Sunday, September 15, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, September 15, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven - - a a a a a a ~ .. i::.:"+ :s MSU CLAWS WILDCATS: Buckeyes run b By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.--Junior running back Archie Griffin set an Ohio State career rushing record Saturday to lead the na- tionally ranked Buckeyes to a 34-19 Big Ten Conference col- lege football victory over Min- nesota. Griffin, who gained 133 yards on 26 carries and now has 2,577 yards during his OSU career, and junior quar- terback Cornelius Greene, sparked the Buckeyes' 499- yard offensive performance. Greene, who passed and ran for 213 yards offense, scored two touchdowns while fullbacks Pete Johnson and "Champ" Henson each scored once. Minnesota struck suddenly in the fourth quarter for 16 points and moved to within 29-19 be- fore Greene sealed the victory with a 57-yard scoring run. * * * partans splurge EAST LANSING, Mich. - ichigan State quarterback Charlie Baggett fired a 57-yard scoring pass and raced to a toiu.hdown himself to highlight touchdowns and W i s c o n s i n a 21-point second quarter yes- fought off a late Purdue surge terday and spark the Spartans yesterday as the Badgers open- to a 41-7 victory over Big Ten ed the Big Ten football season rival Northwestern. with a 28-14 victory. Baggett also hit two 44-yard The Badgers, scoring in each passes, one in the second quar- period, opened a 21-0 lead be- ter to set up his touchdown and fore the Boilermakers could get another in the final period for on the scoreboard. MSU's fourth tally. However, Wisconsin's oppor- t i Go hers FUTURE WORLDS LECTURE SERIES road victory since 1970 for Wis- halfback Frank Johnson late W ILL BE BACK THIS W INTER consin. The Badgers had only a in the third quarter. tie to show for 14 conference In the fourth quarter, Phil- road games since then. It was lips raced 22 yards around end also the first Wisconsin victory for a touchdown after spurting in Purdue's Ross-Ade Stadium 15 yards earlier in the 67-yard since 1957 when Badger coach scoring drive which required John Jardine was a starting eight plays. yIfyOU w n to help plan the Lecture series this guard for the Boilermakers. - * * winter, come to our meetings-Tuesday nights in Beaver shoots CeAverINshoots-llinisthe U.A.C. offices, 2nd floor Michigan Union- CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- Illinois il stopped Indiana on the one-foot line early in the game and then 763-1107. rallied in the second half on Jim Kopatz' passing and Chubby Phillips' running for a 16-0 Big Ten football opener victory yes- terday. First Organizational M eeting- A scoreless struggle in a *I~ ~ Ai.rg nz uo o ragged game ended 22 secondsf before halftime on Dan Bea- TU ES., SEPT. 17- 8:00 P.M . ver's 41-yard field goal and then Kopatz produced an Illini -- tnhdown on a 40-varda sto hi Baggett's long air strikes- he garnered 154 yards on only, four completions -- overshad- owed the aerial show of Wild- cat quarterback Mitch Ander- son, the Big Ten's leading passer for the past two sea- sons. Working against an inexper- ienced Spartan defensive sec- ondary in the season opener for both teams, Anderson notched 20 tunistic defense managed to keep Purdue in check the rest of the way, except for a light- ning 64-yard scoring pass from quarterback Mike Terrizzi to former Olympic sprinter Lar- ry Burton. Burton wound up the game with eight receptions for 180 yards, but was the Boilermakers' only bright spot on offense. It was the first conference completions in 36 tries. But he ::: :: .. ::; . was unable to establish a con-I sistent passing attack afterB T throwing for the game's first n touchdown. *tn g * !. tadings$ Boilers bust WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Sophomore tailback Ron Pollard scored a pair of third period W L T PF PA MICHIGAN Ohio State Mich. State Illinois Wisconsin Minnesota Purdue Indiana Northwestern Iowa 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I I 1 1 1 0 24 0 34 0 41 0 16 0 28 0 19 0 14 0 0 0 7 0 7 7 19 7 0 14 34, 28 16 41 24 11111411YVVY11 llll tl 2V J'KIlW JCIAA lV tin YESTERDAY'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 24, Iowa 7 Ohio State 34, Minnesota 19 Mich. State 41, Northwestern 7 Wisconsin 28, Purdue 14 Illinois 16, Indiana A SATURDAY'S GAMES Colorado at MICHIGAN Oregon St. at Ohio St. Syracuse at Mich. St. Nebraska at Wisconsin N. Dakota at Minnesota Miami (0) at Purdue Arizona at Indiana Notre Dame at Northwestern UCLA at Iowa Illinois at Stanford , .IT is asla-& (I11 %4 :Jun. Jt94. 15u 4- tpm & i LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S film of D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WMEN SIN LOVE" COLOR by Deluxe*Untd Artists Tues. & Wed., Sept. 17 G 18 7 & 9:30 p.m. IMII. . O OTLE M ALLIED ARTISTS Release Thurs., Sept. 19 7 & 9:15 p.m. AUDITORIUM A, ANGELL HALL ADMISSION $1.25 tickets on sale at 6 p.m. FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S 1973 SUCH A GORGEOUS KID LIKE ME Director Francois Truffaut has always been fascinated by society's victims and vanquished, and in Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me, a fresh, funny, zesty celebration of the screwiness of life. Truffaut has found his ultimate nebbish. Stanislas Previne. (Andre Dussollier) is a young sociolocv orofessor who is writinq a book called "Criminal Women." He is Candidate with a Ph.D., a passive dolt who has learned evervthing about life from books. With his tape recorder whirring and his naivete aorina, Previne sets about interviewinq Camille Bliss (Bernadette Lafont), the free-spirited, free lovin gorqeous kid who is in prison for killinq her buq-exteminator lover. In a vocabularv any boatswain could envy, Camille spills out a life story so sordidly woeful-and self-serv- innlv inventive-that Dickens would have wept to hear it. Previne believes her and gradually falls for her. This, of course, inevitably dooms Previne, and he is the only one who doesn't Se it comina. Truffaut's satirical shafts aimed at deep thinkers neatly skewer the taroet. Previne is so thorouahly Freudianized that he accents Camille's fondness for the banio as "sublimated oenis envy." Her nvmphomania reveals "emotional insecurity," an observation that draws a testy "I know emotionally insecure alley cats" from her iealous assistant (played by Anne Kre's. who like Dussollie.r is making her film debut.) Truffauts art mocks life-and even mocks himself. The, author of the auteur theory, which credits the director as the solo creator of a film, he iabs auteur filmmakers in one seauence when a precocious brat-who looks remarkably like the vouna Truffaut-refuses to show a movie provina Camille's innocence until the film is properly edited. Another sequence with Previne and Camille gazinq soulfully at each other as they say boodbye, underscored by Georges Delerue's lush music, gently satirizes all those prison farewell scenes in Hollywood's "Bic House" epics of the 1940's. And Truffaut takes a page. from Harold Robbins's novel "The Betsy" in a scene in which Camille and a pop singer fornicate as a record plays the sound track of the Indianapolis 500. The film derives from Henry Farrell's trashy novel (He also wrote "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?"), and the wonder is that Truffaut has managed to turn it into such an ebullient and entertaining movie. Jean-Loup Dabadie and Truffaut collaborated on the screenplay, transferring the story from Southern California to France and energizing is alona the way. One reason it is such a qorqeous movie is that Bernadette Lafont, who made her debut fifteen years ago in Truffaut's short "Les Mistons," is such a gorgeous actress. Her eyes dilated in a childish innocence, her lush body curving out of her prison denims, Lafont's Camille Bliss is Truffaut's most deliciously spirited heroine since Jeanne Moreau's Catherine in JULES AND JIM. And while Such a Gorqeous Kid Like Me doesn't achieve the artistry of that film, it demonstrates nonetheless that Francois Truffaut is one of the most talented, lively directors in the world. Arthur Cooper, Nswk i TONIGHT AT ARCHITECTURE AUD. cliiinem g iild 7, 8:45 &10:30 ADM. $1 ATTENTION: ALL OLD MEMBERS (YELLOW AND ABOVE) U of M TAE KWON DO CLUB Organizational Meeting Wed., Sept. 18-7:00 p.m. 1026 VAUGHN, NO. 5 662-6831 ii I, . PURDUE BOILERMAKER Reggie Arnold heads upfield against Wisconsin in Big Ten action yesterday. Purdue was beaten on their home field by the Badgers, 28-14. Big Ten teams now play three non-conference games before resuming the Run for the Roses next October 12. 1974's MOST HILARIOUS WILDEST MOVIE IS HERE! "May be the funniest movie of the 5th HIT WEEK! 231' Dia SIDNEY POITIER - BILL COSBV And HARRV BEIAFONTE As Geechie Dan The UPTOWN funn SATURDAY rkyou NIGHT with me -1 Mae "A' CR) Sat. Sun.,& Wed. open 12:45,Z Showsat 23457,9p.m. Mon Tue.Thur Fri at 7 & 9 Only S. STATE ST. I 668-6416 ii 5AY) D y EvER NEAR. -(E ENE ABA . r,,.ACNIGgN CoUPoNg? r. D It's no joke, really. The University Theatre Programs is offering ey 'y a get when mess their oney! -Next- - rx. Bros. NIMAL ACKERS" -I book of ten tickets for just ten dol- lars. The book entitles you to see whatever show you wish, and sit in whatever seat you can get at the time you exchange each coupon for a ticket. The coupons can be used all at once, e.g. ten people can use one book for one show; or the cou- pons can be used individually. year. Rush to see it!" - nneapais Cribune kh~aLI "A smashing, triumphant satire:' ---S a a" e Fost Iitekigercer "Riotously, excruciatingly funny:' -Muwau'kee Sentnel "Consistently hilarious and brilliant:' amoD ecord "Insanely funny, outrageous and irreverent"Beiao P-1 AYE QY wpmi A GREAT NEW MOTION PICTURE COMEDY I I i 1 { I i { i ONE WEEK ONLY! EACH BOOK CAN BE USED FOR THE FOLLOWING PQWER CENTER SHOWS: 1. OCT. 9-12-Edmond Rostand's NOV. 27-30-Wm. Shakespeare's FEB. 5-8-Donald Hall's APRIL 16-19-Aristophanes' ausumm-Am _ - ZA 'CYRANO DE BERGERAC' 'PERICLES' NEW PLAY 'THE BIRDS' I A Ken Shapiro Film Mon. & Tues. open 6:45 1214 S. UNIVERSITY Showsat7 & 9 p.m.t Sat. & Sun. at 1, 3,57& 5D 7 & 9 DIAL 668-6416 - 9 Produced anc Drec eC b Ken Shapiro .Wen b Ken Shapiro Lane Sarasohn A Sir &P~ocno RESIRI(TED 4 The book can also be used for the University Theatre Showcase: The Killing of Sister George, Oct. 21-23; Tht Red Lantern, Nov. 13-16; The Real Inspector Hound, Jan. 19-21; The Last of Mrs. Lin- coln, Feb. 19-22; No Place to Be Somebody, Mar. 26-29. j I 12:45 SShows at DIAL 665-6290 7 & 9 p.m. 603 E. LIBERTY 1.C presents in association with Jewel Productions Limited and Lorimar Productions. Inc. el v i 1 E E irdSfilm In addition, this book contains discount cou- pons for Professional Theatre Program off- erings. 1 U I MAIL ORDER FORM I U U-M Student l.D. Name___-Phone a 'I Ih.. r _ I I I £ fAddress.--------- _________________ ______________________________________________ U II1 I