1964' THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Gridders Show Pr omise in Finale By LLOYD GRAFF It was a great day for a pic- nic and Michigan offense had one -the Blue tallied 61 points in the Wolverines' final spring foot- ball scrimmage. It was exactly 61 more points than the Wolverines could man- age in last year's scoreless finale. The scoreboard showed the Whites squeaking by the Blues 32-29. Dick Vidmer, a highly-regard- ed freshman quarterback from Jeanette, Pa., figuredz in four touchdowns as he paced the White team to victory. He scored the game winner with two minutes remaining on an 11-yard keeper play, set up by a 43-yard pass to end Steve Smith. Frosh Sparkle Freshmen figured prominently in the game, particularly in the backfield. Besides Vidmer, Rich Volk and Wally Gabler distin- guished themselves at quarterback. Volk, playing for the Blues, car- ried twice for 27 yards and com- pleted two of four passes for another 84. Sixty-four of the yards came on a flat pass to halfback Mike Bass, another freshman, who gathered it in at midfield and raced for the score. Gabler, another Blue, threw for 100 yards, completing four of six ;asses. His most spectacular toss came in the fourth period when he lofted a long bomb which Cap- tain Jim Conley grabbed for a 47- yard gain. Freshman Dave Fisher, playing for the Whites, gave veterans Mel Anthony and Barry Dehlin fair warning that he means business at fullback, totalling 86 yards on 16 carries for a 5.4 average. Slow Start The game, played before about 3000 springtime fans, started slow- ly. Both teams moved theball with neither squad able to mount a scoring threat. Finally in the sec- ond quarter the Whites pushed to within striking distance on the strength of a series of rollouts and pitchbacks by Vidmer. With 10:44 Left in the second period the frosh quarterback rolled to his left, and ust as he was about to be flat- tened flipped to the trailing half- jack, Jack Clancy, who scooted 10 yards for the TD. The Whites used the same kind of strategy to rack up another score five minutes later. Vidmer bulled over from the two. Come Back The Blues came alive in the see- ond half through the air. Craig Kirby snared nine passes from as- sorted quarterbacks for 132 yards. The 64-yard Volk-to-Bass throw FRESHMAN HALFBACK Jim Detwiler looks for yardage over the sprawled out figure of fullback Mel Anthony in yesterday's final spring scrimmage. Detwiler is one of a crew of freshman backs who figure prominently in Coach Bump Elliott's '64 plans. UNSPECTACULAR: Michigane Lin ers Lose Three of Four made the score 12-7. Then an eight-yard Vidmer-to- Ben Farabee aerial boosted the White margin to 18-7. Then Bob Timberlake followed by clicking for three straight com- pletions for the, Blue to Kirby, ending up at the four. Timberlake went over the goal, line himself. Mel Anthony scored a two-point ,onversion and the score was 18- 15, White, with 13:25 remaining in the game. The Whites stormed back with another score as Pete Hollis quar- terbacked a 70-yard touchdown drive. Two passes to freshman end Clayton Wilhite kept the drive going and a third for eight yards was good for the score. Barry Dehlin popped over for two points, mnaking the score 26-15 for the Whites. The, Blues came back immedi- ately as Gabler ran back the kickoff 25 yards to the 42. Then Mel Anthony darted through the line and outran the secondary for a 58-yard touchdown run. The Blues got possession of the ball after four downs. Gabler threw to Kirby twice for 3 yards, then Bass zipped over from the four making it 29-26 Blue with five minutes left. The Blue lead was short-lived; however, as Vidmer kept on the )ption for an 11-yard touchdown run for the decisive White six points. TOP NAG Dancer Cops Derby Win LOUISVILLE, Ky. (P)-Northern Dancer, ridden by Bill Hartack, held off the closing rush of favor- ite Hill Rise yesterday and won the 90th running of the Kentucky Derby in track and Derby record time of two minutes flat. It was the fourth Kentucky Derby victory for Hartack and the first ever for a Canadian-bred colt. Northern Dancer, a winner by a neck, is owned by E. P. Tay- lor of Toronto. With the controversal Hartack beating a steady tatoo on the flanks of the Canadian-owned Northern Dancer, the small son of Nearctic, took the lead a quarter of a mile from home. Hill Rise, ridden by Willie Shoe- maker, challenged at that point but he was unable to catch the flying Dancer who went under the wire a neck in front.J 41i.t --- rK' AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION Guitar Studio Herb David Instruments new and used Repair, rent accessories Guitars, lutes and Baroque instruments 209 S. State St. 665-8001 1209 S. University 663-7151 I Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's varsity golf team played unspec- tacular golf here yesterday aft- ernoon as they dropped three of their four matches with Big Ten opponents. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer saw "just flashes of hope" as the Wolverines managed to grab its first conference victory of the year by downing last year's Big Ten runnerup Wisconsin, 930-950, in a six-man match. In the other matches, the Wol- verines pitted nine men against the host Spartans and lost, 1407- 1390; they dropped the seven- man match with Indiana, 1088- 1067; and were defeated in their ether six-man meet with North- western, 930-926. According to K a t z e nmeyer, "Most of the team played accept- able golf, yet we're still not shoot- ing as well as we should be." Captain Gary Mouw was team medalist with a 77-75-152, and was followed by sophomore Bill Newton, 74-80 - 154. Newton's morning round was the lowest for Jhe squad in the tournament with Mouw and Eric Dollenberg run- nersup with 75's in the afternoon. Yesterday's performance was much like the Wolverines' two weeks ago when they finished last in a field of four at Co- lumbus. Katzenmeyer pommented, 'We just missed a whale of a lot of golf shots again. I think there's a lot of potential on that team, but I just haven't seen it. I'm not ready to 'blame the poor weather, yet, for anything, but it sure hasn't helped us." Other scores for Michigan were Tom Clark, 77-78--155; Frosty Evashevski, 77-78-155; Dollen- erg, 81-75-156; Pete Passink, 80- 77-157; Chuck West, 81-76-157; Mark Yahn, 78-80-158; and Jim Evashevski, 80-83--163. Paul Williams of Indiana was the 36-hole medalist over the pat 71 Forest Akers course with a 73- 73-146. Wisconsin's Bill Iverson aad the best 18-hole round, a 70 in the afternoon. Michigan's first home match of the season will be next Saturday May 9, with Ohio State and Pur- due. ASHAWAY PRO-FECTED For Club Play Approx, Stringing Cost Tennis. . Badmnton ... ...$6 I NSTANT ILENKCE STUDY ANYTIME ANYWHERE Sound attenuators as uti- lized by military and commercial jet aircraft ground crew personnel are the perfect solution. For information write: Academic Aids P.O. Box 969 Berkeley 1, Calif. ) i r G r i r i f' STEAK AND SHAKE STRIP STEAK-$1.30 FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP-$1.25 Potato Salad, Bread, Butter 1313 South University iJ PETITIONING NOW OPEN FOR I I