Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sur#Jay, November 15, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sur.~iay, November 1 5, 1970 i IRISH SQUEAK TO VICTORY Combines ancient wisdom of Aztec ., culture with modern mystic Aquarian accent Send check or money order, No COD's Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman Lewin-Ackerman For the student body: SGenuine Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to 46 CHEKMATE 1 i i I I I 1 ! 4 PPD $14.50 to: Upping Products P.O. Box 1849 Tucson, Arizona 85702 I SGC Election Nov. 17, 18, 19 State Street at Liberty S Uptight About Where to Eat Sunday? f We Specialize in V STEAKS. FISH, and SANDWICHES at prices STUDENTS CAN AFFORD Open v Mon. thru Fri. E 319 S. 4th Ave. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. S 761-3548 Sat. & Sun. v 5 p.m.-2 a.m. )Mon. thru Thurs., no minimum charge - >>e< >< -><- < >< ><-><->c c < t7 c<<- >c 0 Bowl By The Associated Press AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo.- Air Force passer Bob Parker guid- ed the cadets to a thrilling 31- 14 victory over Rose Bowl bound Stanford yesterday and bested the Indians' Jim Plunkett in a battle of top quarterbacks. Ernie Jennings caught t h r e e of Parker's passes for touch- downs, two of them in the fierce second half attack by the Falcons. Stanford was ranked number six in the nation prior to the game. Trailing 14-10 at the half, A i r Force carried the fight to the fav- ored Indians as the third quar- ter began, diiving 68 yards for the go-ahead score. A yard from the goal line on fourth down, Jen- nings made a running catch of a short pass as Air Force w e n t back into the lead. The next scoring drive by the Cadets in the fourth period cov- ered 80 yards with Brian Bream, one of the nation's leading col- legiate ball carriers, going the last yard. Yellowjackets stung SOUTH BEND - Notre Dame's top-ranked football team scramb- led from behind inathe last quar- ter yesterday for a. 10-7 victory over the unranked Georgia Tech Yellowjackets. Denny Allen plunged two yards for the winning touchdown, cli- maxing an 80-yard drive that fea- tured a 46-yard pass from J o e Theismann to Ed Gulyas. Georgia Tech's third quarter touchdown was a pass play from Eddie McAshan to Larry Studdard that covered 66 yards. The 5-foot- 10 Studdard outran the Irish de- fenders the last 40 yards. A 10-yard Notre Dame punt put the unbeaten Irish in trouble again in the closing minutes, but Clarence Ellis pulled them out by intercepting a McAshan pass. Cornhus hers bowl bound LINCOLN, Neb.-Halfback Joe Orduna ran for four touchdowns and fourth-rated Nebraska inter- cepted seven passes yesterday as the Cornhuskers blasted Kansas State 51-13 to clinch a tie for the Big Eight Conference football title. The victory makes Bob De- vaney's Huskers 9-0-1 overall and 6-0 in the Big Eight and sets up Indians scalped ( next week's game against Okla- home, the second place club. The Orange Bowl committee announced that it has invited the Cornhuskers to their Miami bowl game. Nebraska coach Devaney said that his players will vote on the invitation today. The seven interceptions came off Wildcat quarterback Lynn Dickey; the Big Eight's all-time leading passer and set a new Nebraska team record. Orduna, a senior who sat out last season after knee surgery, turned in his finest game of the year, running three, 16, two and one yards for his touchdowns. Marshall grid squad killed in plane crash . KENOVA, W.Va. (W) - A twin- engine jetliner carrying Marshall University's football team, boost- ers and crew crashed in flames into a muddy hillside near here last night, killing all 75 persons aboard, authorities reported. The Southern Airways DC9 crashed in a ball of fire midway up a hillside-the last hurdle for planes on approach to the nearby' Tri-State Airport. A Kenova Fire Department offi- cial said "after the plane hit it seemed to explode." The crash site is in southwest- ern West Virginia, about 12 miles east of Huntington, where Mar- shall's campus is located. The four-engine jet was making the approach at the airport at Huntington when it crashed in a light fog and drizzle. A spokesman for Southern Air- MAKE YOUR OWN MOVIES Develop your own mov- ies in 45 minutes with our complete kit. In- cluding film. 8Bmm Soper8 186mm $29.95 for information send to Home Film Processing P.O.B. C-38 Salem, Mich. 48175 ways in Atlanta, Ga., said the $4.5 million craft, a DC9 capable of carrying 95, was carrying 70 pas- sengers and a crew of five. He said it was the only plane Mar- shall had chartered:~ Graydon Hall, executive vice president and general manager of the carrier, said, before leaving Atlanta for the crash site, "Our information is still sketchy . .. We have no information regarding any condition or causes... Witnesses said they were "rock- ed" out of their chairs from the concussion of the explosion. John Young, who lives about a half mile from the crash site, said he "heard this loud noise . . I ran out to see what it was and all I saw was a big ball of fire." "Nobody could have survived that," Young said. Albert Rich, whose . house also is about a half mile from the scene, said he first thought the loud noise was lightning. He went out to see. "I heard this one bang and a minute later there was this ter- rific bang which shook the whole house. I ran outside to see if there was a storm, and I saw this flash over the hill," Rich said. He said the plane skimmed the top of an abandoned house just before it crashed. Positive identifications of those aboard were 'not made, pending transport of the bodies from the rural scene to a National Guard Armory at the airport, where a makeshift morgue was set up. The team was returning from Greenville, N.C., where it suffered a 17-14 loss to East Carolina yes- terday afternoon. The plane had been due to return by 7:30 p.m., the FAA said. Less than two months ago, on Oct. 2, one of two chartered planes carrying the Wichita State Uni- versity football team, coaches, boosters and others, crashed in the mountains in Colorado, killing 31 persons, including 13 football players. The Marshall tragedy was "the worst domestic air. crash this year," a Federal Aviation Agency spokesman in Washington said, and it was described as one of the worst in history involving an athletic team. The crash also was the worst in West Virginia air travel history. Longhorns romp FORT WORTH - Second-rank- ed Texas - fired by Jim Bertel- sen's 54-yard touchdown romp on the third play of the game - buried Texas Christian 58 - 0 Saturday for the Longhorn's 28th consecutive victory. The defending national cham- pions, knocked from the No. 1 rat- ing in The Associated Press poll last week, poured it on the Horned Frogs with their burly star full- back Steve Worster sitting on the bench with an injury. Bertelsen also scored twice on three yard dashes while Texas quarterback Eddie Phillips bolted three and nine yards for touch- downs. * * * Huskies runaway SEATTLE - Sonny Sixkiller and Greg Collins each fired t h r e e touchdown passes in a record- breaking performance as Wash- ington thundered past UCLA 61- 20 yesterday in a Pacific-8 foot- ball game. The loss was the worst for UCLA in 45 years as Washington ran up 31 points against Tommy Pro- thro's Bruins in the fourth per- iod. Collins hurled two 45-yard touchdown passes to Al Maurer and added a seven-yard touch- down pass to Ron Preston. Sixkiller, already second on Washington's career passing list as a sophomore, broke a number of Washington records on his first touchdown pass, a 52-yarder to Bo Cornell. Bulldogs growl AUBURN, Ala. - Georgia, arm- ed with a time-consumed ground game led by sophomore tailback Ricky Lake, struck for a pair of fourth period touchdowns yester- day and stunned eighth-ranked Auburn- 31-17 in a Southeastern Conference football game. The mighty Tigers, averaging more than 500 yards per game, put 17 points together in a second period flurry but couldn't solve the Georgia defense thereafter. Lake, a 185-pounder, cracked out 96 yards on 26 carries and scor- ed touchdowns on runs of one and forr yards. The second came with 12:07 remaining in the game, giving Georgia a 24-17 lead. Mountaineers climb MORGANTOWN, W. Va. - Linebacker Dale Farley intercept- ed a fourth-quarter Syracuse pass here yesterday and ran it back 45 yards to set up a West Virginia touchdown and ice a 28-19 vic- tory, halting a gallant comeback bid by the Orangemen. Farley's steal came with three minutes remaining in the game, when it appeared West Virginia's 21-0 third-quarter lead was fad- ing beneath a furious Syracuse on- rush. Razorbacks roll FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Kick- ing specialist Bill McClard booted three field goals, including a re- cord breaking 60-yarder as the seventheranked Arkansas Razor- backs smothered SMU 36-3 Sa- turday in a Southwest Confer- ence football game. McClard's 60-yarder hit the cross-bar, bounced high into the air and fell into the end zone. The kick, aided by a 20 mile an hour wind, broke the NCAA record of 59 yards set last year. * * * Rebels click OXFORD, Miss. - Quarterback Shug Chumbler took over for ail- ing Archie Manning and threw four touchdown passes in leading 12th-ranked Mississippi to a me- thodical 44-7 victory over out- manned Chattanooga yesterday. Rockets rocket DAYTON, Ohio - Toledo's de- fensive squad helped sweep the Rockets past Dayton 31-7 yes- terday, picking up fumbles and in- terceptions that set up scoring drives. Tangerine Bowl-bound Toledo, is now unbeaten in 10 games this season and holder of its second straight Mid-American Confer- ence title. Sooners soar LAWRENCE, Kan. - Sopho- more Joe Wylie's sweeping runs and Leon Crosswhite's stabbing line thrusts brought Oklahoma a 28-24 uphill victory over Kansas yesterday and kept the Sooners in the thick of the Big Eight Cbn- ference football race with fourth- ranked Nebraska. 4 I 4 SCORES GRADUATE ASSEMBLY, RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SGC ELECTIONS COLLEGE FOOTBALL Gridde Pickings MICHIGAN 55, Iowa 0 Minnesota 23, Michigan State 13_ Northwestern 21, Indiana 7 Wisconsin 29, Illinois 17 Ohio State 10, Purdue 7 Nebraska 51, Kansas State 13 Boston College 21, Pittsburgh 6. West Virginia 28, Syracuse 19 Colorado 30, Oklahoma State 6 Georgia 31, Auburn 17 Florida 24, Kentucky 13 Puke 42, South Carolina 38 Yale 27, Princeton 22 Oklahoma 28, Kansas 24 Miami (O) 10, Kent State 8 Temple 21, Buffalo 8 Rice 18,,Texas A&M 17 Air Force 31, Stanford 14 W -hington 61, UCLA 20 LIBELS over sge, incomplete EAST Army 22, Oregon 22 Cent. Michigan 47, Hofstra Univ. 0 Delaware 51, Boston Univ. 19 Harvard 17, Brown 10 Lafayette 31, Vermont 14 Pennsylvania 21,'Columbia 14 Bucknell 24, Lehigh 20 Dartmouth 24, Cornell 0 Massachusetts 24, New Hampshire 14 Penn State 32, Ohio 22 Rutgers 37, Holy Cross 7 Temple 21, Buffalo 8 Villanova 14, Navy 10 Amherst 35, Williams Col. 7 Connecticut 33, Rhode Island 12 Cortland St. 17, Central Conn. St. 10 Rochester 54, Tufts 26 MIDWEST Louisville 28, Cincinnati 14 Colorado 30, Oklahoma State 6 Iowa State 31, Missouri 19 Toledo 31, Dayton 7 W. Texas St. 23, Bowling Green 7 Drake Univ. 21, Southern Illinois 9 Wooster 19, Oberlin College 6 Notre Dame 10, Georgia Tech 7 East Michigan 60, Ball State 0 Kalamazoo Col. 25, Hiram College 13 Montana 24, So. Dakota State 0 N. Michigan 44, Northwood Mich. 10 W. Michigan 38, Northern Illinois 18 Carnegie-Mellon 21, Case West. R. 0 Denison Univ. 23, Ohio Wesleyan 15 Kenyon College 27, Adrian 14 Marietta Col. 13, Heidelberg'Col. 12 Ohio Northern 20, Findlay College 6 Wayne St. 12, Central St., 0. 6 Baldwin-Wallace 8, Ferris State 6 Mount Union 42, John Carroll 6 SOUTH East Carolina 17, Marshall Univ. 14 Grambling Col. 55, Norfolk State 13 Louisiana Tech 27, S. Mississippi 6 N. Carolina Cen. 14, Virginia Union 0 Florida State 34, Virginia Tech 8 Richmond 40, Virginia Mil. 17 Virginia 54, Colgate 12 William & Mary 29, Davidson Col. 28 West Kentucky 14, Butler 0 North Carolina 42, Clemson .7 Wake Forest 16, No. Carolina St. 13 Memphis State 51, Wichita State 6 Mississippi 44, Chattanooga 7 WEST Arkansas 36, South Methodist 3 California 35, San Jose State 28 Oregon State 28, Washington St. 16 Texas 58, Texas Christian 0 Texas Tech 7, Baylor 3 Idaho 42, Utah State 14 New Mexico St. 69, Lamar Tech 37 Arizona State 37, Utah 14 Colo. State Univ. 17, Pacific Univ. 8 New Mexico 51, Brigham Young 8 San Diego 69, Calif. Tech. 0 PRO SPORTS NHL Toronto 3, Boston 2 Chicago 2, New York 1 Pittsburgh 6, California 1 Montreal at St. Louis, inc. Vancouver at Minnesota, inc. Minnesota 3, Vancouver 3, tie St. Louis 1, Montreal 1, tie NBA Milwaukee 116, Buffalo 107 New York 126, Philadelphia 94 Baltimore 122, Boston 101 Chicago 120, Atlanta 116 Detroit at San Diego, inc. Cleveland at Portland, inc. Utah 106, Pittsburgh 102 ABA Virginia 119, Floridians 97 Kentucky 149, Texas 132, Indiana 128, Carolina 119 Pittsburgh at Utah, inc. -I 4 Venture:Seven minutes to save a life. J4 The problem: lifesaving clinical tests of blood, urine and spinal fluid may take technicians hours to perform using traditional methods. The possible solution: design a virtually complete chemical labora- tory in a desk-sized cabinet that will perform a variety of clinical tests autorrotically, accurately, quickly. The result: Du Pont's Automatic Clinical Analyzer, the end-product of years of cooperation and problem solving among engineering physi- cists, biochemists, electrorriechan- ical designers, computer specialists and many, many others. The heart of the instrument is a transp~ren~t, postcard-sized reagent packetnthat'functions as a reaction chamber and optical cell for a computer-controlled analysis of specimens.t Separate packs-made of a chem- ically inert, optically clear plastic- are designed for a variety of tests. And each pack is suppflied with a binary code to instruct the analyzer. Packs for certain tests also contain individual disposable chroma- tographic columns to isolate spe- cific constituents or molecular weight fractions on the sample. In operation, the analyzer auto- matically injects the sample and diluent into each pack, mixes the reagents, waits a preset time for the reaction, then forms a precise optical cell within the walls of the transparent pack and measures the reaction photometrically. A built-in solid-state computer monitors the operation, calculates the concentration value for each test and prints out a report sheet for each sample. The instrument is capable of handling 30 different tests, the chemistry procedures for ten of which have already been developed. The first test result is ready in about seven minutes. And in continuous operation, successive test results are obtained every 35 to 70 seconds, depending on the type of test. Innovation-applying the known to discover the unknown, inventing new materials and putting them to work, using research and engineer- ing to create the ideas and products of the future-this is the venture Du Pont people are engaged in. Recommendation Recommended Recommended Recommended Recommended Acceptable Acceptable Acceptable Candidate Alan Ackerman Henry Clay Jay Hack Jeff Lewin Andre Hunt Mark Ruessman Paul Travis For a variety of career opportu. nities, and a chance to advance through many fields, talk to your Du Pont Recruiter. Or send the coupon. t E' Not Recommended Russ Garland Not Recommended Marnie Heyn Not Recommended Jim Kent Not Recommended Jeanne Lenyer Not Recommended Lawson Nagel Not Recommended Brian Spears kInf RnrnmmnrIPCI Fdwunrel Stp-in The Henry Martin Loud Lectureship Presents The Rev. Dr. S. Jameson Jones President of Iliff School of Theology speaking on "Church and Campus in the Crisis" SUNDAY--7:00 P.M.I at Wesley Foundation Lounge op Du Pont Company, Room 7894, Wilmington, DE 1989 Please send me the booklets checked below. Chemical Engineers at Du Pont Q Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont I