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November 15, 1970 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-11-15

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

Sunday, November ;15, 1970

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page' Nine

Sunday, November 1 5, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

.P-oa Nin..e.

GUILD HOUSE
-802 MONROE-
Mon., Nov. 16
NOON LUNCHEON 35c
"Does present society provide for a contem-
plative role,-of critique?"
Speaker: FRANK CULLEY
15 years a trappist monk
SUN. EVE. 9:30
SOUP & TALK

BEAN BAG
CHAIRS
MAKE YOUR OWN
IT'S EASY !
Wayne Hobby
34816 MICHIGAN

BOWL HOPES STILL ALIVE

WXildca ts

squeeze

by

I

I

i l| WAYNE

721-0700

By The Associated Press first period, on a 35-yard scoring
BLOOMINGTON - Northwest- pass from Daigneau to Robinson.
ern scored twice in the closing Fullback Mike Adamle broke
minutes of the third quarter yes- the Northwestern record for ca-
terday to break open a close foot- reer rushing yardage on his fourth
ball game and beat Indiana, 21-7, carry in the first quarter.
in bitter, near-freezing weather. Adamle carried the ball 41
In steady rain and snow, with times for 160 yardstgivinghim
winds up to 25 miles per hour, the 1,875 total yards in his three-year
two teams were deadlocked, 7 collegercareer, surpassing the
midway through the third period. four-year career m a r k of 1,726
Northwestern drove 65 yards in) set by All-American fullback Art
10 plays with senior quarterback suaoby i 1946-49.
Maurie Daigneau going over on k s46

ond period for a 10-0 half time
edge after a 47-yard drive start-'
ing with Bowser's interception.
The junior fullback struck again
from a yard out in the fourth per-
iod.
The Spartans finally got rolling
in the third period when 161-
pound Eric Allen swept in for a
two-yard touchdown run.
Earl Anderson went in from a
yard out with 7:15 to play but a,
two-point conversion attempt fell
short to produce the final mar-

COMPLETE HOBBY SHOP

Indin
Badgers top Illini
CHAMPAIGN - After being
stopped inches away from the goa
line in the third period, Wiscon
sin scored twice behind the pass
ing of Neil Graff and the run
nling of Alan Thompson ina
fourth quarter rally yesterday t
defeat Illinois 29-17.
The result boosted the Badgers
Big Ten football record to 2-4 and
dropped the Illini to 1-5.
Graff's 44-yard aerial to Larry
Mialik enlivened a 98-yard scor
ing drive early in the fourth. On
the 13th play of the thrust, Graff
hit Al Hannah from the 5 for
the payoff.
Minutes later, Neovia Greyer
stole a Mike Wells, pass at mid-
field and three plays later Thomp-
son barreled 36 yards for anoth-

a

21m

Mon,.

7

4 P.M.-SEMINAR ON NONVIOLENCE

WORTH THE
11 a.m.-9 p.m.

DRIVE!
Sun. 1-5

THE OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES
POLICY BOARD
is now forming Policy Unit Committees in
Housing, Health Service, Placement, International
Center, Counseling, Student organizations, and Stu-
dent and community relations.
Students and faculty interested in serving on these commit-
tees should come to
3540 Student Activities Building
Monday, November 16 at 2:30
or call
764-7465 before 5:00

I

a one-yard plunge with three min-
utes remaining in the period.
The Wildcats got the ball back
after the series of downs when
Indiana's Steve Porter fumbled
the kickoff on the Indiana 16-1
yard line. On the first play from I
scrimmage, Northwestern half-
back Al Robinson ran around left
end for the touchdown, his second
of the afternoon.
Indiana's only touchdown of the
game came just before the end )f
the first half, when the Hoosiers
recovered a Northwestern fumble
on the Wildcats' 17-yard line. Five
plays later sophomore quarterback
Dan Grossman went around right
end for the. score.
Northwestern scored first on its
second drive midway through the

M # M
C1414hore s"in ]t _CTT

I gin.

