Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY INDIANA ROMPS Sunday, October 15, 1972 Tenace homers twice; Buckeyes overrun Illini I A's outlast Reds, 3-2 By The Associated Press ped loose for 192 yards and Henson McNulty had COLUMBUS - Giant fullback ran his touchdown total to nine touchdowns as Harold Henson hammered for for the season. Wisconsin 33-7 three touchdowns from short range Illinoi's only touchdown came football game y and freshman whiz Archie Griffin on a picture halfback pass play Indiana broke supplied the long gainers yester- from Lonnie Perrin to Joe Lewis with a 17 point day, powering fourth ranked Ohio that covered 60 yards in the sec- four minutes o State to a 26-7 Big Ten football ond quarter. Gartner kicked triumph over stubborn Illinois. j I McNulty passe Henson, a 6-foot-4, 224-pound a downs. sophomore, stormed 5, one and I (- e w Football Wisconsin's R one yards for his scores as the un- Ferguson ran f beaten Buckeyes posted their That trimmed Ohio State's lead 15 carries, and fourth straight victory and kept to 13-7. The Buckeyes came right led to both of the . Illini winless in five games back with a 79-yard march climax- touchdowns. this fall. ed by Henson's one yard plunge, Ferguson ca Griffin, a home town tailback putting the game out of reach of more after his who rolled up a school record of the Illini, 21 point underdogs. parently nursin 239 rushing yards two weeks ago, jury sustained peeled off runs of 48 and 41 yards to complement t h e Buckeyes' BLOOMINGTON - Chris Gart- Purdue po vaunted inside power game. ner booted a Big Ten record four MINNEAPOL The 5-10, 180 pound Griffin slip- field goals and quarterback Ted strong shredde a hand in three Indiana pounded in a homecoming esterday afternoon. open a tight game burst in the final A the first half as a field goal and' d for two touch- ufus "Roadrunner" or only 64 yards in d his two fumbles Indiana's first half rried only twice second fumble, ap- ng a shoulder in- last week. junces IS - Otis Arm- d Minnesota's de- CINCINNATI (P) - Handyman Gene Tenace walloped a pair of home runs and controversial Vida Blue came out of the bullpen and saved the victory as the Oakland A's defeated the Cincinnati Reds 3-2 yesterday in the opening game of baseball's 1972 World Series. Tenace, who had only five hom- ers during the regular season, drove in all of Oakland's runs with a pair of shots off Cincinnati start- er Gary Nolan. He became the first player ever to hit home runs in each of his first two World Series trips to the plate. VIDA BLUE, unhappy with his recent relief roles, hurled shut-out ball for the final 21/3 innings, sav- ing the triumph for Oakland start- er Ken Holtzman. Tenace, usually a catcher but previously used as an infielder and outfielder, hit a 2-1 pitch by Nolan in the second inning after George Hendrick, replacing injured Reg- gie Jackson in the A's lineup, had walked. Johnny Bench and Tony Perez opened the second inning w i t h singles to left and Denis Menke walked, loading the bases with none out against Holtzman. Cesar Geronimo popped up, the runners holding and then D a v e Concepcion bounced into a f o r c e play as the A's barely missed a doubleaplay. Bench scored, a n d when Nolan struck out, the A's were out of the inning with only one run on the scoreboard for She Reds. Big Ten Standings WLTPFPA W LT PFPA MICHIGAN 2 0 0 17 0 5 0 0 121 23 Ohio State 2 0 0 47 7 4 0 0 111 39 Indiana 2 0 0 60 30 4 1 0 133 97 Purdue 2 0 0 52 3 2 3 0 101 77 Michigan State 1 1 0 24 10 1 4 0 62 82 Wisconsin 1 1 0 28 47 3 2 0 97 88 Iowa 1 2 0 23 57 2 3 0 52 82 Minnesota 0 2 0 26 55 0 5 0 60 176 Illinois 0 2 0 7 50 0 5 0 55 171 Northwestern 0 3 0 26 51 1 4 0 53 110 Yesterday's results This week's games MICHIGAN 10, MSU 0 Ohio State 26, jllinois 7 Purdue 28, Minnesota 3 Iowa 23, Northwestern 12 Indiana 33, Wisconsin 7 MICHIGAN at Illinois Indiana at Ohio State Wisconsin at Michigan State Northwestern at Purdue Iowa at Minnesota fense for 152 yards rushing and ran for two touchdowns, the second on a 97 yard kickoff return, and Pur- due overwhelmed the winless Go- phers 28-3 yesterday in a Big Ten football game. Armstrong, who needs less than' 100 yards to become Purdue's all- time career rushing leader slam-: med in for a touchdown from five yards out on the first play of the second quarter on one of his 24 carries. Purdue, 2-0 in the Big Ten and 2-3 for the season, missed poten- tial scoring