-1 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1965 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1963 Y s +. v LLOYD GRAFF NATIONAL ROUNDUP: Irish Smash Pitt, 69-13 ( '! , . , ,r.,y .. " : w iti;?:": ' + }}',, yr,, w' RR. ^: r " gip!}, ti w ti^' ,y,.. ., titi w 5 .,"~",: ti;"ti:?", fi: y,.y ,y+++...{ ...yt.} ,.*} }' ..t t " Y..,... .; , 5 5...:..Yt :..1 ti.r'. .! ti\'.tiltiytitit j.."}. \ ?.l"..ti .tie}: .. . 11. yy'+!} ' . { ; k2 '.TS }i,\ ' " '. r titi5 , s4tiK 4 }. ~ '. k51. .K.. i ...- Bump Elliott wears austere dark ties, speaks with quiet deliber- ateness, patiently sips Coke after a cliffhanger, and plays garish, gaudy, flamboyant, don't-say-wow-say-ZOW football-sometimes. Yesterday was one of those sometimes. Now, normally in college football a fourth down means bring in your "toe." To be Pavlovian, the conditional response' of a coach on fourth and anything is to either attempt a field goal or punt the ball a far piece from your own goal line. It's what I call "founding father" football. And they never second guess you in the morning for going "by the book." Yes, Bump struck a blow for free will and indeterminism in the king sized Skinner box called Illinois Memorial Stadium. He gambled twice on fourth down and easy field goal yardage, and as I'm sure you know or have already guessed, broke the bank. Bump Elliott didn't salivate at the hamburger thrust in front of him. He wanted chateaubriand or nothing. . By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH -- Bill Wolski' rambled for five touchdowns toi tie a Notre Dame record for scor- ing in one game as the Fighting Irishncrushed an outclassed Pitt football team 69-13. The 195-pound senior scored twice in both the first and second quarters and again in the third. , The defeat was the first suffer- ed by Pitt at home against Notre Dame in the 32-game series, and - it marked the third time this season the hapless Panthers have given up more than 50 points. Nick Eddy set up Larry Con-, jar's opening score with a 26 yard Sloan connected on 9 of 16 toss- ball victory over Colorado, nail- es for 150 yards and two touch- ing down second place in the con- downs in the first half. ference and a possible bowl bid. Lane passed for one touchdown . and scored another with a 16-yard Tennessee Wins run in the fourth quarter. KNOXVILLE-Spectacular pass- Earlier the ninth-ranked Mis- ing and running by sophomore souri defenders stole three passes, quarterback Charlie Fulton car- one for a touchdown.; red unbeaten Tennessee to a 21- 7 football victory over Georgia Flid tpsB ldg Tech Saturday.;Florda Stops Bulldogs A crowd of 52,174, largest ever JACKSONVILLE - F 1 o r i d a to see an athletic contest in Ten- I struck with lightning-like fury in nessee, saw the Vols explode for the final minutes on two Steve three third-quarter touchdowns in Spurrier passes for a 14-10 come- 7 minutes. back victory over Georgia yester- m s* *day. The triumph kept alive Florida's Auburn Beats MSU flickering hopes for the Southeast- BIRMINGHAM - Quarterback ern Conference football crown and Alex Bowden picked Mississippi a bowl bid, and cast a pall on the State to pieces with his passes aspirations of the Bulldogs. Both Saturday and drove Auburn to a teams now have 3-2 league records. C HEC KM this is TO L'.,.~ .J0-0. J': { .4.' >r c:~ .r4 4" ' 3, a f c ATE FOR DONEGAL SHIRTS 1110 III FhffiL I®®DIM the label L6 64 this is the shirt BRISTOL BONES ... hem's a button- down with everything going for it. A new look to the fabric, classic oxford in a herringbone weave. A new look to the styling .. . 4"i ". The first time he resisted the ground round syndrome came at run to the Pitt 42, where Conjar eleven minutes into the game. Illinois led 3-0, but Michigan had the raced home to give the Irish the ball on the Illinois one yard line on fourth down. Bump told Wally lead. Gabler to go for the one yard, which was fairly standard procedure. The powerful Irish rolled up 377 However, Michigan was illegally in motion, which pushed the ball yards on the ground and 184 on backto he ix.passing, while Pitt rushed for 92, back_ to the six. and quarterback Kenny Lucas Going for six yards on fourth down? Well, maybe if you're passed for 242. in an eleventh place tie in the intramural league, all right. But in a Big Ten brother match before 50,000 potential laughers? How utterly frightening, how positively unconventional, how abso-fHuskers nbeaten lutely pure, well-aged beef tenderloin. LINCOLN, Neb. -Undefeated, And Mr. Gabler (you've got to call him Mister after the Illinois third-ranked Nebraska overpow- game) hit Carl Ward on a swing pass for the touchdown. Ward, ered Big Eight rival Kansas 42-6,' unquestionably, is one of the best running halfbacks in the country, asterunning up a 2t-0o g adwh e but he's not exactly a threat to Don Hutson in pass catching, a fact year. which makes the call even gutsier. The Huskers, the nation's num- 1 r T r 1 t t r 1 I f i . i 1 i' Ii t Hamburger-shunner Elliott remarked after the game, "I know I could second guess myself . . . but I won't." So you get lucky once, by following the impulse and eschew- ing the mind set. But try it again, Bump, and the law of aver- ages (the law of averages, incidentally, was handed down on a basalt tablet and stored in a remote catacomb beneath the Tower of Babel) is gonna git ya. But once again, with a'touch of icy whimsy, Chalmers Elliott passed up McDonald's to search for the steakhouse. Michigan was, ahead 17-3 in the middle of the third quarter with the ball on the Illinois four, fourth down. Three points would be tasty, but a touchdown, now that's a man's meal. Mr. Gabler, no longer Bob Timberlake's pallid apparition, dodged through unfingered for the four yards. It must have been a meaty moment for Bump. And poor Pete was left with the short half of the wishbone for the sixth straight year. Chalmers Elliott's new nickname is Bret. ber one rushing team with aG 269-yard average, fattened their hold on top spot with a 419-yard performance. HalfbackRon Kirkland, backr in action after recovering from a series of shoulder injuries, led the Husker attack with 146 yards! on 10 carries in the first half. A rkansas Wins, 3 1-0 HOUSTON-Bobby Burnett sup- plied the power as the number two ranked Arkansas Razorbacks extended their win streak to 20, beating Rice 31-0. Burnett scored twice, s'et up an- other TD, and his running played a major role in a drive capped by Ronny Smith's 37-yardhfield goal. Arkansas scored the first two times it had the ball, with Bur- nett providing the scoring punch, giving the Razorbacks a 17-0 half- time lead. * * * 'Bama Over LSUA BATON ROUGE - Alabama struck with savagery yesterday us- ing the passing of Steve Sloan to tame Louisiana State 31-7. The victory put the Crimson Tide into the Southeastern Con- ference title chase. Big Ten Standings Conference 1 All Games Michigan State Minnesota Ohio State Purdue MICHIGAN Illinois Wisconsin Northwestern Indiana Iowa W 6 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 0 L 0 1 ' 3 3 4 6 Pct. 1.000 .800 .800 .600 .400 .400 .400 .400 .250 .000 PF 176 107 83 125 108 83 68 65 62 47 PA 43 67 76 70 62 86 135 97 130 112, W 8 4 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 1 L 0 3 2 3 4 4 4 5 6 7 T 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 PF 212 146 109 205 148 163 74 101 100 74 PA 46 110 111 96 111 112 188 166 171 126 25-18 Southeastern Conference football victory. Auburn scored the winning touchdown midway in the fourth quarter on a 73-yard drive. Bow- den passed four yards to end Scotty Long for the six-pointer. Falcons Down Army CHICAGO - Paul Stein clicked on two fourth down plays forI touchdowns to lift the Air ForceI Falcons to a 14-3 victory over Army Saturday. Steindashed five yards for a second quarter touchdown, and with a fourth-and-one situation in the fourth quarter, hit Carl Janssen with a 27-yard pass and the game-clinching touchdown. It was the first triumph for theI Falcons over Army and the sec- ond victory this season for Air Force, which has suffered fivej losses and had one tie. Twilley Sets Record TULSA-Howard Twilley caught five touchdown passes, kicked four extra points and caught a two- point conversion toss Saturday as Tulsa smothered Louisville 51-18. Twilley, the most prolific pass receiver in college football history, caught 15 passes for 230 yards to run his season total to 106 re- ceptions. In the process, he craked his own NCAA record of 95 receptions set last year. Texas Comes Back AUSTIN - Texas staggered pass-minded Baylor with four touchdown tosses in the first half and whipped the Bears 35-14. Three touchdown passes were to end Pete Lammons, who had not scored this season although he is Texas' leading receiver. The victory pushed the Long- horns' season record to 5-3 after three straight conference losses, and dropped the Bears to 3-4. Utags Lose First MEMPHIS-Two of the nation's scoringest teams ground away furiously but mostly far from the goal yesterday as Memphis State bounced Utah State from the un- beaten ranks 7-0. The Utags led the nation in total points and had the second highest scoring average before the Tigers had bad fumbles shut them out, for the first time in 50 games. Utah State had won seven straight. Memphis State is now 4-3. Missouri Tops Buffs BOULDER - Missouri's Gary Lane blended his quarterback magic with the Tigers' sturdy de- fense for a 20-7 Big Eight foot- - ___________-- __-- SCORIE! GRID PICKS SCORES MICHIGAN 23, Illinois 3 Ohio State 17, Indiana 10 Michigan State 35, Iowa 0 Purdue 45, Wisconsin 7 Minnesota 27, Northwestern 22 Nebraska 42, Kansas 6 Notre Damne 69, Pitt 13 USC 35, Cal 0 Alabama 31, LSU 7 UCLA 28, Washington 24 Texas 35, Baylor 14 Tennessee 21. Georgia Tech 7 Auburn 25, Mississippi State 18 Arkansas 31, Rice 0 Oregon State 13, Syracuse 12 SMU 18, Texas A & M 0 Wyoming 7, New Mexico 9 Missouri 20, Colorado 0 Air FIorce 14, Army 3 OTHER SCORES East Stroudsburg 38, Coitland St. 0 Florida A & M 28, North Carolina 14 Oklahoma 24, Iowa State 20 Central Michigan 48, E. Illinois 6 Buffalo 22, Delaware 0 Maine 27, Youngstown 22 Massachusetts 27, Holy Cross 0 VMI 21, Richmond 14 Bowling Green 20, Marshall 6 Cincinnati 21, Kansas State 14 Colgate 21, Bucknell 7 Dartmouth 47, Columbia 0 Boston Univ. 15, Connecticut 14 Princeton 14, Harvard 6 Navy 19, Maryland 7 Penn State 21, Kent State 6 Yale 21, Penn 19 North Carolina State 21, Duke 0 South Carolina 17, virginia 7 Cornell 41, Brown 21 Florida 14, Georgia 10 Florida State 35, Wake Forest 0 North Carolina 17, Clemson 13 !West Virginia 31, Virginia Tech 22 Eastern Michigan 41, Case Tech 20 Wayne State 7, Thiel 6 Brigham Young 25, Utah 20 Kentucky 34, Vanderbilt 0 Western Michigan 17, Ohio U. 6 NHL Boston 3, Montreal 1 New York 4, yoronto , NBA Boston 101, Philadelphia 91 Cincinnati 114, New York 103 4 302 S. State St. * 00 Lowly B uins Stun Canadiens; Ingarfield Leads Rangers' Win I MONTREAL (P)-Dean Pren- fed Prentice, who whipped the tice's tie-breaking goal early in game-winning shot past Hodge. the final period and the outstand- Ted Green, wrapped up the ing goaltending of rookie Bernie scoring at 18:27 after taking pass- Parent gave the Boston Bruins a es from Prentice and Westfall. 3-1 victory over the Montreal * * Canadiens Saturday night, their TORONTO () - Earl Ingar- first of the National Hockey field's second goal of the game League season. broke a third period deadlock, Showing only a tie and four powering the New York Rangers losses for their five previous to a 4-2 National Hockey League games, the Bruins came from be- victory over the Toronto Maple hind as Ron Stewart and Prentice Leafs Saturday night.. fired goals past Charley Hodge The victory moved New York while Parent kicked out shot after into a third place tie with the shot over the final two periods. Leafs and idle Detroit Red Wings. Third NHL Game Fighting for Job Parent, playing only his third Ingarfield, fighting for a regu-I ganie in the NHL, was brought up lar job in his eighth NHL season, by the - Bruins from Oklahoma put the Rangers in front with 11 City of, the Central League when minutes to go. He beat Toronto injuries sidelined their other two goalie Johnny Bower and defense- goalies, Ed Johnston and Gerry man Mike McMahon. Don Mar- Cheevere. He had allowed 10 goals shall added an insurance goal in in his first two games. the last minute. It looked like the story might be The Leafs had tied it on Dave the same this time as Montreal Keon's tally early in the period pulled into a 1-0 lead at 18:45 of after goals by Rod Gilbert and the first period when Bobby Rous- Ingarfield in the final minute of seau, the league's leading scorer, the second session gave New York took passes from Jean Beliveau a 2-1 margin. and J. C. Tremblay and fired one With Toronto in front by virtue past Parent. of defenseman Allan Stanley's first But that, as it turned out, was period goal, the .Rangers struck all for the Canadiens, who lost an twice in a 38-second span to go opportunity to break a first-place ahead for the first time. Gilbert tie with idle Chicago. fired a short backhander through Stewart Evens It Up Bower's pads after a cross-ice pass Stewart pulled the Bruins even from Arnie Brown. Ingarfield then at 12:19 of the middle period took Marshall's pass' and whipped when he beat Hodge after being in a 25-foot shot from the right set up by Parker MacDonald and side. Murray Oliver. Replaced Goyette Then, at 5:58 of the third pe-. Ingarfield's goals were his sec- riod, John Bucyk and Ed Westfall ond and third of the season. He replaced Phil -Goyette on the Ranger's No. 2 line after Goyette was injured early in the game. Gilbert, skating in a heavy corset to protect a back injury, also has scored three times. Stanley opened the scoring with less than four minutes remaining in the first period and the Ran- gers' Jim Neilson serving an in- terference penalty. He took a pass from Bob Pulford near the New York blue line, skated in and shot the puck through a maze of play- ers past rookie goalie Ed Gia- comin. Giacomin stopped several other Toronto scoring bids before his mates got rolling in the second period. OVER 1,500 1966 MODEL WATCHES 0 GENERATION SEMINAR TUESDAY-NOV. 9-8:00 P.M. DONALD HALL. ROOM 3C-MICHIGAN UNION all welcome ULLR SKI CLUB PRESENTS ALL CAMPUS Yes, you. If you're a senior taking dead aim on a business career, you'll want to check the many opportunities in Atna.Casualty's FIELD MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM These opportunities offer a selection of permanent salaried positions at sixty-seven Company field offices in major cities throughout the country; positions which possess O w I * ALL NEW 1966 MUL)-LS now on display. Choose trom over !DUU watches. 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