8 Tuesday, November 4, 1986 / University Daily Kansan Miami, Penn State Michigan still first The Associated Press Miami, Penn State and Michigan, the only three unbeaten and untied teams in major-college football, held onto the top three spots yesterday in this week's Associated Press poll. Top Twenty poll All three are 8-0 after weekend victories. Oklahoma remained fourth, but Auburn and Washington fell several positions while Arizona State jumped from seventh to fifth. Miami, which defeated No. 20 Florida State 41-23 and knocked the Seminoles out of the Top Twenty, received 53 of 58 first-place votes and 1,153 of a possible 1,160 points from a nationwide panel of college coaches and leaders. The Hurricanes are one for the sixth consecutive week. Penn State, which moved into the runner-up spot a week ago, received four first-place votes and 1.076 points after a 19-0 win over West Virginia. The other first-place ballot went to Michigan, which swamped Illinois 69-13 and received 1,053 points. Oklahoma, 7-1, received 953 points after beating Kansas 64-3 and Arizona State's 34-21 victory over Washington lifted the Sun Devils, 7-0-1, into fifth place with 921 points while the Huskies fell to 13th. Alabama rebounded from last week's 23-3 loss to Penn State and trounced Mississippi State 38-3. The Crismon Tide received 861 points in climbing from eighth to sixth, while the Bulldogs dropped out of the rankings. Nebraska moved up from ninth to seventh with 793 points after a 38-0 rout of Kansas, State, and Texas A&M vaulted from 10th to eighth with 740 points after edging Southern Methodist 39-35. Auburn suffered its first loss of the season, losing to Florida 18-17 and dropping from fifth to ninth with 660 points. Arkansas, No. 13 last week, rounded out the top 10 with 639 points. The second 10 consists of Ohio State, UCLA, Washington, Southern California, North Carolina State, Iowa, Arizona, LSU, Georgia and Clemson. ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Hank Bullough, unable to turn the Buffalo Bills around despite having the NFL's highest-paid quarterback, was fired as head coach yesterday and replaced by Marv Levy. Levy now 3rd Bills coach in 13 months The Associated Press Levy, former Kansas City Chiefs head coach, promised to bring a sense of organization to the Bills. He is the team's third head coach in 13 months. Levy takes over a 2-7 team that played poorly in the first half of Sunday's 34-28 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bills fumbled two kickoffs, helping the Bucs to a 20-10 halftime lead before Buffalo rallied in the second half. The Bills need much help, particularly on defense. Levy said. He also said that he had received a multivear contract. defense was playing better," Levy said. The Bills' defense entered Sunday's game ranked 26th among the 28 NFL teams. a multiyear contract "Offensively, you'd look a lot better if the "I think defensively, and statistics will bear this out, that there needs to be improvement, some of it from current players, some of it from future some of it from development of current players." To begin, Levy said he would direct most attention toward the Bills' "shoddy" kicking game. "offensively, I see some good things," he said. But it's very hard to divorce offense and defense from it. Referring to the two fumbled kickoffs that led to Tampa Bay touchdowns in the first half Sunday, Levy said, "You make the two big kicking game mistakes that you made yesterday, and you put yourself in a position to make it very tough for your passing game to go." The team's abysmal play in the first half against the Bucs may have forced the hand of Buffalo owner Ralph Wilson Jr., who reportedly was angry in the owner's box at Tampa Stadium. The best season Levy had at Kansas City was 7 in 1981. He had an 8-8 record in 1980 and three loses. "The decision was reached very, very recently that a change in direction was needed," General Manager Bill Polian said. Bullough was not home yesterday, his wife said. Levy, director of football operations for the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League, had a 31-42 record from 1978 to 1982 with Kansas City. He said he did not have a contract with Montreal, but was merely a consultant. Doctors OK Leonard's return to competition guarantee. The guarantees are the largest in boxing history. Bullough, who was criticized for not using $8 million quarterback Jim Kelly's passing abilities, was hired Oct. 1, 1985, after former coach Kay Stephenson's team started the season with four straight losses. NEW YORK — Sugar Ray Leonard, carrying the medical seal of approval from a number of doctors, will return to the ring in April to challenge Marvelous Marvin Hagler for the middleweight championship of the world in the richest fight in history, it was announced yesterday. The fight, set for April 6 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nev., could have a potential closed circuit and pay-per-view audience of 3 million and might gross as much as $100 million. That would double the previous record gross set by heavyweights Larry Holmes and Gerry Cooney at Caesar's in 1982. Leonard, the former welterweight and junior middleweight champ, is guaranteed $11 million for the fight, while Hagler, the disputed middleweight king, has a $12 million At Caesar's, Hagler opened as a 4-1 betting favorite for the bout between two of boxing's ton stars Hagler and Leonard seemed on a collision course five years ago after Leonard won the World Boxing Association junior middleweight title in June, then beat Thomas Hearns for the undisputed welterweight crown in September. There was a three-round knockout of Bruce Finch the following February and then, while doing road work for a May fight against Roger Stafford, Leonard experienced pain in his left eye The diagnosis was a detached retina, which was repaired by surgery. On Nov. 9, 1982, he announced his retirement, shooting down plans for a big-money meeting with Hagler. Eighteen months later though, he returned for a fight with Kevin Howard. He looked rusty in scoring a ninth-round knockout and again announced his retirement, saying he had lost the desire to fight. Delivers 5-10 Nightly $5.00 minimum Worth 50¢ off any dinn A COFFEEHOUSE 12th & Oread ( just 1 blk N. of the Union above Yello Sub ) OPEN 7:30 a.m.—1 a.m. Mon. — Fri. 9:00 a.m.—1 a.m. Sat. 9:00 a.m.—Midnight Sun. Enjoy a full menu featuring fine coffees, espresso, delicious bagels, power drinks, juice blends, homemade soups, and salads. Live Entertainment Tues. . The Rhythm Mongrols Thur. . The Parlor Frogs Fri. . Darrell Ley INTRODUCING ISLAM TO NON-MUSLIMS The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents its fifth lecture in a series of lectures designed mainly to introduce Islam to non-muslims. *BARGAIN SHOW TIME: 7:00 p.m., Tuesday Nov.4,1986 PLACE: Gallery Room East Kansas Union "MUHAMED. THE MESSENGER OF GOD PART II" REFRESHMENTS ARE AVAILABLE! EVERYBODY IS WELCOME! For more information call 841-9768 IT WORKS ALL DAY WITHOUT WHINING. The NCR 6416 Laser Printer"is the designed to work wonders on your hard copy without disturbing the peace. It prints fast, at a swift right pages per minute (300 characters per second) with crisp, high-resolution letter quality. And beautifully, with your choice of four standard typefaces. Font downloading. And graphics features like underscoring, enlarging, reverse imaging, and shading. Form generation and overlay. Tab setting. Even horizontal and vertical writing modes. And it does it all quietly at just 55dBs. About as quiet as a turn of a magazine page. The NCR 6416 Printer won't make a lot of noise. But what it does on paper will create quite a stir. The NCR 6416 Laser Printer. Students, Faculty, and Staff only. 804 New Hampshire $ 1795 COMPUTER OUTLET 843-7584 1986 NCR Corporation. NCR 8416 Laser Printer is a reg. trademark of the NCR Corporation. (SHOW STARTS AT 10:00) BILL ENGVALL This comic is definitely on our "Top 5 List" at GAMMONS. His "Rattle Snake Roundup'" and Southern Fried Humor will leave your sides aching! Please don't miss this very funny fellow. THANKS FOR MAKING THE COM SHOP A SMASHING SUCCESS. IF YOU HAVEN'T BEEN OUT YET, YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE MISSING. OUR COMEDIANS ARE THE FINEST WORKING THE NATIONAL CIRCUIT, COAST TO COAST. DO YOU FIND YOURSELF $short$ AT THE END OF THE MONTH? If so, plan to attend the BUDGET WORKSHOP Wednesday, November 5 3:30 p.m. Wescoe 4047 by the Office of Student Finance Sponsored by the Office of Student Financial Aid KLZR 106 day Border Bandido - Texas Burrito - $1.06 • 2 Tacos - $1.06 Watch for Steve and Christine in the Tony's Nissan Lazer Light Rider and Win! Experience the majesty of the Denver Symphony Orchestra One of America's Finest with November 5, 1986 Hoch Auditorium Program: Overture to Der Fresschutz Carl Maria von Weber Mathus Der Mader Paul Hindemuth Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor for Piano and Orchestra Peter Tchaikovsky Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $16 & $14; KU & K-12 Students: $8 & $7; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $15 & $13 For reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA MasterCard accepted for phone reservations Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts; additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swartouth Society and the KU Endowment Association. Presented by The University of Kansas Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series. Half price for KU students