Poge Teri THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 4, 1972 Poge Ter~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday1 November 4, 1972 DAUGHERTY'S LAST HURRAH Vote ARMSTRONG For County Clerk McGOVERN PRECI NCT DELEGATE ~ACTIVE IN CPHA STRIKE PROVIDED CAMPUS McGOVERN' HEADQUARTERS Du fyless Spartans tussle with Purdue DUKE ARMSTRONG-DEMOCRAT for County Clerk Pd. Pol. Adv. IN BASE 2, 1010 to 1100 are Health Service INPUT'S NEW HOURS. As of 1 November, Shari will be answering your ques- tions about Health Service, solving problems and standing up for your rights, between 10 A.M.,and NOON. So please call, but remember the new schedule. I P.S. Because Monday is 6 November Input will be closed but will reactivate Tuesday at 10 a.m. Weekdays 10 a.m. to Noon 763-4384 T7hi By RICHARD FLAHERTY year. Duffy expressed the convic- Duffy D a u g h e r t y, a central tion that the administration would figure in the Big Ten Conference have backed him had he chosen to and the head coach of the Mich- remain as coach. He will retain a igan State Spartan football team position with the school though in for the past 19 years, has resigned some field other than athletics. his position effective the end of "I'll probably be working in the the season. Word of his resigna- area of devolpment raising funds tion was to be released this after- for the school. I'll tell the admin- noon following the conclusion of istration what needs to be done to the Purdue game; however, Duffy, turn the football program around. often remembered as the smiling I'll continue to recruit and work white-thatched Irishman appropri- hard," Duffy mused. ately clad in the green color of MSU, confirmed reports of his These developments have fur- ntin yterda ther darkened the dreary skies in East Lansing, and raises further "I haven't been making it fun question for the Spartans as they for the players lately," Duffy told encounter Purdue. The Spartans newsmen attending his weekly ses- have shown brightly at times. sion prior to home games. "I told They held well against both Notre the boys that I didn't want them Dame and Michigan and squash-j to go out and win one for old ed Wisconsin 31-0. But they have Duffy." fumbled with marked determina- He further stated, "My decision tion and have suffered numer- to resign is irrevocable. I told the ous interceptions. A nadir of squad Tuesday after practice of sorts was attained in last week's my decision and asked them to 6-6 tie with Iowa. keep it confidential until after the game.'' The coach who brought fame to 1 dO / t MSU through the means of football prowess mentioned he had experi- enced no pressure to resign on the Today the Spartans, beset with part of the administration and, a multitude of injuries and memo- though the fans and alumni, ac- ries must face Purdue, undefeated customed to past glories, have in the conference and entertaining grimly received the performance thoughts of a title based on its No. of the Spartans over the last six 1'rushing defense, No. 2 rushing offense, and the talents of Otis Armstrong. Ohio State, after dropping be- e shind Michigan in the national polls, hosts Minnesota and the Buckeye homecoming celebration. Plagued d injuries, the old Scarlet and idlesGrey must call upon the abilities of the bench. Linebacker Vic Koegel and safe- ty Rick Seifert suffer injuries that place them out for the rest of the season. Co-captain Rick Galbas 1972> will be out with his leg in a cast until the Michigan game. Linebackers Randy Gradishar and Kevin Fletcher and defen- sive end Tom Marendt will also miss today's game due to various ailments. hlF Freshman Archie Griffin leads the Buckeyes' rushing with his moves in the left halfback spot. Ohio State is number one in the conference in rushing as well as overall offense. The humble Gophers, having barely recovered from the stomp- ing in Ann Arbor, will rely upon the speed of John King, number two in rushing, and Ohio's injuries [to pull them through with a mini- mum of humiliation. The winless Illini, battered by the best in the land, may finally not lose, for they travel to meet the hapless Wildcats of Northwest- ern. Indeed, Illinois has been named a slight favorite. A brisk aerial d'iel is likely between veter- an Illini quarterback Mike Wells and Wildcat sophomore passer Mitch Anderson, each of whom finally found touchdown range last Saturday. Reportedly the air has been cleared at Illinois now that the dis- gruntled bench players have ex- pressed their disputes with the coaching staff policies. A Dyche Stadium crowd of 40,000 is expected to watch the neighbor- [hood battle for the Sweet Sioux Tomahawk Trophy, symbolic of an ancient and hot rivalry now stand- ing a scant 31-30 in favor of Illinois. Wisconsin, after losing to Ohio State by a single touchdown con- tests Iowa in home territory. After their beating at the hands of MSU, the Badgers will seek revenge on the Hawkeyes, who upset the Spar- tans in the aforementioned 6-6 tie. SLIPPING AND SLIDING, Daymond Mays (elongated shirt) rolls for yardage against Southern Cali- fornia. Today, Mays and his Spartan teammates will be playing their last game under the watchful aegis of Duffy Daugherty as the Irishman with the twinkle in his eyes bows out after a distinguished career at Moo Tech. BRUINS, CARDINALS TANGLE: Nebraska readies to husk Buffs By MARCIA MERKER With half the conference season over college football teams are looking towards major bowl bids. Tennessee would like to do better than the Liberty Bowl, ,Nebra- ska would rather switch to the Sug- ar from the Orange Bowl and LSU prefers the Cotton Bowl. Will Nebraska be the victim of a second season upset today? Their opponents, the Colorado Buffaloes, managed to pull one out from un- der unbeaten Oklahoma, 20-14, two weeks ago. Decidedly, Nebraska poses a more formidable barrier to overcome than Oklahoma due to its number one defensive unit, the Black Shirts, as well as its star studded offensive squad. Colorado starts the game today with tailback Charlie Davis and quarterback Ken Johnson both in good condition. Davis, who has rushed 785 yards in 161 carries, bruised a shoulder in the Oklahoma State game but expects to be 100 per cent today. The absence of these two players figured in the Buffs' two defeats. If the Black Shirts contain Davis, Johnson will Players on emy football states. the Air Force Acad- team come from 20 "DID YOU KNOW that the median income of women em- ployed by Washtenow County is $7,000 while the median in- come for men is $11,000?" KATHY FOJTK Dist. 14 Commissioner Pd. Pal. Adv. resort to the air with his string I of fine receivers, J. V. Cain, Jon1 Keyworth and Steve Haggerty., To score an uoset today, Color-! ado must control the ball for long reriods of time due to the power-. f-l Nebraska offense. Once t h e' Cornhuskers hit the gridiron, John- ny Rodgers and Jerry List just tear up the field. Rodgers, averaging 5.2 yards per carry, shattered al- most everv Gale Sayers record in the Big Eight with a total of 36! to'ichdowns compared to Sayers' 20. The Black Shirts appear to be jist as tough as ever. No team has scored against them in the past 25 quarters of play. The two men up front who solidify the line are shoe-in All-Ameri- Amri-cans Rich Glover and W ill i e Harper. Two arch-rivals - Stanford and U.C.L.A. - will go at it today in the Los Angeles Coliseum. For the past two years, this classic has decided who will fight in the Rose Bowl. The Cardinals could once again determine who gets the bid by defeating UCLA. - - .... Michigan only knows too well The Joe Namath of college foot- how Stanford can hold a team in bal, Bert Jones, stratifies the LSU the clinch. Little Rod Garcia, the offense onslaught. This year alone man who crushed Michigan's Rose Jones has made ten touchdowns Bowl hopes last year, now holds and passed for 770 yards in the every Stanford field goal record Southeastern Conference. in the book. He defintely makes f the edge with the ability to kick 54 yard field goals.f Last Saturday, running b a c k John Winesberry saw his f i r s t action since the Southern C a 1 game. Coach Jack Christiansen termed his as the "difference" be- tween wining and losing to Oregon State. -I Stanford's defensive line con- sists of two outstanding players, j Jim Merlo, who has made 97 tackles this season, and Randy Poltl, who intercepted the pass that sealed a Stanford victory last week.I UCLA will concentrate on lengthy ball control. Mark Harmon uses the wishbone option to his best advantage managing an ex- plosive ground game not to men- tion his passing attack. Most of the Bruin rushing yard- age is credited to Jim McAlister and Kermit Johnson. These t w o have earned the majority of the 40 points per-game. Louisiana State, holding a mostI impressive record to date, takes on Ole Miss today in Baton Rouge. LSU's biggest season game, next' week against Alabama, points tow- ards a clash with Texas in the Cotton Bowl. This is why the Tigers cannot take today's game too light- [ly. The Tiger defense has held every team but Pacific to less than 1N) yards on the ground. So. unless Mississippi can use its passing, the outlook is grim for Ole Miss. Mississippi has the talent in re- ceivers Bill Barry, Butch Veaz- ey and Bill Malouf, but the quar- terback Norris Weese lacks the ability to hit the mark most of the time.! Shop at Folletts for publisher remainders Both two games down in the con- ference, Tennessee and Georgia fight for major bowl bids today. Tennessee, heading towards the Gator Bowl, sports an improved offense compared to last season's squad due to its powerful quarter- back Conredge Holloway. Also aid- ing in the attack is the best open runner the Vols' have seen in a long time, Haskel Stanback, and an improved blocking line. Linebacker Jamie Rotella is playing the best football in his career. He joins cornerback Con- rad Graham and ends Lambert and Johnson as team defensive stand- outs. Georgia has settled down from its early season jitters to execute some sound grid-performers. Tailback Jimmy Poulos and quar- terback Andy Johnson form a bril- liant combo on the field. Prodigal back Duane comes to San Diego SAN DIEGO (P)-Running back Duane Thomas rejoined the San Diego Chargers in a two-hour prac- tice session yesterday for Sunday's National Football League game against the Dallas Cowboys. Thomas has been on San Diego's inactive list after failing to join the team since being traded from Dal- las July 31. Several weeks ago Thomas ap- peared unexpectedly at the Charg- ers' practice field but left the next day. A terse announcement said only that Coach Harland Svare "would not say whether the running back would be activated" for the game against his former teammates. Thomas wore sweat clothes and practiced "like all the others," a team spokesman said. The Dallas game is the eighth for San Diego, now 2-4-1. Wide receiver Billy Parks and running back Mike Montgomery, who were traded to Dallas for Thomas, have been used often by the Cowboys, 5-2. Thomas has sought a major salary increase for the final year of his three-year contract signed with the Cowboys. A0 :At least the Republican candidate has been consistent on this issue in Livonia. At every public meeting, he has begun by berating Marv Stempien University Reformed Church E. Huron at Fletcher - a-h-L Mk Amok, I MI~ARD I cllMnAV NnVIPiARFR 1; 1