63 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Threatens Jugless Blue IEISY Gophers Hand Wolverines Second Conference Defeat FOR SALE DIAMOND engagement ring, .67 carat, never worn. Must sacrifice. Save 50%.' Call 662-7558 after 5:30 p.m. B40 8 FOOT SOFA. Lt. green. $100. Call NO 8-6528 after 6. B35 (Continued from Page 1) Unable to gain anything on first down, Michigan decided to take advantage of a favorable tailwind and punted on second down. Joe O'Donnell's punt only traveled 33 yards in the air and safety man Paul Ramseth returned seven yards to the Michigan 41. Ten plays later halfback Jerry Pelletier scampered over from the six for the only score in the game. The conversion attempt by Mike Reid was wide to the left. The key play in this ground-out drive was a keeper by quarterback Larry Peterson for ten yards to the Michigan 18. Michigan put together its first sustained drive the first time it got the ball. After recovering a Minnesota fumble at midfield, the Wolverines drove to the Minnesota seven yard line. Quarterback Bob Timberlake complet'ed four of six passes during the 12-play drive. The threat ended with a field goal attempt by Timberlake from 23 yards out which the officials called wide to the right. The second period was the low point for Michigan. Not only did the Gophers secure the winning margin but Michigan's total net offense was six yards in 12 plays. On the Ground In the second half Michigan dumped its passing attack in favor of the Ohio State "four yards and a cloud of dust" offense. Fullback Mel Anthony carried 1'4 times for 72 yards in the second half while Timberlake picked up 41 yards in 12 second-half carries. Taking the opening second-half kickoff, the Wolverines drove from their own 26 again to the Minne- sota seven. Here, on a fourth and! two situation, Timberlake couldn't crack the Gopher line. His fum- ble after being stopped for no gain meant nothing, since Minnesota would have taken over on downs. Twice again in the third period the Wolverines got the ball in Gopherland. But the Minnesota line and their ever-present tackles, Carl Eller and Milt Sunde, denied the Wolverines even a first down. At the outset of the fourth per- iod Michigan put together its last and second-longest drive. Starting on the Wolverine 19 yard line, Timberlake drove Michigan to the Gopher 23. In a third and six situatiRn Clancy took the handoff but fum- bled, and Timberlake recovered on the Minnesota 28. On fourth down, Timberlake hit end John Hender- son with a pass deflected by Rind- fuss. Henderson's diving catch was to no avail, as the ball measured inches short of the first down. Michigan fans had one last glimmer of hope when defensive back John Rowser recovered a Gopher fumble on the Michigan 45. One play later, Timberlake fumbled, giving the ball back to the Gophers. Michigan never saw the pigskin;again. The game, ended on the Michi- gan five yard line, with the Goph- ers threatening for another score. -Associated Press PAYDIRT-Minnesota's Jerry Pelletier crashes six yards through Michigan's line for the lone score in yesterday's game. Blocks by Dick Basset (82) and Milt Sunde (77) keep three prospective Wol- verine tacklers, Barry Dehlin (31), Richard Hahn (65) and Bill Yearby (75), from achieving their goal. The victory gave the Gophers the famed Little Brown Jug for the fourth consecutive year. BIG TEN ACTION: Spartan, By The Associated Press EVANSTON - Sherman Lewis, Michigan State's 150-pound pack- age of dynamite, grabbed off at deflected pass for one touchdown' and then bolted 87 yards for an- other score, leading the Spartans to a 15-7 Big Ten football upset of Northwestern yesterday. A stunned homecoming crowd of 51,013 cheered Northwestern for