SUNDAY, OCTOBER ;29, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE N X1 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINZ ., aavi ... a a. .T -_ +. .r-. . . Gophers4 THE FINAL SCOR JIM LaSOVAC Happiness Is a Jug E GE ggled (Continued from Page 1) t Yesterday the plays worked with t all the precision of a Prussian b drill team target practice. At the h half it was 35-0 and it would have n taken five "Win one for the Gip- f per" speeches. seven tearful please a to make your home town proud, and several stern threats about a lost scholarships to inspire either S side for the tedium known as the d second half. p In fact, the Wolverines only managed a puny two touchdowns after the break. At least this made b things easy on, the cheerleaderso who are tradition bound to jump c off the ledges after scores in a c gymnastic point tallying proce- t dure. A Best-Seller e But if one is going to recount c the chronicle of Happy Day North R of Stadium Boulevard, you might u as well start with chapter one. So here goes.b Leaving out introductions and, 49-0 ok a pitchout and made it into he end zone on the first bo.unce, ut the ref said "no" 'cause you ave to make it on the fly. Vid- ner then gave it Detwiler for the inal fraction of a yard. Sygar dded the extra point. When Minnesota, couldn't do nything, it punted and old Rick ygar returned it for the touch- own and kicked another extra oint. First TD of the Year Next was that real nifty play y Clancy where he stopped an verthrown pass with one hand, aught it with two, and then campered for his first score of ;he year. And Sygar kicked the :xtra point. After that was Ward's five-yard atch where he was all by his onesome in the end zone. Guess ho added the extra point. Okay, now comes that other one y Clancy. This time everybod,,y alls time out with only a minute Engineers, Mathematician Contribute to Technical Programs of National SignificanceI It took Jack Clancy six games to cross the goal line this year. Six games.I But when he finally did it, he did it with style. Real class. Clancy saw the pass coming high, so he jumped -up and pulled it down with one hand, turned and raced for the goal. Minnesota halfback Gene Hatfield raced after him, but Clancy evaded any possible tackle by diving the last two yards to hit paydirt.c He must have liked it, because only eight and a half minutes later he did it again. Dick Vidmer unleashed a 25-yard bomb from the Michigan 44, and Clancy, cutting down the middle of the field,1 grabbed it and outran his defender. Warren Sipp, running an even deeper pattern, delivered a block to take the last Gopher safety out of the play. That's the way it went all game for the Wolverines. It wasn'tX like last week against Purdue. Not like the MSU game two weeksr ago, either. This is the kind of game Michigan had yesterday. With less than seven minutes gone in the first quarter, Rick Sygar took a punt on his own 43-yard line, raced past Minnesota tacklers for 47 yards, and picked up a block from Barry Dehlin on the ten to score Michigan's second touchdown. And the play wasn't even nullified by a roughing the kicker penalty! It could have been. Last week it might have been. Two weeks ago it probably would have been. Because John Rowser was right on top of punter Dave Bald idge, and even hit him as the punt was sailing toward Sygar. Baldridge, of course, immediately fell to the turf. What good punter wouldn't? The ref, who had been watching the punt sail toward Sygar, looked back long enough to decide that Baldridge had back on his feet long enough before being hit, and left the flag in his pocket. Then he turned to watch Sygar race down the sideline. That was the way it went for the Wolverines yesterday. It wasn't as if Michigan didn't have to work a little bit for its y 49 points. True, the Wolverines took a 35-0 halftime lead into the locker room with them. But they also racked up a 59-0 margin over the Gophers in yards penalized. By the game's end they'd been penal- ized 79 yards, contrasting to 11 for the Gophers. But Vidmer's passing (he completed 15 of 19 for 212 yards) and the running of Dave Fisher, Carl Ward, and Jim Detwiler kept the offense moving all' afternoon. Stan Kemp was needed for only four punts, two of which came after the first string had been taken out in the last quarter. The 49-point margin was the largest ever in the battle for the Little Brown Jug, which will remain in Ann Arbor again after a year's absence. Back in 1943 a Wolverine squad defeated the Gophers by a 49-6 score. Michigan has now won the Brown Jug 30 times, while the Gophers have had it 18 times. There have been three ties in the series. Before the Jug was the prize for the victor, the two teams had met only six times, with Michigan win- ning four of the contests. The Michigan defense equaled the offense, holding the Gophers to only three first downs by passing and another three by rushing. The defensive secondary allowed only six completions by the three Min- nesota signal callers, with 19 passes going awry or being broken up. And there was the defensive line. Yes, the Line. Rushing as few as four men on some plays, the defense repeatedly smothered the quarterback and stopped the run- ners for short gains. At. half time Minnesota had amassed all of -3 yards on the ground, and added 37 more in the second half for an average of 1.1 yards per rush. Overall Michigan racked up 456 yards to the Gophers' menial 106. Minnesota's coverage of Clancy was interesting. With about six minutes left in the second quarter, it seemed as if the see- ondary had given up all hope of stopping him. At this particular time Clancy stopped in his pattern when he saw Vidmer's aerial fly way out 'of reach. A Minnesota back, however, seemed to as- sume that Clancy would catch it anyway, and attempted to bring him down without even glancing at the ball. Clancy added 10 receptions to his season total. Another interesting sidelight to the game was that Paul D'Eramo had his own shutout in the kickoff department, trouncing Minne- sota's kicker 9-0. On the fifth kickoff, the ball was held up by the wind and came down on Dennis Cornell on the 25, where it looked as if he had a good deal of running room. Unfortunately for Cornell, before he took a step forward, his own teammate, Ken Last, conveniently bumped him over right where he caught it. Perhaps the cricial point in the game came with three and a half minutes left to play in the first half. Michigan had the ball on Minnesota's 19-yard line, and it was fourth down and two to go. What would Elliott do? Michigan had only a 21-0 lead. The crowd yelled 'Go!" Could Sygar kick a field goal from 36 yards out on an angle and against the wind? Elliott decided to go for the o first down. Maybe he remem- bered something from last week. Maybe he felt secure with a 21-0 lead. Anyway, Fisher, took a 4 pitch from Vidmer and went around left end for 12 yards and t at -own on the seven. Three plays later, Ward took a pass at the five and zipped into the end zone. Sl U.. suchredas sone as~ 1 left so you figure something's up. Sscored as soon as it Clancy just runs up the middle. tb hold of that ball. With btaltfse hntetogy ~the eight, Dave Fisher but a lot faster thanthes tgs on te eght Dav Fihercovering him. He catches it at the 31-yard line and keeps going to give Sygar another extra point. Short Run for "Diesel Det" The sixth one was pretty easy to forget. Except probably for Det- wiler who scored it from about two inches away-a good half foot longer than his first score. =4 The final... whoops, Sygar added the extra point. The final touchdown was a four- yard carry by Ernie Sharpe, re- member him? Bumb Elliott, who must be criticized for a total lack of imagination once again in- structed Sygar to boot the conver- -* sion. And the docile youth did so. One of the most disappointing aspects of the game was the Homecoming Queen's failure to make a public appearance. Captain Clancy said this was his best game. ever, but he probably wouldn't JIM DETWILER have minded a pre-game smooch. Wolverines Discover Gopher Holes is * X CIS 1R NA The "Cipher Disk" ... NSA symbol and one of the oldest and most effective crypto- graphic devices known. equipped computer tabbratory where many of them often become involved in both the hardware and soft- ware of advanced computing systems. Theoretical research is also a primary concern at NSA, owing to the fact that the present state of knowledge in certain fields of mathematics is not sufficiently advanced to satisfy NSA requirements. 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Career programs are designed to develop the pro- fessional engineer for a full and satisfying future in, research or management. MATHEMATICIANS. To define, formulate and solve complex communications-related problems in sup- port of the NSA mission. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra, finite fields, probability, combinatorial analysis, programming and symbolic logic are but a few of the tools applied by Agency mathematicians. They enjoy the full support of NSA's completely Mi First Downs Ruching Passing Penalty Total No. of 'Rushes Net Yards-Rushing z Passing .2 Forward Passes Att. Completed Intercepted by Yds. int. returned Total Plays (Rushes and [ICH. 26 12 13 1 61 234 ~222 20 16 0 0 MINN. 8 3 3 2 30 34 72 25 6 0 0 PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Pet. 19 15 .789 1 1 1.000 20 16 .800 Vidiner Brown Totals Wilson Carlson Stephens Totals Minnesota Att. Comp. 3 0 17 5 5 1 25 6 Yds. 212 10 222 Yds. 0 58 14 72 Pct. .000 .294 .200 .240 natinalsecurity'agency" ... where imagination is the essential qualification. Passes) SI 55 Average distance 5.6 1.9 Kickoffs, returned by 0 9 Yds. Kicks Returned 91 184 Punts 91 32 Kickoffs 0 152 Fumbles, Number 0 1 Ball lost by 0 0 Penalties, number 6 1 Yards penalized 79 11 MICHIGAN 14 21 7 7-49 MINNESOTA 0 0 0 0- 0 SCORING Michigan-Detwiler (1 run), Sy- Sgar (kick). Michigan-Sygar (57 punt return), Sygar (kick). Michigan-Clancy (24 pass from Vidmer), Sygar (kick). Michigan-Ward (5 pass from Vid- mer), Sygar (kick). Michigan-Clancy (56 pass from Vidmer), Sygar (kick). Michigan-Detwiler (1 run), Sy- gar (kick). Michigan-Sharpe (4 run), Sygar (kick). Minnesota-None. RUSHING Michigan Tries Net Ave. Fisher 20 68 3.4 Ward 7 34 4.9 Detwiler 16 60 3.8 Vidmer 7 20 2.9 PASS RECEIVING Clancy Detwiler Ward Humphries Sharpe Totals Litten Bryant Forte Cornell Totals Kemp Baidridge Michigan No. 10 1 2 1 2 16 Minnesota No. 2 1 2 1 6 PUNTING Michigan Yds. 168 11. 17 10 16 222 Yds. 55 -9 11 15 72 Ave. 16.8 11.0 8.5 10.0 8.0 13.9 Ave. 27.5 -9.0 5.5 15.0 12.0 Ave. 36 Ave. 40 i No. 4 Minnesota No. 10 PASSES INTERCEPTED Michigan Minnesota None. None. Sharpe Radigan Brown Johnson Jobe Totals 2 1 4 3 61 Minnesota Tries 12 7 4 1 1 30 6 4 17 21 4 234 Net 20 43 4 -35 0 2 34 3.0 4.0 4.3 7.0 4.0 3.8 Ave. 1.7 6.1 0.8 -8.8 0.0 2.0 1.1 Attendance-71,749. WELCOME STUDENTS! 0 DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men-- And Women- OPEN 6 DAYS THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre Wilson Cornell Wintermute Carlson. 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