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October 30, 1963 - Image 6

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-10-30

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

VA £IIVafwnA.A

VW W,"1YF,31TA Y, VC7TVt jsjlt SRr 3.963'

I

SAE, Allen-Rumsey,

Taylor, Hyperion

Take

itles

aylor Slips by Huber; Hyperion Upsets
aple Leafs; A-R Wins Overtime Game
By BOB CARNEY
and JIM GREINER lish who threw back to Connolly Just as important as these two
for a 30-yard touchdown. Con- highlights, however, was Taylor's
sets were the order of the nolly then hit Dalglish again for bottling of Huber's second con-
ing in the independent and the two-point converstion, and version attempt, when the rush
lence. halls-M champion- Hyperion led, 8-6. The score was of Taylor lineman ruled out any
s" H . still 8-6 early in the second quar- chance of a pass completion.-
liknown Hyperion Society ter when Connolly connected with Taylor's offensive play was
ned after the father of Apol- center Bill Hutton on a 30-yardnerya imrsveRciig
fawned the Maple Leafs, 22-6,. nearly as improssive. Receiving
ndeden Mal Leafs, 22-6y pass for Hyperion's second score. the opening kickoff, the challen-
Le independent final, and Tay- In the residence halls final, it gers marched 55 yards to score.
House slipped past defending was a strong Taylor House defense Climaxing the drive was a seven-
npion Huber House, 16-14. and a touchdown conversion that yard touchdown pass from quar-
quarterback named Conerly decided the victory. Twice the terback Bob Schram to end Mike
'onnolly, proved the difference Taylor defense was called upon to Johnson.
he Hyperion victory, account- halt Huber drives inside the ten. Huber responded quickly with a
for two -of his team's three .The first time; with only see- similar march and touchdown, and
tidowns. Taking advantage of onds left in the half, saw a Huber the score was tied 8-8 as the first
strong blocking backs, Con- offensive march halted on the quarter ended. Taylor's Schram
passed for one touchdown, Taylor one-yard line. Again with took charge again in the second
ht a touchdown pass and led only two minutes remaining in quarter, and his team was soon
eam in rushing. the game, the Taylor defense in the lead to stay. Connecting
ter the Maple Leafs had tightened to halt a final Huber on a 45-yard touchdown pass to
n an early 6-0 lead, Connolly rally on the ten, and save a 16- end Mike Papsiak, Schram then
d to his flanker Tom Dalg- 14 victory. ran it in himself for the critical
conversion.
Spearheaded by quarterback
Bob Boysen, Allen-Rumsey eased
past Gomberg, 7-6, in overtime
last night, winning the residence
halls "B"' championship at Wines
Field.
Allen-Rumsey's offense scored
first, taking a 6-0 lead in the'
opening quarter. Dick Clark caught
a 20-yard pass from Boysen for
the touchdown. Gomberg's Greg
Gibbard broke up the extra-point
pass attempt.
Gomberg failed to score until
midway through the fourth quar-
ter, when Nels Letherman receiv-
ed a 10-yard scoring pass from
quarterback Ted Sizemore. This
time Clark kept Gomberg from
picking up the extra points.
Boysen's two interceptions both
came during the second quarter.
Be it knowen, 0 ye miserable, virulent, unsullied He r g'spe fyardiisecond oehwart
hordes of despicable SUBGRADDIES, that the hour ing a scoring drive. Dan Lahti also
of thy RECKONING looms near at hand. Before intercepted a Gomberg pass in the
thine base eyes shalt unfold a display of DEXTER- third quarter, on Allen-Rumsey's
ITY, CELERITY, VIRILITY and STAMINA such as In overtime, with the teams
it is utterly beyond the capacity of thine degen- alternating plays, action centered
enerte intellects to envision.around the middle of the field.
Gomberg started with a five-yard
BE YE PRESENT, pass from Sizemore to Joe Pave-
Lich. Rumsey replied with a five-
hence, ye sulking cullions, at the GREAT DIAG- yard pass from Boysen to Lahti.
ONAL, for On Gomberg's third down. Size-
more ran four yards to Allen-
Rumsey's 37-yard line. Boysen re-1
taliated with a four-yard pass to
on the first day of the Autumnal BACHANALLIA Mark Thompson, leaving Gomberg,
(id est, HOMECOMING) on the day of FRIDAY, a yard inside its own territory.
the frist instant of the eleventh month, in the year Sizemore then attempted to pass
on Gomberg's last play. Don Novac
of our Lord, caught him five yards behind the;
MCMLXIII line of scrimmage, icing Allen-I
Rumsey's victory on a basis of
yardage.

SAE Posts Two Shutouts
To Keep Fraternity Crowns

-Daily-Mark Diem
TAG! YOU'RE .IT- Al Andrews, speedy wingback of Sigma Alpha Epsilon's championship "B"
football team, gets the tag from Sigma Alpha Mu's Barry Tigay in final playoff action at Wines
Field last night. The SAE "B" team downed SAM, 22-0, to clinch its fourth straight title, while
the SAE "A" squad defeated Chi Phi, 28-0, for its fifth consecutive crown.
SPORTS SHORTS:
Wharram, Hawks Beat Wings
By The Associated Press-

CHICAGO-Kenny Wharram of
the Black Hawks scored the first
hat trick of his seven-year Na-
tional Hockey League career last
night as the league-leading Hawks
defeated the Detroit Red Wings
5-1.
In running their unbeaten string
to ' seven games, the Hawks
thwartedbDetroit star Gordie
Howe's bid for a record-breaking
545th goal. Howe tied the record
set by Montreal's Maurice Richard
Sunday night. The 18-year veteran
was held to four shots by the
Chicago defense.
The triumph boosted the Hawks
lead to six points over the idle
Toronto Maple Leafs.
Wharram scored twice within a
minute midway in the first period.
The tiny right wing took a goal-
mouth pass from center Stan Mi-
kita and beat a helpless Terry
Sawchuck in the Detroit nets. The
time was 11:36:
At 12:07, Wharram raced in be-
hind left wing Ab McDonald,
picked up a rebound of McDon-
ald's shot and drilled a 10-footer
behind Sawchuk.
Al MacNeil and Johnny Mc-
Kenzie boosted the score to 4-0

before Wharram, at 13:37 of the
final period, carried the puck into
Detroit ice with only wing defense-
man Doug Barkley to beat. He
moved in close and fired through
the defenseman's legs, completing
his three-goal night.
St. Louis Wins, 109-103
NEW YORK-The St. Louis
Hawks came from six points be-
hind in the last minute of regula-

tion play Tuesday night, then
whipped the Newt York Knicker-
bockers 109-103 in overtime in a
National Basketball Association
game at Madison Square Garden.
PRO RESULTS
NBA
St. Louis 109, New York 103,
overtime
NHL
Chicago 5, Detroit 1~

By DICK R'EYNOLDS
It was a new cast of characters
but the same old script in the I-M
social fraternity football cham-
pionships last night as Sigma Al-
pha Epsilon captured its fifth
straight "A" title and its fourth
consecutive "B" crown at Wines.
Field.
The powerful SAE's rolled up
four touchdowns to crush an in-
spired Chi Phi team, 28-0, in the
"A" contest. The "B" squad shut-
out Sigma Alpha Mu, 22-0.
The dual victory ran the SAE's
combined winning streak to 63
games, one of the longest in all of
I-M history. I
Paced by the passing of quar-
terback Denny Spalla and a hard
rushing defensive line, the SAE
"A" squad tallied Atwice in the
opening two periods and added
two more six-pointers for insur-
ance in the second half.
Slow Starter
Starting off slowly, Spalla miss-
ed on his first four pass attempts.
He then found his favorite re-
ceiver, Dave Campbell, ten yards
behind the Chi Phi secondary. The
lanky end gathered in the pass
and raced 53 yards to score the
first TD of the game.
The SAE tally was the first to
be scored against Chi' Phi. this
season.
After Chi Phi's offense bogged
down, the SAE's moved swiftly for
their second score. Spalla hit
Campbell twice in the TD drive,
the second completion good for
14 yards and the touchdown.
Spalla passed to Charlie Collins
for the two point conversion.J
Nothing seemed to go right for
the losers, on the third play of
the second half Collins picked off
a Chi Phi pass and rambled 55
yards to score.
Come Close
Chi Phi came closest to scoring
late in the final period when
Glaysher engineered a drive to
the SAE 10 yardline with pass
completions of 10 and 15 yards.
The drive was also aided by a
15 yard unnecessary roughness
penalty. But Spalla ended all
hopes for a Chi Phi score when
he intercepted a pass by Bob
Glaysher.
The winners scored their final
TD on the last play of the game
when Spalla fired a 22 yard pass
to end John Artz.
A great share of the credit for
the SAE victory must go to its
hard hitting defensive line of
Greg Neff, Jim (Boom Boom)
Baker and Roger Schmidt. This
trio consistently kept the Chi Phi
quarterback Bob Glaysher off bal-
ance. On several occasions Glay-
sher had to hurry his throws.
In the statistics department,
Spall hit on 9 of 23 passes for
127 yards. Glaysher completed 9 of
15 for 86 yards. Campbell was the
top receiver of the night with five
grabs good for 89 yards.
SAE 'B' Wins, Too
The "B" championship tilt
proved to be no contest as SAE
completely dominated play. The
winners ran 39 plays from scrim-
mage while the Sammies managed
only 16.
SAE set up its first score when
quarterback George Skaff com-