opportunities on the Minnesota one and 28 because of fumbles and on the 12 on downs. Hawks soar EVANSTON - Underdog Iowa guided by rookie quarterback Bob Ousley, stung ,error-prone North- western on Brian Rollins 42 yard end around sprint and Rick Pen- ney's 47 yard punt return to score a 23-12 Big Ten football upset ye's- terday afternoon. The 'Hawkeyes, scoring their first conference victory in three starts jumped off to a 7-0 lead on the games' fifth play after a fum- bled Northwestern punt snap and kept rolling to a 20-0 halftime mar- gin over the rattled Wildcats. The seven point underdog in a meeting of Big Ten cellar clubs, Iowa sent tailback Davis Harris over on a nine yard run two plays after recovering Northwestern's poor center snap on a punt on the Wildcat 14. CINCINNATI tied it in the fourth when Bench led off with a walk and Perez singled him to third. Menke's force play grounder scor- ed Bench again, tying the score 2-2. The tie didn't last long. With one out in the fifth, Tenace, whose real first name is Fury, unloaded again. This time the ball sailed down the left field foul line and barely stayed fair giving Oakland a 3-2 lead. BENCH's second hit of t h e game, a line double off the right field wall leading off the sixth inning, finished Holtzman. Rollie Fingers came out of the bullpen and struck out Perez and Menke before getting Geronimo on an in- ning-ending line drive to left. In the seventh, Concepcion open- ed with a single but Tenace threw him out stealing on a close play at second base. One out 1 a t e r, Pete Rose walked and A's Man- ager Dick Williams brought in Blue, a 24-game winner last year but only 6-10 after a lengthy spring holdout this season. After a wild pitch moved Rose to second, Blue walked Joe Mor- gan, but got Bobby Tolan on a foul pop, ending the threat. Blue breezed through the eighth inning, but got into a jam in the ninth when pinch hitter Hal Mc- Rae opened with a single. CONCEPCION sacrificed pinch AP Photo OAKLAND CATCHER Gene Tenace connects for the first of his two home runs off Cincinnati hurler Gary Nolan during the sec- ond inning of yesterday's 3-2 Oakland World Series victory. Look- ing on are catcher Johnny Bench and umpire Chris Pelekoudas. ri ner G_-orge Foster to second, 'nd J liai Javier's bouncer to s ,c-) d moved the tying run to third. That left it up to Rose and Blue and it was a battle that the talent- ed Oakland left-hander won. Rose hit a high bouncer to second, and Ted Kubiak's quick throw to first ended the game. It was the fourth straight Oak- land game in which Blue has re- lieved. and his fifth post-season re- lief job. He had come out of the bullpen only twice in 25 games dur- ing the regular season. He has not allowed a run in 72/3 innings of re- lief. The nationally televised g a m e drew 52,918 in Riverfront Stadium, the largest crowd ever to watch a baseball game in Cincinnati. The second game of the series is scheduled for this afternoon in Riv- erfront Stadium. The teams switch to Oakland for games 3 and 4 Tuesday and Wednesday. The fifth game, if necessary, will be pLay- ed in Oakland Thursday. Jim "Catfish" Hunter, 21-7, will start the second game for the A's, and Ross Grimsley, a 14-game win- ner during the regular season, will go for the Reds. Tenace anyone? A. GAME 1 OAKLAND UAC presents ADELLE DAVIS leading nutrionist and author of best-selling LET'S EAT RIGHT TO KEEP FIT, LET'S COOK IT RIGHT Speaking on: "THE NUTRITION AWAKENING"' POWER CENTER TUES., OCT. 17-8 P.M. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Power Center Box Office Eden Foods Michigan Union Soybean Cellar The Fishbowl Your Health & Nutrition Applerose Natural Foods (5231/2 N. Main) (404 W. Liberty) Salvation Records A BENEFIT FOR THE MICH. FEDERATION OF FOOD CO-OPS DONATION $1.75 CITY NOTICE Ann Arbor Cablecasting Commission A public hearing will be held by the Commission at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 18, in the Council Chamber at City Hall. The topic of the hearing is the draft operating rules for the Public Access Channel of the Ann Arbor Cable TV System. These rules define "comment use" and "presen- tation use" of the channel and detail the procedures by which individuals and groups may obtain access to the channel for these types of use. Charges for program origination, payment procedures, prohibitions of certain types of material, and other matters are treated in the rules. Copies of the