Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 10, 1970 i U.of M. Students, Faculty and Administration NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY in ACAPULCO* $24900 Dec. 27th-Jan. 3rd Look at all you get! " round trip jet air transportation, 0 transfers and baggage handling e 7 nights hotel accommodations 0 7 "Happy Hours" * Gala New Year's Eve Party RESERVATIONS LIMITED CALL Carol 764-9693 or Owen 665-6216 *Based on 40 or more persons, Travel arrangements by STUDENTOURS For the student body: Genuine Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to46 Bucks, 'Ca ts Ili , Gridde Pickings The big bass drums thumped wildly, the speeding drummer lashed his 11-piece Ludwigs in drugged fury. Suddenly, the fluid riffs of a Les Paul Custom ripped the hazy room as the silken fingers of Gracie Slicks' Manhattan lover caressed his guitar For an hour it continued, each playing off the other - an hour of ferocious unforgettable Poco-like jamming. Sometimes the lean wisp of a drummer would break in with a gutful of smokey vocal and weave a melody of unreal blues, then with a smile he'd lay back and let Cocaine Cutt talk with his shining black Gibson. Then as Cocaine tired and drifted into Airplane licks, the tall, unspeaking country boy would set his axe afire with pure Iowa funk. But suddenly, a pounding at the door stopped the jam, "Your Cottage Inn Pizza is here, sir" smiled the delivery boy. "Come on in Richie, Tim Lee grinned, "We've been waitin' for you. You and the rest of the guys sit down. We were jes gettin some help on our Gridde Picks from last week's winner, Geoff Holczer." drive By MICHAEL OLIN Big Ten standings remained relatively unchanged f o r this week as the top five teams all emerged victorious f r o m Sat- urday's contests. Northwestern kept their Rose Bowl hopes alive on the strength of a come from behind 28-14 victory overhMinnesota. The Gophers jumped ahead in the first quarter when Jeff White blocked the Wildcats first punt and grabbed the ball in mid-air to take it in for the score. Minnesota scored again t h e next time they had the ball on a 90 yard drive led by quarter- back Craig Curry's running and accurate short passes, to p u t the Gophers up 14-0. The Wildcats were not to be denied this d ay, however, as they shut out the Gophers the rest of the way while scoring f o u r touchdowns themselves, three of them in the second half on d r i v e s of 80, 77, and 57 yards. Fullback Mike Adamle scored all of the Wildcat touchdowns and shattered a Big Ten ball carrying record with 48 hauls good for 192 yards. Adamle car- toward. ried the ball more times in the second half (28 for 132 yards) than did the entire Minnesota team. The Wildcats went ahead to stay with 6:03 left in the third quarter as Adamle plunged over from the one for his third touchdown of the day, capping roses rather disappointing first half. That, plus the fact that we had no injuries makes me wish that we had ten more games." Meanwhile, Ohio State's grid- ders continued their surge to- wards a Rose Bowl berth against Stanford on the strength of a 24-7 triumph over Wisconsin. Student basketball tickets may be purchased beginning Wed- nesday, November 11, at the ticket office at State and Hoover. The times tickets may be purchased by priority are as follows: Group No.'4 - 11-11-70, 8:00 a.m. to noon. ID imprints F, G, P, A, J, K and Q or number 7 or less at right of name. Group No. 3 - 11-11-70, 1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. ID imprints P, A, J, K and Q or number 8 at right of name. Group No. -2 - 11-12-70, 8:00 a.m. to noon. ID imprints J, K, and Q or number 9 at right of name. Group No. 1 - 11-12-70, 1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. ID imprints Q or number zero at right of name. I I CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty -0A 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Iowa at MICHIGAN Michigan State at Minnesota Northwestern at Indiana Wisconsin at Illinois Ohio State at Purdue Kansas State at Nebraska Boston College at Pitt Syracuse at West Virginia, Colorado at Oklahoma State Georgia at Auburn 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Kentucky at Florida Duke at South Carolina Princeton at Yale Oklahoma at Kansas Kent State' at Miami (O.) Buffalo at Temple Rice at Texas A&M Stanford at Air Force UCLA at Washington DAILY LIBELS vs. sgc a 77 yard drive. Northwestern's last touch- down came with 65 seconds left in the game as Adamle smash- ed in from the five. After the game, Northwestern coach Alex Agase commented, "It is especially pleasing to see us come back that way after a (313) 886-0844 The Buckeyes, who struggled to only a 10-7 lead over the Badgers at halftime, broke the game open with two third quarter touchdowns within three minutes of each other. Fullback John Brockington, s i k e Northwestern's Adamle, ~scored all of the unbeaten touchdowns on runs of 11, one and four yards. Fred Schram scored the first points of the game for Ohio State on a 23 yard field goal in the first quarter. __ v iq BEAT BAVARIANS: Booters secure play-off berth 4 Surging past an outmanned Ba- varian Sports Club, 