100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 18, 1964 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-10-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE :SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1964

A

THE MICHIGAN DAiLY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1964

NATIONAL ROUNDUP:
Notre Dame Shuts Out UCLA

Ohio State

Smashes

By The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND - John Huarte
passed for two touchdowns as
fourth-ranked Notre Dame flash-
ed a powerful blend of air and
ground power and whipped UCLA.
24-0 yesterday.
The unbeaten fighting Irish,
capturing their fourth victory,
drove 63 yards in 11 running plays '
to score the first time they got
the ball,
Theynturned a pass interception
into another touchdown in the
second period for a 12-0 halftime
lead.
Then they iced it in the third'
by converting two of four recov-
ered Larry Zeno fumbles into
touchdowns.
Bill Wolski's 19-yard smash
keyed the first scoring drive, cap-
ped by Wolski's one-yard crash.
Syracuse Beats Penn St.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - A
38-yard pass interception return
by Roger Smith set up a last min-
ute touchdown by Walley Mahle,,
giving seventh-ranked Syracuse a
hard earned 21-14 football victory
over Penn State yesterday.
Smith snared the errant pass
on his 40-yard line and raced to
the Penn State 22. Seven plays
later, Mahle scored from the four
with just 37 seconds left.

Nittany Lions combined a rugged
defense with a touch of surprise
to take a 14-7 halftime lead.
But Syracuse, 4-1, unleashed its
vaunted ground attack in the third
period behind the running of
Floyd Little and Jim Nance to
march 64 yards for the tying
touchdown. Nance carried over
from the five and Smith booted
the extra point, knotting the count
14-14.
Virginia Stuns Army
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - In-
credible Virginia, turning savage
on defense, converted five Army
mistakes into points yesterday
and shot down the blundering
Cadets 35-14 .in a major football
upset.
Stunned when Army's Rollie
Stichweh scooped up a fumble
on the game's first play from
scrimmage and ran 74 yards for a
touchdown, the twice-beaten Cav-'
aliers pulled themselves together,
and never gave the Cadets anoth-
er chance.
* * *
Oklahoma Upset, 15-14
LAYRENCE, Kan. - Kansas
scored an amazing 15-14 victory
over Oklahoma yesterday when
Bob Skahan went 26 yards to score
on a screen pass as the game
ended and Mike Johnson got the
winning two-point conversion on
a double reverse.

By The Associated Press
This climaxed a miracle finish COLUMBUS - Ohio State's
in which the Jayhawks moved 92 second-ranked Buckeyes shot down
yards in the last 47 seconds on Southern California's air attack
six plays, the first five passes by and sent fullback Willard Sander
Skahan, a sophomore quarterback. on a ground-eating rampage yes-
Gale Sayers of Kansas ran the terday in defeating the Trojans
opening kickoff 93 yards for a 17-0 before 84,315 paying custom-
touchdown, but Oklahoma domi- ers and a nationwide television
nated the game until the astound- audience.

ing finish before 44,000 fans.
* * *
Nebraska Routs K. St.I
LINCOLN, Neb.-Nebraska half-
back Kent McCloughan raced 69
yards to a first quarter touchdown
yesterday and set in motion a
scoring parade that carried the
sixth-ranked Cornhuskers to a 47-'
0 Big Eight football triumph over
Kansas State.
Not a hand was laid on the 6-2
senior as. he snatched a pitchout
from quarterback Bob Churchich
and sprinted down the sidelines
before a record homecoming crowd
of 45,800.
It was Nebraska's 12th conse-
cutive victory in a string dating
back to last season and set a
school record of 28 consecutive
games in which Cornhuskers have
scored. K-State has won one game
in four starts this season.
Duke Wins, 35-3
DURHAM, N.C.-Duke took a
giant step toward the Atlantic
Coast Conference football crown
yesterday by trouncing North
Carolina State 35-3 behind a with-
ering ground attack and firm de-
fense.
It was the first conference loss
for State, which now is 3-1 in
the ACC and 3-2 overall,
The Blue Devils hurled a trio
of hard running backs at State's
out-manned defense and advanced
to a 13-3 lead at halftime. The
winners scored three more touch-
downs in the fourth period, one on

