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October 07, 1962 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-10-07

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

'AGE EIGHT

THE MICHIIGAN A1 IT

Buckeyes, Hawkeyes Upset by west Coast Eli

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7,1962
events

J

UCLA, USC Upset Ohio State, Iowa;

First Victory of Season

NU, W iscon
By The Associated Press
The West Coast continued its
dominance over the Big Ten yes-
terday as UCLA stunned top-
ranked Ohio, 9-7, and Southern
California held Iowa, 7-0.
In conference action, Wisconsin
trounced Indiana, 30-6, and North-
western smashed traditional rival
Illinois, 45-0. Purdue, 'Minnesota,
and Michigan State won easily
over non-conference opponents.
The Boilermakers set Notre
Dame back, 24-6; the Spartans
bombed North Carolina, 38-6, and
the Gophers shut-out Navy, 21-0.
Remarkable Bruins
At Los Angeles, the remarkable
Bruins after stopping mighty Ohio
State three times on the one- yard
line, produced the first shocking
upset of the 1962 football season.
Sophomore Quarterback Larry
Zeno kicked the goal that spelled
defeat for the nation's top-ranked
college football power. Zeno guid-
ed the inspired Bruins 70 yds. in
17 plays in the final seven min-
utes of the intersectional struggle
and climaxed the march on fourth
down with the ball on the Buck-
eye seven.
A Coliseum crowd of 48,513 went
into a wild frenzy.
it was only the second time all
afternoon that UCLA had even
been in Buckeye territory. Coach
Woody Hayes of Ohio State, whose
team entered the game a two-
touchdown favorite, tried to get on
the field to shake the hand of
the winning coach, Bill Barnes.
But Barnes was already on the
shoulders of his triumphant team,
being swept into the dressing room.
UCLA supplied the first shocker
of the dramatic events that were
to follow. Ohio State fullback Dave
Francis was jarred loose from the
ball on the second play from scrim-
mage, and Dave Gibbs of UCLA re-
covered on the Ohio State 45.
On the first UCLA play from
scrimmage, halfback Kermit Alex-
ander flashed off left tackle, out-
ran the only two defensive backs
who had a shot at him, and raced
for a touchdown.
The try for the conversion was
wide to the right.,
Then began the grind-away,
ground attack by Ohio State and
the goalline heroics of the out-
weighed Bruin line.
USC Holds On
Sixth ranked Southern Califor-
nia turned an Iowa fumble intof

sin Win in Conference

a first quarter touchdown and
held on for a 7-0 victory.
The triumph was the third
straight for the Trojans, who were
unable to mount an effective of-
fense. but didn't have to as the
Hawkeyes lost the ball on fumbles
five times and had two passes in-
tercepted.
It was only the second time in
10 years that Iowa had been held
scoreless, and the first time in
that period that the Hawkeyes
were blanked at home.
Southern Cal's touchdown was
scored on a 19-yd. sprint by sec-
ond string fullback Ron Heller.
Iowa played without quarter-
back Matt Szykowny in the sec-
ond half because he was shaken
up in the second quarter. While
Szykowny was in the game he
managed only 35 yds. passing
against the rugged Trojan de-
fense.
NU Unbeaten
Unbeaten Northwestern sprung'
six different players across Illi-
nois' goal line yesterday at Evan-'
ston.
Four quarterbacks were used,
with sophomore sensation Tom
Myers of Troy, Ohio, hitting on
seven passes out of 11 shots for 108
yards and one touchdown in play-
ing only 17 minutes. Five of the
aerials were caught by halfback
Paul Flatley for 86 yds. in playing
about the same length of time. And
tackle Tim Powell got into the
touchdown act by running back
a Mike Taliaferro pass 48 yds. at
the end of the first half as the
Wildcats grabbed a 37-0 lead.
The running of fullbacks Bill
Swingle and Steve Murphy and
halfbacks Larry Benz, Dick Mc-
Cauley and Willie Stinson supple-
mented the quarterbacking of My-
ers, senior Fred Quinn and two
more rookies-Gene Abraham of
Peoria, Ill., and Carl Fischer, La-
porte, Ind.
The closest series in the Big Ten
now stands at 27 to 25 for North-
western with four games being ties.
Backfield Speed
Hometown Wisconsin capitalized
on newly found backfield speed, a
tight defense and the pass catch-
ing talent of end Pat Richter.
Sophomore halfback Ron (Pin-
to) Smgith touched off the scor-
ing with a six-yd. burst off left
guard at the 10-minute mark of
the opening period and the Badg-
ers were in command the rest of
the way in handing Indiana its
15th straight conference loss since
1959.
Richter, a 6-6 All-America can-
didate, grabbed five aerials for 73
yds. and one touchdown against
the Hoosiers.
DiGravio Stars
At South Bend, Purdue's "in-
jured" quarterback, Ron DiGravio,
fired a 25-yd. touchdown pass on
his first play of the game near
halftime and then guided the Boil-
ermakers to a methodical 24-6 tri-

d
i
e
s
2
i
s
s

The heralded DiGravio, suppos-
edly benched by an injured knee,
sewed up Purdue's first victory
after a 7-7 tie with Washington,
with a one-yd. quarterback sneak
in the third period for a 17-0 Boil-
ermaker lead.
Notre Dame, a 13-7 winner over
Oklahoma last week, played tough
but stymied football most of the
way, failing to score until late in
the final period on third string
quarterback Dennis Szot's 17-yd.
pass to end Jim Kelly.
Single-Wing
MSU, stressing a simple pitch-
out play and Ron Rubick's leg
work, scored the first four times
it had the ball and crushed North
Carolina at East Lansing.
Rubick, a chunky 172-1b. junior
tailback, scored three touchdowns
on runs of 67, 11 and 15 yds. He
piled up 207 yds. in 14 carries,
averaging 14.8 per carry.
With speedster tailback Sher-
man Lewis sharing the work load
with Rubick on the bread and but-
ter pitchouts, North Carolina
found the Spartan assault almost
unstoppable.
Lewis and Rubick divided the
four Michigan Statetouchdowns
in the first half with dazzling run-
ning behind quarterback Chuck
Migyanka's blocking.>
Michigan State, its high hopes
for national prestige ground un-
der in last week's opening 16-13
upset by Stanford, quickly showed,
it'll be a power to be reckoned with
in the Big Ten race.
Lewis raced six yds. for the first
touchdown on the Spartan's fifth
offensive play, the last three on
the pitchout.
Middies Sunk
At Minneapolis, the Gophers
struck for touchdowns in the first
time it had the ball in each half,
added another in the final two
minutes and employed over-pow-
ering line play in crushing Navy
21-0.
The Gophers stormed 41 yds.
after the opening kickoff for a
touchdown lead and scored again
less than 21/2 minutes into the
second half.
Jim Cairns wheeled back a Navy
punt 35 yds. to the Middy 29. On
the first play quarterback Duane
Blaska passed nine yds. to Cairns
and the fleet halfback ran the last
20 yds. for the score.
Minnesota added a third touch-
down 1:06 from the game's end on
a 51-yd. drive after end Ray Zit-
loff recovered a Navy fumble.
Jerry Pelletier scored on a four-yd.
pitchout aroundathe left side to
cap the eight play march.
Big Ten Standings

-Daily--James Keson
HE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR-End Jim Conley (82) appears
to be flying through the air like superman to bring down Army
ball carrier, left halfback John Seymour (43). The Raiders are
again in action

' ~-Daily-,Bruce Taylor
MAN ON THE GO-Tom Prichard, Wolverine halfback, finds a flaw in Army's defensive line, at least
for the time being. Mel Anthony (37) and Frosty Evashevski (26) block for him as the end zone fans
look on. Prichard, a converted quarterback, alternated between the defensive specialists and the
Raiders yesterday.

WOODY GRACIOUS:
B ruins in Bedlam
After OSU Upset

FOR
NATIONAL
BUSINESS
WOMAN'S
WEEK
Oct. 7-13

:...
'I!

Fall unfurls a
colorful world of

LOS ANGELES (M)-For nearly
an hour after the game, the UCLA
dressing room at Memorial Col-
iseum was bedlam.
The Bruins, in their first game
of the season, had just upset Ohio
State-the top-ranked team in the
nation-9-7 on a field goal in the
final minutes.
All Smiles
UCLA Coach Bill Barnes, who
had never beaten a Big Ten team
befoie, was all smiles.
"We told our boys they could

]

win before the ball game and also
at half time. They were dedicated
and hungry."
Right halfback Kermit Alexan-
der, who ran 45 yds. for the only
UCLA touchdown, was awarded
the game ball. .
The Bruins didn't attempt to
pass until the last period.
Weren't in Position

HOW TO

SUCCEED"

Fashions

Leafs .Down
A li-SOtars
TORONTO (P) -- The Toronto
Maple Leafs, who have been un-
able to win a game against anoth-
er National Hockey League team
in pre-season exhibition games,
defeated the league all-stars 4-1
last night in the annual All-Star
Game.
All the scoring was in the first
period, and the game settled down
to little more than a routine prac-
tice session after that.
Dick Duff, Bob Pulford, Frank
Mahovlich and Eddie Shack did
the scoring for the Maple Leafs,
the Stanley Cup champions. Vet-
eran Gordie Howe of the Detroit
Red Wings accounted for the only
all-star score.
Jacques Plante, Montreal goal-
tender, was the victim of all the
Toronto goals. Glen Hall of the
Chicago Black Hawks worked the
second period in the nets for the
All-Stars and Gump Worsley of
New York turned back the Leafs
in the third.

,.

"We didn't pass earlier because
we weren't in a position to,"
Barnes said. "They had us backed
up until the very end. But we felt
we would get an opportunity to
pass sooner or later."
A subdued but gracious Woody
Hayes of Ohio State greeted news-
men after 20-minutes with his
players. "UCLA deserved to win,"
Hayes said. "They outplayed us
during the last seven minutes of
the game, and during the first 30
seconds that they had the ball
when they scored their touch-
down.
More Climactic
"They were the more climactic
team and that's why they deserved
the victory.
"I don't thinkethey havesas good
material as they had last year,
but they did a fine job of putting
it together.
"The difference in our game is
that this year we don't have (full-
back) Bob Ferguson. On those
close-in goal-line stands, we failed
to score for a different reason
every time."

We're
till 8:3
for th
the Bu
come
model
and ha

open Mon. eve.
0 P.M. especially
e convenience of
siness women. Do
in and browse,
for your friends
ve an eve. of fun
N FORESTT
ner of S. University '
e Campus Theatre
RK AT REAR

We take special pride in our own Business
and Professional women of the campus and
vicinity.' Always a pleasure to do business.
with, always the first to appreciate our
fashions which we select with you, the busi-
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the loveliest most elegant fall Coats-Suits
-Dresses and Accessories.
SIZES: Junior 7-15, Average 8-44
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A Gal Couldn't Help But Be
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Wearing this appealing chamer by SYD-
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she has a "good head on her
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The amber stripe rayon
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Just$ 95

OSNamR~ed
Pesky Name
New Bosox
MangerR
NEW YORK (')--Johnny Pesky,
a long-time Boston Red Sox play-
er and manager of their Seattle
farm club for the last two sea-
sons, last night was named to
manage the Red Sox in 1963, suc-
ceeding Mike Higgins.
Higgins moves up to a newly
.created post of executive vice
president in charge of baseball.
Dick O'Connell, executive vice
president for the last two seasons,
now holds the title executive vice
president in charge of business.
The shift in personnel was an-
nounced by Red Sox officials in
New York for the World Series.
The announcement confirmed
long-time speculation that Higgins
would move up to an executive
post before next season started.
He had managed Boston from 1955
until mid-season in 1959, when
he was replaced by Billy Jurges.
Higgins returned to the field
'boss job early in the 1960 season
and had held the job since then.
The Red Sox finished in eighth
place this season.

off corn
opposit
PA

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

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oil[

Call S.G.C.
ORIENTATION PROGRAM
4:15 TUESDAYS
Room 3529 S.A.B..
THIS WEEK: COUNCIL MEMBERS
TO DEBATE IMPORTANT STUDENT
ISSUES. BRING A FRIEND.
Contact Ken Miller, NO 3-0553

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