THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 20, 1971 Page Eight UIf MICHIGAN UNION BILLIARDS ii ngers manhandle weee ACU-1 Billiards Tournament sign up now! Free Instructions THURSDAY 7 p.m.-9 p.m. FREE BILLIARDS EXHIBITION Nov. 4-4 and 8 P.M. JIMMY CARAS-5 time champion I, NOON BOOK DISCUSSION Thursday 3545 Student Activities Bldg. Solildad Brother by GEORGE JACKSON, reviewed by ED TRU ITT NEXT WEEK WHOLE EARTH CATALOG Office of Religious,Affairs-Michigan Union 3rd Floor By CHUCK DRUKIS Michigan's ruggers went on a scoring spree last Sunday after- noon and clobbered both Notre Dame and Toledo. The Blue kick- ed their way to a 26-9 triumph while the Gold charged to a 29-10 win. The Blue - Notre Dame game was dominated by penalties. The penalties, however, were caused neither by intentional sloppiness nor flagrant rowdyism. The penalties were called by referee Hugh Hamilton. Hamil- ton, an international referee al- legedly surveying American rug- by for the Rugby Union, made calls on numerous technicalities of which neither team was aware. Michigan's Richard Thompson converted four out of eight penal- ty kicks while Notre Dame's Phil Calandra made three out of seven. During the first scrummage of the day, Notre Dame was called for blocking, and Thompson split the uprights from 40 yards away to give the Blue a lead they never lost. Thompson converted three more times, all on the occasions of No- tre Dame off sides. The first half was rather un- eventful, except for the penalty knicks. Michigan was consistent- Press ly near midfield or in Notre Dame territory, but the only successful ball movement was when the full- ot of backs would exchange kicks. ly, so The Irish did score near .the he is close of the first half on a penal- ewly- ty kick after a Michigan offisde. n the After the Irish score, Thomp- plant- son dummied left but passed right sweet to Hooper who tumbled in for a try to make the score 16-3 at half- time. Notre Dame narrowed the score se to 16-6 on a penalty kick before Michigan scored two tries to put edS the game out of reach. The Blue, playing with a man ---- short when Dave Gordon had to leave the game with a bloody pro- boscus, scored when Cleland Child picked up the ball after it came * out of a set scrum and dived * across the goal line. * Michigan's final try was also scored by Child. When Ron Storey was stopped near the Notre Dame *goal area, Child recovered the ball out of the ensuing ruck and S 1 SSTUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF scored. Thompson converted. After the game, Captain Terry Larrimer expressed disappoint- ment in the performance of a tra- ditionally excellent foe: "Notre Dame didn't play as well as we expected them to play. Their style of kicking the ball and running to recover it didn't work. They were strong, but not quick enough." Despite the win, Michigan's scrum captain Jacque*Passino thought that the Blue played "miserably." The Michigan Gold, led by a swarm of hustling forwards, over- whelmed an inexperienced team. After Toledo scored an early try and conversion, Michigan came back to roll up a 19-6 half-time lead. Rob Huizenga paced the Gold scoring with three tries. Huizen- ga, an outstanding wrestler, re- cently "quit" the wrestling team at Michigan because he refused to cut his hair. John Anderson and Dave Noyes added a try each while Andrew SOME UPSET: Thorburn made one penalty kick and three conversions. This Saturday the Blue and Gold teams will travel to Chicago while the Maize will go to Wind- sor on Sunday. The Blue will play both Palmer College and the Apig..... I foes~ Chicago Lions while the Gold will battle the Chicago "B" equad. Palmer, the winner of the Wind- sor tournament, is the team that the ruggers have been looking for- ward to playing the entire sea- son. Q -Associated Porkers gain revenge GRAD COFFEE HOUR TOMORROW! CIDER and DOUGHNUTS 4-6 p.m. RACKHAM 4th Floor BE THERE! AIRPORT LIMOUSIN ES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day Here's Lee! Leland, the dwarf parr( Ffats Strops, got real lone he took him a wife. Here with Lela, the beaming n wed (Lee is the one on right, with the cocky leer p ed on his pointed puss). dreams, you two! Read and UE Daily ClassifiE PRESCRIPTION EYEWARE j and SHADES 662 5903 i"Mmmm- ......m.......-.......m"-----. 1 I 1 ANOTHER / I famous PAPPAS 1 1 1 I CONEY ISLAND i SPECIAL I I I By RANDY CASWELL What do you do with a team that is missing its starting quar- terback, right halfback and both offensive ends, not to mention 10 other players? If you are Texas, you lose to Arkansas 31-7. The victory was a sweet one for the Razorbacks, who had lost their two previous encounters with Texas 15-14 and 42-7. Texas' lone score came as the result of a 56-yard punt return which took the ball to the Razor- backs' seven yard. Texas Coach Darrell Royal's candidate for top back in the country, Jim Bertel- sen, drove through to score for the Longhorns on the next play. The Razorbacks, guided by quarterback Joe Ferguson, who completed 14 of 24 passes for 249 yards and three touchdowns, rid- dled the Longhorn defense with an aerial attack reminiscent of Pearl Harbor. Tight end Bobby Nichols was on the receiving end of two tosses and split end Mike Reppond was the recipient of Ferguson's other touchdown pass. Texas' secondary was to blame, if lack of experience can be con- sidered a fault. Because of the injuries that sidelined Joe Phil- lips, the Longhorns' elusive quar- terback, and four other players, Royal had to move the defensive safety and the roving linebacker to offense. Adding injury to injury, the ------___ starting defensive ends had also been sidelined for the season with knee problems. That left few ex- perienced players to face the Raz- orbacks on defense. Royal summed up the game glumly. "We 'didn't play well," he said. "I think our team has slip- ped for obvious reasons (injuries). We are just a shell of what we were in the beginning of the sea- son." Arkansas couldn't have cared less that Texas was mortally wounded: they had lost the last two to the Longhorns and this time, on national television,, they were going to prove that they too belonged in the top ten instead of the top twenty. If Arkansas doesn't rate, then at least Ferguson does. Besides throwing three TD's, he ran an- other in from the 10-yard line. Arkansas Coach Frank Broyles had this to say about Ferguson: "His performance was tremen- dous. I have never said just how,*, great Joe is because I wanted the people across the country to see it for themselves." The injuries that plague, Texas will be with them for several more games. Phillips will be out for at least four weeks, and the others mentioned will be sidelined for the rest of the season. With Texas defeated, Arkansas moves into first place in the Southwest Conference. All that remains to be seen is if the Raz- orbacks can stay on top. 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For the student body: LEVI'S M7 The Associated Press The top five teams retained their rankings in this week's As- sociated Press college football poll, but Oklahoma gained 130 points on Big Eight rival Nebras- ka to come within striking range of the No. 1 Cornhuskers. The 5-0 Sooners narrowed the gap on the defending national champions from 168 points to 38 after ripping Colorado 45 - 17 last Saturday to merit 18 top votes and 1,008 points from a panel of 55 - sports writers and broadcasters. Nebraska, 6-0 after a 55-0 romp over Kansas, gained 35 first-place votes and garnered 1,046 points. The other two top votes went to Michigan, a distant No. 3 with 837 points, and Auburn, No. 5 be- hind Alabama. Notre Dame moved up one notch to sixth to replace Colorado whose loss to Oklahoma plunged the Buf- faloes into the No. 11 spot behind Penn State, Georgia, Arkansas and Stanford. Arkansas, 31-7 victor over Tex- as and Stanford, 33-18 conqueror of Southern California, moved back into the top ten with 5-1 re- a CORDUROY Slim Fits ... $6.98 (All Colors) Bells ........ $8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans .$10.00 FIRES BURN TREES Bells ...... Boot Jeans Pre-Shrunk Super Slims . $8.00 $7.50 $7.50 $7.00 I I State Street at Liberty - NEJACS -' TV and Stereo Rental Free Delivery NO DEPOSIT Free Pick-up $10 a month Free Service Ph. 662.5671 I Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 cords, the only teams in they' Top Ten who are not undefeated. Behind Colorado in the second 10 are Ohio State; Louisiana State; Arizona State and To- ledo, who are tied for 12th; Tex- as; Purdue and Tennessee. New- comers Duke and Air Force took, over the last two places as Wash- ington and Florida dropped out of the rankings after Saturday losses to unranked teams. The Top Twenty teams, with first- place votes in parentheses, season re- cords and total points. Points tabulated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9.8-7-6-5g 4-3-2-1: 1. Nebraska (35) 6-0 1046 2. Oklahoma (18) 5-0 1008 3. MICHIGAN (1) 6-0 837 4. Alabama 6-0 765 5. Auburn (1) 5-0 585 6. Notre Dame 5-0 578 7. Penn State 5-0 479 8. Georgia 6-0 460 9. Arkansas 5-1 33 10. Stanford 5-1 28. 11. Colorado 5-1 267 12. Ohio State 4-1 230 13. Louisiana State 5-1 209 14. Tie. Arizona State 4-1 62 Toledo 6-0 62 16. Texas 3-2 60 17. Purdue 3-2 40 18. Tennessee 3-2 37 19. Duke r5-1e3 20. Air Force 4-1 2' Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Dartmouth, Florida State, Houston, Northwestern, Oregon, South Carolina, Washington, West Virginia. Teams deal, wads peel The St. Louis Cardinals, known for their crummy trades, made an- other one Monday as they dealt Chuck Taylor to the New Yo# Mets for Art Shamsky. Running through the other players involved, the Cards also got minor league hurlers Jim Bibby, Rich Folkers and Charley Hudson, while the Mets acquired infielder Tom Coulter, outfielder Jim Beauchamp and pitch Harry "The Tasmanian Devil" Parker. In another deal Monday, the Baltimore Bullets dealt guards Kevin Loughery and Fred Carter to Philadelphia for Archie Clark. Title game? KNOXVILLE, Tenn. () - Of- ficials of major college football bowls, ABC-TV and the NCAA, will meet in Chicago today, to try to work out a national college championship game for 1972,G was reported here yesterday. 1 I iFT Drunk drivers bring families together. ANNOUNCING A LECTURE AND DISCUSSION SERIES on Types of Religious Experience to include: Mystical, Mythical, Aesthetic, Psychological, Intellectual, Chemical, etc. UAC-DAYSTAR HOMECOMING SAT., OCT. 30 QUICKSILVER CATFISH 2-3.50-4-4.50 HILL AUD.-9 P.M. ADVANCE TICKETS MICH. UNION AND SALVATION RECORDS In hospital rooms and at funerals. Because that's where the drunk driver's victims wind up. Drunk drivers are involved in at least 25,000 deaths and 800,000 crashes every year. A'" Tt _ _ rin V a v tz Beginning Thurs., Oct. 21, ending Mar. 23, '721 I IN Ill Wi I - a r .. r _ r i - I