UNDAY, NUVEM.E 11, 196 THE MICHIGAN DAILY NORTHWESTERN DROPS FIRST: Wisconsin, Purdue, Northwestern Share First in Big Ten PAGE N I By The Associated Press MADISON-Rose Bowl-minded Wisconsin shocked Northwestern, the nation's No. 1 football power, with an explosive attack and a bruising defense in knocking the Wildcats from the unbeaten ranks 37-6 yesterday behind the brilliant and one defeat. The lone setback was a 14-7 decision to Ohio State. The Badgers, who have surrend- ered a mere 73 points, threw up a rugged defense, in halting the aer- ial acrobatics of Myers, a sensa- tional sophomore. Wisconsin gave up short yardage on passes in warding off the threat of long- gaining bombs virtually the entire game. VanderKelen; a senior quarter- back who had played only 90 sec- onds of varsity- ball prior to this fall, directed the Badgers on an 80-yd. scoring march after the de- fense had thrown back a scoring bid by Northwestern in the early minutes. Vandy, who was aided in the drive by Holland's three runs for 30 yards, capped the drive by hit- ting Kroner on an 11-yd. payoff maneuver. Kroner added the extra point and then bootes his mates into a 10-0 halftime lead with a 38-yd. field goal in the second per- iod. Kroner ignited the Badgers with a 44-yd. return of the second half kickoff, dashing down the side- lines to the Northwestern 43. Three plays later, VanderKelen rolled to his right and hit Kroner on a scoring shot covering 23 yds. A pass interception on the Northwestern 21 set up a 9-yd. scoring jaunt around end by Hol- land a few minutes later. A North- western fumble on the ensuing se- ries of downs gave Holland anoth- er touchdown-this one on a 4-yd. burst through left guard. Wisconsin stopped Northwest- ern just inches from the goal be- fore the Wildcats rebounded for their touchdown on a Myers pass to Murphy. VanderKelen completed the rout by passing to Holland for another six points on an 11-yd. aerial play with 12 seconds remaining. The victory boosted Wisconsin into a tie with Minnesota and Northwestern-each with 4-1 rec- ords-in the Big Ten. The Badgers have conference games left with Illinois and the Gophers, who are ineligible for the Rose Bowl this year. Northwestern has only a meeting with Michigan State in conference play. "They overpowered us," said Northwestern football coach Ara Parseghian, unable to hide the shock of hearing his own words recap the dethronement of his first-ranked Wildcats. "Wisconsin ran the same plays, they had the same defenses, they did everything we expected, but they did it with greater execution and with greater determination," he said. The replies came had for the stunned Northwestern coach as newsmen huddled around. "How did the game get so out of hand?" a questioner asked try- ing for an explanation of the 37-6 victory by the fired-up Badgers. "I wish I had an answer to that, I really wish I did," Parseghian said. Wisconsin coach Milt Bruhn had trouble with words, too, but his was an inability to find enough of them. "You just have to say that this was VanderKelen's day," he said of Wisconsin's quarterback. In his personal duel with All- American candidate Tom Myers, the Wildcat signal caller, Vander- Kelen was in Bruhn's words, "just superb." VanderKelen completed 12 of 22 passes for three touchdownsi and 181 yds. and averaged more than 3 yds. in nine running trips with the ball. He directed his team flawlessly and contributed to the bruising Badger defense. Bruhn was asked which of the two he'd pick as the All-America quarterback, but sidestepped the question by saying he knew "all along how good Vandy is and I've only seen Myers once." Both coaches agreed that the rush Wisconsin put on Myers was the chief factor in the outcome. Parseghian said it was the "heaviest" his team had come up' against in seven games. Bruhn said Wisconsin's rush and "solid defense, especially in the deep secondary did the job for us." The Badger coach said that as early as Monday he and his staff "could almost sense what was go- ing to happen yesterday. This was as ready as we've been all year." * * * Bucks Beat Clock COLUMBUS-Dick Van Raap- horst, 19-year-old junior, gave fal- tering Ohio State a 10-7 victory over 18-point underdog Indiana yesterday with a 27-yd. field goal in the last eight seconds. The Hoosiers in losing their 18th straight Western Conference game, played the Bucks to a standstill until the final seconds, and had all the edge in the statistics. Paul Warfield, speedy Buckeye junior from Warren, Ohio, put the Bucks in