PneFiaht THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 1, 1974 ..,yG .y ... i SPARTANS SLAUGHTERED: 4r House Plants Supplies Pottery Books 514 E. William 1202 Pa 662-3606 994-4 Pckard Plants Galore Now Has Two Locations To Give You The Best Quality Lowest Prices Au-mv--Ikig Ten II, 842 By TOM CAMERON ranking. The Big Ten gridiron teams Wisconsin spotted the Buf- were brought back to earth last faloes ten points early in the Saturday. With the exception of game, but then scored three Purdue, all reverted to a brand successive times to take the of football more typically ex- lead, 21-10. Early in the fourth pected of them. quarter, though, Colorado came The week before, Big Ten storming back to end the Bad- teams pulled off three major gers' dreams of national ac- upsets in a Saturday of non- claim this season. conference games. On that day, LATER IN THE day Michigan seven of the conference mem- State felt the wrath of revenge bers tasted victory. But last from UCLA, 56-14. The Bruins, Saturday cooled the hot Big Ten their pride badly bruised by an down as five of them bit the embarrassing 21-10 loss to Iowa, dust to put the loop's non- piled up over 500 yards on the conference record at 12-7-1. PURDUE ROCKED the coun- try by shocking second-ranked Notre Dame in a 31-20 pounding.{ But while that upset was taking place, three other teams beaten by the Big Ten the week before got revenge. It's the top of the ninth. Th( First, Wisconsin fell. Their 5-4. If the Birds lose this one, heads still floating after beating John Hiller gets the word from highly-ranked Nebraska, the "What do you mean, I did Badgers were stopped by Colo- Why to 2 uMmyad by idn j rado in a come from behind entry to 420 Maynard by midnig victory, 24-21,mtoflose their over Notre Dame!" The Yankee eleventh spot in the national Rod Van Skoc of 523 Hill ta le young MSU defense, scoring fourteen points in each quarter. "We got demolished," said, State head coach Denny Stolz. "They kicked the hell out of us. We were beaten badly and offer no excuse." Actually, the Spartan offense was not really inept, rolling up 338 yards on the ground. But UCLA quarterback John Sciarra had a field day, running and passing for 237 yards, and the Spartans were never really in the game. Also feeling the effects of a Pik he Tigers are leading the Orioles the Yankees are tied for first, manager Ralph Houk. n't win the Griddies? I got my ght Friday, and I picked Purdue s will have to wait til next year. was this week's winner of the wear, prelvious Big Ten upset were the Wildcats of Northwestern, as Nebraska demolished them, 49-7. Meanwhile, Penn State! came off their Navy upset to thrash Iowa, 27-0, denying the Hawkeyes a first down until thel fourth period. Kentucky held off a late In- diana charge and held on to a 28-22 lead to complete the Big Ten losses. EVEN OHIO STATE did not have its usual killing. .Woody Hayes had to be disappointed with a mere 28-9 domination of Southern Methodist University. The country's number one team, known for running up scores, could manage only four touch- downs. "I'm glad to get that one over with," said Hayes. "We certainly didn't improve be- tween our second and third games." sof Tailback Archie Griffin found the end zone twice for the Bucks and compiled 157 yards for the day, the fourteenth consecutive time the junior has surpassed the 100 yard mark. Wingback Brian Bashnagel, often overshadowed by Griffin, also scored twice and compiled 144 yards in seven attempts. One touchdown was on a Cornelius Greene pass while the other was a 44-yard run. Illinois had an even tougher time capturing a 21-19 victory over Washington State. The Il- lini needed a 22-yard touchdown pass with only 34 seconds left to overcome four lost fumbles and one touchdown called back by penalty. Quarterback Jeff Hollenbach found receivers in the end zone three times in the game, in- cluding the game-saving pass to Jeff Crystal for the winner. U a I 20% STUDENT DISCOUNT I OSU grabs top spot; Blue notches fourth .,_.... ..r .. Pizza Bob Pizza. 1. MICHIGAN at Stanford 11. Alabama at Mississippi (pick score) 12. LSU at Florida 2. California at Illinois 13. Va. Military vs. Virginia 3. West Virginia at Indiana Tech. (at Richmond) 4. Iowa at USC. 14. Pittsburgh at N. Carolina S. Notre Dame at Michigan 15. Georgia at Clemson State 16. Richmond at Furman 6. Minnesota at Nebraska 17. Western Michigan at Kent 7. Oregon at Northwestern State 8. Ohio State at Washington 18. Navy at Boston College St. 19. Pennsylvania at Brown 9. Purdue at Duke 20. Daily Libels vs. Edit 10. Missouri at Wisconsin Staff Flunkies LUNCH-DISCUSSION Tuesday, Oct. 1 12:00 Noon U. of M. International Center By The Associated Press Ohio State survived another wave of upsets last weekend and held on to first place in The Associated Press college football rankings. The Buckeyes, 42-point favor- ites, had a tougher time than expected but defeated Southern Methodist 28-9 and received 26 first-place votes and 1,044 of a possible 1,140 points Monday from a nationwide panel of Ladies' and Children's Hairstyling a Specialty- Appointments Available Dascola Barber Shops Arborland--971-9975 Maple Villae-761-2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-662-0354 j Subject: "Report from North Vietnam' Speaker: Nancy Woodside recently returned from North Vietnam with Indo- China Peace Campaian Cost: 50c Sponsored b For Reservations Ecumenical Campus Cent Call 662-5529 International Cent 1/ sports writers and broadcast- ers. Notre Dame, ranked second a week ago, had its hopes for a second consecutive national championship jolted in a 31- 20 loss to Purdue. The Fight- ing Irish dropped to seventh place while Oklahoma, the preseason and first - week leader, massacred Utah State 72-3 and movedup from third to second with 25 first-place votes and 1,002 points...... SAlabama and Michigan also climbed one position eachto third and fourth, respectively. Alabama, a 23-10 winner over Vanderbilt, received four first- place votes and 898 noints while Michigan earned five No. 1 votes but only 878 points follow- ing a 52-0 clobbering of Navy. TQrns A & M went from ninth to fifthby trouncing Washing- ton 28-15. One ballot listed the A qvies in a fire-wav tie for first place with Ohio State. Ok- inhomn, Alabama and Michi- aan. The Too2 By The Associated Press The Associated Press Top Twen- ty, with first-place votes in paren- theses, season record and total points. Points tabulated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1. w: er ' er 30-40% SALE HANDMADE SHEEPSKIN COATS MAXI REG. $185 .....$115 CAR COAT JACKET . . 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We'll train you "on-the-job" for 8 years) combined with a practice of 6 months-then you'll take full promotion from within provides out- arge of an engineering staff section standing advancement opportunities. direct responsibility for a production t or department. permaking is big business. Tenth gest industry in the U. S. and grow- Sign up at the Placement Office now. rapidly. We're interested in talking with you even armin's growing. As a producer of if you have graduate school plans or a usehold paper products, Charmin is military obligation. Note: You must be a e of the leaders of the segment that is U. S. citizen or have a permanent im- )wing 3 times faster than the total migrant visa. lustry. An Equal Opportunity Employer - M/Ff 1. Ohio State (25) 2. Oklahoma (24) 3. Alabama (3) 4. MICHIGAN (4) I5. Texas A&M S6. Nebraska '7. Notre Dame 8. N. Caro. St. 9. S. California 10. Texas Tech 11. Auburn 12. Arizona 13. Florida 14. Illinois 15. Penn State 16. Miami, Fla. 17. Pitt 18. Arizona State 19. Texas 20. Arkansas 3-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 '10-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 2-0-1 :-:-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 1,044 1,002 898 878 554 452 406 344 258 257 224 210 191 183 168 144 77 74 73 44 I BOWLING LEAGUE Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Cincinnati, Houston, Kansas, Louisiana State, Maryland, Menphis State, Miami of Ohio, Mis- souri, Oklahoma State, Purdue, Tu- lane, Wisconsin, UCLA. One ballot listed a five-way tie for first place among Ohio State, Texas A&M. Wanitto quit U of Michigan stu. w/ professional assistance, will help you beat your habit. phone 764-0434 Mon.-Fri. 9-3 REG STRATION f MEN'S LEAGUE - MONDAY EVENINGS MIXED LEAGUES - TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY EVENINGS CO-OP LEAGUES - MONDAY & TUESDAY AFTERNOONS DORM LEAGUES - WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY AFTERNOONS FRAT-SOR. 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