It was Ohio State's fourth
straight conquest, Southern Cali-
fornia's first shutout in 25 games
and the crowd was the third larg-
est ever to make the Buckeye
Stadium bulge at its seams.
The Ohians, seeking to avenge
last year's 32-3 loss to the Tro-
jans, most one-sided defeat suf-
fered by Coach Woody Hayes in
his 14 years here, marched 64
yards in 15 plays for a score the
first time they had the ball.
Sander, the 215-pound junior
fullback from Cincinnati who
gained 120 yards as he carried 29
times, plunged the last two yards
for the counter.
In the second period, Don Un-
verferth passed 10 yards to Greg
Lashutka for the second Ohio
score after Tom Iiehfuss had re-
covered Mike Garrett's fumble on
the 10. The Bucks put the icing on
the cake with Bob Funk's 24-yard
field goal, his sixth of the year, as
a 75-yard drive was stalled.
Southern Cal's biggest threats
were snuffed out by three pass
interceptions and two fumbles and
its nearest bid to score was erased
by a peculiar penalty.
The victory left the Buckeyes
tied with Purdue for first place in
the Big Ten with 2-0 records.
* * -
Spartans Dumped
BLOOMINGTON - Rich Badar
rose from the depths to the
heights yesterday and passed and
ran Indiana to a 27-20 Big Ten
football victory over Michigan
State.
The Hoosiers, beaten. in three
straight conference games, came
from 13 points behind late in the
second quarter and won in the
face of near-perfect passing by
Michigan State's Steve Juday, who
hit 16 of 20 tosses and pitched for
all three Spartan touchdowns.
However, Juday's only pass in
the third quarter was intercepted
by Ken Hollister of Indiana, and
two fumbles in the fourth quarter
killed the Spartans' last hopes and

Trojans,
Illinois pilfered four of Peter- the Wisc
asses theasecond half when suing ki
theGopershad the ball only bled ther
seven times. , ed at the
The Illini turned a steal of the Snook,
ball by Butkus and a pass inter- the nati
ception by Dave Mueller into sec- needed o
ond quarter touchdowns. Rich O'l
Butkus stole the ball from the the lank
Gophers' Mike Reid at the Minne- complete
sota 35 late in the first period.
Illinois scored in seven plays with Nor
Grabowski ramming over from the
one on the first play of the second EVANS
quarter. mann, a
*i threw tou
Badgers Triumph 54 yards
of Ohio t
MADISON - Wisconsin com- Northwes
bined a crushing ground attack Kellerr
powered by Ralph Kurek and an the seco:
alert defense in knocking Iowa John Ei
from the undefeated ranks 31-21 touchdow:
yesterday in a stunning Big Ten skins af
football upset. then held
Stung by two Iowa touchdowns ran for
within 20 seconds late in the first Redskins
half, the Badgers stormed back vantage.
after the intermission to hold Northw
Hawkeye passing ace Gary Snook touchdow
in check and score three times for ter with
their second victory in four starts. for hist
Wisconsin, which showed little game wit
punch in being routed by Notre minutes
Dame and Purdue, ripped Iowa tempted
defenses with a rushing assault but Ed
that staggered the Hawkeyes, who Tommy
had won three straight.Thy
Kurek, running with reckless The t
abandon for the first time since downs in
he helped the Badgers to the con- play but
ference title as a sophomore two in positio
years ago, piled up 103 yards in After c
29 carries. The 205-pound fullback Northwes
scored one touchdown on a one- kick. T
yard plunge which nailed down the with Mia
triumph. Wildcat
The Badgers, who missed three touchdow
field goal attempts in the first ing on t.
half, jumped into a 10-0 second Northw
period lead on a 35-yard three- the pass
point boot by Gary Pinnow and a the fin
20-yard pass from Hal Brandt to Campbel
1 Lou Jung. from the
However, Snook rallied his point pa
charges with his passing, directing Mike Do
s a 74-yard march, capped by Dal- the Mian
ton Kimble's slant off tackle from one poin

onsin three. On the en-
ikoff A Ron Smith fum-
return and Iowarecover-
Badger 35.
who enterd the game as
on's sixth ranked passer,
nly one play. He spotted
Hara, fired a strike and
:y end pulled away to
the scoring maneuver.
* * *
thwestern Upset
STON - Ernie Keller-
scrambling quarterback,
uchdown passes of 49 and
yesterday, leading Miami
to a major 28-27 upset of
stern.
mann turned the tide in
rd quarter when he hit
risman with a 54-yard
Nn pass to put the Red-
head 19-13. Kellermann
d a faked kick, got up and
two points, giving the
a 21-13 halftime ad-
western put on a 91-yard
n drive in the final quar-
Steve Murphy plunging
third touchdown of the
th a little more than seven
to play. Northwestern at-
to pass to tie the game
Philpott knocked down
Myers' pass.
wo teams traded touch-
in the final minutes of
the Wildcats were never
on to take the lead.
closing the gap to 21-19,
stern tried an on-side
he maneuver backfired
ami taking over on the
45 and driving for a
wn with bon Peddie carry-
he final five yards.
western roared back on,
ing of Tommy Myers for
al touchdown. Woody
1 scored it by going over
e two-yard line. A two-
ass play from Myers to
naldson only helped cut

17-0

A

-Associated Press
INDIANA'S KEN HOLLISTER (70) applies a headlock to stop
Michigan State's Eddie Cotton (44) one yard short of the goal
line during the first half of yesterday's contest. Indiana, in win-
ning its first game of the season dealt the Spartans their second
Big Ten loss.

Syracuse, rated No. 1 in
East, had its hands full as

the
the

Texas Upset by Arkansas, 14-13
AUSTIN, Tex. ()-Top-ranked Texas, fighting for a na-
tional football championship, gambled on a two-point conver-
sion attempt in the closing minutes last night and lost, falling to
underdog Arkansas 14-13.
Texas, with a tie almost assured because the Longhorns have
not missed a conversion attempt in their last 41 tries, went for
a victory on a conversion pass attempt that fell short. Then an
onside kickoff faile4, and Arkansas ran out the last minute on
the clock.

set up Indiana's fourth touchdown.
Juday and his receivers put on
an amazing show when they got
the ball, but Indiana played a fine
posession game, especially in the
crucial third quarter.
Badar, criticized for failing to
get off a field goal attempt as
time ran out in Indiana's one-
point loss to Iowa a week ago,
came back superbly with passes,
runs and sharp signal-calling.
He hit 13 of 32 passes for 215,
yards and two touchdowns, Bill
Malinchak taking scoring tosses
of six and 11 yards. Badar also
scored the clincher on a five-yard
sweep.
"The passing of Rich Badar
and the running of fullback Tom
Nowatzke made the difference,"
Coach Duffy Daugherty conceded
Saturday after the 27-20 Michi-
gan State defeat by underdog
Indiana.
"Badar came up with some
great clutch pass plays when they
were needed," Daugherty said,
adding that "State's offense was
going pretty well, but the defense
just couldn't contain the inspired
Indiana attack.

"This has been the first time
in two years our defense has been
pushed around like that," Daugh-
erty continued. "They (Indiana)
were a fine football team today.
"They needed that win to keep
their morale up after losing the
first three the way they did."
Indiana's ability to control the
ball during the second half was a
big factor in the final outcome
Daugherty said.
Illini Win, 14-0
MINNEAPOLIS - Illinois over-
powered Minnesota's offense with
a massive Dick Butkus-led defen-
sive effort and downed the Goph-
ers 14-0 yesterday with two break
cashed.for touchdowns in the sec-
ond quarter.
The Illini, rebounding from lasi
week's loss to Ohio State, simply
buried Minnesota with a choking
defense that intercepted five pass.
es and grabbed two Gophei
fumbles.
Illinois staved off one Minnesota
penentration to the Illini four-
yard line in the second period
then kept the Gophers outsidf
their 40 the rest of the game.
Minnesota, with first string
quarterback J o h n Hankinsor
benched most of the game by
Coach Murray Warmath, hadonly
one sustained drive behind reservE
Larry Peterson.

an 83-yard runback of an
cepted pass by hailfback
Gutekunst.

inter-
John

mi margin
t.

of victory to

...---- . - - -

61r
wt4,

OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5:30
MONDAY UNTIL 8:30

*w

t
r
a
',

II

Big Ten Standings

I

} .

I''s

r1
'4K'I
z

Y

Prime valves in campus
apparel .. .

;i
j:
ty
h a
i. .

DESERT BOOTS from Clarks of England
unlined suede $13.95; Torrolino calf $14.95;
HAGGAR expand-o-matic stretch slacks for
ease freedom and comfort with crease
retention and wrinkle resistance. $10.
CAR COATS-winter jackets, imported and
domestic finest makes $14.95 to $100.00

r
' :
Kai

STATE

STREET

AT

LI BE R T Y

lb_____

New Styles
First At
Wild's

I

iW
- O
Also available-
CORDUROY LEVIS...
ALL COLORS
STAY-PREST .. .
IN CONTINENTAL
& IVY MODELS

Ohio State
Purdue
Illinois
MICHIGAN
Iowa
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Northwestern
Indiana ta
Michigan State

W
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
0

Conference
L Pet PF
0 1.000 43
0 1.000 49
1 .666 31
1 .500 37
1 .500 42
1 .500 21
1 .500 38
2 .333 38
3 .250 69
2 .000 30

PA
9
27
32
31
51
32
49
51
72
44

lv
4
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
1

All
L
0
1
1.
1
1
2
2
3
3
3

Games
PF PA
87 17
81 61
51 46
82 38
104 93
68 78
62 87
72. 82
69 72
62 72

Lambs
A COMPL.ETE C

10.95

Wool --

CRIB OF

SWEATERS FOR SCHOLARS

s: The establishment has done the gentle-
men's homework in the subject of
sweaters for university wear. It is sug-
gested that these colorful, warming and
comfortable styles will form the basis
of a correct casual wardrobe on the
campus of choice.
by
0 Lord Jeff

.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan