Page twit 1 "HE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October Z4, 1972 1'ag~igt TE MCHIGN DILYTuedayOctber24,197 ----- -- - CLIP AND SAVE ---------------- OSU, PURDUE GRIND IT OUT: I ii B 10 team. S'By MARK RONAN scores were tallied by Greg If God had intended football Hare, the quarterback, on runs "uteams to pass, He would havo of six and seven yards. provided them with wingbacks Indiana lost its quarterback, A1g and a legion of Joe Namaths. i Ted McNulty, for the duration . Perhaps, fundamentalist senti- of the game and possibly for the I ments such as this were taken tc remainder of the season when he r heart by those Big Ten coaches suffered a knee injury in the who enjoyed a victory last Sat- second quarter. r 4 urday ,for every winning team Ohio State led 17-7 when Buck- r fared less well through the air eye Brian Baschnagel returned " than did their defeated oppon- the second half kick-off for a ents. stouchdown behind a vague like- The passing successes of Illi- ness of the old Flying Wedge. MSnoissurpassed Michigan's ef- Said Woody of the Wedge, "That PHONE N M BERSfortsby a mere two yards; how- return was a new play we just ever, the curious trend was put in, but it was first used in ;moreapparent in other games. 1898." *u srpt&!Down in Ohio, where football Not since the Late Mezozoic Crcu a on Subscrip tom assumes the aura of a minor di- Era has Purdue failed to com- r vinity, the . Buckeyes of Woody plete a single pass, yet this very 764-0558 Hayes bowlderized Indiana 44-7. fate befell them Saturday. How- * One is forced to agree with ever, Otis Armstrong attoned for * Woody who said, "I think we a multitude of sins as the Boiler- lassifled Adv. were a little physical for them." makers trampled Northwestern, * Ohio State passed for a grand the cannonfodder of the Big Ten, r r total of 10 yards, though they 37-0. 764-0557 did not even need that. Sopho- Purdue, as yet unsullied in the r more fullback Harold Henson, Big Ten, gained 479 yards in 80 accumulated 116 yards in 22 car- rushes. Much of that is due to "Dis pay A v.ries and scored a couple of Armstrong who has carried 32 DAtouchdowns. An equal number of times while collecting 233 yards. 764-0554- News, Editors r 764-0552 PROSECUTOR r r Sports 764-0562 ; ---------- --u CLIP AND SAVE ---------n m- --- A U S avoid Armstrong's performance enabl- ed him to better Leroy Kelly's single game rushing mark and to become Purdue's all-time rushing leader with 2613 yards. Michigan State displayed its sometimes overshadowed talents in its thorough 31-0 sacking of Wisconsin. State managed a 15 yard touchdown pass in the sec- ond period but never produced another completion. Indeed, quarterback Mark Nei- sen has completed just one of twenty attempted passes though that one was a touchdown while experiencing four interceptions. Yet, once more the aerial at- tack was so much excess bag- gage. By means of the strong running efforts of Damond Mays, pass Dave Brown, and Neisen among many others, the Spartans roll- ed for 415 yards on the ground. Wisconsin's offensive drives were often halted by untimely fumbles as well as Duffy Daugh- erty's Spartan defense which limited Ruffs Ferguson to 79 yards. The exploits of junior fullback John King and a surprising no- huddle offense enabled Minne- sota to rumble by Iowa 43-14 and earn Cal Stoll his first victory as the coach of the often less- than Golden Gophers. Strangely enough the offense advanced not a single yard through the air though it performed with unac- customed power. Big Ten Standings W L T Pts OP MICHIGAN 3 0 0 48 7 Ohio State Purdue Indiana MSU Minnesota Wisconsin Iowa Illinois Northwestern 3 0 0 91 3 0 0 89 2 1 0 67 2 1 0 55 1 2 0 69 14 3 74 10 9 78 100 81 88 AP Photo Victory lap World Series hero Gene Tenace takes a ride through beautiful downtown Oakland in his spiffy vintage Buick following the A's victory over the Cincinnati Reds. Tenace tied a World Series record with his four round trippers and drove in nine of Oakland's 15 runs. Meanwhile, 50,000 fans lined the streets yesterday to see their heroes. 1 2 0 1 3 0 0 4 0 28 37 14 26 I' Conference ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE Conf. All Games SATURDAY'S ACTION Minnesota at MICHIGAN Indiana at Northwestern Michigan State at Iowa Illinois at Purdue Ohio State at Wisconsin t--- i Charisma or Dem ocracy." Most candidates ask that we elect them to office because they are "good" people who we HOPE will act in our interest. That is the politics of individual- ism. HRP disagrees. We do not ask you to vote for HRP cahdidates on blind faith. Instead, we run candidates who are committed to a specific plat- form and to future open meetings of the party. Anyone who believes themself to be a member of HRP can vote. And while our system isn't per- fect, we are striving to increase democracy and participation in our organization. What is the alternative. The Republican and Democratic candidates are running as indi- viduals - they are responsible to no one but themselves. How many times in the past have you seen people elected to office totally sell out their program and those who elected them? If you agree that collective deci- sion-making is a better way, then vote: Qr r A month ago, George Sallade charged that the in- cumbent prosecutor had no women, blacks, Chi- canos, or members of other minority groups on his professional staff. The prosecutor admitted it was true and did nothing. SALLADE will do something about it. } IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE ! VOTE SALLADE FOR PROSECUTOR NOV. 7th DEMOCRAT Paid Political Advertisement Open 11 a.m. for Lunch Dancing-8 p.m. till 2 a.m. Pizza and Sandwic served af ter 5 p. 341 South Main 0 Ann Arbor' r 41-I Nbrth Carolina Duke N. Carolina St. Clemson Maryland Virginia Wake Forest Bi Nebraska Okla State Colorado Iowa St. Kansas St. Oklahoma Kansas Missouri So Texas SMU - Arkansas TCU Texas Tech Baylor Rice Texas A & M Arizona Arizona St. New Mexico Utah Wyoming BYU Colorado St. Texas-El Paso USC UCLA Wash. State California Stanford Washington Oregon Oregon St. 3 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 Big EighLt 2 0 0 2 0 0 3 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 southwest2 WL T 2 0 0 S1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 WLT W L ,T 2 0 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 Pacific-8 3 0 0 2 1 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 0 3 0 W L T 5 1 0 4 2 0 6 1 0 4 1 0 3 4 0 4 1 0 2 4 0 3 3 0 WL T 4 1 0 4 2 0 4 1 0 5 1 0 2 3 0 2 2 1 1 5 0 W L ,T 2 4 0 5 1 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 0 7 0 1 5 0 W L T A: 5 1 OL: 34A 3 4 0 A' 3 4 0 M 1 5 0 T4 4M1 Standings Southeastern labama 5 0 ,SU 2 0 uburn 3 1 lorida 2 1 .eorgia 2 1 .entucky 1 , [iss. State 1 3 ennessee 0 2 [ississippi 0 3 anderbilt 0 3 Mid-American W L ent State 2 1 owling Green 2 1 [iami (Ohio) 1 1 V. Michigan 1 1 hio 1 2 oledo-1 2 Ivy League W.L T Dartmouth 2 0 0 Harvard 2 0 0 Yale 2 0 0 Cornell 1 1 0 Brown 1 2 0 Princeton 0 1 1 Columbia 0 2 1 Penn 0 2 0 Major Independents .................... .r,.; :f" T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 1 0 0 0 W Bc Mi~ WI 01 Tc W L 60 6 0 5 1 32 4 2 2 4 3 4 4 2 3 3 3 3 W L' 3 3 3 2 5 1 4 2 3 4 4 3 W L 4 0 3 1 4 0 3 1 1 4 1 2 1 2 2 2 WL 6 1 5 1 5 1 4 1 5 2 5 2 3 2 3 2 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ches m. 769-5960 Florida State Air Force Penn State Notre Dame Tampa West Virginia Army virginia Tech _ii _______________________ UA* w 5 1i 4 5 2 1 'L 0 1 2 6 2 2 5 6 T: 0; 0 0 0 0 0 0 Billboord An organizational meeting will be held for the Water Polo Club Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Student-Activities Building. PRESENTS THE UNION-LEAGUE Hom Cg Sock Hop PSYCHOLOGY UNDERGRAD ASSOCIATION announces a general meeting and election of officers TUES., OCT. 23-8:00 at SGC office 3rd floor Michigan Union - Discussion and planning of our goals. Participation on decision making in curriculum organizing infor- mational services for psych undergrads. This is your organization-help make it what you want it to be. IF YOU CAN'T COME TO THE MEETING LEAVE YOUR NAME AND NUMBER AT OUR OFFICE-1542 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. AND WE WILL CON- TACT YOU. JIMMY AND THE JAVELINS WITH CHASTITY AND THE BELTS 9:00 P.M., THURS., OCT. 26 UNION BALLROOM Human,ights Party 4h 9 dO BURGHARDT for State Representative .. .. .... No Cost to Get In or Out!! Come Greased and Ready to Kick Ass!! m. Gre ser Homecomina Pep Raliv 7:30 . I