Sunday, November 24, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, N'~vember 24, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 . . i i Buckeyes turn olverine (Continued from page 14 f Having taken care of the Wol- ketball player and a fine short- verine offense, Ohio State spentj stop. He's one hell of an athlete" the last quarter grinding Michi- The Wolverines came back to tie gan's defense into the dust. In the score after a Bill Harris f u- the fatal fourth period the Buck- ble recovery on the OSU 28, with eyes scored three touchdowns and Johnson going over again. But is a field goal to turn a respectable was Michigan's last hurrah. 27-14 win into a 50-14 rout. Ohio came right back on an ex- Two first down interceptions ofj crutiatingly long 17 play drive t Brown's passes deep in Wolver-} take a 21-14 lead with 36 seconds ne territory gave the Buckeyes left in the first half. It was the a couple of easy scores on a silver first time the Buckeyes proved platter. But even on long drives, they could move the ball on a con- Ohisand Kern were too much for tinuous drive from their own ter- ritory. According to Elliott, it was Overall, the game was rough, the turning point of the game, hard hitting, and definitely not In the second half, Ohio State's an ideal example of good sports- domination became much more manship. There were several mini- roses to thorns 1 I t j ", " 3 f } { score 30-14, and might be con- handshake between the coaches. not as good as it was against Pur- sidered the clincher since it put after the game, Elliott said, "I was due." the Wolverines more than two not ready to fight that crowd to The game ended with many of touchdowns behind for the f i r s t get to Woody." the record crowd of 85,371 pulling time in the game. Concerning the season, Elliott down the permanent steel g o a1- OSU's coach Hayes, always an was pleased with his squad's ef- posts in the same methodical angel if he's asked about it, says, fort and said, "they gave 100% fashion as their team had taken "we're the cleanest team in foot- all the time. I couldn't ask for apart Michigan in the worst beat- ball. I once talked to the commis- more. They had a great season." ing an OSU team had ever dished sioner of the Big Ten and asked But Hayes, with a January 1 out to the Wolverines. him if anyone had ever lodged a date left on his schedule could And if anyone has the desire formal complaint against us for still be critical of Ohio State. He to wish Ohio State good luck in dirty play, and no one ever did."' said, "fumbles were killing us" the Rose Bowl, he is advised not When asked why there was no and "our defense was definitely to bother. They won't need it. Deathly silence pervades evident. Kern led the Buckeyes to brawls and a fight next to the a touchdown right from the kick- Michigan bench in the fourth off. This time fullback Jim Otis quarter. Michigan linebacker Tom did most of the carrying although Stincic was saddled with a per- Zelina did the scoring. On the sonal foul peralty in OSU's key day, Otis picked up 145 yards as fourth quarter drive for a field icontinued from page 1) It's1 compared to 91 for Michigan's goal. This three pointer made the of enthusiasm as each Ohio State who Johnson. player made his departure. While seea The Wolverines came back down inside, Buckeye Coach Woody I did the field on a flurry of passes by Hayes waxed expansively on "his him Brown. But a key fourth and 14 a * boys": "B pass to Johnson in the end zone "We may not have put out quite too was caught out of bounds and the - as much defensively as against Ron) drive fizzled. Purdue, but we always rose to the read Elliott said, "we came out I occasion, as we have all year. Let's Ha throwing in the second half be- jface it, my boys are a quality a ter cause the wind was at our backs. team." terdE Actually during the whole game NIGHT EDITOR: His game plan was simple: run as m we were unable to both run and BILL CUSUMANO the ball. "I was hoping (Jim) Otis rema pass successfully in the same could run thirty times. (He ran 3:18 drive." 34). We're a better football team At dressing- room -Daily-Andy Sacks "You'll be back next year, Jim" kind of like being a general, doesn't want the enemy to any weaknesses in his troops. dn't want you to write about being out. ut," he continued, "I wasn't worried, with (quarterback Maciejowski sitting there y to go." ayes has often been accused of !dency to pile it on, and yes- ay gave a good indication why, nost of the Buckeye first unit ained in the game till only was left. t that point--with the score 4- Hayes finally sent in or Bill Long to take over the rterbacking slot. Yet, when scored again, Hayes called a two-point conversion (which cifully, failed). fter the game, Elliott defended es, saying that "in a game like he's playing to win." ohnson's reaction was a little different. When asked how he felt about the situation, he merely said, "I just wish I had another year at them." What about next year? Says Elliott, "Quite a few from this year's team will be back, and there are some awfully good ones coming up. They won't be a super team, but neither was this year's." EROS FESTIVAL NO. 1 UNDERGROUND at the Vth Forum THUR. thru SUN.-l 1:00 P.M. NEXT WEEK ANDY WARHOL'S "NUDE RESTAURANT" Topless anti-war film WIN 31.14: Spartans sprint past Wildeats Events Building spectacle: SA udio-visual grid ismatch Vi I 1 EVANSTON, Ill. RP) -- Soph- omore quarterback Bill Triplett although used sparingly, scored three touchdowns and passed for a fourth yesterday to guide Mich- igan State to'a 31-,.4 victory over Northwestern in a Big Ten foot- ball finale. The triumph was the second in seven conference games for the Spartans who ended the season with a 5-5 mark compared to Northwestern's lowly 1-9. On an apparently sentimental gesture, MSU Coach Duffy Daugh- terty started senior Bill Feraco at quarterback. Twice under Feraco, the Spartan failed to make a first down. In came Triplett to lead a 76-yard drive capped a 13-yard touchdown pass to Charlie Wede- meyer to give MSU a 7-0 lead. Bowl bid blown MI FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. OF RUSHES NET YARDS-Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES q. ATTEMPTED Completed Intercepted by Yds. interceptions returned TOTAL PLAYS (Rushes and Passes) PUNTS-Number Average distance 3 KICKOFFS, returned by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts FUMBLES-Number Lost by PENALTIES-Number Yds. penalized_ MICHIGAN 7 OSU 7 CH. 17 8 8 1 41 140 171 24 14 1 0 65 '5 39.6 9 160 15t 15 1 4 43 7 14 OSU 28 24 3 79 421 46 9 6 3 45 88 2 30.5 3 117 17 4 2 4 37 0 0-14 6 23-50, Pass Receiving No. Early in the second quarter,' Michigan's State's Mike Hogan recovered Dave Shelbourne's fum- ble on the Wildcat 20 and fivej plays later Triplett bulled across the goal for a 14-0 lead. The Spartans then -surprised Northwestern by recovering an onside kick on the Wildcat 46. A Triplett to Al Brenner pass for 35 yards helped set up another touchdown plunge by Triplett. Gordon Longmire, a n o t h e r sophomore quarterback, finished the half and under his command MSU drove deep into Northwest- ern territory but had to settle for a 28-yard field goal by Gary Boyce and a 24-0 halftime bulge. Triplett came back along enough in the second half to en- gineer a 63-yard touchdown drive again capped with his plunge. He then left the game for good. Early in the fourth quarter, Northwestern put on a 80-yard thrust with Dick Emmerich sneak- ing over from the one. In the last 29 seconds of the game, Shel- bourne hit Ken Luxton with a 29- yard touchdown toss. Yards Ave. when he runs." But in fact, the key player in the game was OSU's quarterback Rex Kern. After lavishing praise on the shifty sophomore Hayes leaned forward confidentially and draw- led, "You know, we had a lot of doubts whether he would even play. From Monday on, he had a sore back, and hardly practiced at all. "That's why we didn't let writ- ers in to practice on Thursday. Mandich Iinsland Harris Johnson Staroba 7 78 1 13 2 34 3 18 1 28 Total 14 171 11.1 13 17 6 28 44-1 seni( quar they for mer Af Hay this, Jo By ARNOLD MUSTANG Over 11,500 Michigan partisans without either the bread or the inclination to journey to Colum- bus flocked to the All-Events Building yesterday afternoon to watch the epic disaster on closed- circuit television. The reception on both of the large screens set at opposite cor- ners of the basketball court was certainly adequate, but what they recepted certainly wasn't. In fact, the camera work dis- played by the closed-circuit crew in Ohio Stadium was compared by one disgruntled Wolverine fan to "Spiro Agnew's speech-writers playing the accordion with their toes while watching the Lawrence Welk Show through a fishbowl." It was that confusing. Perhaps the high point of the cameramen's afternoon was not the 192nd time they couldn't fig- ure out where the ball was, but rather when the announcer intro- duced the field judge. and the camera played carefully over a! guy dressed up like a chestnut. x Some of the problem apparent-' ly arose from the- fact that the vis-E ual broadcast was not synced with the audio, so nobody knew what the other was doing. Still, it was fun to look at Jim Otis running like hell for a touchdown when he didn't have the ball. The crowd was very enthusiastic from the beginning until the mid- dle of the fourth quarter or so. They cheered heartily, sang "The' Victors" to a hundred different drummers, and groused about their team's poor showing. But by the time Ohio S t a t e piled up its 30-point lead, t h e people sank into a sort of rest- less sleep. At 50-14 they started leaving in droves. COPIES Fast-Cheap 211 S. State 769-4252 1217 S. University 769-0560 The Organizational Committee of the U. of M. NEW DEMOCRATIC COALITION will meet SUNDAY, NOV. 24 2:30 Room 3B Union Those willing to work, please come Punting No. Yards Ave. 5 198 39.6 . Werner OHIO STATE ILLEL APPENINGS -=^1 , i i.! fi t !{ "JETPORT COACHES" to DETROIT METRO AIRPORT 72 Trips weekly Still only $1.85 on a SHORT WAY BUS Otis Kern Brockington Zelina Gillian Long Hayden Huff Rushing No. Yards 34 143 19 96 10 20 8S 92 5 66 1 1 1 4 1 -1 Total 79 421 Ave. 4.2 5.1 11.5 13.2 1.0 4.0 --1.0 .i t, D 5 2 a a 0 i, I I It I 14 Big Ten Standings I FINAL STANDINGS, Big Ten MICHIGAN Johnson Brown Craw Werner Moorhead Brown Rushing No,. 3 21 10 1 1 Total 41 1 Passing Att. Comp. 24 14 Kern Yards Ave. Long 91 4.3i -6 -.6 19 19 Jankowski 11 11 Brockingto 140 Smith Yds. Ave.s 171 5.83 Sensibajigh Passing Att. Comp. 8 5 1 71 Pass Receiving No.3 3 2 1 Punting Yds. Ave. 41 8.2 5 5 11 Yards 22 19 5 Ave. 7.3 9.5 5.0 Ohio State MICHIGAN Minnesota Purdue Indiana Iowa Michigan State Northwestern IllinoisL Wisconsin w 7 6 5 5 4 4 2 1 1 0 L 0 1 2 2 3 3 5 6 6 7 Pet. PF 1.000 240 .857 207 .714 149 .714 182 .571 174 .571 256 .286 139 .142 88 .142 92 .000 61 PA 114 115 125 112 175 190 114 246 184 214 w 9 8 6 8 6 5 5 1 1 0 All Games L Pct.I 0 1.0002 2 .8002 4 .6009 2 .8u02 4 .6002 5 .5003 5 .5002 9 .1001 9 .1001 10 .000 PF PA 296 134 SUN., NOV. 24 at 6:00: Deli House featuring a talk on "Intermarriage & the College Student" by RABBI SHERWIN WINE of Temple Birmingham (Mich.) Talk begins at 6:30 MON., NOV. 25 at 8:00 PROF. NORBERT C. KELMAN of the psychology department speaks on "Ethical Prqblems in Social Research" RABBI MAX TICKTIN will also be present at both programs to moderate and react. H I LLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill St. 8:05 8:30 10:10 11:20 12:10 1:50 277 291 250 322 202 109 107 85 LEAVE MICHIGAN UNION a.m. Sunday 2:50 p.m. Daily a.m. Exc. 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