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October 05, 1971 - Image 6

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-10-05

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Page Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, October 5, 1971

Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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By MARC FELDMAN
Except for Minnesota's shock-
ing 38-20 conquest of Kansas most
games involving Big Ten teams
went according to plan last Sat-
urday. Overall, the Big Ten came
out with three victories in half-
a-dozen non-conference g a m e s
while Northwestern and Purdue
earned their first Big Ten vic-
tories of the season.
Northwestern won its second
straight game and evened its Big
Ten record at 1-1 by defeating the
Wisconsin Badgers, 24-11, at Ev-
anston Randy Anderson was the
Wildcat hero as he scored all
three Northwestern touchdowns,
including two in the first half
when the Wildcats built up a 14-3
advantage. It was Wisconsin's
conference opener and left them
with a 1-2-1 overall record.
Purdue rebounded from two
tough non-conference losses to
destroy Iowa's Hawkeyes, 45-13..
The Boilermakers were never in
trouble as they had 21 points
before Iowa scored. The Hawk-
eyes are 0-4 and have given up
an average of 44 points a gome.
At South Bend, Michigan State
and Notre Dame battled on na-
tional television. Confusion was
the order of the day as the Fight-
ing Irish triumphed, 14-2. The
officiating, which caused com-
plaints by both teams, particularly
upset the Spartans. "This is the
worst officiated game I've seen in
all my years in coaching", MSU
Coach Duffy Daugherty griped
after the game.
Other technical difficulties,
such as a broken field clock and
broken yard markers marred this
traditional rivalry.

en submits to usual orm

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The Irish got off to a quick 14-0
lead in the first period as Bob
Minnix scored twice and held on
as the Spartans could manage
only a safety and eight first
downs.
Ohio State got back into the
win column after last week's loss
to Colorado by dealing the Cali-
fornia Bears a 35-3 setback. OSU
scored the first two times it had
the ball as Don Lamka scam-
pered. in from 4 yards out and
Morris Bradshaw scored on a 12
yard run. The Bucks led 14-3 at
intermission and three fourth
quarter touchdowns iced the cake
for Woody's boys.
The Minnesota victory, the Big
Ten's first in the last 17 encoun-
ters with the Big 8, was engineer-
ed by quarterback Craig Curry.
The senior signal caller ran for
107 yards in 15 carries and com-
pleted 9 of 12 passes for another
115 yards. The Gopher runners
churned out 302 yards against a
Kansas defense which had allowed
just 338 on the ground in its first
three games. Ironically, Kansas
was the last Big Eight team to
fall to the Big Ten. Indiana edged
the Jayhawks, 18-15, on Sept. 30,
1967.
Syracuse finished its three week
tour of the Big Ten by nosing out
the punchless Indiana Hoosiers,
7-0. The Orangemen finished with
a victory, a loss,and a tie against
Big Ten opposition.
Hapless Illinois finally got on
the scoreboard after three straight
shutouts, and even led 14-10 at
halftime over quarterback Sonny
Sixkiller's Washington team.
BOOKIES HAPPY:

4

Not Leland again?
Not to be discouraged by the roughshod treatment dealt him by
Candlestick Park security guards last Thursday evening, Leland,
the giant featherless parrot, showed up at the Chicago Stadium
Sunday night in search of his hockey idol Bobby Hull. Leland
gained admittance to the stadium by posing as the Toronto Maple
leaf's equipment manager. Halfway through the second period,
Leland swooped down from the rafters in an attempt to grab
Hull, but instead wound up with Chicago goalie Tony Esposito.
Under heavy pressure from stadium police, Leland exited through
the roof, and headed for Lake Michigan whereupon he discovered
his mistake and promptly deposited Esposito into the water.

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-Associated Press
IN A SCENE typical of the entire afternoon, Notre Dame halfback Bill Gallagher (19) is dumped
for a four-yard loss. Michigan State defensive backs Mike Holt (1) and Brad VanPelt (10) lead the
charge which bottled up the Irish all day. However, Notre Dame's defense was even stingier as the
Irish choked the Spartans 14-2 last Saturday at South Bend.

