Page' Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, December 5, 1972 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, December 5, 1972 Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. r, Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard Who is No. 1? No doubt this year Southern Cal takes first as only undefeated team I This Week in Sports THURSDAY BASKETBALL-Brigham Young at Nassau, N.Y. Crimson Tide falls back after closing-giame loss t ._ _ - _ SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE Everyone Welcome! i! LOTS OF PEOPLE GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, Dec. 6 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM OUTSIDE ON THE TERRACE LOTS OF FOOD NEW YORK (UPI)-Like their crosstown rivals in basketball, Southern California's Trojans are national champions, having been named the No. 1 college football team in the nation for 1972 by all 35 coaches on the United Press International Ratings Board. Under the guidance of head coach John McKay, Southern Cal- ifornia swept over eleven straight opponents to become the only major college team in the coun- try to finish undefeated and were named No. 1 by all the coaches on the board, thus out-pointing Big Eight champion Oklahomaf 10-1, 350-302. The second ranked Sooners lost their chance for an unbeaten season and a crack at No. 1 midway through the season when they were upset by Colo- rado. Ohio State 9-1, Southern Califor-' nia's Rose Bowl opponent on New Year's Day, was third in the final balloting and Alabama 10-1 dropped to fourthafter falling fromtthe unbeaten ranks on the final Satur-' day of the season, 17-16, to arch-' rival Auburn. Texas 9-1, which coasted to its sixth straight Southwest Confer- ence crown, wound up fifth in the final balloting followed by MICHI- GAN 10-1, Auburn 9-1, Penn State 10-1, Nebraska 8-2-1, and Louisiana State 9-1-1. The clean sweep of all 35 first place votes by Southern Cal match- ed that of UCLA in the 1971-72 final college basketball ratings and gave the Trojans their third national' title. Previously, they were selected UPI's No. 1 football team in 1962 and 1967. Only Oklahoma and Texas have been so named three times by the coaches. Picked eighth in the preseason ratings and expected to have a tough times winning their own Pacific Eight Conference, the Trojans, spurred by McKay's coaching and the spark ignited by, two sensational sophomores-half- back Anthony Davis on offense and linebacker Rich Wood on defense, rolled to 11 straight victories and were never really threatened by defeat.nTheir victims included Ar- kansas, Notre Dame, and Michigan State in addition to nationally rank- ed Washington State and UCLA in their own conference. Davis, the 5-9 sophomore run- ning whiz, almost single-handedly gave Southern California its final win of the season when he scored six touchdowns in the 45-23 win over Notre Dame and missed Jimmy Brown's national single game scoring record by six points. Davis also finished up fourth in the nation in scoring with a 9.8 points per game aver- age. The other offensive stars that, helped Southern Cal average 38.6 points, third nationally behind Ari-; zona State and Nebraska, were quarterback Mike Rae and tight end Charles Young.j lw ...,. . . . s .. ...:b: a.aa. ... .t...ab . .. ...,.. .s.. ...:. BRING YOUR PICTURE IN TO FRAME FOR AHIN NO. FRIDAY By RICHARD FLAHERTY HOCKEY-at Wisconsin Crimson Tide fans sickened last SWIMMING-at Purdue Saturday as the final seconds tick- ed away leaving Auburn victorious SATURDAY over second-ranked Alabama. The BASKETBALL-at Dayton loss along with a USC pounding HOCKEY-at Wisconsin of Notre Dame, ruined any chance SWIMMING-at Illinois of the Tide succeeding the nation- WRESTLING-at Ohio U. al title. GYMNASTICS-Iowa Invitational at Iowa City . The Southeast Conference battle was a defensive one, with previous- ly undefeated Alabama entering the fourth quarter confidentally leading 16-0. With less than ten minutes to play, the No. 9 ranked Tigers sprang to life with a 42 - yard as Purdue Gardner Jett field goal. Big Bill grid coach Newton's blocks of two Alabama punts, both miraculously scooped WEST LAFAYETTE (T)-Bob DeMoss resigned yesterday after up and converted into touch- three years as head football coach at Purdue and was named assistant downs by defensive star Dave athletic director for the Boilermakers. Langner, gave Auburn its one1 point victory. DeMoss, 45, finished on a winning note, although his three-year Langner, a 5-9, 170 pound defen- record with the Boilermakers as head coach was 13-18. After a disas- sive back from Birmingham, trous nonconference start the past season, Purdue built a 6-2 Big Ten stifled Alabama's passing attack, record for a third-place finish behind Ohio State and Michigan. intercepting Terry Davis's single DeMoss has been associated with the Purdue football program aerial attempt in the first half. The as player and coach for 25 years, since 1945 with one year out for Tiger defensive wonder continual- professionalfootballh ly out maneuvered Alabama's' p a lfamed wide received Wayne Wheel- "There was no pressure whatsoever on Bob in his decision-making er, completely supressing any pos- process from the trustees, President Arthur G. Banson, our athletic sibility of a successful completion! affairs committee or myself," Athletic Director George King said. to Wheeler. King said a search committee to screen candidates to succeed Wheeler entered the game with DeMK sid tlat er th eeks a boast of 30 catches for 573 yards, ss woul meet ter in te wee but surprisingly left without any DeMoss, a quarterback in college, had a national reputation as additions to his record. Langner's a builder of quarterbacks, including pro stars Bob Griese, Len second interception with only 45{ Dawson and Mike Phipps. seconds remaining, assured an Au- burn triumph. He first joined the coaching staff in 1950 after graduation and spent 'Nevertheless, Alabama exhibited1 the first season as quarterback coach before being named head fresh- its usual strength in rushing with man coach. He continued to work with quarterbacks in spring and a total of 235 yards. Relying on its preseason sessions, and became backfield coach in 1956 when Mollen- hoard of muscle men and speed-f kopf succeeded Stu Holcomb as head coach. DeMoss succeeded sters, the Tide gained over twice Mollenkopf after the 1969 season. I as many first downs as Auburn. Powerhouse Steve Bisceglia led ----___Alabama's assault with 24 carries for 102 hard earned yards while UNIVERSITY LECTURE IN the Tide's defense held the Tigers to a total of 80 yards. JOUR ALIM SEIESNumber one USC, now the only JOURNALISM SERIES m 'ajor college team with a per- fect season record, eased by No- tre Dame last week to the deci- sive tune of 45-23. Sophomore An- thony Davis, running with the Outstanding Critic of the Press finesse and speed of a future pro, . utstn gbroke a USC school record, rac- SpaigOn: Ing 97 yards for a touchdown on .peaking O :a kick-off return. The 5-9 185 pounder Trojan from Freedom of the Press in Ieonardv San Fernando tallied another five touchdowns with an equally stun- nizg 96-yard return and one, five, four, and eight-yard carries, leav- ing him one touchdown short of the all-time major college mark for a single game. Mississippi's showboat Boykin set the standing record of seven in 1951. Davis, who came into the sea- son as a third stringer, is the only sophomore and the fifth running back to rush over 1,000 yards in a season at USC. The Fighting Irish capitalized on sophomore quarterback Tom Cle- ments' passing ability, scoring three times as a result of his prowess in the air. On defense, Mike Townsend led the Orange Bowl-bound Irish, intercepting two passes for a school season record of 10. The Irish ground out a total yardage of 360, forty more yards than their opponent. .1,ational Football The National Football Founda- tion and Hall of Fame announced after the game that they had voted USC the winner of the McCarthur bowl, symbolizing the college football national cham- pionship. Southern Cal, 11-0, will play Ohio State in the Rose Bowl Jan. 1, while the Irish will battle Ne- braska in the Orange Bowl on the same day. This week winning coaches high- ly praised their teams for the sea- son's action. USC coach McKay claimed "This is the best team I've had since I've been at USC." Auburn's Shug Jordan, not to be outdone raved, "In 22 years I have always hesitated to put one of my teams ahead of any of the others, but today, I'm putting this team at the top of the list." I~I i MEXICAN 'DINNE1-',jR followed by Latin American Folk Songs by Marco Antonio Vasquez and Q slides about Peru shown by Baldomero Caceres December 7, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church For reservations call: 662-5529, days; 665-7146, nights ->o<-0<><>-0<->o<->o<-=>o<->=o<-y=o<-=>o--yo. 4 ~XJU BREAKFAST WIAL ANCAKES, RESH FRUIT offee or tea OUR DAILY SPE( FREE DOPE AND SEX!!! Now that we have attracted your attention, permit us to remind you of the important ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING OF THE PSYCH UNDERGRADUATE ASSN NHL Montreal N. Y. Rangers Boston Buffalo Detroit Toronto Vancouver N. Y. Islanders Minnesota Chicago Pittsburgh Los Angeles Philadelphia Atlanta St. Louis California East Ea L1 15 4 16 7 15 7 11 8 11 10 8 13 8 15 3 18 West 14 8 14 9 13 11 11 11 11 11 10 13 7 11 4 15 Standings T 7 3 3 7 2 4 2 2 3 2 2 4 4 5 5 5 whole grain P) YOGURTw/ F HOT CIDER, c WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6-4 P.M. AUD. C-ANGELL HALL I Pts GF GA 37 109 62 35 101 69 33 113 84 29 93 81 24 80 78 20 79 80 18 74 102 8 49 115 31 83 66 30 90 73 28 99 83 26 87 86 26 92 93 25 .65 88 19 59 73 13 61 101 r I IWIIL FOODS )13JRWMW1 2;5&s T Ln~ 4Ros 6-74fll TONITE!! TUES., DEC. 5-7:00 P.M. 3545 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING I TOYOTA ALL-N IGHTERS ARE GREAT! (but not if you're cuddling up to a typewriter.) "Statement-Pie Study Techniques" AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK AT FOLLETT'S, ULRICH'S, U. 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