Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 19, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, September 21, 12:00 Noon U.M. International Center Subject: "PING-PONG DIPLOMACY: IRISH DRUB CATS Top-rankied BCOMING NIXON VISIT TO CHyINA"" The Associated Press seven interceptions, several Wild- THEC NXLINCOLN, Neb. - Nebraska's cat fumbles and a blocked puntc Speaker: Prof. Rhoads Murphey, Director, nationally top-ranked Cornhuskers into a 50-7 spanking of Big Ten Center for Chinese Studies methodically posted a pair of first power Northwestern yesterday. For Reservations, call 662-5529 Sponsored by the Ecumenical q u a r t e r touchdowns yesterday, On offense the Irish, alternating Cost: 50c Campus Center gave Minnesota a play in the sec- junior Pat Stenberge and senior ond quarter, then rallied for a Bill Etter at quarterback during1 35-7 football triumph before 69,187 most of the game, relentlessly persons, largest crowd in Me- ground the Wildcats town with1 morial Stadium history. superior size and depth. Quarterback Jerry Tagge hit Three interceptions and a pair fleet flanker Johnny Rodgers on! of lost fumbles in the first half1 touchdown passes of 28, 20 and a dug the Wildcats, 0-2, a hole tooI 37 yards asd Jeff Kinney con- deep to climb out of. y uu s :tributed two touchdowns on short The Irish, with Stenberge start- A r a m a y S rp u plunges as Nebraska ran its un- in tqatrak a aGh beaten string to 21 games. time getting untracked. But All- Used Blue Jeans- $2.99 The win maintained for Coach America candidate Walt Patulski, Bob Devaney a 'record of never a 6-foot-5, 235-pound defensive end Wallace Beery Shirts-$3.00 losing to a Big Ten Conference stormed in to block a Wildcat punt team in 10 Nebraska seasons, and at the Northwestern 32-yard line British Fire-service Jackets- $11.00 gave the Huskers their seventh with 9:23 left in the first quarter. Pea-coats from $239 9straight win over the Golden * $23.9Gophers since 1960. Well contained offensively dur- Washington squeaks 514 E. W ILLIAM ing the first period, Minnesota SEATTLE - Sonny Sixkiller hit (abo e CmpusBike took command for a time in the Tom Scott with a 33-yard pass with (above Carpus Bike) second quarter. Quarterback Craig two andta alf inuteet Curry and fullback Ernie Cook toadahl iue etys HOURS: 10:30-5:30 p.m. PHONE: 761-6207 / te d to move Minnesota 79 terday to give Washington a 38-35 y armsdntadrve MinesbyaJ7m intersectional football victory over yards in a drive capped by Jim Purdue. -- - -----Henry's six-yard touchdown run, cutting Nebraska's margin to 14-7. Sixkiller's pass came just a g s * n tminute after Purdue quarterback Gary Danielson connected with A-7030 STEREO TAPE DECK: An all-sold-state, single- Irish crush 'Cats Darryl Stingley on an 80-yard pass direction, 2-track record/playback/erase, plus 1/4-track playback SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Notre play to put the Boilermakers in stereo tape deck, the A-7030U is designed for the demanding Dame, hoping to move into the front. professional or the discriminating audiophile. This superb deck i number one national spot, turned Scott's winning touchdown wasI Gornhu his third of the day-the first also coming on a Sixkiller pass. His second was on a 60-yard run. * * * Badgers tie SYRACUSE, N.Y. - Wisconsin linebacker Ed Albright blocked an extra point kick by Syracuse's Erle Baugher yesterday and pre- served a 20-20 football tie for the underdog Badgers. Wingback Brian Hambleton had tied the score for the Orangemen in their season-opener by taking a 12-yard touchdown pass from Bob Woodruff with 45 seconds remain- ing in the game. That score came less than two minutes after Wisconsin's tight end, Larry Mialik, scored on a 21- yard pass from Neil Graff, carry-' skers bury ing a defender on his back the last five yards. An attempted two-I point pass conversion to Alan Thompson failed. * * Spartans silenced ATLANTA-- Brent Cunningham,' Georgia Tech's 170-pound speed-I ster, dashed 28 yards for a fourth- period touchdown yesterday as the Yellow Jackets whipped 18th- ranked Michigan State 10-0, spoil- ing Coach Duffy Daugherty's bii for his 100th victory at State. ' Cunningham's touchdown run came with 10:32 remaining in the game, three plays after Jeff Ford intercepted a Michigan State pass and returned it 12 yards to the Spartan 36. The Jackets had nursed a 3-0 lead through two quarters as Cam Bonifay booted a 32-yard field goal 1 with 13:15 left in the first half. I Fullback Rob Healy set it up with i a 42-yard sprint to the Spartan 18. 1 Hoosiers victorious BLOOMINGTON-Chris Gartner, son of a Swedish bishop, kicked four field goals yesterday for In-l diana's football team and the Hoosiers caged Kentucky's Wild- cats 26-8. The junior's soccer-style kicks were good for a 32-yarder in the first quarter, a 47-yard goal in the secondquarter and two ofd37 and 39 yards in the final period. * * * Hawkeyes halted CORVALIS, Ore.-Oregon State, stung by its own mistakes, charged back from a 7-0 deficit to defeat the Iowa Hawkeyes 33-19 in college football action yesterday. Despite three pass interceptions and four lost fumbles, Oregon State earned a 10-7 halftime lead, then added the clincher late in the third period when fullback Mike Daven- port took a pitchout in from 10 yards out. Illini shut out . CHAMPAIGN-Flashing tailback Ike Oglesby piled up 175 rushing yardsaand scored on a58-yard pass play and a 3-yard plunge to lead alert North Carolina to an 27-0 football victory over slightly fa- vored Illinois yesterday. Oglesby almost single-handedly spoiled the home coaching debut of Bob Blackman, former Dart- mouth coach, whose Illini handed North Carolina a gift first touch- Goph ers GIANTS, DODGERS LOSE: Lolich, Tigers humble Orioles down. has a capacity up to the 10/" NAB reel size and operates at 15 or 71/2 ips, with performance comparable to that of the finest professional sound studio equipment. Wow and flutter are an exceptionally low 0.05%, frequency response is 30-20,000 Hz/3dB and the signal-to-noise ratio is a high 58 dB. 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Join THE PROJECT COMMUNITY (formerly U-M Tutorial Project) THOMAS A. MOOREHEAD, Director FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT THE PROJECT COMMUNITY Thomas A. Moorehead, Director 2210 Student Activities B1'dg. Phone 763-3548 PROGRAMS '71-'72 11 i i , 11 'I t F1 i t { C I1 4 Cj I By The Associated Press DETROIT-Mickey Lolich drove in both runs and won his 25th game of the season yesterday as Detroit trimmed Baltimore 2-1 and sliced the Orioles' American League East lead to five games. The second place Tigers, who've beaten Baltimore three times in the last two days, have just nine games left to play and the Orioles' magic number for clinching their third straight division title remains at eight. Lolich hurled his 26th complete game in his 42nd start and in- creased his innings pitched total to 351. His record is 25-1l. The Tigers tallied twice off Oriole starter. Jim Palmer with two out in the fourth. Bill Freehan_ bounced a single to left, but was forced by Jim Northrup. Then Mickey Stanley scratched a double We Style Hair. We Don't Just Cut It. OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Arborland-E. Liberty Maple Village East U. at So. U. off shortstop Jerry Davanon's glove, the ball skipping into short left field. Ed Brinkman was given an intentional pass to load the bases. Then Lolich hit a high-bounder past second base. Dave Johnson fielded the ball but his throw to first was late and both runners crossed the plate on the infield hit. * * * Dodgers cheated LOS ANGELES - The Atlanta Braves wiped out an early 5-2 deficit and went ahead for good with a two-run sixth inning to de- feat the Los Angeles Dolgers 9-6 yesterday and further tighten the National League West Division -race. Atlanta's victory moved the third - place Braves within 5 1' games of the front-running San Francisco Giants. The Dodgers re- mained two games behind the Giants in second place. A two-run homer by Willie Davis in the first inning and a three-run second had propelled the Dodgers into an early 5-2 advantage before the Braves made their comeback. They scored a run in the fourth on the first of Darrell Evans' two home runs and tied the game at 5-5 with a two-run fifth keyed by Earl Williams' RBI double and a run-scoring ground out by Evans. The Braves then snapped the tie on Felix Millan's run-scoring, bloop double down the right field line and scored the eventual win- ning run on Mike Lum's sacrifice fly. It was the second game in a row that Lum delivered the win- ning run against the Dodgers. Evans hit his second homer of the day in the top of the seventh off Pete Mikkelsen, the ninth homer surrendered by Dodger pitching in the last three games. Richie Allen socked a home run in the last of the seventh for the reeling Dodgers, who lost their fourth straight. Williams also hit a-homer for Atlanta, his 33rd, in a two-run scored. * * * Padres triumph SAN FRANCISCO-San Diego's Clay Kirby pitched perfect base- ball through seven innings and beat the first place San Francisco Giants 2-1 on a one-hitter yester- day. Kirby, a '23-year-old right-hand- er, gave up a leadoff home run to Willie McCovey in the eighth in- ning after retiring the first 21 Giant batters. He struck out 10 and walked one in making his record 14-13. Gaylord Perry, 14-12, took the loss despite a fine pitching per- formance for the Giants, who have lost 12 of their last 14 games. Perry allowed just five hits and one earned run. The Padres scored in the third inning on a triple by former Giant Bob Barton and a squeeze, bunt by Enzo Hernandez. Ann Arbor Innovative Education Project Ann Arbor Day Care Project Black Liberation School Matrix (Resource Center) Mental Health Halfway House Project Community Courses Solstis Free School Washtenaw Community College Project Willis Community Action Project Willow Run Counseling Proj ect A , , Ruggers dump tough Cleveland By CHUCK DRUKIS Michigan's ruggers rolled to three wins over Cleveland yester- day, as the Michigan Blue and Gold squads squeezed out 6-4 and 12-9 victories, respectively, while the Maize romped to a 17-4 win. The Michigan Blue played a "ping-pong policy" strategy in the first half which resulted in no progress for either side. At times, it appeared that the Blue 'offense was moving only to be stopped either by a towering Cleveland forward or one of the Blue back- field's numerous fumbles. Cleve- land met the same fate in the first half. The second half started out on the up side for Cleveland. Bill Dudley covered a short Michigan kick and charged over the right corner of Michigan's