VHF MICHIGAN DAILY .1 Page Eight FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 24, 1972 I uprs 314 EAST LIBERTY-761-2231 .arg LATE Featurng: SPECi LIVE E OPEN AS OF' NEW HOUKS: opci > Jxm.-Midnight daily, Hot Town's First Gourmet VEGETARIAN RESTAU RANT For You Natural Folk National foOt -sa odl N IGHT TEA HOUSE AL STUDENT PRICES ENTERTAI NMENT WED., SEPT. 20. Ur Merlyn, Lavey HsBeen Making News for 25 Years hk ........~'f.;..~ S , f e i See What He Does Tomorrow Subscribe to 764-0558 - -- - - - --- - - - ---- -- - - -- - - - Oklahoma earns win By The Associated Press NORMAN - Second-ranked Ok- lahoma racked up more than 700 yards in total offense and com- pletely throttled Oregon's heralded passing attack as the Sooners bur- ied the Webfoots 68-3 yesterday. The Sooner defense held Ore- gon scoreless until the Ducks got a 47-yard fourth-period field goal by Keith Lively. Oregon quarter- back Dan Fouts was intercepted twice in the first half, and the Sooners turned the turnovers into touchdowns. Senior quarterback Dave Rob- ertson passed for two touch- downs and scored on a six-yard run as OU built up a 35-0 half- time lead and exploded for 26 more points in the third period. MID-WEST QUARTERBACK RICH Haynie rifled two touchdown passes and Mike Mark ran for two more touchdowns as the Air Force de- feated Pittsburgh 41-13 Saturday, in a college football game at the Air Force Academy. With Air Force leading 13-7 at the half, Joel Carlson took the third-period kick-off 47 yards, then scored six plays later after Hay-' nie's 40-yard pass to Bill Murray put theFalcons on the Pitt two- yard line. Pitt came back, marching to the Air Force 32, where Falcon Dennis Collins intercepted a John Hogan pass at the 24. Air Force then ate up over seven minutes, scoring finally on. Haynie's sec- ond TD pass of the day, a 16- yard toss to Bob Farr. Even Air Force freshmen scored as Pitt gave up four fumbles, two of them leading to Falcon scores. Frosh place kicker Dave Lawson' put the Cadets on top 6-0 in the first period with a field goal, then added two conversions later. FRESHMAN DON T A Y L O R booted a 27-yard field goal and quarterback Joe Babics plunged one yard for a touchdown with one second left as Bowling Green de- feated Miami of Ohio 16-7 Satur-j day in a regionally televised Mid- American Conference f o o t b a II game at Oxford.{ Taylor connected with 11 min- utes, 10 seconds to go in the final period, giving Bowling Green a 10-0 lead. Led by defensive back Dave 'Turner and end Bill Montrie, the Falcons' defense held Miami tail- back Bob Hitchens and stopped two key Miami drives. Nebra ska tops Army WEST POINT - Johnny Rodg- ers scored twice in the first per- iod and Nebraska added three more touchdowns in the final four minites of the first half yesterday en route to a 777 demolition of Army, the most points ever scored against the Military Academy. Sophomore quarterback Dave Hnmm passed for one touchdown and ran for another and second- string running.. back Dave Goeller scored twice as the ninth-ranked Cornhuskers rolled to a 35-0 half- time lead before a capacity Michie Stadium crowd at 42,239. EAST The Cornhuskers marched 64 yards in eight plays the first time they had the ball, with Rodgers scoring from three yards out after only 3 mminutes. Nebraska had to cover only 37 and 43 yards for the next two touchdowns, followingArmy punts. The final two scores of the half came after a bad snap from punt formation turned the ball over to Nebraska at the Army five and a fumble by Fink was recovered by John Button at the Cadets' 18. IN PHILADELPHIA, four-touch- down favorite Penn State needed a frantic second half rally to re- Dnlse a dogged Navy football team r A } AP Photo DANIEL GENTILE, Northern Illinois pass catcher, comes down empty handed in yesterday's football clash with Western Michigan. Bronco defenders Ron Karlis and Mike Wood smile in relief after Gentile's miscue. Western Michigan continued smiling after the final gun, too, eking out a 14-10 victory. GREEN WAVE CRUISES 4 1 Vols rout Wake Forest By The Associated Press KNOXVILLE-Vol quarterbacks Condredge Holloway and Gary Val- buena riddled Wake Forest's secon- dary as fifth-ranked Tennessee out- classed the Deacons 45-6 for its 10th straight football victory. Valbuena, a junior college trans- fer subbing for Holloway threw three touchdown passes and Hol- loway connected for one and ran 29 yards for another to the delight of a partisan crowd of 66,266. Ricky Townsend, Tennessee's soccer-stylebarefoot kicker, be- gan the rout with a 32-yard field goal, his third of the season. Townsend added six extra points to run his total to 14. Then Valbuena got the touchdown parade going with a25-yard toss to Stan Trott in the end zone. Moments later Valbuena caught tailback Neil Clabo down the middle for a scoring pass that; nenberg intercepted Boryla's pass and returned 26 yards to the Stanford five. But Albright fumbled on second down and Roger Stillwell recover- ed. Moments later the Blue Devils had another chance when Stan- ford's Reggie Sanderson fumbled and Melvin Parker recovered on the seven. However, Hal Spears fumbled again and Roger Cowan recovered. SOUTH zTaV qs ii.,). 1' to1LCIJ~U .iI*..'t t is~*JW - 2 tained drives against a rugged penn State coughed up the ball Greenie defense. three times on three fumbles in Bor--i-g punts by Randy Lee the first half as the Nittany Lions k ypt the Bulldogs deep in their appe-red flat following t h e i r own territory throughout the third emotion - packed opening game period. defeat last week by Tennessee. Ewing's game-clinching punt re- In the third period, Penn State trn came after the Tulane defense took the kickoff and stormed 89 had forced Georgia to kick on yards on 13 playsfor a go-ahead third down from the Bulldog endt zone. Cappelletti. Navy, however, who beat William & Mary last week Georgia scored midway through in its opener, refused to be over- the first period on a seven-yard whelmed as it had done in recent run by halfback Jimmy Poulos years flIIXI l T~efilr DU11Urt r d g.I JT after e Hunaogs recovere . a bobbled punt at the Tulane 25 in MEANWHILE, BERNIE GA- TULANE pair of 80- the secon George Ew yards for down as t Georgia 24- PUT TOGETHER a covered 52 yards. vised foot IN DURHAM, NC., Rod Garcia Orleans. kicked a 48-yard first-quarter field The Ge goal and quarterback Mike Baryla, engineered a third-period . touch- which has down drive as Stanford defeated of the most Duke 10-6 in intersectional colle- Southeast giate football. yard scoring drives in a controversial play. d period and safety Tulane safety David Lee called ing returned a punt 57 for a fair catch and the ball ap- a third period touch- peared to hit the ground several he Green Wave upset feet in front of him and bound -13 in a regionally tele- back up field. However, the of- tball game in New ficial ruled that the ball touched Lee and Georgia had recovered it. orgia running attack, The other Georgia score was on made the Bulldogs one a one-yard run by Poulos in the respected teams in the fourth period after the issue was Conference in recent decided. LIFFA picked a porous Virgipia secondary to pieces with !bur touchdown passes as West Vir- ginia's unbeaten Mountaineers ov- ercame a sluggish start and rolled to a 48-10 football victory over the previously undefeated Cavaliers in Charlottesville. Before hetretired for the day, midway in the third quarter, Ga- liffa completed 13 of 19 passes for 299 yards and scoring srikes of 78 and 23 yards to flanker Danny Buggs, 20 yards to tight end Nate Stephens and 41 yards to split end Marshall Mills. A FRAMED BY THE impersonal faces of the fans Army's Bob Hines (44) takes a King Fink pass for a short gain. More per- sonal faces belong to George Kyros (18) and Bill Jansen of Nebraska. The Huskers flattened the Military Academy quite con- vincingly in yesterday's play. I ® I