Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1971 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1971 Cornhuskers crush By The Associated Press LINCOLN - Johnny Rodgers scored two touchdowns, including. a 62-yard punt runback, and Ne- braska's strong defense throttled Iowa State yesterday as the top- ranked Cornhuskers coasted to a 37-0 Big Eight football victory. Rodgers scored Nebraska's first touchdown on a 10-yard end around in the first quarter, and his bril- liant broken field punt return late in the second quarter helped Ne- braska to a 20-0 halftime lead. Sophomore Rich Sanger booted- field goals of 26, 27 and 39 yards when Iowa State's stingy defense gave up yardage to the Cornhusk- ers but stiffened when Nebraska threatened to score. Meanwhile, the ferocious Corn- husker defense led by end Willie Harper and middle guard Rich Glover intercepted three passes to set up Nebraska's touchdowns and allowed Iowa State just 106 yards total offense. yardage rushes yesterday, but came up with two long runs and Jack Mildren's 44-yard pass to Al- bert Chandler for a 20-3 Big Eight Conference victory over Missouri. Linebacker Mark Driscoll grab- bed Greg Hill's blocked 28-yard field goal attempt and rambled 78 yards for a first period touchdown. After Hill's 34-yard field goal cut the margin to 6-3, Roy Bell broke through Missouri's tough de- fense and rced 78 yards two scrimmage plays later. Mildren, who in previous games had been extremely successful with the wishbone triple option, turned mostly to straight-ahead power plays with Leon Crosswhite, Greg Pruitt and Bell slamming into the line time after time. S* * Nittany Lions roar UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - Ly- dell Mitchell, displaying brilliant runningy ability. scored five touch- pound Mitchell ran for 126 yards and scored four times as the Lions built a 28-13 lead. He broke the Penn State career rushing yardage and the season rushing records, both held by Len. ny Moore. On the first Penn State pay from scrimmage, Mitchell scam- pered off tackle 33 yards for a touchdown. Later he added a one-yard touchdown burst and two more touchdown runs from the 3-yard line. He scored from the f-ur in the second half. * * * yard touchdown run capped of 77 yards. In the next 17 minutes, t] defense held Pitt without down, while Notre Dame in its lead to 28-0, en route seventh triumph againstc feat. Notre Dame's first two downs came on runs of n six yards by Parker. Guly scored three straight touc on one-yard runs. Iowa a drive Auburn ambles he Irish AUBURN-Pat Sullivan te a first up with Terry Beasley for cressed touchown passes and three; to its other to Dick Schmalz to giv one de- burn a 30-21 football victory terday over Mississippi Stat( touch- Mississippi State scored ine and times in the final three m as then of the Southeastern Confe chdowns game on passes by substitute terback Billy Baker. tate Fifth-ranked Auburn displayed an improving ground game as amed Tommy Lowry broke loose for sev- two eral long runs, including one N ali- touchdown sprint which went 28 e Au- yards. yes- Mississippi State went scoreless e. until Baker threw a 19-yard touch- three down pass to Jay Hughes with Minutes, 2:41 left in the game. Then before rerce the Auburn defenders could regain quar- their balance, Baker threw an her to Bill Buckley for nine yards. I A BLUES WIN 25-13: Rice knots Razorbacks HOUSTON-Bill McClard booted ' Rg e s a pressure-cooker 45-yard field goal as time ran out in the game to give the Arkansas Razorbacks a By CHUCK DRUKIS 24-24 tie with Rice yesterday after Despite the hyperborean weath- the Owls had stormed to a second- er yesterday afternoon, Michigan's half lead on two touchdown passes Rugby Football Club burned the trim Hoosiers twice I - s 1U11111119 muill', jCJ± t LY 14C1- M *downs, rushed for 209 yards and Oakies clip Mizzou broke two more Penn State records as the Nittany Lions smothered COLUMBIA, Mo.-Second-ranked Maryland 63-27 yesterday. Oklahoma resorted mostly to short-' In the first half alone, the 200- by Bruce Gadd.- ,The aroused Owls took a 24-13 lead early in the fourth quarter: when Gadd threw a 34-yard touch- down strike to split end Bob Brown. But Arkansas quarterback Joe Ferguson, the Southwest Confer- ence's leading passer, whipped the Razorbacks on a 53-yard drive to pull Arkansas to a 24-21 deficit with seven minutes to play. Tail- back Mike Saint went the final yard. Irish club Pitt PITTSBURGH - Eight - :anked Notre Dame parlayed a trcng defense and pile-driving running of Ed Gulyas and Larry Parker into a 56-7yvictory over Pitt yesterday. Only 4:33 had elapsed in the first period when Parker's nine- ti r ni 6 t. 1 Indiana Hoosiers twice 25-13 and 8-3. The Blue team scorched In- diana for 25 points in the first half, and then complacently held on in the second half for their sixth win in nine fixtures while the Gold scored a try in each half to extirpate their seventh victory in nine encounters. Ron Smith, Michigan's blind side wing, electrified a rather sparse crowd of avid rugby fans early in the first half with a 65 yard run for a try. Smith picked up a loose ball out of a lineout and charged just barely inbounds past the Hoosiers. Once in the clear, Smith dummied to Terry Larrimer to draw the Indiana full- back out of the play and sprinted the last 40 yards untouched. Steve Chapman converted. Minutes later, Michigan struck again. Cleland Child gathered up the ball in a loose ruck deep in Indiana territory and passed to Larrimer who passed out to B il l Mitasik for the try. A strong gust of wind pushed Chapman's con- version attempt to the right. Indiana and Michigan then ex- changed penalty kicks. The Hoos- iers converted a 15 yarder when - SPECIAL - Fish Dinner $1.00 reg. $1.25 Lord Nelson's 1315 S. University 4 Michigan was detected off side on a kick. Chapman split the uprights on a 25 yarders when Indiana was penalized for being off side in a set scrum. Michigan's hustling offense struck twice more before the close of the first half. Mitasik blocked an Indiana fly kick, caught th ball himself, and dashed 60 yards down the near sideline for a try. Again Chapman converted. When Michigan again drove into Indiana territory, Larrimer kicked ahead to the left where Child scooped up the ball and touched it down between the Hoosier goal posts. Chapman successfully cmn- verted, making the half time score 25-3. After regrouping their forces at halftime, Indiana struck twice within ten minutes early in t h e second half, and threatened to get back in the ball game. The Hoosiers fell on a loose ball in the Michigan endzone after a loose ruck. The conversion at- tempt, however, squibbed to the right. After receiving the kick, Indiana again drove into Michigan terri- tory and scored a try on some second effort running by their backs. This time the conversion was good. But both teams settled down the rest of the way in a scoreless bat- tle of the defenses to give Michigan the win. The Gold-Indiana game was equally exciting. Michigan took an early lead when Rob Huizenga bowled over several Indiana tacklers on his way to a 40 yard try. The con- version failed. Indiana came right back with a 30 yard drop kick by their number eight. On a line out, the Gold failed to cover the forward who had drop- ped back, thus allowing him a free opportunity to drop kick. T h e score remained 4-3 until half- time. Michigan's defense stiffened in the second half to shut out t h e Hoosiers while Jerry Shoalman re- -overed a ball in the Hoosier end- zone to preserve the Gold victory. By The Associated Press tics posted their eighth victory in DETROIT-Johnny Bucyk snap- 10 starts to remain atop the ped a scoreless deadlock at 4:29 league's Atalntic Division. Don of the third period with his seventh Nelson contributed 24. goal of the season and the Boston Portland was led by Sidney Bruins went on to beat the Detroit Wicks, who scored 25 points be- Red Wings 2-1 in a National fore fouling out with 91/2 minutes Hockey League game yesterday. left. Stan McKenzie contributed 22. Bucyk's goal came on a rebound * * * after Detroit goaltender Al Smith had made a save on a shot from Colonels clp Nets the point by center Fred Stand- LOUISVILLE-Dan Issel scored field and climaxed a Bruins flurry 36 points-18 in each half-and which saw Boston outshoot De- Artis Gilmore grabbed 22 rebounds troit, 22-8, in the period. to pace the Kentucky Colonels to Phil Esposito, the NHL's scor- a 102-97 American Basketball As- ing champion last season, scored sociation victory over the New what proved to be the winning York Nets last night. goal five minutes later on a power Paced by guard Bill Melchionni, play effort with Detroit's Guy who had 29 points, the Nets led Charron in the penalty box. most of the way, with a 53-43 half- * * * time ed e and a 77-74 ma,'n v ft~r r a , " i . T -Associated Press LYDELL "SEE HOW HE RUNS" MITCHELL (23) Penn State back, evades two Maryland defenders as he breaks Lenny Moore's career record of 2,380 yards. Mitchell gained 209 yards in the Nittany Lions' 63-27 rout of Maryland yesterday at University Park. Red Wingicd,2=1, sie'Buck s pound Pistons . VI Wouldn't yuratherfy TRAVEL offers REDUCED, airfares with reservations on American Airlines to New York " San Francisco " Los Angeles SIGN-UP FOR CHRISTMAS BEFORE NOV. 20 UAC TRAVEL, MICHIGAN UNION, 763-2147 ( I,1 THE 71-72 STUDENT DIRECTORY IS HERE GET IT-NOV. 8, 9, 10, 11 In your favorite dorm dinner line WATCH FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS IN YOUR DORM ALSO AT MICHIGAN DAILY BUILDING For the student body: Genuine Authentic " Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to 50 State Street at Liberty Read and Use Daily Classifieds If IiMMES v/w Pllu -Daily-John Upton MICHIGAN'S RUGBY team gets scrummy, or rather chummy, with the Indiana rugby club. in yesterday's action. The ruggers wrinkled the Hoosiers twice. The Blue team romped 25-13, while the Gold team eked by 8-3. Daily Classifieds Bring Results KICKOFF - Saturday, Nov.13 Crister Auditorium, 1:30 PM Tickets $2, $4 at Michigan Ticket Offices ~Lh -at Hoover and State Bucks smash Pistons MILWAUKEE - The Milwaukee Bucks, with Kareem Jabbar scor- ing 29 points, shook off a slow start2last nights to take a 106-78 National Basketball Association victory over the Detroit Pistons. With the game tied at 32-32 after a sluggish 19 minutes of play, the Bucks outscored Detroit 16-4 in the last five minutes of the first half to take a 48-36 lead. The spurt came after the Bucks used a three-guard offense of Jobn McGlocklin, Lucius Allen and Os- car Robertson. Jabbar, who scored 18 points in the first half against Detroit cen- ter Bob Lanier, added 11 in the final two quarters while sitting out about 10 minutes. Lanier led the Pistons wit1 22 points. Celtics clout Portland BOSTON-Captain John Havlicek and reserve back-court veteran Art Williams combined for 59 points in sparking the- Boston Celtics to a 124-109, National Bas- ketball Association victory over the Portland Trail Blazers last night, Havlicek scored 32 and Williams hit a career high of 27 as the Cel- For the student body: FLARES by ~Levi Farah Wright aLee, ~'Male I The Price-ONLY ONE DOLLAR 1,1110 C ur' l1 a . ,-fit...a~gl al three periods. But the Colonels pulled ahead ate 87-85 when Issel fed Cincy Powell for an easy layup with 6:43 re- maining, and the Nets never re- gained the lead. Melchionni hit three baskets in a row to pull New York within one at 97-96 with only 2:05 show- ing, but 7-foot-2 rookie center Artis Gilmore hit a basket for the Co- lonels and Powell added two free- throws to ice the win. ii I 1^fI 1 rR AII IA r" II N-U- ;; i i INUVLM ULK ,LkII FAIR ullilli I hUIEv GRIDDE PICKINGS Michigan 63, Iowa 7 Michigan state 17, Ohio State 10 Wisconsin 14, Purdue 10 Northwestern 41, Minnesota 20 Illinois 22, Indiana 21 Notre Dame 56, Pittsburgh 7 Nebraska 37, Iowa State 0 4 Stanford 20, UCLA 9 Texas A&M 27, SMU 10 Boston College 10, Syracuse 3 Georgia Tech 34, Navy 21 Washington 30, California (Berkeley) 7 Lafayette 27, Gettysburg 12 Tennessee 35, South Carolina 6 Duke 31, West virginia 15 Massachusetts 38, Holy Cross 27 Kansas State 35, Oklahoma State 23 Dayton 20, Xavier 10 Daily Libels 99, Oklahoma 0 (forfeit) EAST Army 30, Rutgers 17 Columbia 31, Dartmouth 29 Cornell 21, Brown 7 Penn State 63, Maryland 21 Princeton 21, Harvard 10 Villanova 48, Boston Univ 0 Yale 24, Pennsylvania 14 Colgate 47, Bucknell 24 Delaware-49, Lehigh 22 Temple 40, Rhode Island 15 SOUTH Auburn 30, Mississippi State 21 Ohio 30, Tulane 7 South Mississippi 38, VMI 0 Georgia 49, Florida 7 Kentucky 14, vanderbilt 7 MIDWEST Colorado 35, Kansas 14 Toledo 23, Northern Illinois 8 Wichita State 34, Colorado State 14 Miami (OHIO) 7, Western Michigan 6 Kent State 21, Marshall 0 Louisville 17, Tulsa 0: Oklahoma 20, Missouri 3 FAR WEST Idaho 24, Weber State 20 New Mexico 57, Utah 39 Southern Cal 30, Washington State 20 Oregon 23, Air Force 14 Montana 30, Montana State 0 Wyoming 31, Utah State 29 Wyoming 31, Utah State 29 Alaska vs. Juneau, ppd. (tidal wave) SOUTHWEST Arkansas 24, Rice 24 Texas 24, Baylor 0 TCU 17, Texas Tech 6 1NBA Philadelphia 101, Atlanta 96 Boston 124, Portland 109 Buffalo 130, Chicago 99 Milwaukee 106, Detroit 78 Cincinnati 110, Phoenix 95 ABA Memphis 122, virginia 121(ot) Kentucky 102, New York 97 Utah 108, Indiana 107 (ot) Dallas 97, Carolina 92 Floridians 136, Pittsburgh 121 NHL Mon,..tral .1 Chicago t.1 0 0 WHEN: Sunday, November 14, 12-6 P.M. WHERE: Michigan Union Ballroom WHAT: Artists Displaying and Selling T Crafts AND Free Entertainmen WHO: Open to Everyone; No Admission Charge CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty heir it 1i Concerned About the Urban Health Crisis? 11 11 II