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September 24, 1961 - Image 7

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-09-24

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THMBER 24 ,1961THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wisconsin,

Purdue

Open

with

7

COLLEGE ROUNDUP:

Syracuse Rolls Again;
Duke Edges S. Carolina

Richter to Miller: 7-0 Win;
Boilermakers Edge Huskies

By The Associated Press
PORTLAND - Brawny Syracuse
lived up to its pre-season fore-
casts as one of the nation's foot-
ball powers by downing Oregon
State 19-8 yesterday.
Syracuse, ranked No. 10 in the
preseason poll, took advantage of
two Oregon State fumbles to score
touchdowns and added the clinch-
ing touchdown in the fourth quar-
ter march.
Ernie Davis, the tall, fleet, 210-
pound All - America candidate,
scored two of Syracuse's touch-
downs, and was the man the in-
vaders turned to when the Oregon
State line proved tough.
Repeatedly Davis ground out the
vital yards. When Syracuse had to
have one touchdown to insure the
victory, but lacked 18 yards, Davis
was called upon five successive
times. He banged through for
gains each time, needing only one
yard on his final plunge, early in
the fourth quarter.
* * *
Duke 7, South Carolina 6
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Duke sur-
vived an attack of fumbles and
scored with two minutes left last
night to whip underdog South
Carolina 7-6 in the Atlantic Coast
Conference opener for both teams.
Reserve halfback Dean Findley
kicked 26- and 37-yard field goals

for South Carolina, in the first
and fourth periods, to give the
battling Gamecocks what appeared
to be a safe lead.
With two minutes to play, how-
ever, quarterback Walt Rappold
directed the Dukes on a 50-yard
march that ended with, fullback
Red Burch plunging over from the
three for a touchdown. Halfback
Bill Reynolds kicked the extra
point that gave the Blue Devils
their third opener in six years
against South Carolina.
Penn State 20, Navy 10
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (P)-
Sophomore quarterback Don Caum
picked up a faltering Penn State
offense yesterday to thwart Navy's
bid for an upset, 20-10.
For three quarters the Navy line
led by end Greg Mather contained
the Nittany Lions offense except
for senior halfback Don Jonas.
Jonas scored State's first touch-
down on a 6-yard sprint around
end, kicked the extra point and
later added two field goals as
State struggled fitfully against the
two-touchdown underdogs.
Until Caum's entry in the final
quarter, however, the Lions, rated
in pre-season forecasts as the
leading contender for Navy's East-
ern championship, couldn't find
the right offensive combination.

HALF OF THE COMBO-Perhaps it's a good thing for Bump
Elliott that Michigan doesn't play Wisconsin this year and here
is half the reason--Ron Miller. He and his cohort, Pat Richter,
were up to their old tricks yesterday as Wisconsin downed Utah,
7-0.
4

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Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE

By The Associated Press
MADISON-Wisconsin's highly
touted passing combination of
Ron Miller and Pat Richter' click-
ed on a five-yard scoring maneu-
ver enabling the Badgers to edge
stubborn Utah 7-0 yesterday in
a sloppy football meeting on a
rain soaked field.
Miller, a senior quarterback who
led the Big Ten in passing and in
total offense last season, lobbed'
a soft aerial to Richter in the
second period and Wisconsin made
the touchdown stand up for a
triumph in its 1961 opener.
Five Goals Missed
The payoff toss capped a 27-
yard march in five plays after
Bill Hess intercepted a Utah pass
late in the first quarter. Hess
picked up a loose ball on the 31
after halfback Jerry Overton ap-
parently had the pass knocked
out of his hands. Wisconsin wasl
unable to capitalize on several
other scoring chances. Its attack
sputtered at! key times and Jim
Bakken, the placekicking special-
ist, missed five field goal attempts
from the 46, 12, 16, 39 and 27.
Two Interceptions
In addition, Miller had two
passes intercepted when the Badg-
ers had the ball deep in Utah
territory in the final period.
Utah, which rolled over Colo-
rado State 40-0 in its opener a
week ago, was unable to crack the
Wisconsin defense. The Utesalso
were handicapped by penalties,
especially in the second period
when they reached the Wisconsin
and then weredset back on two
straight 15-yard infractions.
The Badgers, who launch their
Big Ten season against Michigan
State next Saturday, netted 170
yards on the ground to 128 for
Utah. Wisconsin also had an edge
in the air with 101 yards to 72,
SEATTLE-Two field goals and
a 30-yard touchdown run in the
first 20 minutes of play gave Pur-
due a lead yesterday and a rug-
ged Boilermaker defense made it
stand up for a 13-6 intersectional
football victory over the Huskies
of Washington.
This was Washington's first de-
feat since Navy edged out the
Huskies 15-14 early last season.
The string of eight victories had
included a 17-7 decision over Min-
nesota in the Rose Bowl.
Capacity Crowd
But the bowl stars had gone
the graduation route and a capa-
city crowd of 55,000 saw the Boil-
ermakers chop huge holes in a
Washington line which last year
was all but impenetrable.
Purdue backs scampered
through the gaps for fat gains in
the opening quarter and the dam-
age was done before the Huskies
could close ranks.
Two Field Goals
Omer Ohl, a junior guard from
Champaign, Ill., booted the two
field goals and kicked the con-
version point after Dave Miller's
30-yard touchdown canter.

-i
-- - - - -

rr

x-New York
Detroit
Baltimore
Chicago
Cleveland
Boston
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Kansas City
Washington
x-Clinched

W L Pct. GB
105 51 .673-
95 59 .617 9
91 65 .583 14
84 71 .542 20Y/2
75 80 .484 29Y/2
73 82 .471 31Y2
69 84 .451 34Y/2
66 88 .429 38
58. 96 .377 46
57 97 .370 47
pennant.

Ii

i

,

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YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 8, Boston 3
Washington 6-0, Minnesota 4-10
Cleveland 9, Kansas City S
Detroit 4, Los Angeles 2
Baltimore at Chicago, rain
TODAY'S GAMES
Detroit at Los Angeles
Baltimore at Chicago
New York at Boston
Washington at Minnesota
Cleveland at Kansas City

NATIONAL

.i

Cincinnati
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Chicago
Philadelphia

LEAGUE
W L Pct.
91 58 .611
86 61 .585
81 66 .551
78 69 .531
77 71 .520
70 76 .483
61 87 .412
46 102 .306

GB
4
9
12
13%
20
29%
45

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YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Cincinnati 10, San Francisco 6
Milwaukee 6, Chicago 3 (6 inn., sec-
ond game postponed)
Los Angeles 8, St. Louis 5
Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 4
TODAY'S GAMES
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
San Francisco at Cincinnati
Chicago at Milwaukee
Los Angeles at St. Louis

MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
Reds Cut Magic Number;
Mantle Hits 54th Homer

CATAL I NA
CARD IGANS
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' By The Associated Press
Cincinnaticut its "magic num-
ber" to three for clinching the
National League pennant yester-
day by beating San Francisco 10-6
while Los Angeles was whipping
St. Louis 8-5.
Any combination of three Red
victories or Dodger defeats would
put Cincinnati into the World
Series. Cincinnati has five games
to play, Los Angeles seven.
Roger Maris had to settle for a
single. Mickey Mantle hit his 54th
homer and Whitey Ford won his
25th game for the New York Yan-
kees who already are assured of
the American League pennant.
The Yanks whipped Boston any-
how 8-3 with Ford pitching five
innings, Jim Coates three and Luis
Arroyo one.
Coleman Smashes Two
Gordy Coleman smashed two I
home runs and drove in five tuns
in the 12-hit Cincinnati attack on
loser Jim Duffalo and his parade
of successors. Coleman's homers
were his 24th' and 25th, both
coming off Duffalo.
Jim O'Toole, an important fig-
ure in World Series pitching plans,
built his record to 18-9 with some
help from Jim Brosnan in the
eighth.
Ed Bailey, traded by the Reds
to the Giants this season, bumped
into his own third baseman as a
pop foul fell safely. Bailey also ran
to the dugout after ,a force play
and was tagged out, apparently
thinking his force out was the
+hi.A

I

"mn

were the big guns for the Dodgers
as they broke Larry Jackson's
six-game winning streak. Four
Cardinal errors helped Los Angeles
come from behind with two runs
in the seventh and four in the
eighth.

L"

Student Government Council

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PETITIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE
From. the offices of Student Government Council
First floor of the Student Activities Building
FOR TWO SEATS ON THE COUNCIL
TERMS EXPIRING NOVEMBER, 1961
ALL FULL-TIME STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
A "A r r FI I/'II"I " T "%" i'" I /"A

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