Sunday,,October 13, 1968 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY P oce Eleven Sunday, ,October 13, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pouylee I, -Michigan, By BILL LEVIS sat back to watch the Wolverines Associate Sports Editor lose another one in typical Maize "On a clear day you can see' and B l u e fashion. But the krevet 6 .". and yesterday was psyched-up gridders bad other the day fo r Michigan. things in mind. comeback drops State, 28 -14 * * * * * * Spartanis sucunmb in first period Theefired-up Woiverines looked right through .the Spartan jerseys and helmets, which have hypno- tized them into submission in the past, and playedgtheir most satis- fying football game in the last Our years. Michigan did things yesterday that the Maize and Blue just, couldn't come up with in recent' seasons. The Wolverines NEVER go out on the field in the first quarter andtry to blow the oppo- sition off the field. *OW YESTERDAY Michigan usually plays "feel-, out 1your-opponent'' football in the first 15 minutes; but not yester- day. The Wolverines, in great spirits following two smashing victories over ~ Duke and Navy, mixed it up for two, count them, ;vo touchdowns before the second quarter began. With a Michigan State score sprinkled in for good measure, the game had all the in- gredients for a high scoring thriller. After settling down to good, hard fighting but scoreless foot- Sall, in the second and third tanzas, the Wolverines did things in the fourth quarter that Mich- igan teams aren't expected to do. They came from behind, not from a tie as in the Duke game last year, but from behind to win in smashing fashion. After substitute fullback Earl' nderson scored State's second touchdown and Charlie Wedemey- er passed to Frank Foreman fort a two point conversion to put the Spartans ahead 14-13 early in the fourth quarter, the Michigan fans SCORED TWICE Michigan scored twice before the game was over to give the Wol- verines their first win over Mich- igan State since 1964, the Rose Bowl year. In the last four sea- sons, the Wolverines have not been known to do things like that and certainly not the way they scored. Michigan won the game on a broken pass pattern. Quarterback Dennis Brown had to elude an oncoming Spartan tackler before passing to Jim Mandich, who was improvising after finishing his pass pattern, for a 53 yard touch- down strike. The Wolverines, ahead 19-14, weren't through with their impro- vising, however. Michigan elected to go for two and Brown rolled right looking for a pass receiver. To his surprise and to that of the Spartans, fullback Garvie Craw was' open just inside the backline of the endzone where Brown hit for the conversion.' 'BIG MISTAKE' As a jubilant Craw put it after the game, "It was all a big mis- take on my part. I missed the man I was supposed to block but Denny was great. He saw me open and hit me. It was peachy keen." Craw made up for his "mistake" minutes later when he ran 25 yards for the score that put the game out of reach of the Spfrtans. The Spartans dominated play throughout most of the game, run- ning 90 plays to the Wolverines' 55 but the Michigan defense wouldn't let up in the clutch. In the past' it has been the Maize and Bluel (Continued from Page 1) 12 minutes of action and everyone was settling down for a ring-a- ding-dandy offensive show. But then everything just seemed to poop out. State moved the ball fairly well up the middle against a revamped Wolverine defense thrown up to stop Feraco and Wedemeyer on the wide gains. But every drive ran out of gas deep in Michigan territory, and field goal kicker Michigan apparently survived yesterday's hard-fought victory over Michigan State without any serious injuries. Flanker John Gabler left the game in the second quarter with a bruised rib, but head coach Bump El- liott said he expects Gabler to be all right for next week's game with Indiana. Gary Boyce couldn't quite find the mark. The Wolverines, were stopped cold every time they got the ball. Two drives ended in punts and the third culminated in an intercep- tion. The third quarter, with Michi- gan still leading 13-6, wasn't much better. This time around, Killian tried a field goal for the Wolverines from 32 yards out, but it flew wide to the left. Finally, the Spartans started what eventually proved to be an 80-yard drive and the go-ahead touchdown. It took 17 plays and the rest of the third quarter to do aged to field all the questions it however. news writers could hurl at him A pair of unheralded tailbacks until he came to one unexpected named Donald Highsmith and toughy: Earl Anderson carried the bulk of "What about Indiana, coach?" from the three for a TD. Wede- asked an eager cub reporter, re- meyer passed to end Frank Fore- ferring to next week's battle with man for the two-point conversion the defending Big Ten champs in after a faked kick drew Michigan Bloomington. defenders away from the end 'Indiana?.. .".stuttered El- zone. liott. "What But from then on. it was all IaboutI Blue. It was evident that the Wolver- After the final gun, Elliott man- ; ines are playing them one-by-one. "S EPCIAL" 12 FREE XEROXCOPIES Introducing-Michigan's First Xerox 3600 Perfect copies every time. As good or better than Lithographing. Fantastic Image Quality. Fast Service!!-Special overnight rates. Once you have used this machine you will never use carbon paper again. -Daily-Eric Pergeaux MICHIGAN'S RON JOHNSON (40) rips through the Michigan State line to gain part of the 152 yards that he piled up yesterday. Jim Mandich (88), Dave Denzin (52), and Bob Penska (76) threw the blocks that helped to spring Johnson loose on his gallop through the Spartan defenders. 20-20 offense which has invar- iably spelled defeat. The Wolver- ines would drive down to the 20 and give up the ball without scor- ing. Yesterday, the Michigan defense let Michigan State have just about anything between the 20 yard strips on .either side of the field but only twice could the Spartans penetrate further for scores. It was that kind of a day, a com- plete reversal from games in the past when Michigan has domi- nated play but come out on the short end. "The team was just anxious to play," said Hank Fonde, defense coordinator. "We were bearing down all over and came up with the big play when we had to." It doesn't fit the script of past Michigan nail biters. The Wolver- ines always seemed to collapse un- der pressure. S C O R ES 1. Michigan 28, Michigan State 14 2. Minnesota 17, Illinois 10 3. Indiana 38, Iowa 34 4. Notre Dame 27, Northwestern 7 5. Ohio State 13, Purdue 0 6. Utah State 20, Wisconsin 0 7. Kansas 23, Nebraska 13 8. Air Forces 26, Navy 20 9. Georgia 21, Mississippi 7 10. Tennessee 17, Georgia Tech 7 ii. virginia Tech 7, Wake Forest 6 12. Texas 26, Oklahoma 20 13. Davidson 30, Connecticut 18 14. Buffalo 29, Delaware 17 15. Princeton 34, Dartmouth 7 16. Auburn 21, Clemson 10 17. Louisville 16, Tulsa 7 18. Maryland 33, North Carolina 24 19. Iowa State 23; Kansas State 14 20. Drexel 20, RPI 10 EXCELLENT FOR " THESIS WORK " BOOK COPIES " TERM PAPERS * NOTE BOOKS " TAX FORMS * CLUB NOTICES. * CLASS NOTICES * PHOTOGRAPHS Discount Photocopym 211 S. State - 769-4252 REGULAR DISCOUNT RATES 8c single copy 7c single copies overnight 6c overnight over 5 copies Sc over 50 of some original 4c over 100 of same original Duffy Bumped MICH FIRST DOWNS 16 Rushing 9 Passing 7 Penalty 0 TOTAL NO. OF RUSHES 39 NET YARDS -Rushing 243 Passing 177 0-ORWARD .PASSES ATTEMPTED 16, Completed 9 Intercepted by, 2 Yards interceptions returned 6 TOTAL PLAYS - (Rushes and Passes) 55 PUNTS, Number 5 Average distance 38.6 *i:ICKOFFs, returned by 3 YARDS KICKS RETURNED 53 Punts 0 Kickoffs 53 FUMBLES, Number 0 Ball lost by 0 PENALTIES, Number 2 Yards penalized r 20 HI. MsU' 25 20 77 295 61 131 6E 2 53 90. 4; 42.7 '5 95 6 89 4' 9' 3'i Johnson Brown Craw Moorhead Thomas Brown Johnson Totals Mandich Gabler Johnson Craw Imsland Tries 19 11 6 z Totals 39, Passing Att. Comp.l 15 9 1 0 16 9 Pass Receiving No.f Net 152 49 35 9 -2 243 Int. 7 1 1 Yards 125: 33 16 -s 11 177 Ave. 8.0 4.5 5.8 4.5 -2 6.2 Yards 177 Triplett Feraco 2 4 16 1 Totals '77 295 On One thing that might have con- tributed to the victory was the 2.0 different attitude of the team .06 towards "the game" this year. "We 3.8 actually gave the game a soft ap- proach this week in practice," noted Tony Mason. offensive co- Yards ordinator. "We had no signs, no 61 rallies. We just did our job. o "It was a complete effort. o Everybody put out," stated Mason. WELCOME I Ferac( Wede Love Passing Att. Comp. Int. V 1 1 6 2 meyer 1 ' 0 0 1 0 0 Totals 13 6 9 OTHER SCORES Army 10, California 7 Syracuse 50, Pittsburgh 17 Alabama 31, Vanderbilt 7 Virginia 50, Duke 20 Florida 24, Tulane 3 NC State 36, South Carolina Missouri 27, Colorado 14 Arkansas 35, Baylor 19 Penn State 21, UCLA 6 Southern; Cal 27, Stanford 24 STUDENTS ! r iI''Me N/ . , t "" en THE DAI "LA P " IS Near Michigan Theatre 12 FREE COPIES This coupon entitles bearer to (12) twelve Free copies I * at either of our copy locotiins. Offer good through December 31, 1 968. Sorry only (1) one coupon per customer. "I wrrwrrr ~ wrww'wrMruuiwrr 12 4 2 1 1 T1otals 9 MICHIGAN STATE MICHIGAN. MsU 13 .C6 MICHIGAN 0 0 35 Rushing Tries Net 15-28 Highslmith 20 104 8--14 Love 20 79 Wedemeyer 48 Anderson 8 32 Berlinski 6 27 Rushing 177 It was the Wolverines' job to 1ass Receiving come from behind in the fourth No. Yards Ave. quarter and they did just that. Ave Wedemeyer 3 30 15.0 The last time Michigan played 31.2 Foreman i 1 5.0 like that was 1964 and everybody 8 Brenner 1 1$ 15.0 knows where the Wolverines were -8 Totals 6 61 10.1 on New Year's Day. 191 FINE FOOD UNTIL 1 A.M. Ae. ENTERTAINMENT 3.91 9.61 MONDAY -STRA 40)SATURDAY Opftom 7P.M- until 2 A.M. every4day iI4I I40 314 South 4th Avenue 7134 H 76-34 GRADUATING ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS BUILD YOUR CAREER IN FLORIDA WITH 16 ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS, NC. Ii ECI'S ST. PETERSBURG DIVISION -ON CAMPUS INTERVIEW OCT. 16 This may be the chance you have been waiting for - an exceptional professional opportunity with an in- dustry pace-setter on Florida's sub- tropical Gulf Coast in St. Petersburg. 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So that we can get to know more about one another, we have arranged an informal buffet for interested physics and elec- tronic, mechanical and chemical engineering seniors and their ladies at the Ambassador Restaurant; Statler Hilton Inn, beginning at 6:30 P.M. Tuesday evening, Oct. 15, 1968. Please I I i r