IP ft 'fJ IYIIj The victory snapped State's
MINNEAPOLIS - Walt Bowser three-game winning streak a n d
dashed 82 yards for a touchdown left the Spartans with a 4-5 over-
after picking off a midair fum- all r e c o r d and a 3-3 Big Ten
ble and Ernie Cook drove in for score. Minnesota, winning for the
two touchdowns yesterday as the first time in a month, is 3-5-1
Minnesota Gophers extended their and 2-3-1.
football hex over Michigan State ;"............ x -...... -;:">:>:..:-,
and Coach Duffy Daugherty, 23-

fi..".. f :" ..":s", ".. d'' it res": fi

13.
Bowser also intercepted a pass
in the second period that started
t h e Gophers toward their first'
touchdown before a Homecoming
crowd of 42,834, who saw t h e
Gophers win their seventh straight
against Daugherty - now winless
in six trips to Memorial Stadium.
Cook plunged a yard in the sec-

Big Ten Standings

.;:

Conference Games
W L T PF PA

V

MICHIGAN
Ohio State
Northwestern
Michigan State
Iowa
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Purdue
Illinois
Indiana

6
6
5
3
2
2
2
1
1

0
0
1
3
3
3
4
5
5
5

0 228
0 163
0 169
0 126
1 83
1 95

48
61
73
107
157
118
130
127
218
172

All Games
W j TPFPA
9 0 0 279 70
8 0 0 253 84
5 4 0 210 141
4 5 0 170 192
2 6 1 107 246
3 5 1 166 194
3 5 1 159 181
3 6 0 121 187
3 6 0 145 257
1 8 0 102 260

er TD. Greyer filched two more
passes before the game ended.
g Illinois gripped a 17-14 le a d
l after a great goal line stand in
the third that halted the Bad-
gers inches short after they had
a driven 77 yards
o The Illini, with lame duck
Coach Jim Valek having only one
more game before official dismis-
sal, scored twice for a 14-0 lead in
the opening quarter. T he first
y time they got the ball, Bob Burns
- made 31 yards on a reverse and
finally Mike Navarro drilled 12
f yards to score.
rr
r
m rug ers
twiee dump
Clevelanders
The Michigan rugby club swept
to two impressive victories yester-
day against a typically fine aggre-
gation of ruggers from Cleveland.
In the first contest the Blue
crunched the Clevelanders 21-3 in
a hard fought yet aesthetically
pleasing game. The team seemed
to feel that yesterday's perform-
ance was the best pure rugby that
they have played all season.
The Blue backfield praised the
effort of the entire team and were
especially appreciative of the way
the ball was consistantly a e n t
back from the scrums.
The Gold team was every bit as
impressive in their 20-5 victory as
the Blues were in the earlier con-
test. The Blue players, watching
the Gold play from the sidelines,
while obviously elated with their
own effort, appeared just as pleas-
ed with the B team's showing.
The victory by the Blue kept
their home victory streak intact.
The ruggers have prevailed in all
seven of their home games this
year to protect the skein which
extends back to years untold. The
Wolverines close out their season
next week in Columbus against
arch nemisis Ohio State.
iU

pedwin.
shoes

0
0
0
0

109
80
93
69

_______ i

... _ _ __

Petitioning now open for:
Central Student Judiciary
8 Seats
Petitions and information available at
SGC offics (1st Floor SAB)
Petitions must be in before Sunday,
Nov. 22, at 5:00
WOMEN AND MEN OF ALL SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
ARE URGED TO APPLY

The side-zippered tall one.
Winning strategy for your
game-watching sportswear
-like the wider cut,
straight-leg pants.
DIETZEL'S SHOE STORE, Inc.
309 S. Main St., Ann Arbor, Mi.
IDOWNTOWN)
Hours: Mon. & Fri. 9 a.m.-8:30 p.m
Tues.-Thurs. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Bankard, Master Charqe, Diner's Club, American Express

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
MICHIGAN 55, Iowa 0
Minnesota 23, Michigan State 13
Northwestern 21, Indiana 7
Wisconsin 29, Illinois 17
Ohio State 10, Purdue 7
THIS WEEK'S GAMES
MICHIGAN at Ohio State
Indiana at Purdue
Illinois at Iowa
Michigan State at Northwestern
Minnesota at Wisconsin

_I

I
I
i
t

1

our college future
looks better and better

U.

HONEST JULIUS
ALIAS
THE MAN

MANY, MANY, MANY
years ago there was a mighty warrior named
Julius. He was not the usual type of warrior
because he never killed people. Some peo-
ple laughed at him because of this but his
goals were different. He fought for peace,
happiness and a full stomache.
His methods were not even subversive
and in fact they were sanctioned by the
State. Julius made the best Pizza in the land.
His gourmet creations were acclaimed every-
where. They were all made from the finest
ingredients and they were bigger than any-
body else's-'20 inches of joy'-

ONLY A T
IN DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR
can you find this fantastic speaker-amp combination
JCV 5030 140 Watt Stereo Receiver
with advanced SEA
Power to spare. Features to match. An outstanding stereo receiver
in the mid- to high power range, the 5030 also incorporates ad-
vanced SEA for greater control within a wider 110db, and click
stops on the sliding controls at every 2db. It's also got the new
FM linear dial scale so useful in areas where there is a profusion
of FM stations, and a very advanced IC and FET-equipped front-
end. Power bandwidth is a wide 25 to 20,000Hz and distortion is
held to a mere 0.8%. Automatic FM stereo switching, of course.
4-3/8"H x 20"W x 13-3/16"D. 30.8 lbs. (with wooden
cabinet) .
J VC 5340 Powerful 4-Way Bookshelf Type
Speaker System with Multi-Channel Input
Nowhere else can you find this kind of power and this kind of
performance in a speaker system this size. Handles an astonishing
80 watts peak input and 40 watts RMS. Equipped with a woofer,
cellular horn midrange, tweeter and super tweeter, it reproduces
the entire spectrum of sound with extraordinary clarity. And the
connection of three main amplifiers directly to the woofer, mid-
range and tweeter is made possible by the inclusion of the multi-
channel input terminal. The front grille of the beautiful air-tight
walnut cabinet is detachable to permit adjustment of level con-
trols of both middle and hiqh frequency ranges. Impedance is 8
ohms. 28-1/2"H x 16-1/2"W x 15-1/4"D. 47.3 lbs.
121 W. WASHINGTON 668-7942
Right across from the Old German Restaurant

r

For clothes that look
and feel new let us
dry - clean your
clothes for campus.
Our special process-
es make clothes look
their best-and that
says a lot for you.

I

L
;; pa.ra
19 10
r
UJJ Ltd- 4

_tA
L]IB 84B

I

\!

DIAMOND

1209 S. University

663-7151

In Ann Arbor his descendants are still carrying on the same fine tradition.
Come and see Julius some time and follow in the footsteps of generations.
U emJPIZZA
rBfEAT
1751 PLYMOUTH at North Campus
75 cents off j:50 cents off
ON A ON A
SPORTSMAN OR PARTY TIME ; LARGE OR MEDIUM
PIZZA PIE ! PIZZA PIE

I

LOWER OVERHEADS FOR US
MEAN LOWER PRICES FOR YOU
Cash 'n Carry -no bookkeeping

in

STUDENTS
Av INTERNATIONAL
UN ION-LEAGUE;
EUROPE $159
No. route dates weeks price
CA-043 D/L/D 12/23-1/4 2 $175
CA-007 D/L/D 5/5-6/8 5 $159
ON-058 D/Munich/D 12/22-1/3 2 $199
UAC and Sl have 16 other flights from which to choose. We
nra rnnJarin twirinn n1 7th+A nnii 1 7t.. l irl va muJf 1

I

I

costs
2. Drive thru pickup-no delivery
costs.

I I aaiiin flnflliflibnnimr rnrr11

Ei

I

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