31M Sunday September 20, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Svnday, September 20, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _acie Sev.n s UNITED Travel StandBy Desk Are you intere:ted in Group Travel or looking for a place to buy a Youth Card for Commercial Airlines? Interested in what your chances are to fly home staniA by at Thanksgiving? UAC travel will have this inforrmaifiorn for you. An airline representative will be in the office on Tuesday and Thursday froni 1:00 to 3:0. COME SEE US: 2nd floor Conference Room Michigan Union 763-2147 Penn St UCLA 0 By The Associated Press UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - Mike Cooper, Penn State's first black quarterback, passed for two touchdowns arid ran for another as the Nittany Lions defeated Na- vy 55-7 yesterday. For Penn State,' it was their 22nd straight victory and extended their unbeaten string to 31 games, both the long-: est, major college streaks in the nation. After a scoreless first period, Penn State blew the game openI with four second quarter touch- downs the first on an 8-yard run by Franco Harris. Cooper passed 21 yards for a TD to Edmonds,! plunged a yard for another and connected w i t h Edmonds again for a 27-yard score before the half ended. ate routs Navy; vertakes Pitt Penn State's hi'gh-powered of-|' fense completed its days w o r k with long third period touchdown strikes of 50 yards on a punt re- turn by Mike Smith, and a 53- yard scoring run from scrimmage by Lydell Mitchell, 15-yard TD pass to Glen Cole in the fourth period by second string quarter- back Bob Parsons, and a 2-yard run by Mike Reitz. Reitz a 1 s o kicked six extra points. Trailing 35-0, Navy scored at 14:04 of the third period againstj gan threw a 20-yard touchdown pass and ran for another score to give Pitt a 15-10 halftime lead. Dummit led UCLA 74 yards in eight plays after opening second half kickoff and capped the.-drive with an eight-yard pass to Reggie Echols in the end zone. Three plays after Pitt got the ball on the ensuing kickoff, run- ning back Dennis Ferris fumbled on the 37 and UCLA's F r a n k Jones recovered. * * * 44 tA.G /rienc/4L d:iC ej / ni" le Ader -- The University of Michig (i e. theory and prerequis offers you EXPERIEN( layout, design and co top .1 M~on-Fi, - isin Career? Penn State's second stringers af- ter recovering a fumble at its 49. The Middies drove 51 yards 'on seven plays with sophomore Andy Pease bolting across from the 1. Bruins bounce back PITTSBURGH - Quarterback Dennis Dummit engineered t w o touchdown drives in the first five minutes of the second half as the UCLA Bruins came from behind to defeat the P it t Panthers 24-15 yesterday. The Bruins found the Panthers tough in the first half w h e n sophomore quarterback John Ho- TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 --- Wildcats wail LEXINGTON, Ky.-Kentucky's crushing defense overwhelmed Kansas State's highly touted pass- ing attack yesterday as the Wild- cats took a 16-3 football upset over 13th nationally ranked K- State. A pair of Kansas quarterbacks PENN STATE FUL -Lynn Dickey and Max Arreguin the Lion's 55-7 sla -found themselves on their backs test, but the star alone, as often as not as Dave the hapless Navy di Hagdt, Dave Roller and Wilbur Hackett led the Kentucky charge. Not only did Kansas State find CUBS WIN: its passing blunted, but the State ground attack wound up with a minus 91 yards, mostly from loss- es on pass attempts. Bc The score was 3-0 at halftime for State but Arvel Carrell's inter- ception late in the third period :'y The Associate set up Kentucky's first touchdown, NEW YORK - L with Cecil Bowens scoring from and f o u r relieverss the two. pitch a five-hitter a Hackett set up Kentucky's other place Pittsburgh Pir touchdown in the final minute New York 2-1 yesterd when he grabbed his second inter- the faltering Mets 31. ception on the State 22 and put hind the National L Kentucky in business only eight race. yards from the goal line. The victory kept th -Associated Press LLBACK Franco Harris (34) crashes through the Navy line for a first down in ughter of the Middies. Harris scored Penn State's first touchdown in the con- of the game was quarterback Mike Cooper, who passed for two scores against efense. top Mets to maiain lead pan only offers classroom exposure to advertising sites). « n CE in selling and servicing local advertisers, py writing, and promotions. by 420 Maynard St. .,and start your career d Press Luke Walker combined to nd the first rates topped ay, dropping I/ games be- eague E as t e Pirates'1%l games ahead of second place Chi- cago which beat Montreal. Robert Clemente, starting h is first game in more than a week, doubled home the Pirates first run and scored the other as Pittsburgh tagged the Mets with their fourth straight setback. Matty Alou got the Pirates started with a one-out single in AN APOLOGY The Sales and Promotions Manager of the Michigan Daily offers his sincere apol- ogy to President Nixon, his party, and representatives thereof on campus for any offense taken by a recent Daily advertisement soliciting salesmen in which Mr. Nix- on's picture was employed. No slur oh the President was 'Intended or contemplat- NHS N 5S 2 ' 'N 2e . The >Alb, =AfA > W S a i .t Thee aas Wordf rn Fso A Paree YOUR CHOICE OPEN DAILY 12 to 9--INCLUDING SUNDAY Just irrived An Instant Change or You ~~ Y N eE APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR Two Student Government Council vacancies (MEMBER-AT-LARGE SEATS) All five student positions on the Office of Student Services Policy Board Two Vacancies on the Bookstore Policy Board ('U' STORE BOARD OF DIRECTORS) Fill Out Applications and SIGN UP FOR INTERVIEWS at ] 546 Student Activities Bldg. Students from all schools and colleges, graduates and undergraduates are urged to apply. I I the third against loser Gary/Gen- try. He moved up on an infield out and then raced home on Cle- mente's drive off the left center field wall. Clemente, who had missed 13 games because of an ailing back, went to third when centerfielder Tommie Agee bobbled his hit and then scored a moment later on Willie Stargell's single. It stayed that way until th e sixth when the Mets loaded the bases with none out on a single by Donn C"endenon and walks to Ron Swoboda and Joe Foy. Expos exposed MONTREAL - Johnny Callison crashed a two-run homer and Joe Pepitone and JimHickman drove in two runs each as the Chicago Cubs riddled Montreal 8-4 yester- day for their third straight victory and remained within reach of the National League's East Division lead. The Gubs overcame a 3-2 deficit with a two-run rally in the fourth inning and Callison's 19th homer of the season climaxed a decisive four-run burst in the eighth, en- abling southpaw Ken Holtzman to stagger to his 16th victory of the season. GjMajor League ' Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE r' A UNION-LEAGUE m:{r: ;; and Baltimore New York Boston Detroit Cleveland Washington Minnesota Oakland California Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago East W 97 85 78 76 73 70 West 90 844 79 59 58 53 L 53 67 73 75 78 79 60 68 72' 90 93 94 Pct. .647 .559 .517 .503 .483 .470 .600 .553 .523 .396' .384 .361 present EUROI MASS $159 MEETING Yesterday's Results Cleveland at Baltimore, inc. New York 7, Detroit 6 Boston 7, Washington 3, 1st Washington at Boston, inc., 2nd Oakland 2, California 1 Kansas City 4, Milwaukee 1 Minnesota at Chicago, inc. Today's Games New York at Detroit \ Washington at Boston Cleveland at Baltimore Minnesota at Chicago Kansas City at Seattle California at Oakland GB 13! 19% 21% 242/2 26% 11% 30% 32% 35% GB 1% 10 13 15% 12% 13% 22 22% 36 Wednesday, September 23-7:30 ;P.M. MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM A ALL NON-STOP JETS COMPLETE MEALS AND COMPLIMENTARY DRINKS CANCELLATION PRIVILEGES - $25 DEPOSIT HOLDS SEAT Pittsbu Chicag New Yc ISt. Lou Philade Montre NATIONAL'LEAGUE East W L Pe. rgh 81 69 .54 0 80 71 .53 ark 78 73 .51i [is 72 80 .47 lphia 69 83 .45 al 66 85 .43 West nati 95 57 .62 geles 82 69 .54 ancisco 81 70 .53 73 79 .48 n 72 79 ,47 ego 59 93 .28E ~0 . 4 34 7 5 3 6 80 7 89 CHRISTMAS PROGRAM Cincinn Los Ang San Fra Atlanta Houston San Di Flight No. SI 043 SI 053. SI 047 S1 048 Routing Det-Lon-Det Det-Haw-Det NY-Mad-NY NY-Ams-NY Deport 12 23 12 20 12 21 12121 Return 1J4 113 1 3 1/5 Weeks 2+ 2 2 2 Price $175 $249 $209 $175 SUMMER 1971 SI 007 S| SI 049 008 Det-Lon-Det Det-Ams-Lon-Det Det-Lon-Det SI 009 SI 001 SI 002 SI 010 SI 051 SI 052 SI 014 SI 030 Det-Lon-Det Det-Lan-Det Det-Lon-Det Det-Lon-Det Det-Lon-Det Det-Tok-Det Bost-Lon-Bost NY-Inn-NY 5, 5 56 515 5,'15 6 28 6 29 7i 2 81 7 31 5 14 A 626 618 616 6/24 8 15 8/28 8 26 8 19 91 8/31 8 '13 9 1 5 '4 7 12 8 8 7 4" 4 12 9 $158 $179 $159 $199 $219 $219 $219 $219 $429 $199 1290 I Yesterday's Results Chicago 8. Montreal 4 Philadelphia 10, St. Louis 6 Pittsburgh 2. New York 1 Cincinnati at Atlanta. inc. Los Angeles 6, Houston 5 San Francisco at San Diego, inc. Today's Games Chicago at Montreal Pittsburgh at New York, 2 Philadelphia at St. Louis Cincinnati at Atlanta Houston at Los Angeles San Francisco at San Diego TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL. 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