Tuesday, November 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Nine WOODY, ARCHIE LEAD WAY: - 'r , - osU 'I By RICHARD FLAIERTY Ohio State's 49-7 devastation of Illinois Saturday was no typical rout. The triumph marked the 200th victory of Woody Hayes'l career. During the game, four other school records were es- tablished, along with a national; rushing record.I Tailback Archie Griffin, with his 18th consecutive game of+ 100 yards or more, broke the+ standard he shared with Okla-+ homa's Steve Owens. The new record was set during a dazzling, 22-yard touchdown run.I Griffin, not to be caught! gloating, passed the credit on+ to the team. "I couldn't have done anything without my line. They kept telling me all week that they would get me the rewrit 100 yards. I want a picture of the whole offensive unit so I can hang it in my bedroom." Griffin's 144 yards in the game boosted his own school career yardage record to 3,638. A record Columbus crowd of 87,813 also saw the Bucks equal the school rushing mark of 517 yards, established against In- diana in 1962. The 644 total offense yards surpassed the 1969 Ohio State record by 49. Cornelius Greene showed his now familiar versatility, passing for 127 yards and gaining an- other 127 in rushing. The junior quarterback was selected the Btckeye's offensive back of the week. Illinois Coach Bob Blackman could not give the number one iug re cord books "Charlie is as good as any- one in the rcountrv and it's him score when we were back- Pd n an- an,, . , r d lina Vile III u1 t.. unry,au e it.N euup on our sx xyar u ne about time the country real- was a real boost." ized how good he is," heralds "It was obvious one team MSU coach Denny Stolz. icame to play and the other Ur:S:,Baggett himself is even more didn't," lamented Iowa Coach f confident. "I believe I am the Bob Commings on the 38-14 NIGHT EDITOR: best quarterback in the Big pounding. + BILL STIEG Ten. Franklin, Greene and I Northwestern, known for its S a are similar, I gust think I can: passing attack, ran for its vic- do as mn things asth can agis 1 ~ ; ~~~tory aantreelingMinst team enough praise. "I don't as well and a little better.', last weekend. think I've ever seen a foot- Coach S t o 1 z, reflecting on Realizing the Gohers would ball team that has more offen- Michigan State's upsets of the g I be most concerned with the sive weapons than Ohio State." Buckeyes in '71 and '72, says 1 Attempting to hide part of the he's still after the Big Ten passing arm of Mitch Anderson, - 1 rown altoug theSparansNorthwestern Coach John Pont arsenal, Coach Woody Hayes crown, although the Spartan stuck to the ground. closed the team's practice to the trail Michigan and Ohio State public yesterday. His decision by 1% games. Jim Trimble was the spark- is probably based on Michigan Coach Hayes, though cautious, plug with 151 yards and Jim State's recent improvement and is not too worried. "I don't ex- Pooler gained 106 more as the the possibility of an upset iii p.ct to score that many points I Wildcats won their first Big Ten East Lansing this Saturday. this week, but we do expect to game, 21-13. Michigan State exhibited its win." potential in posting a 28-21 vic- In other Big Ten games, Mike ..:. .... tory over the 20th-ranked Wis- Pruitt led the Purdue Boiler- eBig T consin Badgers. The elimination makers to victory Saturday, Bg Ten of their many past mistakes and gaining 179 yards in only 10 a stubborn defense seems to be carries. The fullback's 94-yard standings the key to the Spartans' im- romp against Iowa was the long- proved performances. est run from scrimmage in Pur- Conference Games Against Wisconsin, quarter- due history. W L T PF PA back Charlie Baggett completed "Purdue put on a show that five out of eight passes for 74 1was unbelievable," bubbled MICHIGAN 5 0 0 139 41 yards and scrambled for 61. Coach Alex Agase. "To have Ohio State 5 0 0 239 49 Michigan State 3 1 1 128 77 h - - , heads or talesi Marc Feldman No one has seen .. ..the'real' FranklinL.A. defense leads Illinois Wisconsin Iowa2 Purdue Minnesota Indiana Northwestern 30 2 3 0 2 4 0 1 4 0 140 140 L 1G 83 t111 87 1 3 t58 75 71 it 107 143 107 126 155 124 175 THE INEVITABLE and nauseating comparisons have begun. The wire service stories, all seemingly designed to drum mI S up interest in the polls, rather than football are full of non-stories m s like "Who's better, Ohio State or Oklahoma, Michigan or Ohio State, or is Alabama better than all of them?" ad infinitum, ad SAN FRANCISC nauseum. Los Angeles defe The flimsy justification for these reams of copy is either San Francisco's ro a) comparative scores, b) the words of wisdom by a coach hack Tom Owen, r who got creamed by both, or c) the alma mater of the sports- in 35-year-old Nor writer. made the differen Reasons like injuries to key personnel, turnovers, the site of in the Rams' 1 the game and the possibility that lousy teams don't always play Football League lousy, never enter the picture. These considerations are too com- plicated for the average sportswriter, and are often unavailable the 49ers. to him. The Rams' fron Fsch week Ohio State's lopsided scores roll in and Michigan tered four sacks,i continues its less spectacular winning streak so many people which set up a fir have abandoned the Wolverines and predicted gloom and doom down, and lineb two weeks from Saturday in Columbus. Robertson interce Michigan's detractors point to closely contested games at by Snead late i Stanford, Wisconsin and Indiana, for evidence that Michigan is quarter after the hardly the Colossus of the Midwest. When Bo Schembechler says veteran had thro that all he wants to do is beat a team like Illinois, the line is a touchdo pass to little less laughable than in the past. ington which cut But in spite of all the travail, Schembecher appears to be a confident nan heading into the final weeks of the season. lead to two points One also gets the impression that the things that concern fans Los Angeles wv and wire service pollsters don't worry Bo. He knows he hasn't consecutive gam played with a full deck of cards all year. new startingc Specifically, he hasn't seen the "real" Dennis Franklin all James Harris, w season. Nagged by a series of ailments Franklin has yet to dis-2 playhis ld frm.23-yard touchdov play his old form. Bob Klein in thes Starting with his most famous malady, the shoulder separa- tion last November, Franklin has made more headlines with his ter and directed health than his quarterbacking. "I would never have guessed that touchdown drive so many things would happen to him," said Schembechler. "He's period which in missed fifty per cent of practice, which makes it awfully tough to time things." With Franklin out of the lineup or limping around, Michigan S C O R has little opportunity for overconfidence. The Wolverines are far from an omnipotent offensive team without a healthy Dennis Franklin, and were lucky to escape Bloomington Saturday. The NHL limping Franklin garnering negative four total yards in the sec- iontrea16, Minnesot and half. Franklin's ankle injury is hardly disabling, but for a wHA player who depends on shiftiness, speed, and cunning, it might as well be. But Schembechler is hardly willing to let Quebec s, Toronto 3 Franklin rest. "He will definitely play Saturday. We'll see what he does in NFL practice, but he's much better than a week ago. There has been j Los Angeles s, San F no problem with reinjury," Schembechler said. Franklin isn't the only Wolverine on the shelf. Greg Den Boer, Michigan's improving tight end, played sparingly Saturday because of a pulled muscle, and offensive guard Kirk Lewis is ASS( nursing an ankle. Defensively, the injury situation is hardly better. Halfback FA Dave Elliott and end Larry Johnson are both probably out for the season. Harry Banks, who was knocked unconscious by Courtney Snyder's knee, spent Saturday night in the hospital and the aftereffects have been slight. But Bo cautioned, "We're going C to take it easy on him this week." Bo probably won't take it easy on the rest of the team as the toughest stretch of the schedule remains. "Illinois is im- We proving and Purdue has a great offense. There has been a in t great improvement on offense throughout the League", said Bo. "The days of the routs will be over soon, even for Ohio State. Whether Bo likes it or not, the writers and fans will continue CONVERSA to compare and draw conclusions, but remember Michigan was the class team in 1971 and barely won, and Ohio State was - stronger in 1969, but Michigan triumphed. Someone suggested that Bo was getting Ohio State overcon- fident. "Maybe," said Bo, "but that's not exactly my plan." ~' * NEWORE z MELCOR SC535 (/; fully scientific 0 memory * com on log 0 two-level - " natural log parentheses " sin, cos, tan "ten-digit INCLUDES Z 9"arc functions plus scientific notation" Round - *sq root from[ * square~ rechargeable *Acr " square "d Accom j inverse *degrees & radians Hotel " change sign " x exchange y "Round " ni nautomatic constnnt Rud Woody celebrates his 200th win Woody Hayes is carried off by his Buckeyes after recording his 200th coaching victory last week when Ohio State mauled Illinois 49-7. It was only one of the landmarks reached by the Buckeyes in the game-another big one was Archie Griffin setting a new NCAA record for consecutive 100 yards games (18). to1513 Win. O (P) - The passes to Jack Snow and Gridde Picks nse punished1 ookie quarter- met its match -m Snead, but ce last night 5-13 National victory over it four regis- including one rst-half touch- backer Isiah pted a pass n the fourthI well-traveled wn a 39-yard Gene Wash- the Rams' s, Harold Jackson. But the Rams' margin of vic- tory turned out to be the three points provided by David Ray's THE DAILY LIBELS returned home from Wake Forest yester- 20-yard field goal early in the day and were met at Metro airport by "anywhere from eight fourth quarter, making the to twelve thousand screaming fans," according to a policeman score 15-6. Ray had drawn a serving as bodyguard for team coach Fielding H. Feldman. blank on the extra-point at- mpts followinge pRams' The team then returned to Ann Arbor,'their team bus escorted touchdowns, trying unsuccess- by eight police cars, to participatet in a victory celebration in fully to run the ball into the front of the Union. end zone after a bad snap from "I'm not going to say this is the best team in Libel center and then kicking wide history," yelled Feldman from the top of the Union's steps. after the second touchdown. "But 210-0 is apretty good score, considering we only played ned the scor- three quarters." Tony Bakr opene the sca- -_1-- +1+ n- P tha Libac h1CQwctlaP I I 75 1976 e For undergraduates Instruction in English Hebrew Ulpan prior to academic term independent study project for interested students Tours, seminars and extra curricular activities E YEAR PROGRAM SPRING SEMESTER erican Friends of the Israel Program Center-AZYF Aviv University 515 Park Avenue Madison Avenue New York, New York 10022 w York, New York 10017 (212) 753-0230/0282 2) MU 7-5651 Note: departure, January 9 I i a ing for Los Angeles in the na- tionally televised game with a one-yard run off left guard to complete the first-period drive. But on the impromptu con- version try, San Francisco line- backer Willie harper tackled Ray, kr--king him out of bounds just short of the goal Feldman explained that one of the s Duses was u y on the way to the stadium, so there were only three players on hand for the first period. "Gutsy,determined football" held the Deacons scoreless until the rest of the squad arrived, according to Feldman. ON Am Tel 342 New (21 h9I on its third e under its quarterback, 'ho threw a wn pass to second quar- an 80-yard in the first cluded long line. Snead, acquired from the New York Giants two weeks ago, moved the 49ers' offense SO yards to the Los Angeles 27 af- ter the second-half kickoff. But Gossett's 44-yard field goal at- tempt was blocked by defensive end Jack Youngblood. 1. MICHIGAN at Illinois (pick score) 2. Indiana at Northwestern 3. (Ohio State, at Michigan State 4. Wisconsin at Iowa 5. Minnesota at Purdue 6. Alabama at LSU 7. Tulane at Boston College 8. California at Washington 9. North Carolina at Clemson 10. East Carolina at Richmond 11. Vanderbilt at Kentucky 12. Lamar at Louisiana Tech Hairstyling for the Whole Family Appointments Available Dascola Barber Shops Arborland-97 1-9975 Maple Villaqe-761 -2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-662-0354 13. Penn St. at N.C. State 14. Wasihngton St. at Oregon St. 15. Yale at Penn 16. Stanford at USC 17. Hofstra at Georgetown 18. Eastern Kentucky at Tenn. Tech 19. Cornell at Brown 20. Daily Libels vs. Datum Technics (rematch) ACU-1 Tournament Pocket Billiards starts '12 p.m. Sat. Men and Women Michigan Union I 9%i op- I M U A I IL 1 I I I 'ES a 1 rancisco 13 ON An, WA ENDORSED BY: mericans for Democratic Action AFL-CIO Ann Arbor Sun in Arbor Educational Association W-CAP AFSCME-Council 55 Mich. Federation of Teachers FREE INSTRUCTIONS POCKET BILLIARDS Tonight 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Michigan Union paid political advertisement I As a British cmany we'd like to explain our 810 ox automatic turntable in plain English. OCIA TION OF JEWISH iCULTY AND GRADS ANNOUNCES THEIR FIRST )FFEE HOUR dnesday, Nov. 6 at 8 P.M. he HILLEL FRONT LOUNGE 1429 Hill St. TION--COFFEE-STROLLING MUSICIANS How the 810 ox reproduces recorded musi accurately - - - - - - - - doomm mnmftlkl EL MICH. UNION 763-21 TION LIGHT LEANS CAJUN VACATION JAN. 1-6, 1975 $208.00 triple $223.00 double Trip Air Transportation Detroit on Delta Airlines nmodations at the Le Richelieu in New Orleans Trip Transfers from Airport to Hotel )y The BSR 810OX has a sophisticated synchronous motor, spinning a heavy 7-lb. platter for accurate speed (regardless of voltage supply or record load) and all-but-nonexistent wow and flutter Anti-skating force may be adjusted for optimum pressure with either conical or elliptical styli, so stylus sits perfectly centered in goove 'or precise stereo separation without audible distortion or uneven groove wear A strobe disc is integrated into the platter design and a variable speed control is N~ekkNs Howthe 81OQx protects records and cartridge stylus assembly. Tone arm descent is viscous-damped in automatic operation x ~ and also when using 0 the manual cue and pause control, for gentle contact with record surface. Platter rubber mat protects records during play and cushions discs during automatic' drop Automatic spindle4 uses umbrella-type suspen-;ion : without outboard balance arm. Stub spindle rotates with record to prevent distortion of center hole Stylus setdown ad justment prevents stylus damage if dropped outside of entry groove range Tracking pressure adjustable down to grams for newest lightweight cartridges for minimum record wear Stylus brush whisks dust of stylus between plays Lock automatically secures tone arm to prevent How the 810cx provides convenient operation in any desired mode. After touching a single feather- weight button, the 8100X can either play a stack of records, shutting off after the last one, play a single record and shut off,; or play a single record, and repeat it indefinitely until you stop it. Manual operation uses a single button to start the motor, and the cue control to lower the s ys How the 810 OX operates uietly, emitting no sound tat can intrude on the music. Ihe 810OX uses a unique sequential cam drive mechanism. lt is a rigid precision assembly that replaces the plumber's nightmare of rotating eccentric plates and interlocking gears that other changers use Unlike other