>PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1965 PAGE EIGHT TUE MIChIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1965 LLOYD GRAFF Loads Of Thrills Between The, Yawvnsl It was like -expecting the rind and getting the seeds. Like landing a 'D' on an exam you figured you'd flunk. Better than nothing, but not by much. Michigan played bad enough to lose and won, thanks to a full- blooded Cherokee who played the good guy in the spine-tingling scenario, Paul Johnson, a sophomore tackle nicknamed "The Chief," pounded on a Dan Berry fumble on the Michigan 12 and 81,000 bored fans sarcastically sighed "hurrah, we won." The game was just chocked with thrills. For me the high- light came early in the third quarter when a black and white mongrel dog pranced onto the gridiron and romped to the mid- field stripe. Then the doggie gracefully scooted off the turf to the adulation of the crowd, which welcomed the intrusion of anything that didn't know how to fumble a football. Looking back on the frenzied contest other breathtaking moments. stand out like zircons in a basket of rhinestones. There was the announcement of the public address man that "an Oldsmobile car with Michigan license plates has all its car doors locked with the motor running." He could have substituted "Michigan football team" for "Oldsmobile car." And then there was the announcement with 11:00 left in the first quarter for Dr. Irwin Small to call his office. I eat at football games in inverse proportion to the excite- ment of the contest. Observers will verify that I devoured nine hotdogs, six Cokes, and three cups of tomato soup, and the eat- ing pace was quickening as the game progressed. Fortunately a football game is only 60 minutes or my colleagues in the press box would had to roll me out on my side. The game could have put a hypertensive insomniac to sleep. It had all the zip of a Milltown. California had an offense as potent as fizzless Vernors. Michigan's was hardly bubbling either, unless you revel in fumbles. In such case you were probably titillated: If you like to look at seats, I imagine you loved the ball game. Michigan's new blue fiberglass benches were beautiful. The band day festivities were nice too. The moment a young fellow almost dropped his tuba on his toe stands out as one of the bigger thrills of the football Saturday. Another highlight was looking at the iridescent orange pylons that have replaced flags as endzone and out of bounds markers. The bright pylons and variegated band costumes were the most colorful parts of the game. Purdue By The Associated Press into a ro LAFAYETTE, Ind.-Bob Griese striking punctured the Irish defense with a field g pinpoint passing and came from othe gi behind to upset Notre Dame 25- to the ga 21 yesterday. Dick K Griese, who connected on 19 of er fromI 22 passes for 283 yards, brought igan Stat the Boilermakers back in a furi- goals of ous rally after his own fumble accountf on a passhplay had sent-Notre points. Dame on the way to a tie-break- ing field goal. Notre Dame, rated the nation's In No. 1 football team after its opening victory last week, depend- BLOOQ ed almost entirely on a crunching Rector, a ground game. The Irish led at back, ra 3-0, trailed 12-10 at the half, and caug caught up 18-18 in the third quar- sion pass ter and -led again before Purdue's cats yesl comeback. over mdi Griese threw two touchdown It was passes of 28 and 14 yards to soph- Ten gamy omore Jim Bierne and one of 12 yards to Randy Minniear and then passed the Boilermakers into scor- ing position for their winning touchdown. Purdue was ranked sixth in the nation going into the game. OSU Upset COLUMBUS-Alert North Caro- lina struck for a quick first quar- ter touchdown and scored again in the final minute yesterday, handing Ohio State a 14-3 set- back in an intersectional football game. The surprising Tar Heels guid- ed by passing ace Danny Talbott, stunned a partisan crowd of 80,- 182 as they dealt the Buckeyes their first opening game loss since 1957. Talbott swept left end from five yards out, scoring the first time North Carolina got the ball. The clincher came with 56 seconds remaining when left halfback Max Chapman bolted off right guard and outraced the Ohio secondary on a 48-yard touchdown scamper. North Carolina, showing sur- prising defensive strength, repel- led every Buckeye scoring threat except one, when Ohio's Bob Funk booted a 26-yard field goal on the second play of the second period. Spartans Romp UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - Michigan State scored almost at will yesterday with a pounding ground attack and the brilliant passing of Steve Juday to over- power Penn State 23-0. The Spartans turned the game Derails ut in the second quarter, for two touchdowns and oal to take the heart out ttany Lions who went in- me a one-point favorite. enney, the barefoot kick- Hawaii, broke two Mich- te records in booting field 24, 29 and 36 yards to for nine of the Spartan diana Shutout MINGTON, Ind.-Ronald a speedy 196-pound half- n over two touchdowns ght a two-point conver- for Northwestern's Wild- .erday in a 20-0 victory iana. s the season's first Big ne and gave the Wildcats undisputed first place in the con- ference. Rector's 14-points actually were not needed as the stout North- western defense stymied the Hoos- iers after a second quarter Wild- cat touchdown by Woody Camp- bell. Minnesota Upended MINNEAPOLIS - Washington State, handed repeated scoring opportunities by fumbling Minne- sota, punched across a touchdown with two minutes left to upend the Gophers 14-13 in an intersec- tional football game yesterday. Quarterback Tom Roth dived a foot over the left side on fourth down, and Willie Gaskins, who had never kicked extra points in a college game before, added his second conversion to provide the winning margin. rish; lllini Victorious CHAMPAIGN, III.-Fred Cus- tardo fired three touchdown pass- es, two of them 51 and 64 yard bombs, to sophomore end John Wright and Illinois overwhelmed' Southern Methodist 42-0 yester-. day. Senior fullback Jim Grabowski drilled 57 yards for another spec- taculartouchdown. andeboosted his-collegiate ground-gaining total to more than one mile. Iowa Wins PORTLAND, Ore.-Iowa finally put its game together and snap- ped a seven-game sloing streak with a 27-7 victory over Oregon SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: RICK STERN )SU- State yesterday. By half-time thes 0 and Iowa coasted i Upset score was 24- n from there. Gary Snook, Iowa's touted quar- terback, performed as expected, completing 13 passes, but the big omen for Iowa's future opponents was the defense. Wisconsin Falls MADISON, Wis.-Mike Garrett raced for two touchdowns, one on a 61-yard burst, and passed for another yesterday as Southern California pounded out a 26-6 football victory over ponderous I Wisconsin. w Bi Tex Setianidings Northwestern MICHIGAN Purdue Michigan State Illinois Iowa Minnesota Wisconsin Ohio State Indiana w 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Conference L Pet. PF 0 1.000 20 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 .000 0 All Games PA W L T PF PA 0 1 1 0 34 24 0 2 0 0 44 31 0 2 0 0 63 21 0 2 0 0 36 3 0 1 1 0 52 12 0 1 1 0 27 14 0 0 1 1 33 34 0 0 1 1 6' 26 0 0 1 0 3 14 20 1 1 0 19 26 4p Announcing an increase tO 4current annual rate on all savingsat ANNTMADDAD UTIWDAT SAVINGS AND LOAN a_ BEER-PIZZA-BANJOS BIMBO'S 1111IJIfDVIV £ £i~rf~Lbtl AS'SOC/A TION MAIN OFFICE, LIBERTY AT DIVISION NEIGHBORHOOD OFFICE, STADIUM AT PAULINE ORGANIZED 1890 Member: Federal Home Loan Bank System Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation *o -Daily-Jim Lines Thrills and Chinsa MARCHERS BAND TOGETHER: Revelli's Thousands Overrun 'M' Stadium Here is what gold bond professional cleaning does for you! By RICK FEFERMAN 129 years ago Davy Crockett must have felt the same as the 31,417 fans who sat in Michigan Stadium yesterday. Indeed, it was a modern day A1a mo as 14,000 instrument- wielding fanatics stormed onto the field to provide onlookers with a spectacular halftime show. The thoroughness with which the plans were formulated was evidenced by the flawless per- formance. Three minutes before the termination of the first half, Dr.-General William R e v e ll i massed his forces for the ensuing attack. They waited patiently for the signal to begin the engagement. The mid-afternoon s u n l i g h t streamed down upon them, and their assorted weaponry glittered in the brilliant rays. At the sound of a single gun- shot, the rout was on, as the uni- formed marchers flowed into the void created by the rapid flight of the two combative squads from the fields of battle. Whitles blar- ed shrill commands above the background r o a r, as Revelli's WELCOME STUDENTS Raiders encompassed the grounds. A special squadron moved quick- ly and efficiently to forefront, placing a tower in a prominent position. Their leader scampered rapidly to the top. The entire area was choked off by the be- wildering maze of uniforms; all entrances and exits were clogged. Trumpets blared forth the "Bat- tle Hymn of the Republic," and even this anachronism contributed to the aura of militancy in this modern-day Alamo. The efforts of 1000 percussionists added to the increasing tempo. As quickly as it had begun, it ended. A cavalry of Maize and Blue poured through from the sideline, splitting the attackers and send- ing them scurrying to the side- lines in the rapid cadence of re- treat. Davy Crockett would have loved it. FREE FREE Moth and Mildew proofing Minor repairs F RE E Soil-retarding treatment of pile lined garments. FAST SERVICE gold bond cleaners Masters of the Trade 515 E. William St. 668-6335-668-7017 Hours: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. A 4 ... . . A / 7;A1&u' " 2, ,q4e~' / '% 5rttl~k67/cL6 1 DR. DONALD F. HUELKE, PhDs. Ad I