Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 1% 1972 TH IHIAAIYSnd__ovme_1,17 __ _____..._...._..._ __... =.w...v ....-- --- USC rips UCLA 10, 15 and 22 yards in the drive 1 Sooners singe which started after a 50-yard punt By The Associated Press j LOS ANGELES - S o u t h e r n California tailback Anthony Davis romped through UCLA for 178 yards and the top-'anked Trojans won the Pacific-8 Conference spotj in the Rose Bowl with a 24-7 tri- umph over the Bruins last night. Southern California, led by the running of Davis, grabbed a 10-7 first-quarter lead over UCLA. Mike Rae kicked a 32-yard field goal for a 3-0 Trojan lead seven plays after the openingI kickoff. UCLA could gain only seven yards in three plays be- fore punting, and the Trojans drove 76 yards in eight plays, the last a 23-yard touchdown run up the middle by Davis. The Bruins then marched 75 yards on 17 running plays for their lone touchdown - James McAlis- ter's two-yard run on the last play of the quarter. The Trojans took a 17-7 half-time lead when tailback Rod McNeill' plunged one yard for a touchdownF with about three minutes left in the second period.I USC drove 80 yards in 13 plays, with Davis gaining 49 yards in seven carries and Rae throwing a 22-yard pass' to Lynn Swann. The 5-9 Davis, a sophomore, net- ted 112 yards in 12 first-half carries. The Bruins blew one scoring op- portunity about midway through the second quarter after Davis fumbled a UCLA punt and Jack Lassner recovered on the Trojan 27. Six plays later, quarterback Mark Harmon's first pass of the game was incomplete and Efren Herrera missed a 33-yard field goal try.- The Trojans broke away to a 24-7 lead after three quarters by marching 96 yards in 13 plays, Rae bootlegging seven yards around right end for the touch-{ down. Davis accounted for 51 yards in; seven carries, including, runs of for. ference football triumph. It was the 100th victory for Coach Bob Devaney in 11 Nebraska sea- sons, put the Huskers at 8-1-1 for the season, 5-0-1 in the conference and set the stage for a showdown with Oklahoma on Thanksgiving Day. Roses muddy floor of Amon Carter Sta- dium. BC blitzed NEWTON, Mass.-Penn State, the nation's sixth-ranked football power, survived a third-period scare and pulled out of danger by Bruce Barnes. 'Bama burnss TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - WilburT Jackson swept past out-manned Virginia Tech for 131 yards in the first half, including a 67-yard scoring sprint, to pace Cotton Bowl- bound Alabama to a 52-13. victoryt yesterday in college football. The second-ranked Crimson Tide grabbed yardage in huge chunks and the Alabama defense stifled1 the nation's leading passer Don: Strock, as the Tide won its 10th game of the season. LAWRENCE, Kan.-Greg Pruitt put on a brilliant first-half running show as fourth-ranked Oklahoma, eyeing this week's big bout with Nebraska, thrashed Kansas 31-7 yesterday in a football game that was no contest from the outset. Pruitt, the leading point-producer in the Big Eight Conference, failed to score but collected 135 yards on 16 carries and caught a pass for 34 yards. He did not play in the second half because of a bruised ankle. Oklahoma took command of the lop-sided contest with the opening kickoff, driving 76 yards t r f , t t, t. Bowl pairings ROSE BOWL-MICHIGAN or Ohio State vs. Southern Calif ORANGE BOWL-Nebraska vs. Notre Dame COTTON BOWL-Texas vs. Alabama SUGAR BOWL-Oklahoma vs. Penn State ASTRO-BLUEBONNET BOWL-Tennessee vs. Louisiana State SUN BOWL-North Carolina vs. Texas Tech LIBERTY BOWL-Iowa State vs. Georgia Tech TANGERINE BOWL-Kent State vs. East Carolina GATOR BOWL-Colorado vs. Auburn FIESTA BOWL-Missouri vs Arizona or Arizona State ornia For Kansas State, the loss behind quarterback John Hufnagel closed out a 3-8 season, 1-6 in the yesterday for a 45-26 victory over conference, the poorest record fired-up Boston College. for Coach Vince Gibson in five Hufnagel scored two touch- seasons. downs and passed for two others The 52-yard punt return by as the Nittany Lions posted their Rodgers, aided by picture-book ninth consecutive victory since blocking, gave him a career total an opening loss to Tennessee. of seven punt-return touchdowns, Luck of the Irish tying an NCAA record set by Okla- homa's Jack Mitchell from 1946 SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Tenth- to 1948. ranked Notre Dame clinched an invitation to the Orange Bowl yes- Mizzou wins again terday, holding off a fourth-quarter COLUMBIA, Mo.-Greg Hill kicked rush by Miami to squeeze out a a 22-yard field goal with 1:30 to 20-17 collegiate football victory go. giving Missouri a 6-5 Big Eight over the unranked Hurricanes. football victory over Iowa State Miami missed an opportunity yesterday. to tie the game when Mike Scouts from the Liberty, Sun and Burke's 46-yard field goal at- Fiesta bowls witnessed Hill's third tempt was wide to the right with such sensational finish of the sea- 1:31 remaining in the game. son. The attempt came after sopho- His field goals, each in the last more Notre Dame quarterback six seconds, beat Oregon and Tom Clements, who threw for one Colorado earlier in the season. touchdown and ran for another, TheCvictory left Missouri 6-4 for fumbled at his own 35-yard line. the season and Iowa State, 5-3-1. _ -- The losing Cyclones were rank- 12th and Missouri 19th Hill kicked a 28-yard field goal FIENk with two seconds left in the half for a 3-3 tie after ISU's Tom Goed- gen had kicked a 35-yarder in the The Cyclones dominated all but G old( the last four minutes of the second half and took a 5-3 lead when MICHIGAN STATE'S MARK NIESEN scrambles around a fallen Gopher yesterday as defender Ollie Bakken (SO) continues pursuit. The Spartans fell to Minnesota, 14-10, marking the seventh straight loss for Duffy Daugherty and the Spartans at Bloomington. I A cold drizzle helped cause numerous fumbles by both teams but VPI was ablesto convert only one of its breaks into a touch-, down. Strock passed for another VPI score in the game against Alabama substitutes. Jackson's long scoring run came off an option at right end. He picked up blocker Wayne Wheeler after breaking past the line and Wheeler walled off the deep defenders. Jackson later ran 36 yards to the VPI 20 to set up the Tide's second touchdown and in the second period he bulled nine yards for another on 12 plays with quarterback DavezRobertsonbursting into the end zone on the keeper for the final .three yards. Oklahoma moved 80 yards on its third possession, Robertson's 21- yard toss to Tinker Owens the big gainer.sLeon Crosswhite's six-yard smash through the line produced the touchdown. "Huskers obliterate LINCOLN, Neb. - Nebraska's Johnny Rodgers rattled Kansas State with a 52-yard punt return for a first quarter touchdown yester- day, setting off a scoring parade that carried the fifth-ranked Corn- huskers to a 59-7 Big Eight Con- 0N-LED BUCKS STOP 'CATS J'n Gophers jolt MSU I i, ;. ,!. E I y i t i linebacker Brad Storm blocked a By The Associated Press The hard-earned triumph g a v e punt by Missouri's Jack Bastable MINNEAPOLIS - The Minne- Ohio State a 6-1 league record and and the ball rolled out of the end sota Gophers, charged up by de- a chance to gain a championship zone for a safety. fensive end Steve Neils' 36-yardr deadlock in next Saturday's fin- TCII humbled touchdown run with an intercepted ale against first place Michigan. lateral, fashioned two fourth quar- A three-touchdown favorite, FORTnWORTH, Tex.-The Texas ter goal line stands andrupset Ohio State had its hands full all Longhorns rolledI to an unprece- 'Michigan State 14-10 yesterday inI the way against NU's scrappy dented fifth consecutive Southwest Big Ten football. Wildcats, who battled to a 7-7 Conference crown yesterday, crush- The Spartans twice had fourth halftime tie and fought back ing fumble-plagued Texas Chris- down plays from the Gophers three from a 20-7 deficit late in the tian 27-0 behind quarterback Alan in the last quarter, needing o n e third quarter. Lowry's three touchdown runs. yr ahtm o h is L yThe victory gave Texas a6-0 yard each time for the f i r s t The main Buckeye weapon was SWC record and the host spot down. the battering Henson, who set a in he ottn BwlClassic New The right side of. Minnesota's in the Cotton Bowl defensive line rose to smear Buckeye season record of 18 Year's day. k gichael Holt at the line forc touchdowns as he pounded through Thesevnthranedcongornl HothlWidcas't4htmesfor15 turned three Horned Frog fum- ng a mhn Pao ight blitzat- yards. bles into touchdowns with short in to stop quarterback M a r k The nation's leading scorer on a scoring drives i the first half. Niesen for a 3-yard loss on the iper-game-points basis, the 221- e Lowry, the senior who has spark- second try with about 6% mmn- pound Henson plunged twice three ed Texas to an 8-1 season, sneaked . eodtywthaot mn yards and twice one yard for his over from the one-yard line twice utes left in the game. yards wice oe yhr Borks four TD's which broke the Buck's and from the three-yard line on the Neils, a 210-pound junior w h o season mark of 17 shared by John had recovered an earlier fumble, Brockington and Jim Otis. picked off Niesen's lateral at the Northwestern, which b a r e I y Le E vans Spartan 36 and raced down the missed scoring after A. J. Owens sidelines for the touchdown t h a t sprinted 68 yards with the open- cut Michigan State's lead to 10-9 ing kickoff to the Ohio State 29, Las U with 8:43 left to play the third tied the score at 7-7 in the se- TheGophers, after the second cond quarter on a tricky 16- goal line stand, used up the clock yard pass from No. 2 quarter- pi roceducI res with a gutty drive that saw quar- back Todd Somers to No. 1 quar- terback Bob Morgan call a daring terback Mitch Anderson. fourth-and-one play at his own 17 After Henson gave Ohio State its KANSAS CITY 0P) - Lee Evans, with-5:d-o play. He mad the 20-7 lead on his third touchdown, the world record holder in the 400 yardage by inches and John King the Wildcats scored again on An- meters, charged yesterday that the carried on 12 crunching runs to derson's 10-yard pass to Steve Amateur Athletic Union and t h e use up the clock. Craig with two seconds left in the Olympic Committee look for ways Minnesota's defense, abused in third quarter. to disqualify athletes from t h e nine previous games for a 32- Henson's last touchdown came Olympic Games, and that things point average, held Michigan with only 21 seconds left in the happen in the Olympics that "tot-, State without a first down for game, which hinged mainly on a ally blow your mind . . . cheaters more than two quarters. wild third quarter. who eventually won gold medals."; Michigan State was almost as After Henson's second touch- tough, holding the Gophers on down gave OSU a 14-7 lead at the CLIFFORD H. BUCK, president downs in the first half at the outset of the third quarter, b o t h of the U.S. Olympic Committee, t Spartan eight after George Hon- teams exchanged lost fumbles be- denied Evans' allegations that the za's 80-yard kickoff return. The fore a Northwestern pass interfer- organization tries to get athletes Spartans also held at their 27. ence call set up the touchdown disqualified and said the state- King, a junior, carried 34 times which sewed it up for the Bucks' ment was "unfair." for 138 yards to become the first 20-7. Evans, who also charged d i s - Minnesota runner to rush for more * * * crimination against Negro athletes than 1,000 yards in a season. and that the Olympics had a poli- * * * !awkeyes humbled tical flavor, said, "It's time for the AAU and the Olympic Commit- Ohio State rolls BLOOMINGTON - Ken Starling tee to get on our side. scored a first-quarter touchdown "They put the pressure on the EVANSTON - Ohio State's tire- and place-kicker Chris Gartner black Americans. This is my coun- less Champ Henson smashed for booted three field goals yesterday try but I know where my people four touchdowns to enable t h e as Indiana ended a four-game los- are . . . Being a black man, I Buckeyes to stave off last place ing string with a 16-8 Big Ten, found out the doors weren't open Northwestern 27-14 yesterday and football victory over Iowa. to me as they should have been to carry their Big Ten bid for a title The Hawkeyes' only score came a man who won two gold medals." down to the wire. ear in th fourth qarter follow- Big Ten W L T Pts. OP 7 0 0 151 20 6 1 0 185 86 MICHIGAN Ohio State Purdue Michigan State Minnesota Indiana Wisconsin Illinois Iowa Northwestern S 2 0 154 54 4 2 1 112 3 4 0 137 Big Ten Standings All Games W L T Pts.OP 64 177 10 0 8 1 5 5 4 5 3 8 S5 5 5 2 9 253 247 213 134 171 197 163 163 43 118 128 142 291 224 195 282 3 3 4 4 0 0 124 163 97 154 2 5 0 115 161 1 6 7 0 65 169 0 105 207 2 2 7 8 94 194 132, 366 r YESTERDAY'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 9, Purdue 6 Ohio State 27, Northwestern 14 Minnesota 14, Mich. State 10 who now has 14 field goals for the season, connected on boots of 42, 47 and 20 yards. After Iowa's only touchdown, the Hawkeyes threatened o n c e more when Indiana's Bill Atkin- son fumbled a punt on the Hoos- ier 5 and Iowa's Dan Dickel re- covered. The Hawks advanced to the 2 but lost the ball on downs. Aside from that, neither team made any serious threat for the rest of the game and the entire second half was rather evenly" played. For the game, Indiana outrushed the visiting Hawkeyes 196. yards to 88 yards and gained 77 yards through the air to Iowa's 60. Starling led all rushers with 74 yards in 21 carries, while halfback Royce Mix led the Iowa ground at- tack with 45 yards in 11 attempts. Badgers blast CHAMPAIGN - Lonnie Perrin scored twice on short runs a n d George Uremovich hammered 89 yards in 19 carries, including a 17- yard touchdown blast, as Illinois ripped Wisconsin 27-7 yesterday. The victory was the third in a row for the Illini after they lost Wisconsin 27, Illinois 7 Indiana 16, Iowa 8 their first seven games and gave them a Big Ten record of 3-4. The Badgers, who have failed to win on the road in two years, are 4-6 for the season and 2-5 in the con- ference. Wisconsin's only touchdown was a stunner midway in the last per- iod. An Illinois kickoff bounced off the chest of receiver Jeff Mack on the nine yard line, rolled for- ward 10 yards, and was picked up by Chuck Richardson, who gal- loped the remaining 81 yards to score. Illinois went ahead 7-0 in the second quarter on a 98-yard drive that featured a 32-yard aerial. Mike Wells pitched out to Perrin, who passed to Garvin Roberson for the big play. Perrin event- ually went over from the two. Wisconsin's kickoff opening the third quarter was taken by Perrin who faked a crossfield lateral to Uremovich, then lateralled to Joe Lewis in the opposite direction. Lewis sped 64 yards before being downed on the 29. Ten plays later, Wells sneaked over from the one. Wells, the Big Ten's offensive leader, made 21 yards rushing in seven carries and hit on 12 of 16 passes for 94 yards. . ,l AP Photo HAVE YOU TAKEN the MORNING AFTER PILL? HEARD ABOUT ITS POSSIBLE SIDE-EFFECTS AND PROBABLE CARCINOGENICITY? WE NEED INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR CONTACT WITH THIS PILL SO WE CAN RESEARCH ITS ADMINISTRATION. PLEASE call our study committee or walk in: j 1517 S.A.B. - 1-5 P.M. DAILY 662-6597 (6598) Advocates for Medical Information VIRGINIA TECH'S T o m m y Carpenito nails Alabama's El- lis Beck (35) at the end of an eight yard run. The Crimson Tide slaughtered the s m a 11 Gobbler team yesterday 52-13. HUNGARIAN DANCE WORKSHOP CSABA PALFI Professional d a n c e r with the Hungarian State Folk Dance Ensemble will teach dances: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th 8:00-11:00 P.M. BARBOUR GYM EVERYONE WELCOME No Experience Necessary Sponsored by U. of M. Folkdancers { _-- - ---- --------- The Morning After CAN YOU LIVE THROUGH IT? 9 a.m.-noon MONDAY-FRIDAY wcbn-fm 89.5 stereo ing a blocked Hoosier punt that was recovered at the Indiana one- yard line. Two plays later, freshman quar- terback Butch Caldwell plunged through for the touchdown. Cald- well then passed to end Brian Rollins for a two-point conver- sion. Starling, a junior tailback who is Indiana's leading rusher for the season, scored from the one late in the opening period to cap a 44- yard drive. Gartner, a soccer-style kicker, 171 Sruins top cage poll; Michigan grabs 19th Ii MASTER OF By The Associated Press UCLA's powerful Bruins, winners of an unprecedented six consecu- tive NCAA titles and eight of the last nine, and led by Player of the Year Bill Walton, were unanimous choices yesterday to repeat as col- lege basketball champions for the 1972-73 season, in The Associated Press poll. The Bruins, unbeaten in 45 straight games since their last loss, an 89-82 decision to Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind. Jan. 23, Louisiana, North Carolina State, Penn and Ohio State. The 6-foot-11 Walton heads a group of four returning starters, two reserves and three highly touted freshmen on Coach John Wooden's perenially strong team. "They've got to be stronger than they were last year," said Louis- ville Coach Denny Crum, a former assistant to Wooden at UCLA and loser to the Bruins in last season's semifinals. "It shows the strength they have when 6-11 Swen Nater makes the Olympic team and is the leading scorer in the trials, but doesn't even play at UCLA until Walton is hurt. They've got to be considered favorites." The Top Twenty MANAGEME NT A Program of The Rackham Graduate Schoci University of Michigan Offered in Dearborn for those with baccalaureate concentration in areas other than business or management. ; i ',I ! I I ii i I ESKE E A SKI SAVINGS FOR INTERMEDIATES 1971, received all 36 first-place votes for a total of 720 points in the pre-season poll of sports writ- ers and broadcasters. Michigan's Wolverines, with al- most everything. back from last year's Big Ten title-contending team, were ranked in the nine- teenth spot, garnering 67 points, while conference rivals Minnesota and Ohio Statewere fourth and tenth, respectively. Florida State, 81-76 loser in last season's NCAA final, was second in the poll with 520 points, edging, Affl --a - ..tx 2:hfsih~ItA rd.A KN EISSL MC1400 fiberglass GEZE TOP STAR step-in inrlieEa nc iU 1. 1 2.1 3. 4.l 5.1 6.1 7. 8.1 9.1 UCLA (36) Florida State Maryland Minnesota Marquette Long Beach St. S W Louisiana North Carolina St. Penn 30-0 720 27-6 520 27-5 509 18-7 349 25-4 296 25-4 269 25-4 227 16-10 188 25-3 186 I I