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THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3Q, I962
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THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 34), 1962
THE CUBAN CRISIS:
CONTAGIOUS OR CONTROLLED?
The MICHIGAN UNION presents an
INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR,
featuring a panel of students from
BRAZIL, CUBA, UNITED STATES, VENEZUELA, AND YUGOSLAVIA
with
PROF. CARL COHEN, MODERATOR
Tues., Oct. 2 4:15 p.m. Rooms 3R, S, UN ION
MSU Upset; Rest of Big Ten in Form
(Continued from Page 1)
fensive alignment that stopped
Michigan State drives at 7, 15, 4
and 10 yard lines. Two field goal
attempts by George Azar from the
23 and Ron Watkins from the 11,
failed.
Bucks Bomb
Ohio State's highly ranked Bucks
interspersed a sprinkling of passes
with a devastating ground attack
to overwhelm under-manned North
Carolina 41-7.
A crowd of 84,009, largest in
Buckeye history and the 24th
straight over-80,000 throng, watch-
ed the Buckeye juggernaut pile up
314 yards on the ground and .110
in the air in its six-touchdown
splurge.
The Ohio defense, expected to
be leaky due to seven sophomores
in the starting corps, allowed the
Tar Heels to reach Ohio territory
only twice in 12 tries, each coming
on a recovered fumble in the sec-
ond period.
It was a ragged and typically
early-season game.
Ohio intercepted four passes.
Three of the Buckeye passes were
captured by the visitors. The Bucks
fumbled away the ball twice and
the Tar Heels once.
Szykowny Sinks
Sure-handed Matt Szykowny
drove Iowa to a 28-8 victory over
Oregon State with the help of ex-
plosive running backs and bruis-
ing linemen who blunted the
Beavers' aerial and running at-
tack.
Szykowny, takin gadvantage of
Iowa's new "floating-T" offense
designed to give him more targets,
tossed three touchdown passes,
kicked two extra points and pass-
ed for a two-point conversion.
Gophers Draw
Minnesota and Missouri battled
to a scoreless tie before 60,133 in
a football game highlighted by
Missouri's goal line stands on 'its
two and again on its one.
The tight defenses bottled up
both Missouri's Johnny Roland and
Minnesota's Bill Munsey.
Minnesota had the edge statis-
tically but Missouri got off the
longest play of the game, a pass
from Jim Johnson to Bill Tobin
in the third period, good for 55
yards.
Illini Dumped
Washington sputtered at times
but hounded Illinois like a hun-
gry hunting pack when the oppor-
tunity offered and whipped the
eager young Illini 28-7 in a foot-
ball game before 54,000.
Illinois threatened to make a
game of it in the second quarter
and got its only touchdown just
two seconds before the halftime
gun. But even that upsurge had
been offset in the same period by
an unexpected Washington score.
The Huskies, showing the power
that has made them a western
favorite, slashed 69 yards in 12
plays in the opening quarter for a
score.
Hoosiers Romp
Junior halfback Marvin Wood-
son scored twice, leading Indiana
to an expected 26-6 football tri-
umph over the University of Cin-
cinnati.
The outclassed Bearcats, play-
ing their first football game since
1937 against a Big Ten team at
home, held firm in the first quar-
ter, but then began to crumble.
Wisconsin Runs Wild
Wisconsin unveiled a flock of
sophomore backfield talent after
surviving a few minutes of open-
ing game jitters and buried New
Mexico State 69-13in the Badgers'
tuneup, for the Big Ten football
campaign.
Defensive back Jim Nettles, a
junior, touched off Wisconsin's 10
touchdown parade by racing 89
yards with a pass interception in
the first period.
Wisconsin then sent speedster
Lou Holland on a six-ward scor-
ing dash and the rout was under-
way. The Badgers added 21 points
in the second period and 35 in the
third before fifth and sixth string-
ers were held scoreless in the fi-
nale.
COLLEGE ROUNDUP:
Penn State Downs Air Force
-- - - - - - - - -
to
By The Associated Press
UNIVERSITY P A R K, Pa. -
Penn State's fourth ranked Nit-
tany Lions finally came alive in
the second half yesterday to down
a fired-up Air Force Academy 20-
6 for their second straight foot-
ball victory over a s e r v i c e
academy.'
The Lions beat Navy 41-7 last
week.
The Nittany Lions, billed as the
top college power in the East, led
by only one point at halftime, but
quarterback Pete Liske fired two
tocuhdown passes to halfback
Roger Kochman in the final 30
minutes to break the game open.
The second scoring pass cover-
ed 15 yards while, the first was
for 3.
Kochman sparked the Lions
second period comeback, grinding
out 30 yards on the ground, and
grabbing four passes for an-
other 37.
Auburn Inches In
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Sopho-
more quarterback Jimmy Sidle
riddled a porous Tennessee pass
defense yesterday and sent bullish
halfback Larry Laster in for two
vital touchdowns to lead Auburn
to a pulsating 22-21 football up-
set.
Sidle, a 190-pound Birmingham
native, directed Auburn on three
Spahn Sets Record
MILWAUKEE (W) - Warren
Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves
became the top left-handed
pitcher in baseball history yes-
terday as he beat the Pitts-
burgh Pirates, 7-3, for his 327th
major league victory.
touchdown drives and another
that ended in a field goal as the
Tigers opened their Southeastern
Conference season with a tre-
mendous comeback triumph.
Tennessee, opportunists as al-
ways, turned two breaks into a
14-0 lead in the first quarter, but
Sidle and his sophomore cronies
Bucky Waid and David Rawson
sparked a furious Auburn rally
that was almost a carbon copy of
last year's 24-21 Auburn victory
at Knoxville.
Sooners Swoon
NORMAN, Okla. - Notre Dame
beat off a pair of late Oklahoma
challenges here yesterday and de-
feated the Sooners 13-7 in a na-
tionally televised football game.
The Sooners 'drove to a first
down on the Notre Dame three
yard-line late in the first quarter
but the Fighting Irish yielded on-
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Major League Standings
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
x-New York 96 65 .596 -
Minnesota 90 71 .559 6
LosrAngeles 86 74 .538 "9V
Detroit 84 76 .525 11%
Chicago 84 77 .522 12
Cleveland 78 82 .488 17Y2
Baltimore 77 84 .478 19
Boston 75 83 .475 19Y
Kansas City 72 89 .447 24
Washington 59100 .371 36
x-Clinched pennant.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Minnesota 8, Baltimore 4
New York 8, Chicago 6
Detroit 3, Kansas City 2
Los Angeles 4-1, Cleveland 1-5
Washington at Boston (2, ppd., rain)
TODAY'S GAMES
Kansas City at Detroit
Chicago. at New York
Baltimore, at Minnesota
Los Angeles at Cleveland (2)
Washington at Boston
NATIONAL.LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
x-Los Angeles 101 59 .631 ,-
San Francisco 100 61 .621 1%
Cincinnati 97 64 .602' 4%
Pittsburgh 92 68 .575 9
Milwaukee 86 75 .534 15%
St. Louis 82 78 .513 19
Philadelphia 81 79 .506 20
Houston 64 95 .403 36%
Chicago 58 103 .360 43%
New York 40 119 .252 -60Y
k-Clinched tie for pennant.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Milwaukee 7, Pittsburgh 3
New York 2, Chicago 1
San Francisco 11-2, Houston 5-4
St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc.)
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee
Philadelphia at Cincinnati
St. Louis at Los Angeles
Houston at San Francisco
(Only games scheduled)
ly two yards before quarterback
Monte Deere's fourth down pitch-
out was wild. Notre Dame recover-
ed on the 12.
But the Irish gave the Sooners
another chance a minute later
when quarterback Daryle Lamon-
ica fumbled and end John Flynn
recovered on the Notre Dame 30.
Lamonica redeemed h i m s e 1 f
quickly, picking o f f Norman
Smith's first down pass at the 15.
Notre Dame drove for touch-
downs after receiving the opening
and second half kickoffs, on 69
and 89 yard drives.
Michigan Fraternities
RUSHEES
WE WILL NOT BE OPEN
FOR RUSH SUNDAY 2-5 P.M.
HOWEVER, WE'LL BE LOOKING
FORWARD TO SEEING YOU
SUN.-TUES. FROM 7-11 P.M.
THE BROTHERS OF PI LAMBDA PHI
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U U
Attention Eligible Voters!
Students for Romney
and
The Young Republicans
Will provide you with Applications
For Registrationaires to Vote and
for Absentee Ballots in the Nov. 6
General Election.
2
-5
Thi
S
Afternoon;
7-10 Tonight
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