WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN 'Potent IliniPrimed for Revenge By CHUCK VETZNER spring. The Buckeyes pointed for thinking about their game with Twice this season the heralded the game and they won." us." Illini from Champaign have been Against Purdue the story was a Chilling Thought upset, ending their hopes for a little different. Coach Dennis The Illini are loaded with talent Fitzgerald, who scouted the game, and the man who curdles more second straight conference crown. blood than anyone else is Dick But Illinois is still a force to be said that the game was one of the reckoned with and they remain a finest he ever saw. Mason added Butkus. The senior linebacker is; conference powerhouse. that Illinois was at the short end a243-pound tacklng machine. Al- Coach Tony Mason. who re- of a 26-14 score because the Boil- though not as fas as some line-. spects the Illini as a major ob- ermakers had the momentum from backers, Butkus has an uncanny stacle in Michigan's hopes for a three straight Big Ten victories a yto a s bwhere t titoPsdnepandwy(including a squeaker over Mich- ball is. Some teams try to run rf trip to Pasadena, explained why (their plays away from Butkus but the defending champ has been! igan). Mason dismissed this notion say- tripped up twice. "The Illini might have been ing, "The only way to stop him is "Ohio State was ready for Illi- looking past Purdue," Mason also to block him but that isn't nois," he said. "They practiced pointed out. "They were possibly easy" against Illinois' defense since last caught napping because they were Not Alone . SEVEN OUT OF CONTENTION: 'M', OSU, Purdue Fight for Bowl Bid By BUD WILKINSON In the remaining games of the Snook, the Big Ten's leading hseason, Purdue faces Michigan passer, passed for one touchdown, Seven down, three to go! State, Minnesota and Indiana. ran for another, and completed After Purdue's 26-14 victory Purdue has often upset the Spar- 17 of 33 passes for 221 yards in over Illinois only three teams re- tans in their bids for the Rose a losing cause. main in the running for the roses Bowl and Michigan State probably Ohio State faces Northwestern -Ohio State, Purdue and Mich- has ideas of taking revenge. The and Michigan after a non-confer- igan. Minnesota game should also be ence tilt with Penn State and must Purdue strengthened its Rose tough for the Boilermakers and win both to stay in contention for Bowl bid with its fourth straight the last game with Indiana is a the championship. conference victory and gained re- continuation of an old rivalry If Purdue remains undefeated venge for its 41-21 loss to the played for the Old Oaken Bucket. and Ohio State also wins the rest Illini last year. Ohio State added 'to its string of their games the two teams will The Boilermakers gained their of three conference victories by tie for the conference title. Two victory by scoring three times in squeaking out a 21-19 victory over teams have not gone undefeated the first half before Illinois could pass - happy I o w a. Linebacker in conference play since 1943 hit paydirt. The Purdue attack Dwight Kelley was the big man when Michigan and Purdue were seemed to catch the Illini off bal- defensively for the Buckeyes as he undefeated. ance and they didn't right them- intercepted one of Iowa quarter- In the case of a tie, the con- selves until late in the first half back Gary Snook's passes, blocked ference athletic directors vote to when they marched 74 yards for a an Iowa extra point try in the determine which team goes to the touchdown. first half, and stopped Snook when Rose Bowl. Usually the team which Illinois scored again after inter- he tried to run for two points and has not played in the post-season Iltingisscord ainafterineu-a tie in the last two seconds of the classic more recently gets the bid. cepting a Purdue pass to reduce game. Ohio State went to the Rose Bowl the Boilermaker lead to six points. gamehi_ __twe __t__he________ Purdue iced the game on a two- yard touchdown plunge by full- back Randy Minniear, his third of U in 1958 and Purdue has never gone. If both teams should lose one of their remaining games, Purdue would have a higher percentage than the Buckeyes because Ohio State plays only six conference games to Purdue's seven. If Michigan should win its re- maining games against Illinois, Iowa and Ohio State and if Pur- due should lose one game, the two teams would tie and Purdue would probably get the Rose Bowl bid because Michigan went in 1951. Michigan would be assured of a bowl berth only if Purdue loses twice and the Wolverines win the remainder of their games. In other conference games, Wis- consin received more tricks than treats for their Halloween home- coming as they lost to Michigan State, 22-6, and Minnesota beat Indiana, 21-0. I-M SPOUrFLI4,1 By Tom Weinberg SAE Loses To End an Era But Butkus is not a one man team. As Mason mentioned, "He's a great player but they've got a lot of them." Aiding the big linebacker on de- fense will be 234-pound tackle Bill DICK BUTKUS An era has ended. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, peren- nially the fraternity "A" football intramural champion, was upset yesterday afternoon 12-8 by Tau Delta Phi. The SAE's have won the "A" championship in the social fra- ternity division for the past five years, and in that time have not lost a game. Yesterday's loss was the first grid defeat in 83 games for the SAE teams, as the "B" squad has also had a series of undefeated championship teams- four in a row. All the scoring was in the first half, as the Tau Delts connected for two scoring passes and the SAE's hit for one. SAE had one golden opportunity to salvage a come-from-behind win in the closing seconds of the game, but an interception in the end zone by safety and captain Mark Gendle- man squelched the drive. The Tau Delts scored first, as they drove down the field the first time they had the ball. The touch- down was scored by rangy end Gary Zuckerman when he pulled down an aerial from the elusive Tau Delt quarterback, Jerry Golden. SAE responded quickly and went ahead, as quarterback George Skaff led the champs across mid- field and into the end zone with a series of short passes following the kickoff. When Al Bara caught the short Skaff touchdown pass, the score was tied at 6-6, but the SAE's moved out in front tempor- arily with a two-point conversion on a play from Skaff to center Charlie Collins. The Tau Delts fought back for the go-ahead touchdown, and what proved to be the game-win- ning tally when on third down, Golden pump-faked a short fling and winged a bomb to Gendleman who had beaten the SAE defender by some 10 yards. The play cover- ed 55 yards and when the conver- sion failed,_the score stood at 12-8. in otner action yesterday, Sigma Alpha Mu beat Sigma Chi, 14-0 in a hotly contest game and will ad- vance to the first place playoffs. Minor and Greg Schumacher, a and he is one of the nation's lead- speedy 225-pound guard. ing rushers. Butkus' sidekick at the lineback- Sam Price, a halfback who runs ing spot, Don Hanson, is often like a fullback, is the Fighting overlooked but has been doing a Illini's other chief running threat. good job of dropping any enemy At the quarterback post is an- runners that Butkus misses. other junior, Fred Custardo, who At the beginning of the season has been much more than ade- the secondary appeared to be the quate in replacing last year's sig- weak link in the defense, but it nal caller, Mike Taliaferro. An has come through in surprisingly excellent and agile runner and a strong fashion, intercepting an fine passer especially with the average of three passes a game chips down, Custardo has been a up to the Purdue game. The leader real field leader, engineering Illi- of the defensive backs is veteran nois' offensive thrusts. George Donnelly. Main Target . Offensive Leader When Custardo throws, the tar- The big name on offense is Jim get is usually newcomer Bob Grabowski, a 211-pound fullback. Trumpy. The sophomore end Grabowski was the outstanding stands 6'5" and has good speed. player in last year's Rose BowlI In the interior line tackle Archie game and has taken up this season Sutton has put on 13 pounds since right where he left off. The burly last season, but even at his new junior has been ripping off 4.5 weight, 262 very solid pounds, Sut- yards every time he carries the ton maintains the speed and bal- ball. For this reason Grabowski's ance that earned him All-Ameri- number is called quite frequently can honors last season. the afternoon. End Bob Hadrick also starred for Purdue, pulling down eight of quarterback Bob Griese's passes for 95 yards. 7 NEED WHEELS! 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