-_

PEGGE R
FLARES
The dressy look in
fashion jeans.
$8.00-$14.00 a pair.
MEN'S FASHION CLOTHING
310 South State Street
American Express,
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Petitioning is now open for
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JOINT- STUDENT-FACULTY
ADVISORY COMMITTEE

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SIGN-UP

FOR INTERVIEWS

Dyer downed
Ken Dyer, defensive back for
the Cincinnati Bengals, suf -
fered a severe contusion ofsthe
spinal cord in Sunday's game
with the Green Bay Packers.
Team Physicians said yes-
terday that X-rays showed no
evidence of a fracture or any
outside pressure on the spinal
cord. At first, possible paraly-
sis was feared, but Dyer is able
to move his lower extremities.
Though there is no danger
to his life, the doctors said it
was doubtful that Dyer would
ever play football again.
Dyer was hurt when he tack-
led Packer runner John Broc-
kington. Brockington said, "my
knee hit his head."
LIBERTARIAN
FORUM
sponsored by the
Ann Arbor Liberation League
and the
UM Society for Individual
Liberty
eaturing
ANARCHISM VS.
LIMITED
GOVERNMENT
R.A. Childs and J. St. John
WED. 7:30
West Lounge
South Quad

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By C. ANDREW BLOOM
A curious thing happened last
Saturday in college football. It
seemed that teams slated to win,
did just that. While this delighted
the bookies, it disappointed t h e
participants in football pools who
usually count on an upset or two.
The premier game was between
Southern California and Okla-
homa. A crown of 62,000 in Nor-
man, Okla., saw the Sooners lit-

tle trouble beating Utah State,
42-6. Scoring touchdowns for the
first two times they had the ball,
the Cornhuskers stretched their
unbeaten string to 23 games.
Quarterback Jerry Tagge spear-
headed the attack by throwing for
tow touchdowns and running for
two more. Tagge's aerial strikes
were to fullback Phil Olds and
flankers Johnny Rodgers.
Third-ranked Texas trounced

TUES.-FRI. 4-5 P.M.

ROOM

Favorites prevailin weekend action

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3M, MICHIGAN

UNION

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erally run the Trojans into t h e Oregon, 35-7, as substitute quar-
ground in defeating them 33-20. terback Donnie Wigginton led the
With their explosive offense, the Longhorns to victory. Replacing
Wishbone-T Oklahoma gained 516 the injured Eddie Phillips, Wig-
yards on the ground against a ginton engineered four long scor-
Trojans defense that had not ing drives while running for 116
yielded a point in ten quarters. yards and two touchdowns.
Fleet halfback Greg Pruitt led The Ducks were bottled up by
the attack with touchdown runs the Longhorn defense all after-
of 75, 38 and seven yards. On two noon long. Oregon didn't pene-
of those runs, Pruitt seemed to trate the Texas 20 until the Long-
be toying with the USC defense, horns had a 35-0 lead. Duck
Slowing down near the goal line., speedster Bobby Moore gained 110
Pruitt allowed USC defenders to yards but overall was rather in-
catch up to him, then turned on I effective.
the speed at the last moment.
Quarterback Jack Mildren, who Ak-sa usinggaovicious a k
I quick-striking ground attack,
attempted one pass all day long, wasted little time in crushing
scored on an 11 yard romp whilq h 4
halfback Joe Wylie produced the arch-rival Mississippi, 40-6. This
last touchdown. avenges the 48-23 setback to Ole
Southern Cal scored on a 16 Miss last year when the Crimson
yadpsstro uarterback Jim Tide gained only 27 yards on the
yard pass from quarterback Jim- rud
my Jones to split end Edsel Gar-, ground.
rison and a three-yard plunge by Johnny Musso carried the ball
fullback Sam (Bam) Cunningham. 22 times for 193 yards and o n e
Top-ranked Nebraska had lit- touchdown. The touchdown, the
.31st of his career, tied an SEC
record.
Alabama opened the game with-
out huddling, catching Mississippi
ff-75off guard. Asked why the Tide did

bunch of signals, changes and lie Nichols as the Buffaloes of
stunts. We probably made a mis- I Colorado defeated Kansas State,
take not doing more of it.'"' 31-21. Branch also returned a
In the East, a minor miracle, punt 59 yards for a score.
of sorts, occurred when Columbia Pat Sullivan and Terry Beas-
beat Princeton 22-20, for the first ley combined for nine comple-
time in 26 years. Columbia quar- tions and one touchdown as fifth-
terback Don Jackson completed ranked Auburn flew past Ken-
13 out of 18 attempts for 233 tucky, 38-6.
yards and two touchdowns. Beasley became the only SEC
Little Alberto Vitiello booted a receiver to catch nineteen touch-
22-yard field goal with four min- down passes with his catch Satur-
utes left as ninth-ranked P e n n day. Sullivan, a prime candidate
State squeezed by Air Force, 16- for the Heisman trophy, hit on 16
14. Penn State had its vaunted out of 25 for 253 yards including
rushing attack stymied by a de- two for pay dirt.
termined Falcon defense. In the MAC, unranked and un-
Sophomore quarterback K e n derrated Toledo made it 27
Johnson tossed two touchdown straight victories by outlasting
passes to Cliff Branch and Wil- Ohio University, 31-28.
Intramural athletes
take off n full stride

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For the student body:
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Sizes 3 4 to 50

Frustrated high school track
men, many still in surprisingly
good shape, strutted their stuff in
the recent Fraternity and Resi-
dence Hall division track meets.
Former All-Campus cross-coun-
try champ Sterling Speirn chop-
ped a half-second off the meet
record in the mile run and re-j
turned to help Bartlett House set
another new record in the mile
relay to lead the Bursley team to
the Residence Hall title. Speirn
turned his mile in 4.37.1.
Nearly six seconds was lopped
off the record in the relay by the
Bartlett quintet which turned in
a notable 3.45:1 winning fime on
its way to a meet total of 30
points. Bartlett went on to take
first place in the meet..
Tying the meet record in the
90-yard high hurdles with a time
of 9.4 and coming back with a
14.2 clocking to win the 120-yard
lows was Elliot's Jim McLean.
In winning the 100-yard dash,
Tom Hibler edged out last year's
I.M. All-around athlete Mike Mur-
phy of Allen-Rumsey House. Mur-
phy's second place finish helped
take Rumsey to a third place fin-
ish over-all. Rumsey won the
1970-71 indoor and outdoor meets.C
Others winning individual hon-
ors in the residence hall division

were: Les Homan, Scott (880) ;
Brian Caldwell, East Quad (440);
Brad Whitmore, Bartlett (High
Jump) and Don Fontaine, Mosher
(Shot Put).
In the Fraternity division, Del-
ta Upsilon could muster only one
first place but showed good bal-
ance in winning its second event
of the young season. D. U. took
the frat title in golf early last
month.
Lone victor for the champions
was Bob Hartrick who leaped 5'
7" to win the high jump.
Dave Hazlett, Kappa Sigma,
was the meets only double win-
ner, taking the long jump with
a 20' 5 1/4" effort and running
away with the high hurdles in 9.3.
Former M sprinter Ron Clark,
running for Alpha Phi Alpha, won
the low hurdles with a time of
15.5 after earlier taking second
in the 100-yard dash to Sigma
Chi's Tom Littelton.
Other winners in the frat divi-
sion were: Jim Belitisos, Phi
Gamma Delta (440), Dave Ger-
ichs, Sigma Phi (Mile), and Ken
Serba (Shot Put).
Track competition for Indepen-
dents and Graduate Students will
' be Wednesday, 4 p.m., at the
Ferry Field track.

f

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OFFICE FOR STUDENT SERVICES

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