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October 14, 1962 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-10-14

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THE MICHIGVAN D A~lr.V

. T m an a A m ma... A -

--1. .-111V11 i11 (1.1\ /1f i iNpsi
Northwestern, Wisconsin ostRi Ten H
LETT'S-iPot
)TO DEPT.

OCTOBER 14, 1962
0n

MINNEAPOLIS(A-Northwest-
ern's explosive passing attack, with
Tom Myers coming up with the big
play, broke a 22-22 tie with a 65-
yard aerial , to halfback Willie
Stinsom with 3:56 left and went on
to upend Minnesota 34-22 in a Big
Ten battle yesterday.
The Gophers had just scored on
a 52-yard burst up the middle by
fullback Jay Sharp and reserve
quarterback Bob Sadek passed to
end Ray Zitzloff for the conversion
to knot it 22-22.
On the first play after the en-
suing kickoff, Myers passed to
Stinson in the right flat and the
elusive 170-pound speedster shook
off a tackle at midfield and out-'
sprinted the Gopher defenders to
score standing up.
Minnesota Gambles
Minnesota gambled on fourth
down in its home territory after
that and the Wildcats got the ball
on downs at the Minnesota 25.
Northwestern tallied four plays
later with Myers passing three
yards to Paul Flatley for the score.
Myers fired four touchdown
passes to obliterate Minnesota's
record of not having yielded a
point in two previous games. The
magnificent sophomore quarter-
back tossed a 10-yard scoring aer-
ial to Gary Crum to cap an 80-
yard Wildcat drive in the first
quarter. He later threw nine yards
to fullback Steve Murphy for an-
other score before the final two
strikes that broke it up.-
Attack Improved
The Gophers exhibited a much-
improved attack but could not con-
tain Myers well enough to balance
their effort. Myers consistently
eluded the Gopher rush and wound

up completing 16 of 25 passes for
251 yards.
Minnesota had wiped out North-
western's early 7-0 lead to go in
front 14-7 at the half on a 61-yard
drive capped by Duane Blaska's 8-
yard scoring pass to Jerry Jones
and Jones' 17-yard burst up the
middle.
Northwestern regained the lead
at 15-14 in the third period with
an 80-yard drive that ended when
Murphy dove over a pileup to
score from the one after an inter-
ference call in the end zone gave
the Wildcats first down on the one.
Myers passe dto Chuck Logan for
the conversion that gave the Wild-
cats the lead.
Minutes later, Northwestern
flashed 46 yards to score on Myers'
9-yard pass to Murphy that made
it 22-14 and set the stage for
Sharp's romp.
* * *
Buckeyes Overpowering
CHAMPAIGN (P)-Ohio State's
Buckeyes, sticking mainly to their
fearsome ground attack, opened
defense of their Big Ten football
championship yesterday, battering
Illinois 51-15.
Still smarting from a 9-7 loss
last week which cost them their
No. 1 national ranking, the Buck-
eyes really turned on the steam
after a mediocre Illinois team
scored a touchdown in the early
seconds of the second quarter to
pull to a' 7-7 tie.
From then on Ohio State showed
no mercy and kept hammering
away to a one-sided triumph. The
loss was the 13th straight for Illi-
nois.
Quarterback John Mummey, di-

recting the Buckeyes most of the
way, went for two touchdowns
himself on keeper plays and kept
alive several Buckeye drives with
huge gains.
The homecoming crowd of 56,-
107 had little to cheer throughout
the unseasonably warm afternoon.;
Ohio State took a 7-0 lead in the
first quarter when Bob Butts
plunged for a 2-yar dtouchdown.
Illinois came back and tied be-
fore the second quarter was a
minute old on a 10-yard scoring
pass from Mike Taliaferro to Rich.
Callaghan.
Buckeye Rampage
This really sent the Buckeyes
on a rampage. They took the fol-
lowing kickoff and reeled off a
touchdown in four plays with
Mummey scoring and carrying
three times for 37 yards.
The next time the Buckeyes got
the ball, Dick VanRaaphorst boot-
ed a 39-yard field goal.
The Buckeyes attempted only
one pass in the first quarter but
they showed they weren't entirely
conservative. One a fourth and
one situation, with the ball on the
Illinois 48, fullback Dave Francis
hit the center of the line. He never
looked up and went all the way for
the score to make it 24-7 at the
half.
Mummey scored Ohio State's
first second-half touchdown late
in the third quarter on a three-
yard run. Before the period ended,
however, Wes Mirik intercepted an
Illini pass, and on the very next
play Bob Klein dashed 67 yards
for another touchdown.
Tyrone Barnett, a third-string
halfback, bolted 34 yards for an
Ohio State score in the fourth
quarter. And at this point the
crowd began filing out of the huge
stadium and many missed a nifty
22-yard touchdown run by Fran-
cis. * * *
Badgers Undefeated
MADISON P)-Undefeated Wis-
consin continued a drive for na-

tional football recognition by de-
feating Notre Dame 17-8 yesterday
as unheralded quarterback Ron
Vander Kelen engineered the
Badgers to their third straight vic-
tory.
Vander Kelen, a senior who had
seen only 90 seconds of action un-
til this season, passed 25 yards to
All-America candidate Pat Rich-
ter for a, touchdown in the first
period and then scored on a one-
yard sneak in the third quarter.
The Badgers overpowered the
outclassed Irish all the -way, but
were stymied by four interceptions
and .four lost fumbles. Two of the
Notre Dame thefts were in the end
zone.
Avert Shutout
Notre Dame managed to avert
a shutout by marching 68 yards
in the closing minutes. Denis Szot
moved the Irish downfield with
pinpoint passing and then handed
off to Don Hogan, who skirted end
for the final three yards. Szot then
passed to Jack Snow for a two-
point conversion.
A stout Wisconsin defense off-
set the sputtering offense, which
took the field as the nation's No.
2 team in total yardage. The Badg-
ers picked off four Notre Dame
passes and recovered a fumble, all
in the second half.
The Badgers moved from their
20 to the Notre Dame 17 in 9 plays,
setting up a 34 yard field goal by
Gary Kroner, the second time they
had the ball.
Hauls Down Strike
Richter, a 6-6 end, then hauled
down a strike from Vander Kelen
and stepped into the end zone for
his fourth touchdown pass of the
season. He has caught at least one
scoring pass in seven straight
games since the 1961 campaign.
A fumble recovery on the Notre
Dame 5 late in the third period
set up the Badgers' other touch-
down, Vander Kelen sneaking
through left guard on the third
play.

4

--AP wirephoto
JONES THROUGH BIG HOLE FOR TOUCHDOWN-Jerry Jones (38), Minnesota fullback, scampers
18 yards through a big opening in the Northwestern line and scores a touchdown in the second
quarter of their Big Ten football game in Minneapolis yesterday. Northwestern's Jerry Goshgarian
(59) and -Burt Petkus (on ground at left) couldn't get hands on Jones. Minnesota's Casey Fron
(left), and Milt Sunde (77-right) did blocking.

II ~

Women Swimmers
Outclass MSU .61-25

By BILL BULLARD
Special To The Daily

I

is

V

Kluter of Michigan State also
set a new standard.
Miss Swart took a first place in
the 50 yd. free-style despite a bad
start. Her time of :27.2 was a new
record as Cynthia Osgood was a
close second. An even closer race
was the 100-yard freestyle in
which Miss Swart tied her record
of 49.0 by touching out Spartan
Kluter. Nancy Wager was third for
the Wolverines.
Record Time
In the 50-yard butterfly event,
Miss Thrasher won with a record
time of :29.4. Jan Snavely took
a second place for Michigan. Miss
Thrasher won the 100-yard in-
dividual medley with Miss Osgood
taking another close second.
Mona DiFilippo won the 50-
yard breast-stroke race by two
seconds. Swimming competitively
for the first tme, diver June Mori
finished fourth.
Micki King walked away with
the diving honors, piling up 156.35
points. This was over 30 points
above Michigan States' Lola Miller
who was second. Miss Mori took
a third place, ten points -out of
second place.
Sets Record
Miss Kluter, the Spartan flash,
set a record in the 50-yard back-
stroke. Dona Conkilin and Miss
Snavely were second and third.
Michigan won both relays. In
the 200-yard medley relay, the
teams of Conklin, Di Filippo,
Thrasher and Wager beat the
Spartans. The 200-yard freestyle
relay team of Swart, Wager, Os-
good and Snavely won that event.

Boilermakers Upset.
LAFAYETTE (A ) - Miami of
Ohio caught Purdue with the let-
down jitters and stunned the Boil-
ermakers 10-7 yesterday.
A rugged line, an alert pass de-
fense and the aerial lightning of
sophomore southpaw Ernie Keller-
man got the job done for the Red-
skins, who-were undefeated in four
games but who had not played Big
Ten caliber competition.
The Boilermakers, ninth rated
among the nation's college football
teams after a 24-6 victory over
Notre Dame last week, contributed
to their own downfall with three
costly fumbles.
Jencks Scores All
Bob Jencks scored all of Miami's
points on a 31-yard field goal, a
tremendous pass from Kellerman
and a conversion. Forrest Farmer
got Purdue's touchdown on a pass
from Ron DiGravio, Skip Ohl con-
verting. Ohl missed two field goal
attempts, and Jencks missed one.
Purdue had a big edge in first
downs and rushing yardage and a
slight edge in passing, but two pass
interceptions and the fumbles off-
set a lot of yardage. The Boiler-
makers seemed sluggish except for
occasional bursts of brilliance and
missed their signals several times.
Miami Jittery
Miami had to whip its own case
of jitters in front of nearly 50,000
fans in big Ross Ade Stadium. A
fumble on the opening kickoff al-
most gave Purdue two points right
away, but the Redskins recovered
just in front of the goal line and
dug their way out of the hole.
A Miami drive that started on
the Redskins' 35-yard line in the
first quarter reached the Purdue
14 before stalling, and Jencks
kicked the field goal that proved
to be the victory margin.
Purdue was stung into life then.
Charles King returned the kickoff
30 yards to the Purdue 35 and
took the ball to midfield in three
plays, one of them a pass from Di-
Gravio.'The touchdown play start-
ed with some risky razzle-dazzle
in the backfield, DiGravio to King
and back to DiGravio, and then
DiGravio lofted a pass that Farm-
er took on the 15-yard line and
carried into the end zone.
Big Ten Standings

The Boilermakers seemed to
have the situation under control
in the second quarter, when the
Redskins suddenly reversed the
picture. With the ball on the
Miami 12-yard line, Kellerman
faded to his own goal line and cut
loose with a sky-scraping pass
that came down with perfect tim-
ing at the Purdue 55. Jencks took
it there in full stride and sped
down .the sideline untouched.
There were still more than 40
minutes of football to be" played,
but neither team could score again.
Purdue twice tried for a tying
field goal in the second and third
quarters, but disdained another
try in the fourth in a go-for-broke
bid for victory that failed.
With fourth down and 10 yards
to go on the Miami 35-yard line,
DiGravio gambled on a pass ,to
Steve Weil and got a first down
on the 11, but with fourth down
and 2 to go on the 3-yard line he
called a running play and lost the
ball on downs.
Purdue had 21 first downs to
Miami's 10 and outgained the
Redskins 203-69 yards rushing and
163-151 passing. Kellerman com-
pleted 5 of 14 passes, DiGravio 8
of 22 and Gary Hogan 2 of 7 for
Purdue. Roy Walker of Purdue-was
the big ground gainer with 79
yards in 13 carries.
* * *
Hawkeyes Edge By
BLOOMINGTON-Iowa's Hawk-
eyes came from behind twice; and
won their Big Ten football opener
14-10 yesterday from a stubborn
Indiana team.
Sophomore Bob Wallace filled
in smartly for injured Matt Szy-
kowny, Iowa's passing star. The
19-year-old quarterback scored the
Hawkeye's game-winning touch-
down in the second quarter on a
1-foot sneak after setting it up
with passes to Paul Krause for 20
yards and Cloyd Webb for 11.
Score Long Runs
Both teams scored on long runs
in the first seven minutes of the
game. Indiana's Mary Woodson
broke away for a 54-yard touch-
down sprint on the sixth play from
scrimmage. Iowa's Bill Perkins
scampered 50 on Iowa's seventh
play.
Luke George converted for In-
diana and Jay Roberts for Iowa.
Roberts missed a 49-yard field goal
attempt early in the second quar-
ter. George kicked a 43-yarder, the
ball clearing the cross bar by
inches.
Wallace's touchdown and Rob-
erts' second conversion finished
the scoring.
Indiana.Deep
Most of the second half saw In-
diana stand deep in its territory.

The Hoosiers stopped Webb on
their 1-yard line early in the fin-
al period after he caught a short
fourth-down pass from Wallace.
They held again at their 29, fum-
bled at the 34, and stopped the
Hawkeyes again.
Iowa had an 18-13 margin in
first downs and it inflicted Indi-
ana's 15th straight defeat by Big
Ten opponents. The Hawks had a
margin of 225 yards to 105 yards
by rushing, but Indiana led in
passing yardage 123.68.
The Hoosiers, who had been set-
ting school records for penalties,
lost only 36 yards to the whistle
and Iowa was penalized 70.
SCORE!
GRID PICKS
Michigan State 28, Michigan 0
Ohio State 51, Illinois 9
Iowa 14, Indiana 10
Northwestern 34, Minnesota 22
Wisconsin 17, Notre Dame 8
Army 9, Penn State 6
Columbia 14, Yale 10
Holy Cross 34, Harvard 20
West Virginia 15, Pittsburgh 8
Syracuse,12, Boston College 0
Georgia 24, Clemson 16
Florida 42, Texas A & M 6
Georgia Tech 17, Tennessee 0
Maryland 31, North Carolina 13
Kansas 29, Iowa state 8
Oklahoma'State 36, Colorado 16
Washington 14, Oregon State 13
Washington State , Stanford
Louisiana State 17, Miami (Fla) 3
Oregon 31, Rice 12
OTHER GAMES
EAST
Navy 41, Cornell 0
Princeton 21, Penn 8
Dartmouth 41, Brown 0
Geo. Washington 14, Boston U. 6
Rutgers 27, Colgate 15
Buffalo 20, Delaware 19
Temple 21, Lafayette 0
Bucknell 32, Lehigh 6
New Hampshire 21, Maine 6
Northeastern 14, American Int'I. 6
Kings Point 13, Upsala 7
Bates,20, Worcester Tech 7
Vermont 21, Rhode Island 12
Springfield 21, Colby 6
Amherst 34, Bowdoin 12
Hamilton 26, Hobart 13
Johns Hopkins 20, Haverford 0
Slippery Rock 27, California (Pa) 26
SOUTH
Duke 21, California 7
Alabama 14, Houston 3
Virginia 28, Virginia Military 6
Davidson 7, William & Mary 7 (tie)
North Carolina A&T 20, Maryland St. 8
Citadel 21, Vanderbilt 6
MIDWEST
Miami (Ohio) 10, Purdue 7
Missouri 32, Kansas State 0
Nebraska 19, North Carolina State 14
Louisville 21, Dayton 0
Kent State 23, Marshall 14
Western Reserve 12, Thiel 0
FAR WEST
TCU 35, Texas Tech 13
Wichita 24, New Mexico State 6
Tulsa 34, North Texas 0

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

w
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0

L
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
2

Pct. PF
1.000 79
1.000 30
1.000 28
1.000 51
1.000 °14
.000 0
.000 0
.000 22
.000 16
.000 15

PA
22
6
0
15
10
0
28
34
44
96

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