PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. OCTOBER 17.1965 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAilY S~TINflAV. AE'~TAflFR~ VI 1Q~ ra V . il[1 .i. y V V i lJi7L' iV L f, JLUUU p Standouts of Game Show Ability, Emotion MSU Destroys Hailess Bi ackeves ..:: .. . ; ,; : ~ "r" . :.:,.'L': 4: .:AQAMP_...]IKOYVC.: X^. 'x: :"::.Vmoaueumemuoa..aooc...nvvv..^n emmm .. .:%. .v... .... ir". - .f........ 9F 'Yi ':7AWf-.':, aEb':. :r:{4.n". i4YSS' ' By The Associated Press Jones started right into the line, EAST LANSING-Fourth-rank- then reversed his field and scamp- ed Michigan State held Ohio ered 80 yards for the first quarter State's traditional "cloud of dust touchdown. and a first down" offense to a Dick Kenney, the barefoot kick- minus 22 yards rushing and the er from Hawaii, made the extra Spartans romped to a 32-7 Big point. Ten football victory over the Buck- Ohio State was supposed to eyes yesterday. have a powerful, grind - it - out It was the first time in Ohio ground attack. But the Buckeyes. State history that the Buckeyes for example, were held to only ended up on the minus side in seven yards rushing on the ground rushing and marked the second in the first period by the savage straight Big Ten game in which Michigan State defense while -the the Spartans bottled up an op- Spartans were powering for 152 ponent's rushing attack on the yards. minus side.M Last week, Michigan State held Illini Triumph Michigan to minus 37 yards rush- CHAMPAIGN - Fullback Jim Mi. Grabowski scored two touchdowns Michigan State scored first on and shattered Red Grange's career an 80-yard romp by Clint Jones in rushing record in leading Illinois the first quarter, solved a stubborn to a 34-13 Big Ten footballvictory Ohio State defense for a 12-0 third o I-dig esta period lead and poured it on the over Indiana yesterday. Buckeyes for 20 more points in the The senior linebuster from Chi- final period. cago thrilled a homecoming crowd Even the sophomores were get- of 61,257 as he gained 186 yards ting in and scoring at the end, as in 30 carries for a career total of Chuck Lowther, in his first play2, Grabowski entered the game in college football, made the final needing 81 yards to surpass counter. neig8 ad osras MSU now is the top team in the Grange's Illini record of 2,071 Big Ten and the front runner for yards. Grange reached his mark the Rose Bowl bid. in 388 attempts. Grabowski, who still has five games to play, broke The Spartans now are unbeaten the record on his 422nd career and untied in five games. They trip and his 18th of the day when next meet Purdue. he rambled 16 yards toset up Jones, a left half junior from Illinois second touchdown. Cleveland, has often been over- The victory was the second looked when watchers were sing- against three losses for the Illini ing the praises of the MSU ground and the first in three Big Ten attack. games. The Hoosiers, who opened But it was Jones-a high and with a victory over Kansas State, low hurdles sprinter-who made have now lost four straight and MSU the winner, three in the conference. Lickeves I *1~~ Y E i i' s l i l i i Illinois to k th- o' iin kick- off and marched 8) yards in 17 p'ays for a touchdown wish Cyril Pinder scoring from the three. , 'bowski and Fred Custardo lcd the march with Grabowski gain- ing 35 yards and Custardo com- pleting three passes for 25 yards. The touchdown was all the scor- ing in the first half before Gra- bowski and the Illini blew it open in the second half including a 20-point outburst in the final quarter. Gophers Golden IOWA CITY-Minnesota struck swiftly for two touchdowns within 22 seconds of the third quarter and defeated Iowa 14-3 to remain unbeaten in the Big Ten confer- ence. In winning their second confer- ence game, the Gophers' John Hankinson passed 54 yards to Ray Whitlow for the first touchdown. Then Dave Colburn sprinted 30 yards to score on the first play after Aaron Brown recovered Iowa's fumble on the ensuing kick- off. The only bright moment in the rain splattered game for 59,200 Iowa fans was Bob Anderson's record 42-yard field goal in the third quarter. Jay Roberts kicked the previous longest field goal in Iowa history in 1963, a 39-yard boot. Linebacker Tim Wheeler's inter- ception of Gary Snook's pass on the Minnesota 40 started the Gophers toward their first touch- down. On the third play after the theft, Hankinson found Whitlow in the open and the swift halfback eluded several Iowa tacklers. With only 39 seconds remaining in the third quarter Al Randolph fumbl d the Minnesota kickoff acid Brown recovered on the wkt ye 30. On the next play Col- rb xroke loose inside the Iowa cid znd went over untouched. Fumbles stopped Iowa's impov- erished running offense twice in the first half, and the Hawkeyes' vaunted pass r, Gary Snook, didn't complete a pass until after inter- mission. Badgers Upset NU EVANSTON -Sophomore quar- terback Chuck Burt's scrambling dashes and timely passing led un- derdog Wisconsin to a 21-7 upset of Northwestern and kept the Badgers unbeaten in the Big Ten football race yesterday. While Wisconsin's tough defense kept smothering Northwestern, a 10-point favorite, Burt directed the Badgers to two touchdowns on short smashes by Dennis Lager and flipped a four-yard scoring pass to Bill Fritz. It was Wisconsin's second Big Ten victory, following a 16-13 up- set of Iowa two weeks ago. Burt, Lager and Fritz are all sophomores, but Burt-who com- pleted eight of 13 tosses-sat out his first season last yeai because of mononucleosis. Northwestern's only touchdown came late in the second quarter after Wisconsinhbuilt a 14-0 lead. It was scored on Denny Boothe's 17-yard pass to Mike Donaldson. Burt's three scampers, good for 30 yards, led to the first Wiscon- sin touchdown on a 41-yard drive on eight plays. Lager plunged across from the two. $ 4 01 -Daily-Jim Lines -Daily-Jim Lines BOB GRIESE DROPS BACK into the pocket and eyes a Purdue STEVE SMITH, ONE OF QUARTERBACK Wally Gabler's favor- receiver downfiield for one of the 38 passes he attemptel against ite passing targets, watches helplessly as a Purdue defender bats the Wolverines. Including yesterday's game. Griese, a junior, has the pigskin over his head. Smith, who caught seven passes against completed 88 out of 133 passes he has thrown this year. Michigan State, was held to one by the Boilermaker defense. NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ROUNDUP: Arkansas Topples No. One Texas, 27-24 By The Associated Press first play of the fourth quarter. Pete Roberts added the kick with FrAYETTEJILLErk.n- Qur- 14:52 left to play in the game. terback John Brittenum drove(Th Seiosalocrda Arkansas 80 yards in the closing The Seminoles also scored a minutes and got the touchdown field goal in the fourth quarter that toppled mighty Texas, the after inebacker Bill McDowell re- nation's No. 1 team, 27-24, in a covered a fumble by end Pat -Daily-Jim Lines FULLBACK DAVE FISHER BARRELS over a wall consisting of the Boilermaker defensive line for valuable extra yardage. The human cannonball led all Wolverine rushers with 89 yards in 21 carries. This was good for a 4.0 yard gain per carry against Purdue. Fisher, who had little success against Michigan State last week, rushed for seven first downs, three in the final quarter. ALL-AMERICA tackle Bill Year- by reflects upon the Wolver- ine's situation during yester- day's closely fought contest. battle for national football su- premacy yesterday. Brittenum squeezed into the end zone with 1:32 left, snapping the Texas winning streak at 10 games, and extending third-ranked Ar- kansas' to 17, longest in the na- tion by a major college team. It may have been the game that decides the championship in the Southwest Conference.' The desperation drive closed the book on a magnificent comeback by the Longhorns, who trailed 20- 0 after Arkansas unleashed defen- sive thunderbolts that netted two touchdowns, one on a 77-yard fumble return by speedy Tommy Trantham. Bulldogs Upended TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Sopho- more Bill Moreman scored on a brilliant 20-yard run in the final quarter and gave Florida State a come from behind 10-3 upset of fifth-ranked Georgia last night. The elusive run by the half- back, a member of the kicking team playing his first game on offense, capped a 47-yard drive which started late in the thirdt quarter. The touchdown came on the Hougson on the Georgia 20. 'Bama Ties BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Fumble- plagued Alabama and an inspired Tennessee team played to a 7-7 tie yesterday in a bruising South- western Conference football game. It appeared in the closing sec- onds that Alabama was going to stage another of its stirring come- backs, but a Crimson Tide drive fizzled on the Tennessee 10. Both teams scored in the second quarter, Tennessee frist when full- back Stan Mitchell bulled over from the one. Then Alabama drove 80 yards in a little more than three minutes for its score. Quar- terback Steve Sloan drove over from the one with one second left in the first half. The second half belonged to Alabama, but three fumbles kill- ed any hopes the Tide might have had for racking up victory No. 4. Tennessee now has a record of two victories and two ties. Ala- bama is 3-1-1. * * * USC Stops Stanford LOS ANGELES - Sensational Mike Garrett broke loose with a 77-yard touchdown run in the fin- al quarter yesterday as unbeaten Southern California defeated Stanford 14-0 and moved a giant stride toward the Rose Bowl. The spectacular Garrett run broke previously unbeaten Stan- ford's back, and Trojan Rod Sher- man added another touchdown with a 25-yard run in the final two minutes. In his fabulous run, Garrett broke a tackle at the line of scrimmage heading to his right. Then the 189-pound senior cut back to his left, and with deadly blocks by Serman and quarter- back Troy Winslow the 5-9 baby bulldozer traveled down the Tro- jan sideline all the way. Garrett called the ball 31 times and gained 205 yards, while the Stanford running attack totaled 148 yards. The triumph left Southern Cal with a record of four victories and a tie with Minnesota in the open- ing game of the season. Stanford is now 3-1-1, having been tied by Navy. * *. *. Gators Roll On GAINESVILLE, Fla. - With Steve Spurrier and Charles Cas- ey setting passing records, the ninth ranked Florida Gators roll- ed over North Carolina State 29- 6 yesterday in a wild offensive display. Spurrier passed to Casey for two and set up the other two. An in- terception and a penalty prevent- ed two other touchdowns, and three field goal attempts failed. The Gators marched 53, 49, 67 and 36 yards for their touchdowns. Spurrier set school records of 21 pass completions and 250 yards and Casey set one with 10 recep- tions. Auburn Felled ATLANTA, Ga.-Kim King com- pleted the first nine passes he threw and then broke away on a 31-yard touchdown run that start- ed Georgia Tech to a 23--14 foot- ball victory over arch-rival Au- burn yesterday. The sophomore quarterback's passing gave Georgia Tech a 6- 6 halftime tie, and the slender southpaw tookonly 24 secondsof the third quarter to send the Yellow Jackets on to their third victory against a loss and a tie. Before the quarter was over, Georgia Tech led 23-6 and had wrapped up the most lopsided de- cision between the long-time foot- ball foes in their last nine meet- ings. King passed nine yards for a touchdown to end Corky Rogers in the second quarter and raced to his long touchdown sprint in the third quarter on the first play after Auburn fumbled the kick- off. Fumbles and mixup on downs hurt Auburn, which lost its second game after two victories and a tie. SCORES3 GRID SELECTIONS Purdue 17, MICHIGAN 15 Minnesota 14, Iowa 3 Illinois 34, Indiana 13 Michigan State 32, Ohio State 7 Wsconsin 21, Northwestern 7 Arkansas 27, Texas 24 Navy 12, Pittsburgh 0 Syracuse 28, Penn State 21 California 16, Washington 12 Virginia 41, west Virginia 0 Columbia 21, Yale 7 Georgia Tech 23, Auburn 14 Oklahoma 21, Kansas 7 Missouri 14, UCLA 14 (tie) Florifa 28, North Carolina State 6 TCU 17, Texas A&M 9 Southern Cal 14, Stanford 0 Iowa State 10, Colorado 10 (tie) Buffalo 20, Richmond 0' OTHER SCORES Clemson 3, Duke 2 Army 23, Rutgers 6 Cornell 3, Harvard 3 Princeton 27, Colgate 0 North Carolina 12, Maryland 10 California St. 14, Slippery Rock 12, Akron 21, Wooster 8 Tennessee 7, Alabama 7 (tie) Dartmouth 35, Brown 9 Boston U. 7, Holy Cross 7 (tie) Penn 16, Bucknell 13 Delaware 24, Villanova 21 Nebraska 41, Kansas State 0 Utah State 54, Montana 21 Wyoming 38, Texas Western 14 Oregon State 16, Idaho 14 Air Force 18, Oregon 18 (tie) South Carolina 38, Wake Forest 7 Florida State 10, Georgia 3 SMU 17. Rice 14 Memphis St. 33, Mississippi St. 13 NBA Boston 102, Cincinnati 98 New York 111, Detroit 103 Philadelphia 133, Baltimore 101 AFL New York 24, Oakland 24 (tie) V 000001 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi CARL WARD, THE AMAZING little Wolverine halfback, shoots through a hole opened by the Michigan offensive line and goes in for the first touchdown of the afternoon. The second quarter score gave the Blue a six-point lead which they carried into halftime. This lead was turned over to Purdue early in the third quarter though when the Boilermakers secured their first touchdown and then converted the extra point. Ward, at 5'9" and 177 lbs., is the smallest man in the Wolverines' backfield. His unorthodox running style netted him a 4.6 yard per carry average for the day, the best by any player in the contest. b 4> k f V' I., ~ * ~'* t Herringbone traditionally goes everywhere One of the basic sport coats every man should possess. 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