PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1964 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1964' Wolverines Trounce Fumbling Hawkeyes, 34 -20 AI FB Anthony Top Rusher, Bags 3 TD's (Continued from Page 1) came back for real; on the next play halfback Craig Nourse took off around left end, straight through two would-be Michigan tacklers, and into the end zone. After an exchange of punts Timberlake engineered an 83-yard drive that brought the Wolverines down to the Iowa six with goal-to- go. Hawkeye end Long grabbed Timberlake's arm as he tried to pitch to Anthony and the Blue ended up back at the 16 as the Wolverine fullback pounced on the ball. Timberlake's field goal try was no good as the first quarter ended. As the teams changed ends of the field, so did fate. On the first play of the period Nourse fumbled and Gerry Mader picked off the ball at the Iowa 24. Timberlake passed t Ben Farabee at the 12 and then, vith third and four at the six, rolled to the right, stopped, and hit end John Henderson with two Hawkeyes on him up the cen- ter for the first Michigan touch- down. Minutes later, the Wolverines were back. Nourse fumbled at the 24 as the Michigan right side of the line ganged up on him and Dick Wells jumped on the bal. This time a 15-yard referee's hike for holding stymied the drive, and Timberlake's field goal boot from the 27 was blocked by Iowa tackle Phil Deutch. Charitable Iowa Iowa couldn't break the charity habit-and Laskey relieved the Hawkeyes of the ball after guard Bob Mielke deflected Snook's pass. Laskey dashed to the Iowa 10. Then Timberlake gave to Anthony up the center, and the powerful fullback carried three' tacklers all ten yards for the touchdown. d Midway through the second period the Hawkeyes began to roll. Snook passed to Tony Gia- cobazzi at the 41 and four plays later fired to Noonan down the east sidelines. Volk missed' on an ankle tackle, and Noonan scooted to the Michigan nine before be- ing knocked out of bounds by Bass. With fourth down at the five- yard line Nunley batted Snook's pass for Noonan to the ground, but d'Hara dove on his back grabbing it to tie the score. It took Michigan just 1:15 to get another seven points on the score- =board. On the first play after the kickoff Anthony took Timberlake's pitch, dashed off the right side and on for 62 yards to the Iowa 16. Two plays later at the 14, Tim- berlake rolled left, with Anthony throwing a key block, and dragged two tacklers into the end zone with him. On the first play of the second The Smell of Roses MICHIGAN IOWA First Downs 22 19 Rushing 13 9 Passing 9 8 Penalty 0 2 Total No. of Rushes 68 27 Net Yards-Rushing 229 . 97 Passing 136 227 Forward Passes Att. 25 41 Completed it 15 Intercepted by 3 0 Yd s nterceptionsaret 77 Total Plays Rushes and passes) 93 68 Punts, Number 4 3 Average distance 20.7 36 Kikoffs, Returned by 3 '1 Yards Kicks Returned 58 35 Punts 2 10 Kickoffs 56 25 Fumbles, Number 3 7 Ball lost by 2 4 Penalties, Number 6 2 Yards penalized 70 20 RUSHING Michigan Tries Net Avg. Anthony 20 121 6.0 Fisher 8 33 4.1 Timberlake 23 80 3.5 Detwiler 6 7 1.1 Ward 10 -4 -0.4 Evashevski 1 -8 -8 , Totals 68 229 3.4 Iowa Tries Net Avg. Snook 8 17 2.1 Kimble 6 9 1.3 Nourse 7 37 5.3 Noonan 2 19 9.5 Simpson 4 15 3.7 Totals 27 97 3.6 PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Timberlake 23 11 0 136 Evashevski 2 0 0 0 Henderson Catches Six In Big Effort (Continued from Page 1) The football game was an ex- ceptionally long, wearing one, possibly due to the exceptional number of pass plays. But when the game finally ended, Michigan found itself with its first clear shot at a Rose Bowl bid in almost a decade and a half. If Michigan beats Ohio State in next Saturday's game at Colum-! bus, Michigan will go to Pasadena; if Ohio State wins the Buckeyes will be in the nation's premier Bowl game-it's as simple as that. Better Than Bucks Iowa's head coach Jerry Burns, whose teams have lost to both Michigan and Ohio State gives Michigan the edge on t e a m strength. "I think that Michigan is at least on a par with Ohio State defensively and offensively Michig.n is better than the Buck- eyes," ho said after the game. A good deal of Michigan's total passing offense (74 of 136 yards) was due to the personal efforts of! senior end John Henderson, who enjoyed his finest game of the season. Henderson found himself playing in a one-on-one defensive situation against Hawkeye sopho- more defensive back Dave More- land. Henderson Grabs Six Henderson easily victimized the inexperienced Moreland on the old hook pass pattern getting free for six receptions, his high for the season. One of the passes was for six points, the first six Michigan put on the scoreboard, on a four yard buttonhook in the end zone early in the second quarter. Gophers Eliminate Purdue; OSU Wins By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS-John Hankin- son, passing with precision, fired Minnesota to a 14-7 victory over Purdue yesterday to virtually wipe out all hope the Boilermakers har- bored for making their first Rose Bowl trip. Hankinson set two Gopher sea- son passing records, with eight i it Iowa Game Films Films of the Michigan-Iowa game will be shown Wednes- day night at 7 p.m. in the Michigan Union ballroom. Wal- ly Weber will narrate and there is no charge for admission. I -Daily-Jim Lines SENIOR FULLBACK MEL ANTHONY (37), rushed for 120 yards in 20 carries including a 62 yard run and three touchdowns as he helped lead the Wolverines to a 34-20 win over the Hawkeyes. Above he is helped by a block delivered to Dave Moreland (43) by Carl Ward (19).1 half Snook lost the ball on the snap and Michigan's Arnie Sim- kus was right there to cover the ball at the Iowa 24. Six plays later Anthony dove the one yard for the touchdown, set up by a seven-yard dash by halfback Jim Detwiler. The Hawkeyes had the ball for just three plays when Michigan tackle Bill Yearby grabbed hold of Snook and tore his jersey sleeve off. After a time out for repair, Snook really lost his shirt, pass- ing complete to Wolverine half- back Volk, who returned it to the 12-yard line. Timberlrake ran for a touch- down on third and five at the seven but it was called back on another holding penalty. Timber- lake's 40-yard field goal attempt went wide. Snook faded to pass as the Hawkeyes took over the ball and was hit from behind by Michigan captain Jim Conley, enabling Wolverine Bill Keating to pounce on the ball at the Iowa nine. But with second and goal at the six, Detwiler fumbled Timberlake's pitchout and Iowa end Terry Mul- ligan got the ball. The Hawkeyes had the ball for four plays, punted to the Iowa 44 and the Wolverines moved in to score. Timberlake, running and passing (to Henderson up the center to the Hawkeye 10 and a first down), brought the ball to the one-inch line where Anthony dove for the TD. Iowa saw one last breath of hope as Snook sidestepped his way 4to a 20-yard touchdown run with 9:50 to play. The score was set up after Snook's 30-yard pass to Nourse brought the Hawkeyes to the 20. But-with a big chance at a Pasadena trip in the bag- the Wolverines weren't letting up. With senior Frosty Evashevski at the Michigan helm and fullback Dave Fisher with the ball the Blue offense drove to the Iowa 16, only to see the Iowa defense halt Ward on a fourth-down pass attempt. The drive left just 54 seconds on the clock-not' enough to keep a Dad's Day crowd from filing to the exits. completions in 15 attempts for 159 yards and two touchdowns. The Minnesota quarterback also bagged the Gophers' winning touchdown with 40 seconds gone in the fourth quarter. His 43-yard touchdown pass to Kent Kramer came one minute after Purdue had tied the score 7-7 in the battle of hard-knock- ing Big Ten foes. Earlier, Hankinson passed 31 yards to Ken Last for the other Gopher score. Purdue quarterback Bob Griese was unable to get his passes click- ing with star receiver Bob Had- rick out with an injury. The Boil- ermakers scored late in the third n quarterafter Griese hit Sam Longmire on a 49-yard pass. Randy Minniear punched over from the Gopher one. Purdue then kicked off, Min- nesota taking the ball at its 27. Hankinson hit Last for 30 yards, then tossed the winning aerial to Kramer, who caught the ball at the 25 and raced in. Irish Drop [SU SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Sopho-I more Nick Eddy bolted 61 yards for a score in the first 3% rminutes and unloosed a cascade of touch- downs for top-ranked Notre Dame yesterday that ended 10 losing years against Michigan State, 34-7. It was the eighth straight vic- tory for the Fightinfi Irish, .headed possibly for their first perfect season and national championship since 1949. Eddy smashed five yards for a second touchdown and ace quar- terback John Huarte figured in the other two, a 13-yard pass to Joe Farrell and a 21-yard dash into the end zone after a fake hand off. Notre Dame's blitzing defense, the best in the1country against State score-a 51-yard pass from rushing, allowed one Michigan Steve Juday to Gene Washington in the third period-and three times threw back Spartan drives inside their 20. Twice in the first half Michigan State, winner of 11 of its 12 games and eight straight against Notre Dame, moved to the 15 only to be stopped. In the fourth period the Spartans smashed 57 yards to the S C 0 E S GRID PICKS GAMES MICHIGAN 34, Iowa 20 Minnesota 14, Purdue 7 Ohio State 10, Northwestern 0 Illinois 29, Wisconsin 0 Notre Dame 34, Michigan State.7 Oregon 29, Indiana 21 Air Force 7, Wyoming 7 Alabama 24, Georgia Tech 7 Arkansas 44, Southern Methodist 0 Kansas 10, Colorado 7 Harvard 19, Brown 7 Baylor 17, Kentucky 15 Mississippi 30, Tennessee 0 Missouri 14, Oklahoma 14 Stanford 16, Oregon State 7 Pittsburgh 24, Army 8 Rice 19, Texas A&M 8 Washington 22, UCLA 20 Texas 28, TCU 13 Auburn 14, Georgia 7 OTHER GAMES Tulsa 47, North Texas 0 Nebraska 27, Oklahoma State 14 Princeton 35, Yale 14 Navy 27, Duke 14 Miami (0) 27, Dayton 21 Marietta 7, Wayne State 3 Syracuse 20, Virginia Poly 15 Ohio U. 21, Bowling Green 0 Maryland 34, Clemson 0 Cornell 33, Dartmouth 15 Virginia 31, North Carolina 27 Hillsdale 26, Central Michigan 7 Texas Tech 28, Washington State 10 Columbia 33, Penn 12 Brigham Young 43, West. Michigan 8 Utah 14, California 0 Notre Dame six but could go no Grange carried 24 times in his farther. great performance against Michi- * * * ' gan at the Illini's Memorial Sta- Illini J9 CHAMPAIGN, Ill Jim Grabowski sha year-old Big Ten r and broke Red Gra old school record in nois to a 29-0 foo over Wisconsin yes Grabowski carried 239 yards and scor downs on runs of yards. It was the b game ball-carrying Minnesota's Bill Da ference record with 1943. The 211-pound G bettered Grange's yards in the Gall( legendary perform Michigan in 1924. Daley, in fashio record, carried 26 216 yards against Oct. 2, 1943. Fin - lluacK' tttered a 21- Indiana Loses Again ushing record BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Oregon nge's 40-year- came from 14 points behind at a leading Illi- halftime and beat Indiana 29-21 tball triumph yesterday on a great passing and terday. running performance by Bob 33 times for Berry. ed two touch- Berry was thrown out of the 27 and two game for slugging midway in the lest individual! fourth period. He had finished his effort since job by then. It included throwing ley set a con- two touchdown passes and a con- 216 yards in version pass and running over one touchdown. rabowski also Berry's show overshadowed a big total of 212 day by fullback Tom Nowatzke of aping Ghost's Indiana, who set Hoosier scoring ance against records for game and season in the first half by plunging for ning the old three touchdowns and kicking times for his three extra points., His season to- Northwestern tal reached 67 points, breaking his own mark of 58. i Henderson also played part of 4 4 4 the game at the safety position, the first time he has played this Bucks Still on Top position at Michigan. COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio State Despite the impressive showing took a giant stride toward the by the Wolverines, the almost Western Conference champion- summery weather and Minnesota's ship and a Rose Bowl .bid yester- defeat of Purdue, the most out- day as it won its fifth straight standing characteristic of the in the conference by 10-0 victory game was its length. over Northwestern., "It was the longest game that The game was a dice-players' I've ever been in," Wolverine ; dream as the seventh-ranked Coach Bump Elliott admitted. Ohioans parlayed Willard Sander's "With all those passes and the seventh touchdown and Bob ball changing hands so often, it Funk's seventh field goal into seemed like it would never end. It their seventh victory of the season. was a tough game all the way and Sander's score cane in the first we were real happy with the win." period on a five-yard plunge end- The length of the game may ing a 38-yard 11-play drive, and die ddiaton ct18 124 '4 NATIONAL ROUNDUP: Alabama, Arkansas Remain Undefeated By The Assaciated Press scored two of them, while full- back Hal Philipp got the other Alabama and Arkansas crushed two. opponents Saturday and the Ra- Texas had total offense of 445 zorbacks joined fifth-ranked Tex- yards-the largest of the season. as as the first major teams to Roger Staubach, turning in his nail post-season bowl bids. finest performance in a fabulous Alabama, (9-0)., struck for two football career, ran and passed touchdowns in the final 1:45 of Navy to a 27-14 victory over Duke. the first half and then played Staubach completed 21 to 30 tenth-ranked Georgia Tech off for 217 yards and ran 17 times its feet the rest of the way to for 91 yards. whip the Yellow Jackets 24-7 Sat- Jerry Rhome, Howard Twilley urday and keep alive its chances and Tulsa blasted nine football for a national football champion- records and North Texas State 47- ship. Rhome completed 17 of 23 passes Quarterback Joe Namath threw for 68 yards and four touchdowns for one touchdown and set up an- and ran for another 21 yards. That other on a 49-yard pass. gave him season records for com- othr o a49-ar pas.pletion, 185; touchdown .passes, Third-ranked Arkansas vaulted 27; yards passing, 2,320; and total into a Cotton Bowl berth and as- offense, 2,541. sured itself of a tie for the South-- west Conference title by pulveriz- ing Southern Methodist Univer- sity 44-0 Saturday. * Arkansas powered 65, 50 and 50 yards with steamrolled precision' for first half touchdowns. Defense spectaculars led to Arkansas' sec-k ond half points with substitutes seeing most of the action for the Razorbacks. Nebraska's pint-sized fullback, Frank Solich, scored a go-ahead touchdown on an 89-yard second quarter kickoff return Saturday and the fourth-ranked Cornhusk- ers protected the margin for a 27- 14 Big Eight football victory over Oklahoma State and a 9-0 over-....................::{,.r," all mark.*: ." .::.." ::: .4 Marvin Kristynik ran and passed Texas to a 28-13 victory over Tex- as Christian and marched the Longhorns into the Orange Bowl yesterday. ....y.. Kristynik figured in all the Tex- __________________________________________________1.. . HUBBARD SLACKS AVAILABLE AT %nL State Street on the Campus. The most walked about Campus contain "DACRON". Hubbard Slacks have a faculty for fashions of 65% "Dacron"* polyester and 35% combed cotton. Styled in Classic plain front and traditional Gay Blade models for Wrinkle-free good looks and carefree comfort, at Better Stores everywhere. *Dupont's registered trademark 4 have worked to Michigan's ad- Funk's three-pointed came in the vantage by deadening the enthus- second session. The final half was iasm of the Iowa fans and the the most sensational of the game, Iowa team. When Iowa seemed to but produced no scoring. have a chance of closing the score Ohio State, deflated 27-0 by early in the fourth quarter both Penn State a week ago after six the Hawkeye fans and team seem- straight victories, was a different ed too tired to care and Michigan team. The Bucks broke out a new controlled the ball for nearly all "I" formation and did a lot of of the last ten minutes of play. gambling. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. PF PA W L PF PA Ohio State 5 0 1.000 102 31 7 1 146 66 MICHIGAN 5 1 .833 146 69 7 1 191 76 Purdue 4 2 .667 108 90 5 3 140 124 Minnesota 4 2 .667 82 71 5 3 129 117 Michigan State 3 2 .600 99 63 4 4 136 125 Illinois 3 3 .500 80 79 5 3 126 100 Northwestern 2 5 .286 61 133 3 6 95 164 Indiana 1 4 .200 69 93 2 6 132 160 Iowa 1 5 .167 108 139 3 5 170 181 Wisconsin 1 5 .167 59 145 3 5 84 185 I a 1 -finest quality laundry- Pants Skirts 55C (plain) ( l )Su its . . . $ 1 Coats & $140 Dresses. . (plain) a I RAINCOATS, Cleaned & waterproofed .. $2.00 I A & P CLEANERS 312 E. Huron across from City oll 668-9500 4 t y ..° .5 _ .r t. t y . r . ' I I) Snook Noonan O'Hara Moses PA Detwiler Farabee Henderson O'Hara Noonan Simpson Giacobazzi Kimble Nourse Kemp Moses Iowa 37 13 1 1 1 0 2 1 ASS RECEIVING 3 0 a a Michigan No. Yds. 2 38 3 24 6 74 No. Yds. Iowa 2 50 6 104 3 15 1 17 2 11 1 30 170 45 0 12 Avg. 19 8 12 Avg. 25 17 5 17 5.5 30 Avg. 20.7 36 CHAP-STICK AVAILABLE AT THE Quarry State Street on the Campus OPEN HO USE NEW SKI EQUIPMENT ,.,,,, 1 ..." Zit ..h Z ti v4 f n5:: : S H AL PUNTING Michigan No. 4 Iowa 3 Yds. 83 108 and SKI CLOTHES SATURDAY and SUNDAY, 12-5 '/""A0!!* n _Qir'^L.' rynac+ in /Anrv/