100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 29, 1963 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-09-29

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

TIIE MICRIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY. SEFTE ER 29. lA i

THE MCHIGA DAIL !~TTIIAV i~PTFW~i~'? 90 on aa- t~

UGLY- , :1, 1.703

s

TIONAL ROUNDUP:
ooners Sink Southern Cal;
taubach Keeps Navy Rollig
By The Associated Press

South Viet Nam Faces Two-War Struggle

LOS ANGELES-The powerful
Sooners of Oklahoma defeated the
national champions of the Univer-
sity of Southern California 17-12
yesterday with a magnificent and
versatile attack which wrecked the
Trojan defenses for most of the
game.
The defeat was registered in
105-degree heat before 39,345
sweltering fans in Memorial Coli-
seum. It ended an 12-game win-
ning streak for the Trojans, dat-
ing back to the final game of the
1961 season.
'All of the Sooner soring came
in the first half, and they held off
an exciting but belated Trojan,
dating back to the final game of
the 1961 season.
All of the Sooner scoring came
in the first half, and they held off
an exciting but belated Trojan
challenge in the final quarter to
one touchdown.
It was the first meeting in his-
tory between these two college
powers-Southern Cal, the No. 1
rated team in the country, and
Oklahoma, rated No. 3 in last
week's Associated Press poll.
Quarterback Bobby Page and
the aggressive Sooners took over
on their own one after a Trojan
punt in the first quarter. .They
traveled 99 yards-interrupted by
an exchange of fumbles on suc-
cessive plays at the Sooner 35-
and went on to score the opening
touchdown.
Joe Don Looney scored from 19
yards out on a tricky double re-
verse that caught Southern Cal
completely by surprise.
The Trojan fumble in this se-
ries was. one of two that gave the
ball to Oklahoma. The Sooners
displayed a magnificent exhibition
of ball control throughout the aft-
ernoon.
Slouthern Cal came back in the
first quarter with a 67-yard thrust
engineered by quarterback Pete
Beathard, with fullback Ernie
Pye plunging one yard for the six
points. A bad pass from center
cost them the extra point and the
Trojans trailed 7-6.
Sophomore quarterback Mike
Ringer took the Oklahoma con-
trols and the Sooners went 52
yards in 14-plays. Te drive was
highlighted by one complex re-
verse which netted Looney 19
yards on a pass to set up the
score.1
The tally came when the Tro-
jan defense went for a fake hand-
off to fullback Jim Grisham while
Ringer whirled in the opposite
direction four yards for the score.
George Jarman then kicked his
second conversion.
A fumble by Beathard was
turned into a 43-yard field goal
by the efficient Jarman, and the
Sooners left the field at half time
leading 17-6.
The third quarter was scoreless,
although Oklahoma marched 79
yards to the Trojan one. A penal-
ty set the ball back to the six and
Jarman's field goal attempt was
blocked by Hal Bedsole.
Beathard and his two fine half-
backs, Willie Brown and Mike
Garrett, kept the Trojan hopes
alive with a dazzling ezhibition
that carried the ball 93 yards and
touchdown. Brown went over from
the one but a pass; attempt for a
two-point conversion was unsuc-
cessful.
Southern Cal had the ball once
more but surrendered possession
deep in its own territory when
three straight passes were dropped.
Staubach Stars
ANNAPOLIS - Quarterback
Roger Staubach put on a dazzling
display of passing and running for
Navy's homecoming football fans
yesterday as the powerful Middies
racked up William & Mary 28-0.
The scrambling junior from Cin-
cinnati completed 12 of 17 passes
for 206 yards and rushed for 91.
His 297 yards total offense
smashed the Naval Academy
single-game record set by quarter-

Ce Ieg Sc ores
GRID PICKS GAMES
MICHIGAN 27, So. Methodist 16
Pittsburgh 13, Washington 6
Princeton 24, Rutgers 0
Kansas 10, Syracuse 0
Illinois 10, California 0
Northwestern 34, Indiana 21
Washington State 14, Iowai 14
Michigan State 31, No. Carolina 0
Nebraska 14, Minnesota 7
Missouri 7, Arkansas 6
Wisconsin 14, Notre Dame 9
Ohio State 17, Texas A & M 0
Oklahoma 17, USC 12
Miami (Fla) 3, Purdue 0
Auburn 23, Tennessee 19
Georgia Tech 27, Clemson 0
Texas Christian 12, Florida St. 0
Rice 21, LSU 12
Baylor 27, Houston 0
Colorado at Oregon State (inc.)
OTHER GAMES
Rhode Island 20; Maine 16
Dartmouth 20, Bucknell 18
Columbia 41, Brown 14
Massachusetts 0, Harvard 0 (tie)
Buffalo 6, Holy Cross 6 (tie)
West Virginia 34, Boston Univ. 0
Penn State 17. UCLA 14

back Jim Maxfield against Notre
Dame in 1959.
Staubach scored the first touch-
down with 5:37 left in the first
quarter on a 'three-yard plunge
after the Middies had gained pos-
session on a William & Mary
fumble at the 20.
He took the Tars 90 yards for
a second touchdown which Stau-
bach launched from the Navy end
zone on a pass to fullback Pat
Donnelly. Donnelly raced 62 yards
before he was finally bounced out
of bounds. The Middies scored in
three more plays, with Donnelly
plunging over from the one.
Navy added two more touch-
downs in the third quarter on
drives of 63 and 97 yards, with
Staubach again in command.
Speedy halfback John Sai was the
sparkplug of the third scoring ef-
fort, carrying 36 yards and mak-
ing the touchdown from six yards
out.
Staubach took to the air again
on Navy's final drive, completing
passes of 10 yards to Gary Kell-
ner, 27 yards to Dick Earnest,
and 19 to Nick Markoff. He also
ran for 12 yards himself before
Kip Paskewich took the ball in
from the four.
* * *
Tech Beats Clemson
ATLANTA--Quarterback Billy
Lothridge, Georgia Tech's all-
around football magician, opened
his bag of tricks all the way yes-
terday as he passed, ran and
kicked the nationally ranked Yel-
low Jackets to a 27-0 victory over
Clemson.
He tossed touchdown passes to
ends Gary Williams, Ted Davis
and Billy Martin, and kicked two
field goals and three conversions.
He had a hand or foot in all of
Tech's scoring.
It was the worst defeat for
Coach Frank Howard's Tigers
since 1953 when Miami dealt them
a 39-7 setback.
The game was played in a down-
pour of rain and fumbles were al-
most as numerous as the passes
of Lothridge and Clemson quarter-
back Jim Parker.
Pitt Downs Huskies
PITTSBURGH-Junior quarter-
back Fred Mazurek soored one
touchdown, passed for another
and made two clutch defensive
plays in the fourth period to lead
unbeaten Pitt to a 13-6 victory
yesterday over a stubborn Wash-
ington team.
Mazurek scored Pitt's first
touchdown in the second quarter
on a one-yard sneak after his
passing set up the TD.
His 14-yard pass to Joe Kuzes-
ki in the fourth period insured
Pitt its victory, but without Ma-
zurek's sterling defensive efforts
in the clutch the 10th ranked
Panthers would not have won
their second game of the season.
Mazureka's first game-saving ef.,
fort came right after Washington
scored its touchdown on Dave
Kopay's two-yard plunge.
With the score 7-6 in Pitt's fa-
vor, Washington fullback Charlie
Browning took a pitch-out to the
left in a gamble for two points,
but Mazurek, coming up fast
from his defensive halfback slot,
smeared Browning for a loss.
After Pitt had scored following
the ensuing on-side kick, Steve
Bramwell's 70-yard return put the
Huskies in scoring position again
on the Panther 27.
But four plays later, Mazurek
intercepted Bill Douglas' pass on
the Pitt two to end the Washing-
ton threat.
Pitt sewed up the game after
the interception by driving 86
yards, eating up most of the four
minutes remaining bemore Wash-
ington recovered Mazurek's fum-
ble on the one-yard line.
Another Mazurek fumble on
Pitt's first series of plays in the
game also halted a Pitt drive of
54 yards. Washington's Rick Red-
man recovered the ball on the.
Washington 23. But Mazurek made

up for both miscues.,
Penn State Wins
UNIVERSITY PARK - Ron
Coates, a substitute quarterback,
had to kick the game-winning
field goal twice yesterday as Penn
State beat UCLA., 17-14.
With five minutes, 40 seconds
gone in the final perifod of-the
football game, Coates kicked a
field goal from the 18-yard line
to break a 14-all tie. But Penn
State had too many men in the
backfield and the officials called;
a five-yard penalty.
Then Coates kicked the field
goal again-this time from the 22
yard line.

Minutes later the tough UCLA
defense put up a tremendous goal
line stand, holding the Lions on
the two-yard line when a pass
from quarterback Pete Liske
went out ofthe end zone incom-
plete.
UCLA tied the score at 14 in
the third period after gambling on
a fourth down and five situation
on State's 36-yard line.
Quarterback Carl Jones, who
came into the game for the one
play, dashed six yards around his
left end for the first down. Seven
plays later junior quarterback
Larry Zeno fired a five-yard
touchdown pass to halfback Bob
Richardson. Zeno added the extra
point with a place kick.
Liske was the sparkplug of the
Lion's offense, completing 19'of 27
passes for 175 yards.
The Lions scored their two
touchdowns within three minutes
and thirty seconds in the second
quarter. Gary Klingensmith then
plunged over from the one, cap-
ping a 44-yard march for the
first score and Liske and Junior
Powell teamed up on a 52-yard
pass play with 25 seconds left in
the period for their second six
pointer. Sandwiched in between
was UCLA's first touchdown with
Zeno flipping 10-yard pass to
end MelI Profit.
Coaes also added both extra
points for the Lions with place
kicks.
* * *
Kansas Upsets Syracuse
LAWRENCE, Kan.-Fleet Gayle
Sayers of Kansas bolted 25 yards
for the only touchdown and kept
Syracuse off balance with his
speed as the Jayhawks upset the
Big Orangemen, 16-0.
Syracuse set its defense to stop
Sayers outside and this left the
way for fullback Ken Coleman to
punish the Orangemen through
the line.
The Jayhawks moved 78 yards
in 11 plays to score after the sec-
ond half kickoff. Sayers started it
with a 22-yard sweep, then Cole-
man began battering the middle.
With fourth down and a foot,
Sayers took a pitchout, cut over
left tackle, bounced off two Syra-
cuse men and raced into the end
zone.
Syracuse, a one-touchdown fav-
orite with a line averaging 231
pounds, came right back with a
66-yard drive in 16 plays; only to
lose the ball at the Kansas two on
a fourth down fumble by halfback
Bill Schoonover.
Kansas gave the ball to the
Orangemen twice after that. The
second time, they drove to the
KU eight, where Dick King's
fourth down pass was knocked
down by .Mike Johnson with a
minute eft.
* , * *
Missouri Wins, 7-6
LITTLE ROCK - Sophomore
quarterback Gai'y Lane whipped
Missouri's Tigers with a 70-yard
third quarter touchdown for a 7-6
football victory over eighth-ranked
Arkansas last night. Fullback Gus
Otto scored Missouri's tally from
the 2.
Lane and sophomore halfback
Monroe Phelph sparked an awgk-
ened Missouri offense in the sec-
ond half and the Tigers' big ex-
perienced line stopped Arkansas
cold. Lane set up the touchdown
with a 25-yard pass to end Bud
Abell to the Arkansas 2.
The Razorbacks grabbed a
touchdown the first time they got
the ball on an 80-yard drive di-
rected by junior quarterback Bill
Gray. Gray heaved a 26-yard pass
to tailback Jim Lindsey for the
score.
Tom McKnelly's kick for extra
point was short, and that was Ar-
kansas' downfall. Missouri's Bill
Leistritz kicked his extra point for
the win.
Dunn Stars
LEXINGTON - Mississippi's
powerful Rebels, gunning for a
place among the nation's top ten,

crushed Kentucky 31-7 last night
in the SoutheasternhConference
football opener for both schools.
The Rebels, who lost their No. 2
pre-season ranking last Saturday.
when they were held to a score-
less tie by Memphis State, threw
everything they had at Kentucky
and completely dominated the
contest.
Ole Miss, which managed only a
field goal in the first quarter, par-
layed perfect offensive blocking
and the fine efforts of quarterback
Perry Lee Dunn to score three
touchdowns, all on passes, in the
second period.
Dunn threw for three touch-
downs.

The United States is pondering what to do with South Viet Nam's
two wars.
The United States-supported Vietnamese government of President
Ngo Dinh Diem is under attack on two fronts-from Communist Viet
Cong guerrillas and from the insensed Buddhist majority of his nation.
United States military forces are heavily committed to the first
war, but not to the second. Neither is going the way the United States
would like,,but there seems little this country can do about this.
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor are now touring
South Viet Nam to assess the sit-
.. .: .uation and plan new moves.
F The war with the Viet Cong is
I about five years old. Two years
ago, following a similar visit by
Taylor, the United States greatly
< . increased its commitment against
the rebels. Amercan troops moved
from being mere advisers to actual
participation in the fighting.
The war against the Buddhists
- flared from protests of religious
.r. {<?discrimination by the Roman
-°-='Catholic Ngo family-Diem and
his secretive, powerful brother Ngo
Dinh Nhu, chief of the secret po-
lice, and his beautiful, outspoken,
anti-Buddhist wife, head of a par-
liamentary women's organization.
The Buddhists, throtgh' protest
marches and even ritual suicides,
:aprotesting alleged discrimina-
.' > tory measures against them.
Nhu's secret police brutally
raided Buddhist pagodas last Au-
gust, beating and arresting many
NGO DINH DIEM monks and lay leaders. The Unit-
attacked on two sides ed States has since attempted to
persuade the Ngo's to end their
anti-Buddhist policy or remove
the Ngo's from power.
Neither has yet succeeded and
the bloody struggles continua,

I

COOPERATION-Vietnamese soldiers leap out of an American helicopter to battle Viet Cong gueril-
las. Much of the war has been fought by small Vietnamese units flown into enemy areas by American
pilots. This means of fighting hit-and-run attacks is considered quite effective by United States mill-
tary advisers, but the war continues with no let up.

i

!

sammmmeswomaisissmemnssissom aamemammmmeam* sa m mm*' mea m CO-OPERATION.-Amerlcan operations in Vietnam extend be-
ALLIES-Much of the most effective fighting against Viet Cong guerrillas has been carried out by Meo yond fighting with the Vietnamese army to social service and .
mountain tribesmen. These independent-minded Vietnamese have been trained and armed by the Unit- foreign aid. An epidemologist with the United States aid mission
ed States. However, many Vietnamese fear that these tribesmen may one day turn on the govern- takes a blood sample as part of the mission's malaria eradication

ment-no matter who is in charge.

program.

MME. NHU
.anti-Buddhist

NGO DINH NHU
...secret power?

SACRIFICE-Buddhist monks have burned themselves to death
in sacrificial protest against Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh
Diem's policy towards Buddhist religious practices. The monks
seek greater Catholic toleration and a great Buddhist participa-
tion in Vietnamese national life.

'1

ry

I

Major Leadgue Stwidings

x-New'
Chicago
iMxinnes
Baltimo
Detroit

AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L P
York 104 57 .6
94 67 .5
ota 91 70 .5
are 86 75 .5
78 83 .9
~! 09_

ct.
646
585
565
534
484
_ CA

GB
10
13
18
26
an

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
x-y-Los Angeles 99 61 .619 -
St. Louis 92 67 .571 7
San Francisco 87 74 .540 12%
Cincinnati 86 75 .534 13%
y-Philadelphia 85 75 .531 14
Milun21kA 8 7 8 .516 161/.

PHOTOGRAPHS
by The Associated Press
TEXT

W e .,. . .., Um

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan