Page ~ix iMLMI~I1IUAIN LJAILY I uesdoy, Uctober i, l'91L . - - t -- - - - - - - . . I . . Page Six I I-it MICI - kw-y ues ay, c o er , 19-12- Everyone Welcome! GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, Sept. 20 8-10 p~m West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAMa OUTSIDE ON THE TERRACE Fun, Food, People NEW PEOPLE WELCOME! 1*DELTA RESTAURANT PIZZARIA" State and Packard 0 Home-made GREEK MENU-MON.-WED., Baclava oSUNDAYSPECIAL FOR $2.25 ROAST TURKEY SPAGHETTI WITH For take-out BAKED HAM MEAT BALLS call ROAST CHICKEN A LL ABOVE INCLUDE: Soup or juice, Salad, j G 2-7 811 Bread, Soft Drink, Desert. J EVERY THURSDAY-PIZZA 50c OFF ' D Open 7:00 A.M .-1:00A.M. Friday, Saturday 3:00 A.M. i INTERSECTIONAL SLUMP: Shop Folletts State Street at North U. SWITCH TO ANN ARBOR Register To Vole SGC Voter Registration Comm. SWITCH TO ANN ARBOR Register To Vole SGC Voter Registration Comm. 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IaReg. 27 By MIKE LASH Big Ten squads continued to slump in the face of-foreign com- petition this past weekend, adding six more losses to an already bleak intersectional record. Only Michigan and Ohio State marched to convincing vic- tories, while I n d i a n a and Northwestern pulled off a pair of squeakers Saturday as all ten teams battled outside powers. That left the Big Ten with an 8-13 mark against non-conference foes this season. Freshman tailback Archie Grif- fin of Ohio State exploded for 239 yards rushing to break a 27- year-old school record as the Buckeyes trounced North Caro- lina, 29-14. "More important than the rec- ord was the way Archie fired up the ball club," said Coach Woody Hayes as he prepared his squad for its upcoming clash with Mis- souri. Griffin, adding excite- ment to a normally dull Buckeye attack, reeled off runs of 55, 32, 22, and 20 yards, scored on a nine-yard run and caught one pass for another 17 yards. Fullbacks Randy Keith and Harold Henson scored from 11 and 1 yards, quarterback Greg Hare ran 17 yards and Blair Conway bootedta22-yard field goal for the other Ohio State scores. Top-ranked Southern Cal blast- ed the Michigan State defense for 30 unanswered second half points to crush the determined but hope- lessly outmanned Spartans, 51-6. Backup quarterback Dan Werner dived over from the one-yard line in the second quarter for State's only tally. "I don't know who is No. 1, but I imagine USC is as good as any other team," Coach Duffy Daugherty reflected later. The Spartans' overall record now stands at 1-2. Down at; South Bend, Purdue ran into more problems as the Boilermakers d r o p p e d their eighth consecutive game, 35-14, to seventh-ranked Notre Dame. Irish quarterback Tom Clements blitzed the Purdue defense for 287 yards in the air and built up a 35-point bulge early in the second half before the Irish re- serves came in. The Boilermakers' last victory was a 21-20 thriller over North- western last year; so far they are 0-3 this yeason. It took a last-minute touchdown for nationally rated Penn State to squeeze by a stubborn Iowa squad, 14-10. After the Hawkeyes had taken a 10-7 edge with only 3:01 left in the game, PSU quar- terback John Hufnagel directed a Lion drive that covered 80 yards in nine plays, capped by a 10-yard touchdown toss from Hufnagel to tight end Dan Natale with 36 seconds remaining. Northwestern recorded its first victory of the season with a come-from-behind 27-22 win over winless Pittsburgh. Freshman running back Craig Boykin sprinted 44 yards for the winning touchdown midway through the last quarter, Just 19 seconds be- fore that, Pitt had taken a 22-21 edge with a 62-yard TD pass from quarterback Bob Medwid to end Todd Toerper and a clutch two-point conversion pass. Northwestern C o a c h A l e x Agase sympathized with the Pan - thers, saying "I really feel for Pittsburgh . . . they've really been snakebit this year . .. but I'm happy we won." Indiana overcame a 34-27 defi- cit late in the game and nipped Kentucky, 35-34. A Ted McNulty- to-Bill Armstrong touchdown pass with 1:06 remaining set the Hoosiers up for a successful two- point conversion play, which gave them the winning margin. Indiana is now 2-1. 'Nebraska used the brilliant running of Johnny Rodgers and Gary Dixon to crush Minnesota, 49-0. Minnesota quarterback Bob Morgan was unable to get any- thing going against the stingy Cornhusker defense as the Go- phers fell to 0-3 for the season. Despite the powerful running of Wisconsin back 'Rufus "Road- runner" Ferguson, the Badgers dropped a 27-7 contest to Louisi-, en slips iaaun Iwering thir record -1. Th Badger defense was sty id by tailha'k Chris Dantin, why -r k, 'l. 115 yards on 27 _arries for LSU. t Seattle, Illinois Coach Bob Bla k-nan watched as his squad went down in smoke to Sonny Sixkiller and the Washington H'skies, 31-11. "One thing that has puzzled me since I came here," said the former Dartmouth coach, "is the lack of a sense of state pride. We have outstanding high school football programs and coaching in Illinois, but our talent is-scat- tered all over the country." Blackman believes that much of the reason for his team's bad start also lies in thestough sched- ule and unwanted injuries facing the Illini. Whatever the case, Six- killer and the Huskie passing at- tack completely dominated Il- linois, and a fiery defensive unit kept the Illini in check most of the way as Coach Blackman's squad dropped its third straight contest of the season. AP grid poll has USC 1st, Michigan 5th By The Associated Press Southern California and Okla- homa remained 1-2 yesterday in The Associated Press college foot- ball poll while Ohio State and Alabama moved into the third and fourth positions. MICHIGAN moved up from eighth to fifth place after trounc- ing previously unbeaten Tulane 41-7, and picked up one first place vote. The Trojans of Southern Cal received 36 first-place ballots and 970 of a possible 1,000 points from a nationwide panel ofsportswriters and broadcasters following their fourth consecutive triumph, a 51-6 rout of Michigan State. Oklahoma walloped Clemson 52-3 and received 13 first-place votes and 907 points. But Colorado and Tennessee, 3-4 a week ago, dropped well down in the rankings after being upset by Oklahoma State 31- 6 and Auburn 10-6 respectively. Tennessee fell to10th, Colorado to 12th. Top Twenty 1. Southern California (36) 4-0 970 2. Oklahoma (13) 3-0 907 3. Ohio State 2-0 626 4. Alabama 30 612 5. MICHIGAN (1) 3-0 565 6. Nebraska 3-1 59 7. Notre Dame 2-0 490 8. Louisiana State 3-0 467 9. Texas 2-0 241 10. Tennessee 3-1 197 11. washington 4-0 190 12. Colorado 3-1 187 13. Florida State 4-0 162 14. UCLA 3-1 144 15. Stanford 3-0 100 16. Penn State 2-1 97 17. Auburn 3-0 18 18. Mississippi 3-0 41 19. Air Force 3-0 39 20. (tie) Iowa State 3-0 38 Daily Libels 1-0 38 others receiving votes, listed alpha betically: Arizona State, Arkansas, Georgia, Oklahoma State, southern Methodist, Texas Christian, West Vir- ginia. 12 o'clock high Co-captains of the Air F o r c e Academy footbal lteam are center Orderia Mitchell of Elkhart, Ind., and defensive end Gene Ogilvie of San Jose, Calif. t HIFI RAUY S v Free cartridge clinic 4 I It's to your advantage to keep record wear to a minimum, but of course, you want to get the best sound possible. Bring in your cartridge mounted on its turntable and Shure factory trained technicians will help you strike a happy medium between the two. First, your stylus will be carefully inspected for wear under our special Bausch- Lomb stylus microscope. We will also make sure the cart- ridge is properly mounted in the tone arm shell. Second, the Shure engineer will test trackability, showing you the results on an oscilloscope screen. A high score on this test indicates a given cartridge; tone arm combination will track even heavily recorded passages properly at low stylus pressures. Third, the electronic tests are backed up as your cartridge/turntable combination goes thru a listening test. After all, we're ultimately concerned with good sound. It will all happen on Oct. 3 (Noon-3 p.m.) & 4' (Noon-8 p.m.) TODAY, OCT. 3 (Noon-9 P.M.) TOMORROW, OCT. 4 (Noon-8 P.M.) I