Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 22, 1972 Page Six THE !MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 22, 1972 .._....... Noebraska invades Sooner Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard territory ACTION (Peace Corps & Vista) Recruiter will be on campus Nov. 28, 29, & 30, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. at Career Planning and Placement Student Activities Building By ROBIN WAGNER Thanksgiving. The week of the turkey? Not quite. In this age of advanced technology and the likes of Chris Schenkel and Bud Wilkinson, turkeys must move aside and share the limelight with college football. Oh, what would the Pilgrims say? Nebraska and Oklahoma collide in Lincoln on Turkey Day with the Big Eight crown at stake. "Armchair quarterbacks" nation- wide can pick their Heisman Trophy choice from the only gen- uine candidates remaining; Ne- braska's Johnny "Mr. Every- ' " 'M'remains third in Poll Powerful Southern Cal remained a solid favorite as the No. 1 college team in the country this week aft-: er an impressive 24-7 shellackingI of UCLA. The Trojans collected 44 of the 50 first place votes cast by a na- tional panel of sports writers and: broadcasters and led with 988 points. A first place vote went to Michi- gan, which held third place despite a narrow 9-6 victory over Purdue. Top Twenty 1. Southern California (44) 10-0-0 988 2. Alabama 5 10-0-0 874 3. MICHIGAN (1) 10-0-0 744 I Daily Libels (3) tie 121-0-0 744. 4. Oklahoma 8-1-0 689 5. Nebraska 8-1-1 608 6. Penn State 9-1-0 454' 7. Texas 9-1-0 414 8. Louisiana State 8-1-0 388 9. Ohio State 8-1-0 350 Leaky Trojans (tie) 18-0-0 350 10. Auburn 8-1-0 307 11. Notre Dame 8-1-0 266 12. Tennessee 6-2-0 189 13. Colorado 8-3-0 128 14. UCLA 8-3-0 73 15. North Carolina 8-1-0 73 16. Missouri 6-4-0 62 17. Iowa State 5-3-1 36 18. Arizona State 8-2-0 30 19. Washington State 7-4-0 16 20. Texas Tech 8-2-0 '15 thing" Rodgers and Oklahoma's Greg "Super-Sport" Pruitt. The Cornhuskers, 59-7 winners over Kansas State last weekend, defend Big Red country with a 5-0-1 conference mark, thanks to a 23-23 tie with bowl-bound Iowa State. The visiting team, mean- while, readied their devastating wishbone attack with a 31-7 past- ing of Kansas. Pruitt and Co. enter the much-awaited encount- er boasting a 4-1 Big Eight slate. Bob Devaney's contingent bare- ly grabbed victory against the Sooners in last year's "Game of the Century," 35-31. This week's contest is rated a toss-up. The only certainty concerning the game, along with the promise of top-notch football, is that[Rodg- ers, Pruitt and Nebraska's for- gotten man Rich Glover will all be getting in their last "two cents worth" for the coveted Heisman. University of Texas pigskin supporters, avid and devout be- ings that they are, invade Austin on the day of the gobble-gobble to behold what could well be the massacre of Texas A&M. The Longhorns own the Southwest Conference title for the fifth con- secutive year. With a 8-1 record and victories over Arkansas and Texas Tech under its belt, Texas should have "easy pickings" with A&M. The visitors own the confer- ence's cellar position with a 2-4 mark. A colorful sidelight to this nationally televised game, which may need all the excitement it can get, will be the constant voicing of amusing cheers from all sides of Memorial Stadium. Such exclamations as "Hook 'em, Horns" and "Gig 'em, Aggies" should liven up the ac- tion whenever it tends to get dull. An Aggie-Longhorn battle in- volves emotions as well as talent, so despite the lopsided records this contest will provide good college football action. Ivy League football has long been characterized by little skill, lots of emotion and raccoon-coat- This Week int Sports FRIDAY HOCKEY-Wisconsin at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. SATURDAY FOOTBALL-Ohio State at Columbus HOCKEY-Wisconsin at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. sota, the Purdue-Indiana game ranks second in importance to Hoosier residents losing out to Notre Dame-Purdue clambakes. Purdue will probably show the effects of last weekend's donny- brook here in Ann Arbor while Indiana comes off a win over Iowa. Perhaps the Boilermakers will suffer a letdown and allow John Pont's forces to regain the coveted pail. The unpredictable Spartans of Michigan State, losers to Minne- sota a week ago, host North- western in Duffy Daugherty's final game as Spartan coach. MSU wanted to finish their last four games undefeated. That hope has now been washed down the drain by the Golden Gophers, so the best they can do now is let Duffy leave a winner. Northwest- ern leads the nation in passing d e f e n s e, but nevertheless it shouldn't give Duffy's squad much trouble since State doesn't pass. Barring an upset, the smil- ing Irishman's final 'season rec- ord should read 5-5-1. The o t h e r two conference games, totally lost in the sha- dows of their Big Ten brothers, consist of Illinois-Iowa and Min- nesota-Wisconsin. Thanksgiving. A refreshing ka- liedoscope of conference title verdicts, televised football, rival- ries, and don't anyone forget, turkey. ed, whiskey-drinking fans. Three teams still possess title chances enter the final week of compe- tition. Dartmouth and Penn tan- gle in Philadelphia and Yale visits Cambridge to tackle Har- vard. Excepting the Crimson, the remaining trio of footballers can win the Ivy race. The Big Green Top Ten this weekend 1. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA- idle 2. ALABAMA - idle 3. MICHIGAN - at OHIO STATE (TV) 4. OKLAHOMA - at NEBRAS- KA (TV) S. NEBRASKA - OKLAHOMA 6. PENN STATE - Pittsburgh 7. TEXAS - Texas A & M (TV) 8. LOUISIANA STATE - Florida 9. OHIO STATE - MICHIGAN 10. AUBURN - idle of Dartmouth, sporting a 4-1-1 league record, can take the title outright. In "The Game," as its referred to on the East Coast, Harvard's schizophrenic team attempts to regain some pride from a season marred by losses to such foot- ball weaklings as Princeton. Memories of the 1968 Harvard- Yale game which the Crimson "won" 29-29 with 16 points in the final 41 seconds still linger over ancient Harvard Stadium. Surprising'Penn, victors in four straight league games, hosts pe- rennial league chamipon Dart- mouth. The Quakers, with ilttle skill, but lots of emotion and fans, follow the Ivy League axiom perfectly. Dartmouth, on the other hand, has found no trouble with opponents this sea- son except for a tie with Har- vard and a loss to Yale. The Big Green should win in the "City of Brotherly Love." Any- way, what would an Ivy League winter be if the football trophy were not resting securely in Han- over, N.H.? The West also has a conference title at stake as Arizona and Arizona State collide for the championship of the Western Athletic Conference. The Sun Devils lead the nation in total offense with 512.6 yards per game, 331.8 of those coming on the ground. Both teams boast 4-1 WAC slates but Arizona State must be rated clear-cut favorites in this encounter as Arizona has dropped every one of its non- conference games. The winner of Saturday's contest, along with the conference title, also gains the right to play Missouri in the Fiesta Bowl over the holidays. The final weekend of Big Ten Conference action includes, though not nationally important games, old rivalries and floods of sentimentality. Indiana's low- ly Hoosiers travel to Purdue to play for, believe it or not, the "Old Oaken Bucket." Similar to Michigan's "Little Brown Jug" contest with Minne- yI BACK FROM NCAA: Harriers stride, well Final results of the NCAA Cross- warm Texas air made it excellent country Championships held in weather to run in, however. Houston Monday showed Michigan. Brown is a sophomore and Bol- ran extremely well as Keith star and Schott both juniors which Brown finished 34th, Bill Bolster means they'll all be back next 35th and Rick Schott 137th. year. Farmer observed "I'm real- Coach Dixon Farmer was very ly pleased in that we are now a exhuberant, commenting "We had 1 power to be reckoned with in mid- really good performances, espec- western cross-country. I think ially Bill. This is the closest he's we've established ourselves as one been all year to Keith. It's not that of the better programs around." Keith didn't run well either, that In the team race Tennessee won was his best race in a month." i the meet followed by East Ten- Schott also did well running a I nessee State, Oregon, and Wash- 30:44 which was his fastest time ! ington State. The second place for the six-mile. His 137th finish finish by East Tenessee was a came out of a field of 290 of the real cinderella story as they just best college runners in the coun- barely qualified in their regional, try. Brown and Bolster both ran taking sixth place. But they made 28:41, which led Farmer to note; they made an incredible show in "That was a monumental feat in the Championship by taking first, itself. It as the first time they've third and 15th place. Their third both been under thirty, and the and fourth men weren't good conditions of the course probably enough to give them the cham- added thirty seconds to the times. pionship. They were 16 seconds away from The harriers are not complete- All-American and are sure they ty laying off until track season as can do it next year." Bolster and Schott are going to The course was completely Chicago Saturday to compete in drenched and very slippery. The the national AAU championships. Satisfaction Beef Sandwich $1.09 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile I . - I