draft rules are available from the Commission's Secretary at City Hall. The draft rules are intended to serve as a focus for public comment and Commission discussion; extensive revision may well take place prior to formal adoption of rules. In particu- lar, all time intervals, dollar amounts and other specific numerical values in the draft are to be considered highly tentative. Interested persons may comment on the rules, either at the hearing or in writing. Written comments should be re- ceived by the Commission's Secretary at City Hall not later than 5:00 p.m. Friday, October 20. For the Commission by: SIDNEY G. WINTER Chairman Date of Publication: Sun., Oct. 15, 1972 USC RUMBLES ON Soon ers Isso Longhorns Campnris ss Rudi If M Alou rf Epstein lb Lewis pr Hegan lb Bando 3b Hendrick ef Tenace c D Green 2b Marquz ph Kubiak 2b ab 3 4 3 3 0 0 4 2 3 1 0 2 0 0 27 h 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 r bi 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 By The Associated Press DALLAS - Second-ranked Okla- homa's high octane running backs have been grabbing the headlines, but the Sooners' rugged defense, headed by tackle Derland Moore and guard Lucious Selmon, put a 27-0 collar on 10th-ranked Texas yesterday. With the Sooners owning a shaky 3-0 lead in the televised Cardinals flyj game, Moore roared through to block a Texas quick kick in the STANFORD - W h i 1 e injured third quarter and Selmon fell on Washington quarterback Sonny Six- the ball for a touchdown. The spirit killer watched most of the game left the unbeaten Longhorns at from the sidelines yesterday, Mike that point. Boryla passed 17th-ranked Stan- Moore ran down a wayward ford to an easy 24-0 shutout of the pitchout for another touchdown 12th ranked and previously un- in the fourth quarter as the defeated Huskies. Sooners kept their record intact Sixkiller injured both his rightI of not allowing a touchdown this ankle and left knee late in' the year in rolling over four oppon- first quarter. When he returned ents. It was Texas' first shutout to action briefly in the second in 100 games. quarter, he suffered a more "It was defense and kicking to- serious injury to the knee and day. They were the deciding fac- spent the rest of the game on tnvo c ni i ncp, - crutches on the sidelines.' that ended with Davis carrying it in from the methodical march was a 10-yard run by Beck. Gary Rutledge, substitute for Davis, picked up big hunks of yardage on a later Alabama scor- Holtzman p ~Fingers p Blue p Total CINCINNATI abih rbi Micligan ruggers rip tou 1 Spartans twice By CHUCK DRUMS tors, and it as peen awnue since we've said that after a game," declared Sooner Coach Chuck Fair- banks, who has the most explosive nffanic, in rlP f ntb ll lrgirp1IIIW turiiui' ing jaunt. Rose If 4 0 0 0 Morgan Sb 3 0 0 0 Lions roar Tolan ef 4 0 1 0 WEST POINT-John Hufnagel Bench c 3 2 2 0 returning to the scene of his first TPerezlb 430 20 rtrig Menke 3b 3 00 1 varsity start, passed for two first- Gerowimo rf 3 0 0 0 half touchdowns and set up another McRae ph 1 0 1 0 with a 64-yard dash yesterday in Fosterpr 0 ss011 leadingePenn State to a 45-0 vic- Nol pss 2 0 010 tory over Army. Borbon p 0 0 0 0 Hufnagel flipped scoring passes Uhlaendr ph 1 0 0 0 of six yards to Scott Skarzynski Carroll p 0000 and four yards to Dan Natale Totai 31 2 7 2 and set up the first of John Cap- pelletti's two short scoring Oakland000 0 0 0 0- plunges with his long gallop to the Cincinnati 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0-2 Army one. DP--Cincinnati 1. LOB -- Oakland 2, Crippled Army, playing without Cincinnati 8. B-Bench. HR--Tenace three injured defensive regulars 2 2. S-Campaneris, Concepcion. and with quarterback Kingsley ip h r er bb so Fink sitting out the first half on a Holtzman W,1-0 5 5 2 2 3 3 tender ankle, managed only one Fingers 1% 1 0 0 1 3 Blue 2 V 1 0 0 1 1 threat in the first 30 minutes. But Nolan L,0-1 6 4 3 3 2 0 Penn State's Buddy Elllis inter- Borbon 1 0 0 0 0 0 cepted a Dick Atha pass at his I Carroll 2 0 0 0 2 1 own 12 early in theasecond period !Save-Blue 1. WP-Blue. T-2:18. A- and ran it out to the Army 49. 