5-1, Sunday, Michigan's booters secured second place in the Toledo League. The win gave the Wolverines a 6-1 conference record to move ahead of The Arsenal who fell to a 5-2 mark after a loss to the league leading Brazillian Sports Club. The match at Toledo was en- tirely dominated by the Wolverine eleven as they rolled to a 2-0 half- time margin. However, late in the first half Paulo Coota was injur- ed and was taken for medical as- sistance, and this left Michigan with ten able-bodied players to continue the match. Transporta- tion problems led to the s 1 i m turnout. Michigan lined up in a 4-2-4 formation start the game and BEAN BAG CHAIRS MAKE YOUR OWN IT'S EASY! later adjusted to a 4-2-3 a f t e r Coota was injured. The 4-2-4 is a widely used formation that t h e Michigan players have gotten used to over the last two years. It is basically a defensive formation. Sunday's match was marked by a good performance by halfback Daniel Boyle who has been con- sistent all year in thwarting op- ponents' attacks before they be- come dangerous. Michigan's for- ward line also played well in a game marked by turnovers. The Bavarians lost out on their best chance to score when they kicked a penalty shot wide in the first half. The penalty was incur- red unnecessarily when a Michi- gan fullback handed the ball in front of his goal. But the Bavarians did capital- ize on one Wolverine blunder as they turned a Michigan rush' into a Bavarian goal. Michigan 1 e t their defense get too involved in the offensive play and as a result faced a 5 on 3 Bavarian attack when a pass was stolen. Michigan's goals came off of fine efforts from the front line. Jean Gilles contributed two as did Carlos Flores while Tiayab Khan poked in the last score for the 5-1 margin. On the whole the match was not a well played contest as sloppy ball-handling and passing caused numerous collapses in attacks. Michigan now awaits the begin- ning of the Toledo League play- offs which will determine the con- ference champion. The Wolverines will take on the fourth place fin- isher which will probably be the Bavarians. The location of the play-off games has not yet been determined. If the Michigan boot- ers can capture the league crown it will be their second straight championship. The Buckeyes then took a 10- 0 lead barely 30 seconds into the second quarter on Brockington's 11 yard run. The play was set up by a 54 yard pass frofn back- up quarterback Ron Maciejow- ski to Larry Zelina. The Badgers, now 1-5 in Big Ten competition, cut the mar- gin to 10-7 on a 43-yard second quarter march climaxed by a 15 yard touchdown pass from Neil Graff to Larry Mialik. Wisconsin played the Buck- eyes to a standstill for the first six and a half minutes of the third quarter, but with 8:32 re- maining, Doug Adams recovered a Badger fumble on the Wis- consin five and Brockington bowled over from the four two plays later to push the Bucks lead to 17-7. 4I i."a4i":?:"d.": "': ?:SX Y .?::;;.;,{{;:;":i:;.:t a"'{ .r::{:"?:"":. wnr."::,"""'J^5r. .:."""i:R3?" x t~r {" ::;44: :i.rS+tiL4E :::::""::::i,;'}r:s ii4," {.:Y "":a".':"::X""""":?":"i ",......";{t"XS..L : :~r : yY :ec; Big Ten Standings Conference Games Wayne Hobby 34816 MICHIGAN Hairstyling To Please NOW 4 SHOPS ARBORLAND MAPLE VILLAGE LIBERTY OFF STATE EAST UNIV. AT SO. UNIV. MICHIGAN Ohio State Northwestern Michigan State Iowa Minnesota Illinois Purdue Wisconsin Indiana W 5 5 4 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 L 0 0 1 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 T 0 0 0 0 1 1 0. 0 0 0 PF PA 173 48 153 54 148 66 113 84 83 102 72 105 76 189 73 117 80 113 62 151 W 8 7 4 4 2 2 3 3 2 1 All Games T T PF PA 0 0 224 70 0 0 243 77 4 0 189 134 4 0 157 169 5 1 107 191 5 1 143 181 5 0 128 228 5 0 114 177 5 1 130 164 7 0 95 239 WAYNE 721-0700 I COMPLETE HOBBY SHOP WORTH THE DRIVE! 1 1 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 1-5 " " S S THE DASCOLA BARBERS SATURDAY'S GAMES Iowa at MICHIGAN Michigan State at Minnesota Northwestern at Indiana Wisconsin at Illinois Ohio State at Purdue CANCELLATION NOTICE The public lecture by CLOVIS MAKSOUD scheduled for 4 p.m. today has been cancelled. Spponsored by CENTER FOR NEAR EAST STUDIES r PEACE CORPS -NEEDS PEOPLE in math, biology, chemistry, physics, health, science, en- gineering, home economics, agricul- ture, construction, mechanics, indus- trial and vocational education- NOV. 9-13 3529 S.A.B. 11 We want to talk to you about a career in law,... without law school. When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll be doing work tradtionally done by lawyers- work we think you'll find challenging and re- sponsible. And Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Para- legal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice and a higher salary than you'd expect as a recent college graduate. You'll work with lawyers on interesting legal problems-and the rewards will grow as you do. A representative of The Institute for Para- legal Training will conduct interviews on: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 Inquire at Placement Office 4 LOOKS GOOD II 101 I I' with casual cloths.Mode~rn life..-cil I mnrc Aan