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October 11, 1964 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-10-11

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1964

THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1964

Smashes Illinois, 26-0,

To Gain Big Ten Lead

with fullback Willard Sander, 215-
State, pound junior, pounding through
_mh effectively.

t-

Om-

criw-
e of-
. keep
ost to
years.
. back
Jim
-and
with
from

Sander scored two touchdowns,
plunging across from the one in
the second period, and carrying
five times in succession in the
third quarter to move the ball
from the Illini 20 into the end
zone, his final smash covering'
four yards for a touchdown.
Unferverth started the scoring
for the fourth-ranked Bucks when
he rolled out 24. yards for a touch-
down in Ohio State's first scrim-
mage play. The scoring play was
set up when the Bucks' John Fill
returned a pass interception 48
yards in the first period.
* * *
Iowa Tops Indiana
BLOOMINGTON - Iowa rolled
to a seemingly comfortable lead
on Gary Snook's passes and a pair
of Indiana fumbles and then stood,
off the Hoosiers' furious come-

back for a 21-20 victory.
It was the unbeaten Hawk-
eyes' opening game of the Big Ten
football campaign and a bitter
third straight conference loss for
Indiana.
Indiana, down 21-6 going into
the fourth period, fought back two
touchdowns and gambled on two-
point conversions; making the
first but missing by inches on the
crucial go-ahead try.
getting sharp passing and run-
ning from', Richie Badar winless
Indiana drove twice more toward
victory, but a fumble on Iowa's
25-yard line killed one thrust. An
Iowa fumble gave the Hoosiers
another chance, but the Iowa de-
fense stopped them on the 10 as
time ran out.
Dave Moreland was the key man
in the Iowa defense, stopping
Badar 'inches: from 'the goal line
on the Hoosiers' second two-point
conversion attempt and then re-
covering the fumble that ended
their next march.

Snook threw 40 passes, hitting
18 for 263 yards. The most vital
one was a nine-yarder to Dick'
O'Hara for the clinching touch-
down in the third period. Snook
also scored on a touchdown on a
one-yard plunge, and Gary Simp-
son booted each of the three con-
version attempts to provide the
winning margin.
Gophers Win
MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota
held off Northwestern, rallying
behind reserve quarterback Dave
Milam in the fourth quarter, and
clung to a 21-18 victory over the
Wildcats on the strength of Mike.
Reid's three extra point kicks.
Northwestern had two conver-
sion passes go incomplete on its
first two touchdowns and missed
a kick attempt on its final score.
The Wildcats had two late
chances but couldn't get out of
their own territory.

Tom Myers, who sprained an Purdue Victorious
ankle late in the first half and
only came in to punt in the sec- LAFAYETTE - Purdue mixed
ond half, passed on a fake punt sharp passing, hard running and
with 4/ minutes to go but if a sticky pass defense yesterday
was batted down. for an unexpectedly easy 28-7
Then the Cats had an aerial football victory over Wisconsin in
by Milam intercepted by Willie the Big Ten opener for both teams.
Costanzta with 1:59 remaining to
blunt their last threat. nGordon Teter, 180-pound junior
The Gophers boomed ahead 21- halfback, rammed over two touch-
12 early in the fourth quarter downs on short runs,.young quar-
when John Hankinson ran a two- terback Bob Griese passed seven
yard sneak to cap a 76-yard drive. ! yards to Bob Hadrick for another
But Northwestern bounced right and guard Bill Howard wrapped
back to streak 76 yards, with Mi- it up on a 23-yard dash with an
lam's 48-yard pass to Cas Banas- intercepted pass.
zeh setting up a touchdown. Wisconsin got its onlytouch-
Milam took over for Myers and down on the prettiest play of the
got Northwestern a touchdown ,ame, a 24-yard pass from left-
on a 38-yard pass to Dick Smith hander Harold Brandt to end
with 10 seconds left in the first James Jones.
half. That trimmed the Gophers'
halftime margin to 14-6 after Purdue grabbed tiree Wiscon-
Minnesota had counted on short sin passes int the la t quarter as
runs by Reid and Hankinson. the Badgers realized they had no
Milam cut the gap, to 14-12 chance on the ground against the
midway of the third quarter on a massive Boilermaker defense pla-
26-yard pass to Smith. toon.

1

wed little respect
pair of lineback-
and Ron Hansen
s turned to call-
when necessary

GARY SNOOK

TOM MYERS

Ten Standings
Conference

1

NATIONAL ROUNDUP:
Undefeated Texas Rolls Over Oklahoma

All Games

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20
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70
62
83
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60
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66
52

'urgh Drops Cleveland
condP e in NFL

|LAND'(P) - Pounding
isly on the ground, the
h Steelers beat the Cleve-
wns 22-7 before a crowd
last night and dropped
ns to second place in the
Division race of the Na-
>otball League.
Henry Johnson, a full-'
o ran like a halfback,
three touchdowns and
e best single game rush-
t this season in the NFL.
Johnson Scores
n tallied on dashes of
5 yards and plunged four
r another score. He pick-
00 yards in 30 carries.
;ed a 137-yard effort by
MIason of the Minnesota
on Sept. 13. It was also
rushing record, topping
record of 182 yards in
eelers took a 10-0 lead in
quarter and were never
le. Mike Clark kicked a
field goal and Johnson
the middle for a 33-yard
vn. The big fullback dash-
ds in the second quarter,
the Browns' defensive
y in a' race to the corner
Browns Stopped
for an 18-yard touch
55s from Frank Ryan to
l dins in the second quar-
Steeler defense stopped
vns cold in the first half,
p 'only five first downs.
,elers used seven minutes
yard touchdown drive in
- quarter, with Johnson
to the end zone from the
d line.
3teelers rushed for 354
hile holding the Browns'

First Loss
The Browns' first loss leaves
them with a 3-1-1 record. The
Steelers, 3-2, are third. The St.
Louis Cardinals, first in the East
with a 3-0-1 mark, play the Balti-
more Colts tomorrow night. The
Colts are Western Division leaders.
SCORES'

GRID PICKS SCORES
MICIGAN 17, MSU.10
Notre Dame 34, Air Force 7
Penn State'6, Army 2
Ohio State 26, 'Ilinois 0
Iowa 21, Indiana 20
Minnesota 21, Northwestern 18
Purdue 28, ,Wisconsin 7
Nebraska 28, South Carolina 6
Syracuse 39, UCLA 0
Texas 28, Oklahoma 7
USC 31, Texas A&M 7
Pittsburgh 14, West Virginia 0
Yale 15, Brown 7
Kansas 42, Iowa State 6
Missouri 7, Kansas State 0
Wyoming 14, Utah 13
Florida 30, Mississippi 14
-Alabama 21, North Carolina State 0
Florida State 48, Kentucky 6
Arkansas 17, Baylor 6
OTHER SCORES
Oklahoma State 14, Colorado 10
0Ohio U. 20, Toledo 12
Princeton 37, Dartmouth 7
Harvard 3, Columbia 0
Oregon State 9, Washington 7
Stanford 34, Rice 7
Virginia 20, VMI 19 ,
Duke 24, Maryland 17
Georgia 19, Clemson 7
Tennessee 16, Boston College 14
William & Mary 21, Furman 14
Utah State 51, Wichita 7
Washington St.50, Univ. of Pacific 0
Oregon 14, Idaho 8
ViUanova 34, Detroit 0
Mississippi State 17, Tulane 6
Colgate 10, Holy Cross 0
Temple 44, Boston University 13
Cornell 33, Penn 0
Rutgers 20, Lehigh 7
Massachusetts 30, Coknecticut 0

By The Associated Press
DALLAS -- Texas, the nation's
No. 1 team, used two fumbles and
an intercepted pass to get three
'touchdowns, then drove 60 yards
under the power of Harold Phil-
lipp for 'another yesterday to
smash Oklahoma 28-7 and roll on
undefeated and untied through 15
games.
For a half the Jittery Sooners,
gave Texas one of the roughest
afternoons in the history of this
64-year-old intersectional game.
Carl McAdams intercepted a
pass to set up the Oklahoma
touchdown, running from the 22
to the 15. Lance Rentzel and Jim
Grisham hammered to the two
and Rentzel then circled end for
the touchdown.,
But Texas tied it up :early in
the second period when Olen Un-
derwood recovered .a fumble on
the Oklahoma 44. Phil Harris'
23-yard run was the big punch,
placing the ball on the Sooner 10.
Marv Kristynik executed a great
fake and handed off to Ernie
:Koy, who ran untouched to the
score.
Texas shot into the lead in the
third period when linebacker
Timmy Doerr intercepted John
Hammond's pass and scatted to
the Oklahoma 23. Phillipp raced
to the 14 and after a five-yard
penalty set Texas back, rammed
to the 15. Harris took a pitchout
and raced to a touchdown.
* * *
Irish Romp
AIR FORCE ACADEMY-Sixth-
ranked Notre Dame, surprised by
Air Force scoring the first touch-
down on an interception, calmly'
took charge in the second period
and chewed up the Falcons.34-7
in their first football game yes-
terday before a record 44,384 fans
in Falcon Stadium.
Air Force halfback 'Jeff Jarvis,
running at full speed, stole quar-
terback John Huarte's third down
pass on the Irish 23 and sprinted
untouched into the end zone less
than five minutes after the open-
ing kickoff. It was Air Force's only
moment of glory.
The unbeaten' Irish regrouped
and five minutes later tied the
score 7-7 on Nick Eldy's 46-yard
touchdown trip through left tackle
behind a wall of blockers. Eldy
outran two Air Force tacklers in
the last 10 yards 'down the side-
line.

Notre Dame, unleashing'
power that earlier crushed
consin and Purdue, cruisedt

second touchdown on a 72-yard
march in 13 plays in the second
period.
Huarte kept the drive rolling
with a 19-yard pass to Jack Snow
on third down with 13 to go. The
play carried to Air Force's 33.
Another Huarte third down pass
to Phil Sheridan, this time with
10 to go, carried the Irish to Air
Force's nine and three plays later
Huarte sneaked a yard into the
end zone.
The Irish seized on two .des-
peration passes by Air Force early
in the fourth quarter and turned
them into touchdowns that made
the contest a rout.
* * *
Kentucky Dumped
TALLAHASSEE-Florida State=
University took complete com-
mand of fifth-ranked Kentucky
yesterday, scored in every quar-
ter and waltzed to a 48-6 victory.
Kentucky averted a shutout in
the final 30 seconds when Frank
Antonini bulled over from the
five and got the first touchdown
off Florida State this season.
Steven Teni, Florida State's 6-
foot-5 quarterback, passed for two
touchdowns to his favorite target,
Fred Biletnikoff, and halfback
Phil Spooner broke through for
two more as FSU made a strong
bid for national rankings.,
* * *
Army Beaten
WEST POINT - P e n n State
marched 62 yards for its only
touchdown yesterday, then came
up with a tremendous goal line
stand in the dying minutes to up-.
set Army 6-2, snapping a three-
game losing streak.
The fired-up Nittany Lions,
after losing their first three
games, stopped the Black Knights
dead on the Penn State two-yard
line with less than two minutes
to play.
Four plays later, Penn State
punter Frank Hershey allowed
himself to be tackled in the end
zone, giving the Cadets their only
two points, a safety.
The strategy paid off. Hershey
kicked off after the safety and
guard John Runnells intercepted
an Army pass on the Penn State
24 as the final buzzer sounded.
Halfback Bob Riggle scored the
Lions' touchdown in the third

the
Wis-
to a.

quarter, smashing over from the
two climaxing the. 62-yard march.
But Gerry Sanker's conversion at-
tempt was wide to his left.
A record crowd of 32,268 jam-
med Michie Stadium to watch the
defense battle as the Nittany Lions'
handed the Cadets their second,
loss in four ,games for 1964.
Quarterback C a r 1 Stichweh,
Army's "Mr. Everything," brought
the fans to their feet in the final
quarter, controlling the ball for
more than' eight minutes as the
Black Knights marched from their
own 20 to the State two.'
On the next play, guard Bob
Kane nailed tailback Mark Ham-
ilton for a one-yard loss. Two
Stichweh passes fell incomplete
in the end zone to give Penn State
the ball.
*' * *
Washington Loses
PORTLAND - Oregon State's
hard-charging defense set up a
touchdown and a field goal, and
then blunted every Washington
threat for a 9-7 upset in the Pa-
cific Athletic Conference yester-
day,
It was the third loss of the sea-
son for Washington, which had
been rated as a possible Rose
Bowl team earlier.
The victory was the third of the
season for Oregon State and
pushed the Beavers into position
as a Rose Bowl contender. It was
the first conference game for the
Beavers, newly admitted to the
loop.
A pass interception by Dan Es-
palin gave Oregon State the ball
on the Washington 39 early in
the first period and Oregon State
pushed over from there.
After Washington drove 66
yards to take a 7-6 lead, Oregon
State used another interception
to set up a field goal.
Taking the ball on the Wash-
ington 19, Oregon State drove to
the one. Stopped there, Oregon
State drove back minutes later for
a 23-yard field goal by Steve Clark
which was decisive.
* * '*
Missouri Wins
MANHATTAN, Kan.-- Missouri
scored early and held off stub-
born Kansas State to get its first
Big Eight football victory 7-0 in
a hard hitting defensive battle
yesterday.
K-State dominated the rest of
the first half after the Missouri

touchdown. Missouri turned back
three scoring threats and kept the
Wildcats well in check in the last
half.
It was Kansas State's first con-
ference defeat. Missouri n o w
stands 1-1 in the conference and
2-2 for' all games while Kansas
State has won one in the league
and is 1-2 for the season.
* * *
Alabama Victorious
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Second-
string quarterback Steve Sloan
directed Alabama to a 21-0 vic-
tory over North Carolina State
yesterday in a battle of unbeaten
football teams.
Sloan, called on to replace Joe
Namath when the Crimson Tide
star twisted his knee in the sec-
ond quarter, scored one touch-
down and passed for another.
It was the fourth straigt t vic-
tory for third-ranked Alabama
and its third straight over North
Carolina State, which had a per-
fect record.
Namath did not play in the
second half, but the Alabama of-
fense didn't need him. Sloan sent
a host of hard-running backs
through the State line and when
resistance stiffened, he went into
the air.
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4

,,.

---

I

----- - ---- -

11

The

MIC HIGAN

BANDS

present

Dung Lovers

3t every
iould tell
fatherI

'd

i

Friday, Oct. 16

8:30 P. M

Ticket SalesBegi
Tomorrow, a,.m.
At Hill Auditorium

_: i

S ^

0 MAINE . rte

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