1_918. { i i i 1 r The Michigan rugby football club victimized MSU for its tirst oi uiii in clee ULtaii. His replacement, Greg Collins, double sweep of the fall season as the Blue squeezed out a last minute passed effectively at times, but 7-4 triumph while the Gold plowed to a 24-10 decision on Palmer Field Cal collapses turnovers crippled the Huskies' yesterday.'offense. The winner of coveted Webster Steeby trophy was not decided LOS ANGELES - Quarterback Stanford's top running back, until the last three minutes of the game when the Blue's Ross Vickers Mike Rae ran for two touchdowns John Winesberry, missed the game split the uprights on a 15 yard penalty goal. The scrappy Spartans through gaping holes in the Cali- with an ankle injury, but Boryla, had tied the game with four minutes left on a crafty blind side break fornia line and fullback Sam Cun- a senior quarterback, minimized froa loedthecgamebthscrurmthaleftningham plunged for two more as Winesberry's loss by hitting 24 of from a loose ruck by the scrum half. top-ranked Southern California 44 passes for 293 yards and two Michigan, who had led the entire game, did not let the State romped over the Bears 42-14 yes- touchdowns. momentum break its spirit. They drove down field on a series of terday in a Pacific-8 Conference Boryla led the Cards to three up-and-unders and well executed backfield movements. A knock-on football game. first half touchdowns as he com- on the MSU five, however, was detected by referee David Mildner who Cunningham's second touchdown pleted 14 of 26 passes for 191 whistled the play dead. In the set scrum that followed, the State dive from one yard out gave USC yards and two touchdowns in the scrum half, in his overeagerness to score, moved off side before its three-touchdown halftime lead first 30 minutes alone. the ball was heeled out, thus setting up Vicker's kick. but the preceeding play may prove The Blue had scored early in the first half to take what appeared to be costly to the Trojans. Flanker Huskers haul to be a commanding lead. Ron Smith broke outside the MSU wing on sensation Lynn Swann broke off LINCOLN-Dave IummTthrew I P the State forty, but was driven out of bounds on the 6 inch line. In! the lineout that followed, Captain Chris Penoyar, grabbed the long throw-in and took two men with him as he touched the ball down in the MSU goal area. The Gold overcame numerous mistakes early in the game' to blitz the Spartan "B" team with four converted tries. MSU opened the scoring with a 25 yard penalty conversion whenj Michigan was detected for handling the ball in the scrum. After one more penalty kick and a try by State, the Gold began to gel. Carl Anderson spurted 22 yards through the Spartan backline ' to put the Gold on the board. Tony Cooper, whose kicking accuracy was phenomenal as he went four for four, converted. Chuck Holt struck again for Michigan as he rambled 24 yards for a try. left the game with an injury to his knee. The extent of injury was not known. Rae, who ran 10 yards through left tackle for USC's second touchdown, answered Cal's first score with an eight-yard run for a 28-8 USC lead. Sophomore quarterback Pat Ha- den completed a 40-yard touchdown pass to tight end Charles Young late in thesthird quarter, and a nine-yard scoring toss to Young in the fourth period. t ..r : v ,r vs Tf j" /il. {,rr ft 'f ' .$ .N _. y :. ; ae r. f : " - C ''7 three touchdown passes and Johnny Rodgers established himself as the most prolific scorer in Nebraska history yesterday as the sixth- ranked Cornhuskers opened their bid for a fourth Big Eight football title with a 62-0 romp over Mis- souri. Four Nebraska touchdowns were scored in the third quarter alone and reserves played most of the second half. Rodgers broke a Husker ca- reer record inkthe second quar- ter on a 28-yard pass play. The fleet flanker caught a Humm pass, got a block from Dave Goeller and crossed the goal line running backwards, a bit of showmanship he unveiled two weeks ago against Minnesota. The touchdown gave Rodgers a career total of 216 points, erasing the 211-point record by Bobby Reynolds in the early 1950s. Tide rolls TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Quarter- back Terry Davis directed a 74- yard drive that consumed 8:50 minutes and pulled third-ranked Alabama away from Florida in a 24-7 Crimson Tide victory yester- day. The undefeated Tide held a 10-7 lead when it received the second-half kickoff. Davis called on Ellis Beck, Wilbur Jackson and Paul Spivey during the drive effective thru at AP Photo STANFORD FLANKER Eric Cross (40) makes a leaping catch despite the efforts of University of Washington defender Bill Ha- vill (18). Stanford blanked the Huskies 24-0. A UNIQUE JAPANESE STORE ®-