iF

'I

I-M Scores

1

GRID SELECTIONS
The Big Ten proved last week that it was still the "upsettingest"
conference in the nation with almost every intra-conference game
being won by the underdog.t
This week there are five games going in the Big Ten so poten-
tial grid pickers can count on losing at least two if they go with
the favorites.
Striving to live up to our reputation of having one of the
toughest contests in the nation, our board of selectors has once
again come up with some block busters. Any given game could go
either way.
The best system for picking winners is still closing your eyes
and dropping a pencil on the sheet containing the games. Then
pick the opponent of the team which is covered by the pencil.
Remember, your guesses aren't any good unless you bring an
official entry blank or any facsimile thereof to The Michigan Daily,
420 Maynard before 9 p.m. Friday, Nov. 1.
THIS WEEK'S GAMES

pleted a 58 yards toss to end Paul
Schuldt putting the ball on the
one yardline. Two plays later
Skaff passed to wingback Al An-
drews who made a sensational
catch for the TD.
The winners blew a pair of
scoring chances in the first half
as two drives stalled inside the
Sammie 30 yardline. A third drive
in the third period came to an
end on the losers' three.
45 Yards
Skaff scored SAE's second TD
when he gathered in a Sammie
punt and dashed 45 yards to score
behind some beautiful blocking by
Doug-Roeser and Ken Shaw. Skaff
passed to Bob Vaughn for the
extra point.
The final touchdown came on
a 16 yard pass play from Skaff
to end Bob Weldon.
Skaff had a good night in hit-
ting on 15 for 30 passes and 157
yards. On the other hand, Chuck
Pascal, the Sammies' quarterback,
hit the target on only 4 of 12 for
50 yards.

f,

1 Northwestern at MICHIGAN
(SCORE)
2. Iowa at Ohio State
3. Wisconsin at Michigan State
4. Purdue at Illinois
5. Indiana at Minnesota
6. Navy at Notre Dame
7. Penn State at Maryland
8. Syracuse at Pittsburgh
9. Air Force vs. Army (Chicago)
10. Duke at Georgia Tech

11. Mississippi State at Alabama
12. Mississippi at Louisiana State
13. Miami (Fla.) at Kentucky
14. Nebraska at Missouri
15. Texas Christian at Baylor
16. Texas at Southern Methodist
17. Rice at Texas Tech
18. Stanford at Oregon State
19. Florida at Auburn
20. Boston U. at Rutgers

Social Fraternity
"A"
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 28, Chi Phi 0
sigma Alpha Epsilon 22, Sigma
Alpha Mu 0
Independents
Hyperion 22, Maple Leafs 6
Residence Halls
Taylor 16, Huber 14
Allen-Rumsey 7, Gomberg 6
Purdue Hits
On Defense
For Illinois
By The Associated Press
LAYFAYEFIE-Purdue's Boil-
ermakers drilled on pass defense
and defense against the Illinois
running game in preparation for
Saturday's Big Ten football game
at Champaign.
"If we expect to win, we must
stop their running backs, Sam
Price and Jim Graboski, and be
ready for their passing game,"
Coach Jack Mollenkopf told the
squad.
IOWA CITY-Iowa's football
team lield a heavy scrimmage on
praise from Cooach Jerry Burns.
both offense and defense and drew
The Hawkeyes play Ohio State
at Columbus Saturday.
"This was one of the best work-
outs we've had in weeks," Burns
said. "The backs were running
hard on offense. On defense the
first unit did an exceptional job
stopping Ohio plays but the sec-
ond unit had some trouble."
EAST LANSING - Michigan
State has a freshman left-hander
throwing passes in preparation for
the Saturday football homecoming
game with Wisconsin.
Chuck Lother of Royal Oak,
Mich. is playing the practice role
of Harold Brant, sophomore quar-
terback for the Badgers.
Michigan State also is busy
putting in some new plays to
throw against the defending Big
Ten champs.
MADISON-Left halfback Carl
Silvestri, the lone casualty in Wis-
consin's football game against
Ohio State, worked out with his
sprained ankle heavily taped.
Silvestri was joined in the Bad-
ger practice session by veteran
safetyman Ron Frain, who has
missed the last two gameswith a
leg injury. Indications are that
both may play in Saturday's game
against Michigan State at East
Lansing.
*
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