SUNDAY, OCTOBER.29, 196: THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE SEVEN SUNDAY. OCTOBER 29, 196~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Gophers She kitchen cynic.--- 4h RICK STERN Dig Wolverines' Grave, 20-15 Ban Fourth Quarters! Minnesota 2nd Half Swamps Michigan MINNEAPOLIS - It was the old, old story and before long it's going to make Bump Elliott old too. For the fifth time in six 1967 football games Elliott's Wolverines played well enough to win - and lost. Individually and, in fact as a team, Michigan was superb. Denny Brown's starting swiftness was brilliant as he moved Michigan through and over the giant Gophers with astonishing ease, until ! the very end when the time pressure seemed to get to him and his passes,went awry. Denny Morgan, Tom Stincic, and Dave Porter combined for 38 tackles and stopped Minnesota's vaunted running game time after time, except at the very end when they were justifiably tired and the massive Gopher offensive line was able to open some key holes for Curt Wilson and George Kemp. Tom Curtis, Brian Healy, Jerry Hartman, and George Hoey, the defensive backfield, intercepted three passes and broke up all but five Minnesota pass plays as they excelled for the first time this season. Two of the five came in the last quarter and were good for. 72 yards .One to flanker Mike Curtis was a T-D fling which brought Minnesota to within two points. On the play, .safety Hartman appeared to have Curtis covered, then suddenly lost his balance or was pushed and was five yards away when the ball was caught. The second pass, to left end Chip Litten, set up the winning score. And Hoey and Ron Johnson were greased and primed in the cold Minneapolis air. Hoey had no less than 140 yards in punt re- turns while Johnson pulled off one of his patented long touchdown runs which keynoted the first half of the ball game. But Hoey's runback, with less than a minute remaining, was 54 yards long, but still 26 yards too short. So'Michigan lost again. Instead of scapegoating, it might be judicious to look at some facts. For example, the fact that Michigan would have gone into the half-time leading 15-0 if it hadn't been for an offside infraction that nobody, apparently not even the officials, saw. A fumble re- covery by the fired-up Wolverine defense on the three-yard line appeared to have stopped a Minnesota drive with just over a minute left in the half. Then somebody pointed out that there was a flag: on the ground and the play was nullified. Elliott, in a genuinely rare display of anger stomped onto the field and asked an official to tell him who was offside. The official blushed angrily and said, "I didn't make the call." Three plays later Wilson went over from the five for a TD. Altogether Michigan was hit for 107 yards in penalties while Minnesota, which has the most aggressive style of play in the Big Ten, was barely touched for 27. Neilther Elliott nor assistant coach Tony Mason would allow themselves to be quoted as to their actual opinion of the officiating. Bump would only say that "Penalties can go either way and you don't win or lose because of them." Said Mason, "I'd like to look at the film." Minnesota's Murray Warmath, who has to be the most un- sportsman-like coach in the Big Ten was still honest enough to admit that "'when I think the officials did a good job, as I did today, it usually means that we got the best end of the deal." But if the officials were an obstacle to Michigan, then the breaks were a veritable brick wall. The Wolverines couldn't have bought a piece of paper yesterday, if they'd offered the numbers of their uniforms. One example will have to suffice - from the key fourth and one situation at Michigan's 13-yard line during Minnesota's winning drive late in the game. Quarterback Wilson handed off to Kemp and Wolverine Stincic was close enough to grab the halfback and pull him down. But just before Kemp hit bottom Stincic's hand slipped off, and Kemp fell forward for the first down. If Stincic hadn't been off balance, Michigan would have had the ball and kept the Brown Jug. The same thing must have happened ten times yesterday. Mason wasn't fooling when he said white-faced after the game, "We were the best team out there today, not Minnesota, and they know it. In my four years here (including a 9-1 season) we have never deserved to win more and I can truthfully say that I have never seen a team give a greater effort." But neither Elliott nor Mason would make excuses. Nor could anyone who saw the first half of yesterday's game fail to be impressed by Elliott's sagacious coaching. Bump's Messiah-like decisions must have made right guard Stan Brod- nax feel like John the Baptist. Twice in two minutes, Brodnax was sent in with the play on key third down situations. The first time, Johnson rambled around the end for only 61 yards past everybody but Warmath himself, and Michigan had already scored more than MSU had a week before in the same stadium. The second time was on a third and one situa- tion on the one yard line and once again a touchdown resulted. A few moments later Elliott elected to have Mike Hankwitz try a 21-yard field goal, although Hankwitz had missed a 15-yard point after touchdown, a few moments before. The kick was good. But the field goal was the end of the scoring for Michigan and the Gophers started on their own streak of 20 points in a row. And in the end, the one that has the most, does win. But some- times undeservedly. COMING UP IN Playboy," "Harper's Bazaar," etc. I Continued from Page 1) Safety Tom Curtis preserved the Wolverines' margin during the third quarter by picking off a Wilson pass in the end zone, but1 with 40 seconds gone in the fourthr quarter the Gophers' Curtis, Mike. hauled in a 45-yard touchdown pass from Wilson-and Minnesota ha d drawn within two points, 15-j 13, following Bob Stein's successful conversion. And They Keep on Flyin' Nine minutes later, after Mich- igan had repeatedly been stalled by penalties and incomplete passes, Minnesota capped a 51-yard drive on a Wilson three-yard scamper into the end zone. Wilson hadset; up the scoring chance himself aj minute earlier by flinging a 27- yard pass to the leading Minnesota ;--- - -1T-.i ntd-50 nervous moment for Warmath. Michigan forced Minnesota to punt with 40 seconds left, and George Hoey. who had already re- turned three punts, for a total of 86 yards, grabbed the ball on his own 20 and raced 54 yards downI the sidelines to Minnesota's 26. Time ran out as Brown was thrown for losses on the next two play.s "Well, they didn't exactly beat' us 49-0, did they?" Elliott later smiled half-heartedly to halfback, John Gablei'. "We could be five-and-one - just like that," Mason sighed. "A couple of breaks, each game. and. .. Minnesota Captain Tom Sakal carried off the Little Brown Jug at the conclusion of the contest. Mlinn.Mich. First downs 14 11 Rushing 8 5, Passing 5 6 Penalties 1 0 Yards Gained Rushing 187 214 Yards Lost Rushing 23 32 Net Yards Gained Rushing 164 182 No. Passes Attempted 14 21t No. Passes Completed 5 9 No. Passes had Intercepted 3 1 Net Yards Gained Passing 117 94 Total Offense Yardage 281 276 Passes Intercepted 1 3 Net Yards Inter- ceptions Returns 2 32 Total aYrds Penalized 27 107 No. Times Fumbled 2 0 MINNESO' Wilson Wintermute PASS RECE!' Berline Mandich Craw Litten Curtis Sanders Wilson Baidrider MINNESO' PUNTING MINNESO MICHIGA TA A C 1 Yds. 12 4 3 100 2 1 0 17 VING N No. Yds. 6 74 2 15 1 5 TA No. 'ds. 246 I 45 19 1 17 G TA S5 41 N RUSHING MICHIGAN T G Brown 25 94 Ron Johnson 17 111 Gabler 3a9 MINNESOTA L Net 29 65 3 108 0 9 Drehman c,(3 PASS INTERCEPTIONS MICHIGAN No. Yds. Healy 1 31 Curtis 2 1 MINNESOTA No. Yds. Hale 1 2 PUNT RETURNS MINNESOTA Wilson Carter Kemp Bryant Wintermute T G 13 34 16 43 22 94 2 8 2 8 L 1 20 2 0 0 Net 33 23 92 8 8 Condui MICHIGAN PASSING.. MICHIGAN A C I Yds. 21 9 1 94 Hoey Hartmjan SCORES BY PERIODS Michigan 12 3 Minnesota 0 6 218 4 140 I -L 0 0 0 14 Brown * . :receiver. end Cip Litten. Ana au . .. ~ of a sudden a Stein extra point made the score 20-15. Just like old -: times. Wolverine quarterback Dennis ; WE'VE RENTED AN ISLAND FOR YOU! Brown, who had been fairly silent W ~ v E T D1j.jIL ~t since the opening moments of the WOLVERINE QUARTERBACK DENNIS BROWN (22) steps game, immediately began to re- IN FACT .. through the Minnesota defensive line on one of his 25 carries in awaken the Michigan offense by yesterday's 20-15 loss to the Gophers, undefeated in the Big Ten. hitting targets Jim Mandich, Jim Brown gained 65 yards on the ground and completed 9 of 21 Beri, and Garvie Craw and then This Year STUDENTOURS Gives You Your Choice! passes for another 94, as Michigan lost its third straight con- cineall Biefo the ferece ontst ad ffthin sx gmesthisseaon.Minnesota 21. But four straight ference contest and fifth in six games this season. incomplete passes appeared to sew TWO TRIPS! NEW YEAR'S EVE IN MANY A DAY-DOWN up the Wolverines' fifth straight PUERTO RICO-Si! Si! KINGSTON-JAMAICA HEAVYWEIGHT ELIMINATIONS: loss. WAY! But there was to be yet another Dec. 25-Jan. 3 Dec. 28-Jan. 5 Q u rryI'ops Patterson Come along to swinging $289 for Dec. 18-26 or - WRE bec iE GRAND BAHAMA ISLAND only$Dec. 26-Jan. 3 By The Associated Prress butQuarry obviously had the!9 Days-8Ng LOS ANGELES - California's partisan support of his Southern only$99 for only $273 for Jerry Quarry bounced former California backers. OI97D78 N ght two-time champion Floyd Patter- Neither fighter was visibly GRID PICKS n7 sncludingosi 1 son out of the world heavyweight ;marked, but it was a vicious fight Northwestern 17, Wisconsin 13 1 as 9Ngt Ilni41,1Ohio State 13 Ron ti jtar n.uig boxing eliminations yesterday by in which three times neither Purdue 41, Iowa 22e* Round trip jet air inl ufng: winning a split and controversial would back away when the bell Notre Dame 24, Michigan State 12 Including: transportation via Round trip non-stop air e-Alabama 13, Clemson 10 EsenArie 12-round decision. sounded and it took heroicef- Nebraska 29, TCU 0 REasternAirlinesttransportation The 22-year-old Quarry floored forts by the referee to separate Texas A&M 21, Baylor 3 Round trip, non-stop air .the 32-year-old Patterson for them. Washington 23, California 6 transportation Transfers airport/hote Transfers and baggage mnaoyegtcutinterOklahoma St. 10, Colorado 7Transfr iportionl tips mandatory eight counts in the Quarry dumped Patterson in Mississippi 14, Houston 13 Tansfers airport/hotel 8 nights accommodations second and fourth rounds but the the second round with a right to Tennessee 17, LSU 14 9 nights accommodations at the new San Juan 8 nights superior accom- old guy came back strong in the the side of the jaw. Patterson klahoma 7, Missouri9ortin modations at the deluxe closing rounds before losing t kad to the se tejw atterofni Army 24, Stanford 20i at the Freeport Inn Darlington went backwards to the seat of his UsC 28, Oregon s Sheraton Kingston he po ar bomber from nearby pants and bounced up quickly. Florida 27, vanderbit 22 Daily free transportation * All porterage, hotel tips Gala ChristmasEve and Bel oe.TemnaoyegtcutwsN. Carolina St. 28, uke 7 Diyfe rnprainadtxsGl hita v n Referee Vern Bybee from San tolledmoff. Penn State 29, Syracuse 20 to and from all beaches and taxes New Year's Eve Ball Francisco, who was brought in as an outsider to score the fight In the fourth, Quarry, a dan- O'IEI GAMEs Reserve Now-Call Reserve Now-Call Reserve Now-Call called it a draw, with each fight- gerous young man with either Dartmouth 23, Harvard 21 Dick Rini-764-0688 Bill Lombus-764-0819 John Gunning-761-197 errciigsxpithand, unleashed a volley of blows Navy 22, H'ttsburgh 21 Dc ii7408 ilLmu-7401 onGnig-6-47 er receiving six points. and it appeared a solid right to VPI 20, west Virginia 7 Bybee was overruled, however, theabodytausaed thesos rgt dam N. Carolina St. 28, Duke 7 when judges Lee Grossman and the body caused the most dam- Kansas 28; owa State 14 A deposit of $25 will hold your reservation. Choose the trip to make your Winter age and Patterson's second down- Wake Forest 20, N. Carolina 10 Joey Olmos gave it to Quarry. fall. Floyd was up again quickly. southern Illinois 15, Tulsa 13 Break a memorable one. Call your Campus Representative or The Associated Press had it 6-6.Ifl.Fodwsuagqicy. Brigham Young 17, Utah 13 The nationally televised re- Patterson, obviously disappoint- Oregon s. 35, Washington St. 7 match - te ntwo fought a 10- ed with the decision, left the ring Brown ~Colgate 0 "STUDENTOURS" (313) 886-0844 round draw in Los Angeles on quickly following the announce- Yale 41, Cornell 7 June 7 - drew a disappointing ment . Columbia 24, Rutgers 13 a division of Dayton 10, Ohio U 7 crowd in the Olympic Auditorium The Quarry backers shook the Princeton 28. Pennsylvania 21 of well less than its 10,000 capa- house with approval and Jerry VMI 28, Virginia 13 Vacation Travel of Grosse Pointe city. danced around the ring several Wayne State 20, E. Michigan 3 20930 Mack Avenue Grosse Pointe Woods Michigan 48236 Patterson was given a warm times, his hands upraised in a Idaho 28, Parsons 27 _____7 ovation when he entered the ring, victory gesture. U. Pacific 34, San Jose St. 14 ~-~- - > s--,-- ATTEND BIG TRAVEL PARTY, NOV. 8 REFRESHMENTS, FREE GIFTS, DRAWING GET YOUR NEW CARD FOR '67 Call Your Campus Representative for Details a Fill out application below. Bring it to our store and receive your discount card absolutely free, entitling you to 10% DIS- COUNT for the rest of the year. IHA Presents FREE 10% DISCOUNT CARD - ---- - APPLICATION BLANK-------------- ____________The Annual 1111A Sing NAME _---- y'ADDRESS. -NETheme: "HEAVENLY BODIES" ICI TY-_ PHON ---- -- -- - Time: 8:00 p.m., November 17 { 10% SAVINGS ON ALL Cough and Cold Remedies - Dental Place: Union Ballroom Needs-Cosmetics-Toiletries-Hair Preparations-Baby Sup- plies-First Aid Needs-Clocks-Watches-Razors-Vitamins and many other items. 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