Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 2, 1 571 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY i _. ._ F I I PURDUE, NORTHWESTERN FALTER At MEN'S FASHION CLOTHING MESFSINDo y o u rse lf a fav o r .. discover sportswear by V on ar Roses By MARC FELDMAN As the 1971 college football season rounds into its final three weeks, a January 1 trip to Pasadena is a bit surer for the Michigan football team. With Ohio State ineligible for the Roses by the still in effect no-repeat rule, Michigan has only Purdue and Michigan State as competition for the bowl. However, the Boilermakers and Spartans are not exactly breath- ing down Michigan's neck, as each trails by two games with just three to play. In a Saturday of upsets in the Big Ten, perhaps the big- gest shocker was averted by a stalwart Ohio State defense. The Buckeye line stopped Min- nesota quarterback Craig Curry inches short of the goal line on a two point conversion attempt to give Ohio State a pulsating blooming 14-12 victory over the Golden , Gophers.. The win kept OSU and Michi- B; gan in a tie atop the Big Ten} standings with identical 5-0 con- ference slates. Barring a rash of upsets in the next two weeks, M the Wolverines and Bucks will MICHIGAN settle the league title, for the Ohio State fourth straight year, on Novem- Purdue ber 20 in Ann Arbor. Michigan State Ohio State rallied from a Northwestern 6-0 halftime deficit with a Illinois touchdown in the third period Wisconsin and another in the fourth. Minnesota Woody Hayes' troops then stop- Io a ped the onrushing Gophers' last Iowa minute attempt to tie the score.. SATURDAY'S RESULTS Quarterback Curry was the MICHIGAN 61, Indiana 7 dominant force in the last ditch Ohio State 14, Minnesota Minnesota drive which culmi- Mich. State 43, Purdue 10 nated with his two yard run. Illinois 24, Northwestern7 Curry tried a similar roll-out Iowa 20, Wisconsin 16 play for the conversion and, in the ensuing pileup, it was not apparent whether or not he had sin's Rufus Ferguson in made it. The partisan Minnesota Ten rushing race, scamp crowd of 36,281 was hushed as an amazing 350 yards. H the unpiling procedure indicated ed 29 times and reached that the Bucks had held, on four occasions with The Gopher players were bit- 24, 59, 30 and 25 yards. ter about the officiating call Among a host of recor that ruled Curry short of a broke the NCCA singl touchdown. Curry, the Big Ten rushing standard of 347 total offense leader a year ago, set by Michigan's RonJ said, "I was definitely over. In in 1968. In addition, h my opinion we didn't lose this tered Michigan State rec game." career rushing yardage a Michigan State finally lived son rushing yardage. up to some of its pre-season ex- Daugherty was bubbli pectations by handily defeat- praise for Allen after th ing Purdue 43-10. The outcome "The greatest individua of the game wasn't as astound- formance I've seen in ing as was the ease with which . . . the best back in th State mowed down the Boiler- try", enthused the MSUc makers. More important to M1 In what Coach Duffy Daugh- fans, Purdue's loss droppe erty called the "best team per- two games back in the formance at MSU since 1966", ings and threw them int the Spartans, especially little team scramble for thir tailback Eric Allen, produced They now share second some astounding records. with Michigan State at3 Allen, who entered the game In still another upset, just two yards behind Wiscon- vitalized Fightin' Illini Ten Standings Conference W L T PF PA 12 7 5 5 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 0 0 2 2 3 3 3 3 5 for gridd ers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 176 148 110 128 109 61 99 79 53 39 56 110 68 90 83 132 90 175 All Game W L T PFP 8 0 0 316 39 6 1 0 197 79 4 3 1 152 156 4 4 0 161 106 4 4 0 128 146 2 6 0 75 200 3 4 1 178 190 3 5 0 144 178 1 7 0 79 200 GAMES GAN NEXT WEEK'S Iowa at MICHIC forI 339 yards in total offense and its high point production of the season. Quarterback Mike Wells com- pleted 10 of 20 passes for 1'78 s yards and two touchdowns, one A for 58 yards to John Wilson and the other to Garvin Roberson for 22 yards. Wells rounded out a fine performance with a 34- yard field goal and three con- versions as the Illini won their second straight for the first time since the 1967 season. The Iowa Hawkeyes finally got into the win column after seven embarrassing losses by edging Wisconsin 20-16. The win was Coach Frank Lauterbur's first since coming to Iowa from Toledo. Although Iowa's major offen- sive threat, Levi Mitchell, did not play against the. Badgers, quarterback Frank Sunderman and running back Craig Johnson more than made up for Mitch- ell's absence. Badger Rufus Ferguson led all rushers with 126 yards while scoring two touchdowns on runs of 4 and 8 yards. The latter gave Wisconsin a 16-13 lead midway through the final quar- ter, before Iowa drove 80 yards. -I i Michigan State at Ohio State Purdue at Wisconsin Minnesota at Northwestern Illinois at Indiana I GEORGE WASHINGTON got his SHAG at the U-M Barbers the Big ered for le rush- paydirt runs of ds, Allen e game 7 yards, Johnson ie shat- ords for and sea- ng with e game. al per- football e coun- coach. ichigan ed them stand- o a six- d place. d place 3-2. the re- of I111- nois pulled off their second shocker in as many weeks as they trimmed intra-state rival Northwestern 24-7. Last week the Illini knocked Purdue out of a first place tie by dealing the Boilermakers a 21-7 loss. Illinois, which had trouble scoring, much less /winning, in its first six games, broke loose t Stickmen win finale over stubborn Irish For the student body: 'A Genuine A' Authentic Navy For the man of action the Sherpa Coat of $65 rugged cotton suede with acrylic "sheepskin" PEA COATS "I The University of iMchigan la- crosse team kept its winning streak intact at ten in a row when it edged improving Notre Dame 5-4 Sunday in South Bend. Michigan's last loss was at the hands of Oberlin College last March in the first game of the 1971 season. Michigan has also extended its mastery over the Irish to four straight, including two regular season victories. Sunday's game demonstrated a marked improvement in Michi- gan's ball control game. The Wol- verines had spent the last two weeks of practice on the ball handling drills designed to streng- then that aspect of their game. Michigan scored twice in the second quarter, with Dick Dean shooting to go ahead goal on an assist from Don Holman. Soon afterwards, Holman again scored, this time with an assist from Pow- ers. But the Irish scored the next three goals, once before the half and twice in the third quarter. Two fourth quarter goals, the first a repeat of the Flanagan to Powers combination knotted the score. The winning goal was scor- ed by Dean unassisted. Michigan's defense with goalie Jay Johnson, Dave Fischer, Tim Cotter, and Pete "Cowboy" Lod- wick played a fine game. Johnson was credited with 18 saves for a .818 percentage. Moreover, the Wolverines received few penalties. In the "B" game, he Baby Blues avenged their prior defeat by whipping the Irish 3-1. Goalie Larry Cassel was superb in the goal, stopping 25 shots and clear- ing the ball to the offense ex- cellently. Michigan now hibernates for three months before the regular season practice begins in Febru- ary. JJ Gridde Pickings In one of the most incredible propaganda moves of the century, the slithering toads from UCellar are maintaining that their puny football team defeated the mighty undefeated-for-all-time Daily Libel Gridiron Machine Sunday morning at Ferry Field. This phony ba- loney represents yet another scurrilous attack on the clean-cut, down- home Libels by a group of hirsute self-styled revolutionaries. But it just ain't the truth, sports fans. The Libels brought their usual blitzkrieg down on the soft heads of the UCellar running dogs, walloping them by a decisive 99-0 count. A bit of humor was added to the otherwise ho-hum/rout when the Daily's Mr. ConstricTOR punted three stubby CellarDwellars (Mssrs. Pesick, Reisman and Straus) all the way back to their grungy rip-iff dens. A star was born Sunday for the precocious Libels in the form of boyish quarterback D.L. "Red" Weir, who launched countless pin- point bombs into the waiting digits of such dazzling Libel targets as Phalanges Phillips, Chip Papanek and Grasper Shackelford. This week-end cream will again come to the top as the Libels play WCBN, the now-dissolute Libel Alumni, or some equally motley team (Oklahoma?). And once again it will be "Daily Libels . . . can do!" 1. Iowa at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Michigan State at Ohio State 3. Purdue at Wisconsin 4. Minnesota at Northwestern 5. Illinois at Indiana 6. Alabama at Louisiana State 7. Notre Dame at Pittsburgh 8. Iowa State at Nebraska 9. Stanford at UCLA 10. Southern Methodist at Texas 11. Boston College at Syracuse 12. Navy at Georgia Tech 13. Washington at California 14. Lafayette at Gettysburg 15. South Carolina at Tennessee 16. West Virginia at Duke 17, Holy Cross at Massachusetts 18. Kansas State at Oklahoma State 19. Dayton at Xavier 20. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICH- IGAN DAILY LIBELS vs Oklahoma i Security Guards Supervisors BURNS INTERNATIONAL SECURITY SERVICES, INC., the world's leading private security agency, is seeking full and part- time security guards for employment in the Ann Arbor and sur- rounding areas. All applicants must be 21 years of age or older, and must be able to pass a strict background investigation which will include pre-employment and criminal record checks. Those applicants selected for employment will receive training and in- struction in physical and personal safety techniques, first aid, fire fighting and prevention, parkingand traffic control, interior and exterior security techniques, pass and badge procedures and other special training applicable to the assignment, as well as extensive on-the-job training. Applicants selected will receive premium wages and fringe bene- fits. Those having a particularly impressive security background will be given special consideration for supervisory positions. Applcants seeking full and part-time employment with excellent working conditions, and freedom from worry of seasonal layoffs, must apply at: 208 E. Washington Suite 201 Phone 662-4554 Ann Arbor, Michigan I I I