front with a scintillating 75-yd. touchdown run in the sec- ond period, and Indiana matched it with a 72-yd., 19-play drive at the start of the third session. Hoosier quarterback Woody Moore sneaked six inches for the counter. Neither team was able to threat- yesterday in a bruising Big en many times because of the wet defensive battle. Ten I field and a drizzling rain which kept the bands off the field at halftime. Luke George missed a 26-yd. field goal try for Indiana in the second period, and Van Raaphorst, from Ligonier, Pa., but a native of Charlevoix, Mich., had missed from 28 and 58 yds. before his big pay-off punch. The victory moved Ohio to a 4-3 record for the season, and 3-2 in the Conference, the conquests coming on alternate weekends. In- diana is 0-5 in the Conference, and 2-6 overall. * * * Hex on You, MSU EAST LANSING-Purdue, which for the past decade has exercised a football hex over Michigan State, defeated the favored Spartans 17-9 l r 'Maple Leafs, Black Hawks Win While Detroit,_Boston Deadlock Purdue's Omer Ohl converted the Boilermakers' first touchdown in the third period and then add- ed a 27-yd. field goal in the fourth to keep the Boilermakers in the race for a possible Big Ten title and a trip to the Rose Bowl. Pur- due got an insurance touchdown with only 38 seconds left to play. Michigan State's lone touch- down, scored in the third period, came on Sherman Lewis 54-yd. run on the first play after Don Underwood had recovered a Pur- due fumble. But the Spartans' try for the extra point went wrong with a bad pass from center. Breaks were decisive in all the early scoring except for Ohl's field goal. Purdue's first touchdown came when Tom Bloom streaked 47 yards down an aisle near the sidelines after intercepting a Pete Smith pass. The last minute Purdue marker involved a lurching 50-yd. run by Ron Walker and then a one-yd. plunge by the fullback. Michigan State started the scor- ing when Underwood recovered a Purdue fumble in the second per- iod o nthe Purdue 20-yd. line and three plays later Jim Bobbitt kick- ed a field goal from the 27. In the recent past Purdue has broken a Michigan State 28-game winning streak, twice has cost the Spartans possible Big Ten titles, and now has closed the door for any chances to visit the Rose Bowl in January. ATTENTION SOCIAL CHAIRMEN DICKIE JOHNSON ORGAN TRIO is back in town for engagement call NO 3-6760 "ii GARY KRONER ... first 17 masterminding of Ron VanderKel- en. The Badgers, rated eighth in the country, scored a touchdown and a field goal the first two times they had the ball and then buried the stunned Wildcats with a 21-point outburst in the third period. Gary Kroner, a senior halfback who had not scored a touchdown this season, tallied the first 17 points and then added a pair of conversions. Lou Holland, a jun- for speedster, scored the last three Wisconsin touchdowns on a pair of sparkling runs and a pass from VanderKelen. Northwestern, which had rolled to six straight victories, managed to avert a shutout on a 39-yd. pass maneuver, Tom Myers pitch- ing to Steve Murphy midway through the final period. Wisconsin, the nation's highest scoring machine, boosted its out- put to 236 points in six victories By The Associated Press MONTREAL - The Chicago Black Hawks gave rookie goalie Denis DeJordy some fine support and scored once in each period last night in a 3-1 National Hock- ey League victory over the Mon- treal Canadiens. DeJordy, up from Buffalo of the American Hockey League, filled in for the injured Glenn Hall in the Chicago nets and almost pulled out a shutout in his first full NHL game. Hall's absence, because of a pinched nerve in his back, broke a string of 552 consecutive NHL games for the veteran goalie. The Hawks came up with a hel- ter-skelter but highly effective checking game that pulled DeJor- dy out of trouble several times. Ken Wharram, Ron Murphy and Stan Mikita scored for Chicago and Tom Johnson scored for Mon- treal midway through the third period when his goalmouth lift LOUIS ,.HOLLAND ... three TDs EXCEPT UCLA: Country By The Associated Press WACO - Lightning streaked through cloudless skies yesterday- in the form of quarterback Tom- my Wade and the jolt carried na- tionally-ranked Texas to a stir- ring 27-12 victory over Baylor's Battlin' Bears. Wade, locked in a passing duel with Baylor's Don Trull, fired two touchdown bolts, dove one yard for another and directed the un- defeated Longhorns to their sev- enth victory of the ;year. Witih only a 14-14 tie marring their record, the Steers moved a giant step nearer their second straight Southwest Conference championship. Only Texas Christian and arch- rival Texas A&M block the title trail, and a trip New Year's Day to the Cotton Bowl. Wade hurled passes of 54 and s Top Teams Score Victories 14 yds. for the first two Texas touchdowns, spotting Tommy Lu- cas on the first and Sandy Sands on the second. Tailback Jerry Cook scampered eight yds. for the third and Wade closed out the Longhorn scoring with five minutes left on a plunge from the 1. Shoeless kicker Tony, Crosby converted after the first three. * * * 'Bama Crushes Miami TUSCALOOSA-Sophomore Joe Namath took some passing lessons from Miami's brilliant George Mira in the first half yesterday, then applied them with punishing fury and guided nationally ranked Alabama to a 36-3 football victory. Namath ran and passed Ala- bama to 23 points in less than nine minutes of the third period after magician Mira had led Miami to a 3-0 halftime on a 40- yd. field goal by Bobby Wilson. It was Alabama's 19th consecutive victory, and the defending nation- al champions ran their unbeaten string to 26 games. Alabama, currently No. 3 in the nation in the Associated Press top 10, shouted for a return to the No. 1 spot by turning the hearlded Mira-Namath duel into a rout in the second half. Namath triggered the first touchdown by racing 38 yds. in the third period to the Miami 41. Two plays later, he passed 35 yds. to halfback Cotton Clark to the Miami 4. Clark scored three plays later from the one. This touch- down dealt Miami its sceond de- feat in eight games. * * * Cadets Upset UCLA LOS ANGELES-The Air Force Cadets took the opening kickoff and marched 83 yds. for a touch- down, scored twice on enemy errors and upset UCLA 17-11 yesterday. Favored by more than a touch- down, UCLA went into the air in a wild final two minutes but the Academy defense throttled the be- lated attack.' Air Force halfback Darryl Bloodworth intercepted a pass from Larry Zeno and raced 55 yds. for an apparent touchdown with 1:50 to go but the play was nulli- fied by a holding penalty. Earlier in the fourth quarter, UCLA got back into the game on a 49-ydfl drive and a 4-yd. touch- down run by Zeno. Zeno then pass- ed to Bill Hauck for the conver- sion and UCLA trailed 11-17. Bloodworth scored the first touchdown as quarterback Terry Isaacson guided Air Force down- field in 17 plays, all but two on the ground. The alert Cadets cashed in on two of several UCLA mistakes. John Gavin booted a 25-yd. field goal in the third quarter after Joe O'Gorman recovered a fumble. Isaacson intercepted a pass and raced 37 yds. to the UCLA 18 to set up the final Air Force score. * * * Arkansas Levels Rice FAYETTEVILLE - Billy Moore ran for one touchdown, passed to sophomore end Jerry Lamb for two more, and rolled up 71 yds. rushing in quarterbacking sixth- ranked Arkansas to a 28-14 Southwest Conference football victory over Rice yesterday. Moore boosted his conference. scoring lead to 66 points and his rushing lead to 485 yds. in the important Homecoming victory before a record crowd of 34,000. Arkansas has a 7-1 record and with victories in its last two games against Southern Methodist and Texas Tech could virtually assure itself of a bowl bid. Rice quarterback Randy Kerbow mounted an impressive passing attack in the second half and threw to ends Gene Raesz and Jerry Kelley for the Owl touch- downs. But Arkansas' overall strength and aggressiveness made the game far more lopsided than the score indicated. Arkansas got off to a 2-0 lead after three minutes when center Jerry Caveness tackled Rice tail- back Ronnie Hatfield on the Owl one and Hatfield fell into the end zone for a safety. Hatfield had fielded a punt that bounched back at him after hitting the goal line. went in off Chicago defenseman Jack Evans. Montreal goalie Jacques Plante, who has been bothered with a leg muscle injury, started for Cana- diens but had to retire after the first period in favor of Cesare Maniago. The Canadiens were also without forwards Bobby Rousseau and Gil- les Tremblay and the Hawks were short defenseman ' Pierre Pilote and forward Reg Fleming. Trem- blay and Fleming sat out the sec- ond of their three-game suspen-, sion for a stick duel last month in Chicago. Pilote and Rousseau are on the injured list. * * * BOSTON - Tommy Williams, swinging like a baseball batter, brought Boston a 3-3 tie with De- troit's National Hockey League leaders last night with his first goal of the year. Moments before his equalizer at 14 minutes, 38 seconds, of the fin- al period, Williams had replaced Wayne Connelly on the Bruins' high scoring line centered by Mur- ray Oliver. The Red Wings' brilliant mask- ed goal tender, Terry Sawchuk, had just made a stop on a long shot by Pat Stapleton. The puck hop- ped straight in the air as the goalie fell to the ice and Williams swung with his stick, catching the disc squarely and banging it into the goal. Williams also was assisted on the tally by Johnnq Bucyk, who had a hand in every Boston score, helping Oliver and Don McKen- ney earlier. The Stapleton assist made up for his accidental help when Detroit took a temporary 3-2 lead. Rookie Doug Barkley slammed a 35-foot shot early in the third period which caromed off Stapleton's leg directly into the goal. Pete Goe- gan and Gordie Howe also scored for the Wings. Detroit ran its record to eight victories, one loss and three ties, while Boston saw its winless streak extended to 10 games. * * * TORONTO-Billy Harris scored the winning goal midway through the final period last night as the Toronto Maple Leafs broke a three-game home losing string. with a 5-3 National Hockey League victory over the New York Rangers. Harris' ramed in a goal that broke a 3-3 tie at 8 minutes, 9 sec- onds of the final period after New York had rallied from a 3-1 defi- cit for the tie. The Leafs' Red Kelly added one for insurance about four minutes later. It was the second straight tri- O Personahzed CHRISTMAS CARDS wonderful selection order now -4 OvereckBookstoreU umph over New York for the Leafs, who beat the Rangers in New York Wednesday. Toronto started out as if it were going to make a rout of it, scoring the first goal while the Rangers had a man advantage. Dave Keon sliced in a goal while teammate Bob Braun was inwthe penalty box, but New York made it 1-1 on Camille Henry's first per- iod marker. Frank Mahovlich and Baun quickly ran the Toronto margin to 3-1 in the middle period before Dean Prentice and Andy Heben- ton tied it again for the Rangers, settin gthe stage for Harris' win- ner. the fourth dimension: TIME .stil a mysterious concept to science. Time is only an idea, an abstraction ... an area of shadow, speculation-and surprise. SCORES Michigan 14, Illinois 10 Ohio State 10, Indiana 7 Purdue 17, Michigan State 9 Minnesota 10, Iowa 0 Wisconsin 37, Northwestern 6 Notre Dame 43,, Pittsburgh 22 Cornell 28, Brown 26 Harvard 20,Princeton 0 Boston College 42, Texas Tech 13 Georgia Tech 14, Florida St. 14 (tie) Syracuse 34, Navy 6 Penn State 34, West Virginia 6 Alabama 36, Miami 3 Auburn 9, Mississippi State 3 Duke 10, Maryland 7 So. Carolina 17, No. Carolina St. 6 Nebraska 40, Kansas 16 Texas A&M 12, Southern Methodist 7 Air Force 17, UCLA 11 So. California 39, Stanford 14 OTHER GAMES Michigan Case Tech 18, Wayne State 7 Eastern Michigan 30, Alma 6 Albion 26, Hope 22 Western Mich. 28, Brigham Young 20 EAST Penn 15, Yale 12 Dartmouth 42, Columbia 0 Boston 13, Connecticut 0 Holy Cross 20, VMI 14 Oklahoma State 12, Army 7 Massachusetts 19, Villanova 18 Bucknell 32, Colgate 14 Delaware 23, Rutgers 6 Wash. & Jefferson 21, Allegheny 12 Bowling Green (O.) 7, Ohio Univ. 6 Oklahoma 41, Iowa State 0 Wilmington 15, Taylor 14. Missouri 57, Colorado 0 Miami (O.) 42, Dayton 20 John Carroll 12, Thiel 0 SOUTH Virginia Tech 37, Wake Forest 8 Kentucky 7, Vanderbilt 0 Florida 23, Georgia 15 Clemson 44, Furman 3 Tennessee 28, Tulane 16 Arkansas 28, Rice 14 Memphis State 60, The Citadel 13 Mississippi 52, Chattanooga 7 SOUTHWEST Texas 27, Baylor 12 Once our master timekeeper-EARTH-IS RUNNING DOWN! Friction from ocean tides is almost imperceptibly, but definitely, slowing the earth's rotation, gradually disqualifying the turning globe as our most accurate time measure. Science has already devised more dependable timing devices, i.inmMmuNmflISU~UUUI ~ inm~ammuum8MS9SUhhhh8flinU8IUR PRECISION -engineering of the Hamilton 505 Electric Watch is so ad- . A vanced that the energy needed to power a 60- watt light bulb for, one S .hour would run the 505 ifor 960 years! For men who like to stay one im. portant step ahead: Hamilton 505 Electric watches. For girls who like to wear that single important piece of jewelry all the time: lovely Hamiltons for ladies. Both make great gift suggestions. Fine Hamiltons start as low as $35. Hamilton Watch Co., Lancaster, Pa., OYSTER TIME. TIDAL TELEPATHYp An Atlantic Ocean oyster will con- tinue to open up for feeding ac- cording to ocean tides long after being moved to the Midwest, a thousand miles away., 11 M I