a 7-0 lead in the second quarter and then watched Lewis, a 5'9'' senior, turn the tide while MSU's hard-rushing line kept Northwestern passing star Tom Myers off balance most of the game. Lewis climaxed a tremendous day with an 84-yard punt return s Upset Wildcats midway in the final quarter. It moved the ball to the Wildcat 16, but the Spartans could not cap- italize on it. Lewis just ran out of gas and was caught from be- hind by Willie Stinson. S * * * Badgers Overthrown MADISON-Ohio State roared 80 yards for a touchdown on the passing of Don Urnverferth and the power 'running of Matt Snell in the closing minutes and knocked Wisconsin from the unbeaten ranks 13-10 yesterday. Unverferth, a sophomore quar- terback who rode the bench most of the game, took charge and com- pleted four passes in a drive which CHRISTMAS FLIGHT to EUROPE ROUND TRIP NEW YORK to PARIS Dec. 22 PARTS#2toN2 NEWYORK Jan. 12 22 DAYS IN EUROPE Call: Mr. K. Hans Mr. J. Shurman NO 5-8394 NO 8-7720. Absolute Deadline - November 21 Snell, a pile-driving fullback, capped by plunging into the end zone from two yards out with just 2:13 to play. The Buckeyes had been shack- led by Wisconsin's mighty defense in the second half before rallying behind Unverferth. The Badgers made one last gasp, but the game ended with Ohio State's Paul Warfield intercepting a pass. * * * Boilermakers Triumph LAFAYETTE - Ron Digravio, veteran Purdue quarterback, pass- ed to sophomore Bob Hadrick for one touchdown and ran for an- other himself yesterday for a 14-0 victory over an Iowa team that bogged down twice inside Purdue's 15. Ken Eby, reserve quarterback, twice intercepted desperation passes by Iowa's sophomore Gary Snook in the wild final quarter. Digravio hit Hadrick with a 18-yard scoring pass in the first quarter. It was the only com- pleted pass in a 66-yard Boiler- maker drive in which junior half- back Jim Morel made the key gains on the ground. Digravio threw two more passes to Hadrick in a third-quarter 40- yard drive and then carried the last 11 yards himself. The indus- trious Hadrick threw the key block on that run. IIndiana Wins, 20-6 BLOOMINGTON - Indiana panted to a 20-6 victory over Cin- cinnati yesterday in a supposed breather game following four straight Big Ten football defeats.1 The Hoosiers put the game al- most out of reach in the third' quarter with a lightning offensivej thrust and a tremendous goal-line stand, iced it with an insurance touchdown and another defensive stand in the fourth period. It was all on the ground-the Hoosiersdidn't complete a single pass. Indiana started the second half as though it would chew the Bear- cats to bits. Trent' Walters took the kickoff 70 yards to the Cincin- nati 25, and the Hoosiers scored in four plays-10 yards by Doug Spicer and three punches by full- back Tom Nowatzke. MINNESOTAMICHIGAN First Downs Rushing Passing, Penalty Total No. of Rushes. Net Yards--Rushing Passing Forward Passes Att. Completed Intercepted by Total'Plays Punts, Number Average Distance Kickoffs, returned by Yards Kicks Returned Punts Kickoffs Fumbles, Number Ball lost by Penalties Number Yards Penalized 11 9 49 157 45 7 3 0 56 7_ 41 1 50 32 18 5 4 I I 22 8 0 45 105 90 14 8 0 59 8 33 2 58 12 46 2 Reid Farthing Peterson Pelletier Sharp Skjei Lofquist Timberlake Petersoi Minnesota Tries. 16 10 7 5 3 1 Net 55 31 30 24 8 6 3 Avg. 3.4 4.4 3.0 3.4 1.6 2.0 3.0 PASSING Michigan Att.Comp. Yds. 14 8 90 Minnesota Att. Comp. Yds. 7 3 45 The Band is Still Great REVERSIBLE Winter Coat, excellent condition. Moss green plaid wool/fur. Size 12. Call 5-8526, 37 FOR SALE-Microscope "Zeiss" mono- cular-binocular, excellent cond. Ph. 542-6431, Detroit. B9- PORTABLE STEREO, Motorola. Two 4" detachable speakers with 10'1 cords. One 6" speaker. Excellent con- dition. Reasonable price. Call NO 3- 9348 between 5 and 7 P.M. Ask for John W. B27t LOST AND FOUND LOST: Hornrimned glasses in brown case; if found, please contact NO 3- 1561, ext. 942. A34 LOST: Man's wrist watch, steel case leather strap, in 1035 Angell Hall. Call 665-4111, ext. 537. A33 LOST-woman's bifocal glasses, black with white trim, between TV Center and Thayer parking lot. Call 2-4449. Desperately needed. A29_ HELP WANTED KITCHEN HELP WANTED: Call Bob,1 NO 3-3393. ,H2 SALESMAN-Part time or full time for our university division. No traveling, age 23 or older. $600 a month to start,1 raising to $900 at end of first year. Phone 453-4030 to arrange interview H47 REAL ESTATE HOUSE-Nine rooms on Geddes. Bath on 2nd floor and in basement. In-1 come from rent to 4 students. Good terms for right party. Call NO 3-0292 for appointment. RS HOUSE-Nine rooms and bath. Geddes area. Good terms for right party. Call NO 3-0292 for an appointment. R4 MUSICAL MDSE. RADIO REPAIRS, A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington VIOLIN, Case, and Bow. Ideal for ad- vanced beginner. Call 662-7558 after 5:30 p.m. x7 TRANSPORTATION WANT RIDE Tuesday and Thursday from Ypsi to campus and arrive by 9 a.m., to leave at 6 p.m. Will share expenses. Call 483-4452. 01 USED CARS 1959 AUSTIN HEALY Roadster, wire, wheels and over drive. Best offer. 662-4306. N28 1960 SIMCA, 4 door, Arronde deluxe, immaculate, two-tone blue body, seat belts, reclining seats, good motor, has had TLC. Economical transportation. $425. NO 5-9819 after 5:30. N25 '58 RAMBLER 4D, R & H. Spotless body. $510. 5-8196 after 4:30. N25 1929 HUDSON Super 6, 4 door sedan. ' Call 449-7051. N48 FOR SALE-1955 Dodge 4-door sedan. Runs well. $100. NO 2-6193. N22 1960 FIAT-In good condition, less than 10,000 miles. Phone NO 2-2625. NS" MECSEDES 190 SL Sports car. Detach- able hard top. 2900 mil. $1850. Call NO 2-6135. N24 MUST SELL 2 automobiles quickly. '56 Plymouth - hydramatic, radio, power steering, snow tires. '53 Pontiac - hydramatic, radio, snow tires. Both in good condition. Best offer buys. 665-0080 after 6. N27 1957 FORD-Excel. mech. cond. Body and tires very good. $450. NO 2-1291 after 5:30 p.m. N4 1962 BUICK LE SABRE-4-door hard- top, power brakes and steering, many extras. Excellent condition, low mile- age, private owner. HU 2-0405. N37 FOR SALE-1963 Buick Le Sabre Con- vertible. 4-speed trans., p. steering, tinted glass, etc. Best offer. Call 665- 9406 or see at 1846 Stadium, No. 6. Afternoons and evenings. N21 ANN ARBOR'S SPORTS CAR CENTRE FALL SALE Austin-Healey's, MG's, Alfa- Romeo's, and others to choose from. All carry the 1-year G/W Warranty. Don't miss a good buy. Overseas Imported Cars 331 S. Fouth Ave. Ann Arbor, Michigan AT DARW IN'S HOUSEHOLD Furnishings, appliances,, tables, glassware, books, antiques. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3,45 3 .85 2.4C 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 PERSONAL WANTED: One Football Ticket for Homecoming Game. Call Joyce, 3-3693. F24 OLD GOUTY Nancy is 22 today. Let's all call 3-1561, Ext. 422 and wish her a happy birthday. F28 ATTENTION CINEMA GUILD BOARD Film Selection Meeting Tuesday, Oct. 29, 6:30 p.m. Room 3510 SAB F21 THE FREAKS Is Coming . . . Oct. 31 and Nov. 1. F12 BE SURE! Call Conlin Travel Bureau, NO 5-9151 for Thanksgiving & Christ- mas Reservations. Book NOW!! F50 $1.25 HAIRCUT, Mon. thru Thurs., 347 May- nard, near Arcade. $1.50 Fri. and Sat. WEINER SCHNITZEL with German potato salad-$1.35. German meat pat- ties-.30. ROMANOFF'S, 300 S. Thayer. F26 DIAMONDS -- Highest quality at com- petitive prices. Call G. K. Reaver Co. of Ann Arbor, 300 S. Thayer. NO 2- 1132. F18 SALE-One Wednesday