} Page Six - THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 14, 1972 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY ==is COMPLICATES RACE The Center for Continuing Education of Women PRESENTS GAIL THAIN.PARKER President, Bennington College 0 6 Feminism and Romanticism: YOU ARE WHAT YOU READ 8 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 15 Rackham Amphitheatre Free Public Invted LSA COFFEE HOUR with the ENGLISH DEPT. Tuesday, November 14 3:00-4:30 in the Hopwood Room MSU adopts By BOB SIMON due must beat Michigan in Ann Michigan State 19, Ohio State 12. Arbor this Saturday to move one As the score flashed on scoreboards step closer to the roses. across the nation Saturday after- The Michigan State game was noon, many fans could not contain not only a tremendous upset vic- their elation. Millions of television tory, but it also cast remaining viewers jumped for joy in their rays of hope for Spartan chances living rooms as they watched the for the Rose Bowl. If Michigan Bucks slowly fade into the oblivion of defeat. The MSU decision over Woody's f Bucks prompted various reactions from people. For "armchair quar- drops its remaining games to Pur terbacks" outside of the Big Ten, due and Ohio State and Purdue the game was only further proof of and Ohio State lose their non-Mich the demise of the conference. After igan game, the Spartans, provided all, Southern Cal devastated the they finish with two victories, wil Spartans. For the followers of Big win the conference. At least, they Ten football teams, MSU's win can hope. demonstrated that the conference As far as the Buckeye defeat is a well-balanced one in which is concerned, Wolverine mentor "any team can win on any given Bo Schembechler summed it up Saturday." this way, "It doesn't make any P u r d u e ' s Boilermakers were difference. We have to win the thrust right back into the confer- rest of our games anyway." Sch- ence championship race as a con- embechler refers to the fact that sequence of the Buckeye loss. Pur- a tie for the Big Ten champion- spoiler role n e s g s n e i- d 11 Y ship will do the Wolverines no fourth down situation on the Buck- good in their search for the eye seven. However, before they roses. To be in Pasadena on New could start to move the pigskin, Year's Day, Michigan must cap- Woody's boys fumbled it away to ture undisputed possession of the the Green and White. MSU's signal- conference crown. caller swept in from the six two In Michigan State's victory, it plays later and it was all over, was a story of Dirk Krijt keeping except for the shouting and the the Spartans in the game in the singing of "Good-bye, Woody." first half and then sheer domina- "It was not a typical Ohio tion by MSU in the closing 30 min- State University football game utes. Krijt, a soccer-style kicker with all those fumbles we had," imported from the Netherlands, uttered a sullen Woody Hayes. kicked four field goals to tie a Big "We took a real beating out Ten record and set a Spartan rec- there from a good team," he ord for most field goals in a game. added. Despite the disappoint- This was the first game he had ment in the hearts of Buckeye been on the varsity and his name fans, the upset really doesn't wasn't even on the roster. erase their Rose Bowl chances. In the second half Michigan State The league championship and kept the Buckeyes buried in their ensuing West Coast trip will still own end most of the time while probably be decided in the final the winner's offense continued to battle between Michigan and ground out yards on the artificial Ohio State. turf. The Buckeyes were able to In other games around the Big stop the Spartans most of the time Ten last weekend, Purdue, hanging before they could score, but in the on for dear life in the conference third period the home team finally race, blasted Wisconsin, 27-6. In broke through for the winning games of lesser title importance, margin. Illinois defeated Indiana, 37-20, Ohio State's defense had just while Minnesota smashed North- stopped the Spartans on a crucial western, 35-9. 11 4 Big Ten Standings Big Ten W L T Pts. OP All Games W L T Pts. OP MIKE HOLT (with ball) braces for the inevitable contact with the plethora of tackling Buckeyes. Neither the Michigan State half- back nor his teammates quivered as they handed the invaders from Columbus a 19-12 pasting last Saturday. MICHIGAN Ohio State Purdue Michigan State Indiana Wisconsin jIllinois Minnesota Iowa Northwestern 6 5 S 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 5 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 142 158 148 102 108 70 108 123 57 91 14 72 45 so 155 147 134 167 153 180 9 7 5 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 0 1 4 4 5 5 8 8 6 7 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 244 222 207 124 181 139 156 157 86 118 37 104 119 128 212 188 255 281 178 239 SOONERS SAIL ON: SATURDAY'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 31, Iowa 0 Purdue 27, Wisconsin 6 Illinois 37, Indiana 20 Minnesota 35, Northwestern 29 THIS WEEK'S GAMES Purdue at MICHIGAN Ohio State at Northwestern Michigan State at Minnesota Wisconsin at Illinois By MIKE PRITULA As the college football season draws to a close, many teams are still scramblingfor those lucrative post-season bowl bids. But with the passing of each weekend a few more colleges have their names' X-ed from the list of prospective invitees. Even in the case of the Rose Bowl, where invitations are issued on the basis of league champion- ship teams are discarding their chances at a post season appear- ance. Eighth - ranked UCLA saw their hopes for a Pac-8 championship almost vanish as they dropped a 30-21 decision to the Washington Huskies. Caught looking ahead to their game with USC, the Bruins were upended by Sonny Sixkiller's accurate passing. Sixkiller, who returned to ac- tion after a knee injury sidelined him for three weeks, virtually de- stroyed the UCLA secondary. His passing set up four touchdowns by Pete Taggares and he also uncork- ed a 72 yard bomb to Tom Scott in the first quaetrr to get things roll- ing for the Huskies. The Bruins now face the task of upsetting USC to salvage any chance at the Rose Bowl bid. USC, the number1 team in the country, was idle last weekend. i 7 . Tide leads in bowl race Junior Year in Germany in Freiburg First Informational Meeting Nov. 15, 1972-7:30 p.m. lecture Room No. 1-MIBD All students interested in attending the Uni- versity of Freiburg should come to this meeting. for Alabama is that they now have they dumped upset-minded Mis- their choice of the Cotton, Sugar, souri 17-6. The Thanksgiving or Orange bowls. The Tide will Day showndown between the most likely be sought after by all Soonershand Cornhuskers will three, although currently it looks probably decide the victor of the like the Orange Bowl has the in- prestigious Big-8 title. side track. The Sooners, on the ascent in the Alabama's possible bowl oppo- polls and the national picture, were, nent, Nebraska, was taken down pushed to the hilt by the Tigers of a notch in their run for a bowl Missouri. Oklahoma led only by a spot. All the Cornhuskers could 10-6 score early in the fourth quar- come away with last weekend was ter until Greg Pruitt, the Okies a 23-23 tie with Iowa State. little scat back, galloped down the sidelines on the 44 yard touchdown State bottled up Nebraska all af- ranked Sooners. ternoon and took advantage of Twelfth ranked Notre Dame eight Cornhusker turnovers to gain kept their bowl hopes glistening the tie. Actually, Iowa State had with a 21-7 victory over the Air victory within their grasp when Force Falcons. AI 1 1 First Floor Angell Hall U Second - rated Alabama, oper- ating out of the wishbone, rolled by mistake - prone LSU in a na- tionally televised game. The Tide's usually unbeatable de- fense was touched for 21 points; but that wasn't enough as Ala- bama's offense poured it on for a 35-21 victory. The win gave the Crimson Tide their twentieth straight victory in regular season play, and assured them of at least a share of the SEC crown. But most important they tied the game with 23 seconds . remaining. It was all up to place kicker Tom Goedjen, who had connected on 29' of 31 attempts on the season in ex-I tra points, as the sellout crowd' tensed for what they expected was a surerIowa State upset. Goedjen then proceeded to squib tile kick off the right side of his foot, gra-I ciously giving Nebraska the giftl tie. The Sooners of Oklahoma stay- ed right on Nebraska's heels as Ever since the school has re- scinded, its ban on post-season con- tests, the Irish have been a favor- ite target of bowl selectors. The Irish have the kind of name (and record) that the bowls look for. Air Force put up a valiant fight before allowing a fourth quarter 'touchdown that put the game out of reach. Around this time of year the col- lege football season begins anew. The only difference is this time one loss and you are out. tj i Subscribe to The Daily See us "Jovember 15-17 at Career Planning & Placement for information 7bout our two-year Master's degree programs at Conference Standings 4' To All Those People Who Worked For, Supported, and Voted for me ... THANK YOU Hilary (Larry) Goddard IVY LEAGUE Baylor Conf. All Games TCU W L T WV L T Arkansas 2 2 0 4 4 0 2 2 0 530 2 30 54 0 Dartmouth Yale Penn Cornell Harvard Princeton Columbia Brown 3 1 1 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 3 1 1 4 0 MID-AMERICAN Conf. 5 5 5 5 3 3 2 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 4 6 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 Texas A & Rice SMU USC UCLA Washington Washington California Stanford Oregon Oregon St. i _. . . _ . Bowling Green Kent Toledo W. Michigan | Miami Ohio CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE MAJORS People from the Career Planning and Placement Office have some ideas for you to be offered in a CAREER SEMINAR THURSDAY, NOV. 6th-1:30 P.M. 3529 Student Activities Bldg. 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