,v The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 18,1977-Page 9 SPARTANS DUMPED 23-21:, Throwin By PAUL CAMPBELL Special td The Daily EAST LANSING - It was a case of an irresistable force meeting a movable object. The Force was Washington State junior quarterback Jack Thompson, who passed for two touchdowns and 364 yards as he led the Cougars to a 23-21 win over Michigan State in an intersec- tional battle yesterday. Samoan scorches State The movable object was the Michigan State defense, which leaked 533 yards of total offense and has given up over 900 yards to their opponents in two games. Thompson, who completed 21 of 30 for his days work, was particularly awe- some in the second half, leading the Cougars on three long drives for TD's and connecting on 12 of 14 passes for 190 yards. The first two times the Cougars had the ball after intermission, fumbles spoiled substantial drives. But after a Michigan State push stalled at the Washington State 46 and the Spartans were forced to punt, the "Throwin' Sa- moan' led the Cougars 80 yards in only eight plays. First the junior signal caller spotted his favorite target, Mike Levenseller, for 14 over the middle. Then Brian Kelly, who has caught 14 passes already this year, shook his man and grabbed one for 20 more. A fancy re- verse fooled the Spartans and put the ball inside the MSU 30. Two plays later, Thompson spotted Kelly all alone in the end zone for six and a 9-7 Cougar lead. The point after by Paul Watson sailed off to the right, but after the Cougars overcame a third down interference call to halt the Spartans, Thompson en- gineered another long drive - this time going 66 yards in nine plays before throwing a perfect strike to Kelly in the corner of the end zone on the tenth. Michigan State bounced back quick- ly, travelling 70 yards in half a dozen snaps for a fourth quarter score which cut the Spartan deficit to 16-14. But Thompson had the Spartan defense in the palm of his hand, and he showed it as he led Washington State to their clinching score on an 80-yard march that took up almost five minutes of precious time. He completed five passes and used his backs to keep MSU honest. Even a holding penalty couldn't stop the drive, which was capped by a three-yard jaunt by fullback Tali Ena. Penalties were a problem for both teams all day. The officials threw 21 flags and over 200 yards were marched off against the two teams. Twofirst half Washington State drives were aborted by infractions, and despite 246 yards of offense the Cougars could only manage a 30-yardWatson field goal in the first two quarters. i t F Association, Washtenaw Office Equipment Dealers Inc. ORIENTAL Exhibition and Sale by Marson, LTD., Baltimore, MD We cordially invite you to join with many other business and com- munity leaders in a special exhibit of office equipment, products and systems, presented by the experts in each field. This is the first exhibit of its kind to be presented in this area. This exhibit will be held on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977 from 10:00 A.M. until 7:00 P.M. at ROMA'S, 2196 W. Sta- dium, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48103. Come and see for yourself the many products that will be on display. Bring your key people, and let the professionals show you the latest in products and techniques. For additional information please call: HURON VALLEY OFFICE PRODUCTS, INC..................487-4900 UNIVERSITY OFFICE EQUIPMENT, INC................ .....434-5900 M & M TYPEWRITER SERVICE, INC......................665-0919 B & BCOPY PRODUCTS, INC...............................769-0777 DATA MACHINES, CO....... .......................761-0450 G. D. 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MASS MEETING SEPT. 19 7:30 Student Publications Bldg. 420 MAYNARD t * Free medical examination " Physician supervised program * You can donate twice weekly without ill effects * Must be at least 18 DONOR HOURS: Mon: 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Tues: 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Wed: Closed Thurs: 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Fri: 9:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m. Sat: 8:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m. COME IN OR CALL US AT: BLOOD PLASMA DONOR CENTER 309 PEARL STREET " YPSILANTI, MICH. TELEPHONE 487-3100 tW :." Adv. Paid for by NORML (National Organization for the Reform of N In the time it takes you to you could write your Repr 1 ,r.S ,. ; A, .I.. I , - * - R'-' Marijuana Laws), Washington, DC 20037 smoke your next joint, 'esentative about it. Here's how things stack up. More than 50 Representatives support decriminalization, but it takes 56. Leadership is not doing its job. Democratic leaders Joe Forbes (Oak Park) and Tom Anderson (Southgate) oppose the bill despite publicly supporting the issue during the 1976 elections*. Minority leader Dennis Cawthorne (Muskegon) svyitched his vote. So did Ralph Ostling (Roscommon) and Ray Kehres (Monroe). Kehres, Stanley Powell (Ionia), and Dan Angel (Battle Creek) joined Forbes and Anderson in reversing earlier stands. Wilbur Brotherton (Farmington) co- sponsored the bill, then turned against it. There were 7 Representatives absent when it lost by 6 votes. r Governor Milliken called for reduced marijuana penalties, but when the chips were down only 15 Republicans stayed with the bill. DON'T YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO EXPECT MORE THAN THIS? Does your Representative know that decriminalization is endorsed by people as diverse as Jimmy Carter and William F. Buckley? That the ABA, ACLU, AMA, and NEA have called for reduced penalties? That HB 4603 could save Michigan taxpayers as much as $20 million a year in reduced law enforcement costs? Does your Representative know that you endorse it? CALL, WRITE, OR WIRE YOUR SUPPORT FOR HB 4603 TODAY Find out how your Representative is voting. Citizen support will make or break this bill. It's just as important to contact supporters as opponents, but please don't call Perry Bullard, the bill's sponsor. Call your home town Rep. Don't Waste Time -Do I1t Toa i . F . ' - .,,.' .s. v' 0 m, TODAY If you dont do it today, someone else is going to have to do it next year. Or the next.. . Michigan has less than a week to decide to decriminalize marijuana. Last year it was nar-