evening series ticket for the Speech Dept. Playbill. Seven plays-$4.00. Call 8-8431 after 6 p.m. and ask for Evan. 1046 AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION - "Where marginal prices buy quality diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 663- 7151. F73 H. Abrams: Work hard; think hard, live hard . . Some say the world is made for fun and frolic: And so do I! F11 2930 S. State NO 8-7744 PI 0 4 Henders 0 30 Conley Rindfuss Rowser PASS RECEIVING Michigan No. Y on 33 2 3 1 Minnesota No. Y 22 I 1 ! Anthony' Rindfuss Dehlin Timberlake Clancy RUSHING Michigan Trie 18 5 9 17 Yds. 31 30 8 Yds. 26 19 S FOR RENT 3 PSYCH Grad students looking for 4th1 roommate, to share 4-bedrm. house or campus. Call 6-8 p.m., 662-0050. 033 FURNISHED HOME, modern, January- June. Professor on leave. $175-200. Cal 663-6829.C3 AL-DOR MANOR APTS. 2 bedrm. apts for rent, furnished or unfurnished South Lyon. Call GE 7-2023. C32 ON CAMPUS lot parking available. NC 2-1443 022 3 ROOMS AND BATH near campus. Off- street parking. NO 5-7215 or 2-2545 after 5:30. C1: 2 BEDROOM APT, with 900 sq. ft Furnished or unfurnished. Off cam- pus location (.8 mi.) means lowe: rent schedule. Call 3-0511. C2' SPACIOUS 3 RM. APT. Ideal for grad or prof. couple. 605 Elmcrest Dr. block N. of Summit, off Minor. Can be seen after 1 p.m. 031 PARKING available in vicinity of Lary School, Harris Hall and Frieze Bldg. Wilmot-Geddes-Forest intersection & City Hall. Call NO 2-7787. C31 DELUXE NEW 10 unit bldg. completes late. 1 and 2 bedroom units available Furnished or unfurnished. Geddes hospital area. 3-0511. C2 BEL-AIR APTS. Campus 2-bedroom: completely furnished, wall to wal carpeting, balcony, air conditioning Call 2-5780, Eves. 2-5140. Cl NEW 2-BDRM furnished apt, in 6-uni building. Ready for occupancy a $195 on Church Street, just off Oak land. Call 3-0511 C2 2-BEDROOM, nearly new Danish-mod emn furnishings, ideal for 3 or 4' stu dents or nurses. Geddes near Obser vatory. Available immediately. NO 2 7787. C2 BUSINESS SERVICES 65-8184 MANUSCRIPT typing, transcription, medical, legal, technical confer- ences, mimeographing, offset. Quick, Accurate, Experienced. ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIATES 334 Catherine B ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or burns it your clothes? We'll reweave them lk new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade Net Avg. 82 4.6 11 2.2 10 5.0 6 0.4 -4 -2.0 Avg. 10.3 15.0 10.5 8.0 Avg. 13.0 19.0 Brown Farthing MINNESOTA MICHIGAN 0 6 0 0-6 0 0 0 0-0 * *' * Meet The Right People The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of personality appraisal and an IBM system, is to introduce unmarried persons to others whose background and ideals are congenial with their own. Interviews by appointment. Phone after 9 a.m. NO 2-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE MISCELLANEOUS Order Your SUBSCRIPTION Today NO 2-3241 TELEPHONE WAKE-UP SERVIC First week free with paid up phone answering service. $4 per Call Gretzingers' Telephone Ans ing* Service, HU 2-0191, CONVERT YOUR FURS TO CASH. Tree, 419 Detroit, 3-2008. ALTERATIONS expertly done, h pinned at dorm. Call 665-0879, WILL DO TYPING AT HOME-11 taken University qualifying t Have dissertation experience. 21 page, 5c a copy. Marilyn McG 663-5329. WANTED TO RENT GARAGE in the vicinity of Hil Packard to keep car for winter. 5-5744. 'M'Drives. Fail To Spoil Minnesota's Homecoming PUBLISHED I! M 11 (Continued from Page 1) measured, and that's all there was to it," he said. The referee's decision gaveMin- nesota possession long enough to run off eight plays. The key play here, according to Warmath, was a third-down pass from Larry Peterson to Aaron Brown for 17 yards and the first Gopher first down of the half. If the pass had failed, Warmath added, Michigan might have had time for another good drive. Elliott called Minnesota's de- fense, which held Michigan score- less for the third time in the last four meetings between the schools, "as tough as a year ago, if not tougher." Even though, the Wolverines might have put three points up on the scoreboard if the officials had seen Timberlake's 25-yard field goal attempt as Elliott did. It came at the end of the first drive in the opening quarter and sailed wide to the right. "I still think it was good, but that's neither here nor there," Elliott said. "It wouldn't have made any difference in the out- come anyway." Warmath was 'quietly thankful for the victory, the first in the Big Ten for his team this year but was obviously displeased with his team's five fumbles, only one of which was recovered by the Gophers. "I hadn't particularly counted on our getting out there and throwing the ball all over the place," he pointed out. "We're both going to have to quit fumbling (Michigan lost the ball twice on five fumbles of its own) or we're not going to win any games-neither Minnesota nor Michigan." Warmath, who coached Min- nesota to Big Ten titles in 1960 and in 1961 and a second place last year, was, as usual, lavish in his praise of Carl Eller, his 245- pound All-American tackle. Elliott was pleased with Michi- gan's play, except for a let down that carried through most of the second quarter and allowed Min- nesota to score once and get in- side the 20 twice more in the final seconds of the half. About the best thing that hap- pened to the Wolverines was that they didn't lose the services of their second center-linebacker in two weeks. When Brian Patchen limped off the field after the first play of the second half, it looked as though he might have the same kind of knee injury that last week victimized Tom Cecchini, who had played ahead of Patchen in the team's first four games. Patchen, however, had just a slight muscle injury in his right hand, and he returned to the game later ,in the half. Ralph Market Is OPEN Now! Try some bagels and lox or coffeecake. You'll find Ralph at HUNGRY? RALPH'S MARKET 109 Packard Open every Sunday morning M TRY THE DAILY AND SEE THE WORLD.. rl (Through an AP machine, that is) i'. Big Ten Standings W L T Pet. PF PA Illinois 2 0 1 .833 76 35 Ohio State 2 0 1 .833 54 30 Michigan State 2 0 1 .833 42 17 Wisconsin 2 1 0 .667 58 40 Purdue 2 1 0 .667 58 40 Northwestern 2 2 0 .500 65 54 Iowa 1 2. 0 .333 44 50 Minnesota 1 2 0 .333 20 31 MICHIGAN 0 2 1 .167 19 36 Indiana 0 4 0 .000 50 112 Talk to the editorial personnel director about trying out for the staff. t I I " I Scores NHL SCORES Toronto 6, New York 4 Chicago 1, Montreal 1 (tie) AFL SCORES Denver 35, New York 35 (tie) Buffalo 28, Boston 21 NBL SCORES Boston 123, Baltimore 108 New York 109, Philadelphia 101 1l BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1963 SILVER EAGLE Motor Scooter - Fully equipped, 4 months old. Cost $616. Will take $400. 2740 Tim, Wooa- ldnd Lake, Brighton, anytime after 5 p.m. Z29 HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 Z3 ... m m.. . mm mmmi r rI USED LUMBER Ir FOR HOMECOMING DISPLAYS r r 2x4's, 2x6's, etc. r lx6's, 1x8's, etc. All Lengths BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! "WHITE LEVI'S" SLIM-FITS 4.49 FOR "GUYS AND DOLLS" Black, brown, loden, "white," cactus, light blue SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington " 66 5PIZZA. KING,"fS 665-3800 1308 SQ. UNIVERSITY 665-3800 11 Varieties of Pizza in 3 Sizes IM I 68 FREE FAST DELIVERY 6 r ' the inter-arts magazine m 11 -- - P' KI C A I c ' 1K!-ruc FCLJDtanAII I W -.Li-F m Fmw I 1.i w J 1 m F