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November 07, 1972 - Image 8

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-11-07

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, November 7, 1972 44

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 7, 1972

MUFFLE R
AUTHORIZED ~ At ED
DEALER D l~VEA LER

TOP TEN ALL WIN:
Pigskin

powers

waltz on

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MUFFLER, TAILPIPES,
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AND LABOR

APPOINTMENT NOT NECESSARY
SERVICE WHILE YOU WAIT OR USE OUR
CONVENIENT SHUTTLE SERVICE
HOWARD COOPER VW
2575 S. STATE, ANN ARBOR
761-3200
SERVICE HOURS
MON.-THUR. TUE., WED., FRI.
7:30 A.M.-9:00 P.M. 7:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M
LIMITED TIME OFFER

By MARC FELDMAN
The nation's top ranked football
teams continued their winning
ways last weekend as the entire
Top Ten was victorious on the grid-
iron. Most of the elite were merely
warming up for impending show-
downs this month but others ran
into a little more trouble than they
had anticipated.
Down in Baton Rouge, the LSU
Tigers barely escaped the claws of
Mississippi withea spine-tingling
17-16 victory. The Tigers scored
the deciding touchdown with justj
one second on the clock to over-
come a six point deficit, and the
extra point provided the margin

11-yard run
withstand a
victory.

but the Bruins had to
Stanford rally to claim

Mike Boryla led the Cards into
UCLA territory with his passing
and a strike to Miles Moore with
1:21 left put Stanford on the 29.
On the next play, Boryla dropped
back to pass but the ball, bounced
away and was recovered by- the
Bruins amid Stanford protests that
the Card quarterback was hit
while throwing an incomplete pass.
Ninth ranked Texas continued its
winning ways in the Southwest
Conference with a hard-fought 1-7-9

win o er the SMU Mustangs. Bruis- braska, Oklahoma, Colorado, and
ing fullback Roosevelt Leaks trig- Iowa State continued their weekly
gered the Longhorn win with 175 wars and Nebraska disposed of
yards on 33 cracks at the Mustang erratic Colorado, 33-10 while Oklo-
line. 1homa sputtered to a 20-6 thrash-
Texas Tech, the most obscure ing of the Iowa State Cyclones at
team with a 7-1 record in the coun- Ames.
try, enhanced its 18th ranking with Iowa State battled the Sooners
a 10-6 win over the Rice Owls. Joe for most of the game and trailed
Barnes scored Tech's touchdown just 13-6 in the fourth quarter, but
in the first quarter and Don Greg Pruitt put the game out of
Grimes, the nation's third leading reach with a two-yard touchdown
kick scorer, booted a 22 yard field run with 31 seconds remaining.

1

4

goal with 1:05 left to ice the T
win.
The elite of the Big Eight,

N

.......................................................
.........

C
2
'c

LS&A
Coffee
Hour
TUESDAY'
Nov.* 1
at 3:00 p.m.
with the
Botany Department
1139 Natural Science Bldg.

of victory.
Alabama, ranked second in the Conference Standings
nation, and LSU's opponent this
Saturday, needed no last minuteM
heroics to crush impotent Missis- Major Independents Oklahoma 2 1 0 6 3
sippi State 58-14. Penn State 7 1 0 Iowa State 2 2 0 5 2
With the Crimson Tide leading Notre Dame 6 1 0 Missouri 2 2 0 5 3
17-6, Alabama blocked two Mis- Air Force 6 2 0 Oklahoma State 2 2 0 4 4
Sisipp State punts within two Frida State 6 3 0 Kansas 1 3 0 3 5
sisppiSaepnswtn West Virginia 6 3 0 Kansas State 1- 4 0 3 6
minutes and waltzed to the easy Utah State 5 3 0 southwest
victor Army 4 3 0 Conf All Gam

Nebraska. remained unbeaten
in the Big Eight with its con-
vincing win against the Buffaloes
e- of Colorado. The Huskers scored
on their first three possessions
for an early commanding 19-0
lead.
Colorado came back to within
o 19-10 at halftime ;but the irrepres-
0 sible Johnny Rodgers was a one
0
o man wrecking crew for the Huskers
8 as he returned five punts for 144
o yards and caught four passes for
another 79.

les

vuwy.
In the Pacific-8, Southern Cali-
fornia and UCLA each won with
varying amounts of difficulty.
Led by the running of sopho-
more tailback Anthony Davis,
the top ranked Trojans disposed
of lowly Washington State 44-6.
Davis, subbing for injured Rod
McNeill, rushed for 195 yards
and three touchdowns.

Miami, Fla.
Virgin ip' 'ech
Georgi' Ih
Tulan,
Syracus
Houston Univ.
Boston"College
South Carolina
Navy
Pittsburgh

4
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
1

3
3
3
4
5
4
4
5
5
8

1
0
0
1
4
0
0
0

Iv

Washington State kept pace with Yale
the Trojans in the first quarter Dartmouth
which ended in a 3-3 deadlock. Cornell
However, the passing of Trojan Penn
Mike Rae and some key fumbles Columbia
Princeton
hurt the WU cause. stBrown
UCLA, with just a loss to Mich- M
igan marring its record, hung on
to defeat the tenacious Stanford Bowling Green
Cardinals, 28-23. Quarterback Mark wiKent
Harmon scored the decisive touch- Miami, Ohio
down in the fourth quarter on an Toledo
W. Michigan
Ohio U.
it AC

VY LEAGUE
Conf All Games
W L T W L T
3 1 0 5 1 0
2 1 1 4 1 1
2 1 1 3 2 1
2 2 0 4 2 0
2 2 0' 4 2 0
1 2 1 2 3 1
1 2 1 2 3 1
1 30 15 0
id-American
Conf All Games
W L T W L T
311 50 4 10
2 2 0 6 2 0
2 2 0 5 4 0
2 2 1 5 3 1
1 4 0 3 6 0
tlantic Coast
Conf All Games
W L T W L T
4 0 0 6 1 0
3 1 0 5 4 0
State 3 1 1 5 2 1
2 20 35 0
2 2 1 4 4 1
0 4 0 3 6;0
0 4 0 1 7 0
Big Eight
Conf All Games
W L T W L T
4 0 0 7 1 0

Texas
Texas Tech
Baylor
Arkansas
SMU
TCU
Texas A & M
Rice
Wes
Utah
Arizona
Arizona State
Brigham Young
New Mexico
Wyoming
Colorado State
Texas, El Paso

4 0 0
3 1 0
2 1 0
2 2 0
1 0
1 3 0
0 3 0
stern Athletic

I

6
7
4
5
4
4
2
2

1
1
3
3
3
3
6
4

I

0
0
0
0
0
8
0
1

Although the Ivy League has no
Ed Marinaros or unbeaten teams
this fall, a rash of upsets and
Yale's shocking 45-14 win over the
Big Green of Dartmouth enabled
the Elis to capture the lead in the
Ancient Eight with a 3-1 record.

Con! All Games
4 1 0 5 3 0-NCAA EXIT GRANTED:

A
AP Photo
NAVY'S IKE OWENS (10) gets dumped over the shoulders by
Notre Dame's Bob Zarot last Saturday as the Irish dumped the
woeful Midshipmen 42-23 and stayed in contention for a post-season
bowl appearance.

3
3
3
2
2
0:
0
Pacific-

1
1
2
2
3
5

0
0
0
0
0
8
0

3
6
5
3
3
0
1

5
2
3
5
5
8
7

0
0
0
0
0
0
0

USOC politics come under fire

rcic

Southern Cal
UCLA
Washington
California
Stanford
Washington State
Oregon
Oregon State

-

0
MICHIGAN UNION4

North Carolina
Duke
North Carolina
Clemson
Maryland
Virginia
Wake Forest
Nebraska

Southeas

Conf All Games By The Associated Press
W L T W L T NEW YORK - The U. S. Olym-
6 0 0 9 0 0 pic Committee was subjected to
5 0 0 8 1 0 sharp criticism yesterday from itst
3 2 0 7 2 0 first vice president who warned:
2 3 0 2 7 0 "
2 3 0 5 3 0 We can no longer act in a vacu-
2 3 0 5 4 0 um."
1 5 0 2 7 0 "We are being clinically scru-
0 5 0 1 8 8 tinized by an aggressive and prob-
stern.
Conf All Games ing press,' Robert J. Kane, ath-
w L T w L T letic director at Cornell Univer-
6 0 0 8 8 0 sity, told a meeting of the USOC
3 0 0 7 0 0 Executive Committee.
3 2 0 7 1 0 "We can no longer tolerate taw-
2 2 0 3 3 8 dry politics. We can no longer
1 2 0 6 2 0 treat our athletes as mindless
1 3 0 2 6 0 chattels. If we don't put our house
1 4 0 4 5 0 in order, someone else will put it
0 4 0 3 4 0 in order for us."

Alabama
LSU
Auburn
Georgia
Florida
Tennessee
Kentucky
Mississippi
Mississippi State
Vanderbilt

WWWmW"mmummmmmm mmommMmmmmCLIP AND1
/
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UU'VOTE T
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U
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*AND MAKE
President 1iGE
State Rep., 53rd 01st. j JPER I
/
U
I.
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where to vote or jus

_ _ __ _
+ *i
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COUNT

'RGE McGOVERN
RY BULLARD
M 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
ration card for
st go to the Diag

The alarm was sounded at the Clifford H. Buck, president of
first meeting of top U. S. Olym- the USOC, said the United States
pians since the turbulent and ca- was urging that votes in the or-
tastrophic Munich Games, where ganization be apportioned accord-
the Americans were beset with ing to size of the countries.
mishaps, blunders and defeats that There are 33 nations which com-
brought warnings of an investiga- pete in the Pan Am Games, a hem-
tion from Congress and helped ispheric event staged on the year
provoke a sudden withdrawal of before the Olympic Games. The
membership by the sprawling Na- next are scheduled at Santiago,
tional Athletic Association. Chile, in 1975.
The NCAA, long embroiled in Currently each of the 33 coun-
a battle with the Amateur Ath- tries has one vote. Under the U.S.
letic Union for control of the proposal, the 12 nations with less
Olympic movement in this coun- than 2 million people would have
try, announced Oct. 26 that it was only one vote, 11 with population
withdrawing from the USOC between 2 and 10 million would
family and accompanied its ac- have two votes each, the five
tion with a blast at Olympic op- countries with 10 to 20 million peo-
erations, ple would have five votes and
The USOC needed only about 10 those with more than 20 million
minutes to accept the NCAA resig- would be allowed 10 votes. The
nation - and the response was United States would fall in the last
largely a shrug of the shoulders. category.
Also discussed at the meeting There is some strong sentiment
was the United States' considera- in the USOC for pulling out of the
tion of withdrawing from the Pan Pan Am Games because of the
American Games unless there is heavy expense - more than $1
a change in the voting structure. million - and flagging interest.
Gridde Pickings
Being such incredible lovers of that famous Italian dish, the Daily
staffers have long been interested in gaining knowledge of the world's
great pizza pies. Today, the Daily is beginning its first annual pizza
tasting poll. Just stop by Martin J. Quinnan's at 1001 E. University,
last week's Gridde Pickings winner, and he will be glad to offer you
a piece of that wonderful Mr. Pizza pizza.
Kindly rate it from 33 to 98 and report the magic number to us.
1. MICHIGAN at Iowa 11. Nebraska at Iowa State
(pick score) 12. Missouri at Oklahoma
2. OhioState at Michigan State 13. Wake Forest at Duke
3. Minnesota at Northwestern 14. California at Oregon State
15. UCLA at Washington
4. Indiana at Illinois 16. Pitt at Navy
5. Wisconsin at Purdue 17. Notre Dame at Air Force
6. LSU at Alabama 18. TCU at Texas Tech
7. Georgia at Florida 19. Central Connecticut at
8. Vanderbilt at Kentucky Cortland
9. Tulsa at Florida State 20. Daily Libels vs. Michigan
10. BYU at Arizona Rugby Football Club
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Co modern Africa.
THE REIGN OF QUANTITY. Ren Gunon. This new
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condemnation of the modern world from the point of
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CHECK YOUR OWN 1.0. H. J. Eysenck. A sequel to
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WALL STREET: SECURITY RISK. Hurd Baruch. An
eye-opening report on the unsafe and unsound prac-
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FILM AS FILM. Victor Perkins. A unique new set of
criteria for judging movies. $2.25
HOUSING CRISIS U.S.A. Joseph P. Fried. Foreword
by Mayor John V. Lindsay. A comprehensive review of
today's complex housing problems-and the people
and agencies involved. $1.45
MODERN GEOGRAPHY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Robert Estall. An up-to-date- geography-covering
population growth and change, land use, economic
activity, and more. $3.95
POWER IN AFRICA. Ruth First. A searching look at
military interventions in African politics. This is the
most important book to datepen the realities of power
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...bhese new Penguins
cover a wide range

4

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41

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PEOPLE FOR BULLARD will be at the Diag with maps and pre-
cinct information. BULLARD CARS will leave from there every
hour on the hour starting at 10 a.m. to take voters to the proper
voting place.
REMEMBER-VOTE WHERE YOU ARE REGISTERED!
If you have moved since you last voted in Ann Arbor, and
you haven't notified the city clerk, you must vote in the pre-
cinct where your old address is located.
For Other Rides and Voting Information call:
665-6529-Democratic Headquarters
761-9804--McGovern Headquarters
769-5929-The People for Bullard

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