Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 23, 1975 I THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Sunday, November 23, 1975 Visit our "OLD FASHIONED" TOY STORE 0 Fantastic selection of adult GAMES 0HOBBIES TOYS FOR EVERYONE! "The Student Store" CAMPUS BIKE& TOY 514 E. WILLIAM ST. 662-0035 BRING ALONG THIS COUPON SOONERS TOP NEBRASKA, 35-10 ttS Oklahoma-Michigan in Miami By The Associated Press NORMAN OkTrln e_ e nth- The Sooners then added insult n innr o nrin twi in the OPENS WEDNESDAY THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM GUEST ARTIST SERIES PRESENTS NOVEMBER WE1) -SAT8M Nicholas Pennell Guest Artist-in-Resi 1UVM, V a.- v DVIL-.To injury, sc r1U LWACCeI l1 ranked Oklahoma survived three final three minutes on runs of early scares at the cost of a eight yards by Davis and four lone field goal and then turned yards by freshman Billy -Sims. five Nebraska errors into touch- Nebraska, which finished in downs yesterday to defeat the the regular season with a 10-1 previously-unbeaten and second- record like Oklahoma, had ear- ranked Cornhuskers 35-10. lier turned down a bid from the The triumph earned Okla- Fiesta Bowl. homa a share of the Big Eight But Fiesta Bowl officials said title and a berth opposite they would ask the Cornhuskers Michigan in the Orange Bowl to reconsider. New Year's night. Nebraska It was Nebraska's first set- will not go to a bowl game. back in 12 games, since a 28-14 The Sooners came from be- loss to Oklahoma in the 1974 hind twice, on Steve Davis' regular season finale. Nebras- fourth down, one-yard run in j ka's defeat left Ohio State, the second period and Horace third-ranked Texas A&M and, Ivory's second chance, five- eighth-ranked Arizona State as yard dash3 in the third quarter. the nation's only unbeaten-un- It came two plays after a tied teams. touchdown run by Elvis Pea- Jubilant Oklahoma fans hurl- cock was nullified by a penalty. ed oranges onto the field as Peacock added an insurance the game ended to celebrate the touchdown, scoring from three team's bowl invitation. yards out with 10 minutes left. Although Nebraska marched 67 yards to the Oklahoma 13 following the opening kickoff and recovered fumbles at the Sooners' 38 and 32 yard lines before the first period was over, the Cornhuskers managed only a 3-0 lead on MikeCoyle's 24-yard field goal. Nebraska later forged ahead 10-7 on Monte Anthony's one- yard run after another Okla- homa fumble, but that was the Cornhuskers' last lead and the Sooners were soon in control. Cal rolls, 48-15 PALO ALTO, Calif. - Chuck Muncie scored California's first four touchdowns, passed for a fifth and rushed for 166 yards yesterday to lead California to a 48-15 defeat of Stanford and at least a share of the Pacific-8 football championship. The four touchdowns by Muncie, who may have been playing his last collegiate game, equaled a school rec- ord and the senior tailback est -blished several other rec- ords in the convincing victory before 88,000 fans at Stanford Stadium. The 13th-ranked Bears finish- ed the regular season with a 8-3 record. Their conference mark is 6-1. But the UCLA Bruins will go to the Rose Bowl to face Big Ten champion Ohio State if they match California's 6-1 record by beating Southern California next Friday night. If UCLA loses, California wins the Pac-8 and goes to the RoseaBowl. There is a possibility Cal could go to the Fiesta Bowl as a consola- ton. Stanford, in a three-way tie for the Pac-8 lead going, into the game, finished 5-2 in the i conference. idenrce GOPHERS BATTER BADGERS: Spartans squeak by By The Associated Press ,vorite, had problems with Iowa Beery's day ru IOWA CITY-Versatile Char- despite a 180-yard rushing per- out performance lie Baggett ran for two touch- formance by Levi Jackson. Courtney Snyder downs and passed 82 yards for Iowa threatened three times for a school reca another yesterday to lift Michi- after Baggett's go-ahead touch- and scored the I gan State to a 27-23 Big Ten down with 11:43 to play. touchdown. Conference football victory over Iowa marched to its own 45 After Beery's b Iowa. and the Spartan 12 and had the due ahead 9-7, I Baggett's one-yard run early ball after a free kick at mid- close to a pos in the fourth quarter broke a field with 1:41 to play. But on score twice, only 21-21 deadlock. In the final two the second play, Butch Caldwell times. minutes, Michigan State gam- fumbled and Tom Standal 're- The back-break bled by giving Iowa a safety covered. K ith Calvin Can with WILLIAM LEAICH Guest Artist-in -Residence Tickets available through PTP Ticket Office- Located in Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby Mon- day-Friday 10 a.nx-1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL (313) 764-0450 Hawkeyes ined a stand- Perrin power by Indiana's , who rushed EVANSTON - Tailback Lon- ord 211 yards nie Perrin tallied four touch- Hoosiers' only downs yesterday in the great- est individual scoring spree for urst put Pur- Illinois since 1953 as the Illini ndiana moved defeated Northwestern 28-7 in sible winning a Big Ten football finale. to fumble both The 215-pound senior from Washington, D.C., who had er came when made only three touchdowns pre- ght a 24-yard viously this season, scored twice due seven-yard in the second quarter on a 19- with nine sec- yard run and on a 39-yard screen pass from Kurt Steger. Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Quarterback Ricky Leach scores Michigan's second touch- down to put the Wolverines ahead, 14-7. JUNIOR YEAR in FRANCE at AIX-EN-PROVENCE FIRST INFORMATIONAL MEETING Monday-Dec. 1, 1975-8:00 p.m. Modern Language Building Lecture Room No. 2 (FIRST FLOOR ) All undergradutates interested in af plying for the U of M program in Aix for 1976-77 are urged to attend this ineeting. Join The Daily Phone 76-DAILY and two plays later recovered a fumble to clinch the victory. Michigan State, a 10-point fa- k l I ATTENTION!0 This is an ordinary class ring: Dungy dominates , MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota, quarterback Tony Dungy cli- maxed a record-shattering jun- ior season yesterday by run- ning for two touchdowns and passing for a third to lead the Gophers to a 24-3 Big Ten victory over Wisconsin. Dungy ran one and 22 yards for touchdowns and lobbed a three-yard scoring pass to John Mathews to equal the Big Ten single-season mark of 13 touch- down passes established in 1969 by Purdue's Mike Phipps. The 6-foot-1, 175-pound Dun- gy, who went 22 yards on the option for Minnesota's final touchdown, carried eight times for 85 yards and com- pleted 6 of 14 pass attempts for 96 yards. Dungy finished the year throwing for 1,515 yards and 15 touchdowns. The 37,000-plus fans bombard- ed the field with thousands of snowballs, forcing the officials to stop play twice and restore order. Purdue produces BLOOMINGTON - Paul Bee- ry's two-yard touchdown run in ,the fourth quarter yesterday, powered Purdue to a 9-7 Big Ten Conference football victory over Indiana. The Top 20 BASKETBALL UnitedBPress International 1. Indiana (18) 259 9. TYVVA 10 7A pass to the Purd line but fumbled. onds remaining. - 'i Co PLAT Ewa 0 For the finest college class ring: MONDAY, NOV. 24, 1975 10 a.m.-2 p.m.' KOLLETRS 322 S. STATE ST., ANN ARBOR The representative for the finest col- lege class rings, Mr. Vickers of Art- carved College Rings by John Roberts, will be in the store. Stop in and see him to find out how you can save $50.00 on an Artcarved dia- mond engagement ring. Ia p ** h*i Sort s ote Diy Grapplers win, a pair The Michigan wrestling team upped its early-season record to 3-0 on the East Coast yesterday, edging Hofstra 24-20 and easily ,handling Massachusetts, 37-6. The Wolverines had an easier time with Hofstra than the score indicates, with last year's 19th place NCAA fin- ishers garnering 12 of their points in two matches. Hofstra 142-pounder Guy Reeps surprised Michigan's Karl Briggs, leading 8-2 at the time, with a pin at 3:15 for six of those points. The other six came when Wolverine heavyweight Mitch Marsicano dislocated a kneecap and surrendered his match by default. Michigan breezed past Massachusetts later in the day, allowing their opponents' only points on a forfeit at heavy- weight because of the injury. Freshman 150-pounder Mark Churella paced the Wolverines with a first-period fall in each match. Teammates Mark Johnson and Harold King also registered first-period pins, against Hof- stra and Massachusetts respectively. Freshman 126-pounder Amos Goodlow put up a tough fight against Hofstra's Nick Gallo, fourth in the nation at 118 last season, but lost 7-6 on riding time. Hudson win streak stopped MOUNT PLEASANT (UPI) - Tiny Hudson, a giant in Mich- igan and national high school football, crashed yesterday to its first defeat in seven seasons with fired-up Ishpeming exploiting every break to pound up a 38-22 victory in the Class C champion- ship game. The loss endeda 72-game winning streak, but left the Tigers still holders of the longest high school winning streak in the nation. They set that mark last Saturday. "I don't feel anything except disappointment," said Coach Tom Saylor, "but I don't have any regrets. "We can look back and see what we've accomplished," he said, "and defeat is something we all have to live with at times." Ishpeming, celled the Hematites after the iron ore mineral mined in its area of the Upper Peninsula, took a 16-0 first quarter lead and never trailed. i . . missing out on some of the DAILIES because of delivery mistakes ? 2. UCLA (9) 3. Marquette (1) 4. North Carolina 5. Maryland 6. Kentucky 7. Arizona 8. Tennessee 9. Kansas State 10. Cincinnati 11. Notre Dame 12. Louisville S13. San Francisco 14. Alabama 15. MICHIGAN 16. Auburn 17. Washington 18. Rutgers 19. Providence 20. Nevada-Las Vegas 248 191 153 129 70 62 50 45 414 39 1 35 25 23 22 15 14 131 11 -_ - - - - --_-- - - --_- - _ _______________ _ ii OR * " disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE ~r C ) ONE OF A, KIND! For a Great Gift Idea Give a Little Personality 100% Polyester. Trim around collar & sleeves. Reproduction guaranteed not to fade or wash out! We will reproduce any photograph, magazine picture, etc.; in Full Color or Black & White on - an individual T-shirt. Use your imagination to create a colorful ONE OF A KIND PERSONAL- ORDERING 1. Give us ny color or black & white photoraph that fits IJILJI~I~Uinto an 8" x 1 1" area. lNIOflhI~TIChlO2. We can enlarcle your photo to 8" x 11" yo INSTRUCIONS: for an additional price. t 3. Reproductions of lettering on photos comes out reversed. To correct this, please add $1.25. PHOTO WILL BE RETURNED WITH ORDER ------------,---------- RELIABLE GIFT DISTRIBUTORS P.O. Box 204, Dearborn Hats., Mich. 48127 Please RUSH my personalized T-shirt at $8.95 each. Add 85c for postaae and handling. I have indicated my size. ALL ADULT & CHILDREN SIZES AVAILABLE. hIA jAr rWIPT (JQOr.~ 11 I 6TH ANNUAL U-M SKI TEAM SKi SWAP New or Used Aloine & X-Country Ski Eauipment. Clothinc, etc. Where: UM SPORTS COLISEUM, 721 S. 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