Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November S, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 5, 1972 OSU GROUNDS GOPHERS: "; ....:1}i'in,}}}":._ : .::.:y ... ...... viii:: -: ii::^iii ::.::: :. ::: ": ".:vr .vvx v: ".v::n t. .. ,:". ,"nv "r r.w . ,w; ".,.r .r.. . ..ut .. :.,.i ?}:"N:{" v "..t.. . .... :":: v::..}:"; -'.ri:i+.. ..., i.. 11....... r4 .... . Y"..K":r. '+)."'":! } ... .., "(l :, "jPA ,:.,..SS:c:: 2'.... .?{i 2"?\1 .. ::..; .o..::. .: r.... n:.:...Y.... .}:.ii ..n -..n,.. 't. :":::::::: ::........ ........ .r. rh".....,.a.......... .,.... f. }k:>..: C...r:Y'a,+ :i":h}." '< t '+:;i">.,.. ,.r.. h ' , ,:,. .'. ,:.... Spartans squash Purdue EAST LANSING (W) - A fired- from scrimmage this year with his I ed a 31-yard run by the 6-4, 225 stopped just short of the Hawkeye up Michigan State won one 22-12 61-yard jaunt. His two touchdowns pound fullback. goal on fourth and one after t h e for retiring Coach Duffy Daugher- were on identical plays of keepers I The Gophers' Tom Waltower ran Badgers had reached a first down ty yesterday and continued to to the right. the ensuing kickoff back 76 at the six. chase the Big Ten football leaders * * * yards to the Ohio State 10 and * * * while knocking favored Purdue outi, Beaudoin scored three plays later.Iln . from among the front runners iniBuckS bury Minnesota scored again with a tiumpt the conference standings. COLUMBUS-(UPI)-Sohpomore little over a minute left in the EVANSTON, Ill. (Al - Quarter- Daugherty announced the night fullback Harold "Champ" Henson, first period on King's one-yard back Mike Wells scampered to two before the game that he was re- the nation's third leading scorer, plunge, capping a 15-play, 69-yard touchdowns and hurled a pair of I tiring from his coaching job at picked up 131 yards rushing in drive. scoring passes yesterday as Illi the end of this, his 19th season. 25 carries and ran for two touch- r * * nois shattered a seven-game lo- Purdue Coach Bob DeMoss, recov- downs to lead Ohio State to a ing streak with an explosive 43-13 ering from a bout of pneumonia, surprisingly tough 27-19 win over Badgers squeak Big Ten football triumph over er watched from the pressbox while Minnesota yesterday. MADISON () - Wisconsin, stop- ror-stricken Northwestern. watche fromIn notching their season's first his assistants handled the frustrat- ped inches short of a touchdownv. ed Boilermakers. eTnF t with 5:08 to play, was handed a le of conference cellar teams wth Quarterback Mark Niesen was w two-point safety three plays later the sparkling star for the Spartans, The other Ohio State scores when Iowa's Dave Harris fell down a 28-point third quarter after hold es~pin fo tochdwn unsof n hs on ed zne nd ungon tng a 13-7 halftime lead over tne escaping for touchdown runs of came on an 11-yard run by fresh- foras16-1 BidTen football v icto baffled Wildcats who lost three 7and fn ad , man tailback Archie Griffin and fumbles and had three passes inter- Loyal a 23-yard pass from quarterback .rcepted. fly over Spartan Stadium trailing Greg Hare to tight end Ted Pow Harris, on third and eight from Wells, scoring a total of 17 a banner proclaiming: "We love ei, the Iowa three, tried to circle left points, was masterful in the big Duffy and the Spartans." end but hit one of his blockers, Illini third quarter which opened The MSU defense did a stalwart' The Minnesota scoring came on senld utnit oelofllnhisid blockersc opn Thb b gu efens e id t wart a seven yard run by Doug Beau- stumbled and fell, with the 6-foot-5-inch quarterback job, bottling up Purdue's 0 t B s doin, a one-yard run by John King Penetration by Wisconsin corn- racing 40 yards to score on a Armstrong, the leading Big Ten and a six-yard pass to King from erback Kit Davis helped force the keeper ,play. rusher before the game. quarterback Bob Morgan. safety and, after Iowa got the ball Only 41 seconds later, Wells The MSU offense, which had The Buckeyes, who are now 7-0 back with 1:53 to play, Davis flipped a 12-yard scoring pass to been sputtering in earlier games, over all and 5-0 in the Big Ten clinched the victory when he inter- Garvin Roberson and midway in started rolling in the second quar- scored on the first series of downs cepted a pass by freshman quarter- the third quarter he shot a nine- ter with a 48-yard touchdown drive with Henson plunging over from back Butch Caldwell at midfield. yard touchdown pass to George that took 11 plays with Arnold Mor- two yards out to cap a march of The safety came after Wisconsin Uremovich on a fourth-and-three gado going over from, the five. 83 yards in 12 plays, which includ- reserve tailback Tony Davis was play. Another apparent MSU touch- - down, on a pass from Niesen to __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mike Jones on the one, was called back by a penalty. - Ni se , a e en iv or e bakco ve t d o qu rt r ac , sI SOPH SHOW presents CABARE I 1 November 9 November 10 November 11 November 11 * *. .. .8 :3 0 p: ~.mr. . . . . :30 p.m. * *. 8 * * 2: . . . . . . . 8:0 r.m . I Big Ten Standings W LT PF MICHIGAN 5 0 0 11 Ohio State 5 0 0 146 Purdue 4 1 0 121 Mich. State 3 1 1 83 Indiana 2 3 0 88 Wisconsin 2 3 0 64 Iowa 1 4 1 57 Minnesota 1 4 0 98 Illinois 1 4 0 71 Northwestern 1 5 0 62 Yesterday's Results PA 14 53 39 42 118 120 133 138 114 145 MICHIGAN 21, Indiana 7 Mich. State 22, Purdue 12 Ohio State 27, Minnesota 19 Wisconsin 16, Iowa 14 Illinois 43, Northwestern 13 "DID YOU KNOW that Kathy FOJTIK is the only stu- dent candidate for County Com- missioner in District 14?" KATHY FOJITK Dist. 14 Commissioner 'Pd. Pol. Adv. RE-ELECT SYLVESTER A. LEONARD COUNTY TREASURER HONEST-TRUSTWORTHY QUALIFIED BY EXPERIENCE1 25 YEARS AS PUBLIC OFFICIAL 10 YEARS COUNTY TREASURER 10 YRS. COUNTY SUPERVISOR 5 YRS. LINCOLN SCHOOL BOARD Republican Pd. Pol. Adv. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. V . I ? . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 4 ? t N TAX REFORM: Griffin voted against the Kennedy-Hartke Amendments to reduce tax loopholes (Dec. 6 & 10). On November 12 & 20, 1971, he voted to increase tax credits on investments for corporations and to accelerate their depreciation deductions (these two measures will reduce corporate taxes by $8 billion per year) . Griffin voted against measures to increase personal tax deductions and reduce tpxation on the poor (Nov. 12 & 16, 1971) . FRANK KELLEY, Democrat, U.S. Senate Paid for by Students for Kelley .m{ ... ... ... ........... ........ . . Tickets are now on sale at the Power Center Box Office J POWER CENTER for the PERFORMING ARTS v i What the people say about KATHY 0 DIRECTOR SUMMIT STREET CLINIC (Dr. Ed Pierce) "Kathy has thoroughly researched many health care issues and would serve as an advocate for quality health care. She is competent and has my support. I hope she has yours. STATE McGOVERN COORDINATOR (Laird Harris) "Kathy was one of the original organizers of the McGovern campaign in Ann Arbor back in the summer of 1971. She worked as Student Coordinator and as the Manager of the Ypsilanti Headquarters. Due in large part to Kathy's ef- forts, Ypsilanti went for McGovern. We need Kathy on the Board." ACTIVE FEMINIST (Vivian Shaner) "On women's issues, Kathy is certainly the strongest can- didate. If you're a woman, a vote for Kathy is a vote for yourself, if you're a male, let me say that Kathy is fair." FIRST STUDENT CANDIDATE FOR U of M REGENT (John Koza) "Kathy's on top of every _._. _ I Vote PROPOSAL B- Proposal to Allow Abortion Unde.r Certain Conditions. The proposed law would allow a licensed medical or os- teopathic physician to perform an abortion at the request of the patient, if (1) the period of gestation has not exceeded 20 weeks, and (2) if the procedure is performed in a li- censed hospital or other facility ap- proved by the Department of Public Health. YES RPSAL B issue which is relevant to county problems as her issue papers can attest. She's put in a great deal of time, and would continue to do so as a "full-time" commissioner." COUNTY COMMISSIONER (Jim Cregar) "Over the months I've seen Kathy take an active in- terest in county government and the areas which have been neglected for too long (Health Care, Recycling, Bike Paths . . .). Kathy is the best posible representative from the 14th District." YOUNGEST CANDIDATE FOR THE U.S. CONGRESS (Walt Shapiro) "There is no question that Kathy is the most experienced, qualified and socially active of the candidates in the 14th Dis- trict. Kathy would be a conscientious commissioner." PEACE CORPS FIELD REPRESENTATIVE TO AFRICA (Melvin J. Thompson) "As one who has known Kathleen over the years during her time in South America with the Peace Corps and dur- ing the time she taught in Africa. She is the type of person who works "with" people, not "for" them, or "at" them. I've seen Kathleen do many fine things, and I know she will be a fine com- I missioner. rr UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STUDENT (Jane Owens) "Vote for a fellow student who will ef- fectively represent you on the county level. One chosen not by a few, but by many in an open pri- mary where issues were openly debated and discussed." VOTE I 0 n- the issues, or the people, I E( .+trit '> Z#4ft#t ' . . ;rarx :±7 III - w 40W - - -