SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1965 F (Continued from Page 1) Michigan reacted like a half- dead veteran fighter in the fif- teenth round who kfiows he must score a knockout if he's to win. Coach Bump Elliott sent in Wally Gabler who had languished on the bench daring the second half recovering from a wallop on the bean. Gabler had two things in mind THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAr .. % _ _ _. _ _ _ _ _.. _ _, _ rXir t11i11T 9 ick~e E for his final minute as Michigan iquarterback, milk the clock and let Clancy 'lower the boom. Blue's Best Clancy, of course, is Jack Clancy, Michigan's best end ever, who caught 52 passes this season, one and a half times the old 'M' rec- ord. Michigan started its oh-no-not- this-again drive like any drowning man, with three quIcR strokes. dl in _ r---- I I Big Ten Standings 11 FINAL Michigan State Ohio State Purdue Minnesota Illinois Northwestern MICHIGAN Wisconsin Indiana Iowa W 7 6 5F 4 3 2 2 1 0- L 0 1 2 2 3 4 5 5 6 7/ Conference T Pet. PF 0 1.000 203 0 .857 130 0 .714 186 0 .714 149 0 .571 154 0 .429 105 0 .286 137 0 .286 75 0 .143 '96 0 .000 47 PA 56 83 91 109 92 139 105 228 183 150 W 10 7 7 5 6 4 4 3 2 1 L 0 2 2 4 4 6 6 6 8 9 T 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0. AU Games PF 251 156 266 188 234 141 177 81 134 94 PA 62 118 117 152 118 208 154 281 224 192 Gabler popped three beauties to the Jack of Michigan's heart, moving the ball to the Ohio State 33, but then the Scarlet and Gray (aren't those hideous colors) swamped Wally and Michigan. The gruesome linemen like Ike Kelley and Doug Van Horn got awfully naggish and started grab- bing at Gabler's arms, legs, and helmet forcing him to throw from positions quite unbecoming a quarterback. Not surprisingly his aim was off on three straight. One-Sixth of a Minute With ten seconds left, Elliott tossed Paul D'Eramo into the fray with instructions to kick the ball as far as he could and hope hard, Toe, hope and favoring wind couldn't defeat the laws of physics, much less Ohio State. So much for play. I know it's a bit boring because you've read the same kind of sickening story sev- eral other times this season, Georgia, Purdue, Minnesota. You want to know a secret? This kind of sob story gets meaner to write each time, too. Rather than dwelling upon yes- terday's punt, pass, and kick -con- test between the neighboring an- tagonists I'm going to throw in a few comments about the entire Michigan football season while it's still a warm corpse in our mem- ories. Crippled Trite and alibi-ish as it may sound, injuries wounded Michigan Teeth sorely. Jim Detwiler was an All- American halfback. He played one healthy half against North Car- olina. Barry Dehlin was a solid guard and Bill Keating might have been an exceptional one. Secondly, Michigan was groping for a quarterback for a third of a season, Wally Gabler finally won the position but had only two or three outstanding games. With another year of experience he might have been one of the better signal callers in the country, but that's conjecture. And finally, Michigan never built momentum this season. The Wolverines struggled past two patsies in North Carolina and California so the victories never meant much. Georgia, a better than average team beat them at home. Michigan State's mashing sucked the wind out of Michigan. They came back surprisingly well against Purdue and still lost in the most aggravating fashion. Min- nesota, no great power, won a chintzy game on a missed two- point try. For consolation Michigan mur- dered a Wisconsin team that hard- ly belonged in the conference, and then played a superb game at Illinois, unquestionably the best of the year. Last week's debacle at Evanston and yesterday's hand slammer left an ashen taste for all. It was an ashen season. 9-7 THE UNIVERSITY SHOP SAKS FIFTH AVENUE r r S FA. brinjs ~to Anm Arbor' v = .a o lleetio1 of NOW" TITLE FIGHT: The Greatest' Battles 'The Rabbit' Tomorrow JACK CLANCY MirT Christm GILFTS FOR HER By The Associated Press LAS VEGAS-Unbeaten cham- pion Cassius Clay places his heavyweight title on the line for the second time tomorrow night, this one against former two-time 4 champion Floyd Patterson in a match billed for 15 rounds-or considerably less., Interest may center not so much as to how, long the fight lasts but to what extent the box- ing fans around the world will accept it. Indications are that the fans, a courageous lot, won't want to miss it., Codivention Center The match goes on in the Las Vegas Convention Center, which incidentally is a showcase for even better things, at 10 p.m., EST. It also will be §hown for an in- ternational audience on a closed circuit theatre-auditorium system in the United States and Canada and even disrupt the very late- late shows in England and Europe at 4 a.m., their time, if they are blessed with such late-late pres- sures. The Early Bird satellite will carry the bout abroad. The promoters, Inter-continental Promotions Inc., and the local Silver State Boxing Club, hope for a live gate of $300,000. Total Revenue Total revenue, they say, may fall short of the record $4.8 million for the first Clay-Sonny Liston thing in Miami, Fla., in 1964, which still isn't a bad record to fall short of. Whatever the loot, Ali Cassius gets 40 per cent and Patterson 20. Both should be happy, and their followers should be so lucky. Clay, as you might suspect, is the favorite. He is undefeated in 21 professional bouts, and has knocked out 17, including Liston twice when he won the title and defended it. Patterson, now 30, seven years older than Clay, has had 48 bouts since his debut as a pro in 1952, won 44 and lost four. Patterson has won five fights in a roW in the last two years over such op- ponents as Santo Amonti, Eddie Machen, Charlie Powell, George Chuvalo and Tod Herring. Likeable The likeable Floyd was edged out in two matches with Liston in. one round apiece. Oddly enough, intra-racial mat- ters figure in this Clay-Patterson bout. Clay calls Floyd the "Black White Hope," and Patterson is an announced critic of Cassius' Black Muslim devotion. Clay says he will demolish Pat- terson after "punishing him" for seven or eight rounds--or he might do it in one. Patterson promises only "to win the best way I can." Facts and figures of the heavy- weight title fight: Distance-15 rounds. Anticipated attendance - 8,000 capacity. Anticipated gate receipts - $300,000-$350,000. Tickets $100, $50, $20, $10. Purses-Clay 40 per cent of all revenue; Patterson 20 per cent. Anticipated total revenue gate, closed circuit television and radio -$3.4 million. Radio-=ABC Network 10 p.m., EST. Scoring-Five points for winner of a round, four or less for the loser, five apiece for an even round. Not Passing the Bucks MICH. First Downs 18 Rushing 13 Passing 5 Penalty 0 Total No. of Rushes 56 Net Yards-Rushing 249 Passing 86 Forward Passes Att. 16 Completed -7 Intercepted by 2 Yds. inteept. returned 10 Total Plays (Rushes and Passes) 72 Punts, No. 4 Average distance 42 Kickoffs, returned by 3 Yds. Kicks Returned 48 Punts 15 Kickoffs 33 Fumbles, No. 2 'B ost by0 Penalties, No. 3 Yards penalized 35 OsU 19 11 8 0 40 138 123 29 15 0 0 69 3 46 2 43 16 27 3 1 2 10 Sander Unverferth Rein Totals 23 7 3 40 PASSING Michigan 96 -11 32 138 4.2 -1.6 10.7 3.5 Downtown HONDA Sales-Service-Parts z -STATE ST 5tth AVE. 4th AVE. WENK Sales and Service Inc. 211 E. Ann St., Ans Arbor 665-8637 I We have selected from our famed women's shops an exciting array of gifts from around the world-many of them to be found only at Saks Fifth Avenue- all'of them things we know from our long experience are most apt to delight the female of the species. We have set aside a special corner of our campus store for this unusual and beautiful collection, to make your gift-shopping quick and easy. And remember, a gift means more to her when it comes from Saks Fifth Avenue. Gabler Vidmer Totals Unverferth PA Sygar Clancy Totals Anders Rein Sander Totals Kemp Barrington Kelley Totals Att. Comp. Int. Yds. 11 4 0 56 5 3 0 30 16 7 0 86 -Ohio State Att. Comp. Int. Yds. 29 15 2 123 332 South Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan Starting Monday, December 6th, open every night until 8:30 P.M. through Thursday, December 23rd-Saturdays till 5:30 P.M. I i Gabler Ward Fisher Sygar Vidmer Sharpe Totals Barrington RUSHING Michigan Tries Net Ave. 7 14 2.0 14 104 7.4 24 96 4.0 7 22 3.1 3 12 4.0 1 1 1.0 56 249 4.4 Ohio State Tries Net. Ave. 7 21 3.0 ASS RECEIVING Michigan No. S 1 6 7 1 Ohio State No. S 7 5 3 1 15 1 PUNTING Michigan No. S 4 7 Ohio State Nd S Yds. Ave. 11 11.0 75 12.5 86 12.3 Yds. Ave. 53 7.6 57 11.4 .3 4.33 123 8.2 Yds. Ave. 170 42 Yds. Ave. Subscribe toThe. Michigan Daily . 2 3 93 45 138 46 45 46 ATTENTION All affiliates of any chapter of SIGMI P1: Please contact Ron Straley at 536 S. Forest, Apt. 14N, 665-3345 or the Interfraternity Council President, 1518 Student Activities Building, 662-3162 IMMEDIATELY. SIG- MA PI will be colonized at Michigan dur- ing the beginning of the winter semester. Stamp of discernment: J Si J the deft commixture... } t ti. ~.. S- e. A..3. ' '. of color stripings... z, M Hue-Striped Oxford: if you're a fancier of button-downs, here's a choice- luxuriant cotton oxford worth adding to your collection. In distinctive two-color stripings of rust/blue, gold/blue or red/olive. Like all Gant Shirts, Hue-Striped Oxford has elan in a gentlemanly manner. About $7 at discerning stores: /\-NFIFFR ~T~NA\/1< E.F~ (As advertised in The New Yorker and Esquire) --.-.-'c:- .- z:s x da . Ut°