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November 21, 1971 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-11-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Wage Ten

(HE M(;.,MI(DAN L)AiLY

Sunday, November 21, 1971

Page Ten iHL MKJ-IKjAN DAILY Sunday, November21, 1971

LEVI'S
For the student body:
RDUROY
Slim Fits $6.98
(All Colors)
Bells $8.50
DENIM
Bush Jeans . $10.00
Bells $8.00
Boot Jeans $7 50
Pre-Shrunk $7.50
Super Slims $7.00
CHECKMATE-
State Street at Liberty
Daily Classifieds
Bring Results

'Husker-Tide tilt set;
Sugar bids Sooners

Stan ford

LSU BLASTS IRISH

Californija

I

From Wire Service Reports
Officials of the Orange and Sugar
Bowls announced yesterday that
they had snatched up four of the
nation's top five college teams to
play in their post-season classics'
Jan. 1. Top-ranked Nebraska and
fourth-rated Alabama will meet in
the Orange Bowl New Year's night,
while number-two Oklahoma and
number five Auburn will battle it
out earlier in the day at New Or-
leans in the Sugar Bowl,
Just which game will have the
greatest attraction will be deter-
mined within the next week, as
Nebraska and Oklahoma meet for
the Big Eight title on Thanksgiv-
ing, while Auburn and Alabam.a
will play each other next Saturday
for the crown of the Southeast Con-
ference.
Most of the other bowls also had
one or both of their participants
determined yesterday. Stanford in-
sured its spot in the Rose Bowl;
with a 14-0 victory over its only
possible challenger, California. The

Indians will join number-three
ranked Michigan in the battle at
Pasadena.
Penn State accepted a bid to the
Cotton Bowl, and Tennessee took
one to the Liberty Bowl, but they
will have to wait for the outcome"
of next week's Texas-Texas A&M'
contest to learn who their oppo-:
nents will be. Should Texas win, it
will oppose Penn State as South-'
west Conference champions, and'
Arkansas, as the Southwest's run-
ner-up, would take on Tennessee.
However, if Texas A&M should
triumph. Arkansas would host the
Cotton Bowl, and another opponent
for Tennessee would have to be
selected.
Several other teams earned bowl'
spots with wins yesterday. Colo-
rado's romp over Air Force gained
it a berth against Houston in
the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl. Rich-
mond's upset of William and Mary
meant that it will take on Toledo
in the Tangerine Bowl.
In the Peach Bowl, Mississippi
will take on Georgia Tech on Dec.
30, marking the fifteenth consecu-
tive year that Ole Miss will go to;
a bowl. North Carolina will oppose;
Georgia in the Gator Bowl, whilej
Iowa State will go against Loui-
siana State in the Sun Bowl.

By The Associated Press
STANFORD, Calif. - Stanford
quarterback Don Bunce threw a
58-yards touchdown pass to
Jackie Brown late in the second
period yesterday to break up a
defensive battle with California,
and the Rose Bowl-bound In-
dians rolled to a 14-0 victory in
the 74th Big Game with the
Bears.
The defensive unit of the Pa-
cific-8 champions held Cal to un-
der 100 net yards until, late in
the game, the Bears' Jay Cruze
completed a 40-yard pass from
his own one-yard line.
Cal, which had .slim Rose Bowl
hopes going into the game, never
got past the Stanford 24 on of-
fensive.
Tigers roar
BATON ROUGE, La.-Bert Jones
fired two touchdown passes and
scored another last night as 14th-
ranked Louisiana State earned a
berth in the Sun Bowl with a 28-8
nationally-televised football victory
over Notre Dame.
Notre Dame avoided a shutout

with 2:34 left in the game when nal seven and the extra point
Brown connected with Tom Gate- was added to tie the score.
wood on a seven-yard scoring pass. * *
Brown threw to Bob Minix for a Razorbacks sting
two-point conversion. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Wal-
ter Nelson and Mike Saint, sec-

B

Buffs stampede
BOULDER, Colo. - Colorado'st
dynamic offensive trio of Charlie
Davis, Clifford Branch and John
Traver overpowered Air Force
yesterday as the Buffs posted ai
convincing 53-17 football victory
in the season finale for both
teams.
Sophomore tailback Davis, com-
ing off his record - s'tting 324-
yard rushing effort last week,
romped for 196 yards and scored
two touchdowns. He became the
Big Eight Conference's all-time
leading sophomore rusher with
the performance.
Trojans draw
LOS ANGELES - Seven time
loser UCLA, forcing Southern
California into the faulty punt
which turned into a touchdown,
battled the heavily favored Tro-
jans to a 7-7 tie yesterday as the
bitter crosstown rivals completed
their college football seasons.
Meeting for the 41st time be-t
fore 68.426 and a national tele-t
vision audience, the Bruins went
into the third quarter trailing 7-0.c
Bruin defensive end Fred Mc-c
Neill put a big rush on the Tro-
jan punter Dave Boulware, halfc
deflecting the kick.t
It traveled onlyd
in four quick running plays,
UCLA went 30 yards and Mary
Kendricks bored through the fi-

ond teamers most of the season,
combined their talents yesterday
to give bowl-bound, Arkansas a
15-0 victory over Texas Tech in
Wolverines named
All-Americans
Three Michigan gridders were
named to the 1971 Football
News All-American team an-
nounced yesterday.'
Running back Billy Taylor,
zuard Reggie McKenzie and
'linebacker Mike Taylor are
members of the thirty-three
man squad.
Chosen as other running
backs were Greg Pruitt, of Ok-
lahoma, Bobby Moore, Oregon,
Johnny Musso, Alabama, Ed
Marinaro, Cornell, and Lydell
Mitchell of Penn State.
Also included were Michi-
gan State's Brad Van Pelt and
Nebraska's Jerry Tagge and
Johnny Rodgers.
the regular season finale for both
teams.
The victory assured the Raz-
orbacks of no less than a sec-
ond place finish in the Southwest
Conference. Arkansas' 5-1-1 in the
conference and Texas is 5-1 with
one game remaining against Tex-
as A & M on Thanksgiving.
The Razorbacks will play Ten-
nessee in the Dec. 20 Liberty Bowl

at Memphis if Texas beats A&M.
* * *
V ols stomp
LEXINGTON, Ky.-Carl John-.
son, the man who maybe shouldn't
have been there, dashed 85 yards
with a fourth-period interception
to give Tennessee a 21-7 football
victory over Kentucky y sterday
and a birth in the Dec. 20 LibertyE
Bowl at Memphis.
Cyclones breeze
AMES, Iowa - Bullish tail-
back George Amundson rushed
for a school record four touch-
downs and passed for a fifth yes-
terday as Iowa State blanked Ok-
lahoma State 54-0 in a Big Eight
Conference game and solidified an
expected Sun Bowl bid.
The victory-Iowa State's most
decisive since a 55-0 shutout of
San Jose State in 1959-ran the
Cyclones' record to 7-3, best in
11 years. Iowa State has a regu-
lar season game left next Satur-
day at San Diogeo State.
Tarheels blitz
DURHAM, N. C. - Tailback
Lewis Jdlley scored three touch-
downs as North Carolina's Tar
Heels crushed arch-rival Duke 38-
0 yesterday to win the Atlantic
Coast Conference championship
and receive a Gator Bowl bid..
A crowd of 51,500, including
three Gator Bowl representatives,
saw North Carolina finish the
regular season with a 6-0 ACC re-
cord and 9-2 over-all. The Tar
Heels lost only to Notre Dame and
Tulane.

Lions roar
PITTSBURGH - The sixth-
ranked Nittany Lions of State
trounced Pitt 55-18 yesterday,
hen accepted a bid to the Cot-
ton Bowl.
Penn State, undefeated after
10 games, will meet the South-
w st Conference titleholder in
the New Year's Day classic.
Sparked by the passing of John
Hufnagel and the running of re-
cord-breaking Lydell Mitchell,
Penn State exploded for four sec-
ond quarter touchdowns enroute
to their 35-0 halftime lead over
Pitt.
Cornell flies
PHILADELPHIA - Ed Marin-
aro, major college football's all-
time leading rusher, added the
one-season ground - gaining mark
to his bag of records yesterday,
romping for 230 yards and five
touchdowns in leading Cornell to
a 41-13 victory over Pennsylvania.
The triumph enabled the Big
Red to finish their season with
an 8-1 record, best in 22 years,
and a share of the Ivy League
footballstitle with Dartmouth,
which defeated. Princeton 33-7.
Indians scalp
PRINCETON, N.J.- Dartmouth
rolled over Princeton yesterday 33-
7 to capture a share of the Ivy
League championship with Cor-
nell.
The Indians ran up a 20-0
lead in the first half, capitalizing
on Princeton fumbles and inter-
ceptions.

I

University
Reformed
Church
1001 E HURON
at Fletcher

a'
I".r

i

I

I

10:30 a.m. "Discipleship with Integrity"
Speaker: BILL PANNELL
5:30 p.m. Student Supper
6:30 p.m. "Discipleship-How Radical Can
You Get.?
Speaker: BILL PANNELLp

Last GRAD
COFFEE HOUR
before Ihanksgiving
Tius. Nov. 23, 4-6 p.m.
4th floor Rackham
Come, meet new
friends, and have
j cider and doughnuts.

f

TV & Stereo Rentals
$10.00 per month
NO DEPOSIT
FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP
AND SERVICE
CALL:
NEJAC TV RENTALS
662-5671

1RD PERIOD FATAL:
Michigan icers fold to Badgers

' ___ I

I

For the student body:
FLARES
by
Levi
& Farah
* Wright
* Lee
" Male

By JOE PHILLIPS
MADISON - After playing twoI
periods of knock-down, shoot-'em-
up hockey, the Michigan Wolver-
ines fell apart and gave up six
third-period goals, to the Wiscon-
sin Badgers. The final score was
'1-2.
In the final period, the Blue Just
couldn't get it together. After only
a minute and 43 seconds of play,
the Badgers took the lead when
Jim Johnston took a pass from
Bryan Erickson and broke in on
the right wing. Michigan goalie
Karl Bagnell went down, and
Johnston poked it through his
pads to his stick side.
The Wolverines r o a r e d right
back to tie it up at 5:18 when
super-frosh Paul Andre Paris flip-
.3

ped the rebound over a sprawled
Dick Perkins.
But the Badgers needed only 23
seconds to take the lead right
back. Dean Talasouf set up line-
mate Norm Cherrey with a perfect
pass.
Wisconsin made it 4-2 at 8:07
when Paul Lannan rapped in Bo
Shaughnessy's feed pass.
The Badgers capitalized on some
shoddy play by the Wolverines
deep in Michigan's zone. Bob Lun-
deen was credited with an unas-
sisted goal, but that wasn't exactly
the case. After taking a pass-out
from an unidentified Michigan
player, Lundeen drilled a thirty-
footer past Bagnell.
A moment later Talasouf took a
pass from Dool and whipped it in
to make it 6-2. Michigan came
right back to score a goal of their
own but it wasn't allowed because
the referee claimed a Michigan
player kicked it in. Wolverine cap-

tain Brian Skinner protested but
to no avail.
Wisconsin clicked again late in
the period as right winger Gary
Kuklinski scored an unassisted
goal.
In the first period, the Wolver-
ines were more than holding their
own, when at 10:38, on an out-
standing individual effort, Badger
Jim Dool broke in from the left
wing and beat Michigan netminder
Karl Bagnell cleanly, neatly draw-
ing him out of position.
First period - SCORING: (W), Dool
(Lundeen, Talasouf) 10:38; (M) Cartier
(Neal) 14:05; PENALTIES (W) Rotsch
11:56; (M) Skinner 13:32; (W) Erickson
13:32; (M) Cartier 18:15.
Second period - No scoring. PENAL-
TIES: (M) Jarry 4:17; (M) Connelly
6:43; (W) Young 6:43;(M) Mallette 9:59.
Third period - SCORING: (W) John-
ston (Erickson, Winchester) 1:43; (M)
Paris (Cartier, Gagnon) 5:18; (W) Cher-
rey (Talasouf) 5:41; (W) L a n n a n
(Shaughnessy) 8:07; (W) Lundeen 15:51;
Talasouf (Dool) 17:53; Kuklinsky 18:42;
PENALTIES - (W) Cherrey 3:44; (M)
Donnelly 16:31.

w

-

-

CHECKMATE

I NEED
ROSE BOWL TICKETS
WRITE:
SPORTS TOUR
MR. LOGAN
2225 ELCAM INO
PALO ALTO, CALIF.
(415) 328-1580

College Scores

State Street at Liberty

-1

GRIDDE PICKS
MICHIGAN 10, Ohio State 7
Northwestern 28, Michigan State 7
Indiana 38, Purdue 31
Illinois 31, Iowa 0
Minnesota 23, Wisconsin 21
Stanford 14, California 0
Iowa State 54, Oklahoma State 0
North Carolina 38, Duke 0
Harvard 35, Yale 16
Colorado 53, Air Force 17
Arkansas 15, Texas Tech 0
Kansas 7, Missouri 2
Oregon State 30, Oregon 29
Southern Cal 7, UCLA 7
Washington 28, Washington State 20
Penn State 55, Pittsburgh 18
Virginia 29, Maryland 27
Home for Thanksgiving?
Help your friends
Help your neighbors
Help your state
Circulate petitions for
ABORTION
LAW REFORM
Pick up at ENACT,
2051 NAT. SCI. BLDG.
(9-3:30) or call 971-2413
GILBERT BURSLEY
State Senator

Syracuse 28, West Virginia 24
Louisiana State 28, Notre Dame 8
Morehead St. 10, Eastern Kentucky 7
EAST
Boston Univ. 33, New Hampshire 7
Cornell 41, Pennsylvania 13
Dartmouth 33, Princeton 7
Rutgers 28, Colgate 16
Temple 13, Villanova 13
Bridgeport 35, Adelphi 0
Conneticut 24, Holy Cross 17
NHL
Philadelphia 2, Montreal 2
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 2
Boston 2, Chicago 1
NBA
Detroit 105, Buffalo 96
Chicago 123, Boston 106
New York 125, Baltimore 114
ABA
Utah 103, Dallas 98
Kentucky 120, Carolina 107
The Original
PAUL CAMELET
Dean Tailor
for Men and Women
alterations and remodler, also
specialties in shortening ladies
coats, slacks, and skirts.
NO LONGER WITH
CAMELET BROS.
in business for himself
NO 3-4381
NEW LOCATION
321 S. MAIN
No. 204

1v

1217 S. University across from Campus'lheaterj

I

Here's Why Everybody Is
Coming to Campus Bike & Toy

I

4.
,.
"
'
'
p . t,
'
F -.
"y , '.
i
_
r '
r r';

To see the famous
LAND of TOYS
and
Exciting Games
Children's Educational Toys

OPENING CELEBRATION

i

Inaked
Natural Fooc

Ixl#c/i
ds Restaurant

Adult Crafts

Dippity Glass

Candle Making Kits

331 THOMPSON ST.
TAEA' V 7

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