TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Double Pass Dumps 'Cats 10-9 Los Angeles Takes 3-0 Lead in Series GROUP SUPPORT, By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN - Illinois stifled three long goalward drives by Northwestern in the last quarter yesterday to beat the fifth-rank- ed Wildcats, 10-9, on a razzle- dazzle touchdown pass and Jim Plankenhorn's 21-yard field goal. Previously unbeaten Northwest- ern was a touchdown favorite in FOR S G.C. 1 Custardo, Sam Price and Jim Grabowski, moved 58 yards to Northwestern's four. During the push, a pass interference call on a fourth-down-and-six yards to go situation gave the Illini an automatic first down and kept the threat alive. Plankenhorn was called in for a field goal attempt at a danger- ous angle. It sailed perfectly through the uprights from 21 yards out: * * * Purdue Edges ND, 7-6 LAFAYETTE-Purdue's Boiler- makers inflicted Notre Dame's second football defeat of the sea- son 7-6, the difference being totre Dame's unsuccessful gamble for a two-point conversion and a one- pointer booted by Gary Hogan of Purdue. Quarterback John Huarte pass- ed to end Jim Kelly for the Notre Dame touchdown, 90 seconds be- fore the first half ended, on a play covering 41 yards.' CANDIDATE'S VOICE supports * Thomas Smithson * Howard Schecter INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL, supports " Douglas Brook 0 Scott Crooks * Russell Epker * Thomas Smithson YOUNG REPUBLICANS FRED CUSTARDO razzle-dazzle TD this important Big Ten football battle opening Illini league play. Northwestern's g r eat passer, Tommy Myers, hurled a 29-yard scoring pass to Tom O'Grady in the opening 40 seconds of the sec- ond period to give the Wildcats' a 6-0 lead.. But, otherwise, Myers was pres- sured by Illinois' charging line- men and many times, when he did have time, his aerial efther misfired or his receivers dropped the ball. It just wasn't Myers' day and the Illini took advantage of it for its first victory over its intrastate rival since 1959. Center Joe Cerne's high snap- back prevented Northwestern from converting after its touchdown. With three and a half minutes left in the first half, Illinois got the ball on Northwestern's 32 when Ron Rector's fizzled punt went only five yards. On the first play, sophomore quarterback Fred Custardo shot a flat pass to Ron Fearn, who then heaved 32 yards to Jim Warren in the end zone for the Illini touchdown. Plank- enhorn booted the point. Myers mixed up running with two pass completions to George Burman in the third period as the Wildcats thrust 43 yards. After q seven-yard shot from Myers to Burman was ruled caught out of the end zone, Pete Stamison boot. ed a '24-yard field goal putting. the Wildcats ahead 9-7. After the ensuing kickoff, Illi-. nois' sophomore backs, led by himself on the previous play. Notre Dame pounded to the Pur-1 due 10, mostly on hard running by Ron Bliey, but Ellison cut through and threw Bliey for a 12-yard loss. , Ellison fumbled at the Notre Dame 11 in the third quarter after] catching a Digravio pass and was hustling to redeem the error. * *. * Gophers Down Cadets, 24-8' MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota's crunching defense set up three touchdowns on two fumble re-1 coveries and a pass interception as the Gophers defeated Army 24-8. The Gophers only had to go 20 and seven yards to score after3 Frank Marchlewski and Gene Ra-, bel recovered fumbles. Minnesota drove 44 yards after the intercep- tion to score. Army finally broke through the Minnesota defense for a fourth quarter touchdown, moving 38 yard's in six plays with Ken Wal- drop ramming the final three yards.' A fumble recovery and a pass interception set up Minnesota's two second quarter touchdowns. In addition, the Gopher defense held the Cadets to only four first downs and 73 yards rushing and passing the first half. The Gophers marched 56 yards in the late stages of the opening period before being halted at the Army two-yard line. Mike Reid then booted a 19-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. On the ensuing kickoff, Minne- sota jarred John Seymour loose from the ball, Frank Marchlewski recovering on the Army 20. In six plays Minnesota scored as Reid rammed three yards off left tackle. He also converted. Army then had the ball only three plays before Willie Costan- za picked off a Carl Stichweh pass at the Cadet 44. The Gophers covered that distance in 13 plays. with Bob Sadek diving over cen- ter for the touchdown. Reid's. kick made -it 17-0 six minutes before the half. OSU Tramples Indiana, 21-Q BLOOMINGTON -- Dick Van Raaphorst broke the Big Ten field goal distance record and Tom Federle and Greg Lashutka broke the Hoosiers' hearts with a pass interception as Ohio State beat Indiana 21-0 yesterday. Van Raaphorst cleared the, cross-bar from 48 yards away with 3:22 left in the second quarter, and he did it again in the fourth quarter from the easy-for him- distance of 19 yards. Federle intercepted a pass by Indiana's Frank Stavroff in the. first quarter to set up a Buckeye touchdown which Lashutka scored on a 24-yard pass from Don Un- verferth. Lashutka tackled Indi- ana's Bill Malinchak in the end zone for a safety in the fourth quarter that ended Indiana's last hopes. With Indiana thus discouraged, the Buckeyes finally got a drive going late in the fourth quarter and marched 45 yards after tak- ing Indiana's freekick following the safety. Unverferth passed four yards for the touchdown. Van Raaphorst's first field goal broke a conference record of 47 yards set by Jim Bakken of Wis- consin against Northwestern Nov. 11, 1961. The Hoosiers took charge of the game in the second quarter and dominated play throughout the period. They controlled everything except the goal line and could get nothing done about their nine- point deficit. * * * Hawkeyes Win, 17-7 SEATTLE-Not lightning, thun- der, Washington desperation, or, a waterfall of rain could stop a fourth quarter surge that carried the Iowa Hawkeyes 93 yards to a tie-breaking touchdown and set up a 17-7 victory for the visitors in an intersectional football game. Quarterback Fred Riddle rifled the ball to halfback Paul Krause, By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES--Don Drysdale, a tall, handsome part-time TV actor, pitched the Los Angeles Dodgers to their third straight World Series victory over the reel- ing New York Yankees yesterday with a three-hit, 1-0 triumph. One more defeat today and the futile Yanks will go down the drain, victims of their own patent- ed four-straight killer punch. No club in 59 previous Series ever has been able to bounce back after losing three in a row. The Yanks, with a total of three runs in three games and a Sandy Kou- fax ahead, don't look like the team to rewrite the book, even though they hold the record for four-straight sweeps with six. Early Lead Once gain the Dodgers pinned the Yanks to the mat by taking an early lead. In this case it was only one run but it did the trick with Drysdale. Dodger speed, young Jim Bou- ton's wildness and the inability of the highly touted Yankee in- field to come up with the big play at the right time added up to that lonely run. With one out in the first, Jim Gilliam worked the 24-year-old. Yankee right-hander to a 3-2 count and finally walked. Willie Davis lined out wickedly to Johnny Blanchard, filling in for the in- jured Roger Maris in right field. Working carefully on Tommy Davis, Bouton let his fifth pitch bounce into the dirt away from catcher Elston Howard for a wild pitch. Gilliam quickly dashed to second. Davis' RBI Davis, hitting star of the Ser- ies, then smashed a single through the usually dependable Bobby Richardson that rolled into short right center, far enough to per- mit the 'speedy Gilliam to score the only run. Tommy's smash ap- peared to scoot off the edge of the infield grass and hopped off Richardson's foot. The Dodgers were not smashing the ball, but the Yanks weren't doing a thing. They went quietly inning after inning as Big D blew them down. Not until the seventh did a single Dodger outfielder have a putout. In fact, they had three in all, all by Ron Fairly. The futile Yanks gave the cro, of 55,912, largest in the history plush Dodger Stadium, a thrill the last out. Joe Pepitone tc into a Drysdale pitch and loft it to deep right field near t Yankee bullpen. Fairly, w doubles as a first baseman outfielder as the occasion e mands, raced back and pulled down about five feet short home run territory. One Big One New York had one big char to get Drysdale. That opportu ity came in the second inni when Mickey Mantle dropped bunt single behind third base : his first hit of the Series, a Pepitone was hit by a Drysd pitch. With men on first and sE ond and nobody out, Big D v in trouble. But Drysdale was up to I occasion. He made Howard after a high hard one for a strl out. Blanchard rolled out to D. Tracewski. advancing the runn to second and third with t gone. Clete Boyer was ordered walk intentionally by Manager W Alston, loading the bases. Bout was the next batter and Drysd: struck him out on three pitche Drysdale, a 19-game winner t: year after winning 25 last yE when he was awarded the Young Trophy as top pitcher the majors, had been saved the Dodgers' home opener so tl the left-handers, Koufax a Johnny Podres, could pitch Yankee Stadium. Strong He came through with a strc game all the way, striking c nine men and walking only o He fanned Mantle, Howard, T Tresh and Bouton two times er and also got Boyer on a th strike. Besides Mantle's bunt single the second, the only Yankee l were singles by Tony Kubek the sixth and eighth innings. Bouton, a sturdy young ni who graduated from the Yan bullpen in May, had trouble w his control. But he deserved better fate. The Dodgers got o: four hits off him in his sevf inning string and all four w singles. PETE DUDGEON * '.*big block Huarte -then, tried to pass to halfback Tom McDonald for a two-point conversion and' didn't come close. The Irish quarterback explained after the game that he had to pass instead of trying to kick the conversion because he in- jured his ankle on the touchdown play. Purdue got its tying touchdown a third of the way through the final quarter on Ron Digravio's 7-yard pass.to sophomore end Bob Hadrick. James Long missed a 20-yard field goal attempt for Purdue in the second quarter. Huarte tried a 38-yard placement for Notre Dame in the last minute, but it was blocked by center Pete Dud- geon. End Dave Ellison recovered on the Irish field goal attempt, and the big senior also distinguished PAUL KRAUSE ... tie-breaker Fierce Bears Play Colts Washington Meets NY who had gotten behind the last defensive man to take the pitch on the 10 and ambled untouched to the goal. Roberts kicked the conversion. Washington's Huskies, tempor- arily shedding the jitters which" lost them the ball on fumbles three times in the first half, put together a concentrated drive to. tally in the third quarter. RECORD SET: Staubach, Casualties Plague Wolverines By MIKE BLOCK Asocit ports Editor i~~iY .. . . support I/? 9 Douglas Brook * Russell Epker 0 Scott Crooks Gary Cunningham * Douglas Baird YOUNG DEMOCRATS support + Thomas Smithson Howord Schecter INTERQUADRANGLE COUNCIL supports * Thomas Smithson 9 Douglas Brook - Russell Epker Michigan Coach Bump Elliott couldn't think of when he'd seen a football player better than Roger Staubach. Somebody in the press box said. he was the best passer to hit Michigan Stadium since Otto Graham. Others said his running made Ron VanderKelen look sick. And so it went. And no wonder. In Navy's 26-13 victory over Michigan yesterday, Staubach had his best day ever in a Midshipman uniform. The junior All-American candidate ran and passed for a total of 307 yards to' break his own single- game Middie record of, 297 which he himself set against William and Mary just a week ago. Despite being thrown for 24 yards in losses by the Michigan defensive line, Staubach picked up 70 yards net on the ground to lead all Navy runners. For the most part, Wolverine tacklers just couldn't keep their hands on him long enough to bring him down. Aerial Show But Staubach really shone in the aerial warfare department. He improved on his already pheno- menal .744 pass completion per- centage by connecting on 14 out of 16 pass attempts. Out of the two he missed, one was dropped by the intended receiver and the other was picked off by Michi- gan's Tom Cecchini. Although you can't knock Navy's receivers, the majority of the credit for Navy's passing success must go to Staubach. He doesn't have a favorite target, as evi- denced by yesterday's perform- ance, in which he distributed his 14 completions among no less than eight different ends and backs. Staubach's accuracy, even when under a heavy rush, is what makes him so successful. Like Jimmy Rayl, he just doesn't miss. Navy Coach Wayne Hardin was almost complacent about Stau- bach's performance. "Roger was -- '.wAO;n Me .110101 tnt a a By LLOYD GRAFF Papa Bear George Halas and his host of undefeated grizzlies take on the Baltimore Colts in their own Chicago den today in the featured contest of six National Football League games. The Bears have devoured their first three opponents this season with a minimum of effort except in their commencement exercises against Green Bay which they won by a bare 10-3 margin. Recent conquests were against Minnesota and Detroit. A confident Billy Wade, an incredibly well-balanced Ron Bull, and a granite defense have been the keys to the Bears revival. With the exception of a shoulder separation to tackle Fred Williams, Chicago has avoided major injuries. The Colts, on the 'other hand, showing a 1-2 record, have been hurt badly by the injury bugaboo. Ace pass catcher Raymond Berry will not play because of a dis- located elbow. Another fine pass receiver, Jimmy Orr is out- with a 'sprained knee. Linebacker Don Shinnick and standout defensive. end Gino Marchetti are slated as doubtful starters. Baltimore does have Johnny Unitas to pass and Lenny Moore to receive which means they have an explosive offense. The Bears are a strong favorite off their record thus far and because of the Colt injuries. Big One The big game in the Eastern division will pit the New York Giants against the Washington Redskins. The Giants will have the services of Yelberton Abraham Tittle; therefore, they are favored. Tittle is the leading NFL passer and the inspirational and me- chanical catylist who transforms the Giants from mediocrity to ex- cellence. Norman Snead makes the Red- skin offense click. Mercurial Bobby Mitchell is probably the most fear- ed receiver in the game. He and ends Fred Dugan, Bill Anderson, and Pat Ricter will keep the New York secondary busy. Both teams have 2-1 records. In another Eastern division game the Dallas Cowboys will try to vindicate in some small way the confidence many preseason forecasters had in them as they battle the Eagles in Philadelphia, Neither team has savored victory yet this season. Both squads have had quarterback problems. Don Meredith is slated to start for Dallas and King Hill will probably start for Philly. Both have been spotty. Don Perkins is an excel- lent runner for the Cowboys which Detroit. The '49ers, under new coach Jack Christiansen, will be without the services of John Bro- die, out with an injured throwing- arm. Their most startling asset is kick return man Abe Woodson who has a fantastic 50.7 yard average. The game could decide whether Milt Plum will keep the Lions starting quarterback position or give way to Earl Morrall. Detroit is 1-2 and San Francisco 0-3. Green Bay, in hot pursuit of the Bears, has won two in a row and is a top-heavy favorite over the Los Angeles Rams who have yet to win. Packer fullback Jim Taylor has a groin injury but he is ex- pected to play. AFL In the American Football League the Kansas City Chiefs make their regular season debut in Kansas City against last year's playoff opponents, Houston. Houston, 2-2, hopes to have Billy Cannon healthy to take some of the pres- sure off workhorse Charley Tolar. Kansas City which has a disap- pointing 1-1-1 record, focuses its offense around the passing of Len Dawson who has clicked for eight touchdowns. San Diego's rebounding Charg- ers, Western Division leaders at 3-0, are fresh off a victory over Kansas City and are out to avenge two 1962 losses to Denver. The Chargers, led by old Tobin Rote, are big favorites against the er- ratic and youthful Broncos. -Daily-Jim Lines STAUBACH POURS IT ON - With a poisonous, for opponents, combination of passing and running Navy's All-America candidate Rober Staubach (12) almost ran the Wolverines off the field yesterday. Michigan's Bob Chandler to John Henderson combination was all that kept the score (26-13) respec- table. Michigan's line of would be tacklers is led by Jack Clancy (24) followed by Bill Laskey (83) and Tom Keating. Scot' [ES Getting back to the brighter side of things, the Wolverines did put on quite a passing show of their own in the second half. With starting quarterback Frosty Eva- shevski out with a slight injury in the second .period, Elliott sent in ace passer Bob Chandler to try to penetrate Navy's second- ary with the score 20-0 for the visitors. Although Chandler vias all too often unable to get the ball away and subsequently hit for a loss, he did direct Michigan to its only two scores of the afternoon. In. fact, his completion percentage was even better than Staubach's- he connected on nine of 10 tries for 138 yards, including two touchdown passes to John Hen- derson, his favorite target. Catches Six Once again, Dick Rindfuss was the leading ground gainer, but he came up with only 33 yards in eight tries yesterday, as opposed to 58 in four against Southern Methodist last week. The Wolver- ines' rushing yardage amounted to an anemic 84, and you might say that that, outside of a few breaks for Navy, was the ball game. Stagg Staggers The first break, and probably the most important, was in the second quarter, when with a Mich- igan fourth down on its own 18, Elliott sent in sophomore Frank Stagg to punt in place of the in- jured Joe O'Donnell. Stagg pro- ceeded to slide the ball off the side of his foot and out of bounds on the Michigan 33, from where Navy scored easily. Anrnrd n o lln++ m o oLYW AS as much as Staubach did. "We had the heat on Staubach in the first part of the game," he said, 'but with most of our first -line injured, we couldn't keep it up. However, I was really proud of the way the team played, and in spots I thought we looked pretty good." Casualties High The Wolverines' casualty list was an extremely lengthy one. For the most part it amounted to a player getting hit in the head and being dazed enough to miss the rest of the game. This was the case for O'Donnell, Evashevski, fullback Chuck Dehlin, and start- ing tackle Bill Yearby, who had to be helped from the field ap- parently badly hurt, but who re- covered shortly thereafter. Starting linemen Rich Hahn and Bill T.skv had tn leave with PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL NFL Cleveland 35, Pittsburgh 23 AFL Buffalo 12, Oakland 0 New York 31, Boston 24 COLLEGE FOOTBALL GRID PICKS Navy 26, MICHIGAN 13 USC 13, Mich. State 10 (Friday) Penn state 28, Rice 7 Pittsburgh 35, California 15, Illinois 10, Northwestern9 Ohio State 21, Indiana 0 Minnesota 24, Army 8 Purdue 7, Notre Dame 6 Auburn 14, Kentucky 13 No. Carolina St. 7, Clemson 3 Duke 30, Maryland 12 s LSU 7, Georgia Tech 6 Mississippi State 7, Tennessee 0 Oregon 35, West Virginia 0 Arkansas 18, TCU 3' Texas Tech 10, Texas A&M 0 Oregon State 22, Baylor 15 UCLA 10, Stanford 9 Iowa 17, Washington 7 Kansas 25, Wyoming 21 OTHER GAMES Princeton 7, Columbia 6 Colgate 6, Boston University 6 Dartmouth 28, Penn 0 Syracuse 48. Holy Cross 0