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October 24, 1971 - Image 8

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-10-24

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, October 24, 1971

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 24, 1971

CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY
announces
Petitioning for 5 Full-Term
Appointments
Sign up for Interviews-Oct. 1-Nov. 1
Room 1542 SAB

Troja n s

startle

rish

again,

28-14 4

By The Associated Press Huskers ramble
SOUTH BEND - The gloomyHs
skies over South Bend were re- STILLWATER, Okla. - Senior
flected in the faces of N o t r e halfback Jeff Kinney ripped off
Dame partisans here yesterday as touchdown runs of 12 and 25
old nemesis Southern California' yards and speedy John Rodgers
stunned the sixth-ranked Irish, hauled in a nine-yard scoring pass
28-14, with first-half offensive and hit pay dirt on a dazzling
lightning and a revived defense. 92-yard punt return as No. 1_-
A pair of first-period touch- ranked Nebraska riddled Okla-
d pi o f iltouch-dhoma State 41-13 yesterday.
anJwn rI.In iJnkc byJJmiltJU..n'I.

ranked Stanford and one of the halfback Lydell Mitchell scored
proudest moments in their foot- four touchdowns.
ball history.* *
The Cougars, in scoring their Razorbacks fly
first Pacific-8 grid victory since
1968, handed Stanford its f i r s t FAYETTEVILLE - Tailback
conference loss of the year a n d Mike Saint, a senior making his
scrambled the race to the R o s e first start of the year, scored your
Bowl, touchdowns to lead ninth ranked
Arkansas to a 60-21 non-confer-
The Indians, now 3-1 in theenevcoyvrNrtTexas
Pac-8 and 5-2 over-all, were frus- aence victory over North T e x a s
trated throughout the game by a State yesterday.
surprisingly tough Washington Quarterback Joe Ferguson and
State defense but went ahead 23- sophomore tailback Dickie Morton,
21 midway in the fourth quarter who played sparingly because of
on a 36-yard field goal by Red injured ribs, also contributed to
the Arkansas attack.

SHOP
Monday & Friday
Til 8:30

FASHIONS FOR
TALLAND

gown receptions ay spnue1
Edesel Garrison, good for 31 and
24 yards, and a 42-yard catch by!
the junior speedster to set up the
third Trojan touchdown, gave USC
a big early lead on the wet and
slippery field.
The victory ended a three-game
losing string for USC, now 3-4,
and dropped the Irish to 5-1. A
sellout crowd of 59,075 saw USC
wound the pride of the vaunted
Notre Dame defense for the second
straight year.

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Bells ......$8.50
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Bush Jeans . $10.00

Nebraska, gearing for a Thanks
giving Day showdown with second
ranked Oklahoma, burst into
21-0 halftime lead and pouredi
on in the second half with Rod
gers and Kinney providing th
fireworks.
Kinney, who got Nebraska's fir,
score in the initial quarter, smash
ed over right guard to open t h
Cornhusker's scoring barrage i
the second half.
* * *
Sooners smash
MANHATTAN - Greg Pruit
scored three touchdowns and s
a Big Eight Conference one-gam
rushing record of 294 yards Sa
turday as the second-ranked O
lahoma Sooners overwhelme
Kansas State 75-28.
The old rushing record of 55
was set by Coloradoragainst Uta
in 1958. Oklahoma's 785 tote
yards also bettered the Big Eigh
mark of 675 set by Colorad
against Air Force a year ago.
Mildren and Pruitt were th
boys who really broke the backs c
the Wildcats, who wilted quickl
after they pulled up to withi
21-14 with 9:24 left in the firE
half.
The Sooners added three m o r
touchdowns in those last n i n
minutes to lead 41-14 at'the inter
mission.
Stanford stunned
STANFORD, Calif. - Don Swet
kicked a 27-yard field goal f
Washington State as time ran oL
yesterday to give the Cougars
shocking 24-23 upset over lotih

s-
a
it
l-
ie
st
1-
e
n
tt
et
le
d
al
It
o
le
of
ly
n
st
'e
e

Garcia.
Auburn glides
AUBURN. Ala. - Sophomore
linebacker Mike Flynn, scoring on
a fumble recovery and intercept-
ing a pass to set up another touch-
down, stole the show from an er-
ratic Pat Sullivan as fifth-ranked
Auburn sputtered to a 35-13 foot-
ball victory over Clemson yester-
day.
Sullivan, the nation's leading
passer, completed 15 of 31, well
below his 62.8 per cent for the
first five games of the season.
But it was enough to move him
into sixth place among the na-
tion's all-time total offense leaders
in collegiate football.

Yellow Jackets roll
NEW ORLEANS-Georgia Tech
quarterback Eddie McAshan con-
nected on a 30-yard touchdown
pass midway through the fourth
period to preserve a 24-16 victory
over Tulane before 50,248 f a n s
here yesterday.
McAshan's fourth quarter touch-
down pass to flanker Tom Lang
came on a fourth-and-eight play
and put the Yellow Jackets ahead
24-10 with 10:44 to play.
Pitt pummeled
NEWTON, Mass. - Two fourth
quarter fumble recoveries by line-
backer Gregg Dziama set up a
touchdown and a field goal yes-

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Mi ddides win. terday as Boston College erupted
ANNAPOLIS - A determined for 17 points and a 40-22 football
Navy football team took advant- victory over Pittsburgh.
age of four fumbles and a trio of Eddie Rideout, who scored BC's
interceptions yesterday to upset first touchdown, took a pitchout
19th ranked Duke 15-14 before a from quarterback Ray Rippman
homecoming crowd of nearly 25,- and raced 27 yards around left end
a f d hinbruuw at the Unuint f

f

11

II:

CHECKMATE

State Street at Liberty

I

The University Cellar
in the Union basement
proudly announces the arrival of
COMMANDER CODY'S
LOST IN THE OZONE
priced at onl Y
$3.49

G Q or a touc aown at tue opening of
r- the final quarter giving BC a 29 B
The final Navy score came with 22 lead. s
only 29 seconds left when sopho-
more quarterback Fred Sutvek
connected with running back Andy TRIPLE DISASTER:
et Pease on a three-yard pass, giv-
or ing the Middies their second vic-
tt tory against five defeats.
ah * * *chg n
Buffs breezeM ihga 1
BOULDER, Colo. - ReserveSeiaToheDlyI
quarterback Joe Duenas ignited saC pecial To The Daily I
slumbering Colorado offense and CHICAGO-In what had to be mer
slben Coloradto oense ad their most disastrous road t r i p tim
J. B. Dean booted two long fi ever, the Michigan ruggers ran lea
goals as the 11th ranked Buffaloes eeteMcia ugr a la
into a plethora of problems and sec
blitzed Missouri 27-7 yesterday in left Chicago's Grant Park yester- rigi
a Big Eight football game here, day with three dissappointing de- the
Duenas, a 5-8, 174-pound soph- feats, the
omore, drove the Buffs to a touch- es Mtor
down on his first series at t h e The Michigan Blues were dumpedIQ
.hem i th seon qurte, tenonce each by Palmer. College and
.helm in the second quarter, then n Ccg iosw1t c les
diretedthe totwoinsrane ;the Chicago Lions, while the Mich-le
drected them o two rane igan Golds were thrashed by the end
scores in the fourth quarter as CU Chicago "B" squad, !the
boosted its record to 6-1. The Tig- B the
Sexs fell to 1-6.
- K
Lions lash oyola spl
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -
G nn State's unbeaten, seventh-
ranked Nittany Lions entertained 0
scouts from the Orange, Cotton
and Sugar bowls with a 66-14
f ootball victory over Texas Christ-
inn yesterday as hard running By CHUCK BLOOM ter

ruggers drop three
n the opening encounter, Pal- tingent of Palmer players kept
r jumped off to a 7-3 half- L-arson from touching the ball
e advantage only to see its down, and the try was nullified.
d almost disappear in the final Michigan continued to press the
onds. Playing inspired rugby opposing goal but the combination
'ht to the finish, Michigan drove of a slippery field and a stingy A
ball deep into .Palmer's terri- Palmer defense kept the Blues
y to set up the stunning -climax. from scoring.
quint Larson broke several tack- A series of errant passes spelled
and moved 20 yards into the Ithe final doom for the ruggers as
the game ended, 7-3.
[-zone in what appeared to be After the Palmer setback, the
tying try. But a swarming con- Blues were completely demoralized
and their following performance
'showed it. C h i c a g o easily con-
iV es "lue quered, 15-4.
S I) fj The Golds ran into similar prob-
lems in their encounter with the
Chicago "B" team as they came
out on the short end of a 15-0
0O '11(15 score.
The passing attack completely
dissolved as the poor weather con-
ed with three tallies of its own. ditioic didn't help the alread

Associated Press
NOTRE DAME'S Andy Huff (20) plunges the final yard fora
irst quarter touchdown in yesterday's clash with USC at South
Bend. Although unsuccessful in this attempt, the Trojan defense
tiffened later in the game as Southern Cal upset the Irish, 28-14.

-The Centicore Bookshop
Ivan Illich's
Celebration of Awareness

1I

TnA V

NLY Y

..._. ..

I VvAI D EnIm
A VERY FUNNY,
VERY INTELLIGENT
VERY AFFECTING MOVIE!"
-VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. TIMES

m

"A MAD, MAD MOVIE. DEVASTATINGLY
FUNNY. AND COMICALLY DEVASTATING"
-JUDITH CRIST. NBC-TV

20th Century-Fox presents
DOALDRG UEFIFRS
IELLIOTTGOULD P [R3~LITE
i*w* MARCIA RODO wuw,,VINCENT GARDENIA EUZABETH WiSON ONKORKES 99
o.see, ALANi ARKIN a, JACK BRODSKY s«..g,,rJES FEIFFERE
AUD. A, ANGELL HALL
SHOWN AT 5-7-9 & 11 P.M. ONLY
(Tickets for all shows on sale at 4:30)
presented by Orson Welles

Saturday and Sunday
(Comed ie Franca ise )
as an aging musician
and hs six children
8 prn. 1429 Hill 50C

The weather may have been In the final period, fans saw poor ball handling.
wet and muggy, but yesterday in three goals scored in a period of
Matt Mann Pool the action was 59 seconds, which was an indica-
wet and heavy. Michigan's water tion of the torrid pace set by both -
polo tournament concluded this squads.
weekend with a pair of excellent Outstanding for Loyola w a sSES
matches. goalie John Pflaumer, who stopped
Yesterday afternoon featured a several sure goals. Along with him,
hard fought game between Mich- Loyola had a five goal game from GRIDDE PICKINGS
igan and Loyola of Chicago with Dahms and the hat trick from Michigan 35, Minnesota 7
Dahm andthe at tick romMichigan State 34, Iowa3
the Ramblers winning 11-8. Clark. Illinois 21, Purdue 7
Though the game was not de- Michigan was led-by goalie Stu Northwestern 24, Indiana 10
cided on penalties as are most Isaac, who played very well, Mc- Ohio State 31, Wisconsin 6
water polo matches, the referees Carthy with his four' goals, and Iowa State 40, Kansas 24
Washington 38, Oregon state 14
dealt out numerous technicals as two goals from Chris Hansen. 28, otre De 14
the tempers rose with the action. In the first game of the morn- Texas A.&M. 10, Baylor 9
Michigan started off quickly, ing, Indiana destroyed an inept Bowling Green 33, Miami 7
with Captain Steve McCarthy Michigan State team, by shutting Boston 28, Rhode Island 7
striking at the 0:31 mark of the them out 22-0. The Hoosiers were I Boston College 40, Pittsburgh 22
striking-.Th Hoies reIBucknell 33, Lafayette 0
opening quarter. The goal was Mc- led by Gary Hall's five goals. Hall, Pacific 30, Montana 14
Carthy's first of three in the one of the world's outstanding villanova 24, Tampa 3
game. swimmers, looked right at home Georgia Tech 24, Tulane 16
The lead was shortlived how- playing polo. -Syracuse 63, Holy Cross 21
I Monana tate at Idaho State, inc.
ever, as in the next four minutes, In the weekend's best game, ( Connecticut 3, Massachusetts 3
Bob Dahms of Loyola had put his Loyola out-hustled, out-swam but Wilmington 27, CWRU 12
team ahead for good. A pair of didn't out-score Indiana. T h e DEast
goals by Dahms and John Clark Hoosiers were the faster team but Der 48, atChester8
E. trodsbrg 8,MansfleYM St. 13
put the Ramblers up 6-3 at half. failed to utilize it as they beat New Hampshire 37, Northeastern 7
McCarthy's play was excellent but Loyola, 9-6. IU's Larry Barbiere, St. John's N.Y. 48, Manhattan 8
the Wolverine fast break was con- led the Hoosiers with a trio of Navy 15, Duke 14
stantly thwartedgoas. Hoosier goalie Tate H o Princeton 31, Pennsylvania 0
In the final frame, down 8-4, played a brilliant game in holding Columbia 17, Rutgers 16
Michigan began to apply enor- off the inspired Ramblers. Penn State 66,"'Texas Christian 14
mous pressure which resulted in Midwest
four goals. But offense was not '*' ' Adrian 21, Olivet College 0
the est efese a Loola ounCentral Michigan 47, Eastern Illinoi
nse as Loyola coun Billboard Cornell College 24, Coe College 12
___________________________Dakota State College 17, Black
The Michigan hockey t e a m Hills State 13
Try Our New . ? ,....~..
Tr Mcg hkytaTse Michigan 31, Wisconsin, Mi

cwuy

j1

w

4

-A DOUBLEDAY ANCHOR PAPERBACK-

Only a cultural and institutional revolution which re-
establishes man's control over his environment can arrest
the violence by which development of institutions is now
imposed by a few for their own interest. Maybe Marx has
said it better, criticizing Ricardo and his school: "They
want production to be limited to useful things,' but they
forget that the production of too many useful things
results in too many useless people."
-Ivan Illich
- - - - - - - - - -

ff S
- ~~~J
cap
4r

is 14
31-

HAIRSTYLISTS!
* Gerry Erickson
* Dennis Shan r
DASCOLA BARBERS
near Michigan Theater

Degins is iogamnur nu
ule on Nov. 12-13 with. two
games against Western Ontario.
Both games will be played at
the Michigan Coliseum, starting
at 8:00 p.m.
Public season reserved tickets
will go on sale at the Michigan
Athletic Department on Mon-
day, Oct. 25.

wauxee u
-Moorhead State 50, Southwest
Minnesota 14
Southwest
Southern Methodist 18, Texas Tech 17
Arkansas 60, North Texas State 21
a Texas 39, Rice 10
- East Texas State 44, Stephen
F. Austin 22
Texas Lutheran 58, Austin College 21
South
Alabama 34, Houston University 20
Auburn 35, Clemson 13
Louisville 21, Wichita State 5
Mississippi 28, Vanderbilt 7
North Carolina Central 7, Maryland
State 0
Shepard College 37, Towson State 0
Tennessee 10, Mississippi State 7
Fairmont 17, Concord College 12
Te--as Southern'23, Mississippi Valley 0
Virginia Union 21, Norfolk Stat0 0
Georgia 34, Kentucky 0
West Virginia 43, Temple 33
Florida 27, Maryland 23
North Carolina 7, Wake Forest 3
Arizona State 60, New Mexico 28
Richmond 20, Furman University 0
Virginia Tech 37, Ohio 29
West Kentucky 16, East Kentucky 7
Oregon 33, San Jose State 14
Stanford 24, Washington State 23
Air Force 17, Colorado State 12
SColorado 27, Missouri 7
Texas, El Paso 12, Wyoming 7

A Full Line of Doubleday Books
and Anchor Books
336 Maynard-663-1812
1229 South University-665-2604

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