Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 4, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 4, 1970 Hi-Fi Studio 121 W. Washington 668-7942 presents GARRARD the finest-in record changers C1IRCILE BOOIKS Zen, Yoga, Tarot Alchemy, Astrology, Theosophy Tarot, Magic, Parapsychology Macrobiotics and Health Food Books 215 S. STATE... .2nd Floor o 10 A.M.-8:30 P.M. 769-1583 t J !} ?) f o!} te t > C C Reds' Nolan blanks Pirates in ten innings PITTSBURGH (P) - Cincinnati's Big Red Machine erupted for three runs in the 10th inning against Pittsburgh's Dock Ellis, giving the Reds a 3-0 victory over the Pirates yesterday in the first game of the National League playoff series. Pete Rose's tie-breaking single driving in Ty Cline, and a two- run double by Lee May got the job done for the Reds and Gary Nolan, who had matched shutouts with Ellis for nine innings in a tense struggle that overshadowed the unique situation created by the first umpire's strike in baseball history. Four minor league umpires, headed by John Grimsley of the American Association behind the plate, worked the game in the absence of striking major leaguers who picketed outside the ball park carrying placards reading: "Major league umpires on strike for wages." The umpires' strike, however, took a back seat as Nolan and Ellis remained locked in their pitcher's duel for nine innings in a game replete with excellent fielding plays that cut off rallies. Then, in the top of the 10th inning, the Big Red Machine, which had been brought to a screeching halt as Ellis scattered six hits, rolled into gear when pinch-hitter Ty Cline led off with a triple. Orioles bomb Twins aslams one MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (;')-Baltimore's explosive Orioles walloped three home runs including a grand slam by pitcher Mike Cuellar for a seven-run fourth inning and blitzed the Minnesota Twins 10-6 in yesterday's opening. game of the American League championship playoff. Cuellar, a 24-game winner and an .089 hitter during the ;regular season, hurt the Twins more with his bat than he'did with his arm. He surrendered six runs and 10 hits in less than five innings of work and it took 4 2-3 innings of shutout relief by 40-year-old Dick Hall to nail down the decision for Baltimore. But before he left the game, Cuellar put the Orioles in charge with his grand slam homer 330-foot fly ball lofted down the line in right field that made it just inside the foul pole and landed just be- yond the fence, close enough to the field to bounce back on it. After Cuellar's homer, Don Buford and Boog Powell followed with long blasts that shot the Orioles into a 9-2 lead. But the edge wasn't enough for Cuellar. The Twins nicked him for a run in the fourth and three more in the fifth-one on a towering homer by Harmon Killebrew-before Hall came on. -Associated Press Cuellar crosses plate after slam 1 I PURDUE DUMPS PLUNKET T PLANNING A CONCERT OR A SPECIAL EVENT? For help with your ADVERTISING come to Advertising Information Center Rm 533 SAB M-F 1-5 P.M. 764-0436 I I For the student body: FLARES by SLevi Farah Wright Tads ' Sebring CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty By The Associated Press MADISON, Wis. - Quarterba Neil Graff tossed three lo touchdown passes yesterday give John Jardine his first c legiate coaching victory as t Wisconsin Badgers upset 16t ranked Penn State 29-16. Graff connected with tight e Larry Mialik on TD bombs ofI and 54 yards and tossed a 27-ya strike to wide receiver Terry Wh taker. Wisconsin's defense, which ca up with four interceptions and t fumble recoveries, sparked t Badger victory. Defensive ba Denny Crooks picked off a Pe State pass and returned it yards to set up Wisconsin's g ahead touchdown in the four ack mg to ol- ;he h- period, after the teams had been deadlocked 16-16. The final Badger TD came two plays after Mike Mayer recovered a Nittany Lion fumble. d * *e Stanford squashed a a Wisconsin extends Penn State streak et on the winning team for sure fall success ,. :...... . DWB Says ... ~i I.,. Beat 'emBucs 1 :' 3T. :C: .j : .: ::::$::::.i$.:.:::::.>::1s ! ~r:? i STANFORD, Calif.-Purdue de- nd fensive back Randy Cooper inter- 68 cepted three passes by Stanford's rd Jim Plunkett yesterday, setting up it- two touchdowns as the Boilermak- ers stunned the third-ranked In- me dians 26-14. wo Cooper, who as an offensive he halfback last year led Purdue run- .ck ners, also recovered a Plunkett nn fumble on the roughest day of the 27 Stanford quarterback's three-year 1- college career. Quarterback Chuck Piebes com- th pleted his first fourpasses of the game in an 81-yard touchdown drive the first time Purdue had the ball. Cooper's first two interceptions came later in the first period, and the Boilermakers built a 16-0 lead. Plunkett had five passes inter- cepted and was dropped behind the line on passing attempts five times for 41 yards in losses. Spartans crushed EAST LANSING, Mich. - The Notre Dame football steamroller continued to crunch through the ranks of Big Ten teams yesterday as the Joe Theismann to Tom Gatewood passing combination and an awesome array of brilliant running backs crushed Michigan State 29-0. When he wasn't passing, Theis- mann was faking and keeping the ball to run for impressive yardage. Notre Dame started slowly and did not score until only 2:32 was left in the first period. The Notre Dame first half scores came on marches of 79, 86 and 64 yards. After the third score, Theismann ran in the ball for a two-pointer. Bucks roll COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State, stalled in the first half, opened up in the third quarter behind the exciting open field running of quarterback Rex Kern and rolled to a 34-10 victory over Duke yes- terday. Duke took the lead at the start on a 38-yard field goal by Dave Pugh and managed to hang on in the first half. Only a blocked punt and a 45-yard run by end Ken Luttner put Ohio State ahead at the half by scant three points. Then Ohio State, No. 1 in the nation, asserted itself in the third period with a quick touchdown on 81-yard drive. Kern capped it with a 10-yard toss to halfback Larry Zelina. Gophers exterminated MINNEArOLIS, Minn. - Quar- terback Jerry Tagge scored one touchdown and passed for another and directed Nebraska's powerful Cornhuskers to a 35-10 football victory over Minnesota yesterday. Nebraska's fleet running backs. ground out huge chunks of yard- age and Tagge threw often enough to keep the secondary loose. He completed 12 of 21 passes for 148 yards before leaving the g a m e midway in the fourth quarter. * * * Wildcats whipped 'EVANSTON, Ill - Quarterback Chuck Hixson, suffering the worst passing game of his brilliant ca- reer, went to therground yesterday to lead Southern Methodist to a 21-20 victory over Northwestern. SMU sped to a 13-0 lead but Northwestern rallied late in the second quarter to take a 14-13 halftime lead. The Mustangs took advantage of a poor Northwestern punt in the third quarter and roll- ed intothe lead withtailback Gary Hammond carrying four successive times and Hixson took it over from the eight-yard line and then ran for two points to give SMU a 21-14 lead. * * * BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - West Virginia's unbeaten Mountaineers struggled to a 16-10 victory over winless Indiana yesterday Senior Jim Braxton, who splits his time among running back, flanker and tight end, scored all of the 14th-ranked Mountaineers' points. Indiana came from behind twice during the sunny but crisp after- noon but the Mountaineers. the nation's leading offensive t e a m going into the contest, put the lid on the game with 10:31 left in the final quarter. Orange vof fed CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Gambling Illinois quarterback Mike Wells exploited a rash of Syracuse blunders yesterday to produce a 27 to 0 Illini victory and inflict the first opening three-game losing streak in Ben Schwartzwalder's 22- year Orange coaching career. Wells sneaked to the first Il- lini touchdown and set up two others on scrambling keeper plays as Illinois scored a second victory for the first time in three seasons. Rebels manhandle Tide, 48-23 'I 4 PIZZA LOY- DOUBLE 0 333 E. HURON NOW OPEN SUN DAY 2-10 P.M. PIZZA TIME All the Pizza You Can Eat-$1.50 CHOICE OF SEVERAL VARIETIES Also available: SUBS and SHORT ORDER r M I M I M M E I N By The Associated Press JACKSON, Miss.-Archie Man- ning pitched three touchdown passes and scored two others and Vernon Studderd raced 100 yards untouched on a kickoff return last night as seventh-ranked Mississip- pi belted No. 17 Alabama 48-23 in a nationally televised college foot- ball game. The anticipated offen- sive fireworks between the two Southeastern Conference powers failed to develop until the final period. Mississippi's blitzing defense kept Alabama quarterback Neb Hayden under constant pressure in the early going, forcing two in- terceptions that led to short touchdown drives and put the Rebels in command. * * * Buffaloes boffed MANHATTAN, Kan. - Lynn Dickey's gritty clutch passing and Henry Hawthorne's deceptive legs brought Kansas State, a team staggering under two straight de- feats, a 21-20 Big Eight Confer- ence football victory yesterday over 8th ranked Colorado, proud conqueror of Penn State just a week ago. The host Wildcats, trailing by one point in\ the third quarter's dying seconds, had the ball on their own 25. Dickey fired a pass to the swift Hawthorne, who plucked it out of the sunshine at the State 35 and fled through a wave of defenders to the goal. *. * * Bruins horned AUSTIN, Tex.r-dQuarterback Eddie Phillips drilled a 45-yard touchdown pass to ,slippery Char- ~les Speyrer with 12 seconds left in 'the game yesterday as Texas pull- ed out a pulsating 20-17 victory over previously unbeaten UCLA. Defending national champion Texas, rated No. 2 this season, ap- peared beaten after cool Dennis Dummit had shot holes in the Longhorn pass defense. But fighting desperately to keep intact the nation's longest college football winning streak, Phillips faded back on third and 19. His pass hit Speyrer, leaping high, in the chest about the UCLA 20 and the 170-pound speedster raced in- to the end zone. * * * Tigers triumph STILLWATER, Okla.-Missouri turned two Oklahoma State fum- bles into two touchdowns in the first two minutes yesterday and went on to whip the Cowboys, 40- 20, in the Big Eight Conference football opener for both clubs. Tailback Joe Moore spearhead- ed a bruising Missouri rushing game that pounded out 437 yards. Moore, a 205-pound senior, car- ried 34 times for 186 yards and two touchdowns. Junior quarterback Mike Farm- er, placekicker Jack Bastable, and fullbackJames Harrison shared the glory for the 20th-ranked Tigers, who boosted their record to 3-1. Kentucky clawed LEXINGTON, Ky. - Twelfth- rankbd Auburn used an 84-yard kickoff return and a pair of in- terceptions in the third quarter yesterday to wear down the stub- born Kentucky Wildcats and ash- ion a 33-15 Southeastern Confer- ence football victory. The surprising Wildcats had built a 15-9 lead before Auburn's offensive machine, led by quarter- back Pat Sullivan, finally began to click, and with 9:53 left in the third period the Tigers went ahead to stay. Air Force soars AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo- Tenth-ranked Air Force, rolled on undefeated yesterday b e a t i n g Colorado State University 37-22 for the Cadets' fourth straight victory this season. Bob Parker, third among the nation's quarterbacks in total of- fense, connected on long passes mainly to Mike Bolen and Ernie Jennings while Brian Bream, tore off large chunks of yardage on smashes off-tackle. Jennings scored three touch- downs for an academy career rec- ord, of 24 and a total of 144 points, also a school career mark. * * * Clemson stung ATLANTA - Brilliant running by Brent Cunningham and the poise of veteran quarterback Jack Williams sparked Georgia Tech to a 28-7 victory over Clemson yes- terday. Cunningham, a junior tailback, shattered the Tiger defense for 217 yards in 16 carries, setting a Georgia Tech ground gaining record. He climaxed his perfect after- noon with a 69-yard touchdown sprint that clinched the undefeat- ed Yellow Jacket's fourth victory of the season. * * - Sun Devils dance LARAMIE, Wyo. The ramp- aging Sun Devils of Arizona State University, led by "Spaghetti Joe" Spagnola smashed the Wyoming Cowboys 52-3 yesterday for their ninth consecutive victory. It was the seventh consecutive loss for Wyoming, extending back to last season in which the Pokes have been beaten by opponents who scored more than 40 points. * * * Hogs holler FORT WORTH, Tex-Arkansas' bruising Bill Burnett, the leading touchdown-maker in Southwest Conference history, blasted Texas Christian for four scores Saturday night in a 49-14 victory for the 11th ranked Razorbacks. 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