THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDA Y olverines Battle Sophomore-Studded iller, Richter Head Crop f Five Badger Newcomers Ole Miss to Encounter LSU As Top Teams Defend Ratings (Continued from Page 1) Ohio 15 yard line, Miller id a big hole on the keeper but could only hobble for n yards to the eight. Four s later the Buckeyes took ron downs. Iback Tom Wiesner, s leading rusher with the 173 LINEUPS CHIGAN ,'WISCONSIN :aentz LE ibson LT >ulos LG with C rring RG, chopf RT ihnson RE linka QB :cRae LH aimtey RH ureaud FB Carlson Huxhold Matthews Gotta Kulcinskl Perkins Richter Miller Norvell Kunesh Wiesner lanky signal caller has rushed for 95 more yards. Richter, a 6'6", 230-pound ball hawk, has been no less sensation- al than Miller. Against Michigan the big end is almost certain to break Wisconsin's all time pass receiving record for one season. To Break Rec6rd Richter has 24 receptions for 326 yards, and needs only two more to break the record set by halfback Jerry Witt in 1952. He also is nearing the school rec- ords, also set by Witt, for most passes caught in one Big Ten sea- son, 20, and the most yards gain- ed in Big Ten receptions, 371. Michigan's sophomore gallery of stars is led by quarterback Dave Glinka and halfback Dave Raim- ey. Glinka, the first sophomore to quarterback the Wolverines in 20 years, has completed 30 of 70 passes for 463 yards and four touchdowns. A cheering sign about Glinka was that he did not panic last week when under severe pressure by Minnesota's monstrous line. Leading Rusher was injured in the thirdI riod last week but has shown ill effects and will be able to .ay today. Reserve quarterback Jim Bak- n and tackle Brian Moore, each which saw only limited action gainst Ohio State, will also be Raimey is the team's leading lady for duty. ground gainer with 231 yards on 42 carries, for a 5.5 average. He Sophomore Battle has also grabbed three passes for Today's game holds the pros- 37 yards. ect of turning into a battle be- Elliott was unusually optimistic reen exciting sophomores. about his teams chances before The Wisconsin starting lineup leaving for Madison. oasts five sophomores, including "I'm sure we'll come back all iller, the conference's total of- right," he said. "We had a bad use leader, and end Pat Rich- day against Minnesota and never r, who has been on the receiv- got going. Minnesota's defense was ig end of most of his tosses. excellent and contained our run- Miller has attempted 114 passes ners. But we have a sophomore n the year and completed 61 of team and it's improving. Now iem for a rousing 867 yards and we've got to gather our forces and ye touchdowns. In addition the charge again." -Daily-David Giltrow STARTLING SOPHOMORE-Michigan's Dave Raimey, shown here being brought down by three Northwestern tacklers, is one in a gallery of sophomore stars that will be performing today at Camp Randle Stadium in Madison. Spartans, Buckeyes To Clash; Four Big TI .en Games Scheduled By BOB ROMANOFF Today's top Big Ten clash brings Ohio State's Buckeyes to East Lansing to battle the Spartans of Michigan State with both teams still fighting to stay alive in the title race. In other action Michigan travels to Wisconsin, Illinois is at Pur- titans, Chargers Defeat AFL Opponents; :eltics, Warriors Victors in NBA Tilts by The Associated Pres The Oakland Raiders, coming m behind three times, pushed er two touchdowns in the fourth riod last night and defeated the w York Titans, 28-27, while s Angeles crushed Boston, 45- in AFL action. A crowd of about 10,000, sitting ough a miserable drizzle at the o Grounds, saw Al Dorow, his ttered ribs padded and his in- ed ankle wrapped in tape, ect the entire New York attack. le passed for two touchdowns ding the Titans ahead twice. t, ironically, it was a fumble Dorow deep in the Titans' own ritory with less than a minute ' in the game that stalled their t ditch drive and gave the ,iders the victory. A pair of Pauls-Maguire and Lowe led Los Angeles to their victory.I Maguire led a rangy defense which smothered the' Patriots' attack until the game was out of reach, scoring once on a blocked kick and taking a big hand in another. Halfback Lowe, the ex-Oregon State flash, turned in a spec- tacular 76-yard scoring run in the second period and was a con- stant threat. Lowe also broke loose on a 68- yard gallop to the Boston 12 in the final period which led to a 14 yard field goal by Ben Agajan- ian. The Los Angeles triumph was a I complete reversal of Boston's 35-0 victory at Los Angeles earlier in the year. . , . Ed Conlin's field goal at the game-ending buzzer last night gave the Philadelphia Warriors a 122-120 victory in their home NBA opener over Los Angeles, and the Boston Celtics beat New York 110-101 at Madison Square Gar- den. Conlin, onetime Fordham star, joined the Warriors only two weeks ago in a trade that sent Ernie Beck and Woodie Saulds- berry to the St. Louis Hawks. His basket, giving him 10 points for the game, came on a 30-foot set, his fourth such long two-pointer. The Warriors led most of the way, spurting to a 44-36 advan- tage in the second quarter on 10 straight points in 2:10. Guy Rod- gers, who tallied 16, had six in the spree. Philadelphia led by 13 in the third quarter and had an 11- point lead 98-87 early in the fourth. .. due, and Indiana plays host to Northwestern. In non-Conference tilts Big Ten leader Iowa can "take it easy," if they dare, as Kansas invades the corn belt. Kansas State, meanwhile, takes on "monstrous" Minnesota. A near-capacity crowd is ex- pected to watch the Buckeyes and Spartans, each with one Big Ten loss marring their records in a Homecoming clash. Famous Formula Both teams will probably stick mainly to the ground with the Buckeyes using their famous for- mula of "four yards and a cloud of dust." The main guns of their attack are fullback Bob Ferguson and quarterback Tom Matte. These two have combined for 548 yards on the ground. If the ground attack falters Matte is also a proven passer with 15 comple- tions for 254 yards and three touchdowns. Leading the Spartan attack is fullback Bob Charon, and half- backs Herb Adderly and Gary Ballman. State's passing attack is fairly weak with Tom Wilson hav- ing completed only five of 14 for 93 yards. Early Favorite Illinois, one of the pre-season favorites, will be looking for its first win after two setbacks, against favored Purdue. The Boilermakers possess one of the Conference's top quarterbacks in Bernie Allen, who has completed 37 of 43 passes for 294 yards and one TD. He is also fourth in total offense with 334 yards gained. Another pre - season favorite, Northwestern, 1which has an 0-3 Big Ten record, will meet Indiana in a game which won't count in the standings. The Wildcat attack is led by quarterback Dick Thorn- ton and end Al Kimbrough. Looking Forward Iowa and Minnesota are likely to be looking forward to next week's clash with each other, and if that be the case,'the Hawkeyes in particular could be in for an unhappy surprise. They take on a strong Kansas team, which has lost only one game-to Syracuse, 14-7. Detroit QB Sparks Win DFTROIT (P) - Jerry Gross launched a one-man air assault that struck down the Quantco Marines and brought Detroit a 28-7 victory last night. The slender sophomore quarter- back, pressed into emergency ser- vice two weeks ago when regular Bob Lusky was hurt, performed like a seasoned veteran as he ac- counted for 294 yards and two touchdowns through the air. SCORE Miami (Fla.) 10, Boston College 7 The Gophers should have an easier time in their battle with Kansas State, who was mauled earlier in the season, 41-0, by Kansas, and are considered the doormats of the Big Eight Con- ference. LITTLE BEAVER SAYS: AL KIMBROUGH .. . Northwestern speedster Now is a good time to invite your parents in for Business instead A crowd of 10,142 saw the champion Celts win their second straight National Basketball As- sociation game as the Knicks went down to their fourth defeat in five starts. Sharman supplied the scoring impetus as Boston broke open a close game and pulled away in the final minutes. With Boston lead- ing 95-92, Sharman clicked on three one-handers and Frank Ramsey edded another basket to give the Celtics a 103-94 lead. 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