Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 22, 1968 Irish fly high; O.J. runs wild Iowa kills giant, MSU By The Associated Press SOUTH BEND -'- Halfback Bob Gladieux smashed to three touch- downs as third* ranked Notre Dame, behind the aerial artistry of Terry Hanratty and Jim Sey- mour, crushed fifth-rated Okla- homa 45-21 in the football season opener for both' yesterday. By the end of three quarters, split end Seymour set a Notre Dame record by grabbing 10 and seven yard scoring passes from quarterback Hanratty and the Irish turned over a 35-14 lead, to talented reserves, So effective was Notre. Dame's offense they did not have to punt in the game. Senior Seymour now has caught 14 touchdown passes, breaking the school record of 13 set by Leon Hart.4 Oklahoma' mnade it a battle in the first half, erasing a 7-0 defi- cit to move ahead 14-7 on the last play of the first quarter af- ter two touchdown passes by quar- terback Bob Warmack. One was a dazzling 72-yard pass play, worked with wingback Eddie Hin- ton, and the second a 16-yard toss to end Steve Zabel. After battling to a 21-14 half- time yead, the Irish broke t h e game apart in the third quarter frith'a pair of drives covering 54 and.68 yards, capped by one yard smashes by Gladieux. Notre Dame reserves, led by sophomore quarterback Joe Theismann and halfback Chuck Landolfi, shoved across a touch- down on Landolfi's five-yard smash in a 70-yard drive and a 31-yard field goal by Scott Hem- pel. Late in the final period, War- mack clicked on another scoring pass to Zabel, covering 11 yards. When he left after three quar- ters, Hanratty had connected on 18 of 27 passes for 202 yards, hit- ting Seymour nine times for 101 yards. * * * MINNEAPOLIS - O. J. Simp- son's running brilliance shone through the overcast of Memorial Stadium when Southern Califor- nia needed it most yesterday, ral- lying the Trojans to a 29-20 sea- son opening football victory over Minnesota. Simpson carried the ball six straight times in a 45-yard USC touchdown drive in the waning minutes which brought the de- fending national collegiate cham- pions from the brink of defeat. He also ran 36 yards for USC's first touchdown and added a sev- en-yard scoring run with 28 sec- onds left. Simpson gained 235 yards on 39 carriessand taught six passes for, 59 yards. His best previous rush-c ing total was 235 yards on 30 car- ries against Washington last sea- son. The Gophers had taken a 20-16 lead midway through the fourth quarter on a spectacular kickoff return by.George Kemp and John Wintermute. Kemp took the kick on the Min- nesota 17 and headed for the mid- dle of the field. As he met a wall of USC tacklers, Kemp lateraled the ball half way across the field to Wintermute who scooted 83 yards down the sidelines to score. Mike Battle returned a punt 13 yards to the Gopher 45 to set the stage for Simpson's six rushes which carried the Trojans to the, go - ahead touchdown. Simpson scored from seven yards out after going 20 with a pitchout. I -Associated Press JIM SEYMOUR (85), Notre Dame's all-American offensive end, catches an eight-yard scoring pass thrown by quarterback Terry Hanratty. Gary Harper (45) of Oklahoma is the defender. Notre Dame won, 45-21. KEYES ROLLS: Purdue routs Vir5Ania Hawks upset Beavers 21-20 in big shocker By The Associated Press IOWA CITY - A stubborn Iowa defense turned eighth-rank- ed Oregon State into a f o u r th quarter fumbling giant in en- gineering a 21-20 major collegiate football upset yesterday after- noon.J The sophomore-studded Hawk- eyes surprised the Beavers and a partisan crowd by three t i m e sI curling around the bobbles of the Pacific-Eight Conference team in the final 14 minutes. Following the first of the re- coveries, sophomore quarterback Larry Lawrence steered the Big Ten Conference underdog 43 yards in five plays to a tying touchdown. Lawrence sprang Dannie Green for the nine-yard scoring play, and sophomore Marcos Melendez from San Juan, Puerto R i c o , booted the extra point from place- ment for the victory. Iowa, mauled by Oregon State's weight and experience in the first quarter, repulsed the West Coast team's last major threat by cov- ering 230-pound fullback Bill l "Earthquake" Enyart's fumble at the Hawkeye 29, scuttling a 52- yard Beaver advance. The Beavers fell behind by 7-61 on Hawkeye number one quarter- back Ed Podolak's first t o u c h- down, but scored twice more and made a two-point conversion for a 20-14 halftime lead. -Associated Press BILL TRIPLETT (17), MSU quarterback, breaks through the. Syracuse line for a 48-yard gain in yesterday's ,game at East Lansing. Dave VanElst (74) leads the way for the young Spartan signal-caller as he helps to bring home a victory. GONSO STARS: Indiana edges Baylor; .Kansas whips Illinois gallops* Spartans use comeback to beat Syracuse By The Associated Press EAST LANSING -- Michigan State came alive in the second half yesterday after a slow and sloppy start by both teams to give Coach Duffy Daugherty a come- from-behind 14-10 football victory over Syrcause, Daughtery's alma mater, Syracuse Coach Ben Schwartz- walder was particularly disap- pointed because it looked for a while as if he was about to chalk up his 125th victory in 20 years at Syracuse and 150th triumph as a head coach. The Syracuse coach also wanted to avenge a galling 48-7 defeat the last time the two teams met-back in 1952. hh Syracuse had only a slight 3-0 edge at the intermission on a field goal set up by a Spartan fumble on its own 20. Sophomore tailback T o m m y Love gave the partisan crowd of 63,488 in Spartan Stadium some- thing toscream about inthe third period when he bolted 29 yards for a touchdown. MSU scored on a winning gam- ble, electing to run the ball on a fourth down with two yards to go. Syracuse came right back, how- ever, rolling 77 yards in 14 plays for a matching touchdown. Rich' Panczyszyn passed three yards to Ron Trask in the end zone for the score, also on a fourth down. Panczyszyn, the Orangemen's quarterback, is a former High, School All-American from Bor- dentown Military Institute in New Jersey. He is the latest in a series of great Syracuse backs, including Jim Brown, who have worn the number 44. Senior quarterback Bill Feraco sprinted in eight yards for the go- ahead score when he found all his receivers covered in what had started out as a pass play. LAFAYETTE - Middle guard Chuck Kyle spearheaded an ag- gressive defense that swept top-7 ranked Purdue to a 44-6 victory1 over the Virginia Cavaliers yes-1 terday in the season's opener for both teams. T h e Boilermakers, preseason picks to win the national college+ championship, were lackluster on offense through most of the first half and managed only a 13-0 halftime edge. That included a 3- yard touchdown run by All-Ameri- can Leroy Keyes with 31 seconds remaining. Purdue, second nationally in total' offense last year, 'erupted for 10 points in the third period and 21 in the final quarter. GENERAL MEETING Open to All TUES., SEPT.24 8 P. M. VOICE -SDS MICHIGAN UNION E RM. 3-KLM IMPORTANT! Literature, Information Tablej Kyle knifed through to block a field goal attempt and end Bill McKoy lumbered 78 yards for a touchdown with the recovered ball to put the Cavaliers down 6-0 with only five minutes gone in the game. The Purdue defense then inter- cepted a pass and blocked another field goal attempt in wearing down the Virginia offense in the first half. SCORES GRID PICKINGS MIDWEST California 21, MICHIGAN 7 Kansas State 21, Colorado State 0 Miami, Fla. 28, Northwestern 7 Nebraska 31, Utah 0 Kansas 47, Illinois 7 Arizona 21, Iowa State 12 Indiana 40, Baylor 36 Brigham Young 17, Western Iowa 21, Oregon State 20 Michigan 7 Michigan state 14, Syracuse 10 Central Michigan 24, Youngstown 20 Southern Cal 29, Minnesota 20 Eastern Michigan 40, South Purdue 44, Virginia 6 Kentucky 0 Notre Dame 45, Oklahoma 21 Bowling Green 62, Bal State 8 Duke 14, South Carolina 7 SOUTH Arkansas 32. Oklahoma State 15 West Virginia 17, Richmond 0 SMU 37, Auburn 28 Wake Forest 20, Clemson 20, tie Georgia Tech 17, TCU 7 Kentucky 12, Missouri 6 Mississippi 21, Memphis State 7 Florida State 24, Maryland 14 NC State 38, North Carolina 6 Louisiana Tech 20, Mississippi St. 13 Penn State 31, Navy 6 Florida 22, Air Force 20 Texas 20, Houston 20, tie Alabama 14, Virginia Tech 7 Millsaps 16, Sewanee 0 LSU 13, Texas A&M 12 EAST FAR WVEST Massachusetts 21, Maine 3 Washington State 14, Idaho 7 Rutgers 37, Lafayette 7 Colorado 28, Oregon 7 Delaware 35, Hofstra 0 Stanford 68, San Jose State 20 Toledo 45, Villanova 21 Washington 35, Rice 35, tie Temple 28, Rhode Island 0 Wyoming 48, Utah State 3 ANN ARBORREEET for RECORDERS . . . BAROQUE . . . and RENAISSANCE INSTRUMENTS MEETS: TAPPAN JR. HIGH SCHOOL MUSIC ROOM 8:00 P.M.-MONDAY, SEPT. 23, 1968 For Transportation Call: CON N lE H ERTZ--662-7727 By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON - Quarter- back Harry Gonso led Indiana's Hoosiers 80 yards in the last four minutes for a touchdown and a 40-36 victory over Baylor yester- day. Gonso circled left end for the last three yards with 18 seconds remaining, climaxing a wild fourth quarter in which the lead changed hands four times. Gonso and Jade Butcher com- bined on a 50-yard pass play to keep the game-winning drive go- ing, barely seconds after Terry Cozby's 30-yard field goal had put the Bears out front 36-34. Baylor got an early 14-6 lead while crossing the 50-yard line- under its own power only once, thanks to Hoosier miscues. They headed into the fourth quarter with Indiana leading 28-21. Baylor drove 80 and 93 yards for touch- downs with Pinky Palmer going over both times for a 33-28 lead. The Hoosiers stormed back with Larry Highbaugh returning the kickoff to the 50, a penalty help- ing Indiana to the 35, and Gonso sparking the way to the 14. * * * CHAMPAIGN -Two long scor- ing passes by Bobby Douglass, a 41-yard touchdown run by Donnie Shanklin and a 75-yard pass in- terception on runback by Dale Holt launched Kansas to a 47-7 trouncing of Illinois yesterday. Kansas, a Big Eight football title threat, scored three times in the second period for a 20-0 half- time bulge and the Big Ten Illini never got off the hook. Bob Naponic sneaked over for a touchdown early in the third per- iod to cut, the deficit to 20-7, then Kansas continued to explode. Southpaw Douglass fired a 44- yard touchdown to rookie Don Au- try to start the second quarter avalanche. Shanklin, after a 48- yard run belted across from the two. Then Douglass tallied on a six-yard rollout after setting it up with passes to John Mosier and, John Jackson. Midway in the third period, the Jayhawks turned it into a rout. Shanklin raced 41 yards on a re- verse to score. Then Douglass hit Jim Hatcher for a 45-yard touch- down.' At the start of the fourth, Holt snared Naponic's a e r i a l and threaded the sidelines behind fine blocking for 75 yards. Minutes later, Illinois' Chuck Baieither caught a punt on the Illinois fine. The ball bounced from his arms into the end zone and Craig Martindale pounced on it for another Kansas touchdown. Kentucky upsets Missouri; Lyons roars for Wildcats By The Associated Press pass play from Terry McMillan LEXINGTON - Dicky Lyons to halfback Mel Gray, a speedster scored two touchdowns on runs of who matched the national. junior two and 26 yards yesterday as record for the 100-yard dash last Kentucky upset Missouri 12-6 in year. a football defensive duel. Gray, with one step on the de- * Lyons' winning touchdown was fense, wasn't touched as he dash- set up by a 55-yard pass from ed 30 yards for the second period Stan Forston to Phil Thomzpson to give Kentucky a first down on Missouri's 26. On the next play from scrim- mage, with 4:35 to play, Lyons skidded around left end with, a pitchout and barely made th e front corner of the end zone as three Missouri tacklers ran him down. Three times, the Missouri Tig- ers drove to within scoring dis- tance, but each time were stop- ped short and had field goals barely miss the mark. The Tigers scored on a 79-yard score. Lyons put Kentucky ahead first when his two-yard plunge capped a 74-yard drive in 15 plays in the first quarter. The Detroit Tigers edged Washington 4-3 yesterday af- ternoon to extend their winning streak to 11, the longest in the majors this season. It was also the Tigers' 101st victory this year, equalling a club record set in 1926 and 1961. 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