O.J. back with Buffalo $ BUFFALO (AP) O.J. Simpson returned yesterday to the Buffalo Bills, the team he wanted to foresake for his native California. And Bills owner Ralph C. Wilson said the all-pro running back will be in uniform tonight when Buffalo opens its National Football League season in a nationally televised game here against Miami. O s In fact, Simpson was scheduled to workout with the team last night. Simpson reached "a long-term un derstanding during two days of talks on the West Coast," Wilson said. The agreement reportedly was in the form of three one-year contracts, but the club declined to disclose any details. Simpson had 'had two years and an option year left on his old contract. Simpson's new contract is worth $900,000 a year plus fringe benefiti according to NBC's Grandstand program. , Lauda's return MONZA. Italy (AP) Swede Ronnie Peterson won his third Grand Prix of Italy Formula I auto race yester day but defending champion Niki Lauda of Austria, making a comeback six weeks after a near-fatal crash, took the spotlight by placing fourth and extending his lead in the , Welcome Back Business Students!! Be sure not to miss the first Undergraduate Business Council of the academic year on Monday,, night, Sept. 13, at 7:00 P.M. in room 207, Bus. Admin. Bldg. All freshmen and transfer students • are invited. Spaghetti with Shrimp Pizziola ITALIAN. SPECIALTIES Baked Lasagna Veal Alla Parmingiana Baked Manicotti Chicken Cacciatori Imported & Domestic Beers & Wines afropper Also Sandwiches and Pizza 114 S. Garner (just around the block from KitChenMolanahan'st • 110 E. College Ave. We've got the clogs! world driver's championship It was a dramatic edition of the race, for Lauda's per formance and yet another controversy which ripped through the field of starters shortly before the race. Lauda's only competitor for the title, James Hunt of Britain, was charged with Serving Caner boars Mw Ora Sat.: All day Sunday .-@ Aita4.4 Clogs for jeans, clogs for skirts, clogs for gauchos, clogs for pants, clogs for everything! We've got 'em all . . . Just one from our collection: Fine imported leather clog with latticed openwork on top and wood bottom. In rust. For sizes 5-10. $2l. "The important thing is that O.J. is coming back to Buffalo and will finish ' his professional career with the Bills," Wilson said in a statement. "Mr. Wilson showed a genuine concern about my departure from football," Simpson said in a statement issued by the club. "He assured me he made every effort to make a trade but, failing that, the important thing was for me to stay in the game." The former Heisman Award winner from Southern California had asked last June 12 to be traded to the Los Angeles Rams because of family and business considerations. Wilson said he engaged in three months of intense negotiations with the Rams but no agreement could be reached before the last Wednesday's 4 p.m. trading deadline. "We talked at great length Friday and I picked him up on Saturday for some further talks," said Simpson. "Considering all of our conversations, looking over what Mr. Wilson had in mind and what we want to secure for the future of the family, Marguerite and• I decided it would be best for us if I went back to football. "I never wanted to leave the game and I felt bad about not being able to play with the fellows." highlights Prix $3.25 $3.25 $3.85 $3.25 $4.65 Shop Daily 9:30 - 9 path • Sat. 'til 5:30 having used hyped gasoline in Saturday's official tests and dropped to the tail end of the starting line. Also charged and penalized were Hunt's fellow McLaren driver Jochen Mass of West Germany and John Watson of Ireland, driving an American built Penske., ************************** 4x 4r 4t„ MAKE YOUR FEET HAPPY! . e AS ... 'n get em movin' on down to 4( ) * 4( The * 4( * 40(.. ' SCORPION * . * fit". . * CALDER ALLEY & BURROWES STREET * .4( • N.F.L. Football Mondays • "Ladies Night" Wednesdays * * • "Beer Blast" Tuesdays • "Disco Classics" Thursdays * 111(************************* 238.2496 Tough weekend on college polls Football kicks off with upsets 13y the Ap What's new in the wacky world of college football this week? Would you believe the Top Ten? How about the entire Top 20? Oh, it wasn't quite that bad, but 'a glance at the weekend's incredible rash of upsets might lead one to believe that Ohio State's Woody Hayes is the only sane voice left in the game ... and Woody's not talking. It all began Thursday night when No. 17 UCLA upset third ranked Arizona State before a national television audience: And it continued for real Saturday when top-rated Nebraska was held to a 6-6 standoff by unheralded Louisiana State while sixth ranked Alabama, No. 7 Texas and No. 8 Southern California all suffered. defeats in their opening games. Joining them in the losers' column were No. 11 Notre Dame, No. 15 California, No. 18 Florida and No. 20 Miami, Ohio Arizona StUte, Notre Dame and California at least had an excuse for losing they bowed to other ranked teams. Notre Dame bade farewell to Pitt's Tony Dorsett by "holding" him to 181 yards rushing as the ninth ranked Panthers handed the Irish their first opening-game setback in 13 years, 31-10. And California wasted a 379-yard aerial display by Joe Roth, blew a 24-12 lead and dropped a 36-24 slugfest to No. 16 Georgia. LSU, sentenced to a second-division Southeastern Conference finish by the "experts," surrendered an early touchdown for Nebraska and then tied the Cornhuskers on a pair of field goals by Mike Con way. Conway narrowly missed a 49-yarder in the final minute. McLendon's Bayou Bengals made a ,1.44 yd. • Sale effective through Saturday, September 18. ,r CONCORD Famous • "KETTLECLOTH"I. . 45" widg. 50% Polyester/50% co - tton.A BB yd. wide range of colors. Save 614 a yard. Reg. • 2.49 a yard. • VELVETEEN • 4.99 yd. 45" wide. 100% cotton easy care fabric ...elegance for the holidays ahead. FLAME RETARDANT - . PRINTED FLANNELETTE 990 yd. to 45" wide. 100% Dacron , polyester. • A choice of colors and prints. Save 704. Reg. 1.69 a yard. 4 -.I aft,„„i• FABRICS KV.W , E , •••IRRIRYTHINO FOR lIIIRNIINOI LILA'S PU 60-INC BRUSHED DENIM REMNANTS Machine wash 'n dry fabric in popular colors for skirts, dungarees, anything. Save 440 a yard. Reg. 1.88 a yard. • prophet of Nebraska coach Tom Osborne, who had said there were a dozen or so teams capable of winning the national championship. "The pollsters were the ones who put us No. 1," Osborne said. And the pollsters undoubtedly will waste little time in removing the Cornhuskers from their exaulted position. Jeff Logan, Ohio State's tail back successor to Archie Griffin, scored three times and had a fourth touchdown nullified by a penalty as the fourth ranked Buckeyes trounced Michigan State 49-21. Hayes, who has few kind words when the Buckeyes lose and not many more when they win, skipped the post-game news conference, sending two assistants instead. However, he did issue a statement through the Ohio State publicity department " - `For an opener, our first unit played very well," Hayes' statement said. "They didn't make many mistakes. They kept the pressure on." Gee, Woody has a way with words, doesn't he? Alabama dropped a 10-7 decision to Mississippi, Texas lost 14-13 to Boston College, Southern Cal got trounced 46-25 by Missouri, Florida lost 24-21 to North Carolina and Miami of Ohio dropped a 21-16 decision to Marshall. Alabama, guilty of crucial turnovers via in terceptions and fumbles, absorbed its first SEC loss since 1972 in bowing to Ole Miss. Freshman Hoppy Langley kicked the winning 34-yard field goal in the fourth period. "We lost this game two weeks ago ... on preparation," said Crimson Tide Coach Bear Bryant, , "but I don't want to take anything away from Ole Miss." 140 SO.VS tAISOSO .. . 301 COME OUI iltiONS aOll ON O A 561.00 A PAST GOVV PA V ------ -0? SISWV NAME ----- ss sl Ni t 10 r " D°l6.. ov+i f CPI 04 PH IANICAMIIIICJUIO The Daily Collegian Monday, Septemb - r V', 197!• •• ! Neil Green sprinted 74 yards for a touchdown to give Boston College a 14-0 lead, and the Eagles hung on to beat Texas. Texas' Russell Erxleben missed a 53-yard field goal, which would have won the game, as time ran out. Missouri, which upset Alabama in the first game of the 1975 season, turned the trick again con clusively against Southern Cal. Tiger tailback Curtis Brown ran a kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown and scored two more times against the error-prone Trojans. In other games involving the Top 20 teams, No. 2 Michigan drubbed Wisconsin 40-27, fifth-rated Oklahoma downed Vanderbilt 24-3, 10th-ranked Penn State beat Stanford 15-12, No. 12 Maryland downed Richmond 31-7, 13th-ranked Arkansas beat Utah State 33-16, 14th-rated Tetras A&M shutout Virginia Tech 19-0, and No. 19 Kansas clipped Washington State 35-16. Michigan, making a run at the No. 1 spot, got three touchdowns from tailback Harlan Huckleby and a TD pass from quarterback Rich Leach to pummel Wisconsin in a Big Ten game. Defending national champion Oklahoma, which has lost only one game in the past three years, scored three times in the second half under the guidance of quarterback Dean Blevins, and the Sooners held Vanderbilt to a second-period field goal. Mark Manges threw two touchdown passes and rallied Maryland over Richmond, which had taken a 7-0 lead in the second quarter. Arkansas halfback Efen Cowins ran for the final touchdown and kept alive another scoring drive with a 21-yard run on third-and-19 to boost the Razorbacks past Utah. 100 V4IV:10 f ftdal ' OGETHER 100% POLYESTER DOUBLEKNIT CREPE 60" wide. Create your own wardrobe in the most contemporary fashion colors. Easy-care machine wash 'n dry. Save 550 a yard. Reg. 1.99 a yard. 1.44 yd. BLUE RIDGE "WINCAMA" FLEECE 2.44 yd. 48" wide. 80% Arnel "/20% nylon. For robes, long dresses, skirts and more. Machine wash 'n dry. Save 55e a yard. Reg. 2.99 a yard. "DIRTY HARRY" STRIPED T-SHIRT MATERIAL 2.99 yd. 60" wide. 80% polyester/20% cotton. The latest in fashion colors. Save $l.OO a yard. Reg. 3.99 a yard. FREE SPOOL OF MERCERIZED • THREAD with every yard of material purchased at $l.OO per yard or more. STATE COLLEGE: State College 1 Monday - Saturday 10-9 , Ili . ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers