SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1962 TILE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RAMBLES 25-13: NebraskaSpoils 'M' Opener F The Inside Corner with Dave Andrews 11 I1 L s (Continued from Page 1) the injury was not immediately known, but Michigan can ill af- ford to have its big scoring threat miss any game. As it was, Raimey carried the ball on 17 of Michi- gan's 43 running plays despite missing the fourth quarter. Starting tackle John Houtman also suffered a knee injury, the PILEDRIVER - Bill (Thunder) Thornton, Nebraska fullback, dives over the line and into the end zone in the second period. College Scores EAST Kansas 13, Boston Univ. 0 Army 9, Syracuse 2 Columbia 22, Brown 20 Colgate 23, Cornell 12 Holy Cross 16, Buffalo 6 Penn State 20, Air Force 6 Penn 13, Lafayette 11 Dartmouth 27, Massachusetts 3 Navy 20, William & Mary 16 Princeton 15, Rutgers 7 Harvard 27, Lehigh 7 l Boston College 28, Villanova 13 Yale s1,Connecticut 14 Rhode Island 14, Maine 7 Johns Hopkins 28, Frank. & Marsh. 7 Tufts 16, Bowdoin 0 Williams 13, Trinity (Conn) 0 MIDWEST Indiana 26, Cincinnati 6 Nebraska 25, Michigan 13 Minnesota 0, Missouri 0 (tie) Ohio State 41, North Carolina 7 Iowa 28, Oregon State 8 Miami (O) 17, Western Michigan 7 Hiram 7, Oberlin 6 Augustana 14, Milliken 13 Omaha Univ. 47, Bradley 26 Notre Dame 13, Oklahoma 7 Wisconsin 69, New Mexico State 13 Colorado 6, Kansas State 0 Southern Illinois 43, Central Mich. 6 Drake 21, Colorado State College 0 Kenyon 27. Wooster 6 Akron 13, Baldwin-Wallace 7 Ohio Univ. 21, Kent State 0 Bowling Green 14, Dayton 7 Xavier 24, Detroit 20 Denison 39, Carnegie Tech 0 Chicago Illini 14, Elmhurst 6 Carleton 15, Cornell (Iowa) 14 Beloit 19, St. Olaf 13 SOUTH Georgia 10, Vanderbilt 0 Georgia Tech 17, Florida 0 Clemson 7, North Carolina state0 West Virginia 14, Virginia Tech 0 Washington & Lee 28, Lebanon Val. 6 Auburn 22, Tennessee 21 Miami 21, TCU 20 Maryland 13, iWake Forest 2 Mississippi 14, Kentucky 0 Florida State 42, Furman 0 Louisville 18, Marshall 0 Citadel 28, Presbyterian 8 FAR WEST Idaho 9, Idaho State 6 Arizona St. Coil. 20 W. Colo. State 7 British Columbia 10, Monroe Ref. 8 California 25, San Jose State 8 Stanford 16, Michigan State 13 Utah State 43, Montanan State U. 20 Washington 28, Illinois 7 Washington State 21, Wyoming 15 Oregon 35, Utah 8 Southern California 33, SMU 3 seriousness of which has yet to be determined. Nebraska Cashes In The game was one of breaks. They were about even, but Nebras- ka proved the better opportunists. Nebraska fumbled on its own 29 early in the first quarter, but Michigan failed to capitalize as Bill Dodd's attempted field goal went wide. Nebraska's second score was set up when Michigan was caught off- side on a Cornhusker punt. That gave Nebraska a first down on the Michigan 45 and Thornton notch- ed his first touchdown a few min- utes later to give the visitors a 13- 6 third quarter lead. Moments later Raimey fumbled on his own 28 to hand Nebraska its third score. Fullback Warren Powers picked up 19 of those yards in one burst up the middle. Misunderstanding Michigan had been pushed back into its own end when Nebraska recovered a lateral on the Wol- verine 39. The Michigan team, El- liott and the backfield judge thought it was a forward pass, but referee Mike Delaney overruled and called it a lateral. Nebraska didn't go anywhere, but a punt put Michigan in posi- tion for Raimey's fumble. Michigan then made it close, with the help of that 15-yd. pen- alty, but couldn't hold Nebraska when it counted. L The loss ended Michigan's re- cent dominance of non-conference opponents. The last previous loss was to Missouri, 20-15, in the opening game of the 1959 season. The game also marked the elev- enth consecutive game in which Michigan has lost the coin toss. The last time Michigan won the call was in 1960 against Indiana. And that was the only win that year. L. A. Loses, Lheads S. F.) Byl Game LOS ANGELES (AP) - The St. Louis Cardinals, getting superb 2-hit pitching from Ernie Broglio, defeated Los Angeles 2-0 tonight and kept the reeling Dodgers from clinching the National League pen- nant. This was the 9th loss for the Dodgers in their last 12 games, but they will still go into the final game of the season tomorrow lead- ing the second-place tSan Fran- cisco Giant by a full game. If the Giants lose, or if the Dodgers win, or if both lose, Los Angeles will have its second National League pennant in four years. If the two clubs are tied after Sun- day's games, a best-of-three play- off series wil start in San Fran- cisco Monday. "Keep A-Head of your Hair" We specialize in W PERSONALITY CUTS " CREW-CUTS " FLAT TOPS " PRINCETONS THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre HELD AT BAY-In a play typical of yesterday's grid action, Michigan halfback Dave Raimey (19) is shown being subdued by a host of the Nebraska defensive unit. Participating in the tackle are Larry Tomlinson (83) and Jim Baffico (56). . Opening Game Statistics 'The Didn't Hit' HE WEATHER was perfect, the ROTC units put up the flag on time, the bands played in unison-all 185 of them. Nebraska played football. Michigan did not. In fact, just what Michigan did play is, open to serious question. The Wolverines were amazingly inept. The offense sputtered. The ends got boxed and the backfield got foxed. But what hurts more was what one Nebraska back said after the game. "They didn't hit as hard as I expected them to." Inexperienced teams-like Michigan is--can and will make mechanical mistakes. They're not supposed to make physical ones. "We expected to make mistakes in the early season," said Michigan Coach Bump Elliott. "And we did." Michigan made too many. Nevertheless, the Cornhuskers looked good. Their power stuff on the outside murdered Michigan's ends. Their passing clicked when it was needed. Bill "Thunder" Thornton, the All-American candidate at fullback, looked surprisingly healthy. "It felt good," said the Nebraska bomb. "The docs said I couldn't hurt the shoulder any more and I guess you got to believe those medical people once in a while. "I hope I'm set for the season," he added. "We figured he'd play," said Elliott. "In fact, Nebraska didn't do anything that we didn't expect. They're a fine team. They've got good size and speed. They're a solid ball club. "We were disappointed in our ball club, though," Elliott con- tinued. "We did a lot of things that hurt us real bad. When we missed going in a couple of times early in the game ..." WHEN MICHIGAN missed was the story of the game. Michigan tacklers bounced off Nebraska backs like they were hitting rubber bumpers. Passes bounced off board hands. If all of that wouldn't have happened If Dave Raimey have gained 10 yds. on every play instead of on every fourth play. If Dave Glinka hadn't underthrown Bob Brown on the opening play of the second half. If Nebraska hadn't scored 25 points. Inexperience or incapability is the question. Nebraska Coach Bob Devaney sides with Elliott on this one. "Michigan has got potential," he said. "They made some mis- takes, but when you've got a young team like Elliott has you have to expect some mistakes. I'm glad we don't have to play them every week." Amidst the well wishers outside the Nebraska dressing room were scores of Michigan friends-some made while Devaney was coaching in high school circles and others while at Michigan State. Not much from Wyoming showed up except the Cornhusker of- fense. That gave Michigan fits-especially the power sweeps with any of a half dozen ball carriers running almost at will around the weak Wolverine flanks. It was sort of a sad day all over for Michigan, for not only did the Wolverines look bad in losing, but the Army and Michigan State scouts saw it all. It makes you wonder. Where does Michigan turn from here? F if is . SHEAFFER'S $5 CARTRIDGE PENTWO 'SKRIP' 3-RING CARTRIDGES BINDER J'! r+t 1 i L./} NEW DIAMOND SHAPE POINT SHEAFFER' 3-RING SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER World's most popular foun- tain pen! Quick, clean, easy filling with drop.-in car- tridges of 'Skrip' writing fluid. New diamond shape precision ground, point in choice of point styles. Witir FREE binder, 2 cartridges! M First Downs] Passing Passing Penalty Total q. of Rushes 9 Net Yds.-Rushing 1 Passing Forward Passes Att. Completed Intercepted by Yds. interceptions ret. Total Plays (Rushes and ich. 13 9 3 1 43 70 84 27 8 0 0 I Passes) Punts, Number Average distance Kickoffs, returned Yds. Kicks Ret. Punts Kickoffs Fumbles, Number Balls Lost by Penalties, Number Yds. penalized by Y . 1 RUSHING Michigan Dodd Raimey Glinka Rindfuss Hood Timberlake Sparkman Evashevski Strobel Totals 64 5 36 4 72 0 72 3 3 6 26 Tries 6 17 1 4 1 7 3 3 .1 49 Neb. 17 9 7 1 49 222 119 15 8 0 0 64 5 27 3 118 32 86 4 2 7 65 Net 21 59 8 18 0 36 21 5 2 170 42 -2 60 38 Michigan Att.l Glinka 8 Timberlake 4 Chandler 5 Evashevski 3 Prichard 1 Totals 21 Nebraska Claridge 12 Faiman 2 Theisen 1 Totals 15 PASS RECEIVING Michigan Comp. 3 2 1 1 1 8 6 0 1 7 Ross Young Faiman McCloughan Tucker Thornton Totals PASSING 6 4 2 4 1 9 49 20 13 -7 15 3 40 222 L .,U Yds. 30 16 17 17 3 83 89 0 30 119 9 -2 24 23 26 3 83 20 61 20 18 119 Ward Raimey Strobel Chapman Kocan Hood Totals Stuewe Huge Callahan Donovan Totals O'Donnell Claridge 1 1 2 1 2 1 8 1 3 2 1 7 I (Author of "I Was a Teen- ae Dwarf", "Thce Man Loves of Dobie Gifis",c tc.) 314 S. State NO 5-9141 Read and Use Michigan Daily Classifieds Nebraska PUNTING Michigan No. 5 Nebraska 5 Nebraska Claridge 13 Theisen 3 Stuewe 3 Powers 4 Yds. Avg. 182 36 137 27 _. SPACE BALL WRITE? YOU'RE WRONG In the recent furor over the assassination of President McKinley, it may have escaped your notice that a nationwide study of the writing ability of American college students has just been published. The survey reveals an astonishing fact: that when students have completed their freshman year and are no longer required to take English, their writing skill progressively declines until we come to the fantastic situation where graduating seniors actualy are poorer writers of English than incoming freshmen! Many theories have been offered to account for this incredible fact. Some say that seniors know less English than freshmen because all seniors major in French. This is not true. No more than 94 percent of seniors major in French. How about the other six percent? Well sir, of the other six percent, half-or three percent- take physics, and it is not hard to understand how these poor souls grow rusty in English when all they ever say is "E equals MC squared." Of the remaining three percent, two-thirds-or two percent- major in whaling, and their English too grows feeble with disuse. Whalers, as we all know, do not speak at all except to shout, "Thar she blows!" maybe twice a year. Of the one percent remaining, it cannot be fairly said that they are poor writers. The fact is, we don't know what kind of writers they are. Why not? Because they never write. And why don't they ever write? Because this remaining one percent of American college students are enrolled at the University of Alaska, and never take their mittens off. (Incidentally, I received quite a surprise upon first visiting Alaska two years ago when I was invited to Juneau to crown the Queen of the Annual Date Palm Festival. Frankly I ex- pected to find a surly and morose populace. After all, going through life with your mittens on all the time is hardly calcu- lated to make you merry as a cricket. Not only can't you write, but you miss out on all kinds of other fun things-like three card monte, making shadow pictures on the wall, and lint pick- ing. However, to my astonishment, I discovered Alaskans to be a hale and gregarious group, mittens notwithstanding, and I soon found out why: because mittens notwithstanding, they could still smoke Marlboro Cigarettes, still enjoy that rich mellow flavor, that fine, clean Selectrate filter, that truly soft soft pack, that truly flip-top flip-top box-and that, friends, will make anybody happy, mittens notwithstanding. In fact, Alaskans are the happiest people I have ever met in the whole United States-except, of course, for the Alaskan vendors of Marlboro Cigarettes, who have not been paid in many years- indeed, never-because how can anybody dig out coins to pay for cigarettes when he is wearing mittens?) But I digress. What are we going to do about this deplorable condition where college students, having completed Freshman English, become steadily less proficient in the use of the lan- guage? The answer is simple. We will make them take Fresh- i Great new record offer (13.98 value) ...just $1.00 The three Ann Arbor Gymkhana girls pictured were selected to represent the U.S.A. in international competition at the Canadian National Exposition in Toronto late thishsummer. Ed Cole, 1959 Michigan gymnastic captain, led the U.S. men's team in play when you buy Sheaffer's back-to-school special! I