- November 4
- Top-ranked USC beat California at Berkeley, 31–12, to extend its record to 8–0, and No. 2 UCLA stayed unbeaten but was tied by visiting Oregon State, 16–16. No. 3 Tennessee visited Tampa and beat the Spartans, 38–0. No. 4 N.C. State won at Virginia 30–8, and the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs narrowly lost at Houston 15–14. No. 6 Purdue won at Illinois 42–9. The next poll was No. 1 USC, No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 N.C. State, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Purdue.
- November 11
- Top-ranked USC finally lost, falling 3–0 in the rain and mud at Corvallis to Oregon State. No. 2 Tennessee beat Tulane 35–14. No. 3 N.C. State lost at Penn State 13–8. No. 4 UCLA shut out visiting Washington, 48–0, and No. 5 Purdue beat Minnesota 41–12. Their Big Ten rival, No. 6 Indiana, won at Michigan State 14–13. UCLA took USC's place at the top, leapfrogging Tennessee, whom the Bruins had beaten earlier in the year. The other top teams were No. 3 Purdue, No. 4 USC, and No. 5 Indiana.
- November 18
- In Los Angeles, the No. 1 UCLA Bruins and the No. 4 USC Trojans met at the Coliseum for their rivalry game, with a Pac-8 title, a Rose Bowl berth, and possibly the national championship on the line. USC reclaimed its place at the top, edging UCLA 21–20. No. 2 Tennessee faced Mississippi in Memphis and won 20–7. No. 3 Purdue beat Michigan State 21–7, but No. 5 Indiana lost to Minnesota 33–7. No. 7 Oklahoma, which had gone on a winning streak after an early loss to Texas in the Red River Showdown, beat Kansas 14–10 at home to clinch the Big 8 championship and a spot in the Orange Bowl. The next poll was No. 1 USC, No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 Purdue, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Oklahoma.
- November 25
- In the final week of games before the final polls, No. 1 USC had already completed its season at 9–1. No. 2 Tennessee won at Kentucky 17–7 to clinch the SEC title; the Vols opted to play Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl rather than heading to the Sugar Bowl. Indiana had fallen out of the Top Ten, but made their way back in when they beat No. 3 Purdue at home in Bloomington, 19–14. There was a three-way tie in Big Ten Conference play. Not only were Indiana, Purdue, and Minnesota each 6–1, but Indiana beat Purdue, Purdue beat Minnesota, and Minnesota beat Indiana. The Hoosiers had the better overall record (9–1 vs. 8–2 and 8–2), and since Purdue and Minnesota had been to the Rose Bowl more recently, Indiana qualified for the Rose Bowl. No. 4 UCLA, without injured Heisman Trophy winner Gary Beban and little motivation after their loss to USC the week before, lost a meaningless game to Syracuse 32–14, and No. 5 Oklahoma beat Nebraska 21–14. No. 6 Notre Dame, which had won a Friday night game at Miami, 24–22, returned to the top five with unranked Indiana. In the final poll, USC was tops in both the AP and UPI polls, and was awarded the AP Trophy.
The final regular season poll featured No. 1 USC, No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Indiana, and No. 5 Notre Dame. No. 6 Wyoming was the only major team to go unbeaten (10–0), and the Cowboys prepared to play LSU in the Sugar Bowl. No. 7 Oregon State had played three teams that were ranked 1st or 2nd when they played them (UCLA, USC, and Purdue) and went 2–0–1 in those games, but their 13–6 loss to Washington on October 7 kept the "Giant Killers" out of the Rose Bowl. The poll was rounded out by No. 8 Alabama, No. 9 Purdue, and No. 10 Penn State.
A few more games were played after the final poll, but none of them resulted in losses for ranked teams. On December 2, No. 2 Tennessee defeated Vanderbilt 41−14, while the Vols' Orange Bowl opponent, No. 3 Oklahoma, won 38–14 over Oklahoma State. No. 8 Alabama played Auburn in its annual game at Birmingham, won 7–3, and prepared to face SWC champion Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl.