominence, according to the
Associated Press pre-season college
basketball poll.
Experts evidently are convinced that
the Wolverines will rebound from last
year's 16-11 showing. The erudite sports
writers voted Michigan No. 8, one spot
behind "Magical" Michigan State.
JOINING THE two Michigan schools
among the pre-season elite is Big Ten
rival Indiana, whose coach Bobby
Knight has built another powerhouse.
after two relatively disappointing
seasons.
Duke, runners-up to Kentucky in the
NCAA finals last spring, assumed the
top spot as the Wildcats, who lost four of
their top six players, were dropped to
No. 11.
Michigan's 1978-79 season tips off
Monday at 8:05 p.m. with an exhibition
game against Windsor at Crisler Arena.

The Wolverines' first regular season
opponent is Central Michigan,' which
invades Crisler on Nov. 30.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

Duke 38 27-7
UCLA 8 25-3
Notre Dame 1 23-8
Louisville 23-7
Kansas 1 24-5
Texas 26-5
Michigan State 25-5
MICHIGAN 16-11
Syracuse 22-6
Indiana 21-8
Kentucky 30-2
N. Carolina St.. 21-10
Southern Cal 14-13
LSU 18-9
Rutgers 24-7
N. Carolina 23-8
San Francisco 23-6
Marquette 24-4
Alabama 17-10
Nev.-Las Vegas 20-8

918
764
685
492
429
390
348
342
243
210
199
182
142
128
108
104
95
74
72
62

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Second-half
touchdown runs of 3 yards by Art
Schlichter and 46 yards by tailback
Ricky Johnson rallied Ohio State to a
21-18 Big Ten victory over stubborn In-
diana yesterday.
The Hoosiers, on a 1-yard touchdown
run by Mike Harkrader and a 30-yard
field goal by David Freud led 10-7 until
late in the third quarter.
Ohio State, which led 7-0 on a 4-yard
touchdown run by fullback Paul Cam-
pbell, moved into a tie for firsf place
with a 6-1 Big Ten record and boosted
its overall record to 7-2-1. The Hoosiers,
who have not beaten the Buckeyes since
1951, fell to 3-4 in league play and 4-6
overall.
S* * *
Mich. St. 52, N'western 3
EVANSTON-Kirk Gibson and Andy
Schramm scored two touchdowns each
yesterday to lead Michigan State's
high-powered offense to a 52-3 victory
over winless Northwestern that lifted
the 16th-ranked Spartans into a first-
place tie in the Big Ten football race.
The triumph was the sixth straight
for the Spartans, who are 6-1 in the Big
Ten, tied with Michigan and Ohio State,
and 7-3 overall.
Michigan State needs a victory over
Iowa next Saturday to assure itself of at
least a tie for the conference champion-
ship.

MINNEAPOLIS-Sophomore tail-
back Marion Barber rushed for 233
yards aftd two touchdowns to become
the second runner in Minnesota history
to gain more than 1,000 yards in a
season, as the Gophers defeated Illinois
24-6 in a Big Ten football game yester-
day.
His performance was the top rushing
gain by a Big Ten runner this season.
The Gophers raised their Big Ten
record to 4-3 and 5-5 overall. Illinois en-
ded its season with a 0-6-2 league mark
and 1-8-2 slate overall
Iowa 38, Wisconsin 24
IOWA CITY-Split-end Brad Reid
ran the end-around play for two touch-
downs on bursts of 10 and 80 yards to
help Iowa to a 38-24 victory over
Wisconsin in Big Ten football yester-
day.
Iowa fans, who've had nothing to
cheer about through eight straight
losses, tore down the goal post in the
Iowa end zone with more than a minute
remaining.
And, with 8 seconds to play, a
7 7 II

tield, no ang up play, wtp wx .d
Wisconsin goal posts. Officials ended
the game at that point letting the clock
run out while Wisconsin tried to run
one more play.

-
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TIGERS HUSK NEBRASKA
White, Trojans race past Bruins

By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES-Paul McDonald
threw two touchdown passes in the
second period and tailback Charles
White became Southern California's
all-time leader in rushing yesterday,
carrying the Trojans to a 17-10 victory
over arch-rival UCLA and a sport in the
Rose Bowl on New Year's Day.
McDonald, a junior, hit Calvin
Sweeney with a 36-yard scoring pass
and Kevin Williams on a 10-yarder for
another touchdown to give Southern Cal
the Pac-10 title. It will be the Trojans
22nd trip to the Rose Bowl at Pasadena.
White, also a junior, gained 145 yards
in 33 carries for a career total of 3,739
yards, surpassing the 3,724 yards of An-
thony Davis in 1972-74.
A crowd of 96,387 saw the No. 5
ranked Trojans put their season record
at 9-1 with 14th ranked UCLA dropping
to 8-3. In the Pac-10 Conference, USC
finished at 6-1 and UCLA was 6-2.
Missouri 35, Nebraska 31
LINCOLN, Neb.-Running back
James Wilder scored four touchdowns
to set a Missouri record and lead the
Tigers to a 35-31 upset victory over
second-ranked and Orange Bowl-bound
Nebraska yesterday.
Wilder sealed the Huskers' fate, and
dimmed NU's hopes for a national
championship, when he barged 4 yards
to score with 3:42 remaining in the
game to cap a 74-yard Tiger drive. The
march was highlighted by a 33-yard
pass from Phil Bradley to Kellen Win-
slow.
* * *
Clemson 28, Maryland 24
COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Steve

Fuller's touchdown pass plays of 87 and
62 yards twice rallied Clemson from
seven-point third quarter deficits and
the 12th-ranked Tigers beat 11th-ranked
Maryland 28-24 yesterday on/ Lester
Brown's 5-yard fourth-period run.
The victory gave Clemson a 9-1
record and its first Atlantic Coast Con-
ference championship since 1967 with a
6-0 record. Maryland finished the
regular season with a 9-2 mark, in-
cluding 5-1 in the ACC.

N.D. 38, Georgia Tech 21
ATLANTA-Vagas Ferguson rambled
for a school record 255 yards and scored
one- touchdown as 10th-ranked Notre
Dame pounded Georgia Tech 38-21
yesterday for its eighth consecutive
victory.
Ferguson got his yardage on 30
carries, breaking his own single-game
record of 219 yards set earlier this year.

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PRE-MEDICAL
STUDENTS
Current undergraduate pre-medical students
may now compete for several hundred Air
Force scholarships. These scholarships are
to be awarded to students accepted into
medical schools as freshmen . or at the

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