Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 14, 1975 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ohio State powers past MSU, 21-0. 'NO NEW EVIDENCE' (Continued from Page 1) Spartan coach Stolz refused to fault senior quarterback Bag- gett for the poor offensive show- ing. "The quarterbacks always look like a bunch of idiots when everything goes to hell," he said. "Baggett had an average day. It was not great, but it was good." THE GAME began as a tough1 defensive struggle. The spirited' MSU defense choked off the first Ohio State series with threeI clean tackles deep in Buckeye OHIO STATE finally estab- territory. The Spartan defense- lished good field position mid- men jumped and cheered after way through the second period, each play as if every tackle after an MSU punt was downed meant a Rose Bowl. on the OSU 43. From there the But after giving up an initial Buckeyes began a scoring drive. first down, the Buckeye defense Helped by an interference call proved equally effective, and a 15-yard run by Greene,, "It was tremendously impor- Ohio State scored nine plays la- tant the way our defense held ter on Johnson's six-yard plunge when we had terrible field posi- through the left side of the line. tion in the first quarter," Hayes The teams went into the lock- commented after his Buckeyes er room at halftime with the foiled the Spartans best oppor- score 7-0. Neither posed muchj tunities in the first period. of a scoring threat in the third SAM'S Styles inl L EV I'S DEN IMS and COR DS I O quarter until Greene unloaded a bomb to Willis with less than nine minutes left in the period. On a third and nine situation from his own 36, Greene faked a handoff to wingback Brian Baschnagel and dropped back to pass. BOTH the excellent fake and the fine pass blocking gave the senior quarterback plenty of time to find Willis downfield. Even then the pass was not thrown perfectly in stride and Willis had to slow up and turn around. This gave Spartan de- fensive back Joe Hunt enough time to close in on Willis and at- tempt an interception. Hunt, however, only deflected the ball into Willis' arms and the senior speedster scampered in, untouched, for the score. Woody remarked after the game, "We practice that pass play a thousand times in scrim- mage. We don't plan to make it a carom shot, though." THE SPARTANS never recov- ered from that break. Their of- fense gained only one more first down until late in the fourth quarter. And their defense could not repel a late third period scoring drive. This drive began on the Spar- tan 30 after MSU was forced to punt out of its own end zone. A 12-yard carry by Greene,-two carries by Griffin, and a nine- yard romp by Johnson put Ohio State in the MSU end zone. Ford nixes n ew DALLAS (UPI) - President four state campaign-style swing. Ford said yesterday he has not seen "any new evidence that ASKED whether the Warren would justify reopening" the Commission, of which he was a Warren Commission investiga- member, should0reopen the in- tion of the assassination of Pres- quiry into new revelations in ident John Kennedy in Dallas the JFK slaying, Ford said, "I 12 years ago. think the right decision was Ford talked briefly to report- made and I think it would be ers at Dallas' Love Field on his unwise to reopen." arrival from Kansas City, Mo., The Dallas Times Herald re- for a series of public appear- cently disclosed that the FBI ances winding up his three-day, received a note from Lee Har- vey Oswald which was not turned over to the commission during its investigation in 1963. The newspaper said Oswald, labeled as JFK's assassin by the fi ht commission, made no threat s for aainst the President and the FBI destroyed the note. Ford, warmed by enthusiasticI crowds in N e w Hampshire, Kansas, Missouri, and Texas, appeared determined not to let security threats restrict his campaign-style trips or contacts with the people. "IT HAS been great," Ford1 told reporters at Dallas. "The' people have been so wonder- ful." When asked whether Dallas invoked any memories for him of the JFK assassination, Ford said, "It never entered my mind." He said he was "looking for- ward" to the events in Dallas, including his address to the Na- tional Federation of Republican Women and a visit to Southern Methodist University for an hon- orary doctor of laws degree. JFK probe Rockefeller chides Congress for probe tieket rights DETROIT (UPI)-Among the joint property that Barbara Riddle is seeking in a divorce suit is "proprietary rights" to a 50-cent state lottery ticket. The reason, she said yester- day, is that the ticket won $1 million for the man who told lottery officials he was a 23- year-old Detroit bachelor named Charles Riddle. Ms. Riddle said in a divorce suit filed Friday that the man really is her estranged husband, Vance Riddle, and that he bor- rowed the name Charles from his lottery partner. Ms. Riddle said the two men conspired to keep her from re- ceiving any share of the win- nings. THE NOTE allegedly warned the FBI to stop bothering Os- wald's Russianaborn wife. Ford said "every bit of sig- nificant evidence was analyzed" and he saw no reason for any further'investigation. That has long been Ford's stand on the matter. Have a flair for artistic writings' If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Michigan Daily. NORMAN, Okla. (UPI)-Vice President N e I s on Rockefeller yesterday criticized Congress' investigation i n t o.government intelligence activity and said the attempt on President Ford's life proved the need for tougher do- mestic intelligence effort. Rockefeller told an airport news conference in Oklahoma City he feared Congress' probe of domestic intelligence pro- grams would lead Americans to believe there were "massive" abuses, as has been charged. "THE DANGER is that their investigations will" mislead the American people," Rockefeller said. The vice president said Con- rress should keep in mind the importance of a strong intelli- gence system to keep track of terrorist groups and other indi- viduals in the wake of an at- tempt last week on Ford's life in Sacramento, Calif. Rockefeller said the incident "indicates the importance of having intelligence and I think it is an element that must be considered at this point when the Senate and the House are reviewing the entire intelli- gence structure. "I think we see from what happened in this case involving the President that is essential that the FBI and law enforce- ment agencies preserve records of those who have been out- cnoken or active in efforts to undermine the freedom of this "mintrv, to destroy oir demo- -ratic society by force or to kill leaders in our society," he said. COUZENS ENSEMBLE THEATRE presents WILLIAM HANDLEY'S SLOW DANCE and ON THE KILLING GROUND SEPTEMBER 17-21 eight p.m. curtain Couzens Theatre 1200 E. Ann St., Ann Arbor 764-2130 for reservations admission $1.75 Tickets at DAVID'S BOOKS DAILY OFFICIAL RUI'ITIN ARE YOU POLISH? Interested in meeting with others of Polish descent? If so then come to the POLISH CLUB MEETING Mon., Sept. 15, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3M, Michigan Union. I ______ .- _1 Sunday, September 14 Day Calendar WUOM: Sunday morning music selections, 91.7 MHz. 10 am; States of the Union-biocentenniai series, featured state, New Hampshirt, 1 pm. Planetarium: Nova Cygni 1975, audience - requested topics, 'Exhibit Museum, 2:30, 3:30 pm. Monday, September 15 WUOM: E. Wayne Cooley, vice- pres., US Track & Field Federation & commissioner, LA Girls Schools Athletic. Union, "The Role of Inter- scholastic Competition," 10:15 am. Ctr. Near Eastern, N. African Studies: Brown bag lunch, sum- mary activities, Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon.' Physics: P. Grannis, Stony Brook, "Direct Positron Production at 10 CHARING CROSS BOOKSHOP Used. Fine and Scholarly Books 316 S. STATE-994-4041 Open Mon.-Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6 15 and 25 Gev/c," 2038 Randall Lab. 4 pm. Linguistics: K. L. Pike, Gener- al Linguistic Principles: From Tag- memic Theory to Text," Rackham Amph.. 7:30 pm. Music School: Carillon recital, Kathleen Beck, Nancy Hoffman, carillonneurs, Burton Tower, 7-8 pm: Gordon Wilson, Grady Wilson, organists, Hill Aud., 8:30 pm. THE MICHGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 10 Sunday, September 14, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Anp Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area}; $11 ,ocal mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day throu j Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50'by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). 207 E. LIBERTY I of p'0 I di 4 P'~ Required reading look boring? 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