Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 20, 1970 o I Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 20, 1970 Aggies last gasp stuns Tigers; Longhorns gore Golden Bears Ilirni g( By The Associated Press I M utual murder BATON ROUGE - Sophomore quarterback Lex James ,uncorked' a 79-yard scoring pass to split end Hugh McElroy in the last 13 sec- onds as Texas A&M upset heavily favored Louisiana State 20-18 in the season's opener for the Bayou Tigers. James, a 5-foot-11 player, un- leashed his desperation heave to McElroy, who grabbed it near the sidelines and outran an LSU de- fender for the touchdown. Minutes earlier, place kicker Mark Lumpkin had booted field' goals of 21 and 41 yards to bring LSU back in front. Bears axed AUSTIN - Fullback S t e v e Worster blasted for three touch- downs and quarterback Eddie Phillips made a spectacular debut yesterday as No. 2 ranked Texas crushed California 56-15 in an intersectional game. Worster, a 208-pound senior All-America, rumbled for scores on runs of 2,11 and 9 yards-all in the first quarter. Phillips cruis- ed for touchdowns of 10 and 7 yards and handled the defending national champion's Wishbone-TI offense beautifully.. It was Texas' 21st consecutive victory over , three seasons and the awesome performance seemed to indicate the 'Horns are in good shape to defend their national title. * * * - Stanford bombastic STANFORD - Stanford quar- terback Jim Plunkett broke the Pacific-8 Conference career total offense record yesterday and threw the 36th touchdown pass of his college career as the fourth- ranked Indians belted San Jose State 34-3. Plunkett, a 6-3 senior, com- pleted 17 of 29 passesnfor 302 yards and ran for 30 yards in three quarters of play. That increased his 22-game total to 5,584 yards, which is 226 yards more than the old conference record set by Gary Beban of UCLA. Stanford rolled to a 21-0 lead early in the second quarter before Lafry Barnes gave the Spartans their only score, a 36-yarA field goal. PAUL CAMELET Dean Tailor for Men and Women alterations and remodeler, also specialties in shortening ladies coats, slacks, and skirts d NO LONGER WITH CAMELET BROS. in business for himself 1103 S. UNIVERSITY above the drugstore 663-4381 LOS ANGELES -Nebraska's Joe Orduna broke a 14-14 tie in the third quarter with an electrifying 67-yard touchdown run but Southern California struggled back with an 80-yard parade to gain a 21-21 tie with the Cornhuskers last night. The Trojans, ranked third nationally and heavily favored, trailed the surprising Nebras- kans throughout the game play- ed before 73,768-a contest that kept the crowd in a roar with many turnovers of the ball. Tailback Clarence Davis ram- bled nine yards to cap the 80- yard drive by Southern Cal, with 8:16 left to play. * * * Bulldogs clawed GAINESVILLE, Fla. - Quarter- back John Reaves threw an early touchdown pass to his favorite re- ceiver, Carlos Alvarez, then helped make a new star out of sophomore' Willie Jadkson yesterday as Flor- ida romped to a 34-13 Southeast- ern Conference football victory over Mississippi State. Jackson, Florida'# first Negro playero made spectacular sideline catches on 53-yard and 40-yard pass plays and doubled as running' back for key gains in a pair of. touchdown drives. * * * Orange destroyed HOUSTON-Terry Peel and Joe DeSpain, a pair of sophomore quarterbacks, directed the explo- sive Houston/ offense brilliantly last night as the Cougars defeat- ed Syracuse 42-15 in intersectional football before an Astrodome. t crowd of 40,439. While winning its 11th consecu- tive game, Houston scored touch- downs on five of the six times the Cougars had the ball in the first half. * * * Seminoles eaten ATLANTA-Georgia Tech jolt- ed Florida State with a pair of third period touchdowns, one a 22-yard pass from Eddie/McAsh- an to Larry Studdard, and then withstood a last quarter aerial as- sault to trim the Seminoles 23-13 yesterday in a regionally televised battle of Southern independents. Studdard caught the McAshan pass at the FSU eight after it was tipped by teammate Steve Harkey. Studdard then bounced off three FSU defenders and land- ed in the end zone with 1:53 re- maining in the third.quarter, giv- ing Tech a 21-7 lead. * * * 'Rebels fantastic MEMPHIS - Archie Marnning ran for two touchdowns and pass- ed for a third, leading Mississippi to a 47-13 football victory over Memphis State last night. Manning picked an inexperi- enced Memphis State defense: apart with his passing arm, andx got able assistance from tailback Randy Reed, who scored two touchdowns. Porkers gallop LITTLE ROCK-Arkansas tail- back Bill Burnett cracked Deal Walker's Southwest Conference career touchdown record with two six-pointers as the 11th ranked Razorbacks defeated Oklahoma State 23-7 last night. Burnett's touchdowns, his 39th and 40th as a Razorback, came on runs of 11 and 1 yards. Walker set the record of 38 touchdowns during his career at SMU. * * * Mountaineers high MORGANTOWN, W. Va.-Awe- some West Virginia rolled up a school record of 641 yards total offense here yesterday and crush- ed visiting Richmond 49-10 in a nonconference college football game. The Mountaineers exploded from a first quarter struggle, display- ing an offense strong both on the; ground and in the air and a de- fense that held Richmond to eight yards rushing for the afternoon. * * * Georgia inched NEW ORLEANS - Tulane took control of the football game in the third period and upset the Geor- gia,,Bulldogs 17-14 last night. Georgia's only touchdown came on a 62-yard punt return by Buzy Rosenberg. Tulane picked off two Georgia passes in the third period, con- verted them into ten points and kept the Bulldogs backed up the rest of the game., Wake Forest jolted COLUMBIA, S.C. -- South Carolina opened defense of its Atlantic Coast Conference foot- ball crown last night with a smashing 43-7 victory over Wake Forest. Tommy Suggs passed for 31 yards, to Mike Haggard and for, seven to Jackie Brown for touch- downs and Billy DuPre kicked three field goals, one for 43 yards. Tide kicks Gobblers BIRMINGHAM - Alabama, looking mor like the Crimson Tide of the championship 1960s, ended a three-year losing streak last 'night with a 51-18 drubbing of out-manned Virginia Tech. Quarterbacks Neb Hayden and Scott Hunter directed a diversified attack that swiftly 'made it a lost cause for the Gobblers - the sixth consecutive time Alabama has whipped Virginia Tech. ' SMU lynched KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Ten- nessee blended the passing of Bobby Scott and the running of' Curt Watson into a 23-3 victory over Southern Methodist yester- day in the Volunteers' season opener. By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - A 6-foot-5 sophomore, Mike Wells, gambled, passed and placekicked the Uni- versity of Illinois to a 20-15 up- set of Oregon to break an 11-game Illini losing streak yesterday. i Wells and another standout sophomore, halfback Mike Walker, entered the Illini inaugural at the start of the second quarter and turned around the game against Oregon's Ducks who last week opened with -a 31-24 victory over California. Wells sneaked for a touchdown at 4:36 of the second quarter to break a scoreless tie; tossed a 26 yard scoring pass to Doug Dieken in the third quarter; boot-' ed field goals of 36 and 22 yards and converted after each I 11 i n i touchdown. Oregon, favored by eight points, had its vaunted passing attack almost completely spiked except for, a 95-yard scoring pass from Tom Blanchard to Bob Newland which tied it 7-7 in the second quarter. Spartans stomped SEATTLE, Wash. - Sonny Six- killer, Washington's hope from the Cherokee nation, fired 59, 37 and five-yard touchdown passes, hoist- ing the Hu'skies to a 42-16 inter- sectionalfootball victory over Michigan State yesterday. T h e sophomore quarterback broke a 20-year total offense rec- I )ose Du ripSP, ord in his first varsity start. He, completed 15 of 35 passes for 276 yards and ran 37 more yards be- fore leaving early in the fourth period to eclipse the mark set by Don Heinrich against Kansas State in 1950. Sixkiller, the grandson of a Cherokee chief, overwhelmed the Spartan defense by flooding as many as five receivers at one time into the secondary. His line, meanwhile, did an outstanding! job pocketing him against the, Spartan pass rush. * * *- -Associated Press BOILERMAKER FULLBACK STAN BROWN hauls in a pass from quarterback Chuck Pliebes in first half action against Texas Christian yesterday. Purdue won 15-0, their first game under rookie head coach Bob DeMoss. Tigers triumph - COLUMBIA, Mo. - Tailback Joe Mooie, ignoring a second quarter bomb threat 'announce- ment, exploded for three second half touchdowns and 10th-ranked Missouri added two more before the game ended for a 34-12 uphill football victory over brawny Min- nesota yesterday before a capacity crowd of 58,000. Moore's touchdowns came on runs of one, 11 and 13 yards. Wide receiver Mel Gray broke loose on a fourth and five situatior and ran 35 yards for'another. Bill Mauser got the last Missouri touchdown with ,a one-yard plunge late in the game. Frogs falter LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's Scott Clayton plunged for tw o touchdowns in the last six minutes yesterday and the Boilermakers won a costly football opener from Texas Christian 15-0. George Buchanan, No. 1 Pur- due offensive center, suffered a possible broken leg, and Ashley Bell, Purdue's best pass receiver, was benched with a shoulder sep- four touchdown p a s s e s against aration. TCU's Steve Judy, who threw Purdue last year, couldn't g e t; the ball over the goal line yester- day in spite of a brilliant perform- ance. He completed 21 of his 35 passes for 244 yards, but Purdue's de- fenders picked off three of his throws to stop promising drives. Purdue let Judy have the short passes, and as a result trailed the Horned Frogs in first downs, 23- 25. ' ' * * * Irish romp EVANSTON, Ill.-Notre Dame's sixth-ranked Irish employed a punishing ground attack to com- pliment their passing team of Joe Theismann to Tom Gatewood yesterday for a 35-14 opening vic- tory over Northwestern. Except for a span of 39 seconds eks; artan s in the second quarter, when Northwestern scored two touch- downs to climb into a 14-14 tie, the Irish completely dominated the contest with senior halfback Dennis Allan scoring three ,touch- downs on short runs. Two of Allan's touchdowns came in the first half, which end- ed with-Notre Dame leading 28-14. The Irish stayed mainly on the ground in the second half with,- their only touchdown coming in the third quarter on a 1-yard run by Allan after Notre Dame recov- ered a Northwestern fumble. Badgers bounced NORMAN, Okla. - Oklahoma, held in check for a half yesterday by a surprising Wisconsin, used superior speed and depth for a come-from-behind 21-7 college football victory. The visiting Badgers led 7 to nothing at halftime, but the Sooners went. ahead with two t quick touchdowns in t h e third' quarter and added the insurance points in the final period. It was the second victory of the season for the Sooners, while the game was Wisconsin's opener. The Badgers lumped ahead mid-way in t h e second quarter. following a pass interception and" an eight-yard. return to the Soon-* er 34 by Chuck Winfrey. * A * Hoosiers hobbled BLOOMINGTON; Ind. - Colo- rado's big Buffaloes bulled ,their way past a scrappy Indiana team 16-9 yesterday before 42,471 spec- tators in the. Indiana stadium. The difference on t h e score- board was the foot of Colorado kicker Dave Haney who convert- ed three field goals while missing only on one. The Buffs, one of the preseason favorites in the Big Eight Con- ference race, used their great size advantage in the interior line and a bevy of large, fast backs to pow- er past the Hoosiers. One major factor in the Colo- rado victory was the running of halfback Ward Walsh and full- backs Ron Reiger and John Tar- ver, both weighing in at about 200 pounds. * * * Iowa ionized CORVALLIS, Ore. - Oregon State struck quickly for two first quarter scores and then scored again in the second half on a long pass from quarterback Endi- cott to end Jeff Kolbbrg to-'hold off a determined Iowa comeback to claim a 21-14 'intersectional victory over the Hawkeyes last night. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 24 HOUR REFERRAL and INFORMATION SERVICE DIAL 76-GUIDE any question . any problem .. . . any time . . student staff provide immediate help- for a wide range of problems and questions: information about, and referral to, campus and community resources for any problem; information on campus and community events; someone to listen when you need to talk .. - 24 hours a day ... every day .. . a service of Student Affairs Counseling Office! SCORES -Associated Press BACKWARD is probably not Jim Bratten's normal method of gaining yardage. Something must have worked, however, as Colorado managed to eke by Indiana 16-9 yesterday, thanks chiefly to three field goals by Dave Haney. STAMINA KEYS VICTORY:' HUyEggers excel; da swep sertes By JOEL GREER squads and their endurance showv- j Looking at today's action, it TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 is 95% of he Reading Population Reads Only 250 to 300 Words Per Minute or Less The Michigan, ruggers proved once again that they are the class team of the Midwest by sweeping both ends of a doubleheader yes- terday from the' Detroit Cobras. The Michigan Golds won t h e opener from Detroit's second team 22-3 while the Michigan Blues destroyed the Cobras 24-0 in, the finale. The first game was highlighted by Chris Penoyer's 55-yard kick- off return and the ability of the Golds to keep possession of the the ball. Michigan, demonstrat- ing' its superior physical condi- tion, "was very good in the loose," explained Michigan Rugby Club president Hank Lukaski. "T h e y were always ready to jump on the loose balls. Steve Chapman accounted for seven of Michigan's points as he converted two tries and. also hit on a penalty kick. 'Yesterday's games were the first of the season for the Detroit ed it., In the second game Michigan won on fitness, technique and skill. They continually beat De- troit to the ball in the 24-0 shut- out. Speaking about the game's ex-. citement referee David' Mildner, former Michigan rugger, affirmed that the game "was the best 'I've seen out here in a very long time." Lukaski pointed to the fact that the Blues held the ball about 80 per cent of the timeand only lost the ball three times in scrums. Dave Thomas, a transfer stu- dent from Wales, scored a pair of tries including a 50-yard run. Ross Vickers( had a good day too, as he converted three of the Michigan tries. Capt. Peter Swift scored Michi- gan's first try and Ron S m i t h, Peter Hooper and Terry Larrimer followed. Michigan was then in full com- mand as Thomas scored twice. now apparent that rugby has now found a home. Palmer Field's lo- cation allows many more fans on the hill to see the action. In past years, rugby has been mostly played at Ferry Field, until last year when some of the games were played on tl e tartan turf practice field and another was played' at the Michigan Stadium. Next week, Michigan will meet another Midwest power, The Uni- versity of Toronto at Toronto. The Blues and Golds will return home October 3 for games against Kent State at Palmer Field, GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 20, Arizona 9 Oklahoma 21, Wisconsin 7 Purdue 15, Texas Christian 0 Missouri 34, Minnesota 12 Colorado 16, Indiana 9 Illinois20, Oregon 16 Notre Dame 35, Northwestern 14 Oregon State 21, Iowa 14 Washington 42, Michigan State 16 Nebraska 21, USC 21 - Ohio U 24-, Kent State 14 Texas 56, California 15 Rutgers' 41, Lafayette 16 Penn State 55,; Navy 7 UCLA 24, Pittsburgh 15 Alabama 51, Virginia Tech 18 Houston' 42, Syracuse 15 N. Carolina 19, N. Carolina State 0 Duke 13, Maryland 12 Slippery Rock 39, Geneva 0 SOUTH1 Texas A&M 20, LSU 18 Georgia Tech 23, Florida tate 13 Auburn 33, Southern Mississippi 14 Florida 34, 'Mississippi State 13 Tennessee 28, SMU 3 Clemson 27, Virginia 17 Kentucky 16, Kansas State 3 South Carolina 43, Wake Forest 7 Arkansas 23, Oklahoma State 7 Mississippi 47, Memphis State 13 EAST Massachusetts 28, Maine 0 West Virginia 49,, Richmond 10 Middlebury 16, Bates 9 King's Point 7, Norwvich 3 Curry 34, Maine Maritime 0 Boston College 28, Villanova 21 Colgate 26, Boston University 21 Bucknell 13, Temple 10 Connecticut 47, Vermont 0 Delaware 34,.Gettysburg 7 . Union 37, Worcester 13 Mount Union 61, Rochester 30 Springfield, N.Y. 21, Cortland 12 Westchester 56, Ithaca 0 MIDWEST Texas Tech 23, Kansas 0 Central Michigan 27, Northern Iowa 9 Northern Michigan 45, Hofstra 0 Miami, Ohio 23, Xavier g 7 h Western Michigan 35,;I4righ~m'Younig t17 Tulsa 38, Idaho State University 13K Defiance 49, Adrian 6 Arkansas State 53, Wichita State I. Wartburg 9, Upper Iowa 7 Grinnel 10, Coe 7 Franklin 60, Hope 6 Michigan Tech 17, Alma 6 Anderson 26, Olivet 3 FAR WEST Stanford 34, San Jose State 3y Air Force 47, Wyoming 17 Washington State 44, Idaho 16 Utah State 33, Bowling Green 14 LATE BASEBALL SCORES Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 4 Clevealnd 4, Baltimore 2 Boston 7, Washington 3, 1st, Boston 11; Washington3 2nd San Francisco 3, San Diego 0 PRO FOOTBALL Chicago 24, New York 16 4 FA5 ADI G Is Not Difficult to Learn Those who completed courses held this past year at the Bell Tower Hotel achieved speeds of 800 to 2000 w.p.m. with the same or increased comprehension they had at their slower reading rates. 11 SEE HOW EASILY YOU (AN: -save hours, use your time more efficiently -learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now -improve your comprehension and increase your enjoyment of reading material ; b e . . ,. +^i'i 8 , ti 1. , .,,. _ ii i "" - - 'Y +b Expect The Unexpected in The Village Voice Every issue of The Voice uncovers what's new and controversial. 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