PAGE Six THE MICHIGAN WA TLY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1965 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1R05 Happiness Is a Lon g-A waited Burst of Power By GIL SAMBERG Happy days are here again, We'l enjoy that keg of beer again, There's a back who's in the clear again, Happy days are ,here again! -Anonymous Racking his brains to the bone, Anonymous was right on the beam again with this verse which he ripped off during Michigan's foot- ball rebirth yesterday. Wisconsin came on the field, lined up to receive the opening kickoff, fooled around with the ball for a cou'ble of plays .. . and then BLAM! They never knew what hit them. It was Michigan's point-a-min- ute team of another era, some said.. Forget it. This was more or less (actually less) the same squad that has been hemmed in offen- sively since the first half of the first game of the season by pen- alties, fumbles, injuries, and just bad luck. Yesterday 66,907 fans watched things fall into place. They fell in and locked there for 60 minutes and 50 points. Best for Bump This is the the Blue have Coach Bump since a 54-27 highest point racked up for Elliott, their slaughter of total head best Min- nesota in 1951. It got to the point where Mich- igan's cheerleaders, counting out scores with back flips off the low wall around the field, were getting air sick., And it was only by the grace of Bump Elliott, who started go- ing through six full teams after program schedule THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Tune in the Philharmonic each Sunday at 2:00 p.m., (WUOM-FM, 91.7 on your dial), brought to you through special arrangements between the University of Mich- igan, Ann Arbor Federal and the Liberty Music Shop. The current program schedule is: Sunday, October 31 SZELL, Conducting; GRAFFMAN, Pianist' Moussorgsky: Prelude, "Khovantchina"; Prokofieff: Piano Con. No. 3; Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 5 Sunday, November 7 SZELL, Conducting; CURZON, Pianist Mozart: Ov. "Marriage of Figaro"; Mozart: Piano Con., 3 K. 595; Bruckner: Symphony No. 7 ANN ARBOR FEDERAL SAVINGS and LIBERTY MUSIC SHOP the first five minutes of the sec- ond half, that the Wolverines' scoring total was 10 short of be- ing unforgettable or infamous, de- pending on your point of view. Laying for Hayes The last time 50 points were scored in the Big Ten was in 1961, when Ohio State poured it on with its first string to rip the Blue 50-20 at Columbus. Woody Hayes' gesture was and will be remembered , for quite awhile in Ann Arbor. But yesterday it was different. In the opening minutes it was a friendly, one-sided game. The 50- 14 final score wasn't fought for, it just happened. In the second half the scoring was done with apologies. In all the Wolverines had the ball for an incredible 93 plays. And it seemed as though they put every one of them to good use, as they finished with an overall average of 5.5 yards per play. Blue rushing netted 361 of a to- tal of 513 yards. Finally Happens "Everything just came to us," said Elliott in the dressing room after the game. "It's been a long time in coming, but once things start rolling they just aren't go- ing to get stopped." Wisconsin Coach Milt Br'uhn realized exactly wsat was going, on and, after the battle, statedj wanted PAID SUBJECTS with mild ACNE for study of local therapy Involves treatment of one side of face for a 4-8 week period with the object of finding out how valuable several time-hon- ored treatments really are. If comparison shows treatment to be effective, we will then treat the other side and you will have learned something useful about caring for acne. There is also a lump payment at end of period. As this is an experi- mental study, we do not want subjects with very severe acne. Subjects with acne of "black- head type" are especially suit- able. Male subjects are, pre- ferred at this time. If interested, write name, phone, address, and age on a cord and mail to:,Acne Therapy Study, Dept. of Der- matology, U of M Medical Center. If suitable, we will contact you shortly. that he "would never accuse Bump Elliott of pouring it on." It was all over before many people had entered the Stadium- with Michigan's first offensive play. The Badgers had scraped out three yards in three plays after Paul D'Eramo's opening kickoff. Then Blue quarterback Wally Gabler took the snap at his own 48, stepped back into the pocket, and fired the picture bomb that Michigan has been waiting for for years to Jack Clancy at the 10- yard line. Clancy tucked it away and beat safety Bob Grossman into the end zone with 1:39 gone in the game. "If it hadn't been the first play it would have been another," ad- mitted Bruhn. "We were never in the game. We were outcharged and outfought all over the field. "This team looked more like i the. Michigan of last year than And he scrambled: back 20 yards: pointed offensive line coach Tony the one we've been seeing on films . . . in circles 10 yards . . . right 20 Mason toward the playing area, this year. That whole team was yards ... and then (finally) for- but Mason's look said that he outstanding today." ward 28 yards for a first down. didn't think it was his turn quite The Wolverines pulled out all yet. the stops and used just about But Fisher was the Wolver- Elliott commented that it defi- every play in their book. They ines' Iron Horse, and when Wis- nitely felt better to be on the ran the roll-out option to perfec- consin's defense keyed on him it safe side of some fumbles and in- tion, the halfback pass, the "Al- got double-crossed by Rick Sy- terceptions for a change. Tom ley Oop" play, the "scramble" play gar. Fisher, besides blocking, car- Cecchini, Rick Volk, Louis Lee, and on defense the safety play, ried 20 times for 106 yards and and Dick Bass each picked off an the fumble play, and the inter- was never pinned for a loss. He aerial while Cecchini, Volk, and ception play ... and they all work- played only five minutes of the George Knapp recovered fumbles. ed. second half. And it was the Badgers' soph Master Scheme The 215-pound fullback ran in- QB, Chuck Burt, whose fumble Asked about the game plan for side, outside, and around the in his end zone (after Stan Wisconsin, Elliott explained that Badger line, showing an unusual Kemp had punted out of bounds it was simple "to win!" amount of speed turning the cor- on the two-foot line) gave Mich- "We contained them and found ners. igan a safety. that the best thing for us to do was run around end.I "The plays seemed to be execut- ed a little better this week, but the important thing was that we didn't beat ourselves. There are times when you can't do anything wrong." Individual performances were outstanding. ' Carl Ward picked up 85 yards on the ground in only six carries. This included a 52-yard romp- around left end on Michigan's second play from scrimmage. For this one he had to be sprung by a key block from Dave Fisher (did you say Dave Fisher?). Although in the past "block" and "Dave Fisher" have been con- sidered contradictory when used together, things seemed to have changed. Ward Does It Again On another play, with a third- and-seven situation on the Badger 26, Ward ran his by now polished "Scramble Play." Taking a hand- off from Gabler, the, halfback rolled left but didn't enjoy the view, so he switched directions. Caught 'Em Looking But when Wisconsin was look- ing too hard and leaning in Fish- er's direction, Gabler would turn around, his back to the line, make a neat fake to his fullback going right and hand off to Sygar go- ing left. In addition to his 4.2-yard rush- ing average, Sygar pulled off an- other halfback-pass play for a 26- yard TD strike to Clancy, who had left his defender in the dust. Gabler had what was perhaps his finest collegiate day. He ran for 48 yards (netting 24) and two TD's, and had the scoring bomb to Clancy among 121 air yards. But his execution and judgment, especially on the roll-out option, were what made his game. Subs Rack Up Yardage After Sygar's bomb, the entire backfield was switched to include Dick Vidmer, John Rowser and Ernie Sharpe, and Tim Radigan (together they netted an addi- tional 94 yards on the ground). and ,substitutions became whole- sale. After Dave Fisher came out, he Chance for Recovery Elliott could afford to retire Bill Yearby, Rocky Rosema (whose leg was banged up late in the sec- ond quarter), and Tom Cecchinj (who was at the' wrong end of a' shoe-top tackle, reinjuring his an- kle, on an interception return) early. Neither injury is consider- ed significant. He was also able to rest members of his defensive secondary as early as the second period. But Wisconsin was at a distinct disadvantage for most of the way, since it was obvious that they weren't going anywhere on the ground. -Nor, because of the score, could they even affprd to try. They carved out 20 yards on the ground against a first-string de- fense, and later added 57 against the rest of the team. On the other hand, Burt threw for 130 yards on 13 connections in the opening stanza, but fired only three strikes for 31 yards in the second half. But by late in the game it had become a scrimmage between two red teams anyway. t c E R x i 3 0 4 -Daily-Jim Lines QUARTERBACK WALLY GABLER ELUDES Badger defensive end Warren Dyer's grasp on a rollout. Gabler completed 5 passes for 121 yards and rushed 9 times for gains totaling 48 yards, though losses reduced his net to 24 yards. NATIONAL ROUNDUP: Longhorns Lose Third Straight at Hands- of SMU By The Associated Press DALLAS, Tex.-Sophomore Jim Hagle's 93-yard touchdown 'run broke open a tight gamedand Ron- nie Reel's .58-yard return of an intercepted pass clinched it yes- terday as Southern Methodist beat Texas 31-14 to stay in the run- ning for the Southwest Confer- ence football championship. Southern Methodist jammed three touchdowns into the final period to humiliate the proud Longhorns. Southern Methodist was beating Texas for the first time in six years, and it was the first time in 10 years for Texas to lose three games in a row. Ole Miss Upsets LSU JACKSON, Miss. - Mississippi, playing like the mighty Rebel teams of the past, stunned crip- pled Louisiana State 23-0 yester- day and virtually knocked the fifth-ranked Tigers out of the Southeastern Conference football race. Hard-hitting Mississippi de- fenders captured four LSU fum- bles and picked off three passes as the Tigers bowed for the sec- ond time in three conference games. Three of the LSU errors were converted into Mississippi points as the rebounding Rebels rolled to their third straight triumph. Halfback Mike Dennis scored --- MICRO-CLEANING MEANS CAREFUL ATTENTION TO DETAILS As you know, people are better than machines when it comes to fine details in finishing a suit or dress. That's why Greene's have fashion-wise, skilled pressers to touch up each garment by hand before it goes to final assembly. It's another "Finishing Touch" Greene's cus- tomers have come to expert. twice for Mississippi, on a one- yard run and a five-yard sprint. His second touchdown, at the start of the third quarter, put the Rebels in front 16-0, and line- backer James Nelson clinched the upset with a 26-yard touchdown run with an intercepted pass. Louisiana State, which had av- eraged 24 points a game in win- ning five of its first six starts, never threatened as its attack sputtered with quarterback Nel- son Stokely on the sidelines. Huskers Die a Little COLUMBIA, Mo.-Fred Duda, a tricky runner and bold passer, led third-ranked Nebraska in a tremendous comeback to a 16-14 victory over Missouri yesterday on little Larry Wachholtz's 26-yard field goal. The winning field goal by Wach- holtz with 5:56 left in the game capped Nebraska's uphill fight after trailing 14-0 in the first quarter. Nebraska's victory, seventh in a perfect season, made Bob Deva- ney's club an overwhelming fa- vorite to sweep on to the Big Eight football championship. A record crowd of 58,000 watched the Ti- gers fall to 4-2-1 for the season, 3-1 in the league. Quarterback Gary Lane led Mis- souri to two touchdowns its first two times with the ball for its amazing 14-0 first quarter lead. 6OIL-Z99--4sj! 'S tZZ-sI'S :/W NOSIOHIN- saIDA34JodS DOwODA OPPJa1uuliAa a0 PJOD 06UIJOOU16UO puo kp}oS J auulM SS~lD 05 OZ (59, Pu ' 9.) MaiO l U!SjOei OM.- uoldwDyp xlid puoj6 p110M- OO'£L L ssop '3'3 OSZ 1 o J aapapds *0 1aPlH- ijdw tL'S6 PODDJ601P eliW Ja4.Ionb a44l 10 1OPlH- wdi OOOSL dij LZ suOJ4 ds 5 'wa4SAS uoip3aIul S,O LOD)l 4'I~M OU elqolloAo 0 LO'DA 996 L- The Huskers stormed back behind Duda, cutting it to 14-13 at half- time. Missouri gave ground grudging- ly in Nebraska's 51-yard drive that set up the winning field goal. A 15-yard personal foul penalty hurt the Tigers, moving the Huskers to the Missouri 17. The running of Duda and 217- pound sophomore Charlie Winters led the winning drive. Missouri tried to come back, but halfback Kaye Carstens made a key fourth- down tackle on Earl Denny at the Nebraska 39. * * * Gators Grounded AUBURN, Ala. - Quarterback Alex Bowden threw two touch- down passes and linebacker Bill Cody scored on a pass intercep- tion and a recovered fumble yes- terday to give Auburn a 28-17 up- set football victory over seventh- ranked Florida. A crowd of 45,000 howling 'fans saw Auburn win its 15th home- coming game in 'a row, this one a regionally televised affair. It was Florida's. 11th consecutive unsuc- cessful attempt to beat the Tigers on Auburn's home grounds. An inspired, come-from-behind Auburn team struck with swift fury for 14 points in the third quarter after a listless first half had netted the Tigers only 11 yards rushing and 44 in the air. Syracuse Stomps NEW YORK - Floyd Little rambled for four touchdowns, marking his biggest explosion of the season, 'as a rampaging Syra- cuse football team romped over Pitt 51-13 yesterday. Syracuse's third straight victory and fifth in seven games came surprisingly easy. Little, a junior who threatens to surpass the amazing feats of past Syracuse stars Jimmy Brown and Ernie Davis, scored 'two touch- downs in the second quarter-on a 15-yard run and on a 95-yard punt return-and two in the third --on runs of one and 26 yards. SCORES ~I In Syracuse's first six games this season, Little scored three touchdowns in three different games. His 95-yard ramble against Pitt was his fifth long TD run of the year. He also has scored on runs of 69, 72, 85 and 91 yards. II GRID SELECTIONS MICHIGAN 50, Wisconsinl4 Illinois 20, Purdue 0 Indiana 21, Iowa 17 Michigan State 49, Northwestern 7 Ohio State 11, Minnesota 10 Nebraska16, Missouri 14 Texas Tech 27, Rice 0 Auburn 28, Florida 17 SMU 31, Texas 14 Mississippi 23, LSU 0 Kansas 34, Kansas State 0 Georgia Tech 35, Duke 23 Georgia 47, North Carolina 35 Colorado 13, Oklahoma 0 California 21, Penn State 17 Washington 41, Stanford 8 TCU 10, Baylor 7 Maryland 27, South Carolina 14 Kentucky 28, West Virginia 8 William Jewell 20, Nebraska Wes. 0 OTHER GAMES Hamilton 28, Wesleyan 0 Clemson 26, Wake Forest 13 North Carolina St. 13, Virginia 0 Notre Dame 29, Navy 3 Princeton 45, Brown 27 Massachusetts 41, Vermont 6 Cornell 20, Columbia 6 Colgate 29, Army 28 Boston College 41, VMI 12 Boston University 30, Rutgers 0 Connecticut 27, New Hampshire 0 Holy Cross 20, Buffalo 7 Harvard 10, Pennsylvania 10 (tie) Syracuse 51, Pittsburgh 13 Dartmouth 20, Yale 17 UCLA 10, Air Force 0 Utah 22, Colorado State 19 Oregon 17, Idaho 14 Washington State 10, Oregon State 8 Vanderbilt 13, Tulane 0 N. Texas State 28, Cincinnati 24 Wooster 47, Hiram 12, Miami (Ohio) 23, Bowling Green 7 Iowa State 14, Oklahoma State 10 Utah State 34, Brigham Young 21 Indiana (Pa) 14, Slippery Rock 7 Alabama 10, Mississippi State 7 NHL Toronto 4, Detroit 3 Chicago 6, Montreal 4 New York 8, Boston 2 NBA Philadelphia 134, Cincinnati 114 St. Louis 122, Detroit 95 A NAME YOU CAN TRUST :' 4M Harris Tweed sport coats are 1213 S. University 516 E. Liberty Free Daily Pick-up and Delivery Service j I a tr / radition here * TRUTH or SMEAR? Decide your Yourself You have undoubtedly heard much about the book "None Dare Call It Treason" by John Stormer. Some have called it the whole truth about the world situation today; others have called it a pack of lies and smears. We aren't going to argue about it. We only want you to read the book for yourself. Copies of "None Dare Call It Treason" will be distributed FREE on the campus in the coming weeks. Pick one up